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The Baptist Confession of Faith (1689)
With slight revisions by C. H. Spurgeon
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This ancient document is the most
excellent epitome of the things most surely believed among us. It is
not issued as an authoritative rule or code of faith, whereby you may
be fettered, but as a means of edification in righteousness. It is an
excellent, though not inspired, expression of the teaching of those
Holy Scriptures by which all confessions are to be measured. We hold to
the humbling truths of God's sovereign grace in the salvation of lost
sinners. Salvation is through Christ alone and by faith alone."
C. H. Spurgeon
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- The Holy
Scriptures
- God and
the Holy Trinity
- God's
Decree
- Creation
- Divine
Providence
- The Fall
of Man, Sin and Punishment
- God's
Covenant
- Christ
the Mediator
- Free Will
- Effectual
Calling
- Justification
- Adoption
- Sanctification
- Saving
Faith
- Repentance
and Salvation
- Good
Works
- The
Perseverance of the Saints
- Assurance
of Salvation
- The Law
of God
- The
Gospel and Its Influence
- Christian
Liberty and Liberty of Conscience
- Worship
and the Sabbath Day
- Lawful
Oaths and Vows
- The
Civil Magistrate
- Marriage
- The
Church
- The
Communion of Saints
- Baptism
and the Lord's Supper
- Baptism
- The
Lord's Supper
- Man's
State After Death and the Resurrection
- The
Last
Judgement
1. The Holy
Scriptures
- The Holy Scripture is the only
sufficient,
certain, and infallible rule of all saving knowledge, faith, and
obedience.
Although the light of nature and the
works
of creation and providence manifest the goodness, wisdom, and power of
God so much that man is left without any excuse, they are not
sufficient to provide that knowledge of God and His will which is
necessary for salvation.
Therefore it pleased the Lord at
sundry
times and in divers manners to reveal Himself, and to declare His will
to His church;
- and afterward, for the better
preserving
and propagating of the truth, and for the more sure establishment and
comfort of the church, protecting it against the corruption of the
flesh and the malice of Satan and the world,
- it pleased the Lord to commit His
revealed Truth wholly to writing. Therefore the Holy Scriptures are
most necessary, those former ways by which God revealed His will unto
His people having now ceased.
- Under the title of Holy Scripture (or
the
written Word of God) are now contained all the following books of the
Old and New Testament:-
OF THE OLD TESTAMENT
Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, Deuteronomy, Joshua, Judges, Ruth,
1 & 2 Samuel, 1 & 2 Kings, 1 & 2 Chronicles, Ezra,
Nehemiah, Esther, Job, Psalms, Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, Song of Solomon,
Isaiah, Jeremiah, Lamentations, Ezekiel, Daniel, Hosea, Joel, Amos,
Obadiah, Jonah, Micah, Nahum, Habakkuk, Zephaniah, Haggai, Zechariah,
Malachi.
OF THE NEW TESTAMENT
Matthew, Mark, Luke, John, Acts, Romans. 1 & 2 Corinthians,
Galatians, Ephesians, Philippians, Colossians, l & 2 Thessalonians,
1 & 2 Timothy, Titus, Philemon, Hebrews, James, 1 & 2 Peter, 1,
2 & 3 John, Jude, Revelation.
All these books are given by the
inspiration
of God to be the rule of faith and life.
- The books commonly called 'The
Apocrypha'
not being of divine inspiration, are not part of the canon or rule of
Scripture and are therefore of no authority to the church of God, nor
are they to be approved of or made use of any differently from other
human writings.
- The authority of the Holy Scripture,
for
which it ought to be believed, depends not on the testimony of any man
or church, but wholly upon God its Author (Who is Truth itself).
Therefore it is to be received because it is the Word of God.
- We may be moved and induced by the
testimony of the people of God to gain a high and reverent estimation
of the Holy Scriptures. We may be similarly affected by the nature of
the Scriptures—the heavenliness of the contents, the efficacy of the
doctrine, the majesty of the style, the consent of all the parts, the
scope of the whole, which is to give all glory to God, the full
disclosure it makes of the only way of man's salvation, together with
many other incomparable excellencies and entire perfections. By all the
evidence the Scripture more than proves itself to be the Word of God.
Yet, notwithstanding this, our full
persuasion and assurance of the infallible truth of Scripture and its
divine authority, is from the inward work of the Holy Spirit bearing
witness by and with the Word in our hearts.
- The whole counsel of God concerning
all
things necessary for His own glory, man's salvation, faith and life, is
either expressly set down or necessarily contained in the Holy
Scripture, to which nothing is to be added at any time, either by new
revelation of the Spirit, or by the traditions of men.
Nevertheless, we acknowledge the
inward
illumination of the Spirit of God to be necessary for the saving
understanding of such things as are revealed in the Word.
There are some circumstances
concerning the
worship of God and church government which are common to human actions
and societies, which are to be ordered by the light of nature and
Christian prudence, according to the general rules of the Word which
are always to be observed.
- All things in scripture are not
equally
plain in themselves, nor equally clear to everyone, yet those things
which are necessary to be known, believed and observed for salvation,
are so clearly propounded and revealed in some place of Scripture or
other, that not only the educated but also the uneducated may attain a
sufficient understanding of them by the due use of ordinary means.
- The Old Testament in Hebrew (which
was the
native language of the people of God of old), and the New Testament in
Greek (which at the time of its writing was most generally known to the
nations) were immediately inspired by God, and were kept pure through
subsequent ages by His singular care and providence. They are therefore
authentic , so that in all controversies of religion , the church must
appeal to them as final.
But because these original tongues
are not
known to all the people of God who have a right to, and an interest in
the Scriptures, and who are commanded to read and search them in the
fear of God, the Scriptures are therefore to be translated into the
ordinary language of every nation into which they come, so that, with
the Word of God living richly in all, people may worship God in an
acceptable manner, and through patience and comfort of the Scriptures
may have hope.
- The infallible rule for the
interpretation
of Scripture is the Scripture itself, and therefore whenever there is a
question about the true and full sense of any scripture (which is not
manifold, but one), it must be searched by other passages which speak
more clearly.
- The supreme judge, by which all
controversies of religion are to be determined, and by which must be
examined all decrees of councils, opinions of ancient writers, and
doctrines of men and private spirits can be no other than the Holy
Scripture, delivered by the Spirit. And in the sentence of Scripture we
are to rest, for it is in Scripture, delivered by the Spirit, that our
faith is finally resolved.
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Contents
2. God and the Holy
Trinity
- The Lord our God is the one and only
living
and true God; Whose subsistence is in and of Himself
- Who is infinite in being and
perfection;
Whose essence cannot be comprehended by any but Himself;
- Who is a most pure spirit,
invisible,
without body, parts, or passions
- Who only has immortality
- Who dwells in the light which no
man can
approach, Who is immutable, immense, eternal, incomprehensible,
almighty, in every way infinite, most holy, most wise, most free, most
absolute;
- Who works all things according to
the
counsel of His own immutable and most righteous will, for His own
glory;
- Who is most loving, gracious,
merciful,
longsuffering, and abundant in goodness and truth;
- Who forgives iniquity,
transgression, and
sin;
- Who is the rewarder of those who
diligently seek Him;
- and Who, at the same time, is most
just
and terrible in His judgements, hating all sin and Who will by no means
clear the guilty.
- God, having all life, glory,
goodness,
blessedness, in and from Himself, is unique in being all-
sufficient, both in Himself and to Himself, not standing in need of any
creature which He has made, nor deriving any glory from such.
- On the contrary, it is God Who
manifests
His own glory in them, through them, to them and upon them. He is the
only fountain of all being; from Whom, through Whom, and to Whom all
things exist and move.
