PAK, G. Sujin (2010) Judaizing Calvin Sixteenth-Century Debates Over The Messianic Psalms. New York. Oxford University Press..pdf Versión 1 PDF
PAK, G. Sujin (2010) Judaizing Calvin Sixteenth-Century Debates Over The Messianic Psalms. New York. Oxford University Press..pdf Versión 1 PDF
PAK, G. Sujin (2010) Judaizing Calvin Sixteenth-Century Debates Over The Messianic Psalms. New York. Oxford University Press..pdf Versión 1 PDF
Series Editor
David C. Steinmetz, Duke University
Editorial Board
Irena Backus, Université de Genève
Robert C. Gregg, Stanford University
George M. Marsden, University of Notre Dame
Wayne A. Meeks, Yale University
Gerhard Sauter, Rheinische Friedrich-Wilhelms-Universität Bonn
Susan E. Schreiner, University of Chicago
John Van Engen, University of Notre Dame
Geoffrey Wainwright, Duke University
Robert L. Wilken, University of Virginia
G. SUJIN PAK
1
2010
3
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research and career. They include Mickey Mattox, Susan Schreiner, Esther
Chung-Kim, Edwin Tait, Deborah Marcuse, Andrew Yang, Brent Laytham,
George Kalantzis, K. K. Yeo, and Steve Long. I also owe a huge debt of gratitude
to the Perilman Scholarship from Judaic Studies at Duke University for their
financial support of my doctoral studies, as well as A Foundation for Theologi-
cal Education for a yearly stipend and for connecting me to many significant
Methodist scholars, many of whom have become close friends.
My parents, David and Sue Pak, have been and continue to be my most
enthusiastic supporters. I would not be who I am today without their love,
guidance, discipline, and praise. Though I have dedicated this work to my
husband, they should know that it is in so many ways equally theirs. I also want
to thank other friends who have inquired about the project and awaited its
publication. Here I especially mention my best friend, Ashley; my sister,
Minna; my pastor, Kevin; and my godmothers, Betty and Priscilla. Though
my two daughters, Amelie and Anika, are too young to understand what has
been preoccupying their mother, I also want to thank them for their patience
with me. To my husband, Ken, I dedicate this work. He knows better than
anyone else what this project entailed in its daily journey. You are the joy and
love of my life, the truest of partners, my most cherished companion, my
beloved Presbyterian.
Contents
Abbreviations, xi
Introduction, 3
Conclusion, 125
Notes, 141
Index, 209
This page intentionally left blank
Abbreviations
the reasons that several insist upon his precritical status while others hail him
as the first modern exegete.
Not enough can be said about the crucial importance of the views and
practices of reading and interpreting Scripture for the Protestant Reformation.
All of the excellent books written in the last three decades still cannot capture
the magnitude and breadth of this subject in any single volume, and by no
means, do I claim even to come close to such a feat. Indeed, the statement of
the problem by Richard Muller in the introduction to the essays compiled in
Biblical Interpretation in the Era of the Reformation still remains true: “There are
at present no studies of the history of biblical interpretation in the sixteenth
century comparable in their scope and detail to the work of Margerie on
the patristic period or to the works of Spicq, Smalley, and de Lubac on the
Middle Ages.”6 Yet, I hope in this book to make a modest contribution not only
to the subject of Calvin’s place in the history of biblical exegesis but also to
studies concerning Protestant debates about their relationship to the prior
exegetical tradition, suitable christological interpretations of the Old Testa-
ment, and proper Christian views and uses of Jewish exegesis.
As many readers already know, one of the focal points of the Protestant
challenge to the Roman Catholic theology and practices of their day was the call
for the church to return to Scripture and the forms and practices of the early
apostolic church as laid out in Scripture (particularly the Book of Acts). This
brought about significant changes in the life and worship of the church, includ-
ing, most notably for our purposes here, the shift from the Mass to the preaching
of God’s Word as the centerpiece of the worship service, more vernacular transla-
tions of the Bible, and an emphasis on the education of laypersons, especially in
the domain of biblical knowledge. The call of prima scriptura for some (i.e., a more
correct description of Luther and Calvin) and sola scriptura for others (e.g.,
Anabaptists) voiced the challenge of various Protestant reformers to Roman
Catholic understandings of the authority of tradition and the power of the pope
especially. While Roman Catholics tended to give equal voice to Scripture and
the tradition vested in ordained persons, Protestants wanted Scripture to be the
unquestioningly chief authority on all issues, if not the sole authority.
Yet, Protestants’ appeals to Scripture as a clear and decisive authority soon
became problematized as they increasingly realized that such appeals are first
and foremost to their various interpretations of Scripture—interpretations that
very often exhibited numerous levels of disagreement. Disagreements over the
proper interpretation of Scripture on such matters as the theology and prac-
tices of justification, Eucharist, and baptism became immediately evident in
the early years of reform and are at the heart of the development of separate
confessions of faith, in addition to important other political, economic, and
INTRODUCTION 5
social factors. The history of the exegesis of a set of significant Psalms exam-
ined in this particular study portrays in miniature form how Protestants used
the biblical commentary to set forth specifically Protestant programs of theology
and practice. In other words, Luther, Calvin, and Bucer—each in their own
particular ways—used the Psalms to teach key Protestant doctrines and Protes-
tant understandings of piety and worship. Despite many significant agreements
among them, noteworthy shades of difference or outright disagreements are
equally illuminating.
Moreover, a study of a piece of the history of Christian Old Testament
exegesis, and Psalms exegesis in particular, contains important implications
for the history of Christian-Jewish relations. Within the bounds of this particu-
lar study, issues of the views of Jews and Judaism that emerge from various
Christian readings of the Psalms, as well as Christian practices of christological
interpretation and suitable Christian uses of Jewish exegesis, arise as critically
debated matters. Thus, in this introduction, I first set forth the scope, frame-
work, and thesis of this book and close with a modest account of the significant
role biblical exegesis has played in the history of Christian-Jewish relations.
The Book of Psalms has had a long-standing central place in the worship life
and theological formation of the Christian church. The Protestant reformers
knew this just as well as, or perhaps better than, anyone else. Martin Luther,
John Calvin, and Martin Bucer equally emphasized the vitally formative role
the Psalms play in the Christian life and the life of the church. Martin Luther
turned to the Psalms time and again throughout the crucial stages of his
theological development and emergent reforming program. Both Luther and
Calvin looked upon the Psalms as a Christian handbook or “miniature Bible”
that provided a mirror to teach and reflect the true content and practice of
Christianity.7 Bucer chose to write a commentary on the Psalms under a
pseudonym in hopes of reaching a wider audience and for the purposes
of encouraging the persecuted Protestant churches of France and Lower
Germany.8 Both Bucer and Calvin explicitly used the Psalms for the theological
and spiritual formation of their communities in Strasbourg and Geneva;
indeed, the liturgical life of these communities centered upon the use of
metrical Psalms and the practice of Psalm singing in worship.9 Equally, they
both appealed to the Psalms as the key source by which to teach the character
and practice of Protestant piety—the very piety that is the heart of their
reforming programs.
6 THE JUDAIZING CALVIN
As has been already noted, the era of the Protestant reformations was a
time when the sources of authority for the Christian life and for the life of the
church were questioned and redefined in significant ways. Luther, Bucer, and
Calvin equally, and in their own distinctive ways, called for the primacy of
Scripture over and against the authority of the pope, the Roman Catholic
Church, and an uncritical adoption of the patristic tradition. In their advance-
ment of the superior authority of Scripture, they also held to an optimism
about its perspicuity. Indeed, such clarity of Scripture was often elusive, and
such was true for their readings of the Psalms as well. The proper interpreta-
tion of the Psalms became an area of debate among the Protestant reformers—
a debate in which I believe they each had a deep investment precisely because
of the central place of the Psalms in the theological and spiritual formation and
worship of Christians.
This project aims to explore the history of the interpretation of Psalms 2, 8,
16, 22, 45, 72, 110, and 118. I focus on these because they are the Psalms that
are quoted in the New Testament as literal prophecies of Christ’s incarnation,
passion, resurrection, ascension, and kingdom.10 Thus, this is simply what
I mean by referring to these eight Psalms as “messianic Psalms.” Of course,
among many Christian interpreters, many more Psalms have been read as
literal prophecies of Christ. Yet, Christian interpreters have understood these
eight Psalms as particularly clear in their teachings concerning Christ and
Trinity.11 The first chapter demonstrates that although patristic, medieval,
and late-medieval interpreters of these Psalms do have their own nuances,
their overwhelming consensus is that the literal sense of these eight Psalms is
their prophecies of Christ and their teachings concerning Trinity and the two
natures of Christ.
Because within the scope of a study like this, choices are necessary to make
it a feasible project, the first chapter explores the commentaries of the Gloss,
Denis the Carthusian, Nicholas of Lyra, and Jacques Lefèvre d’Étaples in order
to give a representation of trends and consensus in the antecedent Christian
tradition’s interpretation of these eight Psalms. I have chosen the Gloss be-
cause it provides the readings of Augustine (354–430 CE) and Cassiodorus
(490–585 CE) on the Psalms—both of which had widespread impact on Psalms
reading in the medieval church. I include Nicholas of Lyra and Jacques Le-
fèvred’ Étaples because we know that Martin Luther consulted their Psalms
commentaries; thus, they serve as clear and important backdrops for his
exegesis of the Psalms.12 Finally, Denis the Carthusian is a good representative
of the general consensus on the late-medieval reading of these Psalms, as seen
in the prominence and frequency of his commentaries in monastic libraries
and schools. Of course, scholars will recognize that one particular line of
INTRODUCTION 7
first fifteen hundred years of the church, to medieval sermons Jews were
compelled to hear to try to convince them of the truth of Christianity, one
can see just a few of the negative impacts of this claim.
In the sixteenth-century debate over the proper reading of these eight
Psalms, Hunnius saw precisely this Christian assertion of the fulfillment of
Old Testament prophecy by Jesus Christ as being weakened. This particular set
of Psalms was understood as containing especially clear and strong prophecies
of Christ as the promised Messiah; they were part of the exegetical mainstay of
Christian claims about Jesus Christ. Thus, Calvin was performing no small
feat when he made the christological content of these texts secondary to their
reading concerning David. On the other hand, I want to suggest that perhaps
Christians can see in Calvin’s reading of these texts one possible way of reading
them that still maintains a kind of christological center while also avoiding
much of the anti-Judaism that has tended to accompany many premodern
Christian readings of these Psalms.23
A second way that biblical exegesis has affected Christian-Jewish relations
over the centuries is the use of the biblical text by Christians to disinherit Jews
and Judaism. This is saying something more than simply the fulfillment of Old
Testament prophecy by Jesus Christ, for it proceeds from this point to argue
that the promises of God now no longer belong to the Israel Jews and Judaism
embody but to the Israel now embodied by the church. This includes seeing
the prophecy of Matt 24:1–2,24 as well as various Old Testament prophecies
about the coming judgment of Judah and Israel, as being fulfilled in the
destruction of Jerusalem and the second temple by the Roman army under
the Emperor Titus in 70 CE in order to argue that these events represent
the punishment of Jews and their abandonment by God. Classic studies
that highlight this development within Christian theology include James
W. Parkes’s The Conflict of the Church and the Synagogue, Rosemary Radford
Ruether’s Faith and Fratricide, and Jeffrey Siker’s Disinheriting the Jews.25 While
I might want to still argue that Christian claims to scriptural promises again do
not necessitate the disinheriting of Jews and Judaism (for one could claim the
promises and not also make the additional move that they can no longer belong
to Jews and Judaism), the fact of the matter is that such claims historically,
more often than not, have had exactly that adjacent purpose. Exegetically, this
might be expressed both in a pervasive prophecy-fulfillment schema, where
Old Testament prophecy is fulfilled in Jesus Christ and in the experience of the
Christian church, and in typological readings of Scripture, where what is
foreshadowed in the Old Testament finds its fulfillment in the New Testament.
A third way that biblical interpretation has had a bearing on Christian-Jewish
relations involves the use of scriptural passages to depict particular negative
INTRODUCTION 11
images of Jews and Judaism. Biblical passages from both the Old and New
Testaments have been used to portray Judaism as a dead religion that is
concerned merely with ceremony and law or as a religion of “works righteous-
ness.” Indeed, we will see that this is one of Luther’s uses of these eight Psalms.
Texts such as Ps 78:8 and Is 48:4 have been used by Christian exegetes to depict
Jews as a stubborn, obstinate people, and Is 42:19–20 and particular verses in
Exodus have been employed to represent Jews and Judaism as blind, deaf, stiff-
necked, and resolutely unbelieving.26 Harsh New Testament texts such as Jn
8:39–47 that describe the Jews as liars and children of the devil have been the
basis of treatises such as Martin Luther’s On the Jews and Their Lies.27
Several Christian exegetes of the eight Psalms considered in this study
have conjured such images of Jews and Judaism already mentioned here, but
even more common is the depiction of Jews as the crucifiers of Christ and,
more generally, as the enemies of Christ and the church. These eight messian-
ic Psalms in particular evoke from the Christian antecedent tradition the
portrayal of Jews as the enemies and crucifiers of Christ, for such is the
consequence of reading them as pure prophecies of Christ’s passion and
resurrection, especially. Luther retains this tradition and redeploys it in a
reading strategy whereby he uses Jewish attributes and practices as the proto-
typical definition of the “enemy” of Christ and the church and thereby aligns
Roman Catholicism with these attributes and practices to recast Roman Catho-
lics as the contemporary enemies of Christ and the church. John Calvin, on the
other hand, in not reading these as pure prophecies of Christ’s passion,
resurrection, and ascension, does not retain this delineation of Jews as the
enemies of Christ and the church. On the contrary, Calvin elevates biblical
Jews, such as David, as supremely positive examples for the church’s imitation.
Though I by no means mean to argue that Calvin fully escapes the anti-
Judaism of his time (for he certainly does not), I do find in his exegesis of
these eight Psalms a powerful alternative nonetheless.
Fourth, biblical exegesis itself has been an important point of contact
between Christians and Jews. At several moments in this history, Christian
exegetes have sought out Jewish rabbis for the purposes of learning or improv-
ing Hebrew language skills, acquiring better knowledge of the historical
context of a passage, and/or gaining a clearer understanding of the peshat, or
“plain sense,” of the biblical text. We see such points of contact in the works of
Origen, Jerome, Nicholas of Lyra, Andrew of St. Victor, and Martin Bucer in
particular. The questions of the usefulness of knowing the Hebrew language
and the usefulness of Jewish exegesis are both key issues that arise in the
interpretive history of these eight Psalms. Luther affirms the usefulness of
Hebrew but condemns Christian consultation with Jewish exegesis. Bucer
12 THE JUDAIZING CALVIN
explicitly uses Jewish exegesis and finds great value in it as a tool for Christian
exegesis, for he contends that such a tool helps to anchor Christian readings in
the historical sense and makes Christian readings more defensible before the
Jews.28 I argue and demonstrate that although Calvin does not use Jewish
exegesis overtly in the manner of Martin Bucer, he is very much using Jewish
exegesis and much of it quite positively.
Fifth, I should at least note that exegesis was also one of the crucial arenas
in which Judaism defended itself and expressed strong polemic against Chris-
tianity. The Psalms commentaries, in particular, are a good source of Jewish
polemic against Christianity, particularly against Christian interpretations of
them in reference to Jesus Christ.29 Among the Jewish interpreters considered
in this study, David Kimhi rises to prominence, for his exegeses of Psalms 2, 7,
15, 19, 22, 72, and 110 all contain significant anti-Christian polemic—particu-
larly polemic against Christian uses of these Psalms to teach Trinity, the two
natures of Christ, and the claim of Jesus as the Messiah.30 Martin Bucer was
clearly aware of this polemic, as the study of his commentary shows. Hence, it
is my hope that this book will not only contribute to the field of Reformation
studies, and to Calvin studies in particular, but also be seen as having some
input concerning the long-standing place that biblical exegesis has inhabited in
the history of Christian-Jewish relations.
1
Medieval and Late-Medieval
Interpreters
The Legacy of Literal Prophecies of Christ
themes, while also pointing out the various nuances and distinctions bet-
ween the authors along the way. First and foremost are their common
readings of these eight Psalms as literal prophecies of Christ. The
overriding consensus is that the primary, literal sense of these Psalms is
their christological meaning. There is also a discernible increasingly em-
phatic insistence on reading these Psalms as prophecies of Christ over and
against Jewish readings of them.
The primary reading of the messianic Psalms by the interpreters in the Glossa
Ordinaria, Nicholas of Lyra, Denis the Carthusian, and Jacques Lefèvre d’Éta-
ples is to see them as literal prophecies of Christ’s incarnation, suffering,
crucifixion, resurrection, exaltation, and future kingdom. Indeed, the Gloss,
Denis the Carthusian, and Lefèvre give no reading of any of these Psalms
within the history of David at all; instead, the historical context is literally the
history of Christ’s earthly life and future kingdom. Thus, Denis the Carthusian
states explicitly that the literal sense of all of these Psalms is their mean-
ing concerning Christ,3 and he writes on the second Psalm, “No Christian
interpretation to explain the literal sense of this psalm is suitable or allowed
unless it is interpreted concerning Christ.”4 Even Nicholas of Lyra—despite
all the emphasis on his readings of Old Testament books in their original
historical settings—clearly states in his exegesis of these eight messianic
Psalms that they speak of Christ ad litteram.5 Indeed, while Lyra acknowledges
the possibility of referring the Psalm to David (or Solomon), in every case
except one, he rejects these readings in favor of the christological interpreta-
tion.6 Jacques Lefèvre, on the other hand, gives a reading of them solely
as prophecies of Christ’s suffering, crucifixion, resurrection, ascension, and
future kingdom, and he explicitly argues against any reading that is not
christological.7 Hence, the literal sense for these interpreters is its reading
as a literal prophecy of Christ. Any mention of David concerns his role as a
prophet who foresees Christ, with a particular emphasis on the clarity of David’s
foresight.8
Thus, time and again, the Gloss, Lyra, Denis, and Lefèvre read these
eight messianic Psalms as prophecies of Christ’s incarnation, suffering, cruci-
fixion, resurrection, exaltation, and kingdom. In this way, Psalm 2 is a prophe-
cy of the rebellion against Christ that leads to his crucifixion and eventual
triumph in his resurrection. The kings and princes who “take counsel together
against the Lord and his anointed” (Ps 2:2) are Herod, Pilate, and the Jewish
MEDIEVAL AND LATE - MEDIEVAL INTERPRETERS 15
leaders rising up against Christ in his passion (Ps 2:1–2), and the latter
half of the Psalm speaks of the promise of Christ’s resurrection (Ps 2:4, 6)
and eventual triumph over his enemies (Ps 2:7–9).9 Psalm 8 for these
commentators speaks of Christ’s incarnation and passion, triumphal entry
into Jerusalem, ascension, and the eventual triumph and dominion of his
kingdom, so that “you have made him a little lower” (Ps 8:5a) indicates Christ’s
passion, and the crowning with glory and honor (Ps 8:5b) designates his
resurrection and ascension. Furthermore, “babes and sucklings” (Ps 8:2)
are the children who honored Christ upon his entry into Jerusalem, the
“enemy and avenger” (Ps 8:2) are the Jewish chief priests and scribes who
rebuked these children, and the remainder (Ps 8:6–8) portrays Christ’s king-
dom and dominion.10
Similarly, the Gloss, Lyra, Denis, and Lefèvre read Psalm 16 as containing
prophecies of Christ’s passion and resurrection, and they view this Psalm as
Christ’s prayer for protection during his passion. Lyra argues that “I will say to
the Lord, ‘You are my Lord’” (Ps 16:2) is fulfilled when Christ calls out to God,
“My God, my God” on the cross; the Gloss teaches that “I will bless the Lord”
(Ps 16:7) designates Christ’s thanksgiving to the Father for the resurrection. All
four apply the assurances of Ps 16:9–10—that his body will rest secure and that
he will not be given up to Sheol or see corruption—to the promise of the
resurrection.11 In addition, Lyra and Denis identify the “kidneys” that rebuke
in Ps 16:7 with the Jews who mock Christ.12
Not surprisingly, the Gloss, Lyra, Denis, and Lefèvre also interpret Psalm
22 as a testimony of Christ’s crucifixion. The Gloss quotes the statement by
Cassiodorus—and Denis repeats it—that the passion “is described in such apt
terms that it is expressed not so much as prophecy but as history.”13 Hence, Ps
22:12–21 describes the various sufferings of Christ, such as the encircling of
the bulls or the dogs, feeling like he is poured out like water or his strength has
dried up, the piercing of his hands and feet, and the bartering over his clothes.
The Jews, for these interpreters, appear as the persecutors of Christ, so that
they are identified as the “strong bulls” that surround him (Ps 22:12), the ones
who mock him (Ps 22:13, 17), the “dogs” and the “company of evildoers”
(Ps 22:16), and the ravening and roaring lion that seeks to devour him
(Ps 22:13, 21). Other figures in Psalm 22, such as the melting wax (Ps 22:14)
and the bones that are counted (Ps 22:17), refer to the disciples who fled
Christ’s trial and crucifixion. The last half of the Psalm, however, predicts the
resurrection and triumph of Christ. Thus, the request “deliver my soul from
the sword” (Ps 22:20) points to Christ’s resurrection.14
These interpreters commonly read Psalm 45 as an allegory of Christ and
the church through the figures of the bride and bridegroom, and they find
16 THE JUDAIZING CALVIN
Not only are these eight Psalms consistently read as literal prophecies of Christ
but also one can discern over time an increasingly emphatic insistence upon
reading them as such. This begins with Nicholas of Lyra’s arguments for the
primacy of the christological reading and moves to Denis the Carthusian’s goal
to make these christological readings defensible before the Jews. This growing
emphasis culminates in Jacques Lefèvre’s insistence that these Psalms be read
solely as literal prophecies of Christ.
Similarly, Lyra argues for the reading of Psalm 110 concerning Christ ad
litteram based on the New Testament use of the Psalm and the fact that the
ancient Jewish expositors also interpreted it concerning the Messiah.23
18 THE JUDAIZING CALVIN
Denis the Carthusian refers to Lyra’s defense of the primacy of the christologi-
cal reading in his comments on Psalms 2 and 118. Denis, however, more
strongly demonstrates a concern to give christological readings that are defen-
sible before the Jews. He emphatically insists that their literal sense must be
Christ, because only the literal sense is suitable as a proof of faith. Thus, on
Psalm 2, Denis reiterates Lyra’s point that the early rabbis read this Psalm
concerning the Messiah and that it was only later interpreted concerning David
in order to refute the Christian readings. He contends, with Lyra, that the
original rabbinic use of Psalm 2, along with its use in Acts 4:25–26 and Heb 1:5
by the apostles, demonstrates that its literal sense concerns Christ. Thus, Denis
insists that the literal sense of Psalm 2 is Christ, with a particular concern to
buttress this reading in the face of Jewish criticisms.26
Likewise, in his opening comments on Psalm 118, he argues that its literal
sense is its christological reading and that this must be so in order to use it as a
biblical text as a proof of faith against the Jews. He writes, “But a proof is not
strong unless it is from the literal sense, especially for the Jews who do not
receive [an interpretation] unless it is the literal sense.”27 Thus, Denis not only
argues resolutely that these Psalms must be interpreted ad litteram of Christ
MEDIEVAL AND LATE - MEDIEVAL INTERPRETERS 19
2:17–18, Mal 1:11, Ps 142:5, Ps 26:12, and Ps 26:3 and their fulfillment as seen
in such passages as Lk 10:19 and Lk 10:22.32 Finally, Lefèvre’s harmony of
Psalm 22 with the rest of Scripture is packed full of parallels with the Gospel
narrative accounts of Christ’s suffering and crucifixion and other Old Testa-
ment prophecies of the passion.33
Just as significant as Lefèvre’s profound emphasis on reading these
Psalms as purely prophecies of Christ is his even more unyielding insistence
that any interpretation of these Psalms concerning David and his time cannot
be their proper reading. Coupled with this is Lefèvre’s ardent claim that
Christians cannot ever rely on Jewish interpreters to teach the true literal
sense of a text, particularly the Psalms. In the preface to his Psalms commen-
tary, he writes that the Jews are blind interpreters of Scripture, which can be
especially seen when they apply the Psalms to David himself.34 Lefèvre avers,
concerning Jews and Jewish exegesis,
Finally, Lefèvre also argues that his commentary more succinctly and accurate-
ly uncovers the simple, literal sense intended by the divine author than the
commentaries of the church fathers before him. Whereas previous church
fathers have worked with multiple senses, Lefèvre believes that he has clearly
demonstrated the one true sense intended by the Holy Spirit.36
One can observe a trend toward an increasing emphasis not only upon the
proper, singular, literal sense of these Psalms as pure prophecies of Christ but
also upon a concern to protect Christian christological readings of these
Psalms over and against Jewish readings and criticisms. Nicholas of Lyra
demonstrates the positive use of Jewish exegesis to serve Christian purposes;
indeed, he appeals to Jewish exegesis to support christological readings.
Denis follows this but adds a more explicit concern to defend Christian read-
ings against Jewish criticisms. Lefèvre goes beyond Lyra and Denis in both
his resolute interpretation of these Psalms as literal prophecies of Christ and his
insistence that Jewish interpreters and exegesis cannot reveal the Spirit’s true
intention of a passage and thus should never be used by Christian exegetes.
MEDIEVAL AND LATE - MEDIEVAL INTERPRETERS 21
Although the primary, literal reading of these eight Psalms for the Gloss, Lyra,
Denis, and Lefèvre is as a literal prophecy of Christ, for all of these interpreters the
prophecies in these Psalms not only apply to Christ but also often to the church as
Christ’s body. These readings—which I will call ecclesial readings—include not
only prophecies concerning the church but also pastoral messages of comfort and
exhortations. The importance placed on these ecclesial readings demonstrates
the understanding of these commentators that christological readings are inti-
mately tied to ecclesial readings, for the body of Christ is the church, where Christ
is the head and those in the church are members of his body.37
while the “delights” in God’s right hand (Ps 16:11) are God’s favors shown to the
church.43 Similarly, Lyra and Denis read Psalm 110 in reference to the elect and
the promise of a church triumphant in the rule of Christ.44 Psalms 45 and 72,
in particular, provide vivid depictions of the church, according to our commen-
tators. Psalm 45, for all our interpreters, is a description of the marriage of
Christ with the church. Thus, the royal scepter of equity (Ps 45:6) is not only
the scepter by which Christ rules but also the scepter by which the church
rules. The church is the “queen” (Ps 45:9) who is adorned with charity and
diverse gifts and graces of the Holy Spirit.45 Psalm 72 depicts, for them all, the
founding of the kingdom of Christ, the church. Thus, the “mountains” of Ps
72:3 are the leaders of the church, and the “moon” that endures throughout all
generations represents the perpetuity of Christ’s church on earth.46 Hence, for
the Gloss, Lyra, Denis, and occasionally Lefèvre, these eight Psalms not only
contain prophecies of Christ’s passion, resurrection, ascension, and future
kingdom but also give the church several models of faithful prayer in times
of tribulation (i.e., the church militant) and prophesy the institution and
practices of the church that will reign with Christ (i.e., the church triumphant).
Moreover, these Psalms provide depictions of the gifts bestowed on the church
through Christ.
The Gloss particularly finds messages of comfort and exhortation for the
church in these Psalms, as do Lyra and Denis. In the Gloss, for example,
Psalm 2 encourages the church to take comfort in the laughter of God (Ps 2:4)
and know that their enemies plot in vain. Likewise, Psalm 22 comforts the
church in its suffering by demonstrating how to pray and trust in God during
adversity. In this same way, the promises of Psalm 118 provide messages of
comfort for the church that God is its helper and that it will eventually triumph
over its enemies.47 Denis, too, offers a message of comfort and exhortation to
the church through the example of Christ’s prayer in the Twenty-second Psalm.
He writes that this Psalm is written “for our instruction, namely, that we not
become weary or despair when we are not immediately heard or seen by God,
but from the example of Christ we will submit and entrust ourselves to the
pleasant goodwill of the Creator because he cares for us.” Likewise, Denis sees
in the account of Christ’s sufferings a moral teaching that the church should
ponder Christ on the cross as a means of overcoming temptations.48
For the Gloss, and for Lyra as well, these Psalms also give exhortations to
the church to call and instruct it toward faithful and righteous living. Thus, the
statement “I have established my king” teaches that one should not be blindly
MEDIEVAL AND LATE - MEDIEVAL INTERPRETERS 23
ruled by oneself but be instructed by the Lord. Similarly, Psalm 16 teaches the
church through the example of Christ how to avoid sin by “setting the Lord
always in [one’s] sight” (verse 8). Moreover, the Gloss finds in Psalm 110
instruction concerning the true nature of faith—that faith is believing in things
not yet seen. Finally, Psalm 118 instructs the church to trust in God alone and
to practice the true praise of God.49
Even more pronounced than the ecclesial readings of the messianic Psalms,
the Gloss, Lyra, Lefèvre, and Denis emphasize the doctrinal teachings
contained in them concerning the two natures of Christ, Trinity, the virgin
birth and the significance of Eucharist. All of these commentators especially
accentuate the doctrines of the two natures of Christ and the Trinity in their
readings of these Psalms. Although all four of these sources stress the doctrine
of the virgin birth, this doctrine displays distinctive prominence in the exegesis
of Denis the Carthusian. Eucharistic echoes found in certain verses of these
Psalms are particularly stressed in the readings of Lyra and Denis.
The Gloss, Lyra, Denis, and Lefèvre apply many of the descriptions in these
Psalms to expound on the two natures of Christ. For example, on Psalm 2,
Denis asserts that God the Father speaks to the human nature of Christ in such
phrases as “I have set my king” (Ps 2:6) and “ask of me” (Ps 2:8). On the other
hand, the statement to Christ by God the Father, “You are my son” (Ps 2:7),
speaks of Christ’s divinity.50 All of our commentators also find clear teachings
of Christ’s human and divine natures in Psalm 8. The phrases “you have set
your glory above the heavens” (Ps 8:1) and “who is man that you are mindful of
him” (Ps 8:4) indicate Christ’s divinity, whereas the phrases “the son of man”
(Ps 8:4) and “you have made him lower” (Ps 8:5) indicate Christ’s humanity, as
does the dominion that is given to Christ’s humanity (Ps 8:6–8).51
Though our four sources do not exactly agree on what portions of Psalm 16
signify Christ’s divine and human natures, they do all agree that such teaching
is present therein. The Gloss interprets the requests for protection in Psalm 16
(Ps 16:1, 7) as proceeding from Christ’s human nature, while the promise of
the resurrection (Ps 16:9–10) indicates his divinity.52 Nicholas of Lyra sees the
teaching of the inseparability of Christ’s divine and human natures in the
phrase “because he is at my right hand” (Ps 16:8).53 According to Denis, Christ
24 THE JUDAIZING CALVIN
in his human nature says, “You are my God” (Ps 16:2) and “my chosen portion
and cup” (Ps 16:5), whereas God as always before him and at his right hand (Ps
16:8) depicts Christ in his divine nature, united to God as one.54 Lefèvre, on the
other hand, points to “my flesh” (Ps 16:9) as indicating Christ’s humanity.55
For all our interpreters, it is Christ’s human nature that cries out in the
Twenty-second Psalm. They all view the “deer” in the title of this Psalm,
“according to the deer of the dawn,” as an image of Christ’s humanity.56
Although their readings of Psalm 22 tend to highlight Christ’s human na-
ture,57 their interpretations of Psalm 110 contain a clear emphasis on Christ’s
divine nature. According to the Gloss, “sit at my right hand” (Ps 110:1) indicates
the glory of Christ’s humanity, and “the scepter of power” (Ps 110:2) and “with
you is the beginning” (Ps 110:3) designate Christ’s divinity.58 For Lyra, Christ is
called “Lord” (Ps 110:1) and “rules” (Ps 110:2) and “judges” (Ps 110:6) by virtue
of his divinity.59 For Denis, “The Lord says to my lord” (Ps 110:1) are the words
of God the Father to God the Son, who is “Lord” according to his divinity and
“son” according to his humanity. Likewise, Denis understands “sit at my right
hand” (Ps 110:1) as indicating Christ’s equality with God the Father.60 For
Lefèvre, Psalm 110 predominantly speaks of the divine nature of Christ, though
his human nature may be seen in the allusions to his virgin birth (Ps 110:3,
“from the womb of the morning”) and to his passion (Ps 110:7, “he will drink
from the stream”). Psalm 118 also contains a few depictions of Christ’s human-
ity and divinity for the Gloss and Lyra. For both the Gloss and Lyra, the
expression “you are my God” (Ps 118:28) points to the deity of Christ, and for
Lyra Ps 118:20 also speaks of Christ’s two natures.61
Psalms 45 and 72 explode with imagery of the two natures of Christ, accord-
ing to these interpreters. The doubled description of the bridegroom in Psalm 45
designates the two natures of Christ. The Gloss teaches that in the phrase “your
comeliness and beauty” (Ps 45:3), “comeliness” refers to Christ’s humanity and
“beauty” refers to his divinity.62 For Lyra and Denis, the eternity of Christ’s throne
(Ps 45:6) indicates his divine nature, and the anointing by God (Ps 45:7) indicates
Christ’s humanity.63 In Psalm 72, the Gloss, Lyra, and Denis all read the requests
Christ makes as indicating his human nature, whereas the descriptions of the
authority, dominion, eternity, and power of his kingdom indicate his divine
nature.64 Moreover, these same three interpret the “sun” and “moon” in Ps 72:5
as depicting Christ’s divinity and humanity, respectively.65
Trinity
The Gloss, Lyra, Denis, and Lefèvre also find clear descriptions of the persons
and workings of the Trinity within these Psalms. For example, the declaration
MEDIEVAL AND LATE - MEDIEVAL INTERPRETERS 25
of Ps 2:7, “You are my son; today I have begotten you,” describes the cosub-
stantiality of the Son and the Father and the eternal generation of the Son by
the Father.66 Likewise, our commentators use portions of Psalm 8 to depict the
Trinity. The Gloss and Lefèvre find the action of the Trinity in “the work of your
fingers” (Ps 8:3), which expresses the cooperation of the Father, Son, and Holy
Spirit. Similarly, Denis understands in Ps 8:1 (“you have set your glory above
the heavens”) a depiction of the workings of the Trinity, where Christ ascends
to God the Father and sends the Holy Spirit to the apostles and the church.67
For Denis, “because he is at my right hand” (Ps 16:8) depicts not only Christ’s
divinity but also the unity of the persons of the Trinity; for Lefèvre, the
dominion of Ps 8:6–8 and the inheritance of Ps 16:5–6 indicate that the Son
receives all things from the Father.68
On Psalm 22, several of our commentators specifically argue that Christ is
speaking to the Father in this Psalm,69 whereas on Psalm 45, the Gloss, Denis,
and Lefèvre all underscore the Trinitarian meaning of the phrases in Ps 45:1 of
the “good word,” “I speak,” and the “pen writing swiftly” by applying them to
Christ the Word, through whom the Father speaks and begets the Word.70
Furthermore, all four understand the justice and righteousness given to the
king’s son (Ps 72:1) as the authority to judge that God the Father gives to Christ
the Son. Likewise, they all give Trinitarian readings to Ps 72:5 (“May he live
while the sun endures”) and Ps 72:17 (“May his name endure forever, his fame
continue as long as the sun”), where these demonstrate Christ’s coeternity with
the Father, his eternal generation, and his preexistence before creation.71
Finally, all of these interpreters see Psalm 110 as full of Trinitarian teach-
ings. God the Father speaks to God the Son in the first verse of this Psalm, “The
Lord says to my Lord.” Furthermore, the act of sitting at God’s right hand (Ps
110:1) depicts Christ’s equality and coeternity with the Father. They all argue
that Ps 110:3—regardless of its proper translation (whether it is “with you is the
beginning” or “from the womb of the morning”)—points to the coeternity,
unity, coexistence, and inseparability of God the Father and God the Son.72
These Psalms not only teach the doctrines of the two natures of Christ and the
Trinity for our exegetes considered here, they also affirm the virgin birth of
Christ. Specifically, the mentions of the womb contained in these Psalms (Ps
22:9–10 and Ps 110:3) evoke the image of Christ’s virgin birth.73 The Gloss cites
Cassiodorus’s interpretation of Ps 45:4 as “Come forth from the womb of the
virgin”—an interpretation that Denis the Carthusian also maintains.74 Further-
more, the “rain that falls on the mown grass” and the “showers that water the
26 THE JUDAIZING CALVIN
earth” (Ps 72:6) are figures pointing to the virgin birth, according to the Gloss,
Lyra, Denis, and Lefèvre.75 As the Gloss states:
Hence, the Gloss’s reading upholds not only the doctrine of the virgin birth of
Christ but also Mary’s perpetual virginity—an emphasis that Denis later takes
up more fully.
Indeed, Denis highlights the depictions of Christ’s virgin birth found in
these Psalms far more frequently than our other commentators. Moreover, he
uses these passages to emphasize teachings concerning the Virgin Mary
herself. Thus, he interprets Ps 22:9–10 not simply about the virgin birth but
more pointedly to accentuate the enduring nature of Mary’s virginity and intact
womb.77 Likewise, Denis finds an allusion to Mary’s perpetual virginity in the
word until of Ps 110:1 (“Sit at my right hand until I make your enemies your
footstool”). He argues that this “until” does not mean that Christ ceases to sit at
God’s right hand once the enemies are placed under his feet, for Christ is
eternally seated at the right hand of God; rather, says Denis, this “until” is a
customary use in Scripture that “points to and includes all times.” Such an
understanding of “until” applies, then, also to Mary’s perpetual virginity:
Just as Matthew affirms that Joseph did not know Mary until Christ was
born, it is certain that afterwards he did not know her. For if in this manner
the mother of the only begotten Son of God was understood to cohabit,
that would mean that she knows unworthiness. Thus, even while Mary
was living with Joseph, still she did not come near to unworthiness.78
Hence, Denis parallels the perpetuity of Christ’s sitting at the right hand of
God with the perpetuity of Mary’s virginity.
Furthermore, Denis interprets Psalm 45 not only as an allegory of Christ’s
marriage to the church or the faithful soul but also concerning the connection
between Christ and the Virgin Mary. He argues that the “queen” described in
Ps 45:9–15 represents not only the church or the faithful soul but also the
divine virgin. Therefore, this text concerns Queen Mary, who sits at Christ’s
MEDIEVAL AND LATE - MEDIEVAL INTERPRETERS 27
right hand in golden robes. Indeed, he asserts that this is the better reading of
this passage, “for she is the only and highest Queen, always standing at the
right hand of the Son himself.” Hence, Denis upholds not only the perpetual
virginity of Mary but also her status as coredemptrix with Christ. Queen Mary,
he writes, “most ardently chooses that the death and blood of Christ the Son be
made fruitful” for the church.79
Sacrament of Eucharist
Certain phrases and images in these Psalms call forth references to the
sacrament of Eucharist in the exegeses of the Gloss, Lyra, Denis, and Lefèvre.
These references are more pronounced in the interpretations of Lyra and
Denis, which is not surprising, given the intensified centrality of the Eucharist
for medieval worship. For all the interpreters, the phrases “I will pay my vows”
and “the poor shall eat” of Ps 22:25–26 elicit a Eucharistic interpretation.80
The mention of Melchizedek in Ps 110:4 also evokes a connection to the
Eucharist—just as Melchizedek brought out bread and wine (Gen 14:18), so
Christ offers his body and blood. Finally, the altar in Ps 118:27 summons up for
the Gloss and Lyra an association with the Eucharistic altar, and Lyra and
Denis see an allusion to the sacrament in the “gates of righteousness” of Ps
118:19–20. Lefèvre, on the other hand, points out that the words of Ps 118:26
(“Blessed is the one who comes in the name of the Lord”) are said over the
elements during the celebration of the sacrament.81
Lyra, Denis, and Lefèvre find an indication of the Eucharist in Ps 72:16,
though they disagree on the proper translation of this verse. Lyra prefers the
translation of Ps 72:16 as “abundance of grain” and uses this to refer to
the Eucharist. Thus, “may it wave on the tops of the mountains” refers to the
elevation of the host above the heads of the priests. Denis provides the various
translations of Ps 72:16 as “abundance of grain,” “memorial wheat,” or “cake of
wheat” and understands, in all of these, depictions of the sacrament. Likewise,
the rest of the verse (“may it wave on the tops of the mountains”) is a
description of the elevation of the host, and “may the people blossom in the
cities” (Ps 72:16), says Denis, describes Christians who, after going out from
receiving the sacrament, then “spiritually blossom in grace.”82
Conclusions
Although there are clear, shared christological, doctrinal, and ecclesial em-
phases, I have also tried to point to some important trends in this exegetical
history. Especially crucial to keep in mind is the growing emphasis on reading
these Psalms as pure prophecies of Christ over and against Jewish historical
readings of them. Such a trend can be traced from Lyra’s positive use of Jewish
exegesis to support Christian christological readings, to Denis’s emphasis that
the christological sense must be the literal sense in order for it to be more
defensible before the Jews, and then to Lefèvre’s sharp rejection of the useful-
ness of Jewish exegesis for Christian interpretation. These trends toward an
insistence on the christological sense and a more negative view of the useful-
ness of Jewish exegesis are both crucial backdrops to Reformation readings of
these eight Psalms.
