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www.remonstranten.nl /engels /. The Remonstrants (or the Remonstrant Brotherhood) is a Protestant movement that split from the Dutch Reformed Church in the early 17th century. The early Remonstrants supported Jacobus Arminius, and after his death, continued to maintain his original views called Arminianism against the proponents of Calvinism.
Five Articles of Remonstrance. The Five Articles of Remonstrance or the Remonstrance were theological propositions advanced in 1610 by followers of Jacobus Arminius who had died in 1609, in disagreement with interpretations of the teaching of John Calvin then current in the Dutch Reformed Church. Those who supported them were called "Remonstrants".
The confession or declaration of the ministers or pastors, which in the United Provinces are called Remonstrants (PDF). London: Printed for Francis Smith at the Elephant and Castle in Cornhil near the Royal Exchange. LBR (2019a). "Belijdenis" (in Dutch). Landelijk Bureau Remonstranten.
4 April 1643 (aged 60) Amsterdam. Occupation. University teacher. Employer. Remonstrants seminary (1634–1643) Leiden University (1612–1619) Simon Episcopius (8 January 1583 – 4 April 1643) was a Dutch theologian and Remonstrant who played a significant role at the Synod of Dort in 1618. [1] His name is the Latinized form of his Dutch name ...
Official participation in the Synod of Dort, held in 1618–9 in Dordrecht in the Netherlands, consisted of different groups: Dutch ministers, church elders, and theologians; representatives of churches outside the Dutch Republic; and Dutch lay politicians. There were 14 Remonstrants who were summoned, in effect as defendants.
The Counter-Remonstrance of 1611 was the Dutch Reformed Churches' response to the controversial Remonstrants ' Five Articles of Remonstrance, which challenged the Calvinist theology and the Reformed Confessions that the Remonstrants had sworn to uphold. The Counter Remonstrance was written primarily by Festus Hommius and defended the Belgic ...
Biography. Limborch was born on 19 June 1633 in Amsterdam, where his father was a lawyer. [1] He received his education at Utrecht, at Leiden, in his native city, and finally at Utrecht University, which he entered in 1652. [1] In 1657 he became a Remonstrant pastor at Gouda, and in 1667 he was transferred to Amsterdam, where, in the following ...
Johannes Wtenbogaert. Johannes Wtenbogaert (Also Jan or Hans, Uytenbogaert or Uitenbogaert.) (11 February 1557 – 4 September 1644) was a Dutch Protestant minister, a leader of the Remonstrants. 1633 portrait of Johannes Wtenbogaert by Rembrandt.