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HELVETIC CONFESSIONS , the name of two documents expressing the See also: common belief of the reformed churches of See also: Switzerland
.
The first, known also as the Second Confession of See also: Basel, was See also: drawn up at that city in 1536 by See also: Bullinger and See also: Leo See also: Jud of Zurich, Megander of See also: Bern,See also: Oswald Myconius and Grynaeus of Basel, Bucer and Capito of Strassburg, with other representatives from Schaffhausen, St See also: Gall, Mifhlhausen and See also: Biel
.
The first draft was in Latin and the Zurich delegates objected to its Lutheran phraseology.' Leo Jud's See also: German See also: translation was, however, accepted by all, and after Myconius and Grynaeus had modified the Latin See also: form, both versions were agreed to and adopted on the 26th of See also: February 1536
.
The Second Helvetic Confession was written by Bullinger in 1562 and revised in 1564 as a private exercise
.
It came to the See also: notice of the elector palatine See also: Friedrich III., who had it translated into German and published
.
It gained a favourable hold on the Swiss churches, who had found the First Confession too See also: short and too Lutheran
.
It was adopted by the Reformed See also: Church not only throughout Switzerland but in Scotland (1566), Hungary (1567),
See also: France (1571), Poland (1578), and next to the See also: Heidelberg Catechism is the most generally recognized Confession of the Reformed Church
.
See L
.
See also: Thomas, La Confession. helvetique (
See also: Geneva, 1853) ; P
.
See also: Schaff, Creeds of Christendom, i
.
390-420, iii
.
234-306; See also: Muller, Die Bekenntnisschriften der ref ormierten Kirche (
See also: Leipzig, 1903)
.
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