Moreover, one must ask which aspects of the Christian tradition’s inter-
pretation of these Psalms a Protestant reformer might be maintaining, rein-
terpreting, or even disregarding. We will find that Luther preserves the
predominant voice of this tradition in his readings of these Psalms as literal
prophecies of Christ’s incarnation, passion, resurrection, ascension, and king-
dom and in his use of these Psalms to teach the doctrines of Trinity and the two
natures of Christ. Bucer, while he maintains many of these readings as
prophecies of Christ, equally or more so emphasizes the ecclesial readings of
these Psalms. Calvin’s exegesis of these Psalms, on the other hand, will
demonstrate some very significant and revealing departures from the inter-
pretations of the medieval and late-medieval Christian tradition and even from
his own sixteenth-century contemporaries.
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2
Martin Luther
Literal Prophecies Redeployed
commented on Psalms 82, 111, 117, and 118 in 1530 and on Psalm 101 in 1534.
Luther gave lectures on Psalms 2, 51, and 45 in the spring and summer of 1532, on
Psalm 90 in 1534–1535, and on Psalm 23 in 1535, and he preached on Psalms
8 and 110 in 1535. As Heinrich Bornkamm has noted, the majority of Luther’s
career as a lecturer was devoted to the Old Testament, and the majority of his
sermon texts came from the books of Psalms and Genesis, for Luther believed
that among the Old Testament books, these most clearly witnessed to the gospel.2
Martin Luther frequently proclaimed that the Book of Psalms is like a
Christian handbook, containing all the necessary principles and examples to
guide Christian living. In his Preface to the Psalter (1531), he writes that Psalms
“might very well be called a little Bible,” for everything contained in the Bible
may be found in the Psalter. He praises the Book of Psalms for the clarity with
which it prophesies the death and resurrection of Christ, presents the human
condition of sinner in need of grace, and exemplifies saintly words and actions
in every situation of life. He concludes, “In sum, if you wish to see a picture of
the holy Christian Church, presented in miniature and set forth with vivid
colors and in lively figures, take the Psalter; there you will have a bright, clear,
excellent mirror that will show you what Christianity is.”3 For Luther, the
Psalms provide a gaze into the hearts of saints, in which Christians could
find a pattern for how they should conduct themselves toward God, friends,
and foes. Moreover, the Psalms teach the central doctrines of the gospel.
Martin Luther especially affirmed the clarity and beauty of certain Psalms
in particular, those often identified as the messianic Psalms. He describes
Psalm 2 as an “extraordinary psalm” because of its teaching of Christ as king
and priest and because it was the first prayer of the church (Acts 4:25–26).
Similarly, Psalms 8 and 45 are two of the most beautiful Psalms because of their
outstanding descriptions of Christ’s person and kingdom.4 Concerning Psalm
110, Luther proclaims: “Here, as nowhere else in the Old Testament Scriptures,
we find a clear and powerful description of His [Christ’s] person . . . and His
resurrection, ascension, and entire kingdom.”5 Moreover, Luther called Psalm
118 his “own beloved psalm,” for he writes that it “proved a friend” to him in the
midst of many great troubles.6
Given the vital importance of the Psalms for his life and theology, I focus
on Luther’s contribution to the history of exegesis of our eight selected messi-
anic Psalms. I analyze the chronological development of Luther’s thought by
studying Luther’s exegeses of these Psalms, first in his lectures in the Dictata
super Psalterium (1513–1515), second in his treatment of the selected Psalms in
his Operationes in Psalmos (1518–1521), and third in his exposition of individual
messianic Psalms in the 1530s.7 This examination indicates the importance of
Luther’s historical context to his exposition of the messianic Psalms, especially
MARTIN LUTHER 33
Luther’s interpretations of these eight messianic Psalms are first and foremost
as literal prophecies of Christ. In addition, he does not interpret them in
reference to the historical life of David—not even with David as a type of
Christ.8 Much like the previous exegetical tradition, he refers to David as a
prophet who foresees Christ.9 For Luther, all of these Psalms prophesy Christ
and contain New Testament insight and teachings of the gospel. For example,
Luther interprets Ps 2:7, “You are my Son; today I have begotten You,” as the
decree of the gospel. Psalm 2, then, tells of those who gather against Christ in
vain (Ps 2:3), Christ’s ultimate victory over them in the resurrection (Ps 2:4–5),
Christ’s anointing as king and the receiving of his kingdom (Ps 2:6–8), Christ’s
alien work of judgment to accomplish his proper work of salvation (Ps 2:9),
and the honor and homage due Christ (Ps 2:10–11). Psalms 8 and 110 are both
prophecies that teach the Trinity and the two natures of Christ and foresee
Christ’s crucifixion, resurrection, and coronation. They demonstrate that
Christ’s kingdom is not temporal but spiritual. Furthermore, Psalm 110:4
(“Thou art a priest forever after the order of Melchizedek”) prophesies that
Christ is the promised king of righteousness and the true priest. Psalm 22
34 THE JUDAIZING CALVIN
teaches about the suffering and crucifixion of Christ (Ps 22:1–2, 7–8, 12–18),
the two natures of Christ (Ps 22:6, 9–10, 27–28), the virgin birth (Ps 22:9–10),
his resurrection and triumph over his enemies (Ps 22:24), and his kingdom
(Ps 22:27–29) and people (Ps 22:30–31). Psalm 16, says Luther, is about the
suffering, crucifixion, descent to hell, and resurrection of Christ (especially Ps
16:10), and Psalm 45 is an allegory of the wedding of the bridegroom Christ to
his bride, the church.10 All of these readings are very much in keeping with the
antecedent tradition as set forth in the previous chapter.
Luther also consistently finds particular doctrinal teachings in these eight
Psalms. Again much like the medieval interpreters, he time and again finds
key teachings concerning the Trinity and the two natures of Christ. In the
Dictata, the sun and the moon in Ps 72:5 depict for him the two natures of
Christ, and the phrase “from the womb of the morning” in Ps 110:3 indicates
the coeternity of the Father and Son.11 The doctrinal teaching Luther high-
lights most in his Operationes is the Trinity. Thus, the “Lord and his anointed”
in Ps 2:2 indicates the Sender and the One sent, just as verses 8 and 11 portray
that Christ’s rule is established and guided by the will of the Father.12 He
parallels Ps 8:1 (“You have set your glory above the heavens”) with Jn 7:39 (“For
as yet the Spirit had not been given because Jesus was not yet glorified”) to set
forth the Trinitarian teaching that only when Jesus ascends to the heavens can
the Holy Spirit be sent. Furthermore, he uses the phrase “you have made him a
little lower than God” in Ps 8:5 to explain how Christ may be correctly said to be
lower than God the Father. Luther’s interpretations of Ps 16:6 and Ps 16:11 in
the Operationes, as well, teach that Christ receives everything from the Father.13
In his 1530s commentaries on these Psalms, Luther continues to find key
teachings concerning the Trinity and the two natures of Christ. His 1532 commen-
tary on Psalm 2 begins with an assertion of the two natures of Christ.14 The
commentary based on his 1537 sermon on Psalm 8 also reiterates instruction
concerning the Trinity, the two natures of Christ, and the messianic kingdom.15
He finds an expression of the two natures of Christ in the two different Hebrew
words of Ps 8:1 (“O LORD [EFEJ] our Ruler [PFDA]”) and interprets “the work of
your fingers” of Ps 8:3 as a Trinitarian expression of the gifts of the Spirit.16
Likewise, Luther consistently unearths in his 1530s expositions of Psalm 45,
110, and 118 depictions of the two natures of Christ in their descriptions of the
messianic king.17
Much like the antecedent tradition as well, Luther frequently interprets
these messianic Psalms in reference to the church. He understands in them
specific reference to the church as the people belonging to Christ. Thus, “Zion”
in Ps. 2:6 and “infants and sucklings” and “sheep and oxen” in Ps. 8:2 and 8:7
all signify the church. The “holy ones of the land” (Ps 16:3) are the saints of the
MARTIN LUTHER 35
church, and the church is the Lord’s “chosen portion” and “heritage” (Ps 16:5,
6). Furthermore, the church is the bride of the royal wedding in Psalm 45. The
church is the people of Christ the king of which Ps 110:3 speaks, and the latter
part of this verse—“from the womb of the morning like dew your youth will
come to you”—indicates, says Luther, the whole church, “who are born like dew
through baptism from the virginal womb of the church alone.” Finally, the
victory described in Psalm 118 is not just that of Christ the king, but of his
people, the church, as well.18 All of these readings are notably present in the
antecedent tradition.
Finally, Luther consistently sets forth the Jews as the enemies of Christ and
the church and criticizes the Jews’ inaccurate and vain expectations concerning
the Messiah and his kingdom. Thus the “bonds” of Ps 2:3 are the bonds of the
law to which the Jews cling in their denial of Christ. Furthermore, the Jews are
the ones who “take counsel against the Lord and his anointed” (Ps 2:2) and who
will “perish in the way” (Ps 2:11). Christ will “speak to them in his wrath” (Ps
2:5) and “break them with a rod of iron” (Ps 2:9). While Psalm 8 teaches that
Christ’s kingdom is a spiritual one and not a temporal one, Luther argues that
the Jews continue to look for a messiah with physical and political power.
Likewise, “those who choose another god” (Ps 16:4a), says Luther, are the Jews
who cling to the law and their own righteousness, and Christ will not “take
their names upon [his] lips” (Ps 16:4b). In Psalm 22, Luther specifically names
the Jews as those who mock and shake their heads at Christ (Ps 22:7), and they
are the “ferocious people” who are the “bulls,” “ravenous lion,” and “dogs” who
encircle Christ and the church (Ps 22:12–13, 16). The “pen of a man writing
swiftly” (Ps 45:1) is that of the Holy Spirit speaking the gospel, as opposed to
the Jews (and specifically as opposed to Moses), whose pen is slow and weighed
down by the law. Luther contends that Ps 45:10—“Hear, O daughter, look, and
incline your ear; forget your people and your father’s house”—is directly
admonishing the Jews to recognize that Christ has abrogated their law, priest-
hood, and kingdom. He also maintains that Ps 110:1 (“until I make your
enemies your footstool”) has been literally fulfilled in the Jews, who have
been dispersed and trampled. Luther writes that the Jews’ carnal doctrine is
like a reed compared with Christ’s scepter described in Ps 110:2, and the kings
shattered “on the day of his wrath” (Ps 110:5) indicates the destruction of the
synagogue. He interprets “they surrounded me like bees” (Ps 118:12) as refer-
ring to the Jews who persecuted Christ and the church, but Christ and the
church shall look with triumph upon them (Ps 118:7). Finally, he argues that
Psalm 118 rebukes the Jews for their carnal trust and pride in their law, temple,
sacrifices, and priesthood, for they do not know the gate of righteousness (Ps
118:20), nor do they recognize Christ as the cornerstone (Ps 118:22).19 Indeed,
36 THE JUDAIZING CALVIN
these depictions of the Jews as the defeated enemies of Christ and the church
and these various criticisms of Jews are very much in line with those of the
medieval interpreters of these Psalms.20
Throughout his lifetime, Luther steadfastly locates Christ, the church, and the
Jews as the main players in all of his interpretations of these selected messianic
Psalms. He also consistently employs these Psalms to teach the doctrines of
Trinity and the two natures of Christ. Such interpretations and emphases have
been shown to be in solid agreement with the antecedent tradition. Yet, different
emphases develop and new themes arise as Luther returned to these Psalms over
the years. For one, he moves from an emphatic reading of these Psalms as literal
prophecies of Christ to an increased use of these Psalms to provide instruction
and encouragement to the church. This change in emphasis appears in
two forms: a heightened theme of comfort and an increased use of these Psalms
to teach the true nature of faith and the doctrine of justification by faith alone.
Increasing Comfort
The theme of comfort makes three explicit appearances in Luther’s early
lectures on the Psalms. He interprets the conclusion to Psalm 2 (“happy are
those who take refuge in him”) as an exhortation and comfort to those who
are suffering. Likewise, Ps 118:5 (“Out of my distress I called on the Lord, and
the Lord heard me”) promises Christ’s assistance and deliverance to those who
are persecuted, and later in this same Psalm, the description of the persecutors
as “bees” (Ps 118:12) urges the hearer to patience, for, Luther explains, these
bees can only sting, not kill.21 Yet, this theme of comfort appears with increas-
ing frequency in his Operationes in Psalmos and becomes a dominant theme in
his 1530s commentaries and sermons on these Psalms.
When Luther turns to the Psalms in his 1518 Operationes in Psalmos, every
Psalm is used as a source of comfort and consolation. Moreover, the precise
content of the comfort he offers through these Psalms is quite specific to his
particular context. The first verses of Psalm 2 provide the assurance of Christ’s
ultimate victory (Ps 2:4) over the enemies. Psalm 8:5 (“Who is man that you are
mindful of him, the Son of Man that you care for him?”) is a consolation given
not only to Christ but also to every Christian that just as God did not forget
Christ in his suffering, so God does not forget the church. The promise of
God’s constant presence and guidance (Ps 16:7–8) and the promise of future
MARTIN LUTHER 37
joy (Ps 16:11) in Psalm 16 are also a source of solace for every Christian. Finally,
Psalm 22 exhorts the church to remember God’s past faithfulness in the midst
of its present suffering (Ps 22:4–5) and to trust in God’s deliverance, just as
Christ did (Ps 22:24).22
The theme of comfort blooms in Luther’s 1530s treatment of these eight
Psalms and becomes more personal and specific in content. He exhorts Chris-
tians who follow the reformers’ teachings not to be surprised if the whole world is
in an uproar or if they are opposed. These Psalms prophesy these very things.
Moreover, it is proof that they are truly following Christ, for the enemies, the devil,
and the world will always rise up against Christ and the true church. Thus, they
should be consoled by the fact that these enemies are in actuality the enemies of
Christ, not of them per se, and, argues Luther, they can take comfort in the
promises that Christ fights for them, sustains the church, and always triumphs
in the end. In addition, these Psalms teach the powerful effects of prayer and the
promise of eternal life, so that even death is not the last word. Finally, Luther
frequently declares in his 1530s interpretations of these Psalms that Christ is a
king who “rules over consciences” and that his priestly office is one of comfort.23
The burgeoning employment of the messianic Psalms to provide comfort
in the 1530s comes as no surprise. As scholars have observed, Luther is a
“contextual rather than a systematic theologian, a biblical scholar who felt
constrained to relate his findings to concrete situations relating to the issues
of his age.”24 Historically, the 1530s was a time of struggle to refine and
preserve Reformation objectives in the midst of internal disputes among the
reformers and external strife from the Roman Catholics. It was a time when
consolation was a dire need. For example, Luther’s commentary on Psalm 118
was written in the context of the Diet of Augsburg, when he was in hiding at
the fortress in Coburg. One of the first things he did was have some verses
from the Psalms written on the walls of his room, one of which was Ps 118:17:
“I shall not die, but I shall live and recount the deeds of the Lord.”25
There is also intensified use of these Psalms to give specific teaching on the
nature of faith and the doctrine of justification by faith alone in Luther’s
Operationes and even more so in his 1530s expositions. Although the seedlings
of these doctrines may be found in his first lectures on the Psalms, one does
not find the emphasis on the didactic power of the Psalms until his later
accounts. There is also an even greater accent on the clarity of the teachings
expressed in these eight Psalms. In his later 1530s commentaries, new doctrin-
al teachings concerning faith and justification by faith alone surface as even
38 THE JUDAIZING CALVIN
more important than his consistent use of these Psalms to teach the doctrines
of Trinity and the two natures of Christ.
Thus, in 1532, Luther affirms that Psalm 2:7 sets forth the decree of the
gospel, which is justification by faith alone: “I will tell of the decree of the Lord:
He said to me, ‘You are my Son; today I have begotten you.’” This verse, he
asserts, demonstrates what Christ does for us—justification by faith alone—
and the abolishment of the law.26 Psalm 45, too, gives instruction about the
doctrines of faith and justification, for it is a “poem for teaching spiritual
alertness and arousing to faith,” because it educates the reader about a new
and spiritual king, kingdom, righteousness, and people.27 More specifically,
the king in Psalm 45 (who represents Christ) teaches a life of righteousness
based on promise and faith and not upon works of the law.28 Psalm 118, as well,
instructs the church about the nature of true faith, the proper relationship of
the Christian to temporal kingdoms, and the difference between trust and use:
Here [Ps 118:8–9] David teaches that we should not place our
confidence in even pious princes. . . . We should use and enjoy the
princely office and temporal government for food, protection, and
peace on earth, as God instituted it. But we should not rely, trust, hope,
and boast in them. . . . To trust and to use are two different things. The
former is appropriate to God; the latter is appropriate to creatures.29
This emphasis on not putting one’s trust in princes provides the context for
Luther’s comments to Melanchthon on the Augsburg Confession, which was
drawn up just after Luther finished his commentary on Psalm 118. He tells
Melanchthon that it pleases him, but Melanchthon’s error is that he puts too
much hope in gaining the support of princes, when his hope can be only in
God alone.30
Thus, although Luther remains very much in tune with the antecedent inter-
pretation of these selected messianic Psalms, he also makes some unique con-
tributions to this exegetical tradition that are directly related to his specific context
and theological concerns. First, he uses these Psalms to give comfort to downtrod-
den Reformation churches. Second, he employs these Psalms to teach the true
nature of faith and the doctrine of justification by faith alone. Indeed, Luther’s tone
and style in his later interpretations are much more explicitly pastoral.
The reading strategies Luther employs in his readings of these eight Psalms
also demonstrate both consistency and some important changes over time.
MARTIN LUTHER 39
Luther is well known for his use of certain dichotomies to illuminate the
meaning of Scripture, such as flesh versus spirit, letter versus spirit, and law
versus gospel. Yet, while Luther uses the trope of letter versus spirit continually
in the Dictata, he drops it almost entirely in his later exegesis and replaces it
with the dichotomy of law versus gospel (which he also uses in the Dictata).
Likewise, the trope of flesh versus spirit gradually is replaced by the language
of visible versus invisible or language about God working under contrary
appearances. Rather consistently throughout, all of these reading strategies
are deployed against Jews and Jewish readings of Scripture. Indeed, the central
role of the Jews as an exegetical tool themselves may be seen in Luther’s use of
Jews as the archetype for the enemies of Christ and the church.
In the Dictata, Luther uses the dichotomy of spirit versus letter to differentiate
between the living Word of Scripture, which lifts the believer to spiritual things,
and the sluggish, heavy, dead letter that weighs down the believer toward carnal
things. Thus for Luther the word “heavens” in Ps 8:3 points to the spirit over and
against the letter, for “the Lord has destroyed the letter and the defenders and
zealots of the letter, so that the heavenly spirit and the new church might
be established by the fingers of God.”31 Likewise, in the title of Psalm 45, the
Hebrew term maskil for Luther expresses a rebuke to those who follow the letter,
“since everything in the whole Psalm wants to be spiritually understood.”32 This
negativity attached to the “letter” is also seen in its identification with the Jews.
He denotes the Jews as the “zealots” and followers of the letter and frequently
criticizes them for clinging to carnal readings of Scripture and carnal expecta-
tions of the Messiah. On Psalm 16, Luther writes that Scripture has a twofold
sense: “the veil and clarity, the letter and the spirit, the figure and the truth,
the shadow and the form.”33 Here he identifies the figure or shadow with the
negative concept of the letter and argues for the clarity of the spiritual reading.
For Luther, if one can have the spirit and truth and clarity, then why would one
acquiesce to the letter?34
In his interpretations of the Psalms after the Dictata, however, Luther
drops this interpretive lens of letter versus spirit in favor of the lens of law
versus gospel. One possible reason for this change is his growing appreciation
of the literal sense and the possibility of terminological confusion between
“letter” and “literal sense.”35 Nevertheless, Luther clearly found that the same
ideas understood in the Dictata under the tool of spirit versus letter could be
preserved under the reading strategy of law versus gospel.36 For instance,
Luther uses both letter versus spirit and law versus gospel to explicate the
40 THE JUDAIZING CALVIN
title in Psalm 45 in the Dictata, but he later (1532) explains the title and the
whole Psalm in terms of law versus gospel only. Likewise, in the Dictata on Ps
45:1, he elucidates the difference between “utter” and “pour out” as the distinc-
tion between being content with the letter versus seeking the spirit. He inter-
prets this same verse in 1532 solely in terms of law versus gospel: the law is
uttered, but the gospel is poured out. He then concludes his 1532 comments on
Ps 45:1 by saying, “So throughout the psalm an antithesis is set up with Moses,
or between the law and the gospel.”37
One of the key similarities of Luther’s use of the strategies of spirit versus
letter and law versus gospel is that they are both deployed against the Jews in
his interpretations of the messianic Psalms. Indeed, two of the central motivat-
ing factors in his use of these interpretive devices are demonstrations of the
Jews’ mistaken understanding of Scripture and their resulting rejection by
God. Luther intends to show that the content of these Psalms is Christ and the
gospel, as seen in the clear prophecy and teaching it provides. He often
accomplishes this by contrasting this clarity with the errors of the Jews. Thus
in the Dictata, he warns against being content with, caught in, and weighed
down by the letter. By insisting time and time again that the true content of
these Psalms is spiritual, Luther challenges Jewish interpretation of these
Psalms, which he constantly refers to as carnal.38 Subsequently, in his second
lectures on the Psalms and in his 1530s expositions, he regularly admonishes
the Jews for remaining in the law and failing to see that with Christ the gospel
has come and the law is abolished.39 Thus, the Jews cannot interpret these
Psalms rightly, and they cannot see the true nature of the messianic king and
his kingdom.40 So although Luther’s terminology of letter versus spirit is
replaced by law versus gospel, Luther’s basic purposes of demonstrating the
clarity of the Psalm and the Jews’ culpability in not seeing the true, intended
meaning are retained under both strategies.
hears the echoes of the lens of visible versus invisible that will eventually replace
it. Luther writes that the Jews’ concerns and hopes are only of the flesh (on Ps
16:4) and that the “grace poured on his lips” (Ps 45:2) is Christ’s preaching of
invisible things and not the temporal things the Jews anticipate. Furthermore, in
his comments on Ps 16:7, he draws a contrast between the “manifest, public, and
perceptible” synagogue and the splendid church, whose magnificence is not
entirely visible but remains hidden. Likewise, the Jews are concerned only with
perceptible things, such as the law, righteousness of the flesh, and the letter, while
the law of Christ is spiritual.41
In the Operationes, the tool of visible versus invisible is used less explicitly
against the Jews, while the criticism of the Jews for holding to visible things is
still implied. Moreover, he adds a new aspect: that Christ and his gifts are
revealed under contrary appearances (Ps 2:10). He sees Ps 2:10 as a call to the
Christian to turn away from transitory things toward things eternal, for the life
of faith is not about outward appearances but is “a life hidden in Christ” (Ps
16:3).42 Likewise, in his 1530s treatments of the messianic Psalms, the use of
the reading strategy of visible versus invisible is less polemical against the
Jews. Yet, it is still implied in passages in which Luther expounds that Christ’s
kingdom is established in a way that is a stumbling block to the Jews and
foolishness to the Greeks (1 Cor 1:23, comments on Ps 2:9, 8:2, 110:1), for the
king is hidden under an opposite appearance (Ps 45:2).43
This theme of the revelation of Christ under contrary appearances, along
with the exhortation to look not at what is visible but at what is invisible, rises to
prominence in Luther’s 1530s commentaries on these eight Psalms. In these
works, the reading strategy of visible versus invisible becomes a tool to provide
comfort. Luther exhorts the Christians following the Reformation cause not to
despair. Though they may see tyranny and oppression, God is actually laugh-
ing at the enemy (Ps 2:4). Though the Protestant church appears small and its
people few and weak, they are really strong, for this is not unlike the early
Christians among the synagogue (Ps 2:9). Though outwardly the church may
look like a band of beggars, Ps 45:8 teaches them to have spiritual eyes. In fact,
these things above all require the eyes of faith; faith is necessary in order to see
the hidden rule of Christ (Ps 110:1). Finally, Luther reminds his hearers that
those who serve God must expect tribulation and that their blessings will not
be visible or of this world, but they will receive eternal life (Ps 118:14).44
While Luther uses letter versus spirit, law versus gospel, flesh versus spirit, and
visible versus invisible all in one way or another to criticize Jewish readings of
42 THE JUDAIZING CALVIN
But if he speaks contrary to the Word, I will not listen.” Finally, just as the
apostles’ preaching “ran the synagogue into the ground,” the reformers can
expect the gospel to “mow down the system of priests, monks, nuns, [and] the
whole papacy.”51
A final message of comfort in these eight Psalms comes from seeing in the
castigation of the Jews a promise of the coming punishment of the pope and
the Roman church. As Christ overturned the kingdom of the Jews and Paul
overturned the Romans, so will the Protestants overturn the papacy, proclaims
Luther. Just as the Jews believed themselves secure and yet they perish, the
papacy will totter just when it thinks it is most secure. In this same vein, Luther
writes that the example of the Jews becoming Christ’s footstool (Ps 110:1) offers
to the Protestants a promise that the current persecutors of the gospel—the
Roman Catholics—will be cast down.52
Therefore, as far as Luther is concerned, the Roman Catholics of his day
are no better than Jews. In fact, more than that, he exclaims that in some ways
they are worse than Jews. In his commentary on Psalm 45, he writes that Jews
are actually less culpable than the Roman church. He reasons that if the
Protestants are unable to change the minds of the Roman Catholics, who
hold many of the same doctrines as the Protestants, it is even less probable
that the Jews would give up their ancient traditions. More specifically, if the
Protestants cannot get the Roman Catholics to repudiate their own righteous-
ness and dependence on works, it is even less likely that the Jews will.53
use of Hebrew in the development of his exegesis over time. However, these
two positive areas certainly do not extend for Luther into any support for
Christian use of Jewish exegesis. It is to these topics that we now turn.
James Preus has argued that significant changes can be detected in Luther’s
approach to the Old Testament during the course of his first lectures on the
Psalms. Specifically, Preus contends that the notion of promissio plays an
increasingly greater role in the later lectures of the Dictata. In addition,
Preus asserts that during this time one can perceive a crucial shift in Luther’s
thought from the view of the Old Testament as mere shadow to an appreciation
of the Old Testament itself as theologically relevant. A specific example of this,
argues Preus, may be seen in the shift from David the prophet being merely a
mouthpiece for Christ to David himself being an example of faith in the pre-
Advent situation, an example of “faith as expectation, trust, and hope in the
sheer promising Word.” Thus the “faith of the Old Testament people begins to
emerge as a model for Christian faith.”55
My problem with the first part of Preus’s thesis is that at least in his
exegesis on these eight messianic Psalms, Luther does not use the language
of shadow for the Old Testament, nor does he employ the typical reading tool of
typology that usually accompanies the understanding of the Old Testament as
shadow. Rather than the language of shadow or veil, Luther instead praises the
messianic Psalms for their clarity.56 Moreover, from the very start, Luther finds
the Old Testament theologically relevant “on its own terms.” Time and again,
he exclaims over the Book of Psalms (and the messianic Psalms in particular)
that it holds such clear and concise teaching about Christ, the church, and the
saintly life that all of Scripture is contained within it. He writes, “In the Psalter
everything that is contained in the entire Bible is comprehended so beautifully
and so briefly that it constitutes an excellent ‘Enchiridion,’ or handbook.”
Likewise, he affirms concerning the Psalter: “It seems to me that the Holy
Spirit deliberately undertook the task of bringing together material for a small
Bible and for a book of examples whose range is representative of all Christen-
dom and includes the lives of all saints, so that anyone who cannot read the
entire Bible would have here in one small book, a kind of summary of all
Scripture.”57 Furthermore, the Old Testament is “theologically relevant” in and
of itself precisely because Luther finds the gospel in the Old Testament.58
The second part of Preus’s thesis makes a very good point, which my own
study supports. One can detect in Luther’s writings on the messianic Psalms a
shift from David as mere prophetic mouthpiece of Christ to David as significant
46 THE JUDAIZING CALVIN
exemplar of faith, though—at least in these eight Psalms—this shift does not
occur in the Dictata but appears in his later 1530s commentaries on the messianic
Psalms.59 His emphasis, though, still falls on the extreme intimacy and clarity of
David’s prophecy. It was not just that Christ and the Holy Spirit spoke through
David, says Luther, but it is “as though he were seeing the event take place before
his very eyes.”60 Indeed, in his 1537 comments on Ps 8:5, Luther writes that David
actually sees Christ’s passion: “There is no doubt that in the spirit David is here
looking at Christ as He struggles with death in the garden and cries out on the
cross, ‘My God, my God, why hast Thou forsaken Me?’”61 In his 1535 commentary
on Psalm 110, Luther moves from David as mere prophetic mouthpiece to David
as exemplar of faith. He sees in the first verse of this Psalm a confession of David’s
faith and praises David’s example:
It is quite clear that this verse consists not only of prophecy or doctrine
concerning Christ, but that it is also a confession of the psalmist’s
faith. It serves as an example for us to see what kind of power such
faith has, how it produces a daring and courage that enables one to
hold anything on earth in contempt, to fear nothing at all, but in
happy defiance to depend only on Christ, who rules eternally, a Lord
over the temporal and eternal, death and life, sin and righteousness,
evil and good.62
The appeal to David as exemplar of faith, however, is found only in Psalm 110
and not in any of Luther’s other commentaries on the eight Psalms considered
here. It is quite possible that this one text stands out for him as showing David
as an example of faith because Jesus himself quoted this text for that very
purpose (Mt 22:44, Mk 12:36, Lk 20:42).
There are, however, two other instances in Luther’s interpretations of the
messianic Psalms where Luther appeals to Old Testament persons as exem-
plars of faith. The first also appears in his 1535 commentary on Psalm 110. This
in many ways is a much stronger affirmation of Old Testament faith, for Luther
proclaims that Christians’ faith today falls short of the faith exhibited by the
Old Testament fathers:
For we see how the dear, holy fathers of the Old Testament took hold of
their doctrine of the coming Christ, joyously waiting for Him with all
their hearts as though they knew no other joy or comfort on earth.
They believed this with much greater certainty and power than we
believe our glorious resurrection and eternal life. If our hearts were
equally full of faith, so that we could wait in certainty and happiness,
surely we, too, would be able to compose such beautiful and joyous
MARTIN LUTHER 47
psalms! But our faith, unfortunately, does not compare with the faith
of those people. We must give them credit; they remain our fathers,
teachers, and masters.63
Finally, also in his 1535 comments on Ps 110:4, Luther emphasizes that Mel-
chizedek is not merely a type of Christ but that he is in actuality a preacher of
the gospel.64 So although he makes some strong statements about the exem-
plary power of the faith of Old Testament persons, still, one must keep in
perspective that by “Old Testament faith” Luther means Old Testament persons
with certainty in the truth of the promises and teachings of the gospel.
forgotten, and it is also a consolation to believers that though they may forget
God, God does not forget them. Luther writes, “Therefore, this is a great
miracle that man who in himself with every eye forsakes, despairs of, and
forgets God, and yet God remembers him . . . thus the heart of man may
understand and believe God to be pleasant, benevolent, and friendly.”67 More-
over, Luther asserts that the Hebrew word EO in Ps 8:5 can be translated not
only as “who” or “what” but also as “how.” In effect, the theological reading of
this verse is the following: “Do you not perceive how marvelous is that man?
Do you not perceive how marvelous is that Son of Man? That he is mindful of
him and does not forget him but visits him and does not forsake him.”68
In his interpretation of Psalm 16, Luther uses Hebrew grammar for
emphatic effect. For example, he points out that the Hebrew verb in Ps 16:4
is in the active form to emphasize the perverse zeal with which they “increased
their idols.”69 More important, he employs the Hebrew to uphold his theologi-
cal reading of Ps 16:10: “You did not give up my soul to the pit.” Luther says
that the Hebrew word for “soul” (WUQ) always refers to a physical soul. Thus, this
verse speaks of Christ’s soul in regard to the body and indicates Christ’s bodily
resurrection.70
Luther dedicates an extensive digression in his 1532 introductory com-
ments on Psalm 45 to expound on the benefits of knowing Hebrew. He
urges people to learn it for a number of reasons. First, the knowledge of
Hebrew enhances service to God, for he writes, “In it we hear God speak.”
Furthermore, there are things about religion and divine worship that can be
known only through the knowledge of Hebrew. “Thus,” Luther claims, “study
directed toward learning this language might rightly be called a kind of mass or
divine service.”71 Second, knowledge of Hebrew is eminently useful. Hebrew is
a strong tool with which to arm oneself against the enemies, particularly the
Roman Catholics, states Luther. All theological teachers need this armor to
effectively resist the devil and his servants:
[I]f we do not hold fast to the language, they will ridicule and abuse us
as though we were asses. But if we also are fortified with a knowledge
of the language, we shall be able to stop their impudent mouths. . . . I
know how useful it has been to me against my enemies. For that
reason I would not be without this knowledge—however small it is—
for infinite sums of gold. You, too, as future teachers of religion,
should apply yourselves to the task of learning this language, unless
you want to be taken for dumb cattle and uninstructed rabble.72
Similar to his use of Hebrew in the Operationes, Luther also uses Hebrew
to support particular theological readings of the messianic Psalms in his
1530s commentaries. He argues that MJLÚO is a Hebrew word denoting spiri-
Ð
tual wisdom, a spiritual instruction. From this, he contends that this Psalm
teaches about a spiritual king and kingdom, a new righteousness, and a new
people. In addition, he asserts that ‘JUJU J in Ps 45:2 has a dual meaning
(i.e., beautiful in form and spirit), and he concludes that this verse indicates the
two natures of Christ. Finally, in his 1537 commentary on Psalm 8, he sees the
two natures of Christ signified in the dual names of verse 1—yahweh and
adonai.74 However, despite a growing use of Hebrew in his exegesis and a
move to buttress theological interpretation with reference to the Hebrew, these
do not mean that Luther let the Hebrew text determine his exegesis. More
specifically, Luther approached the Psalms armed with the conviction that
they prophesied Christ; thus, he sought in the Hebrew an affirmation of that
truth. Any interpretation of the Hebrew that did not support the content of
Christ in the text—or, even worse, that undermined such a reading—he
rejected.75
and contradictory interpretations and glosses,” and thus they fail to understand
that this signifies the suffering of the Messiah.78
Luther’s historical context gives insight into why these statements against
Jewish exegesis arise in his 1530s commentaries on the messianic Psalms. The
1530s was a crucial decade in the growth of Christian Hebraica.79 Martin
Luther became increasingly critical of the Christian Hebraists during this
time, especially of the kind of Christian Hebraists who turned to Jewish
exegesis to aid them in their interpretation of the Old Testament and to provide
historical contexts and historical readings of Old Testament texts. There was,
however, a kind of Christian Hebraica that Luther was willing to condone, such
as the work of Johannes Forster that focused on the uses of the Hebrew
language for Christian study of the Bible but denied the usefulness of Jewish
exegesis. Indeed, he had recruited Forster to occupy the Hebrew chair at
Wittenberg University. Forster expresses the views of Luther when he writes
in the preface of his Hebrew language dictionary:
damnation and judgment, what else does he do but that he seeks the face of a
blind man, cleverness from a madman, death from life, and grace and truth
from the Devil?”83
Conclusions
Theologically, the Jews are a key piece in these Psalms precisely as prophetic
Psalms; they show that in their persecution and crucifixion of Christ and in
their resulting demise, the prophecies of these Psalms have been fulfilled.
Furthermore, Jews play a fundamental role in particular reading strategies
Luther employs to explicate the messianic Psalms. At the heart of each one of
his letter versus spirit, law versus gospel, flesh versus spirit, and visible versus
invisible reading strategies, one finds the Jew as decisive in both the definition
and the deployment of these devices. Even more considerable is his Jews-
as-enemy reading strategy, which he redeploys to describe, measure, and
castigate the current enemies of his day. Finally, Luther’s conviction that Jews
cannot interpret Scripture rightly determines his decidedly negative view of the
usefulness of Jewish exegesis for the Christian expositor.
Even more to the point, Luther uses the Jews as a tool to depose Roman
church authority and teachings in favor of Protestant ones. By intimately aligning
the Roman Catholics with the beliefs and practices of the defeated Jews as they
appear in these Psalms, he promotes Protestant confessional formation over and
against the present-day Roman church. Through his implicit accusations of
judaizing against the Roman church—in their maintenance of law rather than
gospel, trust in carnal things rather than spiritual, and dependence on works
rather than faith—Luther endorses the truth and purity of the Protestant cause
and advances the strengthening of Protestant churches. It is no wonder, then,
that Luther is concerned with the rising interest in Christian Hebraica in his day,
not only because he insists that Jews cannot read Scripture properly but also
because he has consistently used Jews and Jewish things as a negative foil to
define and identify the enemies of Christ and the church.
Given the central negative role that Jews play in his use of the biblical
commentary to promote the emerging program for Protestant—and later
specifically Lutheran—confessional formation, would not biblical exegesis
that lacks this anti-Jewish polemic (let alone contains positive uses of Jewish
exegesis) undermine some of the very exegetical strategies Luther has devised
for his promotion of Protestantism over and against Roman Catholicism?
Lutherans following the pattern set by Martin Luther and the previous medie-
val tradition would expect that the exegete would maintain the primacy of
reading these Psalms as literal prophecies of Christ and as teaching key
Christians doctrines, particularly the doctrines of Trinity and the two natures
of Christ. For Luther, this is simply the foundation of a Christian reading of
these Psalms. They might also expect, if they are closely following Luther’s
reading strategies, a clear depiction of Jews as the enemies of Christ and the
church and the use of the Jew as the model to define all other enemies,
specifically the Roman Catholics of their day.
MARTIN LUTHER 53
Thus, any reading that fails to comprehend these Psalms primarily as literal
prophecies of Christ, lacks anti-Jewish rhetoric, and fails to employ these Psalms
to teach the Christian doctrines of Trinity and the two natures of Christ would
signify a substantial break from their prior exegetical treatment. Indeed, these
deficiencies are blatantly evident in Calvin’s readings of these eight Psalms, and
they become central to the Lutherans’ negative appraisal of Calvin’s exegesis.
I demonstrate in subsequent chapters how the absence of these emphases lays
the foundation of the later Lutheran accusations of judaizing against Calvin.
Before focusing upon Calvin, however, we turn to Martin Bucer’s exegesis of
these eight Psalms as a significant contribution to the interpretive history of the
messianic Psalms and, particularly, as a crucial backdrop to Calvin’s understand-
ing of them. Bucer’s distinctive contributions include a turn to typological exege-
sis and a confidence in the usefulness of Jewish exegesis for Christian readings
of the Psalms. Furthermore, Martin Bucer’s exegesis of these Psalms can be
viewed as a critical mediating position between the Psalms readings of Luther
and Calvin.
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3
Martin Bucer
Christological Readings through Historical Exegesis
of the Psalms, divided the Psalms into four classifications, and gave a summary
of each Psalm that presages the later argumenta that Bucer would use in his own
commentary on the Psalms.5 In addition, he inserted his Zwinglian under-
standing of the Lord’s Supper into Bugenhagen’s comments on Psalm 111,
much to the dismay of Bugenhagen.6
Indeed, the Lutherans viewed this insertion of his pro-Zwinglian view of
the Eucharist as a deceptive trick on the part of Bucer, and their opinion
probably contributed to Bucer’s decision to publish his Psalms commentary
under the pseudonym of Aretius Felinus. In a letter to Zwingli, Bucer explains
some of the reasons for the pseudonym:
Under the guise of a French humanist, Bucer hoped to keep his commentary
from being eschewed by both Lutherans and Roman Catholics alike, while also
putting it in the hands of the persecuted Protestants of France and Lower
Germany for their consolation and edification.8 Indeed, the pseudonym
worked for a short time, as seen in the praise it received from several Catholic
cardinals and bishops.9 Yet, within a month of the 1529 publication of Bucer’s
Psalms commentary, Erasmus discovered Bucer’s authorship and attacked his
artifice without explicitly naming Bucer; instead, he used an allusion that
anyone would recognize who knew of the quarrels between Bucer and Luther
and Bugenhagen over the revision of Bugenhagen’s Psalms commentary.
Luther also echoed Erasmus’s attack, for he saw it as further proof of Bucer’s
intentions to deceive.10
Bucer was very upset by these attacks and defended himself by replying, “A
deceit that hurts nobody and is useful to many is an act of piety.”11 Indeed, his
purpose for the Psalms commentary was precisely to promote the cause of
reform by setting forth Reformed doctrine with the support of the church
MARTIN BUCER 57
Martin Bucer insists on the primacy of historical exegesis to attain the simple
sense of a Psalm—namely, using a Psalm’s historical context as the tool to
unlock its meaning. For these eight messianic Psalms, he consistently employs
the device of typology, in which he sees in the figure of David and his history a
foreshadowing of Christ and the church.13 This typological reading is intimate-
ly tied to his views on the profound unity of the two testaments. Indeed, more
specifically, Bucer holds to a unity of the two peoples of the Old and New
Testaments, so that the church is just as central a player in his interpretations
of these Psalms as is Christ.