- He has completely sovereign
dominion over
all creatures, to do through them, for them, or to them whatever He
pleases.
- In His sight all things are open
and
manifest; His knowledge is infinite, infallible, and not dependant on
the creature.
- Therefore, nothing is for Him
contingent
or uncertain.
- He is most holy in all His
counsels, in
all His works, and in all His commands.
- To Him is due from angels and men
whatever worship, service, or obedience, they owe as creatures to the
Creator, and whatever else He is pleased to require from them.
- In this divine and infinite Being
there are
three subsistences, the Father, the Word or Son, and the Holy Spirit.
All are one in substance, power, and eternity; each having the whole
divine essence, yet this essence being undivided.
The Father was not derived from any
other
being; He was neither brought into being by, nor did He issue from any
other being.
- The Son is eternally begotten of
the
Father.
- The Holy Spirit proceeds from the
Father
and the Son.
- All three are infinite, without
beginning, and are therefore only one God, Who is not to be divided in
nature and being, but distinguished by several peculiar relative
properties, and also their personal relations.
- This doctrine of the Trinity is the
foundation of all our communion with God, and our comfortable
dependence on Him.
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3. God's Decree
- God has decreed in Himself from all
eternity, by the most wise and holy counsel of His own will, freely and
unchangeably, all things which shall ever come to pass.
- Yet in such a way that God is
neither the
author of sin nor does He have fellowship with any in the committing of
sins, nor is violence offered to the will of the creature , nor yet is
the liberty or contingency of second causes taken away, but rather
established.
- In all this God's wisdom is
displayed,
disposing all things, and also His power and faithfulness in
accomplishing His decree.
- Although God knows everything which
may or
can come to pass under all imaginable conditions, yet He has not
decreed anything because He foresaw it in the future, or because it
would come to pass under certain conditions.
- By the decree of God, for the
manifestation
of His glory, some men and angels are predestinated or foreordained to
eternal life through Jesus Christ, to the praise of His glorious grace.
Others are left to act in their sin to their just condemnation, to the
praise of His glorious justice.
- Those angels and men thus
predestinated and
foreordained, are particularly and unchangeably designed, and the
number of them is so certain and definite, that it cannot be either
increased or diminished.
- Those of mankind who are
predestinated to
life, God chose before the foundation of the world was laid, in
accordance with His eternal and immutable purpose and the secret
counsel and good pleasure of His will. God chose them in Christ for
everlasting glory, solely out of His free grace and love, without
anything in the creature as a condition or cause moving Him to choose.
- As God has appointed the elect unto
glory,
so, by the eternal and completely free intention of His will, He has
foreordained all the means. Accordingly, those who are elected, being
fallen in Adam:
- are redeemed by Christ,
- are effectually called to faith in
Christ
by His Spirit working in due season,
- are justified, adopted, sanctified,
- and are kept by His power through
faith
unto salvation;
- neither are any but the elect
redeemed by
Christ, effectually called, justified, adopted, sanctified, and saved.
- The doctrine of this high mystery of
predestination is to be handled with special prudence and care, in
order that men who are heeding the will of God revealed in His Word,
and who are yielding obedience to it, may, from the certainty of their
effectual vocation be assured of their eternal election.
So shall this doctrine provide cause
for
praise, reverence, admiration of God, and also provide cause for
humility, diligence, and abundant consolation to all who sincerely obey
the Gospel.
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4. Creation
- In the beginning it pleased God the
Father,
Son, and Holy Spirit, for the manifestation of the glory of His eternal
power, wisdom, and goodness, to create or make the world and all things
in it both visible and invisible, in the space of six days, and all
very good.
- After God had made all other
creatures, He
created man, male and female, with reasoning and immortal souls,
rendering them fit to live that life for Him for which they were
created;
- being made in the image of God, in
knowledge, righteousness, and true holiness; having the law of God
written in their hearts, and having the power to fulfil it;
- and yet living under a possibility
of
transgressing, being left to the liberty of their own will which was
subject to change.
- Besides the law written in their
hearts,
they received a command not to eat of the tree of the knowledge of good
and evil. While they kept this command they were happy in their
communion with God, and had dominion over all other creatures.
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5. Divine Providence
- God the good Creator of all things,
in His
infinite power and wisdom, upholds, directs, disposes and governs all
creatures and things, from the greatest to the least, by His most wise
and holy providence, to the end for which they were created.
- God governs according to His
infallible
foreknowledge and the free and unchanging counsel of His own will;
- for the praise of the glory of His
wisdom, power, justice, boundless goodness, and mercy.
- Although in relation to the
foreknowledge
and decree of God, Who is the First Cause, all things come to pass
immutably and infallibly; so that nothing happens to anyone by chance,
or outside His providence, yet by His providence He orders events to
occur according to the nature of second causes, either necessarily,
freely, or contingently.
- God, in His ordinary providence makes
use
of means, yet He is free to work outside, above, and against them at
His pleasure.
- The almighty power, unsearchable
wisdom,
and infinite goodness of God so far manifest themselves in His
providence, that His determinate counsel extends even to the first
fall, and all other sinful actions of both angels and men.
- This is not merely by a bare
permission,
but by a form of permission in which He included the most wise and
powerful limitations, and other means of restricting and controlling
sin. These various limitations have been designed by God to bring about
his most holy purposes.
- Yet, in all these affairs, the
sinfulness
of both angels and men comes only from them and not from God, Who is
altogether holy and righteous, and can never be the author or approver
of sin.
- The most wise, righteous, and
gracious God
often leaves, for a time, His own children to various temptations, and
to the corruptions of their own hearts, in order to chastise them for
the sins which they have committed, or to show them the hidden strength
of corruption and deceitfulness still in their hearts, so that they may
be humbled and aroused to a more close and constant dependence upon
Himself for their support, and that they may be made more watchful
against future occasions of sin. Other just and holy objectives are
also served by such action by God.
Therefore whatever happens to any of
His
select is by His appointment, for His glory, and for their good.
- As for those wicked and ungodly men
whom
God as a righteous judge, blinds and hardens for former sin, from them
He not only withholds His grace, by which they might have been
enlightened in their understanding and affected in their hearts, but
sometimes He also withdraws the gifts which they had and exposes them
to certain objects which their corrupt state will make the occasion of
sin.
- God gives them over to their own
lusts,
the temptations of the world, and the power of Satan, so that
eventually they harden themselves under the same influences which God
uses for the softening of others.
- As the providence of God in general
reaches
to all creatures, so, in a more special manner, it takes care of His
church, and governs all things to the good of His church.
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6. The Fall of Man,
Sin
and Punishment
- Although God created man upright and
perfect, and gave him a righteous law, which secured life for him while
he kept it, and although God warned him that he would die if he broke
it, yet man did not live long in this honour.
- Satan using the subtlety of the
serpent
to subdue Eve, seduced Adam by her, and he, without any compulsion,
wilfully transgressed the law of their creation and the command given
to them by eating the forbidden fruit.
- And this act God, according to His
wise
and holy counsel, was pleased to permit, having purposed to order it to
His own glory.
- Our first parents, by this sin, fell
from
their original righteousness and communion with God, and we in them.
For from this, death came upon all: all becoming dead in sin and wholly
defiled in all the faculties and parts of soul and body.
- They being the root, and by God's
appointment, standing in the room and stead of all mankind, the guilt
of this sin was imputed, and their corrupted nature conveyed, to all
their posterity descending from them by ordinary generation. Their
descendants are therefore conceived in sin, and are by nature the
children of wrath, the servants of sin, and the subjects of death and
all other miseries, spiritual, temporal, and eternal, unless the Lord
Jesus sets them free.
