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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...

46. Thus it follows that chanting and loud clamor, without true devotion and done for money only, either seek human praise or else material gain. CONCERNING OFFENCES 47. A person should suffer physical death rather than offend or disgrace a Christian. 48. One who, because of infirmity or ignorance, tends to take offence without any cause, should not be left weak or ignorant. Rather, he should not be strengthened so that he may not regard as sinful what is not sinful at all. 49. I know of no greater
Volume 1, Page 7