The Fruit of Cain Multiplied: The Murderer
John Calvin
His Doctrine Summarized: “You really
leave me no choice but to predestinate you to eternal torment.”
Calvin, the Murderer
The Lord Jesus Christ laid out a simple guideline for identifying
the true and false among us. He said:
“You can tell what they are by what they do. No one picks grapes
or figs from thorn bushes. A good tree produces good fruit, and a bad
tree produces bad fruit. A good tree cannot produce bad fruit, and
a bad tree cannot produce good fruit. Every tree that produces bad
fruit will be chopped down and burned. You can tell who the false prophets
are by their deeds” (Matthew 7:16-20 CEV).
Aside from any discussion of doctrines, by this criterion alone John
Calvin was a false prophet of the first order. How do we know? Because
he condoned and excused, when not initiating it himself, the persecution
and murder of those who opposed his doctrines and position. These are
not the good fruits of a man of God.
We need not even prove the falsehood of Calvin’s doctrines to
identify him as preeminent among the many false teachers professing
Christ, though we can do that too. What the Lord gave us in this one
simple directive is more than sufficient for judging this man by his
fruits. One such as Calvin who kills others because they differ with
his beliefs is a murderer.
That is precisely what Saul of Tarsus was before he was turned by
God:
“Then Saul, still breathing murderous threats against the disciples
of the Lord, went to the high priest and requested from him letters
of authority to the synagogues of Damascus, that if he should find
any who were of the Way, both men or women, he might bring them, having
been bound, to Jerusalem” (Acts 9:1-2 EMTV).
And Jesus said to him: “Saul, Saul, why are you persecuting
Me?” (Acts 9:4 EMTV)
After the Lord turned him, did Saul then persecute and slay real heretics,
unlike the true brethren of Christ and children of God whom he had
previously persecuted in his ignorance and religious zeal? Never! He
was now found to be the persecuted one, by those that were his former
comrades in unbelief; they stoned him, whipped him, beat him with rods,
and then killed him. Why did they do this? Because of the gospel Paul
preached. They could not bear to hear the Truth. They said: “Get
rid of this man! He doesn’t deserve to live” (Acts 22:22
CEV).
John Calvin said the same thing of Michael Servetus, a man that dared
to disagree with his cherished doctrinal formulations. Seven years
before Calvin actually saw to it that Servetus was put to death, he
said: “If he [Servetus] comes [to Geneva], I shall never let
him go out alive if my authority has weight.”
Calvin made good on his threat. Why? Because he had no answers to
Michael Servetus’ correction of his false doctrines, and he could
not bear to be proven wrong and to lose face. The temporal power he
had taken to himself was predicated on being right. He was a very proud
man; God resists the proud.
What Shall True Believers Do with Heretics?
While the apostle Paul did not kill or threaten anyone, he was not
afraid or moved by what men could do to him. He protected the sheep
of Christ by naming the false teachers and their influences, shining
the light on them and their errors, but never by seeking their physical
harm or deaths:
“That sort of talk is like a sore that won’t heal. And
Hymenaeus and Philetus have been talking this way by teaching that
the dead have already been raised to life. This is far from the truth,
and it is destroying the faith of some people” (2 Timothy 2:17-18
CEV).
And:
“Alexander the coppersmith did me much harm. May the Lord repay
him according to his works; whom you also should guard against, for
he has greatly resisted our words” (2 Timothy 4:14-15 EMTV).
We guard against heresies and evil attitudes by identifying and avoiding
them, not by killing those who manifest such. The necessary putting
away is to not honor, associate with, or follow the wicked in their
ways.
Did Paul call on men to repay the evildoers? No, he identified them
and their evil for the sake of those who would listen, recognizing
and proceeding according to the Lord’s injunction:
“Behold, I send you out as sheep in the midst of wolves. Therefore,
be wise as serpents and harmless as doves” (Matthew 10:16 LITV).
Paul left it to God to judge those opposed to the gospel, and was
willing to pay the price for his stance with his own blood, which
he did. The saints shed their blood for, and not the blood of, sinners.
How Shall True Believers React to Unbelievers?
What else are we to learn from Paul and his conversion from a violent
persecutor of Christ’s brethren to a man who took much abuse
for the privilege of being identified with Jesus Christ? Paul himself
gives us the answer that he received of the Lord:
“However, because of this I was shown mercy, so that in me first
Jesus Christ might show forth all longsuffering, as
a pattern for those who are going to believe on Him for everlasting life” (1 Timothy
1:16 EMTV).
John Calvin does not fit this pattern - quite the opposite. He did
not suffer those that disagreed with him even to live. He played the
part of persecutor. He set an evil example, against the admonition
of the apostle John:
“We are not to resemble Cain, who was a child of the Evil One
and killed his own brother. And why did he kill him? Because his own
actions were wicked and his brother’s actions righteous” (1
John 3:12 WNT).
Can anyone truly defend Calvin? Amazingly enough, many try to do so
in the Name of Christ. They do not realize they have put their hand
in the hand of a murderer, and now their hands are also stained with
the blood of the saints, whom Calvin persecuted and yet persecutes
by his spirit that lives in those who follow him. For they were not
heretics that Calvin persecuted, but the very brethren of Christ. As
Jesus said to His brothers:
“Certainly, the time is coming when people who murder you will
think that they are serving God” (John 16:2 GW).
The Scriptures are not ambiguous about Calvin’s works and their
origin:
“Everyone hating his brother is a murderer. And you know that
no murderer has everlasting life abiding in him” (1 John 3:15
MKJV).
Is Doctrine the Issue?
Those defending Calvin do so based on several lines of reasoning.
Let us look more closely at this matter to see how these defenses hold
up to the facts. We will not be dependent on third parties for information,
but will hear what those involved said for themselves, which is very
instructive. There is no need for speculation or guessing, and that
would not do anyway. Nothing but the untainted Truth is of value for
teaching and instruction in the ways of God. Let all hearts be implanted
with the wholesome and liberating Truth!
I have mentioned that Calvin killed Servetus over doctrine. Was this
the real reason that he solicited and supported this man’s murder?
Have we not just heard that Cain killed his brother because his brother
was righteous, accepted of God, whereas his own works were evil, and
not accepted? There is the outward reason or excuse that men give,
and then there is the true internal motivation; the two are not the
same, as you shall see as we proceed and the hearts are laid bare according
to their own words:
“A good man from the good stored up in his heart brings out
what is good; and an evil man from the evil stored up brings out what
is evil; for from the overflow of his heart his mouth speaks” (Luke
6:45 WNT).
There were two main charges of official religiousdom, represented
by Calvin, against Servetus. Those were that he spoke against (1) the
doctrine of the trinity and (2) infant baptism.
This is similar to another situation with which many of us are already
familiar. I am speaking of the apostle Paul, who was repeatedly charged
by the religious of teaching against the Law and Temple of God. On
one occasion the following transpired:
“Now while Gallio was proconsul of Achaia, the Jews with one
purpose rose up against Paul and brought him before the judgment seat,
saying, ‘This man persuades men to worship God contrary to the
Law.’ And when Paul was about to open his mouth, Gallio said
to the Jews, ‘If then it was some misdeed or wicked crime, O
Jews, according to reason I would bear with you. But if it is a question
about a word and names and your own law, see to it yourselves; for
I do not wish to be a judge of these things.’ And he drove them
away from the judgment seat” (Acts 18:12-16 EMTV).
