Heidelberg Catechism (Heidelbergse Catechismus)
Heidelbergse Catechismus
Was ist dein einziger Trost im Leben und im Sterben? Daß ich mit Leib und Seele, im Leben und im Sterben nicht mein, sondern meines getreuen Heilands Jesu Christi eigen bin.
Our renderingWhat is your only comfort in life and in death? That I, body and soul, in life and in death, belong not to myself but to my faithful Savior Jesus Christ.
What it is
Commissioned by Elector Frederick III of the Palatinate, this catechism was translated into Dutch by Petrus Datheen and bound into his 1566 Psalter, becoming the primary instrument of Reformed instruction in the Netherlands. The Synods of Wesel (1568), Emden (1571), Dort (1578), The Hague (1586), and the great Synod of Dort (1618–19)—the last convened under the direct political patronage of Maurice of Nassau—formally adopted it as one of the Three Forms of Unity, binding every minister, elder, and deacon to subscribe. William III of Orange received daily Reformed instruction from tutor Cornelis Trigland from April 1656, with the Heidelberg Catechism as the backbone of that formation. Its 52 Lord's Days were preached consecutively in Dutch Reformed pulpits every Sunday afternoon, shaping the piety of the entire House across generations.
Why it still matters
Lord's Day 1—'What is your only comfort in life and in death?'—remains one of the most loved entry points into Reformed faith and can anchor daily prayer; the catechism is used today in CRC, URC, Free Reformed, and many other Reformed Sunday schools and pulpits worldwide.
Kept alongside
Heidelberg Catechism
Heidelberger Katechismus
Commissioned in 1563 by Elector Frederick III of the Palatinate and principally authored by Ursinus and Olevianus, the Heidelberg Catechism became the primary doctrinal and devotional formation instrument of international Calvinism, approved at the Synod of Dort in 1619. After Elector John Sigismund of Brandenburg converted to Calvinism in 1613–14, he explicitly placed the Heidelberg Catechism alongside the Augsburg Confession in the Berlin court church, making it the instrument of Reformed catechetical formation for the Hohenzollern dynasty's private faith until the Prussian Union of 1817. Its 129 questions and answers are deliberately affective as well as doctrinal, structured around comfort, guilt, and gratitude rather than abstract theology. Spanning Reformed churches across Germany, the Netherlands, Hungary, and the English-speaking world, its historical reach is genuinely ecumenical.
Belgic Confession (Confessio Belgica)
Confessio Belgica
Written by Guido de Bres, a Reformed pastor in the Low Countries under Spanish persecution, this 37-article confession was originally thrown over the wall of the Governor's palace in Tournai in 1561, addressed to Philip II pleading for tolerance of the Reformed. Adopted by successive national synods, it was revised and ratified at the Synod of Dort (1618–19) under the political patronage of Maurice of Nassau. As one of the Three Forms of Unity, all Dutch Reformed officebearers—including court chaplains who ministered to the House of Orange—were required to subscribe to it. The confession thus defined the doctrinal identity of the church that shaped Orange-Nassau piety, making it an institutional rather than a directly personal household document.
Canons of Dort (Dordtsche Leerregels)
Dordtsche Leerregels
The doctrinal canons produced at the National Synod of Dordrecht (1618–19), which Maurice of Nassau convened—following the arrest of the Arminian statesman Oldenbarnevelt—to settle the Calvinist-Arminian controversy. The canons, summarizing the five points of Calvinist soteriology, were ratified April 23, 1619, and together with the Belgic Confession and Heidelberg Catechism formed the Three Forms of Unity binding all Dutch Reformed officebearers. Maurice's political support made the Synod possible; William III was later taught predestination by tutor Cornelis Trigland—a direct follower of the Dort tradition—including the conviction that William was predestined as an instrument of Divine Providence. The canons are less a devotional manual than a judicial settlement, but their rich chapters on assurance, election, and perseverance carry genuine pastoral depth.