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The London Baptist Confession of Faith of 1689
With Scripture Proofs
With Section 4 of Chapter 26 revised as indicated in the Preface.
- Of the Holy Scriptures
- Of God and the Holy Trinity
- Of God's Decree
- Of Creation
- Of Divine Providence
- Of the Fall of Man, of Sin,
and of the Punishment thereof
- Of God's Covenant
- Of Christ the Mediator
- Of Free Will
- Of Effectual Calling
- Of Justification
- Of Adoption
- Of Sanctification
- Of Saving Faith
- Of Repentance unto Life
and Salvation
- Of Good Works
- Of the Perseverance of
the Saints
- Of the Assurance of Grace
and Salvation
- Of the
Law of God
- Of the
Gospel and the Extent of Grace thereof
- Of Christian
Liberty and Liberty of Conscience
- Of Religious
Worship and the Sabbath Day
- Of Lawful Oaths and Vows
- Of the Civil Magistrate
- Of Marriage
- Of the Church
- Of the Communion of Saints
- Of Baptism and the Lord's
Supper
- Of Baptism
- Of the Lord's Supper
- Of the State of Men after
Death, and of the Resurrection of the Dead
- Of the Last Judgment
Chapter 1. Of the Holy Scriptures
1. The Holy Scripture is the only sufficient,
certain and infallible rule of all saving knowledge, faith and obedience,1
although the light of nature and the works of creation and providence
do so far manifest the goodness, wisdom and power of God, as to leave
men inexcusable; yet are they not sufficient to give that knowledge of
God and His will which is necessary unto salvation.2 Therefore
it pleased the Lord at sundry times and in divers manners to reveal Himself,
and to declare that His will unto His church;3 and afterwards
for the better preserving and propagating of the truth, and for the more
sure establishment and comfort of the church against the corruption of
the flesh, and the malice of Satan, and of the world, to commit the same
wholly unto writing; which maketh the Holy Scriptures to be most necessary,
those former ways of God’s revealing His will unto His people being
now ceased.4
1. 2Ti 3:15-17; Isaiah 8:20 ; Luke 16:29,31; Eph
2:20. 2. Romans 1:19-21 ; Ro 2:14-15; Ps 19:1-3. 3. Heb 1:1.
4. Pr 22:19-21; Ro 15:4; 2Pe 1:19-20.
2. Under the name of Holy Scripture, or the Word
of God written, are now contained all the books of the Old and New Testaments,
which are these:
Of the Old Testament
Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, Deuteronomy,
Joshua, Judges, Ruth,
1 Samuel, 2 Samuel, 1 Kings, 2 Kings, 1 Chronicles,
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 Corinthians,
2 Corinthians
Galatians, Ephesians, Philippians, Colossians,
1 Thessalonians, 2 Thessalonians, 1 Timothy, 2 Timothy,
Titus, Philemon, Hebrews, James, 1 Peter, 2 Peter,
1 John, 2 John,
3 John, Jude, Revelation
All of which are given by the inspiration of
God, to be the rule of faith and life.5
5. 2Ti 3:16.
3. The books commonly called Apocrypha, not being of divine
inspiration, are no part of the canon or rule of the Scripture, and, therefore,
are of no authority to the church of God, nor to be any otherwise approved
or made use of than other human writings.6
6. Lk 24:27,44; Ro 3:2.
4. The authority of the Holy Scripture, for which
it ought to be believed, dependeth not upon the testimony of any man or
church, but wholly upon God (who is truth itself), the author thereof; therefore
it is to be received because it is the Word of God.7
7. 2Pe 1:19-21; 2Ti 3:16; 2Th 2:13; 1Jn
5:9.
5. We may be moved and induced by the testimony
of the church of God to an high and reverent esteem of the Holy Scriptures;
and the heavenliness of the matter, the efficacy of the doctrine, and 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 discovery it makes of the
only way of man’s salvation, and many other incomparable excellencies,
and entire perfections thereof, are arguments whereby it doth abundantly
evidence itself to be the Word of God; yet notwithstanding, our full persuasion
and assurance of the infallible truth, and divine authority thereof, is
from the inward work of the Holy Spirit bearing witness by and with the
Word in our hearts.8
8. Jn 16:13-14; 1Co 2:10-12, 1Jn 2:20,27.
6. 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: unto
which nothing at any time is to be added, whether by new revelation of the
Spirit, or traditions of men.9 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,10 and
that there are some circumstances concerning the worship of God, and government
of the church, 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.11
9. 2Ti 3:15-17; Gal 1:8-9. 10. Jn 6:45;
1Co 2:9-12. 11. 1Co 11:13-14; 1Co 14:26,40.
7. All things in Scripture are not alike plain
in themselves, nor alike clear unto all;12 yet those things which
are necessary to be known, believed and observed for salvation, are so clearly
propounded and opened in some place of Scripture or other, that not only
the learned, but the unlearned, in a due use of ordinary means, may attain
to a sufficient understanding of them.13
12. 2Pe 3:16. 13. Ps 19:7; Ps 119:130.
8. The Old Testament in Hebrew (which was the
native language of the people of God of old),14 and the New Testament
in Greek (which at the time of the writing of it was most generally known
to the nations), being immediately inspired by God, and by His singular
care and providence kept pure in all ages, are therefore authentic; so as
in all controversies of religion, the church is finally to appeal to them.15
But because these original tongues are not known to all the people of God,
who have a right unto, and interest in the Scriptures, and are commanded
in the fear of God to read16 and search them,17 therefore
they are to be translated into the vulgar [i.e., common] language of every
nation unto which they come,18 that the Word of God dwelling
plentifully in all, they may worship of Him in an acceptable manner, and
through patience and comfort of the Scriptures may have hope.19
14. Ro 3:2. 15. Isa 8:20. 16. Ac 15:15.
17. Jn 5:39. 18. 1Co 14:6,9,11-12,24,28. 19. Col 3:16.
9. The infallible rule of interpretation of Scripture is
the Scripture itself; and therefore when 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 places that speak more clearly.20
20. 2Pe 1:20-21; Ac 15:15-16.
10. The supreme judge, by which all controversies
of religion are to be determined, and all decrees of councils, opinions
of ancient writers, doctrines of men, and private spirits, are to be examined,
and in whose sentence we are to rest, can be no other but the Holy Scripture
delivered by the Spirit, into which Scripture so delivered, our faith is
finally resolved.21
21. Mt 22:29,31-32; Eph 2:20; Ac 28:23.
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Chapter 2. Of God and of the Holy Trinity
1. The Lord our God is but one only
living and true God;1 whose subsistence is in and of Himself,2
infinite in being and perfection; whose essence cannot be comprehended
by any but Himself;3 a most pure spirit,4 invisible,
without body, parts, or passions, who only hath immortality, dwelling
in the light which no man can approach unto;5 who is immutable,6
immense,7 eternal,8 incomprehensible, almighty,9
every way infinite, most holy,10 most wise, most free, most
absolute; working all things according to the counsel of His own immutable
and most righteous will11 for His own glory;12 most
loving, gracious, merciful, long-suffering, abundant in goodness and truth,
forgiving iniquity, transgression, and sin; the rewarder of them that
diligently seek Him,13 and withal most just and terrible in
His judgements,14 hating all sin,15 and who will
by no means clear the guilty.16
1. 1Co 8:4,6; Dt 6:4. 2. Jer 10:10; Isa
48:12. 3. Ex 3:14. 4. Jn 4:24. 5. 1Ti 1:17; Dt 4:15-16. 6. Mal 3:6.
7. 1Ki 8:27; Jer 23:23. 8. Ps 90:2. 9. Ge
17:1. 10. Isa 6:3. 11. Ps 115:3; Isa 46:10. 12. Pr 16:4; Ro 11:36.
13. Ex 34:6-7; Heb 11:6. 14. Ne 9:32-33.
15. Ps 5:5-6. 16. Ex 34:7; Na 1:2-3.
2. God, having all life,17 glory,18
goodness,19 blessedness, in and of Himself, is alone in and unto
Himself all- sufficient, not standing in need of any creature which He hath
made, nor deriving any glory from them,20 but only manifesting
His own glory in, by, unto, and upon them; He is the alone fountain of all
being, of whom, through whom, and to whom are all things,21 and
He hath most sovereign dominion over all creatures, to do by them, for them,
or upon them, whatsoever Himself pleaseth;22 in His sight all
things are open and manifest,23 His knowledge is infinite, infallible,
and independent upon the creature, so as nothing is to Him contingent or
uncertain:24 He is most holy in all His counsels, in all His
works,25 and in all His commands; to Him is due from angels and
men, whatsoever worship,26 service, or obedience, as creatures
they owe unto the Creator, and whatever He is further pleased to require
of them.
17. Jn 5:26. 18. Ps 148:13. 19. Ps 119:68.
20. Job 22:2-3. 21. Ro 11:34-36. 22. Da 4:25,34-35. 23. Heb 4:13.
24. Eze 11:5; Ac 15:18. 25. Ps 145:17. 26.
Rev 5:12-14.
