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Reformed Confessions of the 16th and 17th Centuries in English Translation, Vols. 1–4: 1523–1693 is unavailable, but you can change that!

James T. Dennison’s Reformed Confessions compiles English translations of Reformed confessions of the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries—in many cases, presenting them in the Anglo-Saxon vernacular for the first time. Such a collection provides the English-speaking world a richer and more comprehensive view of the emergence and maturation of Reformed theology in these centuries, with summaries...

anything without the head managing them, so it is impossible for anyone in the body of Christ to do anything without Christ, the head. 10. As a person is demented when the members of his body effect something without the head, tearing, wounding and damaging themselves, so are the members of Christ demented, beating and burdening themselves with unwise laws, whenever they undertake something without Christ, their head. 11. From this we see the statutes of the so-called clerics with all their pomp,
Volume 1, Page 4