What Our Political Conversations Ought to Be Like, According to Calvin
Ninth Commandment
THOU SHALT NOT BEAR FALSE
WITNESS AGAINST THY NEIGHBOUR.
"47. The purport of the
commandment is, since God, who is truth, abhors falsehood, we must cultivate
unfeigned truth towards each other. The
sum, therefore, will be, that we must not by calumnies and false accusations
injure our neighbour’s name, or by falsehood impair his fortunes; in fine, that
we must not injure any one from petulance, or a love of evil-speaking.
To this prohibition corresponds the command, that we must faithfully assist
every one, as far as in us lies, in asserting the truth, for the maintenance of
his good name and his estate. The Lord seems to have intended to explain the
commandment in these words: “Thou shalt not raise a false report: put not thine
hand with the wicked to be an unrighteous witness.” “Keep thee far from a false
matter,” (Exod. 23:1, 7). In another passage, he
not only prohibits that species of falsehood which consists in acting the part
of tale-bearers among the people, but says, “Neither shalt thou stand against
the blood of thy neighbour,” (Lev. 19:16). Both
transgressions are distinctly prohibited. Indeed, there can be no doubt, that
as in the previous commandment he prohibited cruelty unchastity, and avarice,
so here he prohibits falsehood, which consists of the two parts to which we
have adverted.
"By malignant or vicious detraction, we sin against
our neighbour’s good name: by lying, sometimes even by casting a slur upon him,
we injure him in his estate. It makes no
difference whether you suppose that formal and judicial testimony is here
intended, or the ordinary testimony which is given in private conversation. For
we must always recur to the consideration, that for each kind of transgression
one species is set forth by way of example, that to it the others may be
referred, and that the species chiefly selected, is that in which the turpitude
of the transgression is most apparent. It seems proper, however, to extend it
more generally to calumny and sinister insinuations by which our neighbours are
unjustly aggrieved. For falsehood in a court of justice is always accompanied
with perjury. But against perjury, in so far as it profanes and violates the
name of God, there is a sufficient provision in the third commandment. Hence
the legitimate observance of this precept consists in employing the tongue in
the maintenance of truth, so as to promote both the good name and the
prosperity of our neighbour. The equity of this is perfectly clear. For if a good name is more precious than
riches, a man, in being robbed of his good name, is no less injured than if he
were robbed of his goods; while, in the latter case, false testimony is
sometimes not less injurious than rapine committed by the hand.
"48. And yet it is
strange, with what supine security men everywhere sin in this respect. Indeed, very few are found who do not notoriously
labour under this disease: such is the envenomed delight we take both in prying
into and exposing our neighbour’s faults. Let us not imagine it is a
sufficient excuse to say that on many occasions our statements are not false.
He who forbids us to defame our neighbour’s reputation by falsehood, desires us
to keep it untarnished in so far as truth will permit. Though the commandment
is only directed against falsehood, it intimates that the preservation of our
neighbour’s good name is recommended. It ought to be a sufficient inducement to
us to guard our neighbour’s good name, that God takes an interest in it.
Wherefore, evil-speaking in general is undoubtedly condemned. Moreover, by
evil-speaking, we understand not the rebuke which is administered with a view
of correcting; not accusation or judicial decision, by which evil is sought to
be remedied; not public censure, which tends to strike terror into other
offenders; not the disclosure made to those whose safety depends on being
forewarned, lest unawares they should be brought into danger, but the odious
crimination which springs from a malicious and petulant love of slander. Nay,
the commandment extends so far as to include that scurrilous affected urbanity,
instinct with invective, by which the failings of others, under an appearance
of sportiveness, are bitterly assailed, as some are wont to do, who court the
praise of wit, though it should call forth a blush, or inflict a bitter pang.
By petulance of this description, our brethren are sometimes grievously
wounded.
"But if we turn our eye
to the Lawgiver, whose just authority extends over the ears and the mind, as
well as the tongue, we cannot fail to perceive that eagerness to listen to
slander, and an unbecoming proneness to censorious judgments are here
forbidden. It were absurd to suppose that God hates the disease of
evil-speaking in the tongue, and yet disapproves not of its malignity in the
mind. Wherefore, if the true fear and
love of God dwell in us, we must endeavour, as far as is lawful and expedient,
and as far as charity admits, neither to listen nor give utterance to bitter
and acrimonious charges, nor rashly entertain sinister suspicions. As just
interpreters of the words and the actions of other men, let us candidly
maintain the honour due to them by our judgment, our ear, and our tongue."
--John Calvin (d. 1564), The Institutes of the Christian Religion, trans. Henry Beveridge
Calvin's Institutes are basically required reading for Presbyterians, but clearly not all Presbyterians today have read them.
Calvin's Institutes are basically required reading for Presbyterians, but clearly not all Presbyterians today have read them.