The heathen know that a dispute about doctrine and beliefs is not
a state matter; how much more should those professing Christ know this?
Servetus knew it, but Calvin did not. That is because he was part of
the state, mixing the spiritual with the worldly. He brought Servetus
before the magistrates, to be dealt with as a common criminal guilty
of capital crimes.
The apostle Paul did not do this to other professing believers, but
expressly forbid it:
“Do any of you dare, when you have a matter against another,
to go to law before the unjust, and not before the saints?” (1
Corinthians 6:1 MKJV)
But the religious did this to Paul, just as they did with Peter, James,
John, and the Lord Jesus Christ. Servetus, as a true Christian, approached
Calvin directly regarding his error. Because Calvin could not successfully
answer him, he used worldly means to get rid of him, just as his fathers
did with the saints of God in their days.
Those seeking to inflict corporal punishments and banishments on others
for their beliefs are found to be in league and of one mind and spirit
with the persecutors and murderers of the Lord and His saints. Never
are the saints of God found to be doing these things to others. Read
The Persecutors and the Persecuted.
Do Calvin’s Doctrines Justify Him?
So what of the charges against Servetus, that he spoke against the
trinity and infant baptism? Do the charges have any merit, even though
it goes against the Spirit of God to persecute him to death for what
he believed? There is no question that Servetus forcefully spoke against
both of these teachings; but is that a crime, especially when he gave
well-reasoned, Scriptural arguments that none could rebut? While our
main concern is the actions of Calvin, and those following him then
and now (they are all one, and bear corporate responsibility), I will
show that Servetus was correct in his arguments, which in part explains
the violent persecution against him. Nothing enrages self-righteous
beasts like proving them wrong and destroying their power base.
Infant Baptism: Water baptism was clearly given only to those who
repented of their sins as a result of hearing the preaching of the
gospel. Never were infants baptized in Scriptural accounts, nor did
the apostles ever teach such. Even for adults, this practice began
to diminish after the ascension of the Lord. Paul at one point says:
“I thank God that I baptized none of you except Crispus and
Gaius, lest anyone should say that I had baptized in my own name. Yes,
I also baptized the household of Stephanas. Besides, I do not know
whether I baptized any other. For Christ did not send me to
baptize, but to preach the gospel, not in eloquent wisdom, lest the cross of
Christ should be deprived of its power. For the message of the cross
is foolishness to those who are perishing, but to us who are being
saved it is the power of God” (1 Corinthians 1:14-18 EMTV).
Obviously water baptism was no longer so important; if it were, Paul
would have been holding it in the highest regard and doing it regularly.
But he was sent to preach Christ and the taking up of the cross instead.
Why? Because water baptism was a symbol of the death and resurrection
now accomplished by the taking up of the cross, as the apostle Peter
wrote, “through the resurrection of Jesus Christ” (1 Peter
3:21). The reality of the death that water baptism represented had
come and replaced the symbol. It is not the symbol that saves, but
the Substance. Therefore Paul was given to testify by the Spirit of
God that he was not there to water baptize.
The Lord had already set the record straight Himself, when He baptized
Cornelius and the Gentiles with His Spirit without water baptism. Now
that the Spirit was available for those who believed and had received
the gospel, water was no longer mandatory. The worship in spirit and
truth had come.
What did Servetus say about infant baptism that so offended Calvin
and his posse of persecutors that they wanted to kill him? He proclaimed
it to be “a doctrine of the Devil, an invention of popery, and
a total subversion of Christianity.” He wrote such comments in
the margins of Calvin’s Institutes of the Christian Religion.
It was after seeing these things that Calvin pledged Servetus would
not leave Geneva alive should he appear there.
Several years later, when Servetus did show up, Calvin, good to his
evil word, supplied these notes to the court to obtain his goal of
destroying this man. During the trial Servetus openly admitted that
he had referred to infant baptism as a “diabolical invention
and infernal falsehood destructive of Christianity.”
Good for him, for so this doctrine is! Praise God that he was not
ashamed or afraid to speak the truth revealed to him. Infant baptism
is one of many diabolical inventions of men, “christened” by
the devil, who comes as an angel of light and uses tools like this
to control people. Just who do you think is served by running a monopoly
on “sacraments” that allegedly insure your eternal fate,
though they require nothing more of you than to submit to them? Corrupt
men use such artifices to serve their temporal and selfish interests.
Furthermore, as demonstrated in the case of Servetus, when contradicted,
they wield the sword of men to torture and kill those who expose their
error.
So they did to our Lord and Master, Who said to them:
“You are good at rejecting God’s commands so that you
can follow your own teachings!” (Mark 7:9 CEV)
If men must resort to murder to protect their doctrines and practices
from being questioned, they are not of God. They never were.
The Trinity: What about the trinity? Surely this is a sacred doctrine
for many. But is it true? As a young man, Servetus red the Bible, which
the invention of the printing press had, for the first time, made widely
available to the public despite efforts by the harlot church to keep
it from them. Servetus was surprised to find the trinity nowhere explicitly
mentioned in the New Testament, much less defined. He also found the
concept totally inconsistent with the teaching in the Old Testament,
which categorically states that there is only one God and Savior. The
apostles, he said, being taught from this Record, “did not hold
the trinity or three persons...but men in later times added this.”
At the age of 21 or so, Servetus wrote a book, On the Errors of
the Trinity. He stated that the trinity was not Biblical at all, but was
an ungodly idea that came from Greek philosophers. For publishing this
he was condemned to be burned by the Catholic Church, along with his
books. He had to flee from the persecution of this beastly entity and
ended up becoming a physician in another country, working under an
assumed name, where he discovered or intuited the correct flow of blood
and oxygenation through the lungs, 85 years before William Harvey of
England introduced this fact to the larger world.
Servetus continued to write more books throughout his life, and here
are some of the things he said about Christ and God; I defy anyone
to prove from Scripture that these are not true statements:
“I do not separate Christ from God more than a voice from the
speaker or a beam from the sun. Christ is the voice of the speaker.
He and the Father are the same thing, as the beam and the light, are
the same light.”
“And because his Spirit was wholly God, he is called God, and
he is called man on account of his flesh.”
“It is a surprising wonder that God has taken for Himself the
body of Christ in order to make His special dwelling.”
“There is therefore a tremendous mystery in the fact that God
may be united with man and the man with God.”
“God has revealed Himself to us, making Himself outwardly visible
through the Word, yet internally perceptible through the spirit. Though
He remains a great mystery in either case, He is yet such that humanity
may see God Himself and posess Him. God was previously not visible,
but now we shall see Him with His face unveiled, and, so long as we
open the gate and step upon the road, we shall gaze upon Him as He
shines in ourselves. It is time that we open that gate and this path
of light....” (Preamble to Restoration of Christianity).
“There is nothing greater, reader, than to recognize that God
has been manifested as substance, and that His divine nature has been
truly communicated to mankind. It is in Christ alone that we shall
fully apprehend the manifestation of God Himself through the Word” (Preamble
to Restoration of Christianity).
“In Christ there is not some portion of God, but the whole totality
of God, the whole fulfillment of the Word and the spirit” (Restoration
of Christianity, 105).
From the Scriptures:
“And without controversy great is the mystery of godliness:
God was manifest in the flesh, justified in the Spirit, seen of angels,
preached unto the Gentiles, believed on in the world, received up into
glory” (1 Timothy 3:16 KJV).
