Question C is trying to bait me into a Catholic Protestant debate, and I’m not biting
Must not be hungry, then!

But seriously, I’m not at all trying to bait; I’m just simply curious as to whether or not a Calvinist would believe Philip of Hesse was saved or not. Since presumably, you are well versed in Calvin’s teachings, I sort of assumed (silly me!) that you might be willing and able to give a ready answer. No need to debate anything.
You ask what authority did Calvin have … of course in your view if one is not a member of your church then they lack any authority. In my opinion that’s a slave mentality.
You’re evading a simple and straightforward question: did he have any authority? A simple yes, no, or I don’t know, would suffice.
I’m not a Christian, but I do know how to read. I am my own authority on matters of reading comprehension and common sense.
And how many times have I heard people talk like
that! - yet for some strange reason, all these self-professed “authorities” seem to be hopelessly confused, as they each contradict one another!
I guess that probably sounds arrogant to you… how dare I not be enslaved to a church institution. How dare I not think I’m too stupid to read and understand a simple book?
And how many times have I heard people talk like
that also! And again, how invariably they all contradict one another! It is precisely
that kind of mentality which is “enslaved” -
to error - not mine!!
“claiming to be wise, they became fools”
- St. Paul to the Catholic Church in Rome (Rom. 1:22).
If you think humans cannot be permitted to interpret a simple book themselves then that’s your problem.
I never said folks can’t interpret (or misinterpret) the Bible - hardly my place grant or not grant such permission anyway!
So go ahead, my friend, interpret (or misinterpret

) all you please! You have my blessing. Only would you, or somebody -
anybody! - be good enough to show me where in the Bible is found a
single instance of anyone privately interpreting Scripture?
But now, returning to this business of authority: you might be interested to know that both Luther and Calvin made some extraordinary claims, not only about their own “authority,” but about their own
infallibility!
Luther, for example, in his book against Henry VIII - “
Antwort deutsch auf König Heinrichs Buch” “
German Answer to King Henry’s Book,” 1522 - writes:
“He who teaches otherwise from what I have taught, condemns God, and must remain a child of hell.”
Dr. Martin Luther’s Sämtliche Werke (Dr. Martin Luther’s Collected Works), Erlangen ed. vol. 28, 346.
Luther’s German:
“Wer Anders lehret, denn ich hierin gelchret habe, oder mich darin verdammt, der verdammt Gott und muß ein Kind der Hölle bleiben”
Slightly different German wording:
“kind der hellen bleiben,” literally, “Child of hell remain.”
As it appears in the Wiemar edition of Luther’s German Works:
“verdampt Gott unnd muß eyn kind der hellen” (“condemns God and must be a child of hell”)
D. Martin Luthers Werke; kritische Gesamtausgabe (D. Martin Luthers Works: Critical and Complete Edition), 1902, Weimar, Herman Böhlaus Nachfolger, 10/II, p. 230 (vol. 10, section II, p. 230).
books.google.com/books?id=omYYAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA230&dq=%22verdampt+Gott+unnd+mu%C3%9F+eyn+kind+der+hellen%22&lr=&as_drrb_is=q&as_minm_is=0&as_miny_is=&as_maxm_is=0&as_maxy_is=&as_brr=0&as_pt=ALLTYPES&ei=L8bsSe_mCI3MM8KxjKcB&client=firefox
And not to forget the *master theologian *himself:
Calvin also claimed for himself infallibility, and wrote to Aubeterre (“Lettres franchises,” vol. 1, p. 389, May, 1553):
“Dieu m’a fait la grace de me declarer ce qui est bon et mauvais.”
Rebuilding a Lost Faith: By an American Agnostic, John L. Stoddard ISBN-13: 9780895554109, p. 98.
books.google.com/books?id=VWbW5SqO0goC&pg=PA98&lpg=PA98&dq=%22Dieu+m%27a+fait+la+grace+de+me+declarer%22&source=bl&ots=vOVW1tKpQ4&sig=25Wf_KA9lZutVRCs-DaZvwKVeSc&hl=en&ei=q7fsSfqxCYW0NJv34e8F&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=1
archive.org/details/rebuildingalostf001613mbp
Book summary here:
marianland.com/romancatholicbooks/rebuildinglostfaith.html
And again:
Possessing terrific and sinister self-assurance, he compared his own views with absolute truth, and said: “Dieu m’a fait la grace de declarer ce qu’est bon et mauvais” — (God has been gracious enough to reveal unto me good and evil).
The Right to Heresy, Stefan Zweig, Eden Paul, 1936, p. 34.
books.google.com/books?id=lIg_AAAAIAAJ&q=%22ce+qu%E2%80%99est+bon+et+mauvais%22&dq=%22ce+qu%E2%80%99est+bon+et+mauvais%22&lr=&as_drrb_is=q&as_minm_is=0&as_miny_is=&as_maxm_is=0&as_maxy_is=&as_brr=0&as_pt=ALLTYPES&ei=YMfsSfCFEYvKNaCcpY4B&pgis=1
Primary source:
*Lettres de Jean Calvin *, Jean Calvin, Jules Bonnet, Librairie de Ch. Meyrueis et Compagnie, Paris, 1854, vol. 1, p. 389.
"Dieu m’a faict la grâce de me déclairer ce qui est bon ou maulvais "
ooo here we go with the heresy word. Gee wiz … what foolishness.
A heretic is simply one who holds an erring opinion. I don’t know why that word seems to evoke such a strong response from you. Unless of course, it’s that you realize that o’l Calvin would have certainly considered me a heretic, and probably caused me to perish by his hands, even as he did poor
Servetus!