Tuesday, May 17, 2022

R. C. Sproul on the Internal Witness of the Holy Spirit in John Calvin's The Institutes of the Christian Religion

  

In section 4 Calvin presents his view of the relationship between the testimonium and other evidence for the authority of Scripture. Calvin begins by asserting the superiority of the “secret testimony of the Spirit” to human conjecture. He says:

 

Hence, the biggest proof of Scripture is uniformly taken from the character whose word it is . . . Our conviction of the truth of Scripture must be derived from a higher source than human conjectures, judgments, or reasons; namely, the secret testimony of the Spirit. (Calvin, Institutes 1.7.4)

 

Here Calvin makes it clear that the testimonium serves as the ultimate and highest ground of certainty for the believer. The testimonium is not placed over and against reason as a form of mysticism or subjectivism. Rather, it goes beyond and transcends reason. Calvin says:

 

But I answer, that the testimony of the Spirit is superior to reason. For as God alone can properly bear witness to his own words, to these words will not obtain full credit on the hearts of men, until they are sealed by the inward testimony of the Spirit. (Ibid.)

 

. . . For Calvin the testimonium is not irrational but transrational. That is, it does not move against reason but beyond it.

 

(R. C. Sproul, “The Internal Testimony of the Spirit,” in Sproul, Scripture Alone: The Evangelical Doctrine [Phillipsburg, Pa.: Presbyterian and Reformed, 2005], 97, 98)

 

Further Reading:


Personal Divine Revelation and the Knowledge the Bible is the Word of God and/or one is "Saved" in the Protestant Traditions


R.C. Sproul on the Internal Witness of the Holy Spirit in the New Testament and Chicago Statement on Biblical Inerrancy

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