For believing and voicing these words, Michael Servetus was condemned
to death by the Catholic Church and John Calvin, which goes to show
that “reformation” of what is corrupt is also corrupt.
It is all one and the same thing. One tyrant was simply replaced by
another and worse one, as a wise man later said:
“If Christ Himself came to Geneva, He would be crucified. For
Geneva is not a place of Christian liberty. It is ruled by a new pope,
but one who burns men alive, while the pope at Rome at least strangles
them first.”
Servetus’ words, written in Calvin’s book as opportunity
before his tribunal to respond to the text and charges Calvin made
against him at his trial, proved prophetic:
“Do you [Calvin] deny that you are a man slayer? I will prove
it by your deeds. For me, I am firm in so good a cause, and do not
fear to die. You howl like a blind man in desert places, because the
spirit of vengeance burns in your heart.... Madness is in you when
you persecute to the death.... You have all roared enough, you are
a great crowd of subscribers, but what passages have you quoted to
prove the Son invisible and really distinct? None. Thus my doctrine
is not met but by your clamors. You have opposed to it neither arguments
nor authorities.
“M. Servetus has signed alone, it is true, but having Jesus Christ
for his most assured Protector.”
Calvin was given opportunity to reply, but did not in word (only
in deed), until after Servetus was dead and could no longer respond
by his own mouth or pen.
Servetus’ Wisdom, Boldness, Honesty and Faithfulness in
Christ
Servetus could have acquitted himself at any time to save his life,
even at the very end being offered clemency if he would but change
his mind on the trinity. Farel, representing the council that condemned
Servetus, visited with him during the morning of his execution and
remained with him throughout the day until his death, trying to convince
him of his “error.” Or was it the other way around? Servetus
asked Farel to quote a single Scripture passage where Christ was called “Son
of God” before His incarnation. Farel could not.
In other words, throughout the Old Testament, there are not different
voices of God, one identified as “the Father” and another
as “the Son.” There is only one Voice, because, as God
said to Israel, “The LORD our God is one LORD” (Deuteronomy
6:4). This is consistent with the New Testament writings, which say:
“In many ways and in various ways of old, God spoke to the fathers
in the prophets; in these last days He spoke to us in the Son, Whom
He appointed Heir of all; through Whom He indeed made the ages” (Hebrews
1:1-2 LITV).
In other words again, God spoke to us in His unique appearing in human
form as the Son, which Servetus rightly calls “His Incarnation.”
How simple! How wonderful! Against this precious truth Calvin gnashed
his teeth and turned Servetus over for execution. And some call him
Christian and make him the founding father of their beliefs no less!
If they are true sons of their father, then they are also murderers!
Yes, we are talking to you, proud Calvinists. Your hands are full of
blood, and the time has come to give account for your sins! You are
all Christ-killers because Jesus said:
“Truly I say to you, Inasmuch as you did it to one of the least
of these My brothers, you have done it to Me” (Matthew 25:40
MKJV).
But precious in the sight of the Lord is the death of His saints.
He is over all, and our beloved brother did not die in vain. Servetus,
we are here to give you rest from your labors; we have that grace and
privilege. We bless you in the Name of our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ,
Whom you have faithfully served. We are brothers. If you are a heretic,
we are heretics. If they kill you, they kill us.
Not being able to answer Servetus, Farel still did not think to try
to halt the execution. It is our understanding today that one ought
not to convict a man of a parking violation while there exists reasonable
doubt, but here you have a man about to be tortured and executed,
who, to the very end, could not be proven wrong in that which he
believed. He had not touched the hair on a person’s head or
materially defrauded anyone. On the contrary, what Servetus taught
about God was true, and for that reason brought freedom to those
who received it.
We should not think it strange, however, that, as Jesus said, His
followers would be killed by those who thought they were doing God
service, as Servetus was by Calvin.
Since he was given no sound reason to confess he was wrong, the only
reason for Servetus to do so would have been to save his life by denying
what he knew to be true and, by extension, Him Who spoke and taught
him the Truth. This he did not do, glory to God! Farel continued to
press him: “Confess your crime, and God will have mercy on your
soul.” Servetus replied: “I am not guilty; I have not merited
death.” And there, before witnesses, he publicly confessed Christ
as Savior, invoked God for pardon, and asked Him to pardon
his accusers.
Farel brought Calvin to Servetus that morning. According to Calvin,
Servetus humbly asked his pardon. Calvin declined with these words, “Think
rather of crying for mercy to God Whom you have blasphemed.” This
had no more effect of changing Servetus’ convictions than the
exhortation of Farel. He went like a lamb to the slaughter. In this
Servetus followed his Lord and Savior, Who also gave a good confession
of faith before Pontius Pilate.
While being tormented in the flames (they placed a wreath strewn with
sulphur on his head and used green wood to prolong the agony of his
death), Servetus cried out with a loud voice, “Jesus Christ,
You Son of the eternal God, have mercy upon me!”
Farel later noted that Servetus could have been saved if he had shifted
the words to say, “Jesus Christ, You eternal Son of God, have
mercy upon me!”
Can you imagine! Reader, will you quibble with one who calls on the
Name of the Lord Jesus Christ in sincerity, who is willing to die rather
than deny Him? Will you condemn such a man to death? Will you burn
him because he does not confess the unScriptural, heathen trinity doctrine?
And what do the Scriptures say about Servetus’ cry?
“And it shall be that everyone who calls on the Name of the
Lord shall be saved” (Acts 2:21 EMTV).
Servetus did not believe in two or three gods, and that one must call
on each, but he believed in only One God, as God consistently testifies
of Himself in the Holy Scriptures:
“Speak and present your case. Yes, let them consult one another.
Who revealed this in the distant past and predicted it long ago? Wasn’t
it I, the LORD? There is no other God except Me. There is no other
righteous God and Savior besides Me. Turn to Me and be saved, all who
live at the ends of the earth, because I am God, and there
is no other” (Isaiah
45:21-22 GW).
Servetus called on the Name of the One True God, the only Name given
to men whereby all must be saved - Jesus Christ. For doing this, evil
religious fanatics led by Calvin murdered him, roasting him over a
deliberately slow-burning fire to feed their vicious lusts.
Only Murderers Justify Murderers
Some people say that Calvin tried to get the execution changed from
burning to beheading. That may be so, but murder is murder, and Calvin
not only initiated and followed through on the deed, but afterwards
collected money from Servetus’ property for the expenses incurred
in his prosecution of the matter and then went on to write a book,
Defence of the Orthodox Faith in the Sacred Trinity, justifying his
disgusting and dastardly deed.
In the book, Calvin called Servetus: “detestable infidel,” “rabid
magician,” “great pest,” “vomit,” “obscene
dog,” “stupid,” and “ferocious beast.” Nowhere
did Calvin express the least regret at what he had done. Nor did he
ever disassociate himself from this murder. In a later letter written
to a marquis, he said:
“Honor, glory, and riches shall be the reward of your pains;
but above all, do not fail to rid the country of those scoundrels,
who stir up the people to revolt against us. Such monsters should be
exterminated, as I have exterminated Michael Servetus the Spaniard.”
Revolt against whom? Against God, perhaps? No, “against us”!
However, Servetus did not seek revolt against man or God. And though
his offenses were truly non-existent, he had asked pardon, and had
prayed for God’s forgiveness of Calvin as he was led to the stake.
Of what Spirit comes such an act?
When Peter asked Jesus how forgiving we should be, perhaps up to seven
times, Jesus answered:
“I say not to you, Till seven times; but, Till seventy times
seven” (Matthew 18:22 BBE).