- All actual transgressions proceed
from this
original corruption, by which we are utterly indisposed, disabled, and
made opposite to all good, and wholly inclined to all evil.
- During this life the corruption of
nature
remains in those who are regenerated, and although it is pardoned and
mortified through Christ, yet this corrupt nature and all its motions
are truly and properly sinful.
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7. God's Covenant
- The distance between God and the
creature
is so great, that although reasonable creatures do owe obedience to Him
as their Creator, yet they could never have attained the reward of life
except by some voluntary condescension on God's part, and this He has
been pleased to express in the form of a covenant.
- Moreover, as man had brought himself
under
the curse of the law by his fall, it pleased the Lord to make a
covenant of grace. In this covenant He freely offers to sinners life
and salvation by Jesus Christ, requiring from them faith in Him that
they may be saved, and promising to give to all who are appointed to
eternal life His Holy Spirit to make them willing and able to believe.
- This covenant is revealed through the
Gospel; first of all to Adam in the promise of salvation by the seed of
the woman, and afterwards by further steps until the full revelation of
it became complete in the New Testament. The covenant of salvation
rests upon an eternal covenant transaction between the Father and the
Son about the redemption of the elect. It is solely by the grace of
this covenant that all the descendants of fallen Adam who have ever
been saved have obtained life and blessed immortality, because man is
now utterly incapable of gaining acceptance with God on the terms by
which Adam stood in his state of innocency.
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8. Christ the
Mediator
- It pleased God, in His eternal
purpose, to
choose and ordain the Lord Jesus, His only begotten Son, in accordance
with the covenant made between them both, to be the Mediator between
God and man; to be Prophet, Priest, and King, the Head and Saviour of
His Church, the Heir of all things, and the Judge of all the world. To
the Lord Jesus He gave, from all eternity, a people to be His seed.
These, in time, would be redeemed, called, justified, sanctified, and
glorified by the Lord Jesus.
- The Son of God, the second person in
the
Holy Trinity, being true and eternal God, the brightness of the
Father's glory, of the same substance and equal with Him;
- Who made the world, and Who upholds
and
governs all things which He has made,
- did, when the fullness of time had
come,
take upon Himself man's nature, with all its essential properties and
common infirmities, with the exception of sin.
- He was conceived by the Holy Spirit
in
the womb of the Virgin Mary, the Holy Spirit coming down upon her and
the power of the Most High overshadowing her, so that He was born to a
woman from the tribe of Judah, a descendant of Abraham and David, in
accordance with the Scriptures.
- Thus two whole, perfect and
distinct
natures were inseparably joined together in one person, without
conversion, composition, or confusion;
- So that the Lord Jesus Christ is
truly
God and truly man, yet He is one Christ, the only Mediator between God
and man.
- The Lord Jesus, His human nature thus
united to the divine, once in the person of the Son, was sanctified and
anointed with the Holy Spirit above measure, having in Himself all the
treasures of wisdom and knowledge. It pleased the Father that all
fullness should dwell in Him so that, being holy, harmless, undefiled,
and full of grace and truth, He might be thoroughly furnished to
execute the office of a Mediator and Surety, a position and duty which
He did not take upon Himself, but was called to perform by His Father.
And the Father also put all power and judgement in His hand, and gave
Him commandment to exercise the same.
- This office and duty of Mediator and
Surety
the Lord Jesus undertook most willingly. To discharge it, He was made
under the law, and perfectly fulfilled it, and He underwent the
punishment due to us, which we should have borne and suffered. He was
made sin and was made a curse for us; enduring the most grevous sorrows
in His Soul with the most painful sufferings in His duty. He was
crucified, and died, and remained in the state of the dead, but His
body did not undergo any decomposition. On the third day He rose from
the dead with the same body in which He had suffered, with which He
also ascended into Heaven, and there sits at the right hand of His
Father making intercession, and shall return to judge men and angels at
the end of the world.
- The Lord Jesus, by His perfect
obedience
and sacrifice of Himself which He, through the eternal Spirit, once
offered up to God, has fully satisfied the justice of God, has procured
reconciliation, and has purchased an everlasting inheritance in the
kingdom of Heaven for all those whom the Father has given to Him.
- Although the price of redemption was
not
actually paid by Christ until after His incarnation yet the virtue,
efficacy, and benefit arising from His payment were communicated to the
elect in all ages from the beginning of the world through those
promises, types, and sacrifices in which He was revealed and signified
as the seed which should bruise the serpent's head, and also the Lamb
slain from the foundation of the world, for He is the same yesterday,
and today, and forever.
- Christ, in His work of Mediator, acts
according to both natures, each nature doing that which is proper to
itself. Yet, because of the unity of His person, that which is proper
to one nature is sometimes in Scripture attributed to the person
denominated by the other nature.
- To all those for whom Christ has
obtained
eternal redemption, He certainly and effectually applies and
communicates this redemption, making intercession for them, uniting
them to Himself by His Spirit, revealing to them in the Word and by the
Word the mystery of salvation. He persuades them to believe and obey,
governing their hearts by His Word and Spirit, and overcome all their
enemies by His almighty power and wisdom. This is achieved in such a
manner and by such ways as are most consonant to His wonderful and
unsearchable dispensation, and it is all by free and absolute grace,
without any condition foreseen in them to procure it.
- This office of Mediator between God
and man
is proper only to Christ, Who is the Prophet, Priest, and King of the
Church. Free Will of God, and this office may not be transferred from
Him to any other, either in whole or in part.
- This number and order of offices is
essential. Because of our ignorance we need His prophetic office.
Because of our alienation from God and the imperfection of the best of
our service, we need His priestly office to reconcile us and present us
to God as acceptable. Because of our aversion to, and utter inability
to return to God, and for our rescue and keeping from spiritual
enemies, we need His kingly office to convince, subdue, draw, uphold,
deliver, and preserve us until we reach His heavenly kingdom.
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9. Free Will
- God has indued the will of man, by
nature,
with liberty and the power to choose and to act upon his choice. This
free will is neither forced, nor destined by any necessity of nature to
do good or evil.
- Man, in his state of innocency, had
freedom
and power to will and to do that which was good and well-pleasing to
God, but he was unstable, so that he might fall from this condition.
- Man, by his fall into a state of sin,
has
completely lost all ability of will to perform any of the spiritual
good which accompanies salvation. As a natural man, he is altogether
averse to spiritual good, and dead in sin. He is not able by his own
strength to convert himself, or to prepare himself for conversion.
- When God converts a sinner, and
translates
him into a state of grace, He frees him from his natural bondage to
sin, and by grace alone He enables him freely to will and to do that
which is spiritually good. But because of his remaining corruptions he
does not only (or perfectly) will that which is good, but also wills
that which is evil.
- The will of man will only be made
perfectly
and immutably free to will good alone in the state of glory.
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10. Effectual
Calling
- Those whom God has predestinated to
life,
He is pleased in His appointed and accepted time to effectually call by
His Word and Spirit, out of that state of sin and death which they are
in by nature, to grace and salvation by Jesus Christ. He enlightens
their minds spiritually and savingly to understand the things of God.
He takes away their heart of stone and gives to them a heart of flesh.
He renews their wills, and by His almighty power, causes them to desire
and pursue that which is good. He effectually draws them to Jesus
Christ, yet in such a way that they come absolutely freely, being made
willing by His grace.
- This effectual call is of God's free
and
special grace alone, not on account of anything at all foreseen in man.