3. In this divine and infinite Being there are
three subsistences, the Father, the Word or Son, and Holy Spirit,27
of one substance, power, and eternity, each having the whole divine essence,
yet the essence undivided,28 the Father is of none, neither begotten
nor proceeding; the Son is eternally begotten of the Father;29
the Holy Spirit proceeding from the Father and the Son;30 all
infinite, without beginning, therefore but one God, who is not to be divided
in nature and being, but distinguished by several peculiar relative properties
and personal relations; which doctrine of the Trinity is the foundation
of all our communion with God, and comfortable dependence upon Him.
27. 1Jn 5:7; Mt 28:19; 2Co 13:14. 28. Ex
3:14; Jn 14:11; 1Co 8:6. 29. Jn 1:14,18. 30. Jn 15:26; Gal 4:6.
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Chapter 3. Of God’s Decree
1. God hath decreed in Himself, from all eternity,
by the most wise and holy counsel of His own will, freely and unchangeably,
all things, whatsoever come to pass;1 yet so as thereby is
God neither the author of sin nor hath fellowship with any therein;2
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;3
in which appears His wisdom in disposing all things, and power and faithfulness
in accomplishing His decree.4
1. Isa 46:10; Eph 1:11; Heb 6:17; Ro 9:15,18.
2. Jas 1:13; 1Jn 1:5. 3. Ac 4:27-28; Jn 19:11.
4. Nu 23:19; Eph 1:3-5.
2. Although God knoweth whatsoever may or can
come to pass, upon all supposed conditions,5 yet hath He not
decreed anything, because He foresaw it as future, or as that which would
come to pass upon such conditions.6
5. Ac 15:18. 6. Ro 9:11,13,16,18.
3. By the decree of God, for the manifestation
of His glory, some men and angels are predestined, or foreordained to eternal
life through Jesus Christ,7 to the praise of His glorious grace;8
others being left to act in their sin to their just condemnation, to the
praise of His glorious justice.9
7. 1Ti 5:21; Mt 25:34. 8. Eph 1:5-6. 9.
Ro 9:22-23; Jude 4.
4. These angels and men thus predestined and
foreordained, are particularly and unchangeably designed, and their number
so certain and definite, that it cannot be either increased or diminished.10
10. 2Ti 2:19; Jn 13:18.
5. Those of mankind that are predestined to life,
God, before the foundation of the world was laid, according to His eternal
and immutable purpose, and the secret counsel and good pleasure of His will,
hath chosen in Christ unto everlasting glory, out of His mere free grace
and love,11 without any other thing in the creature as a condition
or cause moving Him thereunto.12
11. Eph 1:4,9,11; Ro 8:30; 2Ti 1:9; 1Th
5:9. 12. Ro 9:13,16; Eph 2:5,12.
6. As God hath appointed the elect unto glory,
so He hath, by the eternal and most free purpose of His will, foreordained
all the means thereunto;13 wherefore they who are elect, being
fallen in Adam, are redeemed by Christ,14 are effectually called
unto faith in Christ, by His Spirit working in due season, are justified,
adopted, sanctified,15 and kept by His power through faith unto
salvation;16 neither are any other redeemed by Christ, or effectually
called, justified, adopted, sanctified, and saved, but the elect only.17
13. 1Pe 1:2; 2Th 2:13. 14. 1Th 5:9-10. 15.
Ro 8:30; 2Th 2:13. 16. 1Pe 1:5. 17. Jn 10:26; Jn 17:9; Jn 6:64.
7. The doctrine of this high mystery of predestination
is to be handled with special prudence and care, that men attending the
will of God revealed in His Word, and yielding obedience thereunto, may,
from the certainty of their effectual vocation, be assured of their eternal
election;18 so shall this doctrine afford matter of praise,19
reverence, and admiration of God, and of humility,20 diligence,
and abundant consolation to all that sincerely obey the gospel.21
18. 1Th 1:4-5; 2Pe 1:10. 19. Eph 1:6; Ro
11:33. 20. Ro 11:5-6,20 21. Lk 10:20.
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Chapter 4. Of Creation
1. In the beginning it pleased God the Father,
Son, and Holy Spirit,1 for the manifestation of the glory of
His eternal power,2 wisdom, and goodness, to create or make
the world, and all things therein, whether visible or invisible, in the
space of six days, and all very good.3
1. Jn 1:2-3; Heb 1:2; Job 26:13. 2. Ro 1:20.
3. Col 1:16; Ge 1:31.
2. After God hath made all other creatures, He
created man, male and female,4 with reasonable and immortal souls,5
rendering them fit unto that life to God for which they were created; being
made after the image of God, in knowledge, righteousness, and true holiness;6
having the law of God written in their hearts,7 and power to
fulfil it, and yet under a possibility of transgressing, being left to the
liberty of their own will, which was subject to change.8
4. Ge 1:27. 5. Ge 2:7. 6. Ecc 7:29; Ge 1:26.
7. Ro 2:14-15. 8. Ge 3:6.
3. Besides the law written in their hearts, they
received a command not to eat of the tree of knowledge of good and evil,9
which whilst they kept, they were happy in their communion with God, and
had dominion over the creatures.10
9. Ge 2:17. 10. Ge 1:26,28.
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Chapter 5. Of Divine Providence
1. God the good creator of all things, in
His infinite power and wisdom, doth uphold, direct, dispose, and govern
all His creatures and things,1 from the greatest even to the
least,2 by His most wise and holy providence, to the end for
which they were created, according unto His infallible foreknowledge,
and the free and immutable counsel of His own will; to the praise of the
glory of His wisdom, power, justice, infinite goodness, and mercy.3
1. Heb 1:3; Job 38:11; Isa 46:10-11; Ps
135:6. 2. Mt 10:29-31. 3. Eph 1:11.
2. Although in relation to the foreknowledge
and decree of God, the first cause, all things come to pass immutably and
infallibly;4 so that there is not anything befalls any by chance,
or without His providence;5 yet by the same providence He ordereth
them to fall out according to the nature of second causes, either necessarily,
freely, or contingently.6
4. Ac 2:23. 5. Pr 16:33. 6. Ge 8:22.
3. God, in His ordinary providence maketh use
of means,7 yet is free to work without,8 above,9
and against them10 at His pleasure.
7. Ac 27:31,44; Isa 55:10-11. 8. Hos 1:7.
9. Ro 4:19-21. 10. Da 3:27.
4. The Almighty power, unsearchable wisdom, and
infinite goodness of God, so far manifest themselves in His providence,
that His determinate counsel extendeth itself even to the first fall, and
all other sinful actions both of angels and men;11 and that not
by a bare permission, which also He most wisely and powerfully boundeth,
and otherwise ordereth and governeth,12 in a manifold dispensation
to His most holy ends;13 yet so, as the sinfulness of their acts
proceedeth only from the creatures, and not from God, who, being most holy
and righteous, neither is nor can be the author or approver of sin.14
11. Ro 11:32-34; 2Sa 24:1; 1Ch 21:1. 12.
2Ki 19:28; Ps 76:10. 13. Ge 1:20; Isa 10:6-7,12.
14. Ps 50:21; 1Jn 2:16.
5. The most wise, righteous, and gracious God
doth oftentimes leave for a season His own children to manifold temptations
and the corruptions of their own hearts, to chastise them for their former
sins, or to discover unto them the hidden strength of corruption and deceitfulness
of their hearts, that they may be humbled; and to raise them to a more close
and constant dependence for their support upon Himself; and to make them
more watchful against all future occasions of sin, and for other just and
holy ends.15 So that whatsoever befalls any of His elect is by
His appointment, for His glory, and their good.16
15. 2Ch 32:25-26,31; 2Co 12:7-9. 16. Ro
8:28.
6. As for those wicked and ungodly men whom God,
as a righteous judge, for former sin doth blind and harden;17
from them He not only withholdeth His grace, whereby they might have been
enlightened in their understanding, and wrought upon their hearts;18
but sometimes also withdraweth the gifts which they had,19 and
exposeth them to such objects as their corruption makes occasion of sin;20
and withal, gives them over to their own lusts, the temptations of the world,
and the power of Satan,21 whereby it comes to pass that they
harden themselves, under those means which God useth for the softening of
others.22
17. Ro 1:24-26,28; Ro 11:7-8. 18. Dt 29:4.
19. Mt 13:12. 20. Dt 2:30; 2Kn 8:12-13. 21. Ps 81:11-12; 2Th 2:10-12.
22. Ex 8:15,32; Isa 6:9-10; 1Pe 2:7-8.
7. As the providence of God doth in general reach
to all creatures, so after a more special manner it taketh care of His church,
and disposeth of all things to the good thereof.23
23. 1Ti 4:10; Am 9:8-9; Isa 43:3-5.
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Chapter 6. Of the Fall of Man, of Sin, and of
the Punishment Thereof
1. Although God created man upright and perfect,
and gave him a righteous law, which had been unto life had he kept it,
and threatened death upon the breach thereof,1 yet he did not
long abide in this honour; Satan using the subtlety of the serpent to
subdue Eve, then by her seducing Adam, who, without any compulsion, did
willfully transgress the law of their creation, and the command given
unto them, in eating the forbidden fruit,2 which God was pleased,
according to His wise and holy counsel to permit, having purposed to order
it to His own glory.