The Real Reason for Calvin’s Actions
You tell me, reader, which man followed and exemplified the Spirit
of the Lord Jesus Christ, and which one followed His murderers?
“For he could see that it was out of sheer spite that the High
Priests had handed Him over” (Mark 15:10 WNT).
Which are you following?
Calvin, unrepentant of his murder of Servetus, threatened anyone thinking
to criticize his brand of “justice” against “heretics
and blasphemers” with the same “guiltiness” and punishment,
calling this the edict of God. He credited God, rather than his hardened
conscience, for making him into an unfeeling monster:
“Whoever shall now contend that it is unjust to put heretics
and blasphemers to death will knowingly and willingly incur their very
guilt. This is not laid down on human authority; it is God who speaks
and prescribes a perpetual rule for his Church. It is not in vain that
he banishes all those human affections which soften our hearts; that
he commands paternal love and all the benevolent feelings between brothers,
relations, and friends to cease; in a word, that he almost deprives
men of their nature in order that nothing may hinder their holy zeal.
Why is so implacable a severity exacted but that we may know that God
is defrauded of his honor, unless the piety that is due to him be preferred
to all human duties, and that when his glory is to be asserted, humanity
must be almost obliterated from our memories?”
Another famous “reformer” that publicly and formally supported
the persecution and murder of Servetus, Heinrich Bullinger, wrote to
Calvin because even he was having reservations about his book:
“I only fear that your book will not be so acceptable to many
of the more simple-minded persons, who, nevertheless, are attached
both to yourself and to the truth, by reason of its brevity and consequent
obscurity, and the weightiness of the subject. And, indeed, your style
appears somewhat perplexed, especially in this work.”
In other words, “Calvin, you come across as confounded and your
arguments are unconvincing.”
Calvin wrote in reply:
“I am aware that I have been more concise than usual in this
treatise. However, if I should appear to have faithfully and honestly
defended the true doctrine, it will more than recompense me for my
trouble. But though the candor and justice which are natural to you,
as well as your love towards me, lead you to judge of me favorably,
there are others who assail me harshly as a master in cruelty and atrocity,
for attacking with my pen not only a dead man, but one who
perished by my hands. Some, even not self-disposed towards me, wish that I had
never entered on the subject of the punishment of heretics, and say
that others in the like situation have held their tongues as the best
way of avoiding hatred. It is well, however, that I have you to share
my fault, if fault it be; for you it was who advised and persuaded
me to it. Prepare yourself, therefore, for the combat.”
Having seen the moral perversity and spiritual bankruptcy of the murder
of Servetus, we now also see that Calvin possibly had his doubts, yet,
instead of repenting, he dug himself in further, committing himself
to the defense of his heinous murderous spirit, and, like a cornered
badger, threatened to do whatever he saw necessary to protect and justify
himself before men as the hero of God he imagined himself to be. The
seeds of his despotism were planted and watered to yield more atrocities
against God and man.
Calvin’s Perverse Scriptural Pretexts
At this point it is necessary to address the argument that Calvin
and the religious of his day used to justify killing those he deemed
blasphemers - that the Law of God prescribed it. Here is the appropriate
Word of God:
“If there arise in the midst of you a prophet, or a dreamer
of dreams, and he give you a sign or a wonder, and the sign or the
wonder come to pass, of which he spoke to you, saying, Let us go after
other gods, which you have not known, and let us serve them; you shall
not listen to the words of that prophet, or to that dreamer of dreams:
for the LORD your God proves you, to know whether you love the LORD
your God with all your heart and with all your soul.... That prophet,
or that dreamer of dreams, shall be put to death, because he has spoken
rebellion against the LORD your God, Who brought you out of the land
of Egypt, and redeemed you out of the house of bondage, to draw you
aside out of the way which the LORD your God commanded you to walk
in. So shall you put away the evil from the midst of you.
“If your brother, the son of your mother, or your son, or your
daughter, or the wife of your bosom, or your friend, who is as your
own soul, entice you secretly, saying, Let us go and serve other gods,
which you have not known, you, nor your fathers; of the gods of the
peoples who are round about you, near to you, or far off from you,
from the one end of the earth even to the other end of the earth; you
shall not consent to him, nor listen to him; neither shall your eye
pity him, neither shall you spare, neither shall you conceal him: but
you shall surely kill him; your hand shall be first on him to put him
to death, and afterwards the hand of all the people. You shall stone
him to death with stones, because he has sought to draw you away from
the LORD your God, Who brought you out of the land of Egypt, out of
the house of bondage” (Deuteronomy 13:1-10 HNV).
I will not go into all the ways these words do not apply to Servetus,
as much of that should already be obvious. The point I wish to make
is that Calvin and his cronies were in no position to judge others
as though they were the Israel of God. They were not walking in the
faith of God as spiritual Israel in order to apply the Law lawfully
to others. They were phonies, tares, the wicked seed of Satan and as
Cain, who killed his brother. That is why they labeled Servetus a heretic
and slew a righteous man. The spirit of Calvin has ruled to this day
through his unrighteous application of the Law.
It was Calvin and other religious who were preaching other gods that
our fathers never knew, because our fathers spoke of one LORD, the
only God and Savior, not a triune God of three members.
Does that mean we true Christians should be killing Calvinists today,
since they are idolaters? No, because it is not the nature or business
of those in Christ to kill either wayward brethren or false brethren,
but to be separated:
“Little children, it is the last hour; and just as you have
heard that the antiChrist is coming, even now many antichrists have
appeared; from this we know that it is the last hour. They went out
from us, but they were not of us; for if they had been of us, they
would have remained with us; but they went out in order that they might
be made manifest, that none of them were of us” (1 John 2:18-19
EMTV).
They are the equivalent of the heathen nations that God warned His
people Israel not to mix with and learn their ways. As Paul wrote:
“But now I write to you not to associate with anyone named a
brother, who is a fornicator, or covetous person, or an idolater, or
abusive person, or a drunkard, or a swindler--not even to eat with
such a person. For what have I to do with judging those also
who are outside? Do you not judge those who are inside? But those who are outside
God will judge. Therefore put away from yourselves the evil
person” (1
Corinthians 5:11-13 EMTV).
This putting away was not a physical death sentence, but a separation
of unbelievers from believers, as with the man who slept with his father’s
wife:
“You’re being arrogant when you should have been more
upset about this. If you had been upset, the man who did this would
have been removed from among you” (1 Corinthians 5:2 GW).
Those who believe are not called to destroy men’s lives, but
to save them, even and particularly by their separation. Paul said
of the man to be removed from their midst that his spirit would thus
eventually be saved (1 Corinthians 5:5).
Whoever thinks we are here to condemn and kill is corrected by the
Lord Himself:
“But they did not receive Him, because He was determined to
go to Jerusalem. And when they saw this, James and John His disciples
said, ‘Lord, do You wish that we should call down fire from heaven
and consume them, as Elijah did?’ But turning, He rebuked them,
and said, ‘You do not know of what sort of spirit you are. For
the Son of Man did not come to destroy men’s lives but to save
them’” (Luke 9:53-56 EMTV).