In his “Preface to the Pious Reader,” he sets forth the reasons for his
adherence to a historical exegesis of the Psalms:
Thus, the superiority of historical exegesis for Bucer lies in the historical sense
as the solid foundation of christological and ecclesial readings so that these
readings are defensible against Jews and academic disputants.15 Giving prima-
cy to the historical sense also guides one to limit the use of allegorical inter-
pretations and to follow the example of the apostles, who show that they also
interpreted within the bounds of the historical sense, for, says Bucer, “indeed
there is nothing pertaining to piety that the historical [sense] does not abun-
dantly teach.”16
Martin Bucer also holds strongly to an understanding of the profound and
intimate unity of the two testaments. This is deeply tied to his historical
exegesis and exhibited in his typological approach to the interpretation of the
Old Testament, in which Old Testament figures serve as types of Christ and in
which the people of the Old Covenant (Israel, the Jews) foreshadow the people
of the New Covenant (the church). This unity of the Old and New Testament
scriptures may be seen in the ways in which Bucer interweaves Old and New
Testament passages together, not only in the expected places where an Old
Testament passage is quoted in the New but also where he finds common
doctrinal content.
At every place that verses of these eight Psalms are quoted by a New
Testament author, Bucer positively follows the meaning the New Testament
author gives them. Thus, following Acts 4:25–28 and 13:32–33, he interprets
Psalm 2 as concerning the historical events of the passion and death of Christ.
He applies Ps 2:7 to Christ as the mediator of salvation and Ps 8:4–5 to Christ’s
humiliation and exaltation, just as the author of Hebrews (Heb 1:5, 5:5, 2:6–8)
did. He parallels Ps 2:7, “You are my son; today I have begotten you,” with the
accounts of Christ’s baptism in the Gospels (Matt 3:17, Mk 1:9, Lk 3:22). Like
Acts 2:25–31 and 13:34–27, he applies Ps 16:8–11 to Christ’s death and resurrec-
tion. He parallels David’s affection for the “holy ones” (Ps 16:3) with Paul’s
affection for the church in Philippi (Phil 4:1), and the superstitious and
idolatrous cult described in Ps 16:4 is the same as that depicted by Paul in 1
Corinthians 8–10. Not surprisingly, like the Gospel writers and apostles, Bucer
applies Psalm 22 to Christ’s suffering and death on the cross. And he likens the
example of David in setting forth true piety (Ps 22:22–25) to Christ as exemplar
of true Christian piety. Furthermore, he cites the quotations of Ps 45:6–7 in
Heb 1:8 to display Solomon as a type of Christ, Ps 110:1 in Matt 22:43–46 to
show that the Psalm more properly applies to Christ than to David, Ps 110:4
in Heb 7:11–14 to describe the priesthood of Christ, and Ps 118:22 in Matt
21:42–44 to prophesy the Jews’ rejection of Christ. Bucer also gives a Trinitari-
an reading of Psalm 72 based on verses in the Gospel of John, parallels the
deliverance of the poor (Ps 72:12–14) with Christ’s compassion on the crowds
MARTIN BUCER 59
Bucer’s historical exegesis of these eight Psalms leads him to interpret them in
one of three ways or in any combination of these three ways: (1) christological
readings through historical typology, where the life and kingdom of David
foreshadow Christ and Christ’s kingdom, in whom the Psalm is more
completely fulfilled; (2) as literal prophecies of Christ, where David is a prophet
who foresees Christ and speaks of those things that do not so much apply to
himself as to Christ alone; and (3) readings in which the Psalm is fulfilled in
the experience of the church. Thus, although Bucer’s historical exegesis does
lead him to devote a fair amount of his comments to the history of David, his
uses of David to provide readings in reference to Christ and the church remain
in essential agreement with the readings found in the antecedent tradition.19
Bucer often applies the history of David or Solomon in these Psalms to
foreshadow the history of Christ. His interpretation of Psalm 2 provides a good
example of a christological reading through the tool of historical typology. Just
as David was the anointed son of God (Ps 2:2), even more does this Psalm
foreshadow Christ as the anointed Son of God. Just as David was the true king
over Jerusalem (Ps 2:6), even more so is Christ the true king. Just as David
triumphed over his enemies (Ps 2:3, 9), so will Christ triumph. Just as God’s
fatherly beneficence is shown to David (Ps 2:7–8), so through Christ, the
church may embrace God’s paternal benevolence, for the Spirit of Christ raises
believers to the faith of being God’s adopted children. Just as this Psalm
expresses the expansion of David’s kingdom (Ps 2:8), even more so Christ’s
kingdom extends to the ends of the earth. Finally, just as David restores true
faith and piety to the kingdom of Israel (Ps 2:7, 10–11), even more so does
Christ show the church the true path of piety and faith.20
Bucer gives christological readings through historical typology in a num-
ber of these eight Psalms, but a few more examples will suffice. For instance,
David’s persecutions under Saul (Ps 22:1–21) foreshadow the passion of Christ,
and David’s leadership in calling the people of God back to true religion and
piety (Ps 22:22–31) again typifies this act even more fully accomplished by
Christ. The splendor, dignity, and power of Solomon’s kingdom in Psalms 45
and 72 describe a type of the kingdom of Christ, just as Psalm 110 portrays the
defeat of David’s enemies and the adoration of the king—both of which are
60 THE JUDAIZING CALVIN
more fully completed by Christ. Finally, just as Psalm 118 describes David’s
inauguration as a public day of salvation, so the inauguration of Christ brings
forth the saving kingdom of Christ.21
Although Bucer’s preferred method is to give christological readings
through historical typology, at times he also argues that some verses pertain
to Christ alone. In these cases, rather than David portraying Christ through the
experiences of his own life, David is a prophet who foresees and foretells literal
events in the life of Christ. Thus, Bucer argues that Ps 16:10 (“You did not let
your faithful one see corruption”) is rightly said of Christ alone, just as the
severe suffering and mocking described in Psalm 22 more rightly apply to
Christ than to David.22 Likewise, certain verses of Psalms 45 and 72 refer to the
eternal kingdom of Christ and are not fulfilled in the kingdoms of either David
or Solomon—particularly those verses describing the perpetuity and extent of
the kingdom (Ps 45:17; 72:8, 17). Finally, the descriptions of the king at God’s
right hand (Ps 110:1) and of the king as a priest according to the order of
Melchizedek (Ps 110:4) are not completed by David, argues Bucer, but by Christ
alone.23
Bucer is also intent on using these Psalms to teach certain points of doctrine.24
He finds in these Psalms doctrinal teachings concerning the two natures of
Christ, Trinity, the beneficence of God, election, and the true nature of faith.
The use of these Psalms to teach points of doctrine is part of his larger purpose:
to give instruction and exhortation to the church concerning true Christian
piety. Indeed, chapter 1 has shown that it was a medieval commonplace among
Christian interpreters to use these Psalms to teach about the Trinity and the
two natures of Christ, and Bucer retains this use of these Psalms. So, for
example, on Ps 2:7 (“He said to me, ‘You are my son; today I have begotten
you’”), Bucer asserts the necessity for salvation that Christ is both truly human
and truly divine and the same substance with the Father. His readings of Ps 8:4
and most of Psalm 22 also set forth the doctrine of the two natures of Christ,
with emphasis on Christ’s incarnation and redemption of human nature
through his divine nature. For example, the “son of man” in Ps 8:4 indicates
how Christ took on human wretchedness, except for sin, and by doing so,
redeemed humanity.25
What is even more noteworthy in his exegesis of Psalm 2 is that Bucer’s
excursus on the two natures of Christ is clearly tied to a defense of the Christian
doctrine of the Trinity over and against Jewish exegesis and, specifically, against
MARTIN BUCER 61
and Augustine, in particular, Bucer affirms that the good life is inseparable
from faith. In this way, he aims to steer clear of a staunch sola fideism in order
to set forth a more intimate and clear tie between faith and righteousness,
between faith and good works.31
Even more than locating Christ or certain doctrinal teachings, Bucer’s primary
purpose in his readings of these eight Psalms is to position the church as their
central player and subject, and he does this in three ways. First, Bucer’s doctrinal
teaching concerning faith is part of a larger purpose: to exhort the church toward
the cultivation of true Christian piety. Second, his doctrinal teachings concerning
God’s beneficence, election, and the work of the Spirit are part of the larger aim of
setting forth the call of the church to increase the kingdom of Christ on earth.
Third, his instruction concerning the two natures of Christ and the work of the
Spirit in justification and sanctification is part of the greater goal to set forth what
I would argue is for Bucer the central meaning of all of Scripture: the restoration
of God’s people through the saving act of Christ.32
Bucer makes the church the key player in these Psalms, first through his
use of them to exhort the Christian church to cultivate true piety. This exhorta-
tion has three prongs: the cultivation of true faith, the advancement of the
praise of God, and the establishment of the true Christian religion over and
against superstitious cults. As his views on the nature of faith have already been
addressed, we turn to the latter two. For Bucer, the right and proper responses of
humanity to God’s eternal power and grandeur are recognition of God’s excel-
lence and a life lived in praise to God. God is to be praised because of the
salvation and restoration given in Christ and for the protection and deliverance
God gives from enemies and oppressors. Thus, the true Christian religion,
according to Bucer, is typified by a secure and persuaded faith, recognition and
belief in the goodness of God, and a life lived in eternal praise to God.33 Indeed,
these Psalms provide instruction to help distinguish between true and false
religion and true and false piety. Thus, Ps 8:2 teaches the distinction between
the pious praise that comes “out of the mouths of babes and sucklings” and the
impiety of the “enemy and avenger.”34 Similarly, according to Bucer, Ps 16:4 is a
declaration that the faithful will not follow superstitious cults but will desire
holiness and abhor idolatry. Thus the Psalmist sets the example of praying for
protection from God, separating himself from impurity, and calling others to
follow the true Christian religion. Likewise, Bucer maintains that Ps 118:26–28
clarifies the divergence between true and false piety and between false sacrifices
MARTIN BUCER 63
of blood and true sacrifices of praise. For Bucer, all of Psalm 22, as well,
describes the true religion of God, in which David is calling Israel back to true
piety—a task more fully completed by Christ.35
Alongside his exhortations to the church to embrace true Christian piety,
Bucer also finds in these Psalms expressions of God’s election of the church
and descriptions of the church as the kingdom of God. He lays out key aspects
of his kingdom theology, which include the establishment of a Christian
society, the coming of Christ’s kingdom on earth through the saving act of
Christ, and the continuing faithfulness of the elect. Bucer affirms that Psalms
2, 22, 45, 72, 110, and 118 all foreshadow the kingdom of Christ through the
earthly expressions of David and Solomon’s kingdoms. These Psalms demon-
strate the defeat of Christ’s enemies, the splendor and glory of Christ’s king-
dom, the righteousness and justice established by this kingdom, and its
expansion, universality, and eternal character.36
In addition to providing a clear delineation of the kingdom of Christ, Bucer
argues that these Psalms also urge the elect to seek this kingdom above all
things and work to increase Christ’s kingdom on earth. For him, the embodi-
ment of Christ’s kingdom on earth is the calling of the church and, specifically,
of the elect. Indeed, the believers in the church, argues Bucer, “dwell bodily in
the divine” through Christ. They are members of the body of Christ and, thus,
participate in Christ’s life and saving acts by embodying Christ’s kingdom of
righteousness in the world.37 Furthermore, Bucer emphasizes that the church
bears this responsibility specifically by performing acts of righteousness and
charity, such as the care of the poor.38
Bucer also uses these Psalms to give instruction to earthly princes
concerning how a true godly prince should rule. He quite literally applies Ps
2:10–11 (“O kings, be wise; be warned, O rulers of the earth; serve the Lord with
fear and trembling”) to his contemporary princes and magistrates to draw a
contrast between wicked and pious princes.39 For Bucer, Psalms 45 and 72 also
demarcate the characteristics of the pious king, first and foremost of which are
the love of righteousness, the hatred of wickedness, and the administration of
equity, peace, and justice. In keeping with his vision of God’s kingdom on
earth, he not only mingles the earthly kingdom of the church with the heavenly
kingdom and the divine body of Christ but sees an important role to be played
by earthly princes to further the kingdom of God. For instance, Bucer argues
that Psalm 22 “signifies how often the rules of a pious king are to be a benefit
and a divine help.” This leads him to affirm that earthly kingdoms can assist in
ushering in Christ’s kingdom by helping to fight sin in the world.40
In sum, according to Bucer, these Psalms edify the church by exhorting the
elect to true faithfulness and piety and calling the church to embody Christ’s
64 THE JUDAIZING CALVIN
kingdom in the world. Yet, the reading that is the very heart of Bucer’s
interpretation of these Psalms is his constant refrain that Christ has restored
the saints of God (the elect) to the life-giving gifts of God. All of his doctrinal
teachings and the placement of the church as the central player in these
Psalms are established upon the restoration brought by Christ. The teaching
concerning the two natures of Christ is in the context of the restoration Christ
brings, for Christ renews human nature by taking on flesh. Likewise, Christ
makes God’s fatherly beneficence accessible to the elect, for Christ is the one
through whom the elect are able to call God “father” and children of God.41
Bucer defines faith as the persuaded conviction of God’s goodness, a goodness
that is first and foremost shown in the salvation and restoration given through
Christ. True piety, then, is praise of this goodness of God given in Christ;
furthermore, Christ is the one who restores true Christian religion and piety.
Moreover, Bucer’s vision of the kingdom of God on earth is rooted in Christ’s
restoration of the elect so that the elect are incorporated into the body of Christ
and participate in Christ’s saving actions in the world.42
Thus, the focal point of Bucer’s christological readings of these Psalms is
not so much the literal prophecies of Christ that they contain but, rather, the
body of Christ, which is the church. The church becomes the central player in
these Psalms by way of the salvific and restorative act of Christ so that it now
participates in the life of Christ. Thus, Bucer’s interpretation of these eight
Psalms exhibits a profound envisioning of the church as the body of Christ, so
that what may be said of Christ, the head, is also said of the church, the
members of Christ’s body. This placement of the church as central to his
readings of these Psalms is intimately tied to their christological import.43
the elect. Thus, he not only attends to the rabbis’ historical readings of these
Psalms but also points to the places where they apply the Psalm as a promise
and prophecy of the Messiah. Indeed, Rashi notes that the rabbis interpret
Psalm 2 as concerning the Messiah.53 Kimhi and Ibn Ezra both read Psalms
45, 72, and 118 as pertaining to the Messiah, the promised redemption of
Israel, and the future messianic kingdom, where David and Solomon and
their kingdoms serve as types of the Messiah and his reign.54 In this way,
Bucer appeals to the rabbis’ messianic readings of these Psalms to buttress his
own christological readings. Furthermore, Kimhi in particular uses the tool
of typology in his exegesis of Psalms 72 and 118, where he first reads the
Psalms concerning the historical figure (i.e., Solomon or David) and then
applies them to the Messiah and his kingdom, in which the Psalms are
more completely fulfilled.55 Thus, in Kimhi, Bucer finds a model and prede-
cessor for his typological method, by which he can defend his own Christian
typological readings in reference to the fulfillment of these Psalms by
Jesus Christ.
16:5–6—JM YF e and NJM BH —to demonstrate the great benefits God bestows on
God’s people.60
Bucer also employs the rabbis to buttress his readings of Psalms 2, 8, 16,
22, and 118 as issuing a clear call to the cultivation of piety and, more specifi-
cally, the call for the pious to separate themselves from the superstitious cult.
Just as Bucer defines true piety and true worship as praise of God and God’s
goodness and contrasts this to superstitious cults, so also Kimhi, Rashi, and
Ibn Ezra exhibit similar definitions in their readings of these Psalms.61 For
example, Rashi reads Psalm 16 as David giving instruction to the congregation
of Israel in order to establish true religion. More broadly, all three rabbis
describe David as setting forth in this Psalm the example of true humility,
obedience and worship of God, and rejection of idolatry.62 On both Psalms 22
and 118, Bucer applies the readings of Kimhi and Ibn Ezra to buttress his use of
David as an example of bringing God’s people back to true piety and worship in
contrast to the false religion of Saul.63 In addition to utilizing these theological
themes set forth by the rabbis, Bucer again explicitly uses the rabbis’ transla-
tions of certain Hebrew words to support his contrast between true and false
piety. For instance, he states a clear preference for Rashi’s translations of the
Hebrew noun N‘F
BuS and verb hYEO in Ps 16:4 as “idols” and “they hasten”
Ð
(after another god), respectively, in order to argue that the Psalmist is speaking
against idolatry and superstitious cults.64
Besides the obvious parallel between the Jewish view of Israel’s election
and the Christian view of the church as the elect, Bucer uses the rabbis’
comments on certain verses to support his own emphasis on God’s special
favor to the elect and the attributes that separate the elect from the reprobate.
Concerning the “holy ones in the land” in Ps 16:4, Bucer writes, “Because God
chose the people of Israel for himself, God has them as his property and they
are taken care of by him alone, to whom he gives many and vast benefits and
known signs.”65 Indeed, he applies Kimhi’s emphasis on the elect to show that
the elect receive help from God to do good to the saints (Ps 16:4) and to receive
the inheritance God intends for them (Ps 16:5–6).66 Furthermore, in his
interpretations of Psalms 2 and 16, he employs the rabbis to reinforce his
emphasis on the contrast between the pious elect and the impious reprobate.
Bucer applies Kimhi’s comments on Ps 2:12 (“lest he be angry and you perish
in the way”) to demarcate and emphasize the two paths: election and reproba-
tion. He notes that Kimhi connects this verse to Psalm 1, where the way of the
righteous and the way of the wicked are contrasted.67 After using Rashi’s
translations of the Hebrew terms in Ps 16:4, Bucer proceeds to reiterate his
point that the holy elect are instructed to flee the superstitions of the impious.
Likewise, he cites Kimhi and Ibn Ezra in support of the application of Ps
68 THE JUDAIZING CALVIN
22:22–25 to the establishment of piety and justice and the fleeing from impiety
and unrighteousness first by David and then completed by the Messiah.68
For if they should say to you that he was the Son of God, answer that it is
not proper to say “Son of God” in the manner of flesh and blood, for a son
is the species of his father. . . . Say to them that of the Godhead it is
unfitting to speak of father and son because the Godhead cannot be
divided, for it is not a body that it should be divided; but God is one in every
aspect of unity. He cannot be increased, decreased, or split up. And further
say to them that a father is prior to a son in time, and the son issues from
the father’s vigor. . . for one is not called father until he has a son, and a
son is not so called unless he has a father; nevertheless he who is called
father when he has a son is prior in time without a doubt. And if this be so,
the God whom you speak of and call “Father, Son, and Holy Spirit”—the
portion you call Father existed before the other portion you call Son.70
Kimhi is clearly assailing the Christian beliefs in the unity of the persons of the
Trinity and the preexistence of Christ. Also within this is an attack on the
Christian doctrine of the two natures of Christ; indeed, this criticism figures
more prominently in Kimhi’s instruction on how Jews should respond to
Christian readings of the next verse (Ps 2:8):
And further say to them: Has the God whom you describe as “the
Father” said to his Son, Ask of Me and I will give the nations for your
MARTIN BUCER 69
inheritance? How should the Son ask from the Father? Is he not God
like Him? . . . And if they say to you that it is spoken in regard to the
flesh, after the Godhead had taken on flesh, and to the Son in the
flesh . . . this is not the case, for Jesus in the flesh had no kingdom or
any authority over any nation.71
received as ‘they pierce,’ as the Christians receive it, than to assent to the
contentious Jews.”78 Finally, Bucer responds to Kimhi’s criticism of the Chris-
tian reading of Psalm 22 in reference to Christ’s passion and Kimhi’s attacks on
the doctrine of the two natures of Christ. He does so through an in-depth
excursus on the incarnation of Christ and the necessity of the incarnation for
human redemption.79 Through these citations of Kimhi’s anti-Christian po-
lemic, Bucer intends not merely a critique of Jewish exegesis on these points
but also a defense of Christian Trinitarian and christological readings.
A second kind of criticism Bucer voices against Jewish exegesis arises when
he believes the rabbi’s reading is not in accordance with the simple sense of the
text.80 For example, on the second half of Ps 8:8, he recites Kimhi’s interpretation
that “whatever passes along the paths of the sea” refers to ships and the human
ability to cross the sea by ships. Bucer argues that this is not in keeping with the
simple sense of the text and its context, for in the previous verses, the Psalmist has
enumerated the creatures over which God has given humanity dominion. Thus,
this verse must refer to the diverse kinds of fish and sea creatures that God has
made subject to human command.81 Likewise, on Ps 2:7 (“You are my son”), he
argues against Kimhi’s interpretation that it is spoken concerning the first
creation. He contends that it is more in keeping with the context of the Psalm
to understand this verse in terms of a particular election.82 Bucer also argues for
the plain sense of Ps 110:7 in reference to Christ over and against Jewish readings:
“In this clearly is seen Christ the Savior when all his enemies are doomed to
Gehenna. Knowing the different meanings of the Hebrews, for us the meaning of
this psalm is seen more simply as fitted to the great glory of Christ.”83
Keeping the plain sense of a passage is often the criterion Bucer uses to
favor one rabbi’s interpretation over another’s. For instance, he prefers Rashi’s
translation of the Hebrew word F YEO as “they hasten” over Kimhi and Ibn
Ezra’s translation as “dowry” or “they endow” because the context of the passage,
argues Bucer, concerns idolatry and the superstitious cult. Thus, the meaning
“they hasten after other gods” is more fitting to the plain sense of the verse.84
Likewise, on Ps 45:8, he prefers Ibn Ezra’s translation of YO as “myrrh,” rather
than Kimhi’s translation of “moss,” because, again, Ibn Ezra’s meaning is better
suited to the context and plain sense of the passage. Then in the very next
instance, he prefers Kimhi’s translation of ‘F
SJWX as some kind of aromatic
spice over Ibn Ezra’s translation of “folds or angles” for the very same reasons.85
Finally, Bucer prefers Rashi’s interpretation of Ps 72:15 (“Long may he live!”) as
“Long live King Solomon,” rather than Kimhi and Ibn Ezra’s interpretation of
this phrase in reference to the poor. He notes that Rashi says his interpretation
is the simple sense of the text, with which Bucer agrees and adds that this
reading is in keeping with the history narrated in the tenth chapter of 1 Kings.86
MARTIN BUCER 71
Thus, while Bucer’s criticisms of Jewish exegesis mostly focus around their
attacks on the central Christian doctrines of Trinity and the two natures of
Christ, they also revolve around maintaining what he believes to be the plain
sense of the text.
Not only does Martin Bucer have clear criticisms of the Jewish sources he uses
but also his commentary on the Psalms contains several instances of strong
anti-Jewish rhetoric. This rhetoric follows the patterns of anti-Jewish rhetoric
set by late-medieval commentators and retained in Martin Luther’s commen-
taries on the Psalms; that is to say, there are two basic configurations of Bucer’s
anti-Jewish rhetoric. First, he maintains the identification of the enemies in
these Psalms with the Jews. Second, he repeats statements concerning Jewish
blindness and ignorance in their interpretations of certain biblical passages,
particularly passages that Christians read as pertaining to Christ.87
As has been shown, Bucer positively recites the New Testament authors’
use of these Psalms as literal prophecies of Christ’s passion, death, resurrec-
tion, ascension, and exaltation. In these instances where he preserves the New
Testament applications of these Psalms, he also repeats clear designations of
Jews as the enemies of Christ and the church. For example, just as the disciples
in Acts 2:25–28 interpret Ps 2:1–2 in reference to Herod, Pilate, and the Jewish
rulers, Bucer does so through his method of typology:
These enemies of David bear the type of the masses and the people—
the Jewish princes, Herod, Pilate, the high priests and the experts of
the law—they all pressed against the Lord Jesus for his destruction,
but in vain. In this consideration, they were truly senseless and
horrible and insane; they were not born of the Spirit of God. Nothing
was less wise or sacred in the work of the nation of the Jews than this
unspeakable madness . . . that the doctors of religion and scholars of
Scripture arrogated themselves against the Lord.88
Likewise, Bucer notes the use of Ps 2:7–8 in Acts 13:27–33 to argue that Christ is
the begotten Son of God who is given power and authority over his enemies to
“break them with a rod of iron and dash them in pieces like a potter’s vessel” (Ps
2:9). The context of Acts 13:27–33 implies that these enemies are the Jews. Even
more clearly, in his comments on Ps 2:9, he narrates Josephus’s account of the
Jewish Wars to argue that the defeat of the Jews by the Romans is the fulfillment
of this verse. He further supports the application of the shattering of the potter’s
vessel to the destruction of the Jews with references to Jer 19:11 and Is 30:14.89
72 THE JUDAIZING CALVIN
Moreover, Bucer identifies the Jews as the “enemy and avenger” men-
tioned in Ps 8:2, though he first equates this description with “atheists who
spread their impiety and dare to deny that God exists.” By recounting the use
of the first half of Ps 8:2 in Matt 21:16 as Jesus’ response to the chief priests
and scribes when they tried to silence the children who were welcoming Jesus
into Jerusalem, Bucer concludes, “Truly this verse is the exact right response
to them, the enemies of God who were silencing the beautiful voices of
the children.”90 In addition, he interprets “deliver my only one from the
hand of the dog” (Ps 22:20) typologically to refer first to Saul’s persecution of
David and then in reference to the assembly of the Jews who stood against
Christ.91 In his interpretation of Psalm 110, he recounts its application in Jesus’
response to the Pharisees in Matt 22:41–46 to argue that Christ is prophesied
in this Psalm contrary to “the accusations of the Jews.” Therein, he specifically
names the identity of the enemies in Ps 110:5–6 by writing, “At first [this is
spoken of ] the Jews; then it strikes down the head of the Romans, and then the
heads all over the earth, including the destruction of the Turks.” Finally, Bucer
identifies the builders in Ps 118:22 (“the stone that the builders rejected has
become the chief cornerstone”) with the synagogue and any who inwardly
reject Christ, who, therefore, are excluded and no longer have a place among
the people of God.92
Though Bucer does retain the identification of the enemies in these Psalms
with the Jews, he does not deploy this as a reading strategy, as Luther does, to
align the pope and the Roman church with the Jews in order to reveal the Roman
Catholics as the enemies of Christ and the church. In contrast, he has very little
anti-Catholic rhetoric in his commentary on the Psalms. An obvious explanation
for this absence is the fact that he wrote under a pseudonym in hopes of
reaching a Roman Catholic readership. When he does give a more contemporary
application of “enemy,” it is in reference to atheists and the impious, which is in
keeping with his aim to cultivate true piety and worship of God.
Bucer also repeats statements that disparage the Jews as blind and ignorant
readers of certain biblical passages. For example, he criticizes the Jewish inter-
preters for their blindness in insisting that Ps 16:10 (“you did not give me up
to the grave or let your faithful one see corruption”) refers to David rather than to
the resurrection of Christ. Likewise, in his reading of Ps 22:27 as “all the nations
of the Gentiles,” he emphasizes that God is now the God of the Gentiles (citing
the support of Rom 3:29), to which he adds, “And rightly now before the whole
world the blindness of the Jews is all the more evident.” Finally, on Psalm 45,
he criticizes the Jews for not having accepted Jesus as the Messiah, because
they themselves interpret this Psalm in reference to the Messiah.93
MARTIN BUCER 73
Conclusions
what he believes to be the plain sense of the text, he rejects that reading.
Likewise, when a rabbi’s commentary expresses anti-Christian polemic, partic-
ularly against the doctrines of Trinity or the two natures of Christ or against the
application of a verse to Christ, he responds negatively to such comments and
launches a defense of these Christian readings. Hence, one could argue that
Bucer achieves exactly his purpose concerning the defensibility of Christian
readings vis-à-vis Jewish criticisms that he set out to attain, according to the
preface to his Psalms commentary:
Indeed, Bucer gives readings of these Psalms that are in keeping with Jewish
interpretations of them, and at the same time, these readings maintain their
christological import and do so in a way that is in accordance with what he
believes are Jewish exegetical principles of preserving their historical, plain
sense.96 He is convinced that he has succeeded in giving a Christian reading of
these Psalms that would stand up to Jewish critique and still sustain a truly
Christian reading in reference to Christ and the church.
One other element needs to be added to the list of distinctively Reformed
contributions that Bucer has made to the exegetical history of these eight
Psalms. In addition to the distinguishing characteristics of the turn to histori-
cal typology, the use of these Psalms to set forth a program for the cultivation of
Christian piety, and his doctrinal emphases on election, the beneficence
of God, and Christ’s restorative work, one could add the belief in the usefulness
of Jewish exegesis for Christian readings of Scripture.97 Obviously, this is in
precise conflict with the sentiments expressed by Martin Luther; that is to say,
Luther has used the alignment with things Jewish to demarcate that which is
false and to be avoided. Yet, while Bucer makes extensive positive use of Jewish
exegesis, he does so within boundaries that Luther conceivably could approve
(while still not condoning the use of Jewish exegesis)—namely, Bucer still
maintains the christological import of these Psalms and their teachings
concerning Trinity and the two natures of Christ, both of which cannot so
easily be said of the exegesis of John Calvin. Indeed, I have spent a fair amount
MARTIN BUCER 75
In this same preface, Calvin sets forth all of the key theological emphases
that he will highlight in his exegesis of the Psalms.4 The Psalms provide
supreme examples of true prayer, trust in God, faith that overcomes adversity,
consolation and encouragement to believers, guidance in true worship, confi-
dence in God’s goodness and providential care, exercises of proper Christian
piety, and the path of true salvation.5 Furthermore, he asserts that these models
are particularly found through the example of David, with whom Calvin deeply
identifies his own life struggles. Just as David had to contend with the internal
enemies of his kingdom, so Calvin finds encouragement and a model for his
own toils with the internal afflictions of the church of his day. He writes,
Calvin likens himself to David, for just as David was taken from the humble
position of a shepherd and elevated to be king, so God took Calvin from his
“originally obscure and humble condition” and made him worthy of being a
preacher and minister of the gospel. And just as David had to contend with not
only internal enemies but also foreign enemies, so he finds in his own life that
he has been “assailed on all sides” and had to “sustain some conflict from
enemies without and within the church.”7 Finally, Calvin finds in David not
only a teacher and model for his own life but also a teacher for the church
overall. And indeed, his fundamental purpose in his Psalms commentary is to
give a reading for the edification of the church through the person of David.
I demonstrate that above all Calvin reads these eight Psalms for the church
through the example of David. Using David as a model of faith, prayer, trust in
God’s goodness and providence, true worship, and true Christian piety, Calvin
instructs the church and provides a message of comfort to believers. Indeed,
we find that often his readings of these Psalms through the person of David
eclipse the traditional christological readings of them. Does Calvin read these
Psalms as literal prophecies of Christ? Does he give any kind of christological
reading of them, and if so, how? If not, why? Moreover, does he maintain other
traditional uses of these Psalms to teach the doctrines of the Trinity and the two
natures of Christ? Finally, I explore the various ways in which Jews or Jewish
JOHN CALVIN 79
exegesis figures into his interpretation of these Psalms. Does Calvin, like those
before him, retain the identification of the Jews as the enemies of Christ?
Calvin often does not follow the traditional christological readings of these
eight Psalms—either in not giving a reading in reference to Christ or, more
frequently, in the lack of prominence he gives to the christological reading.
More specifically, he does not retain the primacy of reading these Psalms as
literal prophecies of Christ’s incarnation, crucifixion, resurrection, and ascen-
sion, though he does retain some of them as prophecies of Christ’s kingship
and kingdom. Most of the time, he mentions the christological application of a
Psalm as a valid interpretation, but there are passages where he explicitly
rejects the reading of the Psalm in reference to Christ. Furthermore, even on
those Psalms that he agrees are more fully completed in Christ, the weight of
his exegesis falls upon a reading for the church through the example of David.
Through an analysis of his christological exegesis of these eight Psalms, one
discovers that Calvin appears to be operating according to certain principles
that guide him as to when a Psalm properly refers to Christ and when it does
not. Furthermore, Calvin also lays out a number of the reasons for his more
limited applications of these Psalms to Christ.8
Calvin has at least three general principles that regulate when he believes a
Psalm can be properly applied to Christ. First, a Psalm may be read in
reference to Christ when it is more fully completed by Christ or more appro-
priate to Christ. Circumstances such as these render a typological reading, in
which David (or Solomon) acts as a type of Christ, where David foreshadows a
reality that is more brightly set forth in Christ. Indeed, the vast majority of
Calvin’s christological readings of these eight Psalms are also typological—
namely, they are grounded in the original historical person and context of the
Psalm. Thus, he interprets those verses in reference to Christ that indicate
some aspect that is not true of David or not fully completed in David and his
kingdom, such as the descriptions of the eternity, vastness, invincibility, and
unified peace of the messianic kingdom or the priestly function of the king.9 In
this way, the only time that Calvin retains a reading of these Psalms as literal
prophecies of Christ is when the Psalm is a prophecy of Christ’s kingship and
kingdom—that is, the royal elements of a Psalm—which is a different empha-
sis than that of Luther or Bucer, who portray David as a prophet who foresees
not only the kingdom of Christ but even more so the events of Christ’s passion,
crucifixion, and resurrection.10
80 THE JUDAIZING CALVIN
Second, Calvin applies a Psalm to Christ when Christ himself utters the
words of a Psalm in regard to himself. This is the case in Ps 22:1, which the
Gospel of Matthew records as Christ’s words from the cross (Matt 27:46): “My
God, my God, why have you forsaken me?” Likewise, Christ uses Ps 110:1 to
respond to a question about the Messiah and to demonstrate that the Messiah is
not David’s son but David’s Lord.11 Finally, Jesus applies Ps 118:22–23 to
demonstrate that the kingdom of God will be given to the Gentiles. Although
Calvin does retain the christological application of these verses, the first reading
he gives for all of these passages is in reference to the life of David, and he often
spends far more time and detail on the reading concerning David than on the
one concerning Christ. For example, on Ps 22:1, he spends nearly three and a
half times more space applying the verse to David than to Christ. Likewise, he
first applies Ps 110:1 to David as especially anointed by God before arguing that
it more properly applies to Christ.12 On the other hand, he does not even
address the christological application of Ps 118:22 until his discussion of the
twenty-fifth and twenty-sixth verses. Instead, in his exposition of the twenty-
second verse, he applies it only to David and argues that the stone is a similitude
to represent David as being placed “by the purpose and power of God to sustain
the whole building.” Calvin introduces the application of Psalm 118 to Christ
under the phrase in 118:26, “Blessed is the one who comes in the name of the
Lord,” where he uses David’s election as king as a type of Christ’s kingship.13
The third principle that guides Calvin in the proper application of a Psalm
to Christ is when the christological reading retains the “simple and natural”
sense of the passage and is in keeping with the author’s intended meaning,
and by “author,” Calvin means both the Holy Spirit and the human author.14
Hence, at the beginning of his exposition of Psalm 2, he states plainly that
“those things that David declares concerning himself are not violently, or even
allegorically, applied to Christ, but were truly predicted concerning him.”15
Likewise, concerning the Gospels’ use of Ps 22:17–18 to describe the mockery
Christ suffered on the cross, he comments,
The Evangelists quote this place to the letter, as we say, and without
figure—and there is no absurdity in their doing so—to teach us the
more certainly that in this psalm Christ is described to us by the Spirit
of prophecy. The heavenly Father intended that in the person of his
Son those things should be visibly accomplished that were shadowed
forth in David.16
Indeed, Calvin often specifies that the Holy Spirit speaks through David by the
spirit of prophecy to indicate that a Psalm’s christological application is in
keeping with authorial intention. Hence, when he reads these Psalms as
JOHN CALVIN 81
At other points, Calvin does keep a christological reading but instead of the
traditional christological reading he maintains one that he believes is more in
keeping with the authorial intention and context of the passage. For example,
the traditional Christian interpretation of Ps 110:7 (“he will drink from the
stream by the path”) is to apply this to Christ’s passion, but Calvin prefers to
interpret this as representing Christ’s royal military prowess, which is more in
keeping with the two previous verses that are also about military might.22
82 THE JUDAIZING CALVIN
Calvin departs from the traditional Christian readings of these Psalms by not
only the limitations he places upon reading them as literal prophecies of
Christ’s incarnation, crucifixion, resurrection, and ascension but also his re-
strictions upon their usefulness specifically to teach the doctrines of Trinity
JOHN CALVIN 83
and the two natures of Christ. Christian interpreters have used a number of
passages in these eight Psalms to teach the doctrines of Trinity and the two
natures of Christ. Both Martin Luther and Martin Bucer continue to uphold
these didactic traditions. Calvin, on the other hand, sees in these Psalms
different teachings than those of Trinity and the two natures of Christ.
Calvin’s concern for maintaining the “simple and natural” sense of these
Psalms is one of the primary reasons we do not find him expounding upon
their use to teach Trinitarian principles. Indeed, he explicitly argues against the
Trinitarian readings of Ps 2:7 (“He said to me, ‘You are my son; today I have
begotten you’”):
Instead, he contends that the correct reading of this verse concerns the time
when the sonship of Christ was made manifest to the world, which was the time
of Christ’s resurrection. Furthermore, he makes no mention of the quotation of
Ps 2:7 at Christ’s baptism or the workings of the Trinity at Christ’s baptism.28
Likewise, “you have set your glory above the heavens” in Ps 8:1 and “the
work of your fingers” in Ps 8:3 raise no discussion of the Trinity for Calvin;
rather, they demonstrate the glory and providence of God the Creator. Absent
also in his account is the interpretation of “from the womb of the morning” (in
Ps 110:3) as referring to Christ’s coeternity and cosubstantiality with the Father.
Instead, he reads this as David’s prophecy of the people to be born to Christ.
Although Ps 118:13–14 (“the Lord helped me; the Lord is my strength”) has been
interpreted by the antecedent Christian tradition as concerning the indivisibili-
ty of the Trinity, Calvin does not even refer these verses to Christ at all but
instead interprets them concerning David’s situation under the persecution of
Saul.29 He also does not apply certain passages to demonstrate the distinctions
of the persons of the Trinity, where Luther does do so. For example, Luther uses
“the Lord and his anointed” (Ps 2:2), “I have set my king” (Ps 2:6), and the
dominion and gifts given to Christ by the Father expressed in Ps 8:6–8 and Ps
16:6–11 to demonstrate the distinctions between the Sender and the One sent
and to indicate those things that Christ receives from the Father.30 All such
Trinitarian applications are missing in Calvin’s expositions of these passages.
The previous chapter demonstrated how Martin Bucer not only upholds
the Trinitarian teachings traditionally found in these Psalms but also explicitly
contends against Jewish criticisms of the Christian use of these Psalms to teach
84 THE JUDAIZING CALVIN
the doctrine of the Trinity. Calvin, on the other hand, not only does not address
these Jewish criticisms but also drops the Trinitarian readings altogether.
Indeed, I mean to suggest that Calvin may very well drop these Trinitarian
readings partly because he does not think that the Trinitarian readings of these
Psalms can withstand such criticisms. Calvin maintains that the Trinitarian
applications do not retain the simple sense of the passage.
Likewise, Calvin eclipses the use of these Psalms to teach about the two
natures of Christ. Whereas over and over again, Luther uses these Psalms to
teach the two natures of Christ and less frequently, but just as significantly,
Bucer does so as well, there are only a few instances where Calvin employs
these Psalms to discuss the divine and human natures of Christ. In these
instances, he either briefly mentions the common application of a verse to the
two natures of Christ or expounds upon the role of Christ as mediator, in which
Christ’s taking on human flesh is a central component of Christ’s act of
reconciling humanity with God. For example, on Ps 22:22, Calvin briefly
cites the use of this verse by the author of Hebrews to refer to the two natures
of Christ, but he expounds no further on this topic. He also talks about Christ
taking on human nature in his discussion of Ps 22:14, but his main concern is
to explain how it can be properly said that Christ suffered.31
The absences of such discussions on passages the antecedent Christian
tradition explicitly used to teach about the two natures of Christ are much more
striking. In Ps 8:4–5, the application of WF nA (enosh) and NDA (adam) to the two
natures of Christ is completely lacking; instead, Calvin says David is expound-
ing on the infinite goodness of God to insignificant humanity. Furthermore,
the beauty of the bridegroom in Ps 45:2 does not lead to a discussion of the two
natures of Christ, nor does Ps 72:5–6 (“May he endure with the sun . . . . May he
be like rain that falls on the mown grass”). Prior Christian exegetes interpret
these verses in Psalm 72 to indicate Christ’s divinity and virgin birth, but
Calvin uses these verses to describe the establishment of true worship by
Christ and his defense of the church. Whereas he does translate Ps 2:12 as
“kiss the Son” and apply it to Christ, his exposition does not lead to a discussion
of Christ’s two natures, as it does for Christian medieval interpreters, Luther,
and Bucer.32
Though Calvin does read most of these Psalms with some kind of reference
to Christ, his christological applications are significantly more restricted and
less frequent than those of Christian interpreters who have preceded him.
