Abstract

 


 



Preface to the Reformation of Rights


John Witte Jr.


Emory University School of Law


THE REFORMATION OF RIGHTS: LAW, RELIGION, AND HUMAN RIGHTS IN EARLY MODERN CALVANISM, PREFACE, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2007

Abstract:     
The sixteenth-century Protestant reformer, John Calvin, developed arresting new teachings on rights and liberties and church and state that shaped the law of early modern Protestant lands. Calvin's original teachings, which spread rapidly throughout Western Europe, were periodically challenged by major crises - the French Wars of Religion, the Dutch Revolt, the English Revolution, American colonization, and the American Revolution. In each such crisis moment, a major Calvinist figure emerged - Theodore Beza, Johannes Althusius, John Milton, John Winthrop, John Adams, and others - who modernized Calvin's teachings and translated them into dramatic new legal and political reforms. This rendered early modern Calvinism one of the driving engines of Western constitutionalism. A number of basic Western ideas of religious and political rights, social and confessional pluralism, federalism and social contract, and more owe a great deal to early modern Calvinism. This chapter, which introduces the volume, traces the development of rights doctrine in Calvinism, and situates it within a broader history of Western rights.

Number of Pages in PDF File: 5

Keywords: rights, reformation, calvin, beza, milton, althusius, winthrop, john adams, protestantism, liberty, church, state, politics, law, religion

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Date posted: September 17, 2007  

Suggested Citation

Witte, John, Preface to the Reformation of Rights. THE REFORMATION OF RIGHTS: LAW, RELIGION, AND HUMAN RIGHTS IN EARLY MODERN CALVANISM, PREFACE, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, 2007. Available at SSRN: http://ssrn.com/abstract=1014825

Contact Information

John Witte Jr. (Contact Author)
Emory University School of Law ( email )
1301 Clifton Road
Atlanta, GA 30322
United States
404-727-6980 (Phone)
404-712-8605 (Fax)
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