Witnesses Are Manifold Against Calvin
Did Calvin finally rest, having established an iron-fisted policy
of death to all those who dared to question his spiritual authority
and doctrines? Not at all. God now raised up another witness, as though
Servetus had been raised from the dead to testify of God:
“But hearing Herod said, It is John, whom I beheaded. He has
risen from the dead!” (Mark 6:16 MKJV)
Thus a professor of Greek Literature from nearby Basle, a translator
of the Bible into French and Latin, Sebastian Castellion, wrote a pamphlet, “Whether
Heretics Should be Persecuted,” completed three months after
Calvin published his book justifying his persecution and execution
of Servetus.
Castellion could not refrain from expressing horror and disgust at
what Calvin had done in murdering another human being that disagreed
with him:
“If those thus butchered had been, I will not say horses, but
only swine, every prince would have considered he had sustained a grave
loss.”
“However horribly these things may be,” Castellion wrote
Calvin, “the sinners sin yet more horribly when they endeavor
to wrap up their misdeeds in the raiment of Christ, and declare that
they act in accordance with His will.”
Calvin was incensed: “A new heresy has been discovered,” he
said. “We must stamp out this burst of hell-fire before it spreads
over the surface of the earth.... Freedom of conscience is a doctrine
of the devil.... Better to have a tyrant, however cruel, than permit
everyone to do what he pleases.”
Did Castellion preach lawlessness? Not at all. He only said that one
who murdered a man in the name of a doctrinal dispute cannot claim
that Christ approved of this or taught him to do so. Hearing this did
not please Calvin or allow him to rest in his compromised conscience.
Indeed, good to his word, Calvin did not permit anyone to do what
did not please him. Castellion’s pamphlet made many truthful
and excellent points, but no one was to hear them at that time because
Calvin suppressed its publication. Nevertheless, Castellion’s
message of truth hit home. He wrote to Calvin:
“Why do you do to others that which you would not endure if
done to yourself? We are concerned with a dispute about religious matters;
why, then, do you gag your adversaries?
“Your words and your weapons are only those common to every
despotism; and they can but give you a temporal, not a spiritual dominance,
a dominance based upon coercion, and not upon the love of God. Nor
do I envy you your power and your weapons. I have other powers and
other weapons--an imperturbable conviction of innocence, and trust
in Him who will help me and give me grace. Even if, for a season, truth
is suppressed by the blind ‘justice’ of this world, no
one can permanently coerce truth. Let us cease to heed the judgment
of a world which slew Christ; let us ignore an assize before which
only the cause of violence proves victorious. The kingdom of God is
not of this world.”
Castellion continued:
“It is absurd to use earthly weapons in spiritual warfare. The
enemies of Christians are vices, and are to be overcome by virtues….
The cultivation of Christian character is neglected while Christians
spend their time disputing speculative questions such as the nature
of Christ, the Trinity, predestination, free will, the Eucharist and
baptism. These are not necessary to salvation, and do not make a man
better.”
Calvin, condemned by his own conscience, despised the liberty of conscience
offered to others, which he had called “a diabolical doctrine.” Castellion
responded:
“What do we really mean by the term ‘heretic’? Whom
are we entitled to call a heretic, without being unjust? I do not believe
that all those termed heretics are really such. When I reflect on what
a heretic really is, I can find no other criterion than that we are
all heretics in the eyes of those who do not share our views.”
Castellion spoke of the foolishness of compelling men to abide in
a certain doctrinal belief in God without having their own sure conviction:
“Those who wish to win over the largest possible number of supporters
willy-nilly resemble a fool who has a barrel containing only a little
wine, and fills it up with water in order to have more wine. The result
is not to increase the wine, but to spoil the good wine which the fool
already had. It is preposterous to assert that those who are forced
to profess a belief really believe what they profess. Were they free
to follow their own inclinations, they would say: ‘What I sincerely
believe is that you are unjust and tyrannical, and that what you have
compelled me to profess is false.’ Bad wine is not made good
by forcing people to drink it.”
In another place, Castellion wrote:
“Men are so strongly convinced of the soundness of their opinions
that they despise the opinions of others. Cruelties and persecutions
are the outcome of arrogance, so that a man will not tolerate others’ differing
in any way from his own views, although there are today almost as many
views as there are persons. Yet there is not one sect which does not
condemn all the others and wish to reign supreme. That accounts for
banishments, exiles, incarcerations, burnings, hangings, and the blind
fury of the tormentors who are continually at work, in the endeavor
to suppress certain outlooks which displease our lords and masters.”
Calvin, justifying the murder of Servetus, said it was his mission
to save Christianity - the gangrenous limb had to be amputated. To
which Castellion replied, “There is nowhere in the gospels, nor
yet in any moral treatise ever given to the world, the demand for such
intolerance. Will you dare, in the last resort, to say that Jesus himself
taught you to burn your fellow men?
“Who burns a man does not defend a doctrine, but only burns
a man.”
Railing, Lies and False Accusations the Marks of a Murderer
Set on destroying him, Calvin wrote a tract, “Calumnies of a
Rapscallion,” reviling Castellion as a thief, rascal, and blasphemer.
The diatribe ends with, “May God destroy you, Satan!” We
already know what Calvin means by that, the intent of his words being
- “I
will get you, you bastard, one way or another, by hook or by crook,
so help
me God!”
Whereas of those who taught error, Jesus said, “Let them alone.
They are blind leaders of the blind. And if the blind lead the blind,
both shall fall into the ditch” (Matthew 15:14 MKJV). But Calvin
could not stand to be differed with, though Castellion was not even
teaching or speaking error.
Seeking any possible means of bringing Castellion down, Calvin accused
him, without any evidence, of being the author of a lampoon found in
a traveling merchant’s luggage and also of having stolen firewood
in broad daylight.
It must have become clear to Calvin that the first charge was demonstrably
false, because he dropped it from a second edition of his libelous
tract. Yet he made no formal retraction. The commandment of God forbids
falsely accusing your neighbor, and James wrote:
“For He Who said, ‘Do not commit adultery,’ also
said, ‘Do not murder.’ But if you do not commit adultery,
yet if you murder, you have become a transgressor of the Law”(James
2:11).
When found making false accusations, it is incumbent upon the accuser
to make restitution of his offense. But without repentance the many
sins of John Calvin could not be hid or suppressed:
“For whoever shall keep the whole Law and yet offend in one
point, he is guilty of all” (James 2:10).
Castellion used these false accusations to expose Calvin’s devious
ways. He wrote:
“Yes or no. Were you aware that you had no warrant for naming
me as author of that pamphlet? How can I tell? But either you brought
your accusation at a time when you already knew that it was unjustified,
in which case you were cheating; or else you were still uncertain,
and then your charge was heedlessly brought. In either event your behavior
was unworthy, for every point of your contention is false. I did not
write that pamphlet, nor did I send it to be printed in Paris. If its
diffusion was a criminal offence, the crime was yours, for it was through
you that the writing first became widely known.”
He further described Calvin’s manner and antiChrist spirit:
“You have an ample store of abusive terms at your command, and,
speaking out of the fullness of your heart, you have let your tongue
run away with you. In your Latin tract you call me, without drawing
breath, blasphemer, calumniator, malefactor, yapping cur, an impudent
wretch full of ignorance and bestiality, an impious misreader of Holy
Writ, a fool who mocks at God, a despiser of the faith, a man without
shame, a dirty dog, a being full of disrespect and obnoxiousness, a
distorted and perverted spirit, a vagabond, and a wicked subject. Eight
times you call me a rapscallion.... From the title to the conclusion
[‘May God destroy you, Satan!’], the whole work is penned
in the same style, although the author is reputed to be a man inspired
by apostolic earnestness, by Christian gentleness. Woe unto those whom
you lead if they are infected by such moods, and if it should prove
that your disciples resemble their master. But these invectives do
not touch me in the least.... Some day truth will prevail, and you,
Calvin, will have to account to God for the abuse you have showered
on one to save whom, as to save yourself, Christ died. Is it possible
that you are not ashamed, that you cannot remember Jesus’s own
words: ‘Whosoever is angry with his brother without a cause shall
be in danger of the judgment: and whosoever shall say to his brother,
Raca, shall be in danger of the council’?”
