13
November 1618 A.D. International Reformed Council & Synod of
Dordt Convenes to Deal with Arminianism
The Canons Of Dordt
Every one knows the
acronym TULIP, but not everyone knows where this
acronym comes from. The Canons of Dordt are among the most famous but unread
deliverances of any Reformed Synod. The canons are more than five letters.
The canons teach a pastoral doctrine of grace and provide a model for the
stewardship of the Gospel.
The Canons (rules) of the Synod of Dordt were
written after years of controversy within the Reformed churches in Europe and
Britain. In the late sixteenth century the Reformed doctrines of sin, grace,
faith, justification, atonement, perseverance, and assurance faced a growing
resistance. At the same time, James Hermanson (c. 1559–1609), known to us as
Jacob Arminius, was a student in the Genevan Academy where he showed promise
and no obvious evidence of heterodoxy.
Questions about Arminius’ doctrine arose as
early as 1590, but Jacob had married well and his patrons protected him. About
1594 he developed a new reading of Romans chapter 7 in which he argued that
Paul could not be describing a regenerate person. By 1596, after studying
Romans chapter 9, he concluded that inclusion in the covenant of grace is not
determined solely by God’s sovereign decree. Instead, God has willed to accept
those who seek acceptance with Him by faith. This was a clever move. He
appeared to be defending justification by faith all the while redefining the
doctrine of election and the definition of faith. As time passed, his views
became more well known. Confessional pastors and theologians in the Netherlands
and elsewhere began to sound the alarm. Dialogues were conducted and Arminius
said the right things, leaving the orthodox uneasy but without hard evidence of
error. Despite swirling doubts, the regents of the University of Leiden
appointed Arminius to professor of theology. Almost immediately, Arminius was
controversial. He was reported to teach that God elects those whom he foreknows
would believe. He also raised questions about the Reformed doctrine of the
covenant of works. In public, however, Arminius went out of his way to agree
with his orthodox colleagues.
By 1605, however, confessional Reformed pastors
were calling for discipline against Arminius and his growing band of followers
(the Arminians). The orthodox called for a national synod to discipline the
Arminians, but the politicians refused. Instead, leading Arminians in the
government called for a synod to revise the Belgic Confession and
the Heidelberg Catechism to make them more amenable to
Arminius’ views.
Arminius died in October 1609, and the
controversy entered a new phase. The Arminians published a remonstrance against
the Reformed churches in which they outlined five objections to Reformed
doctrine. Some preliminary responses were drafted as early as 1611, but it was
the Remonstrants who first gave us five points to which the Reformed churches
would respond at the great Synod of Dordt.
The Synod of Dordt almost did not occur.
Political forces within the government worked mightily to prevent a national
synod to address the problem. The theological crisis threatened to break out
into warfare. Prince Maurice of Nassau (1567–1625), who sympathized with the
orthodox, called for a national synod. The Remonstrants responded by organizing
riots in 1617. Maurice’s chief rival threatened war, but when Maurice arrived
in Utrecht (an Arminian stronghold) in 1618 with battle-tested veterans, the
opposition melted.
The greatest international Reformed synod
convened in Dordrecht, on 13 November 1618. In attendance were delegations from
across Europe and Britain. Forbidden by Louis XIII from
attending, the French delegation was
notably absent.
notably absent.
For the rest, see:
http://heidelblog.net/2014/04/the-canons-of-dordt/
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