Academic
Theology of the French Reformed Churches, The : From Henri IV to the Revocation of the Edict of Nantes
Outline: The Theology of the French Reformed Churches introduces us to the Huguenots of the seventeenth century. The period was an unusual one in which France boasted two state religions, Roman Catholic and Protestant, due to the protections afforded the latter by the Edict of Nantes in 1598. In this book, Martin I. Klauber and his team of scholars survey the development of and difficulties facing the early French Reformed traditions as well as its ecclesiastical, theological, and political challenges during the seventeenth century. They also investigate the important contributions made by some of its most significant theologians: John Cameron, Moise Amyraut, Pierre du Moulin, Jean Daille, Andreas Rivetus, Charles Drelincourt, Claude Pajon, Jean Claude, and Pierre Jurieu. The Theologians of the seventeenth-century French Reformed churches displayed a theological richness seldom remembered even among Reformed believers in the centuries following their labor, and this volume resurrects their vitality for a new audience.
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