JOHN CALVIN 85
Moreover, he does not use these Psalms at all to teach the doctrine of the Trinity,
and he applies them much less numerously to teach the two natures of Christ.
Whereas Calvin operates with certain exegetical principles, another compelling
reason that he does not apply verses of these Psalms or the whole Psalm itself to
Christ is that he does not find it necessary for his purposes. When the “simple
and natural” sense of the Psalm in reference to David already gives a reading
that brings a message of consolation to the church, then he considers this
reading not only sufficient but also powerful. Likewise, when a reading of
the Psalm through the example of David teaches crucial Protestant doctrines,
he considers such a reading thoroughly fitting and edifying.
fatherly countenance, nor opens the eyes of all [humans] to seek the
matter of their joy in him and nowhere else?35
God’s fatherly countenance and kindness are specifically reserved for the
elect—a principle Calvin also sees demonstrated in Psalm 22. The cry of “my
God, my God” in Ps 22:1, he says, is the cry of faith that patiently trusts that God
will once again reveal God’s fatherly countenance. Likewise, the continuation of
this cry in the second verse and the statement of trust in the fourth articulate the
hope the elect have in God’s goodness. Although the third verse of Psalm 110
does not indicate the Trinity for Calvin, it does set forth for him David’s teaching
concerning God’s goodness in the promise that the elect will be born to Christ.
Finally, he sees in the statements of Ps 118:7 (“the Lord is on my side to help
me”) and Ps 118:15 (“voices of shouting and salvation in the tents of the
righteous”) David’s expressions of public praise of God’s infinite goodness.36
Even more so, Calvin finds David expounding upon the doctrine of provi-
dence in these Psalms. Most prominently, he unearths a marvelous expression
of God’s providence in the verse, “Out of the mouths of babes and sucklings
you have founded your strength because of your foes” (Ps 8:2). Babes and
sucklings proclaim the providence of God, explains Calvin, because God’s
provision may be seen in the nourishment of their mother’s milk ready for
them right at birth and their innate instinct to suck. Likewise, divine provi-
dence is evident through God’s beautiful order of creation (Ps 8:3–4) and the
dominion God gives to humanity (Ps 8:5–8).37 In Psalm 16, David’s words,
“I have set the Lord continually before me” (Ps 16:8), express his trust in God’s
providence. Calvin writes, “The meaning therefore is that David kept his mind
so intently fixed upon the providence of God as to be fully persuaded that
whenever any difficulty or distress should befall him, God would be always at
hand to assist him.” On Ps 22:9–10, he also identifies David’s definition
of faith as trust in God’s providence and again points to God’s provision of
nurturing care right at birth as a powerful sign of this providence.38
Moreover, Calvin asserts that one sees God’s providence in God’s election
of David as a godly king and in the divine ordination and preservation of civil
governments. Thus, the anointing of the king above his companions (Ps 45:7)
is an indication of God’s providence and election, for the anointing, he argues,
preceded any righteousness of the king; thus, the righteousness of the king is
not the cause of God’s election but the fruit of it. Likewise, in his opening
comments of Psalm 72, Calvin exclaims that just as God sets up and maintains
rightful government in the world, how much more God will set up and
maintain the spiritual kingdom of his Son. Indeed, the providence of God
means that God’s hand always preserves and protects God’s people, the elect.39
JOHN CALVIN 87
David set the Lord before him for the purpose of constantly looking to
him in all his dangers. . . . David reckons himself secure against all
dangers and promises himself certain safety because, with the eyes of
faith, he beholds God as present with him.41
The gladness expressed in the next verse of Psalm 16 promises the fruits of this
faith: such trust in God’s protection gives the believer both mental tranquility
and a life of happiness. Furthermore, the last verses of this Psalm (Ps 16:9–11)
display David as an example of faith in God in the face of death, so that
believers may see that they need not fear death but have the assurance of
salvation.42 Finally, Calvin finds in David’s words of Psalm 22 an outstanding
model of faithful and godly wrestling in times of despair and overwhelming
adversity. David demonstrates for the church, says Calvin, how to wrestle
faithfully with doubt and despair. Moreover, he gives an example for imitation
of how believers should encourage themselves in such times of trial and
suffering: to cry out to God, hope for deliverance, declare their own unworthi-
ness, and recount the benefits and evidences of God’s fatherly love that God
has already bestowed upon them.43
David is also the exemplar of true humility for the church. For Calvin, Ps
2:10–11 (“O kings, be wise. . . . Serve the Lord with fear”) is David’s appeal to
88 THE JUDAIZING CALVIN
denounce confidence in one’s own wisdom and to follow the fear of the Lord.
More plainly, he interprets Ps 16:2–3 as expressing that the good one does is
not for God but for the saints, so that in this way David teaches Christians to lay
aside all presumption of merit. Furthermore, David’s example of humility in
Ps 22:6 (“But I am a worm”) also points the believer to hope in God’s relief.
Likewise, in David’s avowal that God is his “strength and song” (Ps 118:14),
Calvin sees an acknowledgment of his weakness and an attribution of his
safety exclusively to God—both of which are dispositions the church should
emulate.44 Hence, David serves as the exemplar of that humility that leads to
complete surrender to God, attribution of all good things as coming from God,
and the fear of the Lord that leads to true wisdom.
David is not only the supreme exemplar of faith and humility but also a
preacher of the gospel and a model of true prayer. In Ps 2:7 (“I will tell of the
decree of the Lord”), Calvin finds David assuming the office of preacher and
later applies this to Christ and then more broadly to the apostles, pastors, and
teachers of the church. The last verse of Psalm 22 (“and proclaim his deliver-
ance to a people yet unborn”) exhibits how the preaching of the gospel main-
tains the perpetuity of the church.45 Moreover, Calvin lifts up David’s prayers
as models of authentic, devout prayer. Psalm 22 demonstrates David’s perse-
verance in prayer through severe adversity and provides a rule for the church:
“The true rule of praying is, therefore, this: that he who seems to have beaten
the air to no purpose, or to have lost his labor in praying for a long time, should
not on that account leave off or desist from that duty.”46 In addition, David’s
example of prayer gives instruction as to how to resist the deceptions of the
devil through the practices of continual crying to God for help and enumera-
tion of God’s past benefits as evidence of God’s continued goodness. Most of
all, David prays with true, solid faith and believes without doubt that God will
hear him and answer him. Calvin understands Psalm 72 as a prayer that David
has offered as an example to the church of how to pray for the coming of the
kingdom of God, and Psalm 118 exemplifies the power and efficacy of prayer.
Finally, the example of David, along with the example of the Jews as a whole,
gives powerful instruction to believers not to cease in praying for the restora-
tion of the church.47
In Calvin’s exposition of Psalm 8 especially, David models the right praise
of God’s beneficence to which all should be directed:
innumerable benefits that they receive at his hand in their sparing and
frigid manner, but may rather apply their whole hearts to this holy
exercise and put forth in it their highest efforts.48
David exemplifies not only the praise of God’s infinite goodness but also the
praise of God’s providence (Ps 8:2). He contrasts God’s liberality to humanity’s
lowliness (Ps 8:3–4) to further show forth God’s fatherly beneficence. Proper
praise of God’s goodness, says Calvin, recognizes that all goodness has its
source in God (Ps 16:2). In this way, Calvin views David as constantly setting
before himself the remembrance of God’s goodness and fatherly care in order
to sustain himself through times of adversity (Ps 16:8 and 22:9–10). Likewise,
David invites all believers to public praise of God through his example exhib-
ited in Ps 22:22, “I will declare your name to my brethren; in the midst of the
assembly I will praise you.”49 Thus, affirms Calvin, David’s praise of God’s
fatherly goodness and providential care embodies for the church the proper
attitude of praise that is part of the true worship of God.
David further exemplifies true worship and piety by setting himself apart
from superstition and idolatry. By connecting himself to the society of the
righteous (Ps 16:3) and separating himself from the pollutions of the world, he
shows the true way to maintain unity with the saints of God. David’s flight
from impiety and idolatry may be seen in such statements as “I will not taste
their drink offerings of blood” and “I will not take their names upon my lips”
(Ps 16:4).50 Likewise, the recognition of God as one’s inheritance (Ps 16:5–6)
offers an antidote against the false attractions of the world and sets forth the
reason for the contentment Christians can have in God alone:
[David] shows the reason why he separates himself from idolaters and
resolves to continue in the church of God, why he shuns with abhorrence
all participation in their errors and cleaves to the pure worship of God;
namely, because he rests in the only true God as his portion. . . . This
passage teaches us that none are taught aright in true godliness but those
who reckon God alone sufficient for their happiness.51
heart” and reverent fear before God but also demonstrates that a truly righteous
king upholds the true worship of God (Ps 72:5) and calls his people to prepare
for the pure worship of God (Ps 118:19).53
The many facets that Calvin sees exemplified in David to furnish a power-
ful model for imitation by the church can be gathered together under the rubric
of “Protestant piety.” Through the example of David in these Psalms, Calvin
essentially sets forth his many-faceted definition of the true piety that God
requires from believers. Just as David looked at his situation with eyes of faith
and saw not what the physical eyes see but what the spiritual eyes see—namely,
that God is present and able to save—so also should the Protestant churches
persevere and see with eyes of faith.54 Hence, the faith of true Protestant piety
is one that completely trusts in the protection of God, puts its confidence in
God alone, and bears the mark of a tranquil mind.55 True Protestant piety for
Calvin also entails the proper dispositions before God of humility and acknowl-
edgment that all good comes from God. Hence, one cannot rely upon one’s
own self, abilities, or works, but must render to God the due recognition that
God is the beginning and end of the good life of faith.56 Furthermore, Calvin
argues through the example of David that the proper response to God is not
only faith but also praise of God’s goodness, liberality, and providential care.
True piety, then, knows that all good comes from God and responds in praise of
God’s infinite goodness to humankind in general and to the elect in particular.
Finally, authentic Protestant piety requires proper practices of true wor-
ship as well. These include not only public praise of God but also preaching the
gospel, the exercise of prayer, fleeing superstitions and idolatry, cleaving to the
society of the righteous, and preserving the true religion of God. Indeed, David
urges believers to be “stirred” to godliness, “inflamed” with the love of God,
“aroused” from their lethargy, and “animated” in their praise of God. Calvin
sees David as awakening people from their “torpor and indifference” in order
that they celebrate God’s goodness with their whole hearts, rather than in a
“sparing and frigid manner.”57 In this way, David teaches the faith that trusts
in God’s eventual triumph over the enemies of the church:
In a word, David here animates the hearts of the godly against being
dispirited by the foolhardy attempts on the part of those who presume
to introduce discord and disorder into the kingdom of Christ; for he
shows them that God will put forth his invincible power for the
maintaining of the glory of his sacred throne. When, then, our minds
are agitated by various commotions, let us learn confidently to repose
on this support, that however much the world may rage against Christ,
it will never be able to hurl him from the right hand of the Father.58
JOHN CALVIN 91
These words of David demonstrate that the struggle of the Protestant churches in
Calvin’s day is not in vain. Calvin, then, intends through the powerful example of
David’s piety to arouse the Protestant churches to proper humility, fervent prayer,
ardent love of God, exuberant praise of God’s goodness, and faithful pursuit of
godliness—all in all, to the exercises of true Protestant piety.
Calvin does not stop here, though. He sets the figure of David as the
exemplar of true worship and piety in contrast to Roman Catholic impiety
and false devotion as another means of setting forth the practices of true
Protestant piety. Thus, Calvin uses David’s example in Psalm 16 to call Chris-
tians to flee the “profane superstitions” of the Roman church.59 Similarly, by
setting forth the exercises of true godliness in his statement “I will pay my
vows” (Ps 22:25), David, according to Calvin, expresses the holy desire for the
purity of the church over and against Roman Catholic corruption of the church
through their false and foolish vows. Likewise, Calvin contrasts David’s confes-
sion of praise over and against Roman Catholic superstitions:
Moreover, Calvin likens the Roman Catholics to Saul in David’s day. While David
aimed to purify the temple and establish the true religion of God, Saul profaned the
temple and led the people astray. The Roman church today, decries Calvin, leads
the people astray. Even more profoundly, Calvin equates the “builders” in Ps 118:22
with the Roman Catholics. Just as David had to oppose the religious rulers of Saul’s
regime in order to promote the true worship of God, so also in Calvin’s day, the pope
and the Roman Catholics are the illegitimate leaders who misguide the people.
Indeed, says Calvin, they are the enemies of Christ. Hence, Calvin sets forth David
as the exemplar of Protestant piety over and against Roman Catholic piety.61
method of paralleling the Roman Catholics with the Jews as the previously
established “enemy.” Indeed, Calvin rarely identifies the “enemies” in these
Psalms as the Jews. He usually first interprets the “enemies” within the
historical context of David and his struggles against both domestic (e.g.,
Saul) and foreign (e.g., the Philistines) enemies. Thus, “all those who see me
mock at me” (Ps 22:7) are the enemies of David who tell him that his prayers
are in vain and that God has deserted him. Likewise, the description of the
enemies found in Ps 22:12–13 indicate the cruelty of David’s enemies. Similar-
ly, “all the nations encompassed me” (Ps 118:10), explains Calvin, expresses
David’s feeling that the whole world is against him, while “you have sorely
thrust at me” (Ps 118:13) is specifically directed at Saul.62
Even when Calvin applies the “enemies” in these Psalms to the enemies of
Christ and the church, he does so in order to offer the comfort and promise of
the future triumph of Christ’s kingdom over its enemies. Thus, just as David’s
enemies did not think that they were rising up against God in Psalm 2, so also
do Christ’s enemies not realize that in raging against Christ, they are actually
assailing God.63 Likewise, Ps 110:1 (“until I make your enemies your footstool”)
is David’s prophecy that all those who rise up against the kingdom of Christ
will come to ruin. Calvin writes:
From this let us learn that however numerous those enemies may be
who conspire against the Son of God and attempt the subversion of
his kingdom, all will be unavailing, for they shall never prevail against
God’s immutable purpose but, on the contrary, they shall . . . be laid
prostrate at Christ’s feet.64
In this same way, he understands Ps 110:5 (“he will shatter kings”) as David’s
prophecy of Christ’s triumph over the enemies of the messianic kingdom.65
And when Calvin specifically names these enemies of Christ and the church,
more often than not they are the Roman Catholics. In the end, he argues that
the Roman Catholics are the real enemies of Christ and the church when they
stand against the Protestant efforts to reestablish God’s true kingdom and the
practices of true worship and piety.
Calvin does retain a number of the negative images of the Jews and rhetoric
against the Jewish interpretations of certain passages in these Psalms,66 but he
very rarely identifies the Jews explicitly as the enemies of Christ in these
Psalms, contrary to Luther’s constant and Bucer’s occasional tendencies to do
so. More significantly, he does not use a single one of the passages commonly
deployed by Christian exegetes against the Jews in this way. Thus, Calvin does
not identify the “enemy and avenger” in Ps 8:2 with the Jews but, rather, with
the “despisers of God.” Further, he does not read Ps 45:10, “O daughter. . . forget
JOHN CALVIN 93
your people and your father’s house,” as concerning the Jews at all; rather, he
aligns the church with “daughter” to exhort her to self-denial and the fleeing
from impiety and corruption. Neither the “bees” in Ps 118:12 (“they surrounded
me like bees”) nor even the “builders” in Ps 118:22 (“the stone that the builders
rejected”) evoke an equation of these with the Jews for Calvin.67 Instead, one
finds several places where he promotes biblical Jews as positive examples for
Christian imitation, the foremost of which is David himself.68
Calvin not only does not identify the Jews as the enemies of Christ and the
church or use the passages against the Jews that Christian tradition has
typically used against the Jews but also at several points lifts up the Jews as
exemplars of faith, prayer, and perseverance worthy of imitation. For instance,
he applies Ps 22:4, “in you our fathers trusted,” as an example of Israel’s faith
to give the church a teaching of comfort:
Here the Psalmist assigns the reason why God sits amidst the praises of
the tribes of Israel. The reason is because his hand had been always
stretched forth to preserve his faithful people. David . . . gathers together
the examples of all past ages in order thereby to encourage, strengthen,
and effectually persuade himself that as God had never cast off any of his
chosen people, he also would be one of the number of those for whom
deliverance is securely laid up in the hand of God.69
Rather than applying Ps 45:10 (“forget your people and your father’s house”)
negatively against the Jews, Calvin appeals to the example of the Jews teaching
their foreign wives to flee previous superstitions and cling to the true worship
of God—an example that demonstrates how the church needs to renounce its
superstitions and cleave to true piety.70 On Ps 118:25–26, he promotes the Jews
as exemplars of prayer, faith, and perseverance:
And as the Jews never ceased to put up this prayer during that sad
desolation and those hideous devastations [i.e., during the Babylonian
exile], their perseverance ought to inspire us with new vigor in these
days. At that time they had not the honor of a kingdom, no royal
throne, no name but with God; and yet amid this deplorable and
ruinous state of things, they adhered to the form of prayer formerly
prescribed to them by the Holy Spirit. Instructed by their example, let
us not fail to pray ardently for the restoration of the church, which, in
our day, is involved in sad desolation.71
Calvin, then, sets forth the faithful example of Jews in times of adversity for the
Protestant churches to imitate during times of trial under the “captivity” of
the Roman church.
94 THE JUDAIZING CALVIN
Although he does often lift up the Jews of the Old Testament as examples
for the church to imitate, there are several passages where he gives strong
critique of rabbinic exegesis. Particularly in interpreting those passages that
are in dispute between Jews and Christians, Calvin expresses disdain for how
the rabbis corrupt the text, obscure the true sense of the passage, and are
ignorant of the true meaning of Scripture.72 Notably, he does argue for the
christological meanings of these verses over and against rabbinic interpreta-
tions, lest my arguments thus far be misunderstood to say that Calvin is willing
to concede everything to the Jews in his limitations on christological exegesis.
However, just as notable are the reasons he gives for the places in which he
finds the rabbinic readings to be “frivolous,” “feeble,” “obscure,” and “without
foundation”: namely, Calvin does not think that the rabbis maintain the simple
and natural sense of the passage as a whole. For example, on Ps 22:16, he
contends that the rabbinic translation of “like a lion” does not suit the meaning
of the passage and requires the addition of a verb (“they surround”) to complete
the phrase and make it sensible. Though Calvin agrees that the Hebrew is
problematic, he affirms the Christian translation as more in keeping with
the simple sense of the text. In this same way, on Ps 45:6, he argues that
even the rabbis have to admit that the simple sense of the phrase “your throne
is forever” is not fully completed in Solomon or David, as their throne was not
eternal, and thus must point to the Messiah.73 These are examples of Calvin’s
critical engagement with rabbinic exegesis; however, in the final section of this
chapter, I propose that Calvin is dealing much more positively with rabbinic
exegesis than first meets the eye.
As the previous chapters have shown, reading these Psalms as literal prophe-
cies of Christ is a commonplace in the antecedent Christian exegetical tradi-
tion. This is most certainly true of those Psalms that are quoted in the New
Testament either in reference to Christ or from Christ’s own mouth. Psalms
8 and 16 are two interesting cases in that the New Testament authors use them
in reference to Christ and yet Calvin only very grudgingly interprets them
concerning Christ.74 Moreover, Calvin pointedly argues against the New Testa-
ment authors’ christological use of them. Indeed, this chapter has shown that
the overriding weight of his interpretations is to use David as a supreme
teacher and exemplar for the church’s imitation, rather than the christological
readings of these Psalms. Furthermore, Psalms 8 and 16 become interesting
cases because they figure prominently in the Lutheran Aegidius Hunnius’s
JOHN CALVIN 95
I have no doubt that the word put forth is to establish, as if the prophet had said,
‘God needs not strong military forces to destroy the ungodly; instead of these,
the mouths of children are sufficient for God’s purposes.’”78
On this same verse in Psalm 8, Bucer provides great detail concerning
Abraham Ibn Ezra’s interpretation of “out of the mouths of babes and sucklings”
as indicating the time when a human begins to speak. For speech, says Ibn Ezra,
separates humans from the rest of creation and shows their rationality, superiority,
and excellence.79 Again, Calvin directly addresses this interpretation and rejects it:
“In my judgment, those reason very foolishly who think that this is done when
children begin to articulate, because then also the intellectual faculty of the soul
shows itself.”80 Calvin instead proclaims that one should keep to the “clear and
suitable” reading of this passage, which is that the verse speaks of God’s provi-
dence. “Babes and sucklings” reveal God’s providence by the fact that nourish-
ment is ready for them as soon as they are born and by the fact that they are born
with the skill to suck; in other words, all they need has already been provided by the
Great Artisan. Incidentally, this is precisely the point made by David Kimhi in his
comments on this text.81 Indeed, Kimhi’s emphases in his interpretation of the
whole of Psalm 8 are that this Psalm portrays the providence of God that may be
seen in the order of all creation and that demands humanity’s recognition and
praise. These are also Calvin’s emphases: that David sets forth the example of
praise of God’s providence and calls all humanity to “apply their whole hearts” and
efforts to the exercise of this praise. Yet, while Kimhi emphasizes that babes and
sucklings have the power to recognize their Creator and should respond with
praise, Calvin seems to especially emphasize that these babes and sucklings,
particularly, are active and loud proclaimers of God’s providence.82
Now it may just be a striking coincidence that Calvin reads Psalm 8 in very
much the same light as does David Kimhi, for a reading in terms of divine
providence is certainly a strong interest of Calvin’s. One other element, howev-
er, makes one wonder whether Calvin is reading Kimhi in some way (probably
through another Protestant commentary). Calvin makes a point to translate the
Hebrew verb En ‘ in the infinitive mood rather than the past tense. The reason
he gives for this translation is that it retains the meaning of the verse better in
indicating that the earth is too small to contain the glory of God. This is also
precisely the point that Kimhi makes. Kimhi prefers the infinitive and supports
this reading by saying the meaning of the verse is that the higher elements (the
heavens) controls the lower elements (earth), for the earth is too small to
contain those higher things.83
On Ps 16:4, Bucer uses Jewish exegesis to unravel the difficulties of the
translation of two Hebrew words: F YEO , which may mean “they hasten” or
“they endow or offer” (i.e., they give gifts), depending on the tense of the verb,
JOHN CALVIN 97
and N‘FBu S , which may mean “idols” or “troubles or sorrows.” He cites the
Ð
translation of F YEO
as “they endow” by Kimhi and Abraham Ibn Ezra, but he
prefers Rashi’s reading of “they hasten.” Likewise, he cites the translation of
N‘FBu S as “troubles or sorrows,” but he prefers to read this as referring to
Ð
idols. Thus, Bucer concludes that he agrees more with the interpretation of
Rashi, who translates this verse as referring to those who long to serve foreign
gods (i.e., those who hasten after idols).84 Calvin, on the other hand, prefers the
translation of F YEO
as “they offer” and N‘FBu S as “sorrows” or “troubles,” so
Ð
that the verse means that the ungodly offer gifts to someone other than God
and in doing so multiply their sorrows. Calvin’s attention to grammar deter-
mines his reading of these Hebrew words: because N‘FBu S is in the feminine,
Ð
it properly denotes “sorrows”; likewise, because F YEO is a Kal conjugation, it
properly means “they offer.” Again, this is precisely the reading and the
reasons for the reading given by David Kimhi.85
Bucer’s other references to Jewish exegesis in his comments on Psalm 16
are less detailed and often in the form of one-liners. Most of these cite a
comment by Kimhi. Thus, on Ps 16:2, he mentions the translation by Kimhi
of this as “the good I do is not unto you” (rather than “I have no good apart from
you”), so that the meaning is that we do no good for God because God has no
need of any good from us, but we do this good for “the holy ones in the land.”
This reading, indeed, appears to be one of the things that supports Bucer’s and
later Calvin’s emphases in this Psalm that David sets his affections upon the
saints, teaches believers to connect themselves to the society of the righteous,
and does good to the saints. Both Bucer and Calvin connect the second verse
with the “holy ones in the land” of the next verse, just as Kimhi does.86 In
addition to his emphasis on David’s affection and good deeds for the saints,
Kimhi’s reading of Psalm 16 also stresses David as an exemplar of obedience (Ps
16:3), trust in God (Ps 16:5), and the recognition of God alone as one’s inheri-
tance (Ps 16:5–6). Furthermore, Kimhi emphasizes that David himself was
confident in God’s delivery of him from all harm, even after death (Ps 16:9–11).
These are all emphases found in Calvin’s interpretation of Psalm 16.87
By walking through Bucer’s uses of Jewish exegesis in these two Psalms
and exploring Calvin’s responses to them, we find that in many cases Calvin
does refer to the ideas of Jewish exegesis cited by Bucer and rejects them,
though in doing so, he does not explicitly name any as Jewish exegesis. There
are also several ways, however, in which Calvin positively uses the ideas of
Jewish exegesis, though again he does not openly credit Jewish exegesis.
Indeed, even though Bucer overtly uses Jewish exegesis and Calvin does not,
Calvin’s particular emphases on divine providence and David as supreme
exemplar in his interpretations of these Psalms fall even more closely to
98 THE JUDAIZING CALVIN
the heart of Jewish exegesis than do Bucer’s. These emphases, as has been
shown, are very much in line with those of David Kimhi. Hence, there is strong
indication that Calvin’s commentary on Psalms 8 and 16 contain clear echoes
of parts of Bucer’s accounts of Jewish exegesis when it suits his own theolog-
ical purposes and that Calvin has knowledge of Jewish exegesis not cited
by Bucer.88
These reasons alone would not be enough, though, to say that Calvin’s
interpretations fall closer to the heart of Jewish exegesis than do Bucer’s.
Two other important factors lead to this assertion. First, Bucer does give a
christological reading of those particular verses cited by the New Testament
in reference to Christ without qualification, whereas Calvin expresses real
reservation and criticism of the New Testament authors’ use of these Psalms
and, thus, gives a qualified christological reading. In other words, Bucer does
not disparage the New Testament authors’ application of these Psalms; rather,
he harmonizes their reading with his own emphases. Calvin, on the other
hand, explicitly says the New Testament authors’ applications present difficul-
ties, do not actually explain the meaning of the text, and instead accommodate
it to a different sense. Indeed, he is not at all willing to accept the reading of
Ps 8:5 (“you have made him a little lower than angels”) in reference to
the humiliation of Christ, even though it is read this way by the author of
Hebrews.89
Another reason that Calvin can be seen as more closely taking up the
emphases of Jewish exegesis is that he—far more than Bucer on these two
Psalms—wants to give a reading of these Psalms in reference to the person and
history of David. Calvin stands apart from Bucer in his profound emphasis on
the example of David.90 Rather than giving a reading in reference to David,
Bucer could be understood as giving a different kind of christological reading
than Luther’s, but a christological reading nonetheless. Although Bucer does
not emphasize a reading of these Psalms as literal prophecies of Christ’s death,
resurrection, and ascension (though he still concedes these readings), he does
give a powerful and emphatic reading of these Psalms in reference to Christ as
the head of his members.91 Though Calvin echoes Bucer’s head-member
reading to show how certain verses are properly interpreted in reference to
Christ, Calvin’s overwhelming emphasis is on David as exemplar of Protestant
piety. In effect, it can appear to some that Calvin elevates the example of David
where he should be promoting Christ. This is precisely one of Aegidius
Hunnius’s accusations against him. In point of fact, all of the reasons Calvin
could be seen as promoting Jewish exegetical emphases that are highlighted
here—emphases on David rather than Christ, on the excellence of humanity,
and on divine providence and the lack of anti-Jewish rhetoric due to not
JOHN CALVIN 99
Both the Greek and Latin fathers, I confess, have strained these words
to a meaning wholly different, referring them to the bringing back of
the soul of Christ from hell. But it is better to adhere to the natural
simplicity of the interpretation that I have given, that we may not
make ourselves objects of ridicule to the Jews; and further, that one
subtlety, by engendering many others, may not involve us in a
labyrinth.93
Bucer many times expresses this same concern for rendering Christian read-
ings that are defensible before the Jews, but it does not lead him to the same
conclusions as it does Calvin, for Bucer states clearly that he wants to strengthen
traditional christological readings by grounding them in the historia, not
diminish them.94 Of course, Calvin would not see himself as diminishing
christological readings of the Psalms but, rather, strengthening them all the
more by consistently applying certain exegetical principles. In this way, Calvin
is more willing to break with the antecedent Christian tradition when it does
not follow those principles he has set forth that call for such christological
readings. Hence, we find between Bucer and Calvin important distinctions in
their views of the authority of the previous Christian exegetical tradition or, at
least, in how blatantly they are willing to counter it.95
Conclusions
In the context of prior Christian readings of these eight Psalms, Calvin makes a
number of surprising exegetical shifts. Although he does interpret portions of
most of these Psalms in reference to Christ, he gives much more limited and
100 THE JUDAIZING CALVIN
less frequent christological readings. In some key places, such as the inter-
pretations of Psalms 8 and 16, he actually explicitly rejects the christological
reading of the Psalm. Furthermore, he not only breaks with the prominence
given to these Psalms in Christian exegesis as literal prophecies of Christ’s
incarnation, crucifixion, resurrection, and ascension but also does not use
these Psalms to teach the doctrines of Trinity and the two natures of Christ.
Instead, Calvin applies his own specific exegetical principles to disclose
what he considers to be the simple and natural sense of the text. By finding
powerful doctrinal and pastoral messages for the church in the simple and
natural sense of the Psalm—namely, in the historical life of David—Calvin
believes he has fully discharged his duty as a biblical exegete. More often than
not, such readings lead him to elevate the prominent messages of comfort and
call to true Protestant piety as that which the Spirit speaks—through the
mouthpiece of David—to downtrodden Protestant churches. Hence, Calvin’s
primary interpretations of these Psalms are readings through the person of
David that bring comfort and teach true Protestant piety (over and against
Roman Catholic piety) and expound upon the doctrines of the goodness of
God, election, and divine providence.96
Moreover, this study of Calvin’s interpretation of these eight Psalms reveals
that the Jews play a very different role in his exegesis than in the interpretations of
Luther or even Bucer. Calvin does not equate Jews with the “enemies” found in
these Psalms, nor does he apply passages of these Psalms against the Jews that
Christian interpreters had historically deployed against them. Indeed, at several
points, he elevates the Jews as positive examples for the church’s imitation. His
concern to render a Christian reading that is defensible before the Jews is a crucial
rationale for giving more limited christological interpretations of these Psalms
and for dropping the Trinitarian applications of these Psalms altogether.
Like Luther and Bucer, Calvin views David as a prophet who foresees
Christ; however, the content of these prophecies differs from the content that
Luther, Bucer, and the late medieval Christian interpreters emphasize. Where-
as Luther, Bucer, and the antecedent Christian tradition view David primarily
as a prophet who foresees and foretells the incarnation, passion, resurrection,
and ascension of Christ, when Calvin speaks of David as a prophet, he specifi-
cally means a prophet who foresees the messianic kingdom. The description of
the kingdom of Christ given by David is the full content of David’s prophecies,
according to Calvin. Indeed, such differing perspectives on David’s office as
prophet have consequences for the treatment of Jews in these Psalms. The
readings of these Psalms as prophesying Christ’s passion and resurrection
have tended to render the Jews as the enemies of Christ and the church, and
Calvin’s lack of doing so curbs these tendencies.
JOHN CALVIN 101
heresies.3 Thus, I begin with some historical background to the debate be-
tween Aegidius Hunnius and Calvin’s defender David Pareus. Next, I explore
Hunnius’s accusations against Calvin, especially as they appear in his critique
of Calvin’s interpretation of these eight Psalms. Lastly, I turn to David Pareus’s
defense of Calvin’s exegesis of the messianic Psalms.4
John Calvin has certainly had his share of Lutheran critics. During his lifetime,
most of his Lutheran detractors attacked his Eucharistic theology, including
most significantly the criticisms of Joachim Westphal and Tilemann Hesshus.5
The accusations of Aegidius Hunnius (1550–1603) against Calvin’s exegesis of
Scripture appear after Calvin’s death; thus, the Reformed theologian David
Pareus (1548–1622) provides the formal rebuttal. Hunnius received his educa-
tion from Württemberg and Tübingen. He began his career as a professor at the
University of Marburg, but in 1592, he was called to Wittenberg. The central
aim of his career was the restoration of Lutheran orthodoxy, which for him also
crucially involved the fight against the growing presence of Calvinism in the
electorate of Saxony, where he lived. Hence, Hunnius’s treatises against Calvin
were part of his larger program of reestablishing Lutheran orthodoxy
and purifying Germany from what he saw as Calvinist contamination. David
Pareus, on the other hand, was a student of Zacharias Ursinus in Heidelberg.
Pareus spent most of his life as a pastor of various Reformed congregations in
southern Germany and eventually finished the last two decades of his career as
a teacher and the professor at the Collegium Sapientia in Heidelberg. Though
he formally took the responsibility to confront Hunnius’s accusations against
Calvin, Pareus was by nature an irenicist who spent much of his career trying
to find ways to unite Lutherans and the Reformed on such issues as the
Lord’s Supper.
The debate between Hunnius and Pareus begins with a 1589 treatise by
Hunnius, in which he charges Calvin with undermining the exegetical founda-
tions of the doctrine of the Trinity.6 Although Hunnius recognizes that Calvin
does believe in the doctrines of the Trinity and the deity of Christ (and therefore
he is not actually an Arian), he contends that Calvin has rejected the patristic
exegesis that has supported these dogmas and has, thus, “opened a window of
opportunity for the corrupt theology of the Anti-Trinitarians,” let alone that of
Arians and judaizers.7 David Pareus defends Calvin against these accusations
of Arianism and judaizing by pointing to his work against contemporary Anti-
Trinitarians, such as Servetus, Alciati, and Blandrata.8
THE JUDAIZING CALVIN 105
Hunnius begins his treatise on the judaizing Calvin by clarifying to Pareus that
he has not accused and does not accuse Calvin of Arianism per se but, rather, of
“offering an opportunity” and “opening a window” to lay a foundation for Arian
impiety. In the preface, he sets forth the purpose of his treatise to “pierce
through the impious glosses of Calvin,” by which Calvin “darkens with Jewish
darkness” many biblical passages that reveal and confirm Christ’s divinity.
Thus, he contends that Calvin distorts Scripture and drags it away from its
genuine sense. Furthermore, decries Hunnius, Calvin not only “arrogantly
looks down upon and mocks” the interpretations of the ancient and recent
church fathers but also “in nothing does he inform himself of the sacred
interpretations of the evangelists and apostles, badly mocking these and having
no respect [ for them].”11 Hunnius proceeds first by pointing to biblical pas-
sages that the church fathers and the apostles interpret concerning the Trinity
and that Calvin does not. Then he turns to biblical passages traditionally read
concerning Christ’s deity that Calvin does not apply in this way. Finally, he
turns to biblical texts traditionally read as prophecies of Christ’s passion,
resurrection, and ascension that Calvin does not employ in these ways.
106 THE JUDAIZING CALVIN
For to which of the angels did God ever say, “You are my Son; today
I have begotten you”? [Ps 2:7] . . . Of the angels he says, “He makes his
angels winds, and his servants flames of fire” [Ps 104:4]. But of the Son
he says, “Your throne, O God, is forever and ever, and the righteous
scepter is the scepter of your kingdom. You have loved righteousness
and hated wickedness; therefore God, your God, has anointed you with
the oil of gladness beyond your companions” [Ps 45:6–7].
The apostle states that in these passages the Spirit undoubtedly speaks
concerning the Son, but Calvin writes that the simple and natural sense of
Ps 45:6–7 concerns Solomon and that it concerns Christ only via the type and
not under the literal sense. Consequently, Hunnius accuses Calvin of judaiz-
ing: “For the Jews clamor in this same sense as Calvin when he says this to be
the simple and natural sense!”13
THE JUDAIZING CALVIN 107
Will the judgment of Calvin stand better than that of the apostles? If
so, then when other articles of the Christian faith wish to be founded
upon the Prophets, will the Prophets be seen not to explain
them . . . but, rather, to bend [deflectit] them toward the sense, of which
others in the Prophets have said is the true sense? If concerning the
Prophets their [the apostles’] words are considered to be embellished
through amplification . . . if, furthermore, they [the apostles] are
seen not so much as interpreting the Prophets’ words but as
accommodating them to some other thing through pious deflection
108 THE JUDAIZING CALVIN
[deflexione]. . . . Well, even the Jews would not suffer the opening of so
many thousands of cracks!17
In this way, Hunnius charges Calvin with separating the apostles’ meaning
from that of the prophets’ meaning and, thus, threatening the very unity of the
Testaments that Calvin claims to uphold.
After arguing for the literal sense of Ps 8:4–6 as a literal prophecy of
Christ’s passion, Hunnius turns to Calvin’s interpretation of Psalm 22, which
Christian tradition, the apostles, and the Gospels have undisputedly read in
reference to the crucifixion of Christ. He demonstrates the multiple parallels
between the Gospels’ descriptions of Christ’s suffering during the crucifixion
and Psalm 22. Thus, that Calvin should explain this Psalm first in reference to
David is an atrocity in Hunnius’s eyes. He views Calvin as a Jew opposing
Christ when he shatters these most basic prophecies and weakens the Chris-
tian interpretation of Psalm 22 before the Jews. Hunnius quotes Calvin’s
statement that David speaks of himself through the use of metaphors to bewail
his condition and exclaims in the margins beside this quote, “Away with your
metaphors!” Again, he disparages Calvin’s “human invention” and blatant
disregard for the interpretations of the evangelists and the apostles. Indeed,
for him, Calvin is no better than a Jewish rabbi who devises ways to crucify
Christ all over again. Finally, Hunnius quotes Calvin’s exegesis of the John 19
account of Christ’s crucifixion, in which Calvin writes that the evangelists
inappropriately drag [trahit] Ps 22:18 to apply it to Christ, and thus they “neglect
the figure and depart from the natural sense.” At this, Hunnius can hardly
contain his fury when he exclaims that Calvin not only exalts himself again
over the authority of the evangelists and the apostles but also acts as their
censor. In effect, fumes Hunnius, Calvin has accused the evangelists, rather
than the Jews, of bending [deflexione] the meaning of this Psalm to an
unnatural sense.18
Next Hunnius turns to Psalm 16 as a literal prophecy of Christ’s resurrec-
tion, according to both the Apostle Peter (Acts 2:25–31) and the Apostle Paul
(Acts 13:34–37). Indeed, both apostles explicitly write that Ps 16:10 cannot be
applied to David, in that David died and experienced corruption, and must be a
prophecy of Christ’s resurrection. Yet, Calvin proceeds to apply this passage to
David nonetheless.19 In response, Hunnius, using the terms Calvin employs in
his criticisms of apostolic exegesis, sarcastically pronounces:
this psalm is forced to be drawn away from the praise of Christ for
which it is written. Therefore, he prefers to drag [trahere] the meaning
to David in contradiction to Peter and Paul [who show] that David
treated nothing of himself but entirely concerning Christ and his
resurrection.20
Thus, Calvin weakens all the strong prophecies of David and departs from
apostolic authority. Indeed, Hunnius points out that Calvin even notes the
apostles’ readings of Ps 16:8–11 concerning Christ alone and exclaims, “If this
is so, why does he apply it to the person of David?” Thus, if one follows Calvin,
bellows Hunnius, the testimony of Psalm 16 can no longer be a refuge of
Christian teaching; instead, it is filled with “Jewish treachery, wantonness, and
tricks.”21
Finally, Hunnius turns to Ps 68:18 and Ps 8:6 as literal prophecies of
Christ’s ascension, according to apostolic usage. He appeals to the Apostle
Paul’s use of Ps 68:18 in Eph 4:7–10 concerning Christ’s ascension and
condemns Calvin’s application of it to David.22 Having already pointed out
Calvin’s accusation that Paul bends the meaning of Ps 68:18 to apply it to
Christ, he moves on to discuss Ps 8:6. The literal sense of this verse, in
accordance with 1 Cor 16:25–27, Eph 1:20–22, and Heb 2:7–8, speaks of the
exaltation of Christ to the right hand of God and his dominion over all
creatures, which occurs at Christ’s ascension. Hunnius admits that Calvin
does indeed “sprinkle some mentioning of Christ” into his exegesis of Ps
8:6, but far “too sparingly.” More to the point, Calvin does not view this verse
as prophecy. Hunnius is dissatisfied with the fact that Calvin will apply only
minor parts of Psalm 8 to Christ and instead narrates the whole of the Psalm as
concerning the excellence of humanity. Thus, he concludes, “Attend to this,
whoever you are, how much the most putrid glosses of Calvin depart from the
minds of the holy apostles, who without doubt understand this Psalm more
rightly and profoundly than a hundred Calvins and just as many Bezas or even
more than all the foggy fumings of Pareus and all of these put together!”23
Hunnius not only is horrified at Calvin’s departure from apostolic exegesis
and traditional Christian readings of these texts but also accuses Calvin of
wicked and clever subterfuge. He views Calvin as “sprinkling” his interpreta-
tions with references to Christ, as if to avoid accusation, and then going on to
explain these passages much more fully concerning David. Hunnius labels
these as “pure tricks,” “deception,” and a “game of cheating the church.”