Let it be interjected and pointed out that, as with the names Calvin
called Servetus, his epithets for Castellion all perfectly applied
to himself. The testimony of Christ in his victims only held up the
mirror for Calvin to reveal his own monstrous demeanor, which he described
in his condemnation of those exposing it.
Regarding Calvin’s accusation that he had stolen firewood in
Basle, Castellion wrote, “It would be a grave offence if I had
committed it,” and pointedly added, “But calumny is an
equally serious matter.”
Calvin’s Manifest Contradiction of His Doctrine of Predestined
Hell
He goes on to show the ridiculous nature of Calvin’s doctrine
of predestination, which allows that some are predestined by God to
eternal hell, and leads Calvin into contradicting his own teaching:
“Let us assume that the charge is true, and that I really stole
wood because I, in the terms of your doctrine, was predestined to do
so. Why should you revile me on that account? Should you not rather
have compassion on me because God foreordained me to such a fate, and
therefore made it impossible that I should not steal? If that be so,
why should you fill the heavens with outcries and denunciations? To
prevent my stealing any more? But if I am a thief because of divine
predestination, you must in your writings acquit me of blame, since
I act under coercion. On your own showing I could as little refrain
from theft as, by taking thought, add a cubit to my stature.”
More False Accusation from the False Witness
Castellion also disproved the charge of stealing firewood. Like hundreds
of others during spring run off or sudden rains, he had hauled driftwood
out of the Rhine river. This was permissible, for not only was driftwood
treasure-trove to anyone, but the citizens of Basle were, by the town
authorities, specially invited to retrieve it, since, when the river
was in flood, floating logs were a peril to the bridges. Furthermore,
they even paid for its removal. Castellion showed how the Basle municipal
authorities had paid him, and certain other “thieves,” a
respectable sum of money for having committed the “theft.” After
hearing this rebuttal Calvin made no further mention of it, yet did
not repent of his vicious campaign of persecution of the one who dared
question or disagree with him.
Having miserably failed to gain his quarry by the traps he had set,
Calvin then employed one of his surrogates to attack Castellion in
the preface of a new version of the Geneva Bible, with many charges
warning all Christians against this “chosen of Satan.”
Castellion responded:
“You are inciting the authorities to compass my death. Were
it not that your books make this plain to all who read them, I should
never venture such an allegation, however convinced I may be of its
truth. You know that as soon as I am dead, it will be impossible for
me to answer you. You find my continued existence a nightmare. Since
you perceive that the authorities will not yield, or at any rate have
not yet yielded to your pressure, you try to make me generally hated,
and to discredit me in the eyes of the world.”
“Tell me, please,” he said to the professed servants of
Christ, “in what respect can you justify your attitude towards
me by an appeal to Jesus? Even when Judas was handing Him over to the
myrmidons of authority, Jesus spoke in kindly tones to His false disciple,
and, on the cross, He prayed for those who were putting Him to death.
But what are you doing? Because I differ from you in respect of certain
doctrines and shades of opinion, you persecute me wherever I may be,
and urge others to treat me no less despitefully than you do yourselves.
How bitter it must be to you, in the depths of your hearts, to know
that such conduct as yours received His unqualified condemnation. For
instance: ‘Whosoever hateth his brother is a murderer.’ These
are simple truths, accessible in the Scriptures to those who consult
the sacred writings with minds freed from theological distortion. You
yourselves pay lip-service with spoken words and in your books. Why
do you not apply the same doctrine in your daily lives?”
Castellion, bypassing the author of the remarks in the Bible preface,
addressed himself directly to Calvin, whom he knew to be behind them:
“You style yourself a Christian, you appeal to the gospels,
you take your stand upon God’s word, and boast that your mind
is wholly devoted to fulfilling God’s intentions. You believe
yourself well acquainted with evangelical truth. But if you would teach
others, why do you not begin with teaching yourself? How do you dare
fulminate from the pulpit against those who bear false witness [it
should read, “whom you accuse of bearing false witness”],
when your own writings are continually bearing false witness? Why,
apparently in the hope of breaking my pride, do you condemn me with
as much arrogance and self-assurance as if you were sitting at God’s
right hand and He had revealed to you all the secrets of His heart?
“Look within, before it is too late. Try, if it be still possible,
to doubt your own all-sufficingness for a moment, and then you may
be able to see what many others see. Rid yourself of the self-love
which consumes you, and of the hatred you feel for so many persons,
especially myself. Let us vie with one another in kindly consideration,
and then you will discover that my alleged impiety is no less unreal
than was the disgraceful offence which you tried to fix upon me. Put
up with my diverging from you a little in matters of doctrine. Is it
impossible that two pious persons may have differences of opinion,
and yet be at one in their hearts?”
A Common Error Amongst Believers, Contrary to Christ’s Admonitions
In this last remark, Castellion was sadly mistaken, if by piety he
meant true godliness. The Scriptures say:
“Can two walk together, except they be agreed?” (Amos
3:3 KJV)
It seems that both Servetus and Castellion had a very hard time giving
up the false notion that Calvin was a Christian. How deceptive are
the appearances assiduously set out by men of religiosity, formality,
learnedness and piety! It requires the complete simplicity of a child
to see and exclaim, “The emperor has no clothes!” If it
does not walk and talk like Christ, then it is not Christ. If it walks
and talks like a serpent, it is a serpent.
You may as well ask a cornered viper not to bite you when you confront
serpents such as Calvin and his followers on their hypocrisies, errors
and lies and expect them to act as Christians. Castellion had yet to
learn as fully as he would that, without Christ, he, and all men, have
no righteousness whatsoever. Pretensions, imitations, intellectual
theorizing, play-acting and even sincere substitutions are not the
Real Thing. Though Calvin was intelligent, as men count intelligence,
the power of God does not lie in man’s intelligence. Nor can
we approve of false faiths such as Calvin’s.
“A righteous man falling down before the wicked is as a troubled
fountain, and a corrupt spring” (Proverbs 25:26 KJV).
Castellion abased the Truth by appealing to Calvin as though he was
Christ’s:
“For the love of Christ I implore you to respect my liberty,
and cease to overwhelm me with false accusations. Let me preserve my
own faith uncoerced, as you preserve yours with my full approval.”
Castellion, you had been running so well, what hindered you that you
now compromise the Truth? Have you not yet learned that no man is good,
yourself included? But for the grace of God, we all seek a truce to
escape from the hangman’s noose. We all seek to preserve the
notion that we are right, and that all who profess Christ will understand
us, until we know and confess our complete depravity, as with righteous
Job. Yes, we are to be at peace with all men as much as possible, but
we cannot treat Satan as a saint, and it is not right to bid Godspeed
to one that does not have the doctrine of Christ. God alone is good.
Castellion: “Unquestionably one of us two must be mistaken,
but that need not prevent our loving one another.”
