Guido de Bres
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Guido de Bres (1522 – May 31, 1567) was the main author of the Belgic Confession.
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[edit] Life
Guido de Bres was born in He was born in Mons, Hainaut. Already at a young age he made his choice of the Protestant religion as taught by Martin Luther. Later he converted to Calvinism. He has met John Calvin at several instances and studied at the academy of Geneva where Calvin taught.
During the years 1552-1556 he was a wandering preacher in the Southern Low Countries. The ideas of Luther found much hearing in these areas (Ghent, Antwerp, Tournai etc.).
De Bres fled to Germany and later on moved to Geneva. Around 1559 he returned to the Low Countries, but now as a travelling Calvinist preacher. In the years 1559-1561 he served as resident reverend in Tournai.
In 1561 de Bres authored the Belgic Confession. This confession was meant for the Spanish Government to show them that the calvinists weren't a radical Anabaptist sectarian movement, but demanded a reformation in biblical sense of the Roman Catholic Church. The text is strongly influenced by Calvin's "Institutes of the Christian Religion" and the creed of the French Huguenots. The creed was printed by J. Crespin in Geneva.
In the night of the 1st to 2nd of November 1561 de Bres throws his creed over the castle wall of Tournai, where Margaret of Parma, governor of the Netherlands stayed, to bring the confession to the attention of the Spanish government. The governor has seen one exemplar.
[edit] Death
In 1565 de Bres is arrested for his Calvinist beliefs. He was trialled for the Spanish Inquisition, received the death penalty and was hanged at Valenciennes. He died a martyr's death in front of a large crowd after making a last statement of his beliefs. Twelve days before his death he wrote a still circulating letter to his mother showing his trust in God.
[edit] Legacy
De Bres wrote a number of books. The Confession is part of the Three Forms of Unity. It's text is still in wide use in particular among orthodox calvinists.
[edit] External links
- Biographical and bibliographical data, Leiden University Bibliothèque Wallonne
- Last letter of De Brès to his mother of 19 May 1567 in modern Dutch