Indeed, as a final proof of Calvin’s artifices, he turns to Calvin’s exegesis of Ps
110:1. Although Calvin does clearly state that Ps 110:4 (“You are a priest after
the order of Melchizedek”) does apply to none other than Christ, Hunnius
110 THE JUDAIZING CALVIN
contends that he sprinkles Ps 110:1 “with the soot of Jewish corruptions,” for
Calvin nonetheless applies this verse to David. The problem is that while the
prior Christian exegetical tradition applies the whole of Psalm 110 to Christ,
Calvin applies only a small portion of it. Thus, Hunnius believes that Calvin
acts as a trickster when he claims to apply a Psalm to Christ, when in actuality
he is picking and choosing what applies to Christ and what does not.24
Hunnius brings his charges against Calvin up another whole notch,
though, when he points out that Ps 110:1 is Jesus’ answer to the Pharisees’
question about who is the Messiah and whose son he is. Hunnius scornfully
writes that if Calvin had been standing beside the Pharisees, he would have
answered that this verse could be understood concerning David, and indeed, in
this way Calvin puts forth the Pharisees’ inanities. But more to the point, Jesus
himself sets the proper interpretation of this verse as concerning himself, as
seen in Matt 22:41–46, Mk 12:35–37, and Lk 20:41–44. In applying Ps 110:1 to
David, Calvin dares even to go against Christ, the true Interpreter!25
deity over and against Jews and heretics such as Servetus.31 Moreover, he
garners evidence of Calvin’s orthodox doctrines of the divinity of Christ and
Trinity in his commentaries on the synoptic Gospels, the Gospel of John, the
Book of Acts, and the apostles’ epistles.32
The heart and bulk of Pareus’s defense of Calvin, however, appears in the
second book of his treatise, where he takes to task the exegetical passages that
Hunnius has used to argue his case against Calvin. Pareus divides these
passages into six classes that he uses to refute Hunnius’s accusations against
Calvin. The first class includes passages that others have interpreted
concerning Trinity and that Calvin interprets in another way.33 The second
class includes biblical texts that others interpret concerning the essential unity
of the Persons and that Calvin does not.34 The third class is biblical passages
that others read concerning Christ and that Calvin interprets concerning God
or according to the literal-historical sense.35 The fourth class is texts others
interpret in reference to Christ alone that Calvin accepts as principally
concerning Christ but also applies to the type.36 The fifth class concerns
those passages that others interpret of Christ alone and that Calvin reads
principally of Christ as head and secondarily of the church as members of
the body of Christ.37 The sixth and final class contains those biblical texts that
Calvin interprets in reference to Christ alone that Hunnius has falsely accused
Calvin of not doing so.38 Two things are most notable in Pareus’s defense of
Calvin. First is his contention that Hunnius uses selective quotations of Calvin
that render an inaccurate picture of his exegesis. Second, Pareus, unlike
Hunnius, provides detailed references to the exegesis of the church fathers to
demonstrate that Calvin has not departed as much from the antecedent Chris-
tian tradition as Hunnius has contended.
Concerning the charge that Calvin departs from previous exegetical consensus
on these passages, Pareus sees little serious problem here. First of all, he
contends that all agree that everyone should preserve and uphold those teach-
ings fundamental to salvation. In this, Pareus is confident that Calvin has
always maintained the consensus of the church. However, just as the rule of
Augustine prescribes, in other matters it is possible—even useful—to depart
from previous interpretations. Basing his arguments also upon the diverse gifts
of the Spirit given to the church, Pareus argues for the necessity of multiple
meanings of Scripture and the guiding goal of the edification of the church.42
Yet, Hunnius accuses Calvin of departing from previous tradition out of
pride, for the sake of his own wisdom, and not out of necessity or edification for
the church. By quoting from the preface of Calvin’s commentary on Romans,
Pareus lets Calvin answer this accusation in his own words. Calvin specifically
states that he should be excused for differing from the previous tradition because
he does not act out of presumption or lack of caution but, rather, with great care
and concern for the edification of the church. He admits that one cannot find
lasting agreement in this earthly life on the proper interpretation of biblical
114 THE JUDAIZING CALVIN
After responding briefly to the first three classes of passages, Pareus focuses
the details of his defense of Calvin’s exegesis on the fourth class of these
“difficult passages” by affirming Calvin’s use of typology.46 He insists that
one must distinguish between kinds of types—some types are absolute and
simple, whereas others are composite and complex. Simple types set forth
things concerning Christ alone so that they speak absolutely about Christ and
may not be transferred to another. Concerning these kinds of types, Pareus has
no disagreements with Hunnius. However, the other kind of type—the com-
posite type—can apply both to the type and to Christ. Indeed, the composite
type can be further divided into four kinds: (1) those fulfilled literally both in
Christ and in the type, (2) those fulfilled figuratively both in Christ and in the
type, (3) those fulfilled literally in Christ and figuratively in the type, and (4)
those fulfilled figuratively in Christ and literally in the type. Hence, one can
speak of “composite prophecies” where there are twin fulfillments of the
prophecies—one in Christ and the other in the type.47
Furthermore, parts of a biblical text might refer literally to the type, while
other parts refer literally to Christ. In this way, there might be various mani-
festations of the composite type in, say, a single Psalm. Thus, for example, the
THE JUDAIZING CALVIN 115
verse concerning the kidneys that rebuke and wrestle with carnal desires (Ps
16:7) refers to David alone, the preservation from corruption (Ps 16:10) refers
to Christ alone, and the rest of the Psalm applies to both David and Christ.
Likewise, the eternal throne described in Ps 45:6 applies to Christ alone,
and the rest of the Psalm applies to Solomon and his spouse. Similarly, the
first three verses of Psalm 72 rightly and literally apply to Solomon, and the rest
of the Psalm rightly speaks of the kingdom of Christ.48 Furthermore,
St. Augustine affirms this principle of exegesis concerning composite types,
as seen in a passage from the City of God, where he says there is a “threefold
meaning of the prophets, referring sometimes to the earthly Jerusalem, some-
times to the Heavenly City, sometimes to both at once.”49 To top it off, Pareus
points to the fact that recent interpreters also utilize this principle of composite
types in their exegesis of the Psalms in particular, and they interpret some
Psalms to refer both to David and to Christ.50
Finally, Pareus takes up a defense against what he sees as Hunnius’s basic
objections to the reading of these passages as composite types and twin
prophecies. First, Hunnius implies that only simple, absolute prophecies
exist—that is, those that are clear promises and predictions that concern Christ
alone—which Pareus believes he has already sufficiently shown to be false.
Second, Hunnius appeals to the apostles’ and evangelists’ applications of these
passages to Christ alone and argues that because they did not apply these
passages to the type, neither should anyone else. But Pareus points out that
this is analogous to saying that these passages suit Christ by no reason of the
type. Yet, they cannot be fitting except by reason of the type, argues Pareus.
Hence, the apostles and the evangelists cannot mean by their application to
Christ that they deny the sacred history within the type, which is the very thing
that gives the content that is then applied to Christ.51
Pareus sees Hunnius’s third objection to composite types as his contention
that the exegetical tradition has interpreted these passages concerning Christ
alone. Pareus denies the truth of this assertion, for he has already shown the
diverse readings of the fathers and will continue to demonstrate this in his
treatment of the specific “difficult passages.” At last, he raises Hunnius’s
objection that the application of the biblical text both to the type and to Christ
weakens Christian arguments and exegetical proofs. Pareus argues that this
can be true of only simple, absolute types and not of composite types. Because
he believes the passages under debate are composite types, it is only right that
they are applied both to Christ and to the type. One needs the historical
referent to fully understand the content of the type; hence this dual application
does not weaken the exegesis but, rather, strengthens it, for, avows Pareus,
“truth does not weaken truth.”52
116 THE JUDAIZING CALVIN
reading of Luther, for by grounding the Psalm within the history and the type,
Calvin actually strengthens the Christian reading.62
Pareus’s defense of Calvin’s reading of Ps 8:4–6 involves a turn to his fifth
class of passages—those passages that others interpret concerning Christ alone
and Calvin interprets first concerning Christ and second concerning the mem-
bers of Christ’s body, the church. Very similar to his defense of Calvin’s interpre-
tation of Psalm 16, he appeals to Calvin’s New Testament exegesis in his Hebrews
commentary (i.e., Heb 2:6–8 cites Ps 8:4–6) as the more authoritative description
of Calvin’s views, rather than his Psalms commentary. In the Hebrews commen-
tary, Calvin remarks, as he does in his Psalms commentary, that the Psalm
“seems to be unsuitably applied to Christ.” Yet, unlike his Psalms commentary,
he proceeds to explain how these words apply properly to Christ by arguing that
the passage refers both to Christ and to the humanity restored by Christ. In this
way, the apostle’s christological application of Ps 8:4–6 is true because all
humanity has lost its excellence because of the Fall, but in Christ alone human-
kind is restored to its original excellence and enabled to participate in the
dominion of Christ as members of his body.63
Next, Pareus brings forth the interpretations of four ancient expositors and
three recent interpreters to demonstrate that Calvin is not alone in his applica-
tion of Ps 8:4–6 to the excellence of humanity. He cites Basil’s reading that Ps
8:4–6 concerns providence and the initial dignity of humanity and points out
that both Chrysostom and Jerome assert that this passage speaks of humanity
in general. As for recent interpreters, he indicates that Pellican applies the
Psalm both to Christ and to all who participate in Christ and that Musculus
emphasizes the contrast between the greatness of God and the insignificance
of humanity and, yet, God exalts humanity. Most significant, Pareus appeals to
the interpretation of Cornerus, a Lutheran, who argues that Ps 8:4–6 may be
read literally concerning humanity and allegorically concerning Christ and his
kingdom. How then, says Pareus, can Hunnius not blush when he casts these
blasphemies upon Calvin?64
Next, Pareus addresses Hunnius’s specific criticisms that Calvin interprets
Elohim as “gods” rather than “angels,” twists the scope of the passage to apply it
to humanity in general, undermines apostolic exegesis, and hardly mentions
Christ at all in his exegesis of Psalm 8. Concerning the first criticism, he points
out that many other interpreters translate “Elohim” as “gods,” including
Luther’s own affirmation that it can be understood as either “gods” or “angels.”
As for the second criticism, he simply refers the reader again to the proof of
other exegetes on this matter. With regard to undermining apostolic exegesis,
he concedes that in his Psalms commentary, Calvin applies this passage to
the excellence of humanity; yet, he quickly points out that in his Hebrews
120 THE JUDAIZING CALVIN
this Psalm speaks of Christ, and he does this, Pareus insists, specifically
against the Jews.68
In sum, David Pareus uses several key tactics in his defense of Calvin’s
exegesis of these eight Psalms. First, he appeals to the understanding of simple
and composite types to argue that most types are composite and require a
careful preservation of the original historical referent. In this way, not only is it
not wrong to read the simple and natural sense of these Psalms in relation
to David or Solomon but also these very readings solidify their christological
application. Second, Pareus repeatedly insists that Hunnius has misrepre-
sented Calvin, particularly by the things he omits from Calvin’s exegesis.
Third, Pareus often appeals to Calvin’s New Testament exegesis of the passages
where these Psalms are quoted to show both Calvin’s adherence to apostolic
exegesis and the christological readings he gives. Fourth, Pareus garners
many anti-Jewish statements in Calvin’s exegesis of these texts to establish
that far from judaizing intentions, Calvin endeavors to overthrow Jewish read-
ings and make the foundations of Christian readings of these texts all the
more secure.
of Christ in Calvin’s exegesis have not at all escaped Hunnius’s notice. These
warrant for him the charge of judaizing against Calvin.
The debate studied here is not unlike most academic debates, where the
two parties talk at and across each other, with their own agendas, and often
retranslate their opponent’s views in a manner that serves their own cause.
One can just imagine Hunnius’s response to Pareus’s defense, for Pareus
completely redefines Hunnius’s views by using his own trope of simple and
composite types. Furthermore, Pareus has often failed to address the equally
serious accusations that Calvin’s exegesis does not teach the traditional doc-
trines of the two natures of Christ or the Trinity. In those two critical cases
where Calvin so explicitly writes against apostolic exegesis (Ps 8:4 and Ps
16:10), Pareus does not actually defend Calvin’s reading of the Psalms in his
Psalms commentary but utilizes Calvin’s New Testament commentaries
(where these passages are quoted) as the more authoritative and accurate
expression of his views.
This leads us to a valuable revelation. Pareus’s defense of Calvin by
appealing to the interpretation of these Psalms within his New Testament
commentaries discloses a distinction that can be found between Calvin’s Old
Testament and New Testament exegesis. This study of Calvin’s exegetical
principles has already noted his concern for authorial intention as one of the
criteria molding his more limited christological readings of the Psalms. Yet
these christological readings emerge more prominently in his interpretation of
these Psalms as they appear in the New Testament. Indeed, this is consistent
with Calvin’s concern for authorial intention. When Calvin reads these Psalms
in their original literary context of the Old Testament, he reads them according
to the Psalmist’s intention, first and foremost. For him, with his emphasis on
David as the exemplar of Protestant piety, this renders a reading that need not
be explicitly christological in content. However, when he interprets the use of
these Psalms by the New Testament authors in his New Testament commen-
taries, his concern is then more for the authorial intention of that New
Testament author. Thus, Calvin renders a more robust christological applica-
tion in keeping with apostolic intention.
This chapter has divulged the central place of Calvin’s interpretation of this
particular set of Psalms for Hunnius’s charges against him. It also makes initial
inroads in delineating the beginnings of a divide between Lutheran and Re-
formed principles of biblical interpretation and their relation to the prior exegeti-
cal tradition. Hunnius maintains the need for a stricter adherence to the
antecedent exegetical tradition, though it should also be said that he appears to
view this tradition as more monolithic than does Pareus. Luther affirms the
efficacy of knowledge of the Hebrew language for exegesis but soundly rejects
THE JUDAIZING CALVIN 123
the merit of Christian employment of Jewish exegesis. Luther and Hunnius both
insist that these Psalms should be read as literal prophecies of Christ’s incarna-
tion, passion, resurrection, ascension, and exaltation. Furthermore, they main-
tain that these Psalms contain clear teachings of the doctrines of Trinity and the
two natures of Christ. Indeed, the study of Luther’s and Hunnius’s views on these
Psalms reveals that a possible consequence of Lutheran tendencies to read these
Psalms as literal prophecies of Christ’s passion, crucifixion, resurrection, and
ascension is the blatant and sometimes violent identification of Jews as the
prototypical enemies of Christ and the church.70
Pareus, on the other hand, illustrates a Reformed fondness for the tool of
typology and a commitment to the principle of simple and composite types.
Much like Calvin, he emphasizes a more deeply critical stance toward the
previous tradition’s christological exegesis and sets forth principles to be
followed to interpret rightly and more soundly an Old Testament passage
concerning Christ.71 Rather than reading these Psalms as literal prophecies
of Christ, Calvin and Pareus both assert the need to affirm the simple and
natural sense of these Psalms in relation to their original historical referent.
Only then can one give a christological reading of the Psalm—a reading that is
secondary because it must be first grounded in this very historical referent that
is the Psalm’s literal sense. Likewise, Pareus contends that Calvin upholds the
traditional Christian doctrines of Trinity and the two natures of Christ, but just
as christological exegesis needs a solid foundation (in the literal-historical
sense of these Psalms), so do these doctrines need to be grounded upon
irrefutable principles of exegesis.
Finally, this analysis underscores the use of the accusation of judaizing to
undermine another confession or, at least, a confession’s exegetical practices.
Hunnius has deployed the accusation of judaizing against Calvin to reveal the
dangers of his Reformed methods of interpretation and doctrinal teachings.
Apparently, the accusation of judaizing is a very effective, debilitating tool in the
sixteenth century, for above all, Pareus focuses his defense of Calvin against this
charge of judaizing to show the soundness of Calvin’s exegesis and of Reformed
exegetical principles more broadly. Indeed, the very heart of Pareus’s defense is
that Calvin’s exegetical practices are precisely aimed at providing more defensi-
ble Christian readings of the Old Testament—particularly against the Jews.
Is Hunnius right? Is Calvin a judaizer? Given Calvin’s historical context, he
certainly would have been dismayed at such a charge and would not have
understood himself to be judaizing. Yet, Calvin really has done something
fundamentally different with these traditionally messianic Psalms, even vitally
different from the interpretations of an outright Christian Hebraist such as
Martin Bucer. Though Bucer explicitly uses Jewish exegesis to undergird his
124 THE JUDAIZING CALVIN
historical readings of these Psalms, he also sustains the central place of their
christological meaning and their doctrinal readings concerning Trinity and the
two natures of Christ. Calvin may not be a judaizer, but it is certainly under-
standable that Hunnius sees in his exegesis significant departures from the
antecedent Christian tradition and a challenge to the assumptions and princi-
ples of that tradition.
Conclusion
I conclude this study of these eight Psalms first with a suggestion for
further research and then, more centrally, with an attempt to place
Calvin and the significance of his exegesis within the history of Christian
biblical interpretation. I believe this study of these Psalms points
to an initial emergence of differing theological content and principles
of exegesis that in time begins to translate into defining aspects of
confessional identities. In other words, this analysis hints at the
significance of biblical exegesis in the formation of Protestant
confessional identities, though admittedly, it just makes tantalizing
suggestions to this effect and cannot prove this point within the scope
of the project. With this clearly said, I do want to explore just what
I think this study can begin to unearth concerning the role of biblical
exegesis in the formation of, specifically, the emerging distinctive
aspects of Lutheran and Reformed identities. Finally, I conclude with
an exploration of the significance of Calvin and his commentaries
within the larger history of Christian biblical exegesis that such as
study as this highlights.
The debate between Aegidius Hunnius and David Pareus reveals the
potential of ongoing and lasting effects from the use of biblical exegesis to
maintain and promote certain confessional identities. Hunnius argues for an
adherence to the primacy of the literal sense of these Psalms as literal prophe-
cies of Christ and their uses to teach Trinity and the two natures of Christ. He
maintains that he has the unquestioning support of Luther and the Christian
exegetical tradition behind him. David Pareus, on the other hand, offers an
extended defense of Reformed exegetical principles and readings—particularly
the use of typology and the need to give christological readings that are
defensible and based on clear exegetical principles (and not “allegory,” with
which he identifies Luther’s interpretations).7 Thus, the proper interpretation
of these eight Psalms and Old Testament prophecy in general becomes an
illuminating piece to begin to understand the potential role of biblical exegesis
in confessional identity formation.
typology. They both appeal to David as an example for Christians, and they both
state a vital concern for keeping the plain sense of the text.
On the other hand, there are a couple of significant divergences between
our two Reformed exegetes. Bucer uses Jewish exegesis explicitly to anchor the
christological readings in the text’s historia, whereas Calvin uses Jewish exege-
sis more subtly to give instruction to the Christian church through the example
of David. Calvin and Bucer demonstrate very different uses of Jewish exegesis
for significantly different purposes, at least when it comes to possible christo-
logical readings.15 Although they agree on the use of typology to read these
Psalms, even here there are important distinctions. Whereas Bucer’s typological
readings render both prophecies of Christ’s earthly life (incarnation, crucifix-
ion, resurrection, etc.), Christ’s kingdom, and the church, Calvin’s typological
readings are mostly in reference to David as a type of the pious member of God’s
church. And almost all other typological readings pertain to Christ’s kingdom
alone, where David’s kingdom foreshadows Christ’s kingdom.
Furthermore, despite sharp distinctions between Luther and Bucer and
between Luther and Calvin, there are also some significant correspondences
between Luther and Bucer. Even as they differ radically about the value of
Jewish exegesis, they both have similar goals in their interpretations of these
Psalms. They both ultimately aim to set forth the christological readings of
these Psalms as their true and proper interpretation, over and against Jewish
readings that undermine these. Indeed, one can very well argue that despite
Bucer’s positive use of Jewish exegesis, his main intent is to use it to support
these precise christological readings. Luther may not agree with Bucer’s meth-
od, but his exegesis concurs with Bucer’s intention to promote these christo-
logical readings. Furthermore, both Luther and Bucer maintain the usefulness
of these Psalms to teach the doctrines of Trinity and the two natures of Christ
and to encourage the downtrodden Protestant churches of their day.
Advocates of the existence of two Protestant schools of exegesis, usually
regionally named as the Wittenberg School and the Basel-Strasbourg-Zurich
School (or Rhenish School), argue that these two schools can be distinguished
first and foremost by their views of Jewish exegesis and the different exeget-
ical strategies they employ (literal-prophetic versus historical typology).16
I propose through this work that perhaps a better way to understand these
exegetical differences is not the existence of two actual schools of exegesis but,
rather, the ties of exegetical practices to their corresponding confessions and,
more specifically, the emerging use of exegetical practices to help define
and distinguish confessional identities. This would help to explain the actual
and significant differences between the various forms of Reformed confessions
(Bucer versus Calvin versus Zwingli) rather than constraining them to fit
CONCLUSION 131
within one school. Hence, this work adds voice to the cautions of such studies
as those of Stephen G. Burnett and Barbara Pitkin when they warn that while
common exegetical strategies can be regionally named, there remains exegeti-
cal variety between these regions—such as those represented by Bucer and
Calvin—that cannot be ignored.17
I conclude with the three cumulating arguments of this book concerning Calvin’s
exegesis of these eight Psalms and his contributions to the history of Christian
biblical exegesis. The first pertains to my depiction of the basically positive
contribution Calvin’s Old Testament exegesis can make to the history of Chris-
tian-Jewish relations. The second implicit argument in this book concerns Calvin’s
role in redefining the literal sense of Old Testament Scripture. Finally, I explore
the question of the relationships of Calvin to precritical and modern exegesis.
Though I place Calvin squarely within the precritical tradition, I argue that there is
good reason to see in him the distant seeds of the principles of modern exegesis.
theology is the least anti-Jewish “of the major classical theological systems.”19
Though Salo Baron notes Calvin’s negative views of Jews and attacks on Jewish
exegesis, he also discusses the ways that Calvin advanced positive views of the law,
Jewish interpretations of the Ten Commandments, and principles of the separa-
tion of church and state that Baron deems as working to the eventual benefit of
the Jews. Thus, Baron concludes that although Calvin may have set out to
curse the Jews, “in the end [he] turned out to have blessed them.”20 Hans-Joachim
Kraus goes as far as to claim that “one cannot accuse Calvin of being guilty of that
ecclesiastical arrogance and pride toward Judaism [that] has everywhere been
characteristic of the history of the church.”21
My concern is not necessarily to argue one way or another about how anti-
Jewish or not Calvin and his exegesis are in actuality. I am much more in
agreement with the evenhanded views of Mary Potter Engel, who argues for the
fundamental ambiguity of Calvin when it comes to the consequences of his
exegesis for and views of Jews and Judaism. Engel demonstrates that Calvin
has made both very positive statements and very negative statements
concerning Jews and Judaism.22 I am interested in proffering Calvin as one
model of how to read the Old Testament (and not necessarily the New Testa-
ment)23 that escapes most of the anti-Jewish tendencies of premodern Chris-
tian exegesis while simultaneously preserving a very Christian reading that
maintains the premodern Christian convictions of the christological center and
import of the Old Testament and the insistence that good exegesis aims to edify
the church. At the end of this chapter I argue in detail about how Calvin’s
exegesis of the Old Testament may still be viewed as christological even as it
eclipses prior traditional christological readings.
I entirely agree with those who refuse to allow the Protestant reformers—and
Calvin in particular—to be co-opted by historical criticism or aligned with
modern principles of exegesis.29 Placing Calvin in the modern historical
critical camp is mistaken on many fronts. It fails to take into strong enough
consideration Calvin’s assertion of the divine inspiration and self-authenticat-
ing quality of Scripture, his conviction of human depravity, his principle that
meaning resides in the text itself (and not outside, under, behind, or beyond it),
his practice of reading canonically, and his insistence that all biblical interpre-
tation is focused on the goal of the edification of the church—namely, that the
Christian biblical reader is always asked to move beyond the grammatical
sense to theology, ethics, and a vision for the life of the church.30
Furthermore, it cannot be forgotten that there are clear places where
Calvin does see prophecies of Christ in these Psalms, so that he does actually
give several christological readings of them. These readings especially appear
on passages prophesying Christ’s kingdom. In such cases, there is an unmis-
takable principle of typology, where David acts as a type of Christ and where
prophecies of the kingdom’s expanse, eternity, and glory clearly are not fulfilled
in the life and experience of David but only in Christ. Yet, even when Calvin
CONCLUSION 135
author. Hence, Pareus is right to argue that these Psalms must apply to Christ
only by reason of the sacred history within the type and not apart from it.33
But the central role of history in Calvin’s readings of Scripture is not only
because of his emphasis on the natural coherence and deep intimate tie
between literal and figural readings but also because of his emphasis on
authorial intention, by which Calvin does not simply mean the authorial
intention of the Divine but also very much includes in this the human author’s
intention. The appeal to the human author’s intention already appears in
several places in Calvin’s exegesis of these Psalms, and it famously appears
in the dedicatory letter of his commentary on Romans to his friend Simon
Gryneus. In this letter, he sets forth authorial intention as a crucial exegetical
principle when he writes, “Since it is almost [the interpreter’s] only task to
unfold the mind of the writer whom he has undertaken to expound, he misses
his mark, or at least strays outside his limits, by the extent to which he leads his
readers away from the meaning of his author.”34 Hence, the import of this
statement is that Calvin sees the rule of attending to authorial intention as an
effective tool in setting a clear parameter for good exegesis.
It needs to be clarified that Calvin’s emphasis on the human author’s
intention does not yield the same results as those of historical criticism. This
is because Calvin never means exclusively the human author; it is always, for
him, a consideration of the Divine intention expressed through the particula-
rities, circumstances, and experiences of the human author. In other words, his
principle of taking into account the human author’s intention must be seen
within his larger principle of accommodation and his overarching vision of
divine providence.35 Calvin’s description of his doctrine of Scripture in the
Institutes demonstrates that one of the crucial starting points is the understand-
ing that God speaks in Scripture through the human authors.36
Yet, while it is God who ultimately speaks in Scripture, Calvin also de-
scribes Scripture as God’s Word and revelation accommodated to human
capacity. In God’s essence, God is far beyond all human comprehension or
perception; thus, God must accommodate God’s Self to human capacity
through revelation—one of the central acts of revelation being Scripture.37 In
the Institutes, Calvin explicates this principle of accommodation perhaps most
clearly at the end of his section on the differences between the Old and New
Testaments, where he explains why God would permit such differences:
require the same worship of his name that he enjoined from the
beginning. In the fact that he has changed the outward form and
manner, he does not show himself subject to change. Rather, he has
accommodated himself to men’s capacity, which is varied and
changeable.38
I imagine Calvin has much the same explanation concerning God’s working
through the human writers of Scripture and the apparent differing emphases
or pictures of God they portray. God’s constancy likewise shines through all of
the various human authors in the biblical canon so that they always ultimately
accomplish the purpose God intends.
Furthermore, the very particularities, circumstances, and experiences of
the human author play an important role in their being vessels and instru-
ments of God’s Word. Calvin’s vision of divine providence envisions a sover-
eign God whose perfect good will works sometimes “through an intermediary,
sometimes without an intermediary, sometimes contrary to every intermedi-
ary.”39 The human authors of Scripture can be understood as intermediaries of
God’s revelation, Word, and intention. Calvin’s arguments that God uses even the
circumstances, personalities, and attributes of the ungodly to carry out God’s
purposes surely also applies to God using these very things in the godly!40 Thus,
for Calvin, the distinct history and historical context of the human author are vital
to the expression of God’s accommodation and the accomplishment of God’s
intention through that particular author.
Finally, Calvin’s insistence upon the human author’s history as central to
the literal sense of the text needs to be understood within the larger context of
his understanding of the unity of the Old and New Testaments. Calvin’s
emphases in his conception of this unity are different from Luther’s in impor-
tant ways, which leads to some significant nuances between their thought. At
the risk of a slight caricature of each, often it appears that for Luther the unity
of the Old and New Testaments warrants the christological reading of Old
Testament texts as their literal sense. On the other hand, it is precisely the unity
of the Old and New Testaments for Calvin that leads him to find in the Old
Testament author’s particular history, experience, and context a message,
teaching, or example for the church.41 Both Luther and Calvin ultimately
hold that both testaments narrate a single integral history—a history of how
God acts in the world and brings salvation. Both would argue that Christ is the
central figure of that history, and thus, both also claim that Christ is the content
of all Scripture. Yet, again I want to argue that the nuances of their vision of
this very history—salvation history—is exactly what is at stake. For Luther,
salvation history is made up of the saving events of Christ’s life: Christ’s
138 THE JUDAIZING CALVIN
INTRODUCTION
1. David Steinmetz, “The Superiority of Pre-Critical Exegesis,” Theology
Today 37 (1980): 27–38.
2. Here I name a few of the important books written by these authors
concerning the significance of biblical exegesis in the Protestant Reformation.
See John L. Thompson, John Calvin and the Daughters of Sarah: Women in
Regular and Exceptional Roles in the Exegesis of Calvin, His Predecessors, and His
Contemporaries, Travaux d’Humanisme et Renaissance 259 (Geneva: Librairie
Droz, 1992); Writing the Wrongs: Women of the Old Testament among Biblical
Commentators, Oxford Studies in Historical Theology (New York: Oxford
University Press, 2001); and Reading the Bible with the Dead: What You Can
Learn from the History of Exegesis That You Can’t Learn from Exegesis Alone
(Grand Rapids, MI: William B. Eerdmans, 2007). See also Susan Schreiner,
The Theater of His Glory: Nature and the Natural Order in the Thought of John
Calvin (Durham, NC: Labyrinth, 1991; repr., Grand Rapids, MI: Baker, 1995)
and Where Shall Wisdom Be Found? Calvin’s Exegesis of Job from Medieval and
Modern Perspectives (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1994); Timothy J.
Wengert, Human Freedom, Christian Righteousness: Philip Melanchthon’s Exe-
getical Dispute with Erasmus of Rotterdam, Oxford Studies in Historical Theol-
ogy (New York: Oxford University Press, 1998); Craig S. Farmer, The Gospel of
John in the Sixteenth Century: The Johannine Exegesis of Wolfgang Musculus,
Oxford Studies in Historical Theology (New York: Oxford University Press,
1997); Barbara Pitkin, What Pure Eyes Could See: Calvin’s Doctrine of Faith in Its
Exegetical Context, Oxford Studies in Historical Theology (New York: Oxford
University Press, 1999); Irena Backus, Reformation Readings of the Apocalypse:
Geneva, Zurich and Wittenberg, Oxford Studies in Historical Theology (New
142 NOTES TO PAGE 3
York: Oxford University Press, 2000); Mickey Leland Mattox, “Defender of the Most Holy
Matriarchs”: Martin Luther’s Interpretation of the Women of Genesis in the Enarrationes in
Genesin, 1535–45 (Leiden: Brill, 2003); Beth Kreitzer, Reforming Mary: Changing Images of
the Virgin Mary in Lutheran Sermons of the Sixteenth Century, Oxford Studies in Historical
Theology (New York: Oxford University Press, 2004); and Raymond A. Blacketer, The
School of God: Pedagogy and Rhetoric in Calvin’s Interpretation of Deuteronomy, Studies in
Early Modern Religious Reforms 3 (Dordrecht: Springer, 2006).
3. See, for examples, David C. Steinmetz, ed., The Bible in the Sixteenth Century
(Durham, UK: Durham University Press, 1990); Richard A. Muller and John L.
Thompson, eds., Biblical Interpretation in the Era of the Reformation (Grand Rapids, MI:
William B. Eerdmans, 1996); Timothy J. Wengert and M. Patrick Graham, eds., Philip
Melanchthon (1497–1560) and the Commentary (Sheffield: Sheffield Academic, 1997);
Wim Janse and Barbara Pitkin, eds., The Formation of Clerical and Confessional Identities
in Early Modern Europe, Dutch Review of Church History 85 (Leiden: Brill, 2005); and
Kathy Ehrensperger and R. Ward Holder, eds., Reformation Readings of Romans, Romans
through History and Cultures Series (New York: T&T Clark, 2008).
4. In addition to the volumes on Calvin’s exegesis by Susan Schreiner, Barbara
Pitkin, and Raymond Blacketer previously cited, see also T. H. L. Parker, Calvin’s New
Testament Commentaries (Louisville, KY: Westminster John Knox, 1993, 1st ed., 1971) and
Calvin’s Old Testament Commentaries (Edinburgh: T&T Clark, 1986; Louisville, KY:
Westminster John Knox, 1993); Wulfert de Greef, Calvijn en het Oude Testament (Am-
sterdam: Ton Bolland, 1984); David L. Puckett, John Calvin’s Exegesis of the Old Testament,
Columbia Series in Reformed Theology (Louisville, KY: Westminster John Knox, 1995);
Wilhelm H. Neuser, ed., Calvinus Sacrae Scripturae Professor: Calvin as Confessor of Holy
Scripture (Grand Rapids, MI: William B. Eerdmans, 1994); and Donald K. McKim, ed.,
Calvin and the Bible (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2006). These are only a
select few in a very long list. Interestingly, Calvin has received the notice of scholars
outside the field of sixteenth-century history. For example, Hans W. Frei paints Calvin as
the quintessential biblical expositor in his classic text, The Eclipse of Biblical Narrative: A
Study in Eighteenth and Nineteenth Century Hermeneutics (New Haven: Yale University
Press, 1974), esp. 18–37. The biblical scholar Brevard S. Childs also lauds Calvin as a
superior exegete. See his “The Sensus Literalis of Scripture: An Ancient and Modern
Problem,” in Beitrage Zur Alttestamentlichen Theologie, ed. Herbert Donner, Robert
Hanhart, and Rudolf Smend (Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1977), 80–87.
Wesley A. Kort, as well, names Calvin’s doctrine of Scripture as an excellent culmination
of the scriptural reading practices preceding and contemporary to him, so that Kort uses
Calvin to set forth both an understanding of the Bible as “Scripture” and a theory of
reading. See “Take, Read”: Scripture, Textuality, and Cultural Practice (University Park:
Pennsylvania State University Press, 1996), esp. 14–36.
5. See Philip Schaff, “Calvin as a Commentator,” Presbyterian and Reformed Review
3 (1892): 462–69; Frederic W. Farrar, History of Interpretation (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker
Book House, 1961, reprint from 1886), 342–54; and Kember Fullerton, Prophecy and
Authority: A Study in the History of the Doctrine and Interpretation of Scripture (New York:
Macmillan, 1919), 133.
NOTES TO PAGES 4–6 143
See Heb 5:6, 7:17, 7:21. Finally, the Gospel writers quote Ps 118:22 from the mouth of
Jesus as a prophecy of the Jews’ rejection of Jesus. See Matt 21:33–46, Mk 12:1–12, and Lk
20:9–19. The Apostle Peter also quotes Ps 118:22 as a prophecy of the Jews’ rejection of
Christ in Acts 4:11 and 1 Pet 2:7, and the Apostle Paul does the same in Rom 9:33.
11. These eight Psalms are most prominently applied in the New Testament as
literal prophecies of Christ; however, they are not exhaustive. There are a few other
Psalms that could have been included in this study. These include Ps 40:6 (quoted in
Heb 10:5–6 to teach that Christ is the one, true, and final sacrifice), Ps 89:26 (alluded to
in Heb 1:5 to teach Christ’s relationship to God the Father), and Ps 68:18 (quoted in Eph
4:8 in reference to Christ’s ascension).
12. For studies on the importance of Nicholas of Lyra for Martin Luther’s biblical
exegesis, see the conclusion of Skevington Wood’s article, “Nicolas of Lyra,” Evangelical
Quarterly 33 (1961): 205. Wood argues that early on, Luther “had no liking for Lyra” but
in later years came to appreciate Lyra’s emphasis on the literal sense (205). On the other
hand, in the introduction to his translation of Lyra’s commentary on Song of Songs,
James George Kiecker notes that in his lectures on Psalms, “Luther refers to Lyra several
dozen times and by an overwhelming margin favorably” (The Postilla of Nicholas of Lyra
on the Song of Songs [Milwaukee: Marquette University Press, 1998], 19). As to the
importance of Lefèvre for Luther, see Guy Bedoulle’s Le Quincuplex Psalterium de Lefèvre
d’Étaples: Un guide de lecture (Genève: Droz, 1979), 226–40 and “Lefèvre d’Étaples et
Luther: Une Recherche de Frontières (1517–1527),” Revue de Théologie et de Philosophie 63
(1983): 17–31. Heiko Oberman argues that Lefèvre was as much or more of an important
source for Luther’s Dictata than Lyra (“Biblical Exegesis: The Literal and the Spiritual
Sense of Scripture,” in Forerunners of the Reformation: The Shape of Late Medieval
Thought, trans. Paul L. Nyhus [New York: Holt, Rinehart, & Winston, 1966], 291).
Gerhard Ebeling also notes Luther’s debt to both Lefèvre and Lyra and his criticisms of
the latter (“Luthers Psalterdruck von Jahre 1513,” Zeitschrift für Theologie und Kirche 50
[1953]: 43–99).
13. Beryl Smalley, The Study of the Bible in the Middle Ages (Notre Dame, IN:
University of Notre Dame Press, 1964), 19.
14. Smalley, 19, 20, 18, 192–93.
15. Aegidius Hunnius, Calvinus Iudiazans, hoc est: Iudaicae Glossae et Corruptelae,
quibus Iohannes Calvinus illustrissima Scripturae sacrae Loca & Testamonia, de gloriosa
Trinitate, Deitate Christi, & Spiritus Sancti, cum primis autem ascensione in caelos et sessione
ad dextram Dei, detestandum in modum corrumpere no exhorruit. Addita est corruptelarum
confutatio per Aegidium Hunnium (Wittennberg, 1593). David Pareus, Libri Duo: I.
Calvinus Orthodoxus de Sacrosancta Trinitate: et de aeterna Christi Divinitate. II. Solida
Expositio XXXIIX. Difficilimorum Scripturae Locorum et Oraculorum: et de recta ratione
applicandi Oracula Prophetica ad Christum. Oppositi Pseudocalvino Iudaizanti nuper a
quodam emisso (Neustadt: Matthaeus Harnisch, 1595). There are few detailed studies of
this debate. Ken Schurb analyzes the debate on the single text of Gen 3:15. See
“Sixteenth-Century Lutheran-Calvinist Conflict on the Protevangelium,” Concordia
Theological Quarterly 54 (1990): 25–47. David Steinmetz studies Hunnius’s and Pareus’s
use of the Johannine passages in their debate in “The Judaizing Calvin,” in Die Patristik
NOTES TO PAGES 8–9 145
in der Bibelexegese des 16. Jahrhunderts, ed. David C. Steinmetz and Robert Kolb, Wol-
fenbütteler Forschungen, Band 85 (Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz, 1999), 135–45.
16. I realize and agree that the use of the term “judaizing” is offensive for our
current context, especially when it is used as an insult. I sincerely apologize to any who
are offended. I choose to retain the term because it is a word used in the history of
Christian-Jewish relations that is difficult to substitute and because it is particularly
used by Hunnius to accuse Calvin. When I use the word “judaizing,” I employ it under
the meaning that Hunnius gives it. Hunnius describes Calvin’s exegesis as “judaizing”
because he believes it eclipses—much like Jewish exegesis—the christological and
Trinitarian teachings of Old Testament passages in favor of the plain, historical mean-
ing of the human author. Of course, it is a Christian misrepresentation of Jewish
exegesis to assume that it always reads these texts only in their historical sense or peshat.
17. The term confessionalization specifically focuses on the close cooperation of
church and state in the process of confessional formation. Confessional formation—the
term I use because of its broader connotations including but beyond church-state
relations—refers to the process in which individual confessions became consolidated
and integrated into particular societies. Key scholarship defining confessionalization
and confessional formation in the sixteenth century include the following: Ernst Walter
Zeeden, Die Entstehung der Konfessionen: Grundlagen und Formen der Konfessionsbildung
im Zeitalter der Glaubenskämpfe (München: R. Oldenbourg, 1965); Wolfgang Reinhard
and Heinz Schilling, eds., Die Katholische Konfessionalisierung: Wissenschaftliches Sym-
posion der Gesellschaft zur Herausgabe des Corpus Catholicorum und des Vereins für Re-
formationsgeschichte 1993 (Münster: Aschendorff, 1995); and Heinz Schilling,
Konfessionskonflikt und Staatsbildung: Eine Fallstudie über das Verhältnis von religiösem und
sozialem Wandel in der Frühneuzeit am Beispiel der Grafschaft Lippe (Gütersloh: Güter-
sloher Verlagshaus G. Mohn, 1981); “Die zweite Reformation,” in his Die reformierte
Konfessionalisierung in Deutschland—Das Problem der “Zweiten Reformation” (Gütersloh:
Gütersloher Verlagshaus G. Mohn, 1986), 387–438; “Die Konfessionalisierung im
Reich: Religiöser und gesellschaftlicher Wandel in Deutschland zwischen 1555 und
1620,” Historische Zeitschrift 246 (1988): 1–45; and “Confessional Europe,” in Thomas
A. Brady Jr., Heiko A. Oberman, and James D. Tracy, eds., Handbook of European History
1400–1600: Late Middle Ages, Renaissance and Reformation, Vol 2: Visions, Programs and
Outcomes (Leiden: Brill, 1996), 641–81.