It is not made because of any power or agency in the creature who is
wholly passive in the matter. Man is dead in sins and trespasses until
quickened and renewed by the Holy Spirit. By this he is enabled to
answer the call, and to embrace the grace offered and conveyed by it.
This enabling power is no less power than that which raised up Christ
from the dead.
- Infants dying in infancy are
regenerated
and saved by Christ through the Spirit, Who works when, where, and how
He pleases. So also are all elect persons who are incapable of being
outwardly called by the ministry of the Word.
- Others are not elected, although they
may
be called by the ministry of the Word, and may experience some common
operations of the Spirit, yet because they are not effectually drawn by
the Father, they will not and cannot truly come to Christ and therefore
cannot be saved. Much less can men who do not embrace the Christian
religion be saved, however diligent they may be to frame their lives
according to the light of nature and the requirements of the religion
they profess.
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11. Justification
- Those whom God effectually calls He
also
freely justifies, not by infusing righteousness into them, but by
pardoning their sins, and by accounting and accepting them as
righteous, not for anything wrought in them, or done by them, but for
Christ's sake alone. They are not justified because God reckons as
their righteousness either their faith, their believing, or any other
act of evangelical obedience. They are justified wholly and solely
because God imputes to them Christ's righteousness. He imputes to them
Christ's active obedience to the whole law and His passive obedience in
death. They receive Christ's righteousness by faith, and rest on Him.
They do not possess or produce this faith themselves, it is the gift of
God.
- Faith which receives Christ's
righteousness
and depends on Him is the sole instrument of justification, yet this
faith is not alone in the person justified, but is always accompanied
by all the other saving graces. And it is not a dead faith, but works
by love.
- Christ, by His obedience and death,
fully
discharged the debt of all those who are justified, and by the
sacrifice of himself through the blood of His cross, underwent instead
of them the penalty due to them, so making a proper, real, and full
satisfaction to God's justice on their behalf. Yet because He was given
by the Father for them, and because His obedience and satisfaction was
accepted instead of theirs (and both freely, not because of anything in
them), therefore they are justified entirely and solely by free grace,
so that both the exact justice and the rich grace of God might be
glorified in the justification of sinners.
- From all eternity God decreed to
justify
all the elect, and Christ, in the fullness of time, died for their
sins, and rose again for their justification. Nevertheless, they are
not personally justified until the Holy Spirit, in due time, actually
applies Christ to them.
- God continues to forgive the sins of
those
who are justified, and although they can never fall from the state of
justification, yet they may because of their sins, fall under God's
fatherly displeasure. In that condition they will not usually have the
light of God's countenance restored to them until they humble
themselves, confess their sins, ask for pardon, and renew their faith
and repentance.
- The justification of believers during
the
Old Testament period was in all these respects exactly the same as the
justification of New Testament believers.
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12. Adoption
- God has vouchsafed, that in Christ,
His
only Son, and for His sake, all those who are justified shall be made
partakers of the grace of adoption, by which they are taken into the
number of the children of God and enjoy their liberties and privileges.
They have His name put upon them, and receive the Spirit of adoption.
They have access to the throne of grace with boldness, and are enabled
to cry, 'Abba, Father!' They are pitied, protected, provided for, and
chastened by Him as by a father, yet they are never cast off, but are
sealed to the day of redemption, when they inherit the promises as
heirs of everlasting salvation.
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13. Sanctification
- Those who are united to Christ,
effectually
called, and regenerated, having had a new heart and a new spirit
created in them through the virtue of Christ's death and resurrection,
are then further sanctified in a very real and personal way. Because of
the virtue of Christ's death and resurrection. and by His Word and
Spirit dwelling in them, the dominion of the whole body of sin is
destroyed. The different lusts of the body of sin are increasingly
weakened and mortified, and Christ's people are increasingly quickened
and strengthened in all saving graces, to practise all true holiness,
without which no man shall see the Lord.
- This sanctification extends
throughout the
whole person, yet it remains imperfect in this life. Some remnants of
corruption live on in every part, and from this arises a continuous war
between irreconcilable parties - the flesh lusting against the Spirit,
and the Spirit against the flesh.
- In this war, although the remaining
corruption for a time may greatly prevail, yet through the continual
supply of strength from the sanctifying Spirit of Christ, the
regenerate part overcomes. And so the saints grow in grace perfecting
holiness in the fear of God; pressing after a heavenly life in
evangelical obedience to all the commands which Christ as Head and
King, in His Word, has prescribed to them.
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14. Saving Faith
- The grace of faith by which the elect
are
enabled to believe, so that their souls are saved, is the work of the
Spirit of Christ in their hearts, and is ordinarily brought into being
by the ministry of the Word. It is also increased and strengthened by
the work of the Spirit through the ministry of the Word, and also by
the administration of baptism and the Lord's Supper, prayer, and other
means appointed by God.
- By this faith a Christian believes to
be
true whatever is revealed in the Word because this Word has the
authority of God Himself. Also, by this saving faith, a Christian
apprehends an excellency in the Word which is higher than in all other
writings and everything else in the world, because the Word shows forth
the glory of God, revealing His attributes, showing the excellency of
Christ's nature and offices, and also the power and fullness of the
Holy Spirit in His workings and operations. - So the Christian is
enabled to cast his soul upon the Truth he has believed, and to see and
respond to the different kinds of teaching which different passages of
Scripture contain. Saving faith equips him to perceive and obey the
commands, hear the threatenings with fear and respect, and to embrace
the promises of God for this life and the life to come. - But the first
and most important acts of saving faith are those directly to do with
Christ, when the soul accepts, receives, and rests upon Him alone for
justification, sanctification and eternal life, by virtue of the
covenant of grace.
- This faith, although it differs in
degree,
and may be weak or strong, even at its very weakest is in an entirely
different class and has a different nature (like other aspects of
saving grace) from the kind of faith and common grace which is
possessed by temporary believers. Therefore, though it may be
frequently assailed and weakened, it gets the victory, growing up in
many to the attainment of a full assurance through Christ, Who is both
the author and finisher of our faith.
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15. Repentance and
Salvation
- Those of the elect who are converted
in
riper years, having lived some time in the state of nature, and in this
state served various lusts and pleasures, God gives repentance which
leads to life, through an effectual call.
- Because there is not one person who
does
good and commits no sin, and because the best of men may fall into
great sins and provocations through the power and deceitfulness of
their own indwelling corruption and the prevalency of temptation, God
has mercifully provided in the covenant of grace that when believers
sin and fall they shall be renewed through repentance to salvation.
- Saving repentance is an evangelical
grace
by which a person who is made to feel, by the Holy Spirit, the manifold
evils of his sin, and being given faith in Christ, humbles himself over
his sin with godly sorrow, detestation of his sin and self-abhorrency.
In such repentance the person also prays for pardon and strength of
grace, and has a purpose and endeavour, by supplies of the Spirit's
power, to walk before God and to totally please Him in all things.
- As repentance is to be continued
through
the whole course of our lives, on account of the body of death, and the
motions of it, it is therefore every man's duty to repent of his
particular known sins particularly.
- Such is the provision which God has
made
through Christ in the covenant of grace for the preservation of
believers in the way of salvation, that although even the smallest sin
deserves damnation, yet there is no sin great enough to bring damnation
on those who repent. This makes the constant preaching of repentance
necessary.
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16. Good Works
- Good works are only those works which
God
has commanded in His Holy Word. Works which do not have the warrant of
Scripture, and are devised by men out of blind zeal, or upon any
pretence of good intentions are not good works.
- Good works, performed in obedience to
God's
commandments, are these: the fruits and evidences of a true and living
faith. By these believers express and show their thankfulness,
strengthen their assurance, edify their brethren, adorn the profession
of the Gospel, stop the mouths of the adversaries, and glorify God,
Whose workmanship they are; created in Christ Jesus to perform good
works, and to have fruits of holiness which lead to eternal life.