Yes, Castellion, that is true, but how can one whose heart is filled
with hate, which leads him to embrace his mistakes, manifest the love
of God? Can a bad tree produce good fruit? Can you not tell which is
which? Indeed, the sheepskins Calvin used appeared real, so as to deceive,
if possible, the very elect.
Castellion: “The Master will some day guide the strayed sheep
back into the right path.”
Yes, friend and brother Sebastian, but are you talking to a lamb?
Do lambs kill their brothers? Why are you trying to gather grapes from
thorns? Someday God will reconcile all things, wolves too, but today
Calvin must be exposed for what he is, a murderous viper and tyrant
of the first order who went to his grave with hands stained with the
blood of Christ’s brethren.
Castellion: “The only thing either of us certainly knows (or
ought to know) is the duty of Christian charity. Let us practice this,
and by practicing it close our adversaries’ mouths. You believe
your opinions to be right. Others believe the same of their opinions.”
Yes, men’s opinions all have equal weight, which is to say none.
When speaking the Word of God, one is not entitled to present his opinions
as truth. If you know what you have is opinion and present it as such,
well and good, but it is evil to be as Calvin, who demands his opinion
be treated as the Truth and very Word of God, punishable by death should
anyone transgress against it or him.
And when you know the Truth, Castellion, as you have, It is not an
opinion, and you ought not to allow that opinions have equal weight
to It. That is evil; it is giving false honor to men and denying the
Lord, because He is the Truth. Jesus Christ did not deny, but always
gave witness to, the Truth:
“And so it was, when Jesus finished these words, the crowds
were astonished at His teaching, for He taught them as one having authority,
and not like the scribes” (Matthew 7:28-29 EMTV).
His authority was in being Himself, speaking the Truth. He did not
have to threaten or cow men into believing He had this authority. He
only had to speak. He was not threatened if they did not believe Him,
and He did not threaten if they did not believe Him (though He warned,
which is something altogether different). So will the servant be like
his Master.
Do you hear this, you Calvinist devils? You think to have Jesus Christ’s
favor? Think again. Repent, if you can. Repent of evil doctrines, of
pride and of arrogance, and especially of following proud and murderous
men, no matter how impressive or famous they may be.
Despite Castellion’s advances and the appeal he made to a better
nature in Calvin that did not exist (nor does it exist in any man,
except he be born again, and then it is not his nature, but Christ’s),
he continued to speak against Calvin’s acts and intolerance.
In this he was right and in no way do we condemn our brothers for their
shortfalls; indeed we stand with them and in the work we inherited
from them:
“Because God had kept some better thing for us, so that it was
not possible for them to become complete without us” (Hebrews
11:40 BBE).
Cowardice Another Mark of Murderers
For his part, Calvin pressed on in his persecution. As was his style,
he had a front man do his dirty work in pressing charges of heresy.
A citizen indicted Castellion with the charges found in the Bible preface,
calling him a Papist, an Anabaptist, a free-thinker, a blasphemer,
and, in addition, a protector of adulterers and criminals.
No matter that the charges were contradictory, like being a Papist
(who, among other things, believed in infant baptism) and Anabaptist
(who denounced infant baptism), with the lodging of this written accusation
(which is still extant) the legal requirements had been fulfilled for
the prosecution of Castellion. Now the Basle authorities had no other
choice than to initiate it. Calvin was on the way to securing his goal
of ridding himself of Castellion.
However, Castellion was well known in these parts, unlike Servetus,
so he was not immediately arrested and mistreated, as Servetus had
been. Like Paul, he was a “citizen of Rome,” and received
different treatment because of his status.
Summoned to appear before the senate to answer the charges, Castellion
said:
“If Calvin and de Beze are acting in good faith, let them come
into court and prove that I have committed the offences with which
they charge me. If they believe themselves to have acted rightly, they
have no reason to dread the tribunal of Basle, since they made no ado
about attacking me before the whole world.... I know my accusers to
be influential, but God, likewise, is mighty, and He judges without
distinction of persons. I am aware that I am an obscure individual,
lowly placed and comparatively unknown; but God keeps watch over the
lowly, and will demand atonement if their blood should be unjustly
shed. I acknowledge the jurisdiction of the court, and declare that
if I am guilty of any of the things with which I am charged, my head
ought to answer for it.”
Calvin was not acting in good faith, and never had been. Neither he
nor de Beze appeared before the court. Calvin gained his objective,
however, because Castellion, being of a weak constitution, took ill
and died in his forty-eighth year, another victim of Calvin’s
persecution. Castellion, however, had the last word, as Truth always
does:
“This infamy of religious persecutions was already raging in
the days of Daniel. Since the prophet’s enemies could find nothing
assailable in his behavior, they put their heads together in order
to attack him through his convictions. The same thing is happening
today. When people cannot discover anything to complain of in their
enemy’s conduct, they take up the cudgels against his ‘doctrine’;
and this is extremely adroit, seeing that the authorities, who have
no opinion of their own, are all the easier to persuade. Thus the weak
are oppressed by those who loudly appeal to the ‘sanctity of
doctrine.’ Alas, their ‘sacred doctrine’ is one which
Jesus will repudiate with loathing on the Day of Judgment, when He
will hold assize upon conduct, not upon doctrine. When they say unto
Him, ‘Lord, we were on Thy side, and acted in accordance with
Thy teaching’ He will answer: ‘Away with you, ye malefactors!’”
Reformation – Correcting Sheep or Washing Swine?
It is said that history is written by the victors. The preceding account,
though documented, is largely unknown and overshadowed by the reputation
of Calvin as a hero of the “Reformation.” This false version
of history has been recorded by the harlot church, that which is known
in the Scriptures of God as Mystery, Babylon the Great, mother of harlots.
She has wielded the power and authority of men in this world, being
the apparent victor for a time.
But just how successful was Calvin’s reformation, when it manifested
all the evil fruits - murder, persecution, deception, false accusation,
tyranny and false doctrine - of that which he sought to reform -
religion, or more specifically, the Catholic Church? Is not the very
word, “reformation,” one of gross error and presumption?
Can good water come out of a corrupt spring? That question was always
rhetorical; the answer has never changed. The Catholic Church is
a perverse organization, not founded by or on the Lord Jesus Christ.
Reformation is impossible and out of the question. What passes for
it is only window dressing. The Lord addressed this in His parables:
“No one patches an old coat with a new piece of cloth that will
shrink. When the patch shrinks, it will rip away from the coat, and
the tear will become worse. Nor do people pour new wine into old wineskins.
If they do, the skins burst, the wine runs out, and the skins are ruined.
Rather, people pour new wine into fresh skins, and both are saved” (Mat
9:16-17).
And:
“Woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! For you are
like whitened graves which outwardly indeed appear beautiful, but within
are full of bones of the dead, and of all uncleanness...Serpents! Offspring
of vipers! How shall you escape the judgment of Hell?” (Matthew
23:27, 33 LITV)
Any success Calvin had with diluting the rule and influence of the
Catholic Church was replaced with his own self-indulgent, self-righteous
spirit, manifest in his despotic reign of terror against these two
Truth speakers. The true procurers of liberty and freedom of conscience
for mankind were those that Calvin and his mother, the Catholic Church,
persecuted, such as Michael Servetus and Sebastian Castellion. The
reason the latter were successful in bringing liberty to men, though
reviled and forgotten, was because they were truly Christ’s,
and like their Master, Who is, despite all false appearances to the
contrary, also reviled and forgotten:
“There was a little city, and few men within it; and there came
a great king against it, and besieged it, and built great bulwarks
against it; now there was found in it a man poor and wise, and he by
his wisdom delivered the city; yet no man remembered that same poor
man” (Ecclesiastes 9:14-15 JPS).