18. See volume 85 in the Dutch Review of Church History series: The Formation of
Clerical and Confessional Identities in Early Modern Europe. My deepest thanks to Barbara
Pitkin and Wim Janse for inviting me to contribute to this volume and, thus, encour-
aging me to pursue an understanding of this project through the lens of confessional
identity and confessional formation. This volume demonstrates the much-needed
realization of the use of biblical interpretation and preaching as recently neglected tools
for confessional formation and, more generally, the need to explore the social history of
the Reformation and the history of theological thought as mixed and deeply related
realities rather than separate ones.
19. For important case studies of Lutheran, Reformed, or Catholic confessional
formation, see Lorna Jane Abray, The People’s Reformation: Magistrates, Clergy and
146 NOTES TO PAGES 9–12
1040–1105) and Abraham ibn Ezra (1092/93–1167), tended to emphasize the impor-
tance of the historical context of the author and biblical text. For this reason, they were
the three favorites to read among Christian Hebraists, as can be seen in the work of
Nicholas of Lyra and among sixteenth-century Christian Hebraists.
Press, 1982) sees Lyra as the culmination of the anti-Judaic missionizing efforts of the
school of Raymond Martini. See also the more recent work by Deeana Copeland
Klepper, The Insight of Unbelievers: Nicholas of Lyra and Christian Reading of Jewish Text in
the Later Middle Ages (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2007).
7. See Jacques Lefèvre d’Étaples, Quincuplex Psalterium, 1513 edition (Genève: Li-
brairie Droz, 1979), Aii, Aiii. Lefèvre argues this in the preface to his Psalms commentary.
For an English translation of his preface, see Heiko A. Oberman, Forerunners of the
Reformation: The Shape of Late Medieval Thought (New York: Holt, Rinehart, and Winston,
1966), 297–301. My placing of Lefèvre as a late-medieval interpreter involves a particular
position on his relationship to Protestantism. Scholars have debated this topic. Some have
hailed Lefèvre as the first French Protestant. See, for example, the very early work of
Charles-Henri Graf, Essai sur le Vie et les Écrits de Jacques Lefèvre d’Étaples (Strasbourg: G. L.
Schuler, Print, 1842). Others have emphasized him as a predecessor of Protestant reform,
especially given his stress upon the centrality of Scripture and its availability in the
vernacular. See, for example, the article by James Jordan, “Jacques Lefèvre d’Étaples:
Principles and Practice of Reform at Meaux,” in Contemporary Reflections on the Medieval
Christian Tradition: Essays in Honor of Ray C. Petry, ed. George H. Shriver (Durham, NC:
Duke University Press, 1974), 95–115. Guy Bedouelle argues that Lefèvre is a good
precursor to Protestant reform, but not necessarily specifically Luther’s or Zwingli’s
precursor. See “Lefèvre d’Étaples et ses disciples,” Bulletin de la Société de L’histoire du
Protestantisme Français 134 (1988): 669–72. Finally, some argue that Lefèvre is ultimately
Catholic because he staunchly envisioned reform within the boundaries of the Catholic
Church and saw schism as a greater evil than the evils within the church. See, for example,
the article by M. Cecily Boulding, “Jacobus Faber Stapulensis, c 1460–1536—Forerunner
of Vatican II,” in Opening the Scrolls: Essays in Catholic History in Honor of Godfrey
Anstruther, ed. Dominick Aidan Bellenger (Bath, UK: Downside Abbey, 1987), 27–49. My
own view is that Lefèvre is an important predecessor to Protestant reform; however, he
remains a Catholic who never embraced Protestantism. Furthermore, Lefèvre’s views on
Scripture are convincingly understood within the context of Renaissance humanism. This
argument is nicely and concisely made in a review article critiquing Philip Hughes’s
alignment of Lefèvre with Protestantism. See Maxine B. Morel, “Jacques Lefèvre d’Étaples:
A Review Article,” Iliff Review 42 (1985): 43–48; and Philip Edcumbe Hughes, Lefèvre:
Pioneer of Ecclesiastical Renewal in France (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 1984). I place
Lefèvre in this chapter, as well, because of his importance as a backdrop to Martin Luther.
8. Biblia Latina cum Glossa Ordinaria, facsimile reprint of the editio princeps,
Adolph Rusch of Strassburg 1480–81 (Brepols: Turnhout, 1992), 2:459, 471, 478, 508,
509, 543, 598, 599. Denis the Carthusian, 5:415, 451, 485, 529; 6:2, 206, 499, 500, 501,
502, 534. Lefèvre, 3a, 10a, 20b, 33a, 69a, 104a, 163a, 170a.
9. Glossa Ordinaria, 459; Nicholas of Lyra, 88b–d, 89a; Denis the Carthusian,
5:415–16, 417–18; Lefèvre, 3a–3b.
10. Glossa Ordinaria, 465; Nicholas of Lyra, 96d, 97b, 97c; Denis the Carthusian,
5:451–52, 453–54; Lefèvre, 10a–10b.
11. Glossa Ordinaria, 471, 472; Nicholas of Lyra, 105b, 105d–106a; Denis the
Carthusian, 5:485, 487–88; Lefèvre, 20b, 20b–21a.
NOTES TO PAGES 15–19 149
12. Nicholas of Lyra, 105d; Denis the Carthusian, 5:487. However, the Gloss and
Lefèvre prefer to interpret this as the temptations of the flesh. Glossa Ordinaria, 472;
Lefèvre, 20b. Lyra also identifies the Jews with “those who hasten after another god” (Ps
16:4). See Nicholas of Lyra, 105b.
13. Glossa Ordinaria, 478; Denis the Carthusian, 5:529.
14. Glossa Ordinaria, 478, 479, 480; Nicholas of Lyra, 113b, 114a–d; Denis the
Carthusian, 5:529–31, 532–33, 534–38; Lefèvre, 33a–33b.
15. Glossa Ordinaria, 509; Nicholas of Lyra, 149c–149d, 150a–150d, 151a; Denis the
Carthusian, 6:1, 3–4, 7–10; Lefèvre, 69a–69b, 70a.
16. Glossa Ordinaria, 543–44; Nicholas of Lyra, 186c–d, 187a–d, 188a–c; Denis the
Carthusian, 6:205, 207, 208–12; Lefèvre, 104a–105a.
17. Glossa Ordinaria, 598–99; Nicholas of Lyra, 251b, 251d, 252a, 252b, 251c; Denis
the Carthusian, 6:499–505; Lefèvre, 163a.
18. Glossa Ordinaria, 606; Nicholas of Lyra, 261c–d; Denis the Carthusian, 6:538–
40; Lefèvre, 170a–b. Lefèvre, however, does not interpret Ps 118:5–18 as concerning
Christ’s passion but as a promise to the church that Christ will help in its struggles
against its enemies.
19. Glossa Ordinaria, 605, 606; Nicholas of Lyra, 260c, 261c–d, 261d, 262a–b;
Denis the Carthusian, 6:534–40, 534, 536, 537, 539; Lefèvre, 170a–b.
20. Nicholas of Lyra, 88a–d, 89a.
21. Portions of Psalm 2 are quoted in Acts 4:25–26, Acts 13:33, Heb 1:5, and Heb 5:5.
Hailperin makes these same observations concerning Lyra’s interpretation of Psalm
2 in Rashi and the Christian Scholars, 176–79.
22. Nicholas of Lyra, 88b (emphasis added).
23. Nicholas of Lyra, 251b.
24. For example, Lyra writes on Psalm 22, “Noteworthy theologians have explained
this psalm concerning David and his persecution by Saul . . . but it is the determination
of the church that this psalm is explained ad litteram of Christ’s passion and his
divine liberation in the glory of the resurrection” (Nicholas of Lyra, 113b). Similarly, Lyra
only discusses the original historical context of Psalm 72 in his treatment of the Psalm’s
title “of/for Solomon.” He concludes, “Concerning the subject matter of this psalm,
it seems to me that it is better understood not concerning the prosperity under the
reign of Solomon but of the magis who brought gifts to Christ the king, which is seen
in many places in this Psalm. These things are not accomplished concerning
Solomon but only concerning Christ and his kingdom” (Nicholas of Lyra, 186c).
See Hailperin’s emphasis on Lyra’s view of David as a prophet of the “highest grade”
in Rashi and the Christian Scholars, 224, 228, 230–31.
25. Nicholas of Lyra, 105a, 186c, 186d, 187a–d, 188a–c, 149b–c.
26. Denis the Carthusian, 5:415.
27. Denis the Carthusian, 6:534. This is an assumption about Jewish exegesis that
Denis and most of medieval Christian tradition make that is not necessarily always true.
28. Note that this is a circular argument. For readings of Denis in comparison with
the exegesis of the Protestant reformers, see David C. Steinmetz: “Luther and the
Drunkenness of Noah,” “Luther and the Ascent of Jacob’s Ladder,” and “Luther and
150 NOTES TO PAGES 19–21
Calvin on the Banks of the Jabbok,” in Luther in Context, 2nd ed. (Grand Rapids, MI:
Baker Academic, 2002); “Calvin and the Natural Knowledge of God,” “Calvin and
Tamar,” and “Calvin and Isaiah” in Calvin in Context (New York: Oxford University
Press, 1995), 23–39, 79–94, 95–109; “Calvin as Interpreter of Genesis,” in Calvinus
Sincerious Religionis Vindex: Calvin as Protector of the Purer Religion, ed. Wilhelm H.
Neuser and Brian G. Armstrong, Sixteenth Century Essays and Studies 36 (Kirksville,
MO: Sixteenth Century Journal, 1997), 53–66; and “John Calvin on Isaiah 6: A Problem
in the History of Exegesis,” Interpretation 36 (1982): 156–70.
29. The method of Jacques Lefèvre d’Étaples in his interpretation of the messianic
Psalms is quite different from that of his predecessors. Lefèvre provides three parallel
columns that give three Latin versions of each Psalm, portraying his concern for
discovering the best translation. He then deals with the meaning of the title of each
Psalm, provides a paraphrase of the Psalm along with his verse-by-verse interpretation,
brings in the harmony of the Psalm’s content and prophecies with the New Testament
and other Old Testament prophecies, and concludes by addressing certain passages that
are often debated among exegetes—to which Lefèvre gives his own preferred reading.
30. Lefèvre, 3b.
31. Lefèvre, 10a–10b. The other interpreters also draw this parallel: see Glossa
Ordinaria, 465; Nicholas of Lyra, 97b; and Denis the Carthusian, 5:453. Bedouelle
provides his own examination of Lefèvre’s interpretation of Psalm 8 in his study of the
Quincuplex Psalterium (Le Quincuplex Psalterium de Lefèvre de’Étaples: Un guide de lecture,
121–33) and points out the parallels Lefèvre makes between Psalm 8 and Phil 2:6–11
(127).
32. Lefèvre, 10b, 21a. Lefèvre also connects the prophecies of Ps 8:2–3 with Matt
21:15–16, Ps 33:6, and Is 40:12.
33. Lefèvre quotes Matt 27:46, 26:39, 27:39–40, 27:41–43, 26:59, and 27:35. The
other Old Testament prophecies concerning Christ’s suffering and crucifixion that he
quotes include Ps 88:1, Ps 76:13, Ps 115:9, Ps 107:6, Is 41:14, Ps 108:25, Ps 72:6, Ps
142:4, Ps 54:3, Ps 109:2–3, Ps 40:12, Is 53:7, Zech 13:6, Ps 40:11, Ps 144:11, and Ps 35:17.
See Lefèvre, 34a–34b. Concerning Psalm 110, Lefèvre cites Ps 45:6, Matt 7:28–29, and
Acts 4:33 in support of the description of Christ’s authority and power found in this
Psalm, and he cites Is 9:6 and Is 7:14 in support of the virgin birth of Christ (Lefèvre,
163a–b).
34. Lefèvre, Aii; Oberman, Forerunners, 298.
35. Lefèvre in Oberman, Forerunners, 300.
36. Lefèvre in Oberman, Forerunners, 301.
37. Each of our interpreters, however, has differing methodologies and emphases.
The Gloss mingles the christological and ecclesial readings, tends to have almost equal
emphasis on the ecclesial readings of these Psalms as on their christological readings,
and portrays a greater accent upon the messages of comfort found in these Psalms than
the other commentators. Nicholas of Lyra and Denis the Carthusian provide two
separate expositions of each Psalm—a literal exposition and a moral one. Lyra is less
inclined than the Gloss to draw out messages of comfort for the church; Denis
emphasizes the tropological reading of each Psalm, in which these Psalms may be read
NOTES TO PAGES 21–23 151
concerning the individual, faithful Christian soul. Lefèvre aims for the one, literal, true
sense intended by the Spirit, which is the christological reading; however, within this
emphasis, he also finds prophecies concerning the church.
38. Glossa Ordinaria, 459; Nicholas of Lyra, 87d, 88d, 89a; Denis the Carthusian,
5:419; Lefèvre, 3b.
39. Nicholas of Lyra, 105b, 105d, 106a; Denis the Carthusian, 5:485, 488.
40. Glossa Ordinaria, 478–80; Nicholas of Lyra, 113d, 114b, 114d, 115b; Denis the
Carthusian, 5:531; Lefèvre, 33a–b. The Gloss cites the statement of Augustine that Christ
bears the weakness of the members of his body and “speaks for the sake of those who
are members of his body and yet are afraid of death” (Glossa Ordinaria, 478–79, 479–
80). Hence, the request that God “deliver my soul from the sword” (Ps 22:20) is Christ’s
request to save the church.
41. Glossa Ordinaria, 605, 606; Denis the Carthusian, 6:535–36, 542; Lefèvre,
170a–170b.
42. For example, on Psalm 8, see Nicholas of Lyra, 260d, 261b, 261d, 262b; Denis
the Carthusian, 5:451, 455–56. Both Lyra and Denis write that the first half of Psalm
8 describes the church militant and the second half (from Ps 8:6, “you have given them
dominion”) describes the church triumphant (Nicholas of Lyra, 96d, 97b, 97c; Denis
the Carthusian, 5:451, 453, 455–56). The Gloss also reads Psalm 8 as a description of the
church; however, it describes the mixed nature of the church (Glossa Ordinaria, 465).
43. Glossa Ordinaria, 471, 472; Nicholas of Lyra, 106a; Denis the Carthusian,
5:489, 490.
44. Nicholas of Lyra, 251b, 251d, 252b; Denis the Carthusian, 6:501.
45. Glossa Ordinaria, 508, 509, 510; Nicholas of Lyra, 149b, 149d, 150b, 149c, 150b–
c; Denis the Carthusian, 6:1, 7, 8; Lefèvre, 69a–b.
46. Glossa Ordinaria, 544, 543; Nicholas of Lyra, 186c, 186d, 187a; Denis the
Carthusian, 6:212, 207; Lefèvre, 104a–105a. Furthermore, Lyra and Denis interpret Ps
72:15–16 as indicating the institution of the sacrament of Eucharist and other practices
of the triumphant church (Nicholas of Lyra, 188b; Denis the Carthusian, 6:211). The
Gloss reads Ps 72:15–16 concerning the authors of divine Scripture rather than
concerning the Eucharist (Glossa Ordinaria, 544).
47. Glossa Ordinaria, 459, 480, 605. Thus, the Gloss concludes with a statement
by Cassiodorus concerning the hope of salvation that Psalm 22 offers the church in its
suffering: “This Psalm speaks of the Lord’s passion and finds its end most of all in the
hope of Christians so that they may know that they will be saved from suffering” (Glossa
Ordinaria, 480).
48. Denis the Carthusian, 5:531, 536; there 531.
49. Glossa Ordinaria, 459, 472, 598, 605, 606. See Lyra, 149b, 149d, 150b, 188d,
187b, 188b.
50. The Gloss, Lyra, and Denis clearly maintain the tradition of seeing certain
Psalms as providing particularly clear teachings of the two natures of Christ. For
example, the Gloss often cites key statements by Cassiodorus, such as “this is the first
Psalm to teach the two natures of Christ . . . this is the second Psalm to teach the two
natures of Christ” and so on. Psalms 2, 8, 45, and 72 are precisely the first four Psalms
152 NOTES TO PAGES 23–25
understood to contain the clearest teachings of the two natures of Christ. See Glossa
Ordinaria, 459, 465, 508, 543. Psalms 16 and 22 are also seen as teaching the two
natures; however, Cassiodorus names these even more so as particularly vivid prophe-
cies of Christ’s passion and resurrection. For example, see Denis the Carthusian, 5:417,
417–18.
51. Glossa Ordinaria, 465; Nicholas of Lyra, 97b, 97a; Denis the Carthusian, 5:452–
54; Lefèvre, 10a, 10b, 11a. For these commentators, the “mouths of babes and sucklings”
(Ps 8:2) also confess his divinity.
52. Glossa Ordinaria, 471, 472.
53. Nicholas of Lyra, 105d.
54. Denis the Carthusian, 5:485, 487.
55. Lefèvre, 20b.
56. Glossa Ordinaria, 478; Nicholas of Lyra, 113b–c; Denis the Carthusian, 5:529;
Lefèvre, 34b.
57. However, while the Gloss and Denis focus upon the pictures of Christ’s
humanity contained in Psalm 22, both Lyra and Lefèvre maintain that clear depictions
of Christ’s divinity may also be found, especially in the latter half of the Psalm. See
Nicholas of Lyra, 113d, 114c; Lefèvre, 33a, 34b.
58. Namely, this refers to God’s promise of the Word made flesh. Glossa Ordinaria,
598–99.
59. Nicholas of Lyra, 251b–c, 252b.
60. Denis the Carthusian, 6:499, 500. Yet, Denis adds that this also can be
understood of Christ’s humanity in that Christ’s body ascends to the right hand of God.
61. Lefèvre, 163a. See Glossa Ordinaria, 606; Nicholas of Lyra, 262b, 261d.
62. Glossa Ordinaria, 508. The Gloss is citing the teaching of Cassiodorus here.
Lyra, Denis, and Lefèvre all maintain this tradition. See Nicholas of Lyra, 149c–d; Denis
the Carthusian, 6:3; Lefèvre, 69a–b, 70a.
63. Nicholas of Lyra, 150a–b; Denis the Carthusian, 6:7–8.
64. Glossa Ordinaria, 543–44; Nicholas of Lyra, 186d, 187a, 188b; Denis the Car-
thusian, 6:207. For example, according to Denis, the request of Ps 72:1 (“Give the king
your justice, O God”) is a request made by Christ in his humanity.
65. Glossa Ordinaria, 543; Nicholas of Lyra, 187a–b; Denis the Carthusian, 6:207.
However, Lyra is less clear that the “moon” indicates Christ’s humanity. He also sees the
“moon” as indicating Christ’s divinity.
66. Glossa Ordinaria, 459; Nicholas of Lyra, 88d; Denis the Carthusian, 5:419;
Lefèvre, 3a–3b. Denis the Carthusian, more than any of the other interpreters
considered here, exhibits a profound emphasis on the doctrine of the Trinity. He very
often depicts God as Trinity throughout a whole Psalm so that it is the “whole most
blessed Trinity” that is ultimately the actor within it. For example, for Denis, the
whole Trinity judges those who revolt against Christ (Ps 2:4–5). See Denis the
Carthusian, 5:416–17.
67. Glossa Ordinaria, 465; Lefèvre, 10a, 11a; Denis the Carthusian, 5:452. Denis
sees the whole Trinity working in this Psalm as well. For example, the whole Trinity
gives dominion to Christ (Ps 8:6–8).
NOTES TO PAGES 25–26 153
68. Denis the Carthusian, 5:487; Lefèvre, 10a, 11a, 20b, 21a. Here Lefèvre quotes
from the Gospel of John that God has “given all things into his [Christ’s] hands” (Jn 13:3)
and “all that the Father has is mine” (Jn 16:15).
69. Nicholas of Lyra, 115a; Denis the Carthusian, 5:529, 531–32; Lefèvre, 33a.
Nicholas of Lyra specifically points to Ps 22:26 as a word that Christ the Son directs
to the Father. Denis, especially, wants the reader to understand that Christ’s cry “why
have you forsaken me” (Ps 22:1) cannot mean that God has departed from Christ, for
“neither the personal union of the Word nor the blessed delight of the mind of God did
he [Christ] lose” (Denis the Carthusian, 5:530).
70. Glossa Ordinaria, 508; Denis the Carthusian, 6:1–2; Lefèvre, 69a, 70a. The
Gloss also sees a distinction of the persons of the Trinity in the expression “therefore
God, your God” of Ps 45:7 that points to God the Father and God the Son (Glossa
Ordinaria, 509). Again, Denis finds even more Trinitarian overtones in Psalm 45.
According to Denis, “I speak my words to the king” (Ps 45:1) is God the Father speaking
to Christ the king (Denis the Carthusian, 6:1–2, 2), and the beauty of Christ expressed in
Ps 45:2 is not only a bodily beauty but also a divine, uncreated beauty grounded in
Christ’s coeternity with the Father (Denis the Carthusian, 6:3).
71. Glossa Ordinaria, 543, 544; Nicholas of Lyra, 186d, 187a, 187b; Denis the
Carthusian, 6:206, 211; Lefèvre, 105b.
72. Glossa Ordinaria, 598, 599; Nicholas of Lyra, 251b–d; Denis the Carthusian,
6:499–500, 501–502; 163b; Lefèvre, 163a.
73. Glossa Ordinaria, 479, 599; Nicholas of Lyra, 113d, 251d; Denis the Carthusian,
5:533; Lefèvre, 33b, 163a–b. There are a few other isolated places where particular
interpreters find allusions to the virgin birth. For example, Nicholas of Lyra also sees
a reference to the Virgin Mary as the moon in Ps 72:5 (“May he live while the sun
endures and as long as the moon”) and a reference to Christ’s humanity as one who is
“born of a virgin” in Ps 8:4 (“son of man”). See Nicholas of Lyra, 187b, 97b. The
application of Ps 72:5 to the Virgin Mary does not appear in the Gloss, nor does the
specific mention on Ps 8:4 that Christ is born of a virgin; however, the Gloss sees the
virgin birth in Ps 22:6 (“But I am a worm”) and Ps 45:4 (“Come forth”)—readings that
do not appear in Lyra. Denis finds teachings concerning the virgin birth in other
portions of these Psalms not found by our other interpreters. For example, he argues
that the beauty of Christ expressed in Ps 45:2 includes an account of Christ’s human
beauty—a beauty based upon the fact that the body of Christ “was chosen from the most
beautiful material, namely from the cleanest blood of the most dignified Virgin” (Denis
the Carthusian, 6:3).
74. Glossa Ordinaria, 509; Denis the Carthusian, 6:5–6.
75. Glossa Ordinaria, 543; Nicholas of Lyra, 187b; Denis the Carthusian, 6:208;
Lefèvre, 104b–105a.
76. Glossa Ordinaria, 543.
77. Denis the Carthusian, 5:533. Scholars have noted the importance of Mary for
Denis; doctrines concerning Mary’s perpetual virginity and status as coredemptrix reach
their height during Denis’s day.
78. Denis the Carthusian, 6:500 (emphasis added).
154 NOTES TO PAGES 27–32
79. Denis the Carthusian, 6:1, 11, there 11. Denis goes on to apply the rest of Ps
45:9–15 to Mary. Lefèvre also reiterates the interpretation of the Psalm 45 concerning
Christ and the Virgin. See Lefèvre, 69a.
80. Glossa Ordinaria, 480; Nicholas of Lyra, 115a, 115b; Denis the Carthusian,
5:537–38, 538, 543; Lefèvre, 33a–b.
81. Glossa Ordinaria, 599, 606; Nicholas of Lyra, 252a, 262a, 261c–d; Denis the
Carthusian, 6:503, 593; Lefèvre, 163a, 170b.
82. Nicholas of Lyra, 188b; Denis the Carthusian, 6:211; Lefèvre, 105a. The Gloss,
however, does not see the ties to the Eucharist in Ps 72:16.
83. Except, as already noted, he does read the first half of Psalm 118 in reference
to David.
12. WA 5:51, 61, 70. Luther writes, “Again you see that the rule of Christ is not one
that he has arrogantly assumed, but that it was established by the command and
authority of the Father” (WA 5:61).
13. WA 5:251–52, 275–76, 456, and 465. Luther interprets the “inheritance” in Ps
16:6 as Christ receiving everything from the Father.
14. WA 40/2:196. Likewise, Luther concludes with an affirmation of Psalm 2’s
teachings concerning the dual natures of Christ and Trinity: “Now, then, you have the
chief articles of our faith set forth in this psalm, who and what sort of king Christ is,
namely, begotten of the Father from eternity and set upon Mount Zion; then, what his
kingdom is like, namely, that he is a teacher beyond the Law and Moses” (WA 40/2:
258).
15. Luther writes, “Thus the Holy Spirit through the prophet David instructs us in
this Psalm by short, clear words about the following topics: the two natures of Christ so
united in a single undivided person; Christ’s dominion and kingdom . . . the glory and
renewal of creation; Christ’s humiliation, suffering, death; Christ’s resurrection, exal-
tation, and glorification . . . . In a fine and happy way this Psalm proves these sublime
doctrines with simple and short words” (WA 45:249).
16. WA 45:207–208, 230.
17. For examples, see WA 40/2:483–85, 515–17, 585–89; WA 41:79–80, 89; WA 31/
1:179–80. He also praises Psalm 110, especially, as giving one of the clearest and most
powerful descriptions of Christ’s person in the Old Testament, providing teaching
concerning the kingship and priesthood of Christ. See WA 41:79–80, 88–89, 194–195.
18. WA 4:234. See also WA 41:144, 159. Luther maintains some of the medieval
readings of parts of these Psalms concerning the virgin birth of Christ. The typical
passages that evoke comments on the virgin birth are Ps 22:9–10, Ps 45:4, Ps 72:6, and
Ps 110:3. Luther does give a brief mention of the virgin birth in his interpretation of Ps
22:9–10 in his Operationes (WA 5:624); however, his focus is on the birth of the church
(WA 5:624–26). Psalm 45:6 does not evoke for him a mention of the virgin birth; and
he briefly mentions the readings of Lyra and Cassiodorus concerning the virgin birth
in his comments on Ps 72:6 in the Dictata (WA 3:468). Although Luther interprets
Ps 110:3 concerning both the virgin birth of Christ and the birth of the church in the
Dictata (WA 4:234), he applies this to only the birth of the church in his later 1535
commentary on Psalm 110 (WA 41:158–67).
19. On Psalm 2: WA 3:33; WA 5:52, 55; WA 40/2:205, 217, 233, 270, 282, 300–301,
305, 309. On Psalm 8: WA 3:82; WA 5:280, 281; WA 45:213–14. On Psalm 16: WA 3:105–
108; WA 5:445, 447, 449, 452–53. On Psalm 22: WA 5:620–21, 627, 628–29, 632. On
Psalm 45: WA 3:257–58; WA 40/2:483, 563–74. On Psalm 110: WA 4:230, 231, 235; WA
41:112–13, 144–45, 161, 226. On Psalm 118: WA 4:279–80, 280; WA 31/1:103–104, 164,
168, 171, 172.
20. Luther, however, adds the emphasis of the Jews’ wrong reliance upon the law
and works-righteousness much more than the antecedent exegetical tradition of these
Psalms. This added emphasis will be shown to be part of his larger concern to use these
Psalms to teach the doctrine of justification by faith alone.
21. WA 3:34; 4:279, 279–80.
NOTES TO PAGES 37–39 157
because David is the very mouthpiece of Christ, so that Christ’s words are actually
spoken by David. See Luther’s preface to the scholia (WA 3:15).
35. See Heiko Oberman, “Biblical Exegesis: The Literal and the Spiritual Sense of
Scripture,” in Forerunners of the Reformation: The Shape of Late Medieval Thought, trans.
Paul L. Nyhus (New York: Holt, Rinehart, and Winston, 1966), 281–96, esp. 290–91.
One can see a growing appreciation of the literal sense in Luther’s exegesis in his
increasing attention to the biblical text’s historical setting. Even between the Dictata
and the Operationes, he displays much more concern for the Psalms’ historical setting in
the Operationes. This turn to the importance of historical context continues in Luther’s
1530s exegesis of the prophets and his last lectures on Genesis. Several of Luther’s
teachings of comfort in his 1530s expositions of the Psalms are grounded in a greater
appreciation of the historical sense of each Psalm.
36. Though he does not drop letter versus spirit completely in all of his exegeses.
He does, however, drop it completely from his interpretation of the messianic Psalms
studied in this chapter.
37. WA 3:254, 255–56; WA 40/2:485–86, 490–91, 492–93.
38. WA 3:82, 106, 107–108, 255–56, 259, 263; WA 4:280.
39. WA 5:61, 68; WA 40/2:242, 265, 278, 285–86, 301–302, 483, 572–73; WA
41:152; WA 31/1:180–81.
40. WA 5:52, 280, 281, 447, 453, 463; WA 40/2:205–206, 270, 282, 309, 473,
563–66, 572–73, 586–87; WA 45:213–14, 236; WA 41:144–45, 161, 169–71, 174–75,
230–31; WA 31/1:164–65, 171–72.
41. WA 3:105, 258, 106, 107.
42. WA 5:69, 74, 447.
43. WA 40/2:273–74, 486–87; WA 45:217; WA 41:109–10.
44. WA 40/2:219–20, 222, 273–74; WA 41:96–98; WA 31/1:91.
45. WA 4:278–80; WA 5:53, 280, 281, 447; WA 45:219; WA 41:170; WA 31/
1:103–104.
46. WA 3:107; WA 5:54, 445, 447, 452, 453; WA 40/2:270, 300–301, 305, 309,
563–65, 572–73, 575; WA 41:150–52, 161–63; WA 31/1:166–67, 168, 171.
47. WA 5:54, 447, 453; WA 40/2:273, 545–47, 576–77; WA 45:228; WA 41:112–13,
145, 225–26; WA 31/1:103–104.
48. WA 5:447, 450, 452–53.
49. WA 5:447, 450, 452–53; WA 40/2:205–206, 273–74, 301, 564–65, 572–75; WA
41:161–63; WA 31/1:166–67, 168–69, 174–75, 178.
50. WA 5:305–306; WA 41:151–52; WA 31/1:162–63.
51. WA 45:219, 224–26; WA 40/2:534–35, 546–47, 564–65, 570–72.
52. WA 40/2:309–10, 546–47; WA 45:226–29; WA 41:112–15. Other enemies
make brief appearances in these commentaries, such as the Turks and the sectarians,
especially in the 1532 commentary on Psalm 45.
53. WA 40/2:567, 583.
54. Much work has been done on the topic of Luther and the Jews. Early scholar-
ship tends to follow one of two extremes: either an overly apologetic portrayal of Luther
or the depiction of Luther as the father of modern anti-Semitism. Neelak Tjernagel
NOTES TO PAGES 45–46 159
(Martin Luther and the Jewish People) and A. K. Holmio (Martin Luther: Friend or Foe of the
Jews) follow the former tendency; William Shirer’s The Rise and Fall of the Third Reich
follows the latter tendency. More balanced views include those of Wilhelm Maurer (“Die
Zeit der Reformation,” in Kirche und Synagoge: Handbuch zur Geschichte von Christen
und Juden, Vol. 1, ed. Karl Heinrich Rengstorf and Siegried V. Kortzfleisch [Stuttgart:
Klett, 1968], 363–452), Heiko Oberman (The Roots of Anti-Semitism: In the Age of the
Renaissance and Reformation, trans. James I. Porter [Philadelphia: Fortress, 1984]), Mark
U. Edwards (“Against the Jews,” in Essential Papers on Judaism and Christianity in
Conflict: From Late Antiquity to the Reformation, ed. Jeremy Cohen [New York: New York
University Press, 1991], 345–79), and Eric Gritsch (“The Jews in Reformation Theology,”
in Jewish and Christian Encounters over the Centuries: Symbiosis, Prejudice, Holocaust,
Dialogue, ed. Marvin Perry and Frederick M. Schweitzer [New York: Peter Lang, 1994],
197–213). See also the recent essay by Thomas Kaufmann, “Luther and the Jews,” in
Jews, Judaism, and the Reformation in Sixteenth-Century Germany, ed. Dean P. Bell and
Stephen G. Burnett (Leiden: Brill, 2006), 69–104.
55. Preus, “Old Testament Promissio and Luther’s New Hermeneutic,” 146, 148,
153–55, 160.
56. WA 40:195–96; WA 45:207, 239; WA 40/2:586; WA 41:79, 80, 81.
57. WA 10/1: 99, 100, 101.
58. As several scholars have pointed out, law and gospel are found in both the Old
and New Testaments, so that the division between the Old Testament and the New is not
one of law and gospel. See David Steinmetz, Luther and Staupitz: An Essay in the
Intellectual Origins of the Protestant Reformation (Durham, NC: Duke University Press,
1980), 55. I suppose one would have to define what one means by affirming the Old
Testament “on its own terms.” If by this Preus means that Luther would have to affirm
the Old Testament apart from its gospel content, this would be foreign to Luther. If he
means that Luther affirms the New Testament vision of the Old Testament people as Old
Testament people, then this Luther does do.
59. There is one other point of contention that I have with James Preus’s thesis. He
places a fair amount of weight on the appearance and use of the “faithful synagogue” in
the second half of the Dictata super psalterium. Preus sees in Luther’s references to the
faithful synagogue a fundamental change in the meaning of “prophetic”: while in
earlier Psalms David’s word is prophetic because he speaks the words of Christ, in the
later Psalms the prophetic speaker is “the faithful synagogue awaiting Christ’s first
advent.” Thus, Preus concludes, “The voice of the Old Testament people, speaking as
themselves, is heard” (“Old Testament Promissio and Luther’s New Hermeneutic,”
154–55). What he fails to point out is that Luther identifies the faithful synagogue with
the primitive church (WA 3:535) and with the early church (WA 4:394). See also Scott
Hendrix’s discussion of Preus’s thesis in Ecclesia in Via: Ecclesiological Developments in
the Medieval Psalms Exegesis and the Dictata super psalterium (1513–1515) of Martin Luther
(Leiden: E. J. Brill, 1974), 271–78.
60. WA 3:15; WA 41:81.
61. WA 45:239.
62. WA 41:98.
160 NOTES TO PAGES 47–49
63. WA 41:81–82. I suggest, in fact, that David is not only an exemplar of faith for
Luther but also perhaps even more so a teacher of Christian doctrine, especially in
Luther’s 1530s writings on the messianic Psalms.
64. WA 41:187. The mention of Melchizedek (Ps 110:4), as well as Ps 22:25–26, 29;
Ps 72:16; and Ps 118:19–20, 27, evoke Eucharistic connotations for the antecedent
tradition. On Ps 22:25–26 in his Operationes, Luther very briefly refers to the Eucharist,
but his emphasis is upon the gospel that is given as food for the poor (WA 5:664–65).
He harmonizes all the various translations of the Hebrew in Ps 72:16 in his
Eucharistic reading (WA 3:470–71). While in the Dictata Luther briefly uses Ps 110:4 to
refer to the Eucharist (WA 4:234–35), he argues against such a reading in his later
1535 commentary on Psalm 110; the mention of Melchizedek, argues Luther, is not
made to foreshadow the Eucharist but, rather, to demonstrate what kind of
priesthood Christ would have—namely, an eternal priesthood that is apart from
law (WA 41:180–83). Finally, Ps 118:19–20 and Ps 118:27 do not warrant an application
to the Eucharist for Luther in either his Dictata or his 1530 exposition on this Psalm.
65. References to Hebrew in the Dictata occur mostly in Luther’s discussion of a
title of a Psalm. In addition, his references to the Hebrew in his coverage of the
messianic Psalms deal with other scholars’ translations, such as Reuchlin, Jerome, Lyra,
and Burgensis, followed by Luther’s attempts to harmonize these translations. See
WA 3:33–34, 35, 104, 254. See Siegfried Raeder’s works on Luther’s use of Hebrew in
the first and second lectures on the Psalms: Das Hebräische bei Luther, untersucht bis
zum Ende der ersten Psalmenvorlesung (Tübingen: J. C. B. Mohr, 1961); Die Benutzung des
masoretischen Textes bei Luther in der Zeit zwischen der ersten und zweiten Psalmenvorlesung
(Tübingen: J. C. B. Mohr, 1967); and Grammatica Theologica: Studien zu Luthers
Operationes in Psalmos (Tübingen: J. C. B. Mohr, 1977).
66. WA 5:250, 252–53.
67. WA 5:269–271, 271, 270.
68. WA 5:274. On the following verse (Ps 8:6), Luther pays lengthy attention to the
Hebrew words DF BĻ and YḐȨ. See WA 5:276.
69. WA 5: 449.
70. WA 5:462.
71. WA 40/2:474–76.
72. WA 40/2:474–75.
73. WA 40/2:231. Luther contends that even if knowledge of Hebrew was not
useful, one should learn it out of gratitude to God, and he includes a warning:
“Therefore, I earnestly admonish you not to neglect it. There is a danger that God may
be offended by this ingratitude and deprive us not only of the knowledge of this sacred
language, but of Greek, Latin, and all religion” (WA 40/2:474).
74. WA 40/2:481, 484–85; WA 45:207–208. He also uses the Hebrew to correct
the Vulgate version of the biblical text of Ps 45:13–14. See WA 40/2: 599, 601.
75. See Martin Brecht’s discussion of this in Martin Luther: His Road to Reforma-
tion, 1483–1521, trans. James L. Schaaf (Minneapolis: Fortress, 1993), 290–91.
76. These censures become particularly strong in his later works. See, for example,
his lectures on Genesis. For a few examples, see WA 42:194–96, 198–99, 218, 223.
NOTES TO PAGES 49–51 161
77. WA 3:13. Luther, of course, has Nicholas of Lyra in mind when he writes this.
78. WA 40/2:282, 473; WA 41:83, 169, 230.
79. For example, the first edition of Martin Bucer’s commentary on the Psalms
appeared in September 1529, and it was full of positive references to Jewish exegesis.
A second edition of Bucer’s commentary came out in 1532. Jerome Friedman argues that
the first half of the sixteenth century witnessed the greatest growth in Christian
Hebraica and the most significant internal conflicts among Christian Hebraists. See The
Most Ancient Testimony: Sixteenth-Century Christian Hebraica in the Age of Renaissance
Nostalgia (Athens: Ohio University Press, 1983), 5.
80. Johannes Forster, Dictionarium Hebraicum Novum, non ex Rabinorum
Commentis nec ex Nostratium Doctorum stulta imitatione descriptum, sed ex ipsis thesauris
sacrorum Bibliorum et eorundem accurate locorum collatione depromptum, cum phrasibus
scripturae Veteris et Novi Testamenti diligenter annotatis. Translation from Frank
Rosenthal, “The Rise of Christian Hebraism in the Sixteenth Century,” Historia
Judaica 7 (1945): 179. See also Friedman, 170–71.
81. WA 42:271–72.
82. Martin Luther, Tischreden in der Matheischen Sammlung, ed. E. Kroker (Leipzig,
1903), 588.
83. Martin Luther, Von Schem Hamphorus und Vom Geschlecht Christi, in Gerhard
Falk, The Jew in Christian Theology (London: McFarland, 1992), 222–23, 222. For studies
on sixteenth-century Christian Hebraists, see Frank Rosenthal, “The Rise of Christian
Hebraism in the Sixteenth Century,” Historia Judaica 7 (1945): 167–91; Jerome Friedman,
The Most Ancient Testimony, and “Protestant, Jews, and Jewish Sources,” in Piety, Politics,
and Ethics: Reformation Studies in Honor of George Wolfgang Forell, ed. Carter Lindberg,
Sixteenth Century Essays and Studies 3 (Kirksville, MO: Sixteenth Century Journal
Publishers, 1984), 139–56; Bernard Roussel, “Strasbourg et l’école rhénane d’exégèse
(1525–1540),” Bulletin de la Société de l’Histoire du Protestantisme Français 135 (1989): 36–41;
Gerald Hobbs, “L’Hébreu, le Judaı̈sme et la Théologie,” Bulletin de la Société de l’Histoire
du Protestantisme Français 135 (1989): 42–53, and “Monitio Amica: Pellicon à Capiton sur
le Danger des Lectures Rabbiniques,” in Horizons Européens de la Reforme en Alsace, ed.