1. Ge 2:16-17. 2. Ge 3:12-13; 2Co 11:3.
2. Our first parents, by this sin, fell from
their original righteousness and communion with God, and we in them whereby
death came upon all;3 all becoming dead in sin,4 and
wholly defiled in all the faculties and parts of soul and body.5
3. Ro 3:23. 4. Ro 5:12-21. 5. Tit 1:15;
Ge 6:5; Jer 17:9; Ro 3:10-19.
3. They being the root, and by God’s appointment,
standing in the room and stead of all mankind, the guilt of the sin was
imputed, and corrupted nature conveyed, to all their posterity descending
from them by ordinary generation,6 being now conceived in sin,7
and by nature children of wrath,8 the servants of sin, the subjects
of death,9 and all other miseries, spiritual, temporal, and eternal,
unless the Lord Jesus set them free.10
6. Ro 5:12-19; 1Co 15:21-22,45,49. 7. Ps
51:5; Job 14:4. 8. Eph 2:3. 9. Ro 6:20; Ro 5:12.
10. Heb 2:14-15; 1Th 1:10.
4. From this original corruption, whereby we
are utterly indisposed, disabled, and made opposite to all good, and wholly
inclined to all evil;11 do proceed all actual transgressions.12
11. Ro 8:7; Col 1:21. 12. Jas 1:14-15; Mt
15:19.
5. The corruption of nature, during this life,
doth remain in those that are regenerated;13 and although it
be through Christ pardoned and mortified, yet both itself, and the first
motions thereof, are truly and properly sin.14
13. Ro 7:18,23; Ecc 7:20; 1Jn 1:8. 14. Ro
7:23-25; Gal 5:17.
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Chapter 7. Of God’s
Covenant
1. The distance between God and the creature
is so great, that although reasonable creatures do owe obedience unto
Him as their creator, yet they could never have attained the reward of
life but by some voluntary condescension on God’s part, which He
hath been pleased to express by way of covenant.1
1. Lk 17:10; Job 35:7-8.
2. Moreover, man having brought himself under
the curse of the law by his fall, it pleased the Lord to make a covenant
of grace,2 wherein He freely offereth unto sinners life and salvation
by Jesus Christ, requiring of them faith in Him, that they may be saved;3
and promising to give unto all those that are ordained unto eternal life,
His Holy Spirit, to make them willing and able to believe.4
2. Ge 2:17; Gal 3:10; Ro 3:20-21. 3. Ro
8:3; Mk 16:15-16; Jn 3:16. 4. Eze 36:26-27; Jn 6:44-45; Ps 110:3.
3. This covenant is revealed in the gospel; first
of all to Adam in the promise of salvation by the seed of the woman,5
and afterwards by farther steps, until the full discovery thereof was completed
in the New Testament;6 and it is founded in that eternal covenant
transaction that was between the Father and the Son about the redemption
of the elect;7 and it is alone by the grace of this covenant
that all of the posterity of fallen Adam that ever were saved did obtain
life and blessed immortality, man being now utterly incapable of acceptance
with God upon those terms on which Adam stood in his state of innocency.8
5. Ge 3:15. 6. Heb 1:1. 7. 2Ti 1:9; Tit
1:2. 8. Heb 11:6,13; Ro 4:1-2; Ac 4:12; Jn 8:56.
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Chapter 8. Of Christ the Mediator
1. It pleased God, in His eternal purpose,
to choose and ordain the Lord Jesus, His only begotten Son, according
to the covenant made between them both, to be the mediator between God
and man;1 the Prophet,2 Priest3 and King;4
head and Saviour of His church,5 the heir of all things,6
and judge of the world;7 unto whom He did from all eternity
give a people to be His seed and to be by Him in time redeemed, called,
justified, sanctified, and glorified.8
1. Isa 42:1; 1Pe 1:19-20. 2. Ac 3:22. 3.
Heb 5:5-6. 4. Ps 2:6; Lk 1:33. 5. Eph 1:22-23. 6. Heb 1:2.
7. Ac 17:31. 8. Isa 53:10; Jn 17:6; Ro 8:30.
2. The Son of God, the second person in the Holy
Trinity, being very and eternal God, the brightness of the Father’s
glory, of one substance and equal with Him who made the world, who upholdeth
and governeth all things He hath made, did, when the fulness of time was
come, take upon Him man’s nature, with all the essential properties
and common infirmities thereof,9 yet without sin;10
being 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; and so was made of a woman of the tribe of Judah, of the seed of Abraham
and David according to the Scriptures;11 so that two whole, perfect,
and distinct natures were inseparably joined together in one person, without
conversion, composition, or confusion; which person is very God and very
man, yet one Christ, the only mediator between God and man.12
9. Jn 1:14; Gal 4:4. 10. Ro 8:3; Heb 2:14,16-17;
Heb 4:15. 11. Mt 1:22-23; Lk 1:27,31,35. 12. Ro 9:5; 1Ti 2:5.
3. The Lord Jesus, in His human nature thus united
to the divine, in the person of the Son, was sanctified and anointed with
the Holy Spirit above measure,13 having in Him all the treasures
of wisdom and knowledge;14 in whom it pleased the Father that
all fullness should dwell,15 to the end that being holy, harmless,
undefiled,16 and full of grace and truth,17 He might
be thoroughly furnished to execute the office of a mediator and surety;18
which office He took not upon Himself, but was thereunto called by His Father;19
who also put all power and judgement in His hand, and gave Him commandment
to execute the same.20
13. Ps 45:7; Ac 10:38; Jn 3:34. 14. Col
2:3. 15. Col 1:19. 16. Heb 7:26. 17. Jn 1:14. 18. Heb 7:22.
19. Heb 5:5. 20. Jn 5:22,27; Mt 28:18; Ac
2:36.
4. This office the Lord Jesus did most willingly
undertake,21 which that He might discharge He was made under
the law,22 and did perfectly fulfil it, and underwent the punishment
due to us, which we should have borne and suffered,23 being made
sin and a curse for us;24 enduring most grievous sorrows in His
soul, and most painful sufferings in His body;25 was crucified,
and died, and remaining in the state of the dead, yet saw no corruption:26
and on the third day He arose from the dead27 with the same body
in which he suffered,28 with which He also ascended into heaven,29
and there sitteth at the right hand of His Father making intercession,30
and shall return to judge men and angels at the end of the world.31
21. Ps 40:7-8; Heb 10:5-10; Jn 10:18. 22.
Gal 4:4; Mt 3:15. 23. Gal 3:13; Isa 53:6; 1Pe 3:18. 24. 2Co 5:21.
25. Mt 26:37-38; Lk 22:44; Mt 27:46. 26.
Ac 13:37. 27. 1Co 15:3-4. 28. Jn 20:25,27.
29. Mk 16:19; Ac 1:9-11. 30. Ro 8:34; Heb
9:24. 31. Ac 10:42; Ro 14:9-10; Ac 1:11; 2Pe 2:4.
5. The Lord Jesus, by His perfect obedience and sacrifice
of Himself, which He through the eternal Spirit once offered up unto God,
hath fully satisfied the justice of God,32 procured reconciliation,
and purchased an everlasting inheritance in the kingdom of heaven for all
those whom the Father hath given unto Him.33
32. Heb 9:14; 10:14; Ro 3:25-26. 33. Jn
17:2; Heb 9:15.
6. Although the price of redemption was not actually
paid by Christ till after His incarnation, yet the virtue, efficacy, and
benefit thereof were communicated to the elect in all ages successively
from the beginning of the world, in and by those promises, types, and sacrifices
wherein He was revealed, and signified to be the seed which should bruise
the serpent’s head;34 and the Lamb slain from the foundation
of the world,35 being the same yesterday, and to-day, and for
ever.36
34. 1Co 4:10; Heb 4:2; 1Pe 1:10-11. 35.
Rev 13:8. 36. Heb 13:8.
7. Christ, in the work of mediation, acteth according
to both natures, by each nature doing that which is proper to itself; yet
by reason of the unity of the person, that which is proper to one nature
is sometimes in scripture, attributed to the person denominated by the other
nature.37
37. Jn 3:13; Ac 20:28.
8. To all those for whom Christ hath obtained
eternal redemption, He doth certainly and effectually apply and communicate
the same, making intercession for them;38 uniting them to Himself
by His Spirit, revealing unto them, in and by the Word, the mystery of salvation,
persuading them to believe and obey,39 governing their hearts
by His Word and Spirit,40 and overcoming all their enemies by
His mighty power and wisdom,41 in such manner and ways as are
most consonant to His wonderful and unsearchable dispensation; and all of
free and absolute grace, without any condition forseen in them to procure
it.42
38. Jn 6:37; Jn 10:15-16; Jn 17:9; Ro 5:10. 39.
Jn 17:6; Eph 1:9; 1Jn 5:20. 40. Ro 8:9,14.
41. Ps 110:1; 1Co 15:25-26. 42. Jn 3:8;
Eph 1:8.
9. This office of mediator between God and man
is proper only to Christ, who is the prophet, priest, and king of the church
of God; and may not be either in whole, or any part thereof, transferred
from Him to any other.43
43. 1Ti 2:5.
