I might have said it before but just in case you missed it, I said that Calvin was the first to correctly interpret the Gospel. Before him we had the dark ages where the scriptures were hidden away and only the pope had access to them. So Calvin became famous for rightly interpreting the Gospel.
Arminius was deceived by the popes works based Gospel, Calvin was not, that's why we agree with Calvin. You can have your pope and Arminius all to yourself but don't push heresy on me, thank you
John didn't interpret nor translate a thing, yes he approved of the Geneva bible and use it quite often.
While not a direct translator for the first edition of the 1560 Geneva Bible, John Calvin-almost as much as Martin Luther, who seized upon the novel-for-the-day Gutenburg technology in Germany-was certainly one of earliest and strongest advocates for of Bible translation. To be sure, Luther arrived at this conclusion a little earlier, emphasizing that the Bible needed to be known by both clergy and laity alike. However, Luther’s German language translation (New Testament [NT] in 1522; whole Bible in 1534), over time, reached fewer readers than did the Genevan Bible’s various English editions.
Prior to the 1560 Geneva Bible, of course, several groundbreaking English Bibles had been translated by John Wyclife (NT, 1382), William Tyndale (NT in 1525), Miles Coverdale (1535), and the Great Bible in 1539. These pioneering translations catapulted the ancient Scriptures into the language of English-speaking people, who would soon colonize North America. The Geneva Bible, thus, became a megaphone for the Scriptures and, by its commentary, a broadcast mechanism for a certain type of theology: John Calvin’s.
It was the invention of the printing press in 1455 that made it possible for every day people to own a bible though quite exspensive in those days, before that getting someone to translate scripture into English handwritten out would have cost you a large fortune to do so.