[In case you just popped in, I'm taking some time to keep notes as I read through Calvin's Institutes this year. Glad you came. Hope you check in more often.]
The next three chapters in Book 1 (chapters 3-5) deal with some issues related to what some theologians call ‘general revelation’.
“All men of sound judgment will therefore hold, that a sense of deity is indelibly engraved on the human heart… Whence we infer, that this is not a doctrine which is first learned at school, but one as to which every man is, from the womb, his own master; one which nature herself allows no individual to forget, though many, with all their might, strive to do so.” -Institutes, 1.3.3
For Calvin, a right apprehension of God and reverence for God precedes mission.
“No one, indeed, will voluntarily and willingly devote himself to the service of God unless he has previously tasted his paternal love, and been thereby allured to love and reverence him.” -Institutes, 1.5.3
Once again, Calvin is no speculative, ivory tower theologian. All theology is for and leads to doxology. It is meant to impress upon our minds and hearts (yes, even our ‘feelings’) the greatness and beauty of this self-revealing God.
“The Lord is manifested by his perfections. When we feel their power within us, and are conscious of their benefits, the knowledge must impress us much more vividly than if we merely imagined a God whose presence we never felt. Hence it is obvious, that in seeking God, the most direct path and the fittest method is, not to attempt with presumptuous curiosity to pry into his essence, which is rather to be adored than minutely discussed, but to contemplate him in his works, by which he draws near, becomes familiar, and in a manner communicates himself to us.” -Institutes, 1.5.9
I had heard that Calvin was well read and that he loved Augustine. Both of those are apparent on every page of the Institutes so far. His fluency in the classics, in the patristics, and, in particular, Augustine, is remarkable. Here he lets Augustine speak to manifestations of God’s providence for good and ill, both in the here and now and at the consummation.
“There is a well-known passage in Augustine, ‘Were all sin now visited with open punishment, it might be thought that nothing was reserved for the final judgment; and, on the other hand, were no sin now openly punished, it might be supposed there was no divine providence.’” -Institutes, 1.5.10
A Calvinian riff on Romans 1:18-22.
“But while man must bear the guilt of corrupting the seed of divine knowledge so wondrously deposited in his mind, and preventing it from bearing good and genuine fruit, it is still most true that we are not sufficiently instructed by that bare and simple, but magnificent testimony which the creatures bear to the glory of their Creator. For no sooner do we, from a survey of the world, obtain some slight knowledge of Deity, than we pass by the true God, and set up in his stead the dream and phantom of our own brain, drawing away the praise of justice, wisdom, and goodness, from the fountain-head, and transferring it to some other quarter.” -Institutes, 1.5.15

