John Calvin's Institutes in a Year Podcast By Christopher Michael Patton cover art

John Calvin's Institutes in a Year

John Calvin's Institutes in a Year

By: Christopher Michael Patton
Listen for free

Ever stared at John Calvin’s Institutes of the Christian Religion on your shelf and thought, “One day I’ll finally read that… but where would I even start?”

This podcast is for that moment.

Calvin’s Institutes in a Year is a guided, day-by-day journey through one of the most influential works in Christian theology. Together, we read through the entire Institutes over the course of a full year—one manageable section at a time—so that a book many admire from a distance finally becomes something you actually finish.

Each daily episode is short, focused, and intentional. We keep the pace steady, the sections approachable, and the explanations clear, helping you follow Calvin’s arguments without feeling buried under the weight of a theological classic. No rushing. No intimidation. Just faithful reading, thoughtful reflection, and steady progress.

This is not a lecture series and it’s not a shortcut. It’s a companion for the long walk—designed for pastors, students, Reformed readers, and anyone who wants to understand historic Christian doctrine at a deeper level by actually reading the text.

If you want more than just listening, you’re invited to read along with us at ThroughTheChurchFathers.com where you’ll find the full reading schedule, written texts, and the ability to comment and discuss alongside others making the same journey.

If the Institutes has always felt important but unreachable, this is your invitation to finally open it—one day at a time.

We begin January 1, 2026

Explore the Project:

Through the Church Fathers – https://www.throughthechurchfathers.com

Patreon – https://www.patreon.com/cmichaelpatton

Credo Courses – https://www.credocourses.com

Credo Ministries – https://www.credoministries.org

C. Michael Patton
Christianity Ministry & Evangelism Spirituality World
Episodes
  • Calvin's Institutes: February 6
    Feb 6 2026

    How do we truly know the invisible God when nature alone leaves us prone to confusion and speculation? In this reading, Calvin explains why Scripture provides a clearer portrait of God than creation by itself ever could, grounding our knowledge of the Creator in the historical account given through Moses. He rebukes arrogant curiosity about time, eternity, and creation, urging humility where God has chosen silence, and shows how the six-day creation displays God’s fatherly wisdom and care. Calvin then turns to the invisible realm, addressing angels not to satisfy curiosity, but to guard against errors that diminish God’s sovereignty or divide creation into rival powers. Throughout, he calls us away from idle speculation and back to Scripture’s plain teaching, where true knowledge leads not to pride, but to reverence, faith, and worship.

    Readings: John Calvin, The Institutes of the Christian Religion, Book 1, Chapter 14 (Sections 1–5)

    Explore the Project:

    Through the Church Fathers – https://www.throughthechurchfathers.com

    Patreon – https://www.patreon.com/cmichaelpatton

    Credo Courses – https://www.credocourses.com

    Credo Ministries – https://www.credoministries.org

    #JohnCalvin #InstitutesOfTheChristianReligion #DoctrineOfCreation #Angels #ChristianTheology #ReformedTheology #ScriptureAndNature

    Show more Show less
    12 mins
  • Calvin's Institutes: February 5
    Feb 5 2026

    of God? In today’s reading, Calvin carefully addresses this tension by showing how Scripture speaks of the Father and the Son according to order and role without dividing the divine essence. He explains Christ’s words as Mediator, clarifies passages that seem to imply inferiority, and demonstrates that the Son’s submission belongs to His redemptive office, not to His nature. Drawing on Irenaeus, Tertullian, and the broader consensus of the Fathers, Calvin dismantles claims that early Christianity knew only the Father as God, showing instead a consistent confession of one God in three persons. The result is a sober, historically grounded defense of Trinitarian faith that guards both Christ’s full divinity and the unity of God without speculation or distortion.

    Readings: John Calvin, The Institutes of the Christian Religion, Book 1, Chapter 13 (Sections 26–29)

    Explore the Project:

    Through the Church Fathers – https://www.throughthechurchfathers.com

    Patreon – https://www.patreon.com/cmichaelpatton

    Credo Courses – https://www.credocourses.com

    Credo Ministries – https://www.credoministries.org

    #JohnCalvin #InstitutesOfTheChristianReligion #Trinity #Christology #ReformedTheology #ChurchFathers #NiceneFaith

    Show more Show less
    10 mins
  • Through the Church Fathers: April 1
    Apr 1 2026

    Calvin draws a careful line between confusion and division, showing that Christ is one person with two distinct natures—fully God and fully man—so that the language of Scripture only makes sense when read through this lens of unity without mixture (John 1:14; Colossians 1:15–17); some passages clearly display his divinity, others his humanity, and others speak in a way that joins both together through what the church has called the communication of properties, where what belongs to one nature can be spoken of the person as a whole (Acts 20:28; 1 Corinthians 2:8); and this is not merely technical theology but the foundation of salvation itself, since Christ’s mediatorial role bridges God and man until the end, when his work is complete and we see God face to face, no longer through the veil of his humbled state but in the fullness of divine glory (1 Corinthians 15:24–28; Philippians 2:8–11).

    Explore the Project:

    Through the Church Fathers – https://www.throughthechurchfathers.com

    Patreon – https://www.patreon.com/cmichaelpatton

    Credo Courses – https://www.credocourses.com

    Credo Ministries – https://www.credoministries.org

    #ChurchFathers #Calvin #Institutes #Christology #TwoNatures #HypostaticUnion #Mediator #ReformedTheology #BiblicalTheology #JesusChrist

    Show more Show less
    16 mins
No reviews yet