10. This number and order of offices is necessary; for in
respect of our ignorance, we stand in need of His prophetical office;44
and in respect of our alienation from God, and imperfection of the best
of our services, we need His priestly office to reconcile us and present
us acceptable unto God;45 and in respect of our averseness and
utter inability to return to God, and for our rescue and security from our
spiritual adversaries, we need His kingly office to convince, subdue, draw,
uphold, deliver, and preserve us to His heavenly kingdom.46
44. Jn 1:18. 45. Col 1:21; Gal 5:17. 46.
Jn 16:8; Ps 110:3; Lk 1:74-75.
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Chapter 9. Of Free Will
1. God hath endued the will of man with that
natural liberty and power of acting upon choice, that it is neither forced,
nor by any necessity of nature determined to do good or evil.1
1. Mt 17:12; Jas 1:14; Dt 30:19.
2. Man, in his state of innocency, had freedom
and power to will and to do that which was good and well-pleasing to God,2
but yet was unstable, so that he might fall from it.3
2. Ecc 7:29. 3. Ge 3:6.
3. Man, by his fall into a state of sin, hath
wholly lost all ability of will to any spiritual good accompanying salvation;4
so as a natural man, being altogether averse from that good, and dead in
sin,5 is not able by his own strength to convert himself, or
to prepare himself thereunto.6
4. Ro 5:6; 8:7. 5. Eph 2:1,5. 6. Tit 3:3-5;
Jn 6:44.
4. When God converts a sinner, and translates
him into the state of grace, He freeth him from his natural bondage under
sin,7 and by His grace alone enables him freely to will and to
do that which is spiritually good;8 yet so as that by reason
of his remaining corruptions, he doth not perfectly, nor only will, that
which is good, but doth also will that which is evil.9
7. Col 1:13; Jn 8:36. 8. Php 2:13. 9. Ro
7:15,18-19,21,23.
5. This will of man is made perfectly and immutably
free to good alone in the state of glory only.10
10. Eph 4:13.
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Chapter 10. Of Effectual
Calling
1. Those whom God hath predestined unto life,
He is pleased in His appointed and accepted time, effectually to call,1
by His Word and Spirit, out of that state of sin and death in which they
are by nature, to grace and salvation by Jesus Christ;2 enlightening
their minds spiritually and savingly to understand the things of God;3
taking away their heart of stone, and giving unto them a heart of flesh:4
renewing their wills, and by His almighty power determining them to that
which is good, and effectually drawing them to Jesus Christ;5
yet so as they come most freely, being made willing by His grace.6
1. Ro 8:30; Ro 11:7; Eph 1:10-11, 2Th 2:13-14.
2. Eph 2:1-6. 3. Ac 26:18; Eph 1:17-18. 4. Eze 36:26.
5. Dt 30:6; Eze 36:27; Eph 1:19. 6. Ps 110:3;
SS 1:4.
2. This effectual call is of God’s free
and special grace alone, not from anything at all forseen in man, nor from
any power or agency in the creature,7 being wholly passive therein,
being dead in sins and trespasses, until being quickened and renewed by
the Holy Spirit;8 he is thereby enabled to answer this call,
and to embrace the grace offered and conveyed in it, and that by no less
power than that which raised up Christ from the dead.9
7. 2Ti 1:9; Eph 2:8. 8. 1Co 2:14; Eph 2:5;
Jn 5:25. 9. Eph 1:19-20.
3. Elect infants dying in infancy are regenerated
and saved by Christ through the Spirit;10 who worketh when, and
where, and how He pleaseth;11 so also are all elect persons,
who are incapable of being outwardly called by the ministry of the Word.
10. Jn 3:3,5-6. 11. Jn 3:8.
4. Others not elected, although they may be called
by the ministry of the Word, and may have some common operations of the
Spirit,12 yet not being effectually drawn by the Father, they
neither will nor can truly come to Christ, and therefore cannot be saved:13
much less can men that receive not the Christian religion be saved, be they
never so diligent to frame their lives according to the light of nature
and the law of that religion they do profess.14
12. Mt 22:14; Mt 13:20-21; Heb 6:4-5. 13. Jn
6:44-45,65; 1Jn 2:24-25. 14. Ac 4:12; Jn 4:22; Jn 17:3.
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Chapter 11. Of Justification
1. Those whom God effectually calleth, He
also freely justifieth,1 not by infusing righteousness into
them, but by pardoning their sins, and by accounting and accepting their
persons as righteous;2 not for anything wrought in them, or
done by them, but for Christ’s sake alone;3 not by imputing
faith itself, the act of believing, or any other evangelical obedience
to them, as their righteousness; but by imputing Christ’s active
obedience unto the whole law, and passive obedience in His death for their
whole and sole righteousness,4 they receiving and resting on
Him and His righteousness by faith, which faith they have not of themselves;
it is the gift of God.5
1. Ro 3:24; Ro 8:30. 2. Ro 4:5-8; Eph 1:7.
3. 1Co 1:30-31; Ro 5:17-19. 4. Php 3:8-9; Eph 2:8-10.
5. Jn 1:12; Ro 5:17.
2. Faith thus receiving and resting on Christ
and His righteousness, is the alone instrument of justification;6
yet it is not alone in the person justified, but ever accompanied with all
other saving graces, and is no dead faith, but worketh by love.7
6. Ro 3:28. 7. Gal 5:6; Jas 2:17,22,26.
3. Christ, by His obedience and death, did fully
discharge the debt of all those that are justified; and did, by the sacrifice
of Himself in the blood of His cross, undergoing in their stead the penalty
due unto them, make a proper, real, and full satisfaction to God’s
justice in their behalf,8; yet inasmuch as He was given by the
Father for them, and His obedience and satisfaction accepted in their stead,
and both freely, not for anything in them,9 their justification
is only of free grace, that both the exact justice and rich grace of God
might be glorified in the justification of sinners.10
8. Heb 10:14; 1Pe 1:18-19; Isa 53:5-6. 9.
Ro 8:32; 2Co 5:21. 10. Ro 3:26; Eph 1:6-7; Eph 2:7.
4. God did from all eternity decree to justify all the elect,11
and Christ did in the fullness of time die for their sins, and rise again
for their justification;12 nevertheless, they are not justified
personally, until the Holy Spirit doth in time due actually apply Christ
unto them.13
11. Gal 3:8; 1Pe 1:2; 1Ti 2:6. 12. Ro 4:25.
13. Col 1:21-22; Tit 3:4-7.
5. God doth continue to forgive the sins of those
that are justified,14 and although they can never fall from the
state of justification,15 yet they may, by their sins, fall under
God’s fatherly displeasure;16 and in that condition they
have not usually the light of His countenance restored unto them, until
they humble themselves, confess their sins, beg pardon, and renew their
faith and repentance.17
14. Mt 6:12; 1Jn 1:7,9. 15. Jn 10:28. 16.
Ps 89:31-33. 17. Ps 32:5; Ps 51:1-19; Mt 26:75.
6. The justification of believers under the Old Testament
was, in all these respects, one and the same with the justification of believers
under the New Testament.18
18. Gal 3:9; Ro 4:22-24.
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Chapter 12. Of Adoption
1. All those that are justified, God vouchsafed,
in and for the sake of His only Son Jesus Christ, to make partakers of
the grace of adoption,1 by which they are taken into the number,
and enjoy the liberties and privileges of children of God,2
have His name put on them,3 receive the spirit of adoption,4
have access to the throne of grace with boldness, are enabled to cry Abba,
Father,5 are pitied,6 protected,7 provided
for,8 and chastened by Him as by a Father,9 yet
never cast off,10 but sealed to the day of redemption,11
and inherit the promises as heirs of everlasting salvation.12
1. Eph 1:5; Gal 4:4-5. 2. Jn 1:12; Ro 8:17.
3. 2Co 6:18; Rev 3:12. 4. Ro 8:15. 5. Gal 4:6; Eph 2:18.
6. Ps 103:13. 7. Pr 14:26. 8. 1Pe 5:7. 9.
Heb 12:6. 10. Isa 54:8-9; La 3:31. 11. Eph 4:30. 12. Heb 1:14; 6:12.
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Chapter 13. Of Sanctification
1. They who are united to Christ, effectually
called, and regenerated, having a new heart and a new spirit created in
them through the virtue of Christ's death and resurrection, are also farther
sanctified, really and personally1 through the same virtue,
by His Word and Spirit dwelling in them;2 the dominion of the
whole body of sin is destroyed,3 and the several lusts thereof
are more and more weakened and mortified,4 and they more and
more quickened and strengthened in all saving graces,5 to the
practice of all true holiness, without which no man shall see the Lord.6
1. Ac 20:32; Ro 6:5-6. 2. Jn 17:17; Eph
3:16-19; 1Th 5:21-23. 3. Ro 6:14. 4. Gal 5:24. 5. Col 1:11.
6. 2Co 7:1; Heb 12:14.