- Their ability to do these good works
does
not in any way come from themselves, but comes wholly from the Spirit
of Christ. To enable them to do good works, alongside the graces which
they have already received, it is necessary for there to be a further
real influence of the same Holy Spirit to cause them to will and to do
of His good pleasure. But believers are not, on these grounds, to grow
negligent, as if they were not bound to perform any duty unless given a
special motion by the Spirit, but they must be diligent in stirring up
the grace of God that is in them.
- Those who attain the greatest height
which
is possible in this life in their obedience to God, are still so far
from being able to supererogate, and to do more than God requires, that
they fall short of much which they are bound to do in their duty to
God.
- We cannot by our best works merit
pardon of
sin or eternal life from the hand of God because of the great
disproportion between our best works and the glory to come, and because
of the infinite distance which is between us and God. With our works we
cannot profit or satisfy God concerning the debt we owe on account of
our sins. When we have done all we can, we have only done our duty, and
are still unprofitable servants. And in any case, in so far as our
works are good they originate from the work of the Holy Spirit. Even
then, the good works are so defiled by us, and so mixed with weakness
and imperfection, that they could not survive the severity of God's
judgement.
- Yet, quite apart from the fact that
believers are accepted through Christ as individual souls, their good
works are also accepted through Christ. It is not as though the
believers are (in this life) wholly unblameable and unreprovable in
God's sight, but because He looks upon them in His Son, and is pleased
to accept and reward that which is sincere, although it is accompanied
with many weaknesses and imperfections.
- Works performed by unregenerate men,
although they may in essence be things which God commands, and they may
be good and beneficial both to themselves and others, yet because they
do not proceed from a heart purified by faith, and are not done in a
right manner according to the Word, and because it is not their
underlying purpose to bring glory to God, therefore they are sinful,
and cannot please God, nor can they make a man fit to receive grace
from God. And yet, for unregenerate men to neglect such works is even
more sinful and displeasing to God.
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17. The
Perseverance of
the Saints
- Those whom God has accepted in the
beloved,
and has effectually called and sanctified by His Spirit, and given the
precious faith of His elect, can neither totally nor finally fall from
the state of grace, but they will certainly persevere in that state to
the end and be eternally saved. This is because the gifts and calling
of God are without repentance, and therefore He continues to beget and
nourish in them faith, repentance, love, joy, hope, and all the graces
of the spirit which lead to immortality. And though many storms and
floods arise and beat against the saints, yet these things shall never
be able to sweep them off the foundation and rock which they are
fastened upon by faith. Even though, through unbelief and the
temptations of Satan, the sight and feeling of the light and love of
God may for a time be clouded and obscured from them, yet God is still
the same, and they are sure to be kept by His power until their
salvation is complete, when they shall enjoy the purchased possession
which is theirs, for they are engraved upon the palm of His hands, and
their names have been written in His Book of Life from all eternity.
- This perseverance of the saints does
not
depend on them - that is, on their own free will. It rests upon the
immutability of the decree of election, which flows from the free and
unchangeable love of God the Father. It also rests upon the efficacy of
the merit and intercession of Jesus Christ, and upon the union which
true saints have with Him. - It rests upon the oath of God, and upon
the abiding of His Spirit.
- It depends upon the seed of God
being
within them and upon the very nature of the covenant of grace.
- All these factors give rise to the
certainty and infallibility of the security and perseverance of the
saints.
- The saints may, through the
temptation of
Satan and the world, and because their remaining sinful tendencies
prevail over them, and through their neglect of the means which God has
provided to keep them, fall into grievous sins. They may continue in
this state for some time, so that they incur God's displeasure, grieve
His Holy Spirit, suffer the impairment of their graces and comforts,
have their hearts hardened and their conscience wounded, and hurt and
scandalise others. By this they will bring temporal judgements upon
themselves. Yet they shall renew their repentance and be preserved,
through faith in Christ Jesus, to the end.
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18. Assurance of
Salvation
- Although temporary believers, and
other
unregenerate men, may vainly deceive themselves with false hopes and
carnal presumptions that they are in the favour of God and in a state
of salvation, such a hope on their part will perish. Yet those who
truly believe in the Lord Jesus, and love Him in sincerity, and who
endeavour to walk in all good conscience before Him, may be certainly
assured in this life that they are in the state of grace, and may
rejoice in the hope of the glory of God. And such a hope shall never
make them ashamed.
- This assurance is not merely a
conjectural
persuasion nor even a probable persuasion based upon a fallible hope.
It is an infallible assurance of faith founded on the blood and
righteousness of Christ revealed in the Gospel. It is also founded upon
the inward evidence of those graces of the Spirit in connection with
definite promises made in the Scriptures, and also on the testimony of
the Spirit of adoption who witnesses with our spirits that we are the
children of God, and who uses the experience of assurance to keep our
hearts both humble and holy.
- This infallible assurance is not so
joined
to the essence of faith that it is an automatic and inevitable
experience. A true believer may wait long and fight with many
difficulties before he becomes a partaker of it. Yet, being enabled by
the spirit to know the things which are freely given to him by God, he
may, without any extraordinary revelation attain this assurance by
using the means of grace in the right way. Therefore it is the duty of
every one to give the utmost diligence to make his calling and election
sure, so that his heart may be enlarged in peace and joy in the Holy
Spirit, in love and thankfulness to God, and in strength and
cheerfulness for carrying out the duties of obedience. These duties are
the natural fruits of assurance, for it is far from inclining men to
slackness.
- True believers may have the assurance
of
their salvation in various ways shaken, diminished, or intermitted.
This may be because of their negligence in preserving it, or by their
falling into some special sin which wounds the conscience and grieves
the Spirit, or by some sudden or forceful temptation, or by God's
withdrawing the light of His countenance, and causing even those who
fear Him to walk in darkness and to have no light. Yet, believers are
never left without the seed of God and life of faith, that love of
Christ and the brethren that sincerity of heart and that conscience
about their spiritual duty. Out of these things, by the operation of
the Spirit, their assurance can in due time be revived, and in the
meantime the presence of these graces preserves them from utter
despair.
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19. The Law of God
- God gave to Adam a law of universal
obedience which was written in his heart, and He gave him very specific
instruction about not eating the fruit of the tree of knowledge of good
and evil. By this Adam and all his descendants were bound to personal,
total, exact, and perpetual obedience, being promised life upon the
fulfilling of the law, and threatened with death upon the breach of it.
At the same time Adam was endued with power and ability to keep it.
- The same law that was first written
in the
heart of man continued to be a perfect rule of righteousness after the
Fall, and was delivered by God upon Mount Sinai in the ten
commandments, and written in two tables, the first four containing our
duty towards God, and the other six, our duty to man.
- Besides this law, commonly called the
moral
law, God was pleased do give the people of Israel ceremonial laws
containing several typical ordinances. These ordinances were partly
about their worship, and in them Christ was prefigured along with His
attributes and qualities, His actions, His sufferings and His benefits.
These ordinances also gave instructions about different moral duties.
All of these ceremonial laws were appointed only until the time of
reformation, when Jesus Christ the true Messiah and the only lawgiver,
Who was furnished with power from the Father for this end, cancelled
them and took them away.
- To the people of Israel He also gave
sundry
judicial laws which expired when they ceased to be a nation. These are
not binding on anyone now by virtue of their being part of the laws of
that nation, but their general equity continue to be applicable in
modern times.
