Guido
de Brès (1522 – May 31, 1567) was a French-speaking Walloon minister
of the gospel, who studied under both John Calvin and Theodore Beza. Raised a
Roman Catholic, he was converted to Christ before the age of 20. He would spend
most of the rest of his life on the run for his faith. Most famous for his
authorship of the Belgic
Confession (1561), one of the Three Forms of Unity
of the Reformed Churches (he
also wrote another confession as well). It is an eloquent and profoundly
spiritual milestone in the history of Reformed confessions and creeds, and it
is the only Reformation creed written by a martyr. He also wrote Le Baston del la Foy (The Staff of Faith, Able to Shut the Mouths
of Faith’s Enemies) (1562) and La Racine,
Source et Fondement des Anabaptistes (The
Root, the Origins, and the Foundation of the Anabaptists or Rebaptizers of Our
Time) (1565), responses to both Roman Catholic and Anabaptists, the two
greatest threats to the Reformed Faith at that time. Arrested in 1565, he was
tried by the Spanish Inquisition, and ultimately hanged at Valenciennes, France
on the last day of May, 1567, 450 years ago today. Before he was executed, he
wrote a
letter to his wife expressing his faith in Christ and encouraging her in
the same, a letter which stands in the annals of church history’s most
inspirational writings.
For more on his life, writings and significance, please
consult Trust
God, Keep the Faith: The Story of Guido
de Bres by Bartha Hill-de Bres; Three
Men Came to Heidelberg and Glorious
Heretic: The Story of Guido de Bres by Thea B. Van Halsema; The
Belgic Confession: Its History and Sources by Nicolaas H. Gootjes; The
Church Says Amen: An Exposition of the Belgic Confession by J. Van
Bruggen; Reformed
Confessions of the 16th and 17th Centuries in English Translation, Vol. 2 by James T. Dennison, Jr.,
ed.; For
the Cause of the Son of God: The Missiological Implications of the Belgic
Confession of Faith by Wes Bredenhof; With
Heart and Mouth: An Exposition of the Belgic Confession by Daniel Hyde;
and many other works could be named.
(The Countess de Reux Visiting De Bray and Le Grange in Prison,
Illustration from James Wylie's History of Protestantism)
I find this very interesting, as I am a Huguenot historian myself. Jean de Lery was another Genevan student who had a lot of adventures with the Huguenots (also in New World Brazil).
ReplyDeleteThanks for posting this!
http://blog.hellandfamily.com/DanielInTheWritersDen/
https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCCxmd52VgBzDnOgt7ofqffw