2. This sanctification is throughout the whole
man,7 yet imperfect in this life; there abideth still some remnants
of corruption in every part,8 when ariseth a continual and irreconcilable
war; the flesh lusting against the Spirit, and the Spirit against the flesh.9
7. 1Th 5:23. 8. Ro 7:18,23. 9. Gal 5:17;
1Pe 2:11.
3. In which war, although the remaining corruption
for a time may much prevail,10 yet, through the continual supply
of strength from the sanctifying Spirit of Christ, the regenerate part doth
overcome;11 and so the saints grow in grace, perfecting holiness
in the fear of God, pressing after an heavenly life, in evangelical obedience
to all the commands which Christ as Head and King, in His Word hath prescribed
to them.12
10. Ro 7:23. 11. Ro 6:14. 12. Eph 4:15-16;
2Co 3:18; 2Co 7:1.
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Chapter 14. Of Saving Faith
1. The grace of faith, whereby the elect are
enabled to believe to the saving of their souls, is the work of the Spirit
of Christ in their hearts,1 and is ordinarily wrought by the
ministry of the Word;2 by which also, and by the administration
of baptism and the Lord's Supper, prayer, and other means appointed of
God, it is increased and strengthened.3
1. 2Co 4:13; Eph 2:8. 2. Ro 10:14,17. 3.
Lk 17:5; 1Pe 2:2; Ac 20:32.
2. By this faith a Christian believeth to be
true whatsoever is revealed in the Word for the authority of God Himself,4
and also apprehendeth an excellency therein above all other writings
and all things in the world,5 as it bears forth the glory of
God in His attributes, the excellency of Christ in His nature and offices,
and the power and fullness of the Holy Spirit in His workings and operations:
and so is enabled to cast his soul upon the truth thus believed;6
and also acteth differently upon that which each particular passage thereof
containeth; yielding obedience to the commands,7 trembling at
the threatenings,8 and embracing the promises of God for this
life and that which is to come;9 but the principle acts of saving
faith have immediate relation to Christ, accepting, receiving, and resting
upon Him alone for justification, sanctification, and eternal life, by virtue
of the covenant of grace.10
4. Ac 24:14. 5. Ps 19:7-10; Ps 119:72. 6. 2Ti
1:12. 7. Jn 15:14. 8. Isa 66:2. 9. Heb 11:13.
10. Jn 1:12; Ac 16:31; Gal 2:20; Ac 15:11.
3. This faith, although it be different in degrees,
and may be weak or strong,11 yet it is in the least degree of
it different in the kind or nature of it, as is all other saving grace,
from the faith and common grace of temporary believers;12 and
therefore, though it may be many times assailed and weakened, yet it gets
the victory,13 growing up in many to the attainment of a full
assurance through Christ,14 who is both the author and finisher
of our faith.15
11. Heb 5:13-14; Mt 6:30; Ro 4:19-20. 12.
2Pe 1:1. 13. Eph 6:16; 1Jn 5:4-5. 14. Heb 6:11-12; Col 2:2.
15. Heb 12:2.
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Chapter 15. Of Repentance Unto Life and Salvation
1. Such of the elect as are converted in riper
years, having sometime lived in the state of nature, and therein served
divers lusts and pleasures, God in their effectual calling giveth them
repentance unto life.1
1. Tit 3:2-5.
2. Whereas there is none that doth good and sinneth not,2
and the best of men may, through the power and deceitfulness of their corruption
dwelling in them, with the prevalency of temptation, fall in to great sins
and provocations; God hath, in the covenant of grace, mercifully provided
that believers so sinning and falling be renewed through repentance unto
salvation.3
2. Ecc 7:20. 3. Lk 22:31-32.
3. This saving repentance is an evangelical grace,4
whereby a person, being by the Holy Spirit made sensible of the manifold
evils of his sin, doth, by faith in Christ, humble himself for it with godly
sorrow, detestation of it, and self- abhorrency,5 praying for
pardon and strength of grace, with a purpose and endeavour, by supplies
of the Spirit, to walk before God unto all well-pleasing in all things.6
4. Zec 12:10; Ac 11:18. 5. Eze 36:31; 2Co
7:11. 6. Ps 119:6,128.
4. As repentance is to be continued through the
whole course of our lives, upon the account of the body of death, and the
motions thereof, so it is every man's duty to repent of his particular known
sins particularly.7
7. Lk 19:8; 1Ti 1:13,15.
5. Such is the provision which God hath made
through Christ in the covenant of grace for the preservation of believers
unto salvation, that although there is no sin so small but it deserves damnation,8
yet there is no sin so great that it shall bring damnation on them that
repent,9 which makes the constant preaching of repentance necessary.
8. Ro 6:23. 9. Isa 1:16-18; Isa 55:7.
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Chapter 16. Of Good Works
1. Good works are only such as God hath commanded
in His Holy Word,1 and not such as without the warrant thereof
are devised by men out of blind zeal, or upon any pretence of good intentions.2
1. Mic 6:8; Heb 13:21. 2. Mt 15:9; Isa 29:13.
2. These good works, done in obedience to God's
commandments, are the fruits and evidences of a true and lively faith;3
and by them believers manifest their thankfulness,4 strengthen
their assurance,5 edify their brethren, adorn the profession
of the gospel,6 stop the mouths of the adversaries, and glorify
God,7 whose workmanship they are, created in Christ Jesus thereunto,8
that having their fruit unto holiness they may have the end eternal life.9
3. Jas 2:18,22. 4. Ps 116:12-13. 5. 1Jn
2:3,5; 2Pe 1:5-11. 6. Mt 5:16. 7. 1Ti 6:1; 1Pe 2:15; Php 1:11.
8. Eph 2:10. 9. Ro 6:22.
3. Their ability to do good works is not all
of themselves, but wholly from the Spirit of Christ;10 and that
they may be enabled thereunto, besides the graces they have already received,
there is necessary an actual influence of the same Holy Spirit, to work
in them to will and to do of His good pleasure;11 yet they are
not hereupon to grow negligent, as if they were not bound to perform any
duty, unless upon a special motion of the Spirit, but they ought to be diligent
in stirring up the grace of God that is in them.12
10. Jn 15:4-5. 11. 2Co 3:5; Php 2:13. 12.
Php 2:12; Heb 6:11-12; Isa 64:7.
4. They who in their obedience attain to the
greatest height which is possible in this life, are so far from being able
to supererogate, and to do more than God requires, as that they fall short
of much which in duty they are bound to do.13
13. Job 9:2-3; Gal 5:17; Lk 17:10.
5. We cannot by our best works merit pardon of
sin or eternal life at the hand of God, by reason of the great disproportion
that is between them and the glory to come, and the infinite distance that
is between us and God, whom by them we can neither profit nor satisfy for
the debt of our former sins;14 but when we have done all we can,
we have done but our duty, and are unprofitable servants; and because as
they are good they proceed from His Spirit,15 and as they are
wrought by us they are defiled and mixed with so much weakness and imperfection,
that they cannot endure the severity of God's punishment.16
14. Ro 3:20; Eph 2:8-9; Ro 4:6. 15. Gal
5:22-23. 16. Isa 64:6; Ps 143:2.
6. Yet notwithstanding the persons of believers
being accepted through Christ, their good works also are accepted in Him;17
not as though they were in this life wholly unblameable and unreprovable
in God's sight, but that He, looking upon them in His Son, is pleased to
accept and reward that which is sincere, although accompanied with many
weaknesses and imperfections.18
17. Eph 1:6; 1Pe 2:5. 18. Mt 25:21,23; Heb
6:10.
7. Works done by unregenerate men, although for
the matter of them they may be things which God commands, and of good use
both to themselves and others;19 yet because they proceed not
from a heart purified by faith,20 nor are done in a right manner
according to the Word,21 nor to a right end, the glory of God,22
they are therefore sinful, and cannot please God, nor make a man meet to
receive grace from God,23 and yet their neglect of them is more
sinful and displeasing to God.24
19. 2Ki 10:30; 1Ki 21:27,29. 20. Ge 4:5;
Heb 11:4,6. 21. 1Co 13:1. 22. Mt 6:2,5.
23. Am 5:21-22; Ro 9:16; Tit 3:5. 24. Job
21:14-15; Mt 25:41-43.
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Chapter 17. Of The Perseverance Of The Saints
1. Those whom God hath accepted in the beloved,
effectually called and sanctified by His Spirit, and given the precious
faith of His elect unto, can neither totally nor finally fall from the
state of grace, but shall certainly persevere therein to the end, and
be eternally saved, seeing the gifts and callings of God are without repentance,
whence He still begets and nourisheth in them faith, repentance, love,
joy, hope, and all the graces of the Spirit unto immortality;1
and though many storms and floods arise and beat against them, yet they
shall never be able to take them off that foundation and rock which by
faith they are fastened upon; notwithstanding, through unbelief and the
temptations of Satan, the sensible sight of the light and love of God
may for a time be clouded and obscured from them,2 yet He is
still the same, and they shall be sure to be kept by the power of God
unto salvation, where they shall enjoy their purchased possession, they
being engraven upon the palm of His hands, and their names having been
written in the book of life from all eternity.3
1. Jn 10:28-29; Php 1:6; 2Ti 2:19; 1Jn 2:19.
2. Ps 89:31-32; 1Co 11:32. 3. Mal 3:6.
2. This perseverance of the saints depends not
upon their own free will, but upon the immutability of the decree of election,4
flowing from the free and unchangeable love of God the Father, upon the
efficacy of the merit and intercession of Jesus Christ and union with Him,5
the oath of God,6 the abiding of His Spirit, and the seed of
God within them,7 and the nature of the covenant of grace;8
from all which ariseth also the certainty and infallibility thereof.