- The moral law ever binds to obedience
everyone, justified people as well as others, and not only out of
regard for the matter contained in it, but also out of respect for the
authority of God the Creator, Who gave the law. Nor does Christ in the
Gospel dissolve this law in any way, but He considerably strengthens
our obligation to obey it.
- Although true believers are not under
the
law as a covenant of works, to be justified or condemned by it, yet it
is of great use to them as well as to others, because as a rule of life
it informs them of the will of God and their duty and directs and binds
them to walk accordingly. It also reveals and exposes the sinful
pollutions of their natures, hearts and lives, and using it for
self-examination they may come to greater conviction of sin, greater
humility and greater hatred of their sin. They will also gain a clearer
sight of their need of Christ and the perfection of His own obedience.
It is of further use to regenerate people to restrain their
corruptions, because of the way in which it forbids sin. The
threatenings of the law serve to show what their sins actually deserve,
and what troubles may be expected in this life because of these sins
even by regenerate people who are freed from the curse and undiminished
rigours of the law. The promises connected with the law also show
believers God's approval of obedience, and what blessings they may
expect when the law is kept and obeyed, though blessing will not come
to them because they have satisfied the law as a covenant of works. If
a man does good and refrains from evil simply because the law
encourages to the good and deters him from the evil, that is no
evidence that he is under the law rather than under grace.
- The aforementioned uses of the law
are not
contrary to the grace of the Gospel, but they sweetly comply with it,
as the Spirit of Christ subdues and enables the will of man to do
freely and cheerfully those things which the will of God, which is
revealed in the law, requires to be done.
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20. The Gospel and
Its
Influence
- The covenant of works being broken by
sin,
and made unprofitable for life, God was pleased to promise Christ, the
seed of the woman, as the means of calling the elect and bringing to
life within them faith and repentance. In this promise the substance of
the Gospel was revealed and shown to be the effectual for the
conversion and salvation of sinners.
- This promise of Christ and the
salvation
which comes by Him, is revealed only by the Word of God. The works of
creation and providence with the light of nature do not reveal Christ
or His grace even in a general or obscure way. How much less,
therefore, can those who are devoid of the revelation of Christ by the
promise (or the Gospel) be enabled by the light of nature to arrive at
saving faith or repentance.
- The revelation of the Gospel unto
sinners,
made in divers times and by sundry parts, with the addition of promises
and precepts for the obedience required therein, as to the nations and
persons to whom it is granted, is merely of the sovereign will and good
pleasure of God, not being annexed by virtue of any promise to the due
improvement of men's natural abilities, by virtue of common light
received without it, which none ever did make, or can do so; and
therefore in all ages, the preaching of the Gospel has been granted
unto persons and nations, as to the extent or straitening of it, in
great variety, according to the counsel of the will of God.
- Although the Gospel is the only
outward
means of revealing Christ and saving grace, and as such is totally
sufficient to accomplish this, yet more is necessary if men who are
dead in trespasses are to be born again, brought to life or
regenerated. It is necessary for there to be an effectual, insuperable
work of the Holy Spirit upon the whole soul to produce in them a new
spiritual life. Without this no other means will bring about their
conversion to God.
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21. Christian
Liberty and
Liberty of Conscience
- The liberty which Christ has
purchased for
believers under the Gospel, lies in their freedom from the guilt of sin
and the condemning wrath of God, from the rigours and curse of the law,
and in their deliverance from this present evil world, from bondage to
Satan, from dominion of sin, from the harm of afflictions, from the
fear and sting of death, from the victory of the grave, and from
everlasting damnation. - This liberty is also seen in their free access
to God, and their ability to yield obedience to Him not out of slavish
fear, but with childlike love and willing minds. All these freedoms
were also experienced in substance by true believers under the Old
Testament law, but for New Testament Christians this liberty is further
enlarged, for they have freedom from the yoke of the ceremonial law to
which the Jewish church was subjected. They also have greater boldness
of access to the throne of grace and fuller communications of the free
Spirit of God than believers under the law normally experienced.
- God alone is Lord of the conscience,
and
has left it free from all doctrines and commandments of men which are
in any respect contrary to His Word, or not contained in it. Thus to
believe such doctrines or to obey such commands out of conscience, is
to betray true liberty of conscience. The requiring of an implicit
faith, an absolute and blind obedience, is to destroy liberty of
conscience and reason also.
- They who on pretence of Christian
liberty
practice any sin, or cherish any sinful lust, pervert the main purpose
of the grace of the Gospel to their own destruction. They completely
destroy the object of Christian liberty, which is that we, being
delivered out of the hands of all our enemies, might serve the Lord
without fear, in holiness and righteousness before Him, all the days of
our lives.
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22. Worship and the
Sabbath Day
- The light of nature shows that there
is a
God Who has lordship and sovereignty over all, is just and good, and
Who does good to all. Therefore He is to be feared, loved, praised,
called upon, trusted in, and served, with all the heart and all the
soul, and with all the might. But the acceptable way of worshipping the
true God has been instituted by Himself, and therefore our method of
worship is limited by His own revealed will. He may not be worshipped
according to the imagination and devices of men, nor the suggestions of
Satan. He may not be worshipped by way of visible representations, or
by any other way not prescribed in the Holy Scriptures.
- Worship is to be given to God the
Father,
Son, and Holy Spirit, and to Him alone; not to angels, saints, or any
other creatures. And since the Fall, worship is not to be given without
a mediator, nor by any other mediation than that of Christ.
- Prayer, with thanksgiving, is one
part of
natural worship, and this God requires of all men. But to be accepted
it must be made in the name of the Son, by the help of the Spirit, and
according to His will. It must be made with understanding, reverence,
humility, fervency, faith, love, and perseverance; and corporate prayer
must be made in a known language.
- Prayer is to be made for lawful
things, and
for all kinds of people who are alive now or who shall live in the
future, but not for the dead, nor for those who are known to have
sinned the 'sin leading to death'.
- The reading of the Scriptures,
preaching
and hearing the Word of God, the teaching and admonishing of one
another in psalms, hymns, and spiritual songs, singing with grace in
our hearts to the Lord; as well as the administration of baptism and
the Lord's Supper, are all parts of the worship of God. These are to be
performed in obedience to Him, with understanding, faith, reverence and
godly fear. Also to be used in a holy and reverent manner on special
occasions are times of solemn humiliation, fastings, and thanksgivings.
- Under the Gospel neither prayer nor
any
other part of religious worship is tied to, or made more acceptable by,
any place in which it is performed or towards which it is directed. God
is to be worshipped everywhere in spirit and in truth, whether in
private families daily, in secret by each individual, or solemnly in
the public assemblies. These are not to be carelessly or wilfully
neglected or forsaken, when God by His Word and providence calls us to
them.
- As it is the law of nature that in
general
a proportion of time, by God's appointment, should be set apart for the
worship of God, so He has given in His Word a positive, moral and
perpetual commandment, binding upon all men, in all ages to this
effect. He has particularly appointed one day in seven for a Sabbath to
be kept holy for Him. From the beginning of the world to the
resurrection of Christ this was the last day of the week, and from the
resurrection of Christ it was changed to the first day of the week and
called the Lord's Day. This is to be continued until the end of the
world as the Christian Sabbath, the observation of the last day of the
week having been abolished.
- The Sabbath is kept holy to the Lord
by
those who, after the necessary preparation of their hearts and prior
arranging of their common affairs, observe all day a holy rest from
their own works, words and thoughts about their worldly employment and
recreations, and give themselves over to the public and private acts of
worship for the whole time, and to carrying out duties of necessity and
mercy.
