A MODEL CITY
G.K Chesterton once wrote, “the Christian ideal has not been tried and found wanting; it has been found difficult and left untried”. Though Chesterton wrote these words centuries after Calvin, the work that Calvin, Farel, and others engaged in, in the city of Geneva, was a direct response to this statement. They took up the work of the Christian ideal as it is laid out in the gospel and attempted to try it and prove that it was amply sufficient to meet the needs of the human soul. Calvin set himself two goals when he agreed to stay in Geneva; to build a truly reformed church and to bring personal reformation to the people. Geneva was both a social experiment and a fertile breeding ground for the Reformation. It became a model city, showing dynamic moral uprightness under the ministry of Calvin and it also became the Rome of the Reformation, a hub for training and deploying countless Protestant missionaries across Europe.