4. Ro 8:30; Ro 9:11,16. 5. Ro 5:9-10; Jn 14:19.
6. Heb 6:17-18. 7. 1Jn 3:9. 8. Jer 32:40.
3. And though they may, through the temptation of Satan and
of the world, the prevalency of corruption remaining in them, and the neglect
of means of their preservation, fall into grievous sins, and for a time
continue therein,9 whereby they incur God's displeasure and grieve
His Holy Spirit,10 come to have their graces and comforts impaired,11
have their hearts hardened, and their consciences wounded,12
hurt and scandalize others, and bring temporal judgements upon themselves,13
yet shall they renew their repentance and be preserved through faith in
Christ Jesus to the end.14
9. Mt 26:70,72,74. 10. Isa 64:5,9; Eph 4:30.
11. Ps 51:10,12. 12. Ps 32:3-4. 13. 2Sa 12:14.
14. Lk 22:32,61-62.
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Chapter 18. Of the Assurance
of Grace and Salvation
1. Although temporary believers, and other
unregenerate men, may vainly deceive themselves with false hopes and carnal
presumptions of being in the favour of God and state of salvation, which
hope of theirs shall perish;1 yet such as truly believe in
the Lord Jesus, and love Him in sincerity, endeavouring to walk in all
good conscience before Him, may in this life be certainly assured that
they are in the state of grace, and may rejoice in the hope of the glory
of God,2 which hope shall never make them ashamed.3
1. Job 8:13-14; Mt 7:22-23. 2. 1Jn 2:3;
1Jn 3:14,18-19,21,24; 1Jn 5:13. 3. Ro 5:2,5.
2. This certainty is not a bare conjectural and
probable persuasion grounded upon a fallible hope, but an infallible assurance
of faith4 founded on the blood and righteousness of Christ revealed
in the Gospel;5 and also upon the inward evidence of those graces
of the Spirit unto which promises are made,6 and on the testimony
of the Spirit of adoption, witnessing with our spirits that we are the children
of God;7 and, as a fruit thereof, keeping the heart both humble
and holy.8
4. Heb 6:11,19. 5. Heb 6:17-18. 6. 2Pe 1:4-5,10-11.
7. Ro 8:15-16. 8. 1Jn 3:1-3.
3. This infallible assurance doth not so belong to the essence
of faith, but that a true believer may wait long, and conflict with many
difficulties before he be a partaker of it;9 yet being enabled
by the Spirit to know the things which are freely given him of God, he may,
without extraordinary revelation, in the right use of means, attain thereunto:10
and therefore it is the duty of every one to give all diligence to make
his calling and election sure, that thereby his heart may be enlarged in
peace and joy in the Holy Spirit, in love and thankfulness to God, and in
strength and cheerfulness in the duties of obedience, the proper fruits
of this assurance;11- so far is it from inclining men to looseness.12
9. Isa 50:10; Ps 88:1-18; Ps 77:1-12. 10.
1Jn 4:13; Heb 6:11-12. 11. Ro 5:1-2,5; 14:17; Ps 119:32.
12. Ro 6:1-2; Tit 2:11-12,14.
4. True believers may have the assurance of their
salvation divers ways shaken, diminished, and intermitted; as by negligence
in preserving of it,13 by falling into some special sin which
woundeth the conscience and grieveth the Spirit;14 by some sudden
or vehement temptation,15 by God's withdrawing the light of His
countenance, and suffering even such as fear him to walk in darkness and
to have no light, 16 yet are they never destitute of the seed
of God17 and life of faith,18 that love of Christ
and the brethren, that sincerity of heart and conscience of duty out of
which, by the operation of the Spirit, this assurance may in due time be
revived,19 and by the which, in the meantime, they are preserved
from utter despair.20
13. SS 5:2-3,6. 14. Ps 51:8,12,14. 15. Ps
116:11; Ps 77:7-8; Ps 31:22. 16. Ps 30:7. 17. 1Jn 3:9. 18. Lk 22:32.
19. Ps 42:5,11. 20. Lam 3:26-31.
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Chapter 19. Of the Law of
God
1. God gave to Adam a law of universal obedience
written in his heart, and a particular precept of not eating the fruit
of the tree of knowledge of good and evil;1 by which He bound
him and all his posterity to personal, entire, exact, and perpetual obedience;2
promised life upon the fulfilling, and threatened death upon the breach
of it, and endued him with power and ability to keep it.3
1. Ge 1:27; Ecc 7:29. 2. Ro 10:5. 3. Gal
3:10,12.
2. The same law that was first written in the
heart of man continued to be a perfect rule of righteousness after the fall,4
and was delivered by God upon Mount Sinai, in ten commandments, and written
in two tables, the four first containing our duty towards God, and the other
six, our duty to man.5
4. Ro 2:14-15. 5. Dt 10:4.
3. Besides this law, commonly called moral, God
was pleased to give to the people of Israel ceremonial laws, containing
several typical ordinances, partly of worship, prefiguring Christ, His graces,
actions, sufferings, and benefits;6 and partly holding forth
divers instructions of moral duties,7 all which ceremonial laws
being appointed only to the time of reformation, are, by Jesus Christ the
true Messiah and only law-giver, who was furnished with power from the Father
for that end abrogated and taken away.8
6. Heb 10:1; Col 2:17. 7. 1Co 5:7. 8. Col
2:14,16-17; Eph 2:14,16.
4. To them also He gave sundry judicial laws,
which expired together with the state of that people, not obliging any now
by virtue of that institution; their general equity only being for modern
use.9
9. 1Co 9:8-10.
5. The moral law doth for ever bind all, as well justified
persons as others, to the obedience thereof,10 and that not only
in regard of the matter contained in it, but also in respect of the authority
of God the Creator, who gave it;11 neither doth Christ in the
Gospel any way dissolve, but much strengthen this obligation.12
10. Ro 13:8-10; Jas 2:8,10-12. 11. Jas 2:10-11.
12. Mt 5:17-19; Ro 3:31.
6. Although true believers be not under the law
as a covenant of works, to be thereby justified or condemned,13
yet it is of great use to them as well as to others, in that as a rule of
life, informing them of the will of God and their duty, it directs and binds
them to walk accordingly; discovering also the sinful pollutions of their
natures, hearts, and lives, so as examining themselves thereby, they may
come to further conviction of, humiliation for, and hatred against, sin;14
together with a clearer sight of the need they have of Christ and the perfection
of His obedience: it is likewise of use to the regenerate to restrain their
corruptions, in that it forbids sin; and the threatening of it serve to
shew what even their sins deserve, and what afflictions in this life they
may expect for them, although freed from the curse and unallayed rigour
thereof. These promises of it likewise shew them God's approbation of obedience,
and what blessings they may expect upon the performance thereof, though
not as due to them by the law as a covenant of works; so as man's doing
good and refraining from evil, because the law encourageth to the one and
deterreth from the other, is no evidence of his being under the law and
not under grace.15
13. Ro 6:14; Gal 2:16; Ro 8:1; Ro 10:4. 14.
Ro 3:20; Ro 7:7-25. 15. Ro 6:12-14; 1Pe 3:8-13.
7. Neither are the aforementioned uses of the law contrary
to the grace of the Gospel, but do sweetly comply with it,16
the Spirit of Christ subduing and enabling the will of man to do that freely
and cheerfully which the will of God, revealed in the law, requireth to
be done.17
16. Gal 3:21. 17. Eze 36:27.
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Chapter 20. Of the Gospel and the Extent of
Grace thereof
1. The covenant of works being broken by sin,
and made unprofitable unto life, God was pleased to give forth the promise
of Christ, the seed of the woman, as the means of calling the elect, and
begetting in them faith and repentance;1 in this promise the
gospel, as to the substance of it, was revealed, and [is] therein effectual
for the conversion and salvation of sinners.2
1. Ge 3:15. 2. Rev 13:8.
2. This promise of Christ, and salvation by Him,
is revealed only by the Word of God;3 neither do the works of
creation or providence, with the light of nature, make discovery of Christ,
or of grace by Him, so much as in a general or obscure way;4
much less that men destitute of the revelation of Him by the promise or
gospel, should be enabled thereby to attain saving faith or repentance.5
3. Ro 1:17. 4. Ro 10:14-15,17. 5. Pr 29:18;
Isa 25:7; Isa 60:2-3.
3. 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;6 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;7 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.
6. Ps 147:20; Ac 16:7. 7. Ro 1:18-32.
4. Although the gospel be the only outward means
of revealing Christ and saving grace, and is, as such, abundantly sufficient
thereunto; yet that men who are dead in trespasses may be born again, quickened
or regenerated, there is moreover necessary an effectual insuperable work
of the Holy Spirit upon the whole soul, for the producing in them a new
spiritual life;8 without which no other means will effect their
conversion unto God.9
8. Ps 110:3; 1Co 2:14; Eph 1:19-20. 9. Jn
6:44; 2Co 4:4,6.
