RT Article T1 The Reformation of Hebrew Scripture: Chosen People, Chosen Nations, and Exceptionalism JF Reformation VO 23 IS 1 SP 100 OP 119 A1 Guibbory, Achsah 1945- LA English YR 2018 UL https://ixtheo.de/Record/1576490718 AB The Reformation taught a way of reading the Hebrew Bible that made the “Old Testament” the valued possession of Protestants, encouraging them to see the histories and prophecies about biblical Israel as about the present and future not the past, and being fulfilled in Protestants. Calvin used Old Testament verses to prove predestination and “election,” which were concepts also useful to emergent nationalisms. The idea of Chosen people and nations, supposedly the hallmark of “Jewish Israel,” did not disappear with Christianity but was revived and transformed with the Reformation. We see it not just in Milton and the seventeenth century but in the later development of “British” and “Anglo”-Israelism in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. The obsession with being Israel—with chosenness and “exceptionalism”—persists to the present, and is one of the most important, if troubling, legacies of a way of reading the Hebrew Bible that emerged with the Reformation. K1 America K1 British-Israelism K1 Calvin K1 England K1 Israel K1 Milton DO 10.1080/13574175.2018.1467596