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23. Lawful Oaths
and Vows
- A lawful oath is an act of religious
worship, in which the person swearing in truth, righteousness, and
judgement, solemnly calls God to witness what he swears, and to judge
him according to the truth or falsity of it.
- Only by the name of God can a
righteous
oath be sworn, and only if it is used with the utmost fear of God and
reverence. Therefore, to swear vainly or rashly by the glorious and
awesome name of God, or to swear by any other name or thing, is sinful,
and to be regarded with disgust and detestation. But in matters of
weight and moment, for the confirmation of truth, and for the ending of
strife, an oath is sanctioned by the Word of God. Therefore a lawful
oath being imposed by a lawful authority can rightly be taken in such
circumstances.
- Whoever takes an oath sanctioned by
the
Word of God is bound to consider the weightiness of so solemn an act,
and affirm or confess to nothing except that which he knows to be true.
For by rash, false, and vain oaths, the Lord is provoked and because of
them this land mourns.
- An oath is to be taken in the plain
and
common sense of the words. without equivocation or mental reservation.
- A vow, which is not to be made to any
creature but to God alone, is to be made and performed with all the
utmost care and faithfulness. But monastical vows (as in the Church of
Rome) of a perpetual single life, professed poverty, and regular
obedience, so far from being degrees of higher perfection, are
superstitious and sinful snares, in which no Christian may entangle
himself.
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24. The Civil
Magistrate
- God, the supreme Lord and King of all
the
world, has ordained civil magistrates to be under Him, over the people,
for His own glory and the public good. For this purpose He has armed
them with the power of the sword, agement of those that do good, and
for the punishment of evil-doers.
- It is lawful for Christians to accept
and
carry out the duties of a magistrate when called upon. In the
performance of such office they are particularly responsible for
maintaining justice and peace by application of the right and
beneficial laws of the nation. Also, to maintain justice and peace,
they may lawfully (under the New Testament) engage in war if it is just
and essential.
- Because civil magistrates are
established
by God for the purposes previously defined, we ought to be subject to
all their lawful commands as part of our obedience to God, not only to
avoid punishment, but for conscience sake. We ought also to make
supplications and prayers for rulers and all that are in authority,
that under them we may live a quiet and peaceable life, in all
godliness and honesty.
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25. Marriage
- Marriage is to be between one man and
one
woman. It is not lawful for any man to have more than one wife, nor for
any woman to have more than one husband, at the same time.
- Marriage was ordained for the mutual
help
of husband and wife, for the increase of mankind with a legitimate
issue, and for preventing uncleanness.
- It is lawful for all sorts of people
to
marry if they are able with judgement to give their consent. But it is
the duty of Christians to marry in the Lord, and therefore those who
profess the true religion should not marry with infidels or idolaters.
Nor should those who are godly be unequally yoked by marrying with
those who are wicked in their life or who maintain heretical teaching
condemned to judgement.
- Marriage ought not to be within the
degrees
of consanguinity or affinity forbidden in the Word, nor can such
incestuous marriages ever be made lawful by any law of man or consent
of parties so that such persons may live together as man and wife.
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26. The Church
- The universal Church, which may be
called
invisible (in respect of the internal work of the Spirit and truth of
grace) consists of the entire number of the elect, all those who have
been, who are, or who shall be gathered into one under Christ, Who is
the Head. This universal Church is the wife, the body, the fullness of
Him Who fills all in all.
- All people throughout the world who
profess
the faith of the Gospel and obedience to Christ on its terms, and who
do not destroy their profession by any errors which contradict or
overthrow Gospel fundamentals, or by unholy behaviour, are visible
saints and may be regarded as such. All individual congregations ought
to be constituted of such people.
- The purest churches under Heaven are
subject to mixture and error, and some have degenerated so much that
they have ceased to be churches of Christ and have become synagogues of
Satan. Nevertheless Christ always has had, and always will (to the end
of time) have a kingdom in this world, made up of those who believe in
Him, and make profession of His name.
- The Lord Jesus Christ is the Head of
the
Church. In Him, by the appointment of the Father, is vested in a
supreme and sovereign manner all power for the calling, institution,
order, or government of the Church. The Pope of Rome cannot in any
sense be head of the Church, but he is that antichrist, that man of
sin, and son of perdition, who exalts himself in the church against
Christ and all that is called God, who the Lord shall destroy with the
brightness of His coming.
- In the exercise of the authority
which has
been entrusted to Him, the Lord Jesus calls to Himself from out of the
world, through the ministry of His Word, by His Spirit, those who are
given to Him by His Father, so that they may walk before Him in all the
ways of obedience which He prescribes to them in His Word. Those who
are thus called, He commands to walk together in particular societies
or churches, for their mutual edification, and for the due performance
of that public worship, which He requires of them in the world.
- The members of these churches are
saints
because they have been called by Christ, and because they visibly
manifest and give evidence of their obedience to that call by their
profession and walk. Such saints willingly consent to walk together
according to the appointment of Christ, giving themselves up to the
Lord and to one another, according to God's will, in avowed subjection
to the ordinances of the Gospel.
- To each of these churches thus
gathered,
according to the Lord's mind as declared in His Word, He has given all
the power and authority which is in any way required for them to carry
on the order of worship and discipline which He has instituted for them
to observe. He has also given all the commands and rules for the due
and right exercise of this power.
- A particular church gathered and
completely
organised according to the mind of Christ, consists of officers and
members. The officers appointed by Christ to be chosen and set apart by
the church are bishops or elders and deacons. These are to be appointed
for the peculiar administration of ordinances and the execution of
power or duty with which the Lord has entrusted them and to which He
has called them. This pattern of church order is to be continued to the
end of the world.
- The way appointed by Christ for the
calling
of any person fitted and gifted by the Holy Spirit for the office of
bishop or elder in a church, is that he is to be chosen by the common
consent and vote of the church itself. Such a person should be solemnly
set apart by fasting and prayer, with the laying on of hands of the
eldership of the church (if there be any previously appoint elder or
elders). The way of Christ for the calling of a deacon is that he is
also to be chosen by the common consent and vote of the church and set
apart by prayer, with the laying on of hands.
- Because the work of pastors is to
apply
themselves constantly to the service of Christ in His churches by the
ministry of the Word and prayer, and by watching for their souls as
they that must give an account to Him, the churches to which they
minister have a pressing obligation to give them not only all due
respect, but also to impart to them a share of all their good things,
according to their ability. This must be so done that the pastors may
have a comfortable supply and that they may not have to be entangled in
secular affairs, and may also be able to exercise hospitality towards
others. All this is required by the law of nature and by the express
command of our Lord Jesus, Who has ordained that they that preach the
Gospel should live by the Gospel.
- Although an obligation lies on the
elders
or pastors of the churches to be urgently preaching the Word by virtue
of their office, yet the work of preaching the Word is not exclusively
confined to them. Therefore others who are also gifted and qualified by
the Holy Spirit for the task, and who are approved and called by the
church, may and ought to perform it.
- All believers are bound to join
themselves
to particular churches when and where they have opportunity so to do,
and all who are admitted into the privileges of a church, are also
under the censures and government of that church, in accordance with
the rule of Christ.
- No church members, because of any
offence
which has been given them by a fellow member, once they have performed
their prescribed duty towards the person who has caused the offence,
may disturb church order in anyway, or be absent from the meetings of
the church or the administration of any ordinances on account of any
such offence. On the contrary, they are to wait upon Christ in the
further proceedings of the church.
- Each church and all its members are
obligated to pray constantly for the good and prosperity of all
Christ's churches everywhere, and to help forward everyone who comes
into their district or calling, by the exercise of their gifts and
graces. It clearly follows that when churches are planted by the
goodness of God they ought also to hold fellowship among themselves to
promote peace, increasing love and mutual edification as and when they
enjoy an opportunity to do so to their advantage.