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Chapter 21. Of Christian Liberty and Liberty
of Conscience
1. The liberty which Christ hath purchased
for believers under the gospel, consists in their freedom from the guilt
of sin, the condemning wrath of God, the rigour and curse of the law,1
and in their being delivered from this present evil world,2
bondage to Satan,3 and dominion of sin,4 from the
evil of afflictions,5 the fear and sting of death, the victory
of the grave,6 and everlasting damnation:7 as also
in their free access to God, and their yielding obedience unto Him, not
out of slavish fear,8 but a child-like love and willing mind.9
All which were common also to believers under the law for the substance
of them,10 but under the New Testament the liberty of Christians
is further enlarged, in their freedom from the yoke of a ceremonial law,
to which the Jewish church was subjected, and in greater boldness of access
to the throne of grace, and in fuller communications of the free Spirit
of God, than believers under the law did ordinarily partake of.11
1. Gal 3:13. 2. Gal 1:4. 3. Ac 26:18. 4.
Ro 8:3. 5. Ro 8:28. 6. 1Co 15:54-57. 7. 2Th 1:10. 8. Ro 8:15.
9. Lk 1:73-75; 1Jn 4:18. 10. Gal 3:9,14.
11. Jn 7:38-39; Heb 10:19-21.
2. God alone is Lord of the conscience,12
and hath left it free from the doctrines and commandments of men which are
in any thing contrary to His Word, or not contained in it.13
So that to believe such doctrines, or obey such commands out of conscience,
it so betray true liberty of conscience,14 and the requiring
of an implicit faith, an absolute and blind obedience, is to destroy liberty
of conscience and reason also.15
12. Jas 4:12; Ro 14:4. 13. Ac 4:19,29; 1Co
7:23; Mt 15:9. 14. Col 2:20,22-23. 15. 1Co 3:5; 2Co 1:24.
3. They who upon pretence of Christian liberty
do practice any sin, or cherish any sinful lust, as they do thereby pervert
the main design of the grace of the gospel to their own destruction,16
so they wholly destroy the end of Christian liberty, which is, that being
delivered out of the hands of all our enemies, we might serve the Lord without
fear, in holiness and righteousness before Him, all the days of our lives.17
16. Ro 6:1-2. 17. Gal 5:13; 2Pe 2:18,21.
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Chapter 22. Of Religious Worship and the Sabbath
Day
1. The light of nature shews that there is
a God, who hath lordship and sovereignty over all; is just, good and doth
good unto all; and is therefore to be feared, loved, praised, called upon,
trusted in, and served, with all the heart and all the soul, and with
all the might.1 But the acceptable way of worshipping the true
God, is instituted by Himself,2 and so limited by His own revealed
will, that He may not be worshipped according to the imagination and devices
of men, nor the suggestions of Satan, under any visible representations,
or any other way not prescribed in the Holy Scriptures.3
1. Jer 10:7; Mk 12:33. 2. Dt 12:32. 3. Ex
20:4-6.
2. Religious worship is to be given to God the
Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, and to Him alone;4 not to angels,
saints, or any other creatures;5 and since the fall, not without
a mediator,6 nor in the mediation of any other but Christ alone.7
4. Mt 4:9-10; Jn 6:23; Mt 28:19. 5. Ro 1:25;
Col 2:18; Rev 19:10. 6. Jn 14:6. 7. 1Ti 2:5.
3. Prayer, with thanksgiving, being one part of natural worship,
is by God required of all men.8 But that it may be accepted,
it is to be made in the name of the Son,9 by the help of the
Spirit,10 according to His will;11 with understanding,
reverence, humility, fervency, faith, love, and perseverance; and when with
others, in a known tongue.12
8. Ps 95:1-7; 65:2. 9. Jn 14:13-14. 10.
Ro 8:26. 11. 1Jn 5:14. 12. 1Co 14:16-17.
4. Prayer is to be made for things lawful, and
for all sorts of men living, or that shall live hereafter;13
but not for the dead,14 not for those of whom it may be known
that they have sinned the sin unto death.15
13. 1Ti 2:1-2; 2Sa 7:29. 14. 2Sa 12:21-23.
15. 1Jn 5:16.
5. The reading of the Scriptures,16
preaching, and hearing the Word of God,17 teaching and admonishing
one another in psalms, hymns, and spiritual songs, singing with grace in
our hearts to the Lord;18 as also the administration of baptism,19
and the Lord's supper,20 are all parts of religious worship of
God, to be performed in obedience to Him, with understanding, faith, reverence,
and godly fear; moreover, solemn humiliation, with fastings,21
and thanksgivings, upon special occasions, ought to be used in an holy and
religious manner.22
16. 1Ti 4:13. 17. 2Ti 4:2; Lk 8:18. 18.
Col 3:16; Eph 5:19. 19. Mt 28:19-20. 20. 1Co 11:26.
21. Est 4:16; Joel 2:12. 22. Ex 15:1-19;
Ps 107:1-43.
6. Neither prayer nor any other part of religious
worship, is now under the gospel, tied unto, or made more acceptable by
any place in which it is performed, or towards which it is directed; but
God is to be worshipped everywhere in spirit and in truth;23
as in private families24 daily,25 and in secret each
one by himself;26 so more solemnly in the public assemblies,
which are not carelessly nor wilfully to be neglected or forsaken, when
God by His word or providence calleth thereto.27
23. Jn 4:21; Mal 1:11; 1Ti 2:8. 24. Ac 10:2.
25. Mt 6:11; Ps 55:17. 26. Mt 6:6. 27. Heb 10:25; Ac 2:42.
7. As it is the law of nature, that in general
a proportion of time, by God's appointment, be set apart for the worship
of God, so by His Word, in a positive moral, and perpetual commandment,
binding all men, in all ages, He hath particularly appointed one day in
seven for a sabbath to be kept holy unto Him,28 which from the
beginning of the world to the resurrection of Christ was the last day of
the week, and from the resurrection of Christ was changed into the first
day of the week, which is called the Lord's Day:29 and is to
be continued to the end of the world as a Christian Sabbath, the observation
of the last day of the week being abolished.
28. Ex 20:8. 29. 1Co 16:1-2; Ac 20:7; Rev
1:10.
8. The sabbath is then kept holy unto the Lord,
when men, after a due preparing of their hearts, and ordering their common
affairs aforehand, do not only observe an holy rest all day, from their
own works, words and thoughts, about their worldly employment and recreations,30
but are also taken up the whole time in the public and private exercises
of His worship, and in the duties of necessity and mercy.31
30. Isa 58:13; Ne 13:15-22. 31. Mt 12:1-13.
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Chapter 23. Of Lawful Oaths
and Vows
1. A lawful oath is a part of religious worship,
wherein the person swearing in truth, righteousness, and judgment, solemnly
calleth God to witness what he sweareth,1 and to judge him
according to the truth or falseness thereof.2
1. Ex 20:7; Dt 10:20; Jer 4:2. 2. 2Ch 6:22-23.
2. The name of God only is that by which men
ought to swear; and therein it is to be used, with all holy fear and reverence;
therefore to swear vainly or rashly by that glorious and dreadful name,
or to swear at all by any other thing, is sinful, and to be abhorred;3
yet as in matter of weight and moment, for confirmation of truth, and ending
all strife, an oath is warranted by the Word of God;4 so a lawful
oath being imposed by lawful authority in such matters, ought to be taken.5
3. Mt 5:34,37; Jas 5:12. 4. Heb 6:16; 2Co
1:23. 5. Ne 13:25.
3. Whosoever taketh an oath warranted by the
Word of God, ought duly to consider the weightiness of so solemn an act,
and therein to avouch nothing but what he knoweth to be truth; for that
by rash, false, and vain oaths, the Lord is provoked, and for them this
land mourns.6
6. Lev 19:12; Jer 23:10.
4. An oath is to be taken in the plain and common
sense of the words, without equivocation or mental reservation.7
7. Ps 24:4.
5. A vow, which is not to be made to any creature, but to
God alone, is to be made and performed with all religious care and faithfulness;8
but popish monastical vows of perpetual single life,9 professed
poverty,10 and regular obedience, are so far from being degrees
of higher perfection, that they are superstitious and sinful snares, in
which no Christian may entangle himself.11
8. Ps 76:11; Ge 28:20-22. 9. 1Co 7:2,9.
10. Eph 4:28. 11. Mt 19:11.
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Chapter 24. Of the Civil
Magistrate
1. God, the supreme Lord and King of all the
world, hath ordained civil magistrates to be under Him, over the people,
for His own glory and the public good; and to this end hath armed them
with the power of the sword, for defence and encouragement of them that
do good, and for the punishment of evil doers.1
1. Ro 13:1-4.
2. It is lawful for Christians to accept and execute the
office of a magistrate when called thereunto; in the management whereof,
as they ought especially to maintain justice and peace,2 according
to the wholesome laws of each kingdom and commonwealth, so for that end
they may lawfully now, under the New Testament, wage war upon just and necessary
occasions.3
2. 2Sa 23:3; Ps 82:3-4. 3. Lk 3:14.
