He left Cambridge, and was offered a lecturer position at
Colchester, but
George Abbot, the
Bishop of London, went against the wishes of the local corporation, and refused to grant institution and induction. Similar rebuffs awaited him elsewhere, and he travelled with
Robert Parker to the
Netherlands, helped by English merchants who wished him to controvert the supporters of the English church in
Leiden. At
Rotterdam, he debated with Grevinchovius (
Nicholas Grevinckhoven, died 1632), minister of the
Arminian party, with reasoning from
Philippians ii. 13, "It is God that worketh in us both to will and to do." This dispute made his name in the Netherlands. Subsequently, Ames entered into a controversy in print with Grevinchovius on
universal redemption and election, and
cognate problems. He brought together all he had maintained in his
Coronis ad Collationem Hagiensem (A Finishing Touch to the Hague Conference)—his major book. At Leiden, Ames became intimate with
Hugh Goodyear, pastor of the English church there. He was sent for to
The Hague by
Sir Horatio Vere, the English governor of
Brill, who appointed him a minister in the army of the states-general, and of the English soldiers in their service. He married a daughter of
John Burges, who was Vere's chaplain, and, on his father-in-law's return to England, succeeded to his place. It was at this time he began his controversy with
Simon Episcopius, who, in attacking the
Coronis, railed against the author as having been "a disturber of the public peace in his native country, so that the English magistrates had banished him thence; and now, by his late printed
Coronis, he was raising new disturbances in the peaceable Netherlands." Episcopius was rebutted by Goodyear, who became a defender of Ames against the
Remonstrants, and later provided Nethenus with material for his biography of Ames. The
Coronis had been primarily prepared for the
Synod of Dort, which sat from 13 November 1618 until 9 May 1619. At this synod the position of Ames was anomalous. The
High Church party in England had induced Vere to dismiss him from the
chaplaincy; but he was still held in reverence. It was arranged he should attend the synod, and he was retained by the
Calvinist party at four
florins a day to watch the proceedings. He was adviser to
Johannes Bogerman, the synod's president. ==Academic==