The neutrality of this article is disputed. Relevant discussion may be found on the talk page. Please do not remove this message until conditions to do so are met.(May 2021) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
The 1834 Dutch Reformed Church split, or the Secession of 1834 (Dutch: Afscheiding van 1834), known simply as Afscheiding ("Separation, Secession, Split"), refers to a split that occurred within the Dutch Reformed Church in 1834.[1] The federation of churches resulting from the split, the Christian Reformed Churches, still exists in the Netherlands.[2] The Free Reformed Churches are the North American counterpart.[3]
^Presbyterian Reformed Churches in America website, Chapter 49 - Hendrik De Cock: Reformed Reformer
^Christian Reformed Church of North America website, History
^Free Reformed Churches of North America website, Our History
and 27 Related for: 1834 Dutch Reformed Church split information
1886 DutchReformedChurchsplit, also known as the Doleantie (from Latin dolere, 'to feel sorrow'), was the name of a prominent schism in the Dutch Reformed...
The DutchReformedChurch (Dutch: Nederlandse Hervormde Kerk, abbreviated NHK) was the largest Christian denomination in the Netherlands from the onset...
The ReformedChurches in the Netherlands (Dutch: Gereformeerde Kerken in Nederland, abbreviated Gereformeerde kerk) was the second largest Protestant...
Calvinist. The Christian ReformedChurch (CRC) split from the ReformedChurch in America (then known as the DutchReformedChurch) in an 1857 secession....
and Reformed denominations in North America. There are more than 6 million Presbyterians in North America. Associate Reformed Presbyterian Church - around...
of the ReformedChurches (Dutch: Theologische Universiteit Kampen van de Gereformeerde Kerken) is an academic theological seminary in the Dutch city of...
(12 April 1801 – 14 November 1842) was a Dutch minister responsible for the 1834–35 DutchReformedChurchsplit due to his incarceration and suspension...
church and state, initially allowing only the DutchReformedChurch, and later also other Protestant churches in the Calvinist (specifically Afrikaner) tradition...
merged with the Netherlands ReformedChurch (in Dutch: Nederlands Hervormde Kerk, abbreviated NHK) in 2004. The Reformed Congregations was formed in 1907...
along linguistic lines. The Free University of Brussels, founded in 1834, split along linguistic lines in 1969, creating the Université libre de Bruxelles...
conservative Reformed federations like the World Reformed Fellowship and the International Conference of ReformedChurches, as well as independent churches. John...
Netherlands merged with another group split from the mainstream DutchReformedChurch to form the ReformedChurches in the Netherlands, which founded a...
Presbyterian Church in the United States, and the Communion of Reformed Evangelical Churches, which admits Continental Reformed and Reformed Baptists as...
the DutchReformedChurch. An opposition movement developed. In 1834, led by Rev. Hendrik de Cock, a group seceded from the DutchReformedChurch in what...
Helena Suzanna van Schermbeek (?-1844). His father joined the 1834DutchReformedChurchsplit, bringing him into conflict with the ruling elite. He died...
Robinson, Jeff (25 August 2016). "Meet a Reformed Arminian". The Gospel Coalition. Retrieved 16 June 2019. Reformed Arminianism's understanding of apostasy...
The Groningen Theology was a theological movement in the DutchReformedChurch of the mid-nineteenth century that sought a middle way between theological...
Batavia was DutchReformed but there were also Lutherans and Catholics. The Dutch governors constructed Reformedchurches, for Portuguese, Dutch and Malay...
Evangelical and Reformed Church, German Reformed Presbyterianism in the United States ReformedChurch in America, DutchReformed Bremer 2009, pp. 2–3. Bremer 2009...
a fifth of the colony's Dutch-speaking white population at the time participated in the Great Trek. The DutchReformedChurch, to which most of the Boers...
migration, about a fifth of the colony's Dutch-speaking white population at the time. The DutchReformedChurch, to which most of the Boers belonged, explicitly...
First DutchReformedChurch (New Amsterdam) (1633), Pearl Street in New Amsterdam—Congregation was organized in the 1620s. It was a simple timber structure...