3.Civil magistrates being set up by God for the
ends aforesaid; subjection, in all lawful things commanded by them, ought
to be yielded by us in the Lord, not only for wrath, but for conscience'
sake;4 and we ought to make supplications and prayers for kings
and all that are in authority, that under them we may live a quiet and peaceable
life, in all godliness and honesty.5
4. Ro 13:5-7; 1Pe 2:17. 5. 1Ti 2:1-2.
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Chapter 25. Of Marriage
1. Marriage is to be between one man and one
woman; neither is it lawful for any man to have more than one wife, nor
for any woman to have more than one husband at the same time.1
1. Ge 2:24; Mal 2:15; Mt 19:5-6.
2. Marriage was ordained for the mutual help
of husband and wife,2 for the increase of mankind with a legitimate
issue,3 and for preventing uncleanness.4
2. Ge 2:18. 3. Ge 1:28. 4. 1Co 7:2,9.
3. It is lawful for all sorts of people to marry,
who are able with judgment to give their consent;5 yet it is
the duty of Christians to marry in the Lord;6 and therefore such
as profess the true religion, should not marry with infidels, or idolators;
neither should such as are godly, be unequally yoked, by marrying with such
as are wicked in their life, or maintain damnable heresy.7
5. Heb 13:4; 1Ti 4:3. 6. 1Co 7:39. 7. Ne
13:25-27.
4. Marriage ought not to be within the degrees
of consanguinity or affinity, forbidden in the Word;8 nor can
such incestuous marriages ever be made lawful, by any law of man or consent
of parties, so as those persons may live together as man and wife.9
8. Lev 18:1-30. 9. Mk 6:18; 1Co 5:1.
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Chapter 26. Of the Church
1. The catholic or universal church, which
(with respect to the internal work of the Spirit and truth of grace) may
be called invisible, consists of the whole number of the elect, that have
been, are, or shall be gathered into one, under Christ, the head thereof;
and is the spouse, the body, the fulness of Him that filleth all in all.1
1. Heb 12:23; Col 1:18; Eph 1:10,22-23;
Eph 5:23,27,32.
2. All persons throughout the world, professing
the faith of the gospel, and obedience unto God by Christ according unto
it, not destroying their own profession by any error everting the foundation,
or unholiness of conversation, are and may be called visible saints;2
and of such ought all particular congregations to be constituted.3
2. 1Co 1:2; Ac 11:26. 3. Ro 1:7; Eph 1:20-22.
3. The purest churches under heaven are subject
to mixture and error;4 and some have so degenerated as to become
no churches of Christ, but synagogues of Satan;5 nevertheless
Christ always hath had, and ever shall have a kingdom in this world, to
the end thereof, of such as believe in Him, and make profession of His name.6
4. 1Co 5:1-13; Rev 2:1-29; 3:1-22. 5. Rev
18:2; 2Th 2:11-12. 6. Mt 16:18; Ps 72:17; Ps 102:28; Rev 12:17.
4. The Lord Jesus Christ is the Head of the
church, in whom, by the appointment of the Father all power for the calling,
institution, order, or government of the church, is invested in a supreme
and sovereign manner.7[*]
7. Col 1:18; Mt 28:18-20; Eph 4:11-12.
5. In the execution of this power wherewith He
is so intrusted, the Lord Jesus calleth out of the world unto Himself, through
the ministry of His Word, by His Spirit, those that are given unto Him by
His Father,9 that they may walk before Him in all the ways of
obedience, which He prescribeth to them in His Word.10 Those
thus called, He commandeth to walk together in particular societies, or
churches, for their mutual edification, and the due performance of that
public worship, which He requireth of them in the world.11
9. Jn 10:16; 12:32. 10. Mt 28:20. 11. Mt
18:15-20.
6. The members of these churches are saints by
calling, visibly manifesting and evidencing (in and by their profession
and walking) their obedience unto that call of Christ;12 and
do willingly consent to walk together, according to the appointment of Christ;
giving up themselves to the Lord, and one to another, by the will of God,
in professed subjection to the ordinances of the Gospel.13
12. Ro 1:7; 1Co 1:2. 13. Ac 2:41-42; Ac 5:13-14;
2Co 9:13.
7. To each of these churches thus gathered, according
to His mind declared in His Word, He hath given all that power and authority,
which is in any way needful for their carrying on that order in worship
and discipline, which He hath instituted for them to observe; with commands
and rules for the due and right exerting, and executing of that power.14
14. Mt 18:17-18; 1Co 5:4-5; 1Co 5:13; 2Co 2:6-8.
8. A particular church, gathered and completely
organized according to the mind of Christ, consists of officers and members;
and the officers appointed by Christ to be chosen and set apart by the church
(so called and gathered), for the peculiar administration of ordinances,
and execution of power or duty, which He entrusts them with, or calls them
to, to be continued to the end of the world, are bishops or elders, and
deacons.15
15. Ac 20:17,28; Php 1:1.
9. The way appointed by Christ for the calling
of any person, fitted and gifted by the Holy Spirit, unto the office of
bishop or elder in a church, is, that he be chosen thereunto by the common
suffrage of the church itself;16 and solemnly set apart by fasting
and prayer, with imposition of hands of the eldership of the church, if
there be any before constituted therein;17 and of a deacon that
he be chosen by the like suffrage, and set apart by prayer, and the like
imposition of hands.18
16. Ac 14:23. 17. 1Ti 4:14. 18. Ac 6:3,5-6.
10. The work of pastors being constantly to attend
the service of Christ, in His churches, in the ministry of the Word and
prayer, with watching for their souls, as they that must give an account
to Him;19 it is incumbent on the churches to whom they minister,
not only to give them all due respect, but also to communicate to them of
all their good things, according to their ability,20 so as they
may have a comfortable supply, without being themselves entangled in secular
affairs;21 and may also be capable of exercising hospitality
towards others;22 and this is required by the law of nature,
and by the express order of our Lord Jesus, who hath ordained that they
that preach the Gospel should live of the Gospel.23
19. Ac 6:4; Heb 13:17. 20. 1Ti 5:17-18;
Gal 6:6-7. 21. 2Ti 2:4. 22. 1Ti 3:2. 23. 1Co 9:6-14.
11. Although it be incumbent on the bishops or pastors of
the churches, to be instant in preaching the Word, by way of office, yet
the work of preaching the Word is not so peculiarly confined to them but
that others also gifted and fitted by the Holy Spirit for it, and approved
and called by the church, may and ought to perform it.24
24. Ac 11:19-21; 1Pe 4:10-11.
12. As all believers are bound to join themselves
to particular churches, when and where they have opportunity so to do; so
all that are admitted unto the privileges of a church, are also under the
censures and government thereof, according to the rule of Christ.25
25. 1Th 5:14; 2Th 3:6,14-15.
13. No church members, upon any offence taken
by them, having performed their duty required of them towards the person
they are offended at, ought to disturb any church-order, or absent themselves
from the assemblies of the church, or administration of any ordinances,
upon the account of such offence at any of their fellow members, but to
wait upon Christ, in the further proceedings of the church.26
26. Mt 18:15-17; Eph 4:2-3.
14. As each church, and all the members of it,
are bound to pray continually for the good and prosperity of all the churches
of Christ,27 in all places, and upon all occasions to further
every one within the bounds of their places and callings, in the exercise
of their gifts and graces, so the churches, when planted by the providence
of God, so as they may enjoy opportunity and advantage for it, ought to
hold communion among themselves, for their peace, increase of love, and
mutual edification.28
27. Eph 6:18; Ps 122:6. 28. Ro 16:1-2; 3Jn
8-10.
15. In cases of difficulties or differences,
either in point of doctrine or administration, wherein either the churches
in general are concerned, or any one church, in their peace, union, and
edification; or any member or members of any church are injured, in or by
any proceedings in censures not agreeable to truth and order: it is according
to the mind of Christ, that many churches holding communion together, do,
by their messengers, meet to consider, and give their advice in or about
that matter in difference, to be reported to all the churches concerned;29
howbeit these messengers assembled, are not intrusted with any church-power
properly so called; or with any jurisdiction over the churches themselves,
to exercise any censures either over any churches or persons; or to impose
their determination on the churches or officers.30
29. Ac 15:2,4,6,22-23,25. 30. 2Co 1:24;
1Jn 4:1.
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Chapter 27. Of the Communion
of Saints
1. All saints that are united to Jesus Christ,
their head, by His Spirit, and faith, although they are not made thereby
one person with Him, have fellowship in His graces, sufferings, death,
resurrection, and glory;1 and, being united to one another
in love, they have communion in each others gifts and graces,2
and are obliged to the performance of such duties, public and private,
in an orderly way, as do conduce to their mutual good, both in the inward
and outward man.3
1. 1Jn 1:3; Jn 1:16; Php 3:10; Ro 6:5-6.
2. Eph 4:15-16; 1Co 12:7; 1Co 3:21-23.
3. 1Th 5:11,14; Ro 1:