Marijn de Kroon and Marc Lienhard, Société Savante D’Alsace et des Régions de L’est 17
(Strasbourg: Librairie Istra, 1980), 81–93; and Eric Zimmer, “Jewish and Christian
Hebraist Collaboration in Sixteenth Century Germany,” Jewish Quarterly Review 71 (1980):
69–88. Rosenthal, Roussel, Friedman, and Hobbs all espouse the predication of
two schools of exegesis that are divided both regionally and concerning their views on
the usefulness of Jewish exegesis. These two schools are identified as the Strasbourg-
Basel-Zurich School (or Upper Rhineland School) and the Wittenberg School, where
the former advocates the usefulness of Jewish exegesis for Christian exegesis and the
latter does not. Stephen G. Burnett, however, questions whether the differences
between these two “schools” are as clear as these authors contend. See “Reassessing
the ‘Basel-Wittenberg Conflict’: Dimensions of the Reformation-Era Discussion of
Hebrew Scholarship,” in Hebraica Veritas? Christian Hebraists and the Study of Judaism
in Early Modern Europe, ed. Allison P. Coudert and Jeffrey S. Shoulson (Philadelphia:
University of Pennsylvania Press, 2004), 181–201.
162 NOTES TO PAGES 55–56
definition is supported by Heb 11:1: “Faith is the assurance of things hoped for, the
indication of things not seen.” This assurance, says Bucer, is the same as undoubted
persuasion (Bucer, 27b–28a).
31. Bucer, 28a, 28b, 29a–b, there 28b. Hobbs discusses this as a point of Bucer’s
moderation toward more Roman Catholic views of salvation and sanctification. See
“An Introduction,” 83–85. These depictions of faith as persuaded assurance and faith
as intimately tied to a righteous life appear in Bucer’s readings of Psalms 8, 16, 22, and
45, as well. See his comments on Ps 8:1, 16:2, 16:9, and 22:22–31 in Bucer, 55b–56b,
57b–58b, 90a, 93a–b, 127b, 128a–b, 129a, 130b, 131b. On the whole, Bucer does not
maintain the medieval and late-medieval traditions of using these Psalms to teach
about the virgin birth or Eucharist. The mention of the “mother’s womb” in Ps 22:9–10
evokes from him praise of God’s great care and goodness to humanity and to the elect
in particular (Bucer, 123b). The image of the rains that water the earth in Ps 72:6
speak of the restorative work of Christ, rather than the virgin birth (see 266b). And
“from the womb of the morning” (Ps 110:3) is about the birth of the church (and not
Christ’s virgin birth). See Bucer, 342b–343a. As to Eucharist, Bucer only maintains a
brief mention of Eucharist on Ps 22:25–26 (130a) and 110:4 (343a–b).
32. We will see that these purposes are accomplished by Bucer’s profound
envisioning of the church as the body of Christ, so that what may be said of Christ,
the head, is also said of the church, the members of Christ’s body. Hence, Bucer’s
placement of the church as central to his readings of these Psalms is intimately tied
to their christological import. This is important to note, because John Calvin will find
the experience of the church in these Psalms primarily through the person of David (i.e.,
without a clear christological link).
33. Bucer, 21a, 26a, 26b, 55b, 56a, 57b, 59b, 94b–95a, 129a, 93a, 122b, 127a, 354a,
354b, 355b, 21a, 24b, 59a.
34. Bucer, 57a. He specifically identifies the “enemy and avenger” as atheists. Amy
Nelson Burnett argues that Bucer’s emphasis on moral reform and the cultivation of
piety echoes the influence of Erasmus. See her article “Church Discipline and Moral
Reformation in the Thought of Martin Bucer,” Sixteenth Century Studies Journal 22
(1991): 454. Gottfried Hammann notes Bucer’s preoccupation with holiness and piety
in the context of his creation of the “Gemeinschaften” (“Ecclesiological Motifs
behind the Creation of the ‘Christlichen Gemeinschaften,’” in Martin Bucer: Reforming
Church and Community, ed. D. F. Wright [Cambridge: Cambridge University Press,
1994], 141–42).
35. Bucer, 90a, 91a, 91b, 355b, 122b, 128a, 128a–b. Bucer contrasts Saul and David:
“Saul’s ruling of the people obscured the true religion of God. So David inaugurated it
when he invited the people to bring the Ark of God back . . . . Therefore he [David] was
encouraging them to know the wonderful and incomparable goodness of God so that
they would come forth to all goodness, gather as one, and give praise and cleave to this
religion alone and serve God’s commands devotedly” (128a).
36. On the defeat of Christ’s enemies, see Bucer, 20a–b, 21b, 24b–26a, 342a,
342b, 343b, 344a. On the splendor of Christ’s kingdom, see Bucer, 24a, 131b, 212a, 215a,
266b, 267b–268a, 355a–b. On the establishment of righteousness and justice, see
166 NOTES TO PAGES 63–64
Bucer, 130a, 131a, 131b, 212b, 215a, 266a, 343a. On the expansiveness, universality, and
eternity of the kingdom, see Bucer, 121a, 122a–b, 131b, 215a, 215b, 268a, 341a, 343a.
See T. F. Torrance, “Kingdom and Church in the Thought of Martin Butzer,” Journal of
Ecclesiastical History 6 (1955): 48–59, which argues that the doctrine of the two
natures of Christ is the foundation of Bucer’s concept of the relation between the
heavenly and earthly kingdoms (58).
37. Bucer, 24b, 342b–343a, 90a, 92a, 127b. T. F. Torrance also points out Bucer’s
emphasis on seeing the church as the living body of Christ and eloquently describes
the connection for him between election and incorporation into the body of Christ
(“Kingdom and Church in the Thought of Martin Butzer,” 51, 53–54).
38. See, for example, Bucer, 90b–91a. Moreover, he identifies the kingdom of
Christ on earth as the “society of the saints.” See, for example, Bucer, 92b. A fuller
expression of Bucer’s vision of Christ’s kingdom on earth is given in his 1550 De
Regno Christi, in which he sets forth a program for church reform in England. For a
description of Bucer’s concern to form a new Christian society, see Amy Nelson
Burnett’s article “Church Discipline and Moral Reformation in the Thought of Martin
Bucer,” 438–56, and her book, The Yoke of Christ: Martin Bucer and Christian Discipline
(Kirksville, MO: Sixteenth Century Journal, 1994).
39. Bucer, 26a–b. For example, a good and pious prince never starts cruel wars,
does not neglect piety and holiness, does not neglect the innocent, practices the virtue
of study, and seeks to do justice. Most of all, such princes understand that they are
stewards of God’s kingdom (26b). Gerald Hobbs argues that Bucer uses the figure
of David to exemplify the true pious prince. See Hobb’s article “Bucer’s Use of King
David as Mirror of the Christian Prince,” Reformation and Renaissance Review 5
(2003): 119.
40. Bucer, 213a, 266a–b, 129a–b, 131b, there 129a–b. Aspects exhibited by
David that characterize a pious king include setting forth laws of peace, calling the
people to faithfulness and praise of God, imploring the help of God in time of need,
and caring for the poor and needy (129b–130a). Many scholars have noted the intimate
tie Bucer places between civil and religious leaders in furthering the kingdom of
Christ on earth. See Martin Greschat’s article “The Relation between Church and Civil
Community in Bucer’s Reforming Work,” in Martin Bucer: Reforming Church and
Community, 17–31.
41. Bucer, 127b, 268b, 342a, 22a–b.
42. Bucer, 22b, 27b–28a, 131b, 21a, 59a, 92a, 128a–b, 129a, 90a, 92a, 127b,
342b–343a.
43. For examples: Bucer interprets Ps 16:10 concerning Christ having passed
from death to life, but then he goes on to emphasize that the saints share in this victory
so that through Christ the saints escape death, and the blessings of resurrection,
eternal life, and eternal joy befall them (94a). Likewise, the weight of his interpretation
of Psalm 22 is to show that Christ underwent these sufferings for the elect’s salvation
and restoration (127b).
44. Dates for these Jewish exegetes are the following: David Kimhi (1160–1235),
Abraham Ibn Ezra (1092/93–1167), and Rabbi Solomon ben Isaac (1040–1105).
NOTES TO PAGES 64–66 167
primarily within Solomon’s historical context. See Rashi in Gruber, 35–36, 324–28.
Likewise, he notes that parts of Psalm 118 are often read pertaining to the future war of
Gog and Magog, particularly verse eleven (see Feuer, 1406). Rashi does not, however,
interpret Psalm 45 in reference to the Messiah but instead as concerning the Torah
scholar. See Rashi in Gruber, 22–23, 212–215.
55. See Kimhi in Esterson, 438, 441–42, and Feuer, 1402, 1412, 1413, 1414. On
Psalm 22, however, the weight of the rabbis’ exegesis falls on the meaning of the
Psalm as a prophecy of Israel’s exile, suffering, and redemption, rather than as a
prophecy of the Messiah’s suffering. See Rashi in Gruber, 12–13, 126–28; Kimhi in
Schiller-Szinessy, 65–71; Finch, 97–109; Feuer, 269–85.
56. Kimhi in Schiller-Szinessy, 26, 27, there 27; Finch, 49–50, 53, there 53.
57. Bucer, 55b, 56b, 57b–58a.
58. Kimhi in Schiller-Szinessy, 42; Finch, 74. Bucer, 90a. David Kimhi cites his
father’s interpretation of Ps 16:2 as “the good I do is not done to You [God],” so that
the meaning is that because God is the source of all good, God does not need our good
deeds, but, rather, they are done “to the holy ones who are in the earth” (Ps 16:3).
59. Bucer, 56b. Kimhi translates the verb as “you have founded,” and Ibn Ezra
translates it as “you make a beginning.” Bucer essentially harmonizes these two
translations. Kimhi writes on Ps 8:2: “In the present psalm he says that the wonders
of the Creator and His loving-kindness to man are to be recognized from the moment
of his first coming into the air of the world and from his early infancy” (Kimhi in
Schiller-Szinessy, 25–26; Finch, 49).
60. Bucer, 92b. See Kimhi in Schiller-Szinessy, 43; Finch, 76.
61. For example, all three Jewish commentators use the latter verses of Psalm
2 to teach about true worship of God—that the proper stance before God is holy fear,
trembling, and complete trust in God. See Kimhi in Schiller-Szinessy, 11; Finch, 17,
18. Rashi in Gruber, 1–2, 53–54. Ibn Ezra in Feuer, 70–71. It is curious, though, that
Bucer does not use the rabbis’ comments on Ps 2:12 to support his emphasis on true
piety and separation from impurity. Kimhi and Rashi both cite the possible
translation of the Hebrew phrase YBÐF s W Q as “kiss purity” to point to the purity of heart
Ð Ð
of the righteous (see Kimhi in Schiller-Szinessy, 11; Finch, 17 and Rashi in Gruber, 1, 53).
Instead, Bucer cites Jerome’s interpretation of this phase as “worship purely” (see Bucer,
27a).
62. See Rashi in Gruber, 8, 99–100; Kimhi in Schiller-Szinessy, 42–44, and Finch,
75–78; Ibn Ezra in Feuer, 192, 193, 199.
63. Bucer, 127b–128b. For the citations of Kimhi and Ibn Ezra in Bucer, see 128b
and 130a. See Kimhi in Schiller-Szinessy, 69; Finch, 106. On Psalm 118, see Bucer, 355b,
and Feuer, 1402–1403. David is shown as the one who establishes true religion and
worship of God over and against Saul’s “rule in darkness” and “dull devotion” (Bucer,
128a). Bucer does then turn from the example of David to David as a type of Christ,
for, argues Bucer, the institution of the true worship of God was more fully established
by Christ. See Bucer, 128a–b, 130b.
64. Bucer, 91a, 127b–128b. See Rashi in Gruber, 8, 99.
65. Bucer, 90b and 91a.
NOTES TO PAGES 67–70 169
66. Bucer, 90b and 92b. Kimhi comments on the phrase “you hold my lot” in
Ps 16:5b that God provides help to those who choose God as their inheritance. See
Kimhi in Schiller-Szinessy, 43, and Finch, 76.
67. See Bucer, 27a and Kimhi in Schiller-Szinessy, 11, and Finch, 17–18. Bucer
then connects this reading to Christ, when Christ’s wrath is kindled against those who
are unwilling to worship him.
68. Bucer, 92b, 128b, and 130a.
69. See Kimhi in Schiller-Szinessy, 11–12, 70–71; Finch, 18–19, 108–109; Kimhi
in Bosniak, 66–68. Bucer does not directly quote or address Kimhi’s anti-Christian
polemic in his comments on Psalms 72 and 110. Hobbs surmises that Bucer is most
likely using the 1517 edition of David Kimhi’s commentary on the Psalms, which
may very well explain the absence of his response to Kimhi’s attacks on Psalms 72
and 110, for they were censored in the 1517 edition. See Hobbs’s discussion, “An
Introduction,” 269–71.
70. Kimhi in Schiller-Szinessy, 11–12; Finch, 18–19.
71. Kimhi in Schiller-Szinessy, 12; Finch, 19.
72. Bucer, 23a–b.
73. See Bucer, 20a, 21b, 22b, 23a, 23b, 27a.
74. The dispute is how to translate the Hebrew phrase: JMC YF JD J JYA L . The
medieval rabbis translate this phrase “as a lion, my hands and feet”; ¯ ¯ Christians
¯ ¯ read it as
“they pierce my hands and feet.”
75. Kimhi in Schiller-Szinessy, 70; Finch, 109. Kimhi also asks why Jesus is asking
for help (Ps 22:1) when it is also said that he willingly faced death, why Jesus would
speak of the praises of Israel (Ps 22:3) if it is Israel who is doing him harm, or how he can
speak of all the nations bowing down to him (Ps 22:27–29) when the Jews and the
Muslims do not believe in him.
76. Bucer, 124b.
77. Bucer cites Num 23:24, Judges 14:8, 1 Sam 17:34, 2 Sam 23:20, and Is 38:13. He
argues that no one writes JYA with a cof and translates it as “like a lion.” The only
exception is Is 38:13, which is the only other place in Scripture (other than Ps 22:16)
where a cof precedes the word.
78. Bucer, 125a. Yet, Bucer is still concerned about Jewish mockery of Christian
interpretations, for in the very next line he states, “Nevertheless this is not without them
exhibiting laughter at our expense. I urge them to follow me and not impede me on this
passage concerning the word JYA.”
79. See Bucer, 126b–127b. He also cites the parallels of the events recorded in the
Psalm with those recorded concerning the life of Jesus in the Gospels. See Bucer, 122a,
123b, 126a, 126b–127a, 129a, 130b, 131a–b.
80. Constantin Hopf notes that Bucer applies this rule with all of his sources,
whether church fathers or Jewish commentators. See Hopf, 212. Bucer’s sentiments
toward Jewish exegesis appear to echo those of Nicholas of Lyra, for both men find
Jewish exegesis helpful in illuminating the literal sense and both limit the use of Jewish
exegesis according to how well it maintains the simple sense of the text; however, Lyra
preferred Rashi, and Bucer preferred Kimhi. Lyra writes in his Second Prologue to his
170 NOTES TO PAGES 70–71
Postilla Litteralis super Totum Bibliam: “Likewise, my intention is to cite the statements
not only of Catholic but also of Jewish teachers and especially Rabbi Solomon, who
among all the Jewish exegetes has put forward the most reasonable arguments in
order to illuminate the literal meaning of the text . . . . So one must not adhere to the
teachings of the Jews except insofar as they are in accord with reason and the true literal
meaning” (PL 113:30). This translation comes from A. J. Minnis, A. Brian Scott, and
David Wallace, eds., Medieval Literary Theory and Criticism, c. 1100–c. 1375: The Commen-
tary Tradition (Oxford: Clarendon, 1988), 270.
81. Bucer, 59a. See Kimhi in Schiller-Szinessy, 27; Finch, 52.
82. Bucer, 22a–b. See Kimhi in Schiller-Szinessy, 10; Finch, 15.
83. Bucer, 344a. There are other instances as well. For example, Bucer disagrees
with Kimhi’s interpretation of Ps 16:11 as a prayer, for he argues that the context of the
previous verse proves that it is a praise that God has not deserted him and has saved him
from the corruption of the grave (Bucer, 94b). See Kimhi in Schiller-Szinessy, 44; Finch,
78. On the title of Psalm 22, Bucer rejects Jewish interpretations of the Hebrew word
‘MJA, particularly Kimhi’s application of this word as a metaphor for Israel. Through
Ð
the quotation of various biblical passages, Bucer argues that the preferable meaning is
that ‘MJA refers to Christ (122a–b).
Ð
84. Bucer, 91a–b. See Rashi in Gruber, 8, 99; Kimhi in Schiller-Szinessy, 42;
Finch, 75.
85. Bucer, 213b. See Kimhi in Esterson, 331; Ibn Ezra in Feuer, 568–69.
86. Bucer, 267b. See Rashi in Gruber, 36, 326. Kimhi in Esterson, 440. Ibn Ezra
in Feuer, 902.
87. My views on Bucer’s anti-Jewish rhetoric are slightly different from those
expressed by R. Gerald Hobbs in his “An Introduction,” 272–75. Hobbs sees Bucer’s
remarks to be “significantly free of animus” and states that Bucer does not “indulge in
an all-too-popular anti-semitic jargon.” Though not so virulently or frequently as Martin
Luther, Bucer does retain the two basic anti-Jewish sentiments of his day—Jews as
enemies of Christ and the church and Jews as blind and ignorant interpreters of
Scripture. I have not included in the body of this chapter a discussion of Bucer’s
dealings with contemporary Jews of his day, for my investigation is focused on his use of
Jewish commentaries in his exegesis. The best known incident is, of course, the Cassel
Advice, in which Bucer advocates several economic and religious restrictions on the
Jews of Hesse to maintain the supremacy of Christianity and the church.
For studies on Bucer and the Jews of Hesse, see Hasting Eells, “Bucer’s Plan for
the Jews,” Church History 6 (1937): 127–35; Robert Stupperich, ed., Bucers Deutsche
Schriften, Vol. 7: Schriften der Jahre 1538–1539 (Gütersloh: Gütersloher Verlagshaus Gerd
Mohn, 1964), 336–37; Wilhelm Maurer, “Die Zeit der Reformation,” in Kirche und
Synagoge: Handbuch zur Geschichte von Christen und Juden, ed. Karl H. Rengsdorf
and Siegfried von Kortzfleisch (Stuttgart: Ernst Klett, 1968), 1:363–448; W. Nijenhuis,
“A Remarkable Historical Argumentation in Bucer’s ‘Judenratschlag’” and “Bucer
and the Jews” in Ecclesia Reformata: Studies on the Reformation (Leiden: E. J. Brill, 1972),
23–72; Steven Rowan, “Luther, Bucer and Eck on the Jews,” Sixteenth Century Journal
16 (1985): 79–90; John W. Kleiner, “The Attitudes of Martin Bucer and Landgrave
NOTES TO PAGES 71–77 171
Philipp toward the Jews of Hesse,” in Faith and Freedom: A Tribute to Franklin H. Littel,
ed. Richard Libowitz (Oxford: Pergamon, 1987), 221–30; Martin Greschat, Martin
Bucer: A Reformer and His Times, trans. Stephen E. Buckwalter (Louisville, KY:
Westminster John Knox, 2004), 156–58, and “The Relation between Church and Civil
Community in Bucer’s Reforming Work,” in Martin Bucer: Reforming Church and
Community, ed. D. F. Wright (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1994), 27–29;
R. Gerald Hobbs, “Martin Bucer et les Juifs,” in Martin Bucer and Sixteenth-Century
Europe: Actes du Colloque de Strasbourg (28–31 août), ed. Christian Krieger and Marc
Lienhard (Leiden: Brill, 1993), 2:681–89, and his more recent article, “Bucer, the Jews,
and Judaism,” in Jews, Judaism, and the Reformation in Sixteenth-Century Germany, ed.
Dean P. Bell and Stephen G. Burnett (Leiden: Brill, 2006), 137–69.
88. Bucer, 20a.
89. See Bucer, 21b, 25a–b.
90. Bucer, 57a.
91. Bucer, 126a. However, it is notable that he does not carry out a continual
reading of the Jews as the enemies and crucifiers of Christ in his interpretation of Psalm
22; indeed, this is the only explicit reference.
92. Bucer, 342a, 344a, 355a; there 344a.
93. Bucer, 94b, 130b, 213a; there 130b.
94. This is important to keep in mind once we consider John Calvin. Bucer
maintains these Psalms as literal prophecies of Christ and anchors his placement of the
church as the central player in these Psalms with the church’s identity as the body of
Christ; thus, the christological center is still maintained in various ways. Calvin, on the
other hand, exhibits a significant shift to readings given through David (not Christ).
95. Bucer, 7a. Taken from Hobbs’s translation in “How Firm a Foundation,” 480–81.
96. This is not to say, however, that Bucer’s readings are necessarily convincing to
Jews.
97. This is a suggestion that should be made with caution, as this study looks at
Luther, Bucer, and Calvin and, later, Hunnius and Pareus. I hope to indicate a trend, but
it has yet to be seen whether such distinctions, especially concerning views of Jewish
exegesis, can be maintained in later generations of Lutheran and Reformed thinkers.
James A. De Jong, “‘An Anatomy of All Parts of the Soul’: Insights into Calvin’s
Spirituality from His Psalms Commentary,” in Calvinus Sacrae Scripturae Professor:
Calvin as Confessor of Holy Scripture, ed. Wilhelm Neuser (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans,
1994), 1–14; James Luther Mays, “Calvin’s Commentary on the Psalms: The Preface as
Introduction,” in John Calvin and the Church (Louisville, KY: Westminster John Knox,
1990), 195–204; and Barbara Pitkin, “Imitation of David: David as Paradigm for Faith in
Calvin’s Exegesis of the Psalms,” Sixteenth Century Journal 24 (1993): 843–63, and her
book What Pure Eyes Could See: Calvin’s Doctrine of Faith in Its Exegetical Context (New
York: Oxford University Press, 1999), especially chapter 4. Pitkin, Hasler, and De Jong
stress Calvin’s use of David as an exemplar of Christian faith and prayer. A more recent
work by Herman J. Selderhuis explores Calvin’s doctrine of God in his Psalms com-
mentary; see Calvin’s Theology of the Psalms, Texts and Studies in Reformation and Post-
Reformation Thought (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Academic, 2007).
2. See, for examples, W. Stanford Reid, “The Battle Hymns of the Lord: Calvinist
Psalmody of the Sixteenth Century,” in Sixteenth Century Essays and Studies, ed. Carl
S. Meyer (St. Louis: Foundation for Reformation Research, 1971), 2:36–54; and John
D. Witvliet, “The Spirituality of the Psalter: Metrical Psalms in Liturgy and Life in
Calvin’s Geneva,” in Calvin and Spirituality/Calvin and His Contemporaries, Calvin
Studies Society Papers, 1995, 1997 (Grand Rapids, MI: CRC Product Services, 1998),
93–117.
3. CO 31:13–16. Calvin writes, “I began to perceive more distinctly that this was by
no means a superfluous undertaking, and I have also felt from my own individual
experience that to readers who are not so exercised I would furnish important assistance
in understanding the Psalms.”
4. James Luther Mays makes a similar argument in his article, “Calvin’s
Commentary on the Psalms: The Preface as Introduction,” 95. Mays points out that
Calvin names his intended audience and stresses parallels between the experiences of
David and himself. I also find that the preface sets forth all of Calvin’s key theological
themes.
5. CO 31:15–20.
6. CO 31:19–22.
7. CO 31:21, 22, 27, 28. See also CO 31:13, 14, 35, 36.
8. Hans-Joachim Kraus notes, “Calvin always reveals himself as an unusually
careful interpreter of the Old Testament when it comes to christological interpretations”
(“Calvin’s Exegetical Principles,” Interpretation 31 [1977]: 9).
9. On the eternity of the kingdom, see CO 31:452–54, 663–65, 667, 671; CO
32:159–60, 202, 210. On the vastness of the kingdom, see CO 31:47, 458, 459, 669; CO
32:159–60, 162. On the invincibility of the kingdom, see CO 31:48, 459; CO 32:159–60,
165. On the priestly function, see CO 31:234–36, 666–67, 667; CO 32:159–60, 163–65.
On peace and unity of the kingdom, see CO 31:234–35; CO 32:162–63.
10. See CO 31: 43, 45, 46, 47, 48, 233, 449, 451–53, 456, 664, 665, 667, 668, 669,
670, 671, 671–72, and CO 32:159–60, 161, 162, 163, 164, 165–66, 202, 203, 210–11.
There are a few brief places in Psalm 22 where Calvin does refer to Christ’s sufferings
(see CO 31:222, 224, 227–28). Barbara Pitkin contends in her article “Imitation of
NOTES TO PAGES 80–82 173
David: David as Paradigm for Faith in Calvin’s Exegesis of the Psalms” that Calvin
downplays David’s prophetic status and concentrates on David’s historical person (843).
My study of these eight Psalms has found a need for this statement to be slightly
revised. Although Calvin does very much emphasize David as a historical person, he
also emphasizes a particular aspect of David’s prophetic status, namely, his foresight of
Christ’s kingdom and less so his foresight of the earthly events of Christ’s life. S. H.
Russell studies the connection between Calvin’s christological exegesis and the royal
elements in the Psalms. See his article “Calvin and the Messianic Interpretation of the
Psalms,” Scottish Journal of Theology 21 (1968): 37–47. Yet, Russell’s article does not
address the lack of christological exegesis in Calvin’s interpretation of passages that have
been traditionally interpreted concerning Christ, nor does he note Calvin’s larger
emphasis on David as an exemplar for the church.
11. See Matt 22:41–46, Mk 12:35–37, and Lk 20:41–43.
12. See CO 31:220–22. Throughout his exposition of Psalm 22, Calvin lifts up
David as an exemplar of persevering faith. When he turns to the application of this verse
to Christ, his main concern is to address the apparent contradiction of how the Son of
God (divine) can feel forsaken by God. On Psalm 110:1, see CO 32:160–62.
13. CO 32:208, 209, 210, there 209.
14. For an extended discussion of Calvin’s notion of the dual authorship of Scrip-
ture, see David L. Puckett, John Calvin’s Exegesis of the Old Testament, Columbia Series in
Reformed Theology (Louisville, KY: Westminster John Knox, 1995), 26–37. See also
Hans-Joachim Kraus, “Calvin’s Exegetical Principles,” 7–8; and Richard C. Gamble,
“Brevitas et Facilitas: Toward an Understanding of Calvin’s Hermeneutic,” Westminster
Theological Journal 47 (1985): 2.
15. CO 31:43 (emphasis added).
16. CO 31:230.
17. CO 31:156–57, 219, 230, 237, 669, 672; CO 32:161, 211.
18. CO 31:89.
19. See CO 31:90 (emphasis added).
20. See CO 31:91, 92–93, 93.
21. CO 31:219 (emphasis added).
22. CO 32:166.
23. CO 31:157 (emphasis added).
24. CO 31:92. Calvin writes, “The Septuagint renders NJEMA, Elohim, by angels, of
which I do not disapprove . . . .But as the other translation [gods] seems more natural
and as it is almost universally adopted by the Jewish interpreters, I have preferred
following it.”
25. CO 31:664 (emphasis added). The importance of not giving the Jews a reason
to criticize Christian interpretations may also be seen in Calvin’s comments on Psalms
45 and 110, where he uses the Jews’ own application of the Psalms to the Messiah as
support for a christological reading of the Psalm—something already seen in the
exegeses of Lyra and Bucer. See CO 31:453; 32:159.
26. My reading of Calvin’s christological interpretation differs from that of W.
McKane, who emphasizes his extensive christological applications of the royal elements
174 NOTES TO PAGES 83–86
in the Psalms. See “Calvin as an Old Testament Commentator,” in Calvin and Herme-
neutics, ed. Richard C. Gamble (New York: Garland, 1992), 256, 257–58. Insofar as
Calvin sees David as a prophet who foresees Christ’s kingdom, I agree that the Davidic
element (i.e., the royal element) is a key guide for Calvin toward the application of a
Psalm to Christ. However, my study of these eight Psalms reveals more of a deficit of his
christological applications, for Calvin does not retain the tradition of reading these
Psalms as literal prophecies of Christ’s incarnation, passion, resurrection, or ascension.
27. CO 31:46–47.
28. Such a discussion of Ps 2:7 concerning the workings of the Trinity at Christ’s
baptism are prevalent in medieval readings and emphasized in the interpretations of
Luther and Bucer. See WA 5:59–51; WA 40/2:250–60; and Bucer, 21b–23b.
29. CO 31:88, 90–91; CO 32:163, 205–206. Indeed, he appears to be very con-
scious of his rejection of the Trinitarian reading of Ps 110:3, for he states, “It would not
be edifying to recount all the interpretations that have been given of this clause, for
when I have established its true and natural import, it would be quite superfluous to
enter upon a refutation of others” (CO 32:163).
30. WA 5:49, 56, 456, 465; WA 45:209, 246.
31. CO 31:231, 227–28. All the other references to Christ’s two natures lead more to
a discussion of Christ as mediator. See his comments on Ps 2:8, 22:1, and 45:6 in CO
31:47–48, 222, 454. This is much like Bucer’s emphasis on the restorative work of Christ
but with much less explicit attention to his two natures.
32. CO 31:450–51, 666–67, 667, and CO 31:5052. See WA 40/2: 299–302 and
Bucer, 27a.
33. See CO 31:88, 91–92. Calvin sees Ps 8:3 as setting up a contrast between God’s
goodness and the lowliness of humanity. The remainder of the Psalm describes the
goodness that God gives to humanity: namely, honor and dominion over the works of
creation.
34. CO 31:149, 154.
35. CO 31:158.
36. CO 31:220, 222, 223–24; CO 32:163, 203, 206.
37. CO 31:89, 91, 94, 95. Barbara Pitkin discusses Calvin’s unusual emphasis on
children as preachers of God’s providence in her articles “The Heritage of the Lord:
Children in the Theology of John Calvin,” in The Child in Christian Thought, ed. Marcia
Bunge (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdsman, 2001), 160–93, 479–80, there 166–67, and
“Psalm 8:1–2,” Interpretation 55 (April 2001): 177–80.
38. CO 31:155, 225–26, there 155. Psalm 22:9 reads (NRSV), “Yet it was you who
took me from the womb; you kept me safe on my mother’s breast.” This evokes a
reading concerning God’s provision of care directly from birth. Indeed, the mentions
of the womb (Ps 22:9–10, 45:4, 72:6, and 110:3) elicit no application to the virgin birth at
all for Calvin but, rather, indicate God’s providence. Of these, he interprets all but Ps
45:4 as concerning God’s providential care. See CO 31:226, 667, and CO 32:163.
39. CO 31:452, 664–65. Calvin’s comments on Ps 16:3 (“the saints on the earth”),
16:11 (“you show me the path of life”), 22:3–4 (“yet you are holy. . . our fathers trusted
in you”), and 22:30 (“their seed will serve him”) all point to God’s providential care of
NOTES TO PAGES 87–89 175
the elect. See CO 31:151, 157–58, 223, 236. Chapter 4 of Pitkin’s book (What Pure Eyes
Could See, 98–130) analyzes the providential character of Calvin’s understanding of faith
based on his interpretations of several Psalms.
40. CO 31: 42, 44.
41. CO 31:155.
42. Thus, Calvin concludes his interpretation of Psalm 16 with this teaching:
“David, therefore, testifies that the true and solid joy in which the minds of [humans]
may rest will never be found anywhere else but in God; and that, therefore, none but the
faithful who are contented with his grace alone can be truly and perfectly happy.” See
CO 31:155–56; 158, there 158.
43. See CO 31:220–22, 224–26. Calvin writes: “It is a wonderful instance of the
power of faith that he [David] not only endured his afflictions patiently, but that from the
abyss of despair he arose to call upon God. Let us, therefore, particularly mark that
David did not pour out his lamentations thinking them to be in vain and of no effect . . . .
He does not pray in a doubting manner, but he promises himself the assistance that the
eyes of sense did not as yet perceive” (CO 31:230). For other examples of David as the
exemplar of faith, see CO 31:149, 154–55, 155, 156, 220–21, 223, 226, 230, 663, 672; CO
32:162, 203–204.
44. CO 31: 49–50, 150, 224; CO 32:205–206.
45. CO 31:45–46, 236–37. Through all of these preachers, Calvin argues that
Christ is ultimately speaking: “As often, therefore, as we hear the gospel preached by
[humans], we ought to consider that it is not so much they who speak as Christ who
speaks by them. And this is a singular advantage that Christ lovingly allures us to
himself by his own voice that we may not by any means doubt the majesty of his
kingdom” (CO 31:45–46).
46. CO 31:221, 222, there 222.
47. See CO 31:225, 226, 230, 664, 670; CO 32:203, 209, 213. Psalm 72 as David’s
last prayer should, says Calvin, “stir up the church the more earnestly to pour forth
before God the same prayers that David had continued to offer even with his last breath”
(CO 31:672). He finds in David’s prayer of Ps 118:5 (“I called upon God in my distress”) a
reminder that God’s mercy never fails (CO 32:203). Likewise, he interprets the repeti-
tion of “we beseech you” in Ps 118:25 as a design of the Holy Spirit through the mouth of
David to arouse the faithful to “earnestness and ardor in prayer” (CO 32:209).
48. CO 31:88.
49. CO 31:88–90, 91, 149–50, 155, 226, 232, there 232. Calvin’s emphasis on God’s
beneficence echoes Bucer’s emphasis. Calvin writes, “David here confines his attention
to God’s temporal benefits, but it is our duty to rise higher and to contemplate the
invaluable treasures of the kingdom of heaven that he has unfolded in Christ and all the
gifts that belong to the spiritual life. That by reflecting upon these, our hearts may
be inflamed with love to God, that we may be stirred up to the practice of godliness,
and that we may not suffer ourselves to become slothful and remiss in celebrating his
praises” (CO 31:95).
50. CO 31:150–51, 152, 153.
51. CO 31:153.
176 NOTES TO PAGES 89–92
52. CO 31:233; CO 32:208. Calvin also depicts David as the true, pious king and
emphasizes the important role of the king in maintaining purity, piety, and the true
religion of God. See CO 31:450–51, 663, 665–66.
53. CO 31:150–51, 232, 666–67; CO 32:208.
54. This is especially clear in Calvin’s exhortation to the church in his comments
on Ps 16:8–9: “We must look to [God] with other eyes than those of the flesh, for we
shall seldom be able to perceive him unless we elevate our minds above the world; and
faith prevents us from turning our back upon him . . . he [David] constantly depended
upon the assistance of God, so that, amidst the various conflicts with which he was
agitated, no fear of danger could make him turn his eyes to any other quarter than to
God in search of succor. And thus we ought so to depend upon God as to continue to be
fully persuaded of his being near to us, even when he seems to be removed to the
greatest distance from us. When we shall have thus turned our eyes towards him, the
masks and the vain illusions of the world will no longer deceive us” (CO 31:155).
55. Indeed, the opposite characteristics indicate the ungodly, says Calvin. For
example, Calvin writes, “But the ungodly. . . never experience true joy or serene mental
peace; rather, they feel terrible agitations within, which often come upon them and
trouble them, so much as to constrain them to awake from their lethargy” (CO 31:156).
56. Thus Calvin writes, “By this manner of speaking, he [David] not only
ascribes to God the beginning of faith, but acknowledges that he is continually making
progress under his [God’s] tuition; and, indeed, it is necessary for God, during the
whole of our life, to continue to correct the vanity of our minds, to kindle the light of
faith into a brighter flame, and by every means to advance us higher in the attainments
of spiritual wisdom” (CO 31:155).
57. CO 31:88.
58. CO 32:162.
59. CO 31:153.
60. CO 31:233.
61. CO 32:208, 211–12. Likewise, Calvin deploys Ps 45:10 (“Hear, O daughter. . .
forget your people”) against the Roman Catholics (CO 31:457). Calvin writes on
Psalm 118, clearly aiming his statement at the Roman Catholics, “From the first, we
know that the master-builders have endeavored to subvert the kingdom of Christ. The
same thing is taking place in our times, in those who are entrusted with the superin-
tendence of the church having made every attempt to overturn that kingdom by
directing against it all the machinery that they can devise” (CO 32:211–12).
62. CO 31:225, 227; CO 32:204–206.
63. See Calvin’s comments on Ps 2:1–3 in CO 31:41–44. Here Calvin does mention
the Jews. However, his point is that David speaks of two sets of enemies—domestic
and foreign—in which the Jews are the domestic enemies and other nations are the
foreign enemies. Calvin does not read Psalm 2 in reference to the passion of Christ
(where the Jews are the crucifiers of Christ) but rather in reference to Christ’s kingdom
(where all nations rise up), and thus, his reading does not carry the same tone against
the Jews as Luther’s.
64. CO 32:161.
NOTES TO PAGES 92–94 177
65. See CO 32:165–66. Again, Calvin does not mention the Jews as a specific
group in this category of “enemies.” In a couple of instances, he speaks of the enemies
of the church more generally, such as on Ps 8:2 (“enemy and avenger”) and Ps 2:12 (“lest
you perish in the way”), where he interprets the enemies in these passages as the
despisers of God (CO 31:51, 89).
66. These images are very few in number in these Psalms but include depictions
of the Jews as stubborn, prideful, idolatrous, and wicked. The view of Jews as
stubborn appears in Calvin’s comments on Ps 22:16, the title of Psalm 110, and Ps
118:25–26 (CO 31:229; CO 32:159, 213). The view of Jews as prideful appears only once
and may be found in Calvin’s comments on Ps 22:16 (CO 31:228). The depiction of Jews
as idolatrous also appears only once in Calvin’s interpretation of these eight Psalms
(comments on Ps 16:5–6 in CO 31:153). Depictions of Jews as wicked appear on Ps 2:1–3,
22:16, and 118:25–26 (CO 31:42, 229; CO 32:213).
67. CO 31:89, 457; CO 32:205, 210–12. Calvin read Ps 118:10 solely in reference to
David and his enemies, where “bees” indicate the fury of David’s enemies (CO 32:205).
He does mention the “scribes and the priests in Christ’s time” as the “builders” in Ps
118:22, but his emphasis is on how the religious leaders in all ages, including Calvin’s
own (i.e., Roman Catholics), continue to fail to recognize Christ and mislead the people
(CO 32:210–12).
68. However, ultimately Calvin envisions David as a type of the church—thus,
more as a Christian than as a Jew. The appeals to the Jewish nation as worthy of
imitation should also be understood within Calvin’s view of the church as the
continuation and fulfillment of God’s elect people, Israel.
69. CO 31:223.
70. CO 31:455–57. Similarly, in Ps 72:10, Calvin elevates the Jews as an example of
keeping away from the corruptions of foreign nations (CO 31:668).
71. CO 32:213.
72. These passages are especially Ps 22:16, 45:6, 110:4, and 118:22. The criticisms
are especially strong on Ps 22:16 and Ps 45:6. See CO 31:228–29, 451, 453; CO 32:162,
213. To be clear, I do not mean to argue that Calvin is not anti-Jewish, for there is plenty
of evidence demonstrating that toward the Jews of his day he holds the same anti-Jewish
views as his Protestant and Catholic contemporaries. For example, after expounding on
the faithfulness of biblical Jews in his Institutes (II.x.7–23), he concludes this account
with a negative evaluation of present-day Jews: “Nor would the obtuseness of the whole
Jewish nation today in awaiting the Messiah’s earthly kingdom be less monstrous, had
the Scriptures not foretold long before that they would receive this punishment for
having rejected the gospel. For it so pleased God in righteous judgment to strike blind
the minds of those who by refusing the offered light of heaven voluntarily brought
darkness upon themselves” (Institutes II.x.23). For studies on Calvin and the Jews, see
Salo W. Baron, “John Calvin and the Jews,” in Essential Papers on Judaism and Chris-
tianity in Conflict: From Late Antiquity to the Reformation, ed. Jeremy Cohen (New York:
New York University Press, 1991), 380–400 [previously published in 1965]; Calvin
Augustine Pater, “Calvin, the Jews and the Judaic Legacy,” in In Honor of John Calvin:
Papers from the 1986 International Calvin Symposium, ed. E. J. Furcha (Montreal: McGill
178 NOTES TO PAGES 94–96
University Press, 1987), 256–95; Mary Sweetland Laver, “Calvin, Jews, and
Intra-Christian Polemics,” PhD dissertation, Temple University, 1988 (Ann Arbor, MI:
University Microfilms, 1989); Hans-Joachim Kraus, “Israel in the Theology of Calvin—
Towards a New Approach to the Old Testament and Judaism,” Christian Jewish Relations
22 (1989): 75–86; Mary Potter Engel, “Calvin and the Jews: A Textual Puzzle,” Princeton
Seminary Bulletin, Supp. 1 (1990): 106–23; and Jack Hughes Robinson, John Calvin and
the Jews (New York: Peter Lang, 1992). See also the more recent article by Achim
Detmers, “Calvin, the Jews, and Judaism,” in Jews, Judaism, and the Reformation in
Sixteenth-Century Germany, ed. Dean P. Bell and Stephen G. Burnett (Leiden: Brill,
2006), 197–217; and his book Reformation und Judentum: Israel-Lehren and Einstellungen
zum Judentum von Luther bis zum frühen Calvin (Stuttgart: Kohlhammer).
73. CO 31:228–29, 452, 453. The same may be seen in Calvin’s defense of the applica-
tion of Ps 110:4 and Ps 118:22 to teach the divinity of Christ, for such readings according
to Calvin retain the simple and natural sense of the passage. See CO 32:163 and 213.