On three major counts we have found John Calvin to be a false teacher.
He was a murderer. He sought, gained, and used temporal power, like
his mother the whore, riding on the back of the beast, and his doctrine
was false.
It is on this third point that many rally to Calvin’s defense,
saying, whatever weaknesses or faults he had (thus whitewashing his
vile acts and sins), he taught true doctrine. Nothing, as we have shown
with infant baptism and the trinity, could be further from the truth.
Calvin’s Reliance on His Own Understanding
The two doctrines for which Calvin is most well known and followed
would be eternal security (“once saved, always saved”)
and predestination. It is difficult to reduce these doctrines down
into a few words, because, as Castellion noted of Calvin’s contradiction, “He
writes huge tomes to explain what he says is absolutely clear.”
Is this the way of the Lord? Must one be a scholar and have an adept
intellect capable of grasping arcane reasonings to enter into the knowledge,
understanding, and fellowship of the Lord Jesus Christ? Did He not
say that the Father had revealed the truth to babes, and not the wise
and prudent? Is it not also written that men do not attain to the things
of God in their own wisdom? Calvin’s complex doctrines are man’s
wisdom, and, as Castellion correctly noted, these are not the way to
salvation.
The truth is, one knows and learns true doctrines because he is being
saved by Christ, and not the other way around. Without the faith of
Christ, it is impossible to know God through doctrinal teaching. Those
who try to establish others in such, as Calvin did (and does today),
whether those doctrines be true or not, are fools, demonstrating they
are not in saving grace or faith themselves.
That is what makes the discussion of what Calvin called the “perseverance
of the saints,” now known as “once saved, always saved,” a
nonstarter. The man propagating the doctrine had not entered into salvation
himself (“no murderer has eternal life”), so he was only
speaking in theory of what he did not know. What is the point of being
taught something by someone who has not experienced the matter at hand?
Or, had he actually ever received saving faith, Calvin disproved his
own doctrine by manifesting the works of the flesh (murder, wrath,
strife, divisiveness, false teachings, etc.), and, “they which
do such things shall not inherit the Kingdom of God” (Galatians
5:21 KJV). He was, in such a case, as the dog returning to his vomit,
or the sow to wallowing in the mire. There is reserved for such as
Calvin a certain place of purification:
“But the fearful, and the unbelieving, and the abominable, and
murderers, and whoremongers, and sorcerers, and idolaters, and all
liars, will have their part in the Lake burning with fire and brimstone,
which is the second death” (Revelation 21:8 MKJV).
This matter of correction and purification by fire, to which the apostle
Paul alluded (“If any man’s work shall be burned, he shall
suffer loss: but he himself shall be saved; yet so as by fire” -
1 Corinthians 3:15 KJV) is a cause of great confounding of Calvin’s
doctrines.
His doctrine of predestination, which says that God has created a
great number of mankind, made in His image, for the eternal torment
of hellfire is as great and blasphemous a lie as can be told to assassinate
God’s character. It is in direct contradiction to the clearly
stated corrective judgment that God Who is Love, says He will accomplish
with all peoples, for whom He paid with the blood of His Son, Jesus
Christ. This is very clearly stated throughout the Scriptures. (See
The Restitution of
All Things.) The record declares that Calvin has
never known love, only hate.
What ungodly and confused doctrines have been concocted to accommodate
this demonic notion of Hell attributed to God! Calvin preaches men
have no free will, therefore God must be blamed because He intentionally
made them so He could burn them forever. Next to this monstrous notion
of God, Calvin does not look so bad merely burning them till they die
on earth. The monster is not God, though, but Calvin, and all men who
conceive such a senseless, vicious punishment on others to justify
their utter, insatiable hatred of anyone who disagrees with them and
the evils they perpetrate on earth.
The truth is that Calvin is correct at least in part; men do not have
free will. How can slaves of sin choose otherwise? It is for this very
reason that Christ died for us, because we have not been free at all.
Slaves do not exercise a free will, and the freemen of God are His
slaves, even as Christ in the days of His flesh said, “I always
do those things that please Him, and, “Not My will, but Yours
be done.”
Regarding God’s will, the Scriptures declare that He has concluded
all in unbelief, so that He might have mercy
on all. This Calvin did
not comprehend or practice. If it is only by the grace of God that
any are turned, as was Saul of Tarsus, then how can any person freely
choose and serve God? How can we, who have been given this grace, condemn
anyone? We are all dependent on Him to do it for us.
Does this absolve men of their sins or Calvin of the blood on his
hands? Not so fast. Calvin is held accountable for his misdeeds, especially
while insisting to sit on the throne of God. Calvin must be dethroned,
as must those with him and all other usurpers - the whore of Rome,
her many daughters, and other imitators and frauds. In the Kingdom
of God they cannot be allowed one scintilla of power or prestige, within
themselves or in the hearts of men. Nothing of their works shall remain
when the fires have done their work.
“For the man who has had no mercy will be judged without mercy...” (James
2:13 BBE).
Amen, thank You Lord Jesus for Your faithfulness, and for bringing
us to Your Day to see Your victory and appearing! We are so thankful
for the privilege of exonerating Your sons, and not only so, but bringing
forth the glorious credit that is theirs by Your grace, for which You
receive all glory, thanksgiving, honor and praise!
The will of the Lord is done.
Paul Cohen
March 6, 2008
Conversations We Have Had with Those Who Manifest the Spirit of Calvin:
This article contains the true answers from God for those who believe,
or were taught, the false doctrine from Calvin that God has predestinated
them to burn in hell forever, time without end. There is a time to
stop drinking from the poisonous doctrines of men mixed in with Biblical
Truth, and to start drinking from Jesus Christ alone, Who gives the
water of life freely to whosoever wills.
Is a man a heretic because he believes there is only one God, the
Father, manifest in the flesh through His Son, Jesus Christ, the Spirit
of Truth? Seth McBee thinks so. He justifies Calvin's part
in the persecution and murder of Servetus on these grounds. The wonderful
thing is that today, instead of religious butchers having their way
and burning those they call heretics, the Word of God has come
to burn them. It is the Day of His vengeance!
A man sees and speaks from the place where his heart
resides. If that place is one of darkness, he does not know the spirit
in which he is speaking. But the one in Light will discover it for
him, and darkness can no more prevail with Light than death can stop
God.
Tony is ready to light up the faggots when he hears us say there is
only One God, and not three persons. This is vintage John Calvin, who
is rebuked for his spirit that the Light has come to reveal and do
away with.
If we can do nothing right, God cannot hold us responsible for doing
everything wrong. But if God gives commandments, He also gives the
grace to walk therein to each according to his or her need. Here we
talk with a Calvinist proclaiming himself a “Monergist,” or
one who justifies murder because “only God is righteous.” They
ask the saints, “Just who do you think you are that you take
God’s commandments so seriously and walk in His righteousness?”
Lisa Nunley presents herself as a dedicated Christian woman of God,
but is exposed by the following correspondence as a deceitful mocker
instead. It is “Calvinism with a feminine touch,” the poison
of asps concealed under the guise of a self-proclaimed meek and submissive
woman. How different the reality! Lisa’s cover is blown when
she falls into a pernicious trap of her own making: “But in the
traps they set for others, they themselves get caught” (Psalms
7:15 GNB).