- In cases of difficulties or
differences,
either in matters of doctrine or administration, which concern the
churches in general or any single church, and which affects their
peace, union, and edification, or when any members of a church are
injured because of any disciplinary proceedings not consistent with the
Word and correct order, it is according to the mind of Christ, that
many churches holding communion together do, through their appointed
messengers meet to consider, and give their advice about the matter in
dispute, and to report to all the churches concerned. However, when
these messengers are assembled, they are not entrusted with any real
church power, or with any jurisdiction over the churches involved in
the problem. They cannot exercise any censure over any churches or
persons, or impose their determination on the churches or their
officers.
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27. The Communion
of
Saints
- All saints who are united to Jesus
Christ,
their Head, by His Spirit, and by faith, although they are not by this
made one person with Him, have fellowship in His graces, sufferings,
death, resurrection, and glory. Also, being united to one another in
love, they have communion in each other's gifts and graces, and are
obligated to the orderly performance of such public and private duties
as lead to their mutual good, both in the inward and outward man.
- Saints, by their profession are bound
to
maintain a holy fellowship and communion in the worship of God and in
performing such other spiritual services as advance their mutual
edification. They are also to give relief to each other in outward
things according to their different needs and abilities to meet them.
This communion or fellowship, though chiefly exercised by saints in
their immediate circle of fellow believers such as families, and
churches, is also to be extended (according to the rule of the Gospel)
to all the household of faith, as God gives the opportunity. This means
all those who in every place call upon the name of the Lord Jesus,
However, their communion with one another as saints does not take away
or infringe the personal ownership which each man has of his goods and
possessions.
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28. Baptism and the
Lord's Supper
- Baptism and the Lord's Supper are
ordinances of positive and sovereign institution, appointed by the Lord
Jesus, the only lawgiver, to be continued in His Church to the end of
the world.
- These holy appointments are to be
administered only by those who are qualified and called to administer
them, according to the commission of Christ.
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29. Baptism
- Baptism is an ordinance of the New
Testament, ordained by Jesus Christ, to be to the person who is
baptised - a sign of his fellowship with Christ in His death and
resurrection; of his being engrafted into Christ; of remission of sins;
and of that person's giving up of himself to God, through Jesus Christ,
to live and walk in newness of life.
- Those who actually profess repentance
towards God, faith in, and obedience to, our Lord Jesus Christ, are the
only proper subjects for this ordinance.
- The outward element to be used in
this
ordinance is water, in which the person is to be baptised in the name
of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit.
- Immersion - the dipping of the person
in
water - is necessary for the due administration of this ordinance.
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30. The Lord's
Supper
- The Supper of the Lord Jesus was
instituted
by Him the same night on which He was betrayed to be observed in His
churches until the end of the world for the perpetual remembrance, and
showing forth of the sacrifice of Himself in His death. It was also
instituted by Christ to confirm believers in all the benefits of His
death; - for their spiritual nourishment and growth in Him; - for their
further engagement in and commitment to all the duties which they owe
to Him; - and to be a bond and pledge of their communion with Him and
with their fellow believers.
- In this ordinance Christ is not
offered up
to His Father, nor is there any real sacrifice made at all for
remission of sin (of the living or the dead). There is only a memorial
of that one offering up of Christ by Himself upon the cross once for
all, the memorial being accompanied by a spiritual oblation of all
possible praise to God for Calvary. Therefore, the popish sacrifice of
the mass, as they call it, is most abominable, being injurious to
Christ's own sacrifice, which is the only propitiation for all the sins
of the elect.
- The Lord Jesus has, in this
ordinance,
appointed His ministers to pray and bless the elements of bread and
wine (so setting them apart from a common to a holy use) and to take
and break the bread, then to take the cup, and to give both to the
communicants, also communicating themselves.
- The denial of the cup to the people,
the
practices of worshipping the elements, lifting them up or carrying them
about for adoration, or reserving them for any pretended religious use,
are all contrary to the nature of this ordinance, and to the
institution of Christ.
- The outward elements in this
ordinance
which are correctly set apart and used as Christ ordained, so closely
portray Him as crucified, that they are sometimes truly (but
figuratively) referred to in terms of the things they represent, such
as the body and blood of Christ. However in substance and nature they
still remain truly and only bread and wine as they were before.
- The doctrine commonly called
transubstantiation, which maintains that a change occurs in the
substance of the bread and wine into the substance of Christ's body and
blood, when consecrated by a priest or by any other way, is repugnant
not only to Scripture but even to common sense and reason. It
overthrows the nature of the ordinance, and both has been and is the
cause of a host of superstitions and of gross idolatries.
- Worthy receivers, outwardly taking
the
visible elements in this ordinance, also receive them inwardly and
spiritually by faith, truly and in fact, but not carnally and
corporally, and feed upon Christ crucified, and all the benefits of His
death. The body and blood of Christ is not present corporally or
carnally but it is spiritually present to the faith of believers in the
ordinance, just as the elements are present to their outward senses.
- All ignorant and ungodly persons who
are
unfit to enjoy communion with Christ are equally unworthy of the Lord's
Table, and therefore cannot without great sin against Him, take a share
in these holy mysteries or be admitted to the Supper while they remain
in that condition. Indeed those who receive (the elements) unworthily,
are guilty of the body and blood of the Lord, eating and drinking
judgement to themselves.
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31. Man's State
After
Death and the Resurrection
- The bodies of men after death return
to
dust, and undergo corruption, but their souls, which neither die nor
sleep, having an immortal subsistence, immediately return to God Who
gave them. The souls of the righteous are then made perfect in
holiness, are received into paradise where they are with Christ, and
look upon the face of God in light and glory, waiting for the full
redemption of their bodies. The souls of the wicked are cast into hell,
where they remain in torment and under darkness, reserved to the
judgement of the great day. The Scripture acknowledges no other place
than these two for souls separated from their bodies.
- At the last day, those of the saints
who
are still alive shall not sleep but shall be changed. And all the dead
shall be raised up with their own, same bodies, and none other,
although with different qualities, and these bodies shall be united
again to their souls for ever.
- The bodies of the unjust shall, by
the
power of Christ, be raised to dishonour. The bodies of the just shall,
by His Spirit be raised to honour, and made conformable to His own
glorious body.
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32. The Last
Judgement
- God has appointed a day in which He
will
judge the world in righteousness, by Jesus Christ, to Whom all power
and judgement is given by the Father. In this day not only the apostate
angels shall be judged, but also all people who have lived upon the
earth. They shall appear before the tribunal of Christ to give an
account of their thoughts, words, and deeds, and to receive according
to what they have done when in the body, whether good or evil.
- The end of God's appointing this day
is for
the manifestation of the glory of His mercy in the eternal salvation of
the elect, and also His justice, in the eternal damnation of the
reprobate, who are wicked and disobedient. Then shall the righteous go
into everlasting life and receive that fullness of joy and glory with
everlasting reward in the presence of the Lord. But the wicked, who
know not God and obey not the Gospel of Jesus Christ, shall be cast
aside into everlasting torments, and punished with everlasting
destruction from the presence of the Lord and from the glory of His
power.
- As Christ would have us to be
certainly
persuaded that there will be a day of judgement, both to deter all men
from sin and to give greater consolation to the godly in their
adversity, so also He will have the date of that day kept unknown to
men, that they may shake off all carnal security, and always be
watchful, because they know not at what hour the Lord will come. Also,
so that men may be affected in such a way that they ever say, 'Come
Lord Jesus, come quickly!' Amen.
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