74. A longer version of this section on “Calvin and Jewish Exegesis” appears in an
article in volume 85 of the Dutch Review of Church History. See “Luther, Bucer, and
Calvin on Psalms 8 and 16: Confessional Formation and the Question of Jewish
Exegesis,” in The Formation of Clerical and Confessional Identities in Early Modern Europe,
ed. Wim Janse and Barbara Pitkin, Dutch Review of Church History, Vol. 85 (Leiden: Brill,
2005), 169–86.
75. See Bucer, 56a.
76. CO 31:88. Bucer makes this point also, not by rejecting the Jewish reading,
but by adding that the Name also refers to the works and properties of God. Bucer, 56a.
77. Bucer, 56b–57a.
78. CO 31:89–90.
79. Bucer, 56b.
80. CO 31:89.
81. Bucer only briefly quotes Kimhi, and he leaves out Kimhi’s interpretation of
this verse as concerning the providence of God in his account. Kimhi writes, after
expounding on infants’ ability to suck, that this verse is given “that man may be able to
see that all is within the design of a Designer and not, as the enemies of the Lord say,
that everything happens by nature and chance without the direction of a Director and
the design of a Designer” (David Kimhi, The Longer Commentary of R. David Kimhi on the
First Book of Psalms [trans by R. G. Finch; New York: Macmillan, 1919], 49). See the
Hebrew text in The First Book of the Psalms according to the Text of the Cambridge MS
Bible with the Longer Commentary of R. David Qimchi, ed. S. M. Schiller-Szinessy
(Leipzig: F. A. Brookhaus, 1883), 26.
82. CO 31:88, 91, 95. Kimhi writes, “Such being the case, it is incumbent upon
humanity to reflect and to recognize the work of God and to confess God in everything”
(Kimhi in Schiller-Szinessy, 26, and in Finch, 50).
83. CO 31:88; Kimhi in Schiller-Szinessy, 25, and Finch, 48–49. Again, Bucer
does not discuss the translation of the verb EQ‘ or give Kimhi’s reading of it. There
is one other citation of Jewish exegesis by Bucer in Psalm 8 not dealt with here.
Bucer refers to Kimhi’s interpretation of “whatever passes along the paths of the sea”
NOTES TO PAGES 97–99 179
confutatio per Aegidium Hunnium (Wittennberg, 1593), 4–5, 126, 149, 149–50, 151,
172–73.
93. CO 31:157.
94. Bucer, 7a.
95. Irena Backus finds a shift in Bucer’s use of the church fathers between 1528
and 1536 from a much less critical appropriation of them to a more cautious but more
frequent use of them. See Backus, “Martin Bucer and the Patristic Tradition,” in Martin
Bucer and Sixteenth-Century Europe: Actes du colloque de Strasbourg (28–31 août 1991), ed.
Christian Krieger and Marc Lienhard (Leiden: Brill, 1993), 1:64. This is important
because the writing of Bucer’s Psalms commentary appears before this shift.
96. Not included here is an analysis of Calvin’s use of the church fathers, mostly
for reasons that this venture is beyond the scope of this project. Furthermore, Calvin
makes very little explicit reference to church fathers in his exegesis of these eight
Psalms. In fact, there is only one overt reference to a church father: he explicitly argues
against Augustine’s application of “head of the corner” in Ps 118:22 to Christ as the
cornerstone who unites the two different walls representing the Jews and the Gentiles
(CO 32:211). All of Calvin’s other references to other interpreters are very general, and he
refers to the vast majority in his debates on how to translate a Hebrew word (e.g., “some
translate it . . . while others translate it . . . ” after which Calvin proceeds to give his
preferred translation and his reasons). Thus, it is at least initially unclear in these cases
whether Calvin is speaking of Jewish exegetes, Christian exegetes, or both. The handful
of comments in which it is immediately clear that he is referring to Christian inter-
preters all express criticism of these interpreters. These include Calvin’s denunciation
of the use of Ps 2:7 in reference to the Trinity (CO 31:46–47), the dismissal of the
translation of Ps 2:12 as “embrace purity” (which is Jerome’s; see CO 31:51), the refuta-
tion of the attribution of Psalm 72 as “simply a prophecy of Christ” (CO 31:664), and
rejection of the various interpretations of “from the womb of the morning” in Ps 110:3
(CO 32:163). For a study of Calvin’s use of the church fathers, see the book by Anthony
N. S. Lane, John Calvin: Student of the Church Fathers (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Books,
1999) and his extensive bibliography. See also the article by David Steinmetz, “Calvin
and Patristic Exegesis,” in Calvin in Context (New York: Oxford University Press, 1995),
122–40.
for his anti-Trinitarianism. Indeed, at this time Calvin was lecturing on the Psalms in
Geneva. Calvin would not have imagined that he would be accused of undermining the
doctrine of Trinity.
4. Interestingly enough, seven of the eight Psalms considered in this study play a
central role in the case Hunnius is trying to make against Calvin. The only Psalm
Hunnius does not use is Psalm 118. Two other Psalms (Ps 33:6 and Ps 68:18) are also
employed in Hunnius’s arguments against Calvin.
5. See the chapter by David Steinmetz, “Calvin and His Lutheran Critics,” in
Calvin in Context (New York: Oxford University Press, 1995), 172–86. Calvin is seen as a
judaizer even by someone like Servetus, who accused him of creating a kind of “Jewish
legalism.” See Baron, “John Calvin and the Jews,” in Essential Papers on Judaism and
Christianity in Conflict: From Late Antiquity to the Reformation, ed. Jeremy Cohen (New
York: New York University Press, 1991), 383–84. Lutherans also accused Calvin of
judaizing because of his more positive view of the law in the Christian life. See, for
example, the brief comment made by Kraus, “Israel in the Theology of Calvin—Towards
a New Approach to the Old Testament and Judaism,” Christian Jewish Relations 22
(1989): 77. Louis Israel Newman writes about charges of judaizing against Calvin from
both Catholics and radical Protestants (Jewish Influence on Christian Reform Movements,
Columbia University Oriental Studies 23 [New York: Columbia University Press, 1925],
584–96).
6. Aegidius Hunnius, Articulus de Trinitate, per quaestiones et responsiones pertrac-
tatus solide, et indubitatis testimonies sacrarum literarum contra quavis haereticorum ve-
terum et recentium blasphemas strophas et corruptelas firmissime communitus (Frankfurt am
Main: Johannes Spies, 1589).
7. See David Steinmetz, “The Judaizing Calvin,” in Die Patristik in der Bibelexegese
des 16. Jahrhunderts, ed. David C. Steinmetz and Robert Kolb, Wolfenbütteler For-
schungen, Band 85 (Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz, 1999), 136.
8. See the reply of David Pareus in his In Quartem Explicationum Catecheticarum
Partem, De Gratitudine, Praefatio, in Miscellanea Catechetica (Johannes Tornaesius,
1622), 177–93, esp. 181. See also Steinmetz, 136–37.
9. Specifically, Hunnius attacks Calvin’s exegesis of Gen 1, Gen 19:13, Gen 35:7,
Ps 2:7–8, Ps 33:6, Ps 45:6–7, Ps 68:18, Mic 5:2, Is 6:3, Jn 10: 30, Jn 14:10, Jn 17:21,
1 Jn 5:7, Col 1:15–16, Gen 3:15, Jer 31:22, Hag 2:6–7, Is 40:3, Deut 18:18–19, Is 61:1–2,
Zech 9:9, Zech 13:7, Zech 11:12, Is 50:6, Ps 8:4–6, all of Psalm 22, Is 63:1–4, Is
43:25, Zech 9:11, Ps 16:8–10, Mic 2:13, Hos 6:2, Hos 13:14, Zech 14:4, and Ps 110:1.
He also criticizes Calvin’s exegesis of Ps 72:8 within the larger discussion of his
exegesis of Zech 9:11.
10. David Pareus, Libri Duo: I. Calvinus Orthodoxus de Sacrosancta Trinitate:
et de aeterna Christi Divinitate. II. Solida Expositio XXXIIX. Difficilimorum Scripturae
Locorum et Oraculorum: et de recta ratione applicandi Oracula Prophetica ad Christum.
Oppositi Pseudocalvino Iudaizanti nuper a quodam emisso (Neustadt: Matthaeus
Harnisch, 1595).
11. Hunnius, 4, 5, 6.
12. Hunnius, 18, 19, 22, 23, there 22, 23.
182 NOTES TO PAGES 106–11
13. Hunnius, 30–32, there 32. See CO 31:451, 452–54. After first applying Ps 45:6–7
to Solomon, Calvin clearly states that this is the literal sense of the text and then moves
on to show the comparison of Christ under the type of Solomon. Hunnius points out
that the apostle warns those who ignore this testimony (Heb 2:1–4) and states, “I do not
doubt that this applies to Calvin when he narrates the pericope of this Psalm concerning
Solomon and this in a judaizing way” (Hunnius, 31).
14. Hunnius, 32–35, there 33. Hunnius calls him an Æı Ø ÆŒø, a self-teacher of
Scripture. For Calvin’s exegesis, see CO 31:628.
15. Hunnius, 122–125, there 124. See CO 31:92. Here Hunnius cites Dan 4:35
and Is 40:17.
16. Hunnius, 125–26, there 125. Hunnius goes on to point out Calvin’s further
statements that the Apostle Paul drags [trahit] the meaning of Ps 8:4 to the
debasement of Christ, just as the apostle also “deflects” and “accommodates” the
meanings of Deut 30:12 in Rom 10:5–7 and Ps 68:18 in Eph 4:8. See CO 31:93.
17. Hunnius, 127–28.
18. Hunnius, 131, 133, 134, there 133. Calvin writes on Ps 22:16–17 and Hunnius
quotes: “If they object that David was never nailed to a cross, the answer is easy, namely,
that in bewailing his condition, he has made use of a metaphor, declaring that he
was not less afflicted by his enemies than the man who is suspended on a cross,
having his hand and feet pierced through with nails. We will meet a little after with
more of the same kind of metaphors” (CO 31:229; Hunnius, 132). Likewise, Calvin
comments on Ps 22:18 and Hunnius quotes: “What follows in the next verse concerning
his garments is metaphorical. It is as if he [David] had said that all his goods had become
a prey to his enemies, even as conquerors are accustomed to plunder the vanquished
or to divide the spoil among themselves by casting lots to determine the share that
belongs to each” (CO 31:229; Hunnius, 132).
19. Hunnius, 146–48. Calvin comments on Ps 16:10 (and Hunnius quotes),
“David entertains the undoubted assurance of eternal salvation, which freed him
from all anxiety and fear. It is as if he had said, ‘There will always be ready for me a way
of escape from the grave that I may not remain in corruption’” (CO 31:156).
20. Hunnius, 149–50.
21. Hunnius, 151, 164–65.
22. Hunnius, 166. He writes, “Truly in this way Calvin weakens this citation of
Psalm 68 with his wicked metaphors when he believes its sense to be characteristic
of the things and history encompassed under David.”
23. Hunnius, 170–74, there 174.
24. See Hunnius, 175–76, 176–77, 180–81. Of course, Hunnius points to the
interpretations of Ps 110:1 concerning Christ in Heb 1:13, Matt 22:41–46, Mk 12:35–37,
and Lk 20:41–44.
25. Hunnius, 178–79.
26. Hunnius, 181, 182–83, 183, 186.
27. Hunnius, 185–86, 187–88.
28. Hunnius, 182–83, 183, 186.
29. Hunnius, 181.
NOTES TO PAGES 111–14 183
literally in Christ and figuratively in David. Psalm 2:9 (“You shall break them with a rod
of iron”) is a prophecy that applies literally to David and figuratively to Christ. Finally, Ps
118:22 (“The stone that the builders rejected”) is a prophecy that is fulfilled figuratively
by both Christ and the type. See Pareus, 97–98.
48. Pareus, 95–96.
49. Augustine, City of God, xvii.3 and Pareus, 101. Pareus goes on to give specific
examples of Augustine’s application of this principle to Solomon in Psalm 72 (City of
God, xvii.8) and to David in Psalm 89 (City of God, xvii.9). See Pareus, 101–102.
50. Pareus cites the examples of Pomeranus’s and Cornerus’s exegeses of Psalms
2, 16, 8, 22, 45, and 118, among others. See Pareus, 102.
51. Pareus, 103–104.
52. Pareus, 104–105, 105–106, there 106. Of course, these are reformulations of
Hunnius’s accusations in Pareus’s language of simple and composite types—termi-
nology that Hunnius does not use. Thus, one could say that Pareus artfully evades the
simple fact that Hunnius’s point is that when one does not take the apostles’ or
evangelists’ reading of a text as authoritative, but accuses them of bending the text, this
undermines the exegetical foundation of key Christian beliefs.
53. Pareus, 193–96, 198. See CO 31:42–43. He quotes a long section from Calvin,
including his statement that Psalm 2 is “not violently or even allegorically twisted to
apply to Christ but truly predicted concerning him.”
54. Pareus, 199–202.
55. Pareus, 203–205, there 205.
56. Pareus, 206–207, there 207.
57. Pareus, 209–210.
58. Pareus, 212–13. See Calvin’s comments on Acts 2:25–28 in his commentary on
the Acts of the Apostles in CO 48:41–45. Thus, one should note that Pareus has not
actually defended Calvin’s Psalms commentary. Pareus also points to an anti-Jewish
statement Calvin makes in his Acts commentary concerning Ps 16:8–10 to argue
against Hunnius’s accusation of judaizing. See Pareus, 214.
59. Pareus, 217–21, 224–25. Of course, what Pareus is either purposefully ne-
glecting or failing to see is that Hunnius and much of the Christian tradition reads
Psalm 22 as pure prophecy and not through the tool of typology at all. He also quotes an
anti-Jewish statement of Calvin that the Jews have corrupted the translation of Ps 22:16
to prove that Calvin is not judaizing but is concerned to argue against the Jews (Pareus,
221–22).
60. Pareus, 223–24. See CO 31:229 and CO 47:415–16.
61. See CO 31:451; Hunnius, 31. Hunnius’s other criticism is that this verse refers
to Christ’s deity and Calvin does not interpret it as such. Pareus does not address this
part of Hunnius’s charges.
62. Pareus, 229, 227–28, 232. Pareus cites from Luther’s 1532 commentary on
Psalm 45: “Here we should call to mind again what we said above that the psalm is
purely allegorical and that beneath these metaphorical words like ‘king’ and ‘kingdom’ a
spiritual kingdom and the church are to be understood” (WA 40/2:481–82). Thus
Pareus contends, “In truth, the argument is weakened and overthrown if the psalm is
NOTES TO PAGES 119–123 185
CONCLUSION
1. See John W. O’Malley, Trent and All That: Renaming Catholicism in the Early
Modern Era (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2000), 138–39, and Bodo
Nischan, Prince, People, and Confession: The Second Reformation in Brandenburg
(Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1994), 1. See also Thomas
Brady, “Confessionalization—The Career of a Concept,” in Confessionalization in Eur-
ope, 1555–1700: Essays in Honor and Memory of Bodo Nischan, ed. John M. Headley, Hans
J. Hillerbrand, and Anthony J. Papalas (Burlington, VT: Ashgate, 2004), 11, 19.
2. See Brady, 12, and Ernst Walter Zeeden, Die Entstehung der Konfession. Grun-
dlagen und Formen der Konfessionsbildung im Zeitalter der Glaubenskämpfe (München:
R. Oldenbourg, 1965). Likewise, in a later essay in Confessionalization in Europe, Mack
P. Holt also appeals to the need to return to Zeeden’s original definition of “confessional
formation,” which contains an emphasis on the religious aspects of confessional
formation and the forces “from below” equal to those “from above” (i.e., the state).
See Mack P. Holt, “Confessionalization beyond the Germanies: The Case of France,” in
Confessionalization in Europe, 272–73.
3. This is also one of the important goals of the recent volume edited by Wim
Janse and Barbara Pitkin, The Formation of Clerical and Confessional Identities in Early
Modern Europe, Dutch Review of Church History 85 (Leiden: Brill, 2005). The editors
rightly point out the vital—and perhaps more direct—role of preaching (in addition to
the biblical commentary) for formation of confessional identities. I fully concur with the
significance of preaching, but the study of the preaching of the Psalms is beyond the
scope of this project.
4. Markus Wriedt argues for the important role of the printing press as
Luther’s instrument of preaching and teaching. Wriedt specifically points to Luther’s
use of the biblical commentary for confessional interests and the influences of the
printing press upon this process. He writes, “Even the style of biblical commentaries
changed under the influence of the extensive use of the printing press by Luther and
other Wittenberg professors to a continuous explanation as lectio continua . . . . Theology
became either commenting on the Scriptures or the controversial explanation of
the evangelical truth against its opponents” (“‘Founding a New Church . . .’: The Early
Ecclesiology of Martin Luther in the Light of the Debate about Confessionalization,”
in Confessionalization in Europe, 63). Mark U. Edwards also points to Luther’s
creative and shrewd use of the printing press (Printing, Propaganda, and Martin Luther
[Berkeley: University of California Press, 1994]).
NOTES TO PAGES 126–129 187
5. The one thing I thought I might find, but did not find, was a contrast between
Luther’s emphasis on law versus gospel and Calvin’s more positive use of the law.
This can be seen in a few places in a study contrasting Luther’s and Calvin’s exegesis of
the Psalms; however, Calvin’s lack of maintaining the contrast between law and gospel
is not a criticism Hunnius used in his arguments against Calvin’s exegesis of the
Psalms.
6. Thus, Luther, Bucer, and Calvin differ in their understandings of the content
of the prophecies contained in these Psalms. For Luther, the content is, first and
foremost, predictions of Christ’s earthly life (incarnation, crucifixion, etc.). Bucer retains
this content but equally emphasizes the prophecies of Christ’s kingdom. Calvin keeps
only the prophecies of the kingdom.
7. See, for example, Pareus, 227–28.
8. It was also a weapon used by the Roman Catholic Church to discredit the
Protestants. See, for example, Louis Israel Newman’s discussion of Roman
Catholic charges of judaizing against Protestants in Jewish Influence on Christian Reform
Movements, Columbia University Oriental Studies 23 (New York: Columbia University
Press, 1925), 584–96.
9. Note that this Defense is written just two years after Bucer’s first edition of
his Psalms commentary. Luther writes, “We have not acted out of a misunderstanding
of the languages nor out of ignorance of the rabbinical commentaries, but
knowingly and deliberately” (WA 38:9). See Stephen G. Burnett’s discussion in
“Reassessing the ‘Basel-Wittenberg Conflict’: Dimensions of the Reformation-Era
Discussion of Hebrew Scholarship,” in Hebraica Veritas? Christian Hebraists and the
Study of Judaism in Early Modern Europe, ed. Allison P. Coudert and Jeffrey S. Shoulson
(Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2004), 188–89.
10. Burnett shows that fellow Reformed expositors appeared even more concerned
about Bucer’s use of Jewish exegesis than Luther was. This can be seen in Conrad
Pellican and Ulrich Zwingli’s evaluations of Bucer’s commentary on the Psalms. Pelli-
can writes in a letter concerning Bucer’s Psalms commentary, “I have read almost all of
your first book . . . and am compelled to approve your effort and your judgment, save that
I am pained by your labors in searching out and sifting the opinions of the rabbis, which
you repeat time and again while they disagree with one another both in grammar and
sense” (quote taken from Burnett, 189, as quoted and translated in Hobbs, “Conrad
Pellican,” 97–98).
11. Burnett, 192–93.
12. See the many studies of Willem Van’t Spijker on this topic: “Prädestination bei
Bucer und Calvin. Ihre gegenseitige Beeinflussung und Abhängigkeit,” in Calvinus
Theologus: d. Referate d. Congrès Europ. de Recherches Calviniennes vom 16.–19. September
1974 in Amsterdam, ed. W. H. Neuser (Neukirchen-Vluyn: Neukirchener Verlag, 1976),
85–111; “The Influence of Bucer on Calvin as Becomes Evident from the Institutes,” in
John Calvin’s Institutes (Potchefstroom, South Africa, 1986), 106–32; “Bucer und Cal-
vin,” in Martin Bucer and Sixteenth Century Europe: Actes du colloque de Strasbourg, ed.
Christian Krieger and Marc Lienhard, 1:461–70 (Leiden: Brill, 1993), 461–70; “Bucer’s
Influence on Calvin: Church and Community,” in Martin Bucer: Reforming Church and
188 NOTES TO PAGES 129–32
20. Salo W. Baron, “John Calvin and the Jews,” in Essential Papers on Judaism and
Christianity in Conflict: From Late Antiquity to the Reformation, ed. Jeremy Cohen (New
York: New York University Press, 1991), 380–400, there 394.
21. See Hans-Joachim Kraus, “Israel in the Theology of Calvin—Towards a New
Approach to the Old Testament and Judaism,” Christian Jewish Relations 22 (1989): 85.
Though Kraus does recognize the distinction between Calvin’s treatment of the biblical
Jew (i.e., quite positive) as opposed to the post-biblical Jew (i.e., rather negative), he still
makes this claim, which I find to be overstated. See Kraus, 83.
22. Mary Potter Engel, “Calvin and the Jews: A Textual Puzzle,” Princeton Seminary
Bulletin Supp 1 (1990):106–23. For example, Engel argues that Calvin simultaneously
affirms that God’s covenant with the Jews is eternal and also that it has been ruptured by
Jewish apostasy (110).
23. Though much of Calvin’s Old Testament exegesis escapes prior Christian anti-
Jewish tendencies, this is not necessarily true of his New Testament exegesis. Precisely
because Calvin emphasizes reading the literal sense of the text in its original historical
setting, this leads him to read the Jews of the Old Testament as part of God’s covenant,
whereas many of the Jews of the New Testament are those who question and oppose
Christ.
24. See the helpful surveys of the changing understandings of the literal sense
of Scripture given by Brevard S. Childs, “The Sensus Literalis of Scripture: An
Ancient and Modern Problem,” in Beitrage Zur Alttestamentlichen Theologie, ed. Herbert
Donner, Robert Hanhart, and Rudolf Smend (Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht,
1977), 80–87, and Richard Muller, “Biblical Interpretation in the Era of the
Reformation: The View from the Middle Ages,” in Biblical Interpretation in the Era of
the Reformation, ed. Richard A. Muller and John L. Thompson (Grand Rapids, MI:
Eerdmans, 1996), 8–11.
25. Childs, 86–87. See also Hans W. Frei, The Eclipse of Biblical Narrative: A Study
in Eighteenth and Nineteenth Century Hermeneutics (New Haven: Yale University Press,
1974), 19–20, 23–24. Frei is clearer and more careful than Childs on the distinctions
between Luther and Calvin, though I think Childs is still basically right; yet, I want to
clarify that uniting the grammatical sense with the theological is not the same as
uniting the historical sense with the theological. In other words, Luther and Calvin
define and treat “history” in these Psalms in very significantly different ways.
26. See, for examples, August Tholuck, “Die Verdienste Calvin’s als Ausleger der
heiligen Schrift,” in Vermischte Schriften, großtentheils apologetischen Inhalts (Hamburg:
Friedrich Perthes, 1839), 2:330–60; Eduard Reuss, “Calvin considéré comme exegete,”
Revue de Théologie 6 (1853): 223–48; Philip Schaff, “Calvin as a Commentator,” Presby-
terian and Reformed Review 3 (1892): 462–69; Frederic W. Farrar, History of Interpretation
(Grand Rapids, MI: Baker Book House, 1961, reprint from 1886), 342–54; and Kember
Fullerton, Prophecy and Authority: A Study in the History of the Doctrine and Interpretation
of Scripture (New York: Macmillan, 1919), 133.
27. Farrar, 346–47. See Schaff, 466–67. Though immediately after this quote
Farrar admits that Calvin does not deny the reality of these messianic prophecies, he
emphasizes that Calvin retains the particular, original contexts of these prophecies so
190 NOTES TO PAGES 134–35
that one might better see the universal spirit within them. This identification of the
meaning of the text with an external “universal spirit” is a typical Enlightenment
interpretive move. See Frei, 217–21.
28. Gerhard Ebeling, Word and Faith, trans. James W. Leitch (Philadelphia: For-
tress, 1963; original German in 1960), 55. Specifically, Ebeling relates the Protestants’
doctrine of justification by faith alone with the historical critical method:
Though in the end, Ebeling is critical of the historical critical method, he still maintains
an important tie between the Protestant Reformation and the “rise of the modern spirit”
(see 55).
29. See David Steinmetz, “The Superiority of Pre-Critical Exegesis,” Theology
Today 37 (1980): 27–38, and “John Calvin on Isaiah 6: A Problem in the History of
Exegesis,” Interpretation 36 (1982): 156–70; Muller, 13–16; and Muller and John L.
Thompson, “The Significance of Precritical Exegesis: Retrospect and Prospect,” in
Biblical Interpretation in the Era of the Reformation, 339–45.
30. Muller expresses many of these aspects of Calvin’s exegesis in more detail, and
he has eloquently aligned this with an echo of the fourfold sense—a move from littera to
credenda, agenda, and speranda—from the letter to doctrine, morality, and hope. See
Muller, 11.
31. For example, in his comments on Ps 5:10, Calvin writes that David “in his
person represents both Christ as well as the whole body of the church” (CO 31:70). See
also similar comments on Ps 109:1 (CO 32:147).
32. Frei uses the examples of Calvin’s interpretation of Gen 3:15, where he denies a
christological reading of the text, and Is 7:14, where he affirms a christological reading
of the text, to argue for the “natural coherence” between literal and figurative readings
for Calvin. Frei writes:
Calvin would not have worried in the slightest about the contrasting
conclusions of the literal reading of these two Old Testament passages,
NOTES TO PAGE 136 191
33. See David Pareus, Libri Duo: I. Calvinus Orthodoxus de Sacrosancta Trinitate: et
de aeterna Christi Divinitate. II. Solida Expositio XXXIIX. Difficilimorum Scripturae Lo-
corum et Oraculorum: et de recta ratione applicandi Oracula Prophetica ad Christum.
Oppositi Pseudocalvino Iudaizanti nuper a quodam emisso (Neustadt: Matthaeus Har-
nisch, 1595), 103–104.
34. CR 38:403.
35. Much research has been done on Calvin’s principle of accommodation.
To name just a few significant sources, see Ford Lewis Battles, “God Was Accommodating
Himself to Human Capacity,” Interpretation 31 (1977): 19–38; Vincent Bru, “La notion
d’accommodation divine chez Calvin: Ses implications théologiques et éxégetiques,”
La Revue Réformée 19 (1998): 79–91; and several articles by David F. Wright: “Calvin’s
Pentateuchal Criticism: Equity, Hardness of Heart, and Divine Accommodation in
the Mosaic Harmony Commentary,” Calvin Theological Journal 21 (1986): 33–50; “Accom-
modation and Barbarity in John Calvin’s Old Testament Commentaries,” in Understanding
Prophets and Poets: Essays in Honor of George Wishart Anderson, ed. A. Graeme Auld
(Sheffield: Journal for the Study of the Old Testament Press, 1993), 413–27; and “Calvin’s
Accommodating God,” in Calvinus Sincerioris Religionis Vindex, ed. Wilhelm Neuser and
Brian Armstrong (Kirksville, MO: Sixteenth Century Journal Publishers, 1997), 3–20.
36. Just to cite a few examples: “But whether God became known to the patriarchs
through oracles and visions or by the work and ministry of men, [God] put into their
minds what they should then hand down to their posterity” (Institutes I.vi.2). “Credibility
of doctrine is not established until we are persuaded beyond doubt that God is its
Author. Thus the highest proof of Scripture derives in general from the fact that God in
person speaks in it” (Institutes I.vii.4). “As far as Sacred Scripture is concerned, however
much forward men try to gnaw at it, nevertheless it clearly is crammed with thoughts
that could not be humanly conceived” (Institutes I.viii.2). “Similarly, Moses foretells
things, albeit obscurely, concerning the election of the Gentiles into God’s covenant,
which actually took place almost two thousand years later. Is this not plain proof that he
spoke by divine inspiration?” (Institutes I.viii.7). And speaking about the humble origins
of the Gospel writers, Calvin proclaims, “Yet the truth cries out openly that these men
who, previously contemptible among common folk, suddenly began to discourse so
gloriously of the heavenly mysteries must have been instructed by the Spirit” (Institutes
I.viii.11).
192 NOTES TO PAGES 136–138
37. See for examples CR 5: 324, CR 6:16, and Institutes I.iii. 1 and 21, and Institutes
I.v.1.
38. Institutes II.xi.13.
39. Institutes I.xvii.1.
40. Institutes I.xviii and II.iv.
41. I should add that Luther exhibits more of this other understanding that I have
identified with Calvin in his later exegeses, especially in his exegesis of Genesis. Of
course, one of the clearest ways in which this contrast appears between Luther and
Calvin is on their views of the law. Luther tends to emphasize the dichotomy of law and
gospel, so that law is mostly a negative term for him to signify from what the Christian
is now set free. For Calvin, just as he retains the historical context and content of Old
Testament Scripture as precisely the avenue through which meaning is found, so also
the law continues to have a continuing, vital function in the Christian life. The law is not
simply abrogated by its fulfillment in Christ, but the very details of it still illumine
divine teaching and will for the Christian. So also, Christ’s fulfillment of Old Testament
prophecies does not negate what these texts have to say within their own context; rather,
meaning resides there as well, to reveal the story of divine providence and the goodness
of God.
42. Calvin makes several statements against allegory in the Institutes, including
Institutes I.xiii.22, II.v.19, II.xiii.3, III.iv.4–5, IV.xi.1, IV.xvi.15, IV.xvi.31, and IV.xvii.15. For
an example, in his commentary, Calvin gives an extended critique of allegories in his
interpretation of Gal 4:22. Scholars who have emphasized Calvin’s abhorrence of
allegory include Hans-Joachim Kraus, “Calvin’s Exegetical Principles,” Interpretation 31
(1977): 8–18, and Wulfert de Greef, Calvijn en het Oude Testament (Amsterdam: Ton
Bolland, 1984), 48–52. T. H. L. Parker and Raymond A. Blacketer caution against
assuming that this means Calvin does not at all employ some kind of allegory in his own
exegesis. See Parker, Calvin’s Old Testament Commentaries (1986, reprint, Louisville, KY:
Westminster John Knox, 1993), 72–74. Blacketer argues that “Calvin reserves no place
for allegories that lack any textual or historical connection to the text. But he does not
reject allegory altogether; allegories, as well as types, may be drawn from the sens naturel,
as long as there is a clear textual or historical connection between type and antitype”
(“Smooth Stones, Teachable Hearts: Calvin’s Allegorical Interpretation of Deuteronomy
10:1–2,” Calvin Theological Journal 34 [1999]: 62). Though I agree that one needs to be
more careful between what Calvin says and what he actually does in exegesis, I do
wonder if when a reading retains at least a clear historical connection, whether we are
talking about allegory per se anymore, but instead are really talking about figurative
readings.
43. See my discussion of Calvin’s principles of christological exegesis in the early
part of chapter 4. I name three general principles: an Old Testament text may be read
christologically when it is more fully completed by Christ and more appropriate to
Christ, when it is cited by New Testament authors in reference to Christ, and when it
maintains the “simple and natural” sense of the text.
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Index
Abraham ibn Ezra, 64, 65, 66, Augustine, 6, 62, 113, 114, 115, 151n40,
67, 70, 95, 96, 97, 163n15, 167n46, 180n96, 184n49
146–47n30, 166–67n44, authorial intention, 8, 80, 81, 82, 122,
167n47, 167–68n54, 133, 135, 136, 138, 139
168n59, 168n61, 168n63 authority, 4, 6, 18, 24, 25, 52, 69, 71, 99,
Against the Sabbatarians, 128 103, 106–10, 111, 126, 127, 150n33,
allegory, 15, 19, 26, 34, 58, 80, 156n12
81, 114, 118, 119, 128, 138,
139, 163n16, 184n53, beneficence of God, 21, 57, 59, 60–62,
184–85n62, 192n42 64, 66–67, 68, 73, 74, 81, 84, 85,
Andrew of St. Victor, 7, 11, 88, 89, 95, 100, 101, 127, 128, 129,
146n28 138, 164n28, 165n35, 175n49,
anti-Judaism (anti-Jewish), 9, 188n15, 192n41
10, 11, 50, 52, 53, 57, Bucer, Martin, 5, 6, 7, 11, 12, 29, 53,
71–72, 121, 131–32, 138, 55–75, 77, 79, 83, 84, 85, 92, 95,
146n22, 146n29, 96, 97, 98, 99, 100, 101, 123,
170–71n87, 177–78n72, 127, 128, 129, 130, 131, 138,
184nn58–59, 189n23 157n26, 161n79, 162nn1–2,
apostolic authority, 106, 109, 162n5, 162n8, 163nn16–19,
110, 111 164n22, 164–65nn24–32,
apostolic exegesis, 103, 106, 165–66nn34–40, 166n43,
107, 108, 109, 111, 116, 167nn45–46, 167nn50–52,
117, 118, 119, 120, 121, 168n59, 168n61, 168n63, 169n67,
122 169n69, 169–70nn77–80,
Arianism, 104, 105, 111, 112, 113 170n83, 171n91, 171n94, 173n25,
210 INDEX
Christian Hebraists, 49, 50–51, 52, 55, church fathers, 20, 99, 105, 106, 111,
121, 123, 146–47n30, 161n79, 112, 114, 116, 162n8, 167n46,
161n83, 179n88 169–70n80, 180nn95–96
Christian-Jewish relations, 5, 9–12, comfort, 7, 21, 22–23, 28, 31, 36–37, 38,
131–32, 145n16 41, 42, 43, 44, 46, 51, 78, 85, 87,
christological exegesis, 4, 7, 8, 17–20, 21, 92, 93, 100, 101, 127
29, 55, 58, 59–60, 64, 65, 66, 70, confessional formation, 3, 4–5, 8, 9, 52,
73, 78, 79–82, 94, 98–99, 100, 101, 125, 125–28, 128–29, 130,
103, 110, 121, 123, 126–28, 129, 145n17, 145–46n19, 186nn1–4
130, 132, 133, 137, 138, 139, 147n5, role in biblical interpretation, 9, 52, 101,
150–51n37, 173n25, 190–91n32 125, 125–28, 128–29, 130, 145n18
Calvin’s lack of, 8, 10, 79–82, 94,
98–99, 103, 105, 110, 121–22, 123, David (biblical), 8, 10, 14, 17, 18, 20, 28,
132, 138, 139, 145n16, 165n32, 31, 33, 51, 58, 61, 63, 65, 66, 67, 71,
171n94, 172–73n10, 173–74n26, 72, 77, 78, 79, 80, 81, 82, 83, 84,
185n63 92, 94, 97, 98, 99, 100, 101, 106,
church, 4, 10, 11, 22–23, 25, 26, 27, 28, 107, 108–10, 110, 111, 115, 116, 117,
32, 33, 36–37, 38, 39, 42, 45, 50, 51, 118, 121, 122, 127, 133, 135,
52, 57–62, 62–65, 67, 71, 72, 74, 147–48nn5–6, 149n24, 154n83,
78, 79, 82, 84, 85, 87–90, 91, 92, 155n8, 165n35, 166nn39–40,
93, 94, 99, 100, 101, 109, 112, 113, 167nn52–53, 171n94, 172n4,
117, 118, 119, 123, 126, 127, 128, 176n52, 176n63, 177n67, 179n90,
129, 130, 132, 134, 135, 137, 138, 182nn18–19, 182n22, 184n49,
145n17, 146n23, 166nn37–38, 185n68
170n87, 172–73n10, 175n47, as prophet, 14, 18, 20, 28, 33, 45, 46,
176n54, 177n65, 177n68, 190n31 59, 60, 79, 80–81, 83, 92, 100,
apostolic church, 4, 43, 106, 159n59 106, 109, 143–44n10, 149n24,
Bucer’s emphasis upon, 57, 59, 61, 156n15, 157–58n34, 159n59,
62–64, 65, 67, 74 172–73n10, 173–74n26
early, medieval church, 5, 6, 10, 43, 103 as teacher and example for the
prophecies of in the Psalms, 15, 16, 18, church, 11, 38, 45–46, 46, 58,
19, 20, 21–22, 22–23, 28, 29, 33, 67, 77, 78, 79, 84–91, 93, 94, 96,
34–36, 37, 41–44, 51, 57, 59, 97, 98, 100, 101, 122, 127, 130,
62–64, 65–66, 74, 126, 149n18, 135, 160n63, 168n63, 172–73n10,
150–51n37, 151n40, 151n42, 173n12, 175nn42–43, 175n47,
151nn46–47, 156n18, 163n17, 175n49, 176n54, 176n56, 179n86
163n19, 164n27, 165nn31–32, as type of Christ, 28, 33, 57, 59–60, 63,
171n94, 179n91, 184–85n62 66, 68, 72, 79, 80, 106, 115, 116,
Protestant church(es), 5, 40, 41, 44, 51, 117–18, 134, 135, 157–58n34,
52, 77, 78, 90, 91, 93, 100, 101, 164nn21–22, 168n63, 183–84n47
128, 130 as type of the church, 57, 59, 61,
Roman church, 6, 42, 43, 44, 52, 72, 65–66, 71, 80, 130, 135, 165n32,
91, 93, 176n61, 187n8 177n68, 190n31
212 INDEX
Luther, Martin (continued) 90, 91, 92, 93, 98, 100, 101, 122,
reading strategies, 38–44, 52, 72, 126, 127, 129, 165n34, 166n39,
155n8, 157n24, 157–58nn34–35, 168n61, 176n52, 188nn14–15
189n25, 192n41 plain sense, 8, 11, 65, 70, 71, 73, 74, 103,
Jews-as-enemies reading strategy, 106, 107, 111, 130, 132, 135, 145n16
41–44, 51–52, 72, 91–92, 127 polemic, 7
relationship to exegetical tradition, 29, Christian polemic against Judaism,
33, 33–36, 95, 127, 144n12, 148n7, 17–19, 20, 29, 41, 44, 52, 53, 57, 65,
148–49n28, 155n9, 156n18, 69–71, 71–72, 92, 98–99, 101,
160n64, 186n71 129, 146n29, 158–59n54, 170n87,
177–78n72, 184nn58–59
Mary, 25–27, 28, 141–42n2, 153n73, Jewish polemic against Christianity,
153n77, 154n79 12, 13, 60–61, 68–70, 71, 74, 129,
as coredemptrix, 27, 153n77 146n29, 164n26, 169n69
perpetual virginity of, 25–27, 28, Protestant polemic against Roman
153n77 Catholic, 4, 42–44, 48, 52, 72,
as queen, 26–27 91–92, 176n61
prayer, 15, 16, 21, 22, 28, 32, 37, 61, 77, 78,
Nicholas of Lyra, 6, 11, 13–29, 133, 87, 88, 90, 91, 92, 93, 101, 170n83,
144n12, 146n28, 146–47n30, 171–72n1, 175n47
147–48nn5–6, 149n12, 149n21, precritical exegesis, 4, 8, 9, 131, 134, 139,
149n24, 150–51n37, 151n42, 141n1
151n46, 151–52n50, 152n57, Preus, James, 45–46, 155n9, 159nn58–59
152n62, 152n65, 153n69, 153n73, providence, 78, 81, 83, 85, 86, 89, 96, 97,
154n83 98, 100, 101, 119, 127, 129, 136,
views of Jews, 15, 16, 21, 149n12 137, 138, 174nn37–38, 178n81,
188n15, 192n41
On the Jews and their Lies, 11, 146n21 Psalms, Book of, 3, 5–9, 10, 11, 12, 13,
Operationes in psalmos, 31, 32, 34, 35, 36, 31–33, 40–44, 45–46, 47–50, 53,
37, 40, 41, 42, 47, 49, 55, 154, 55–57, 71–72, 73, 74, 77–79, 91–94,
154–55nn7–8, 156n18, 158n35, 103–104, 116–21, 125–28, 128–29,
160n64 144n12, 146nn28–29, 147n5,
147–48n6, 150n29, 150–51n37,
Pareus, David, 7, 8, 95, 101, 103–105, 154n2, 155nn8–9, 156n20,
109, 111–23, 128, 129, 132, 136, 157–58nn34–35, 159n59, 160n65,
144–45n15, 181n8, 181n10, 161n79, 162n2, 162n5, 163n13,
183nn31–32, 183nn40–41, 163n18, 164n27, 172n3,
183–84nn46–47, 184nn49–50, 172–73n10, 173n25, 180–81n3,
184nn52–53, 184nn58–59, 186n3, 187n5
184–85nn61–63, 185n65 didactic use of, 5, 6, 13, 22–23, 23–27,
peshat, 11, 65, 145n16 28, 29, 32, 34, 36, 37–38, 45–46,
piety, 5, 56, 57, 58, 59, 60, 61, 62–64, 46, 49, 51, 53, 60–62, 69, 74, 78,
66–68, 68, 72, 73, 74, 78, 87, 89, 83–84, 85–86, 96, 97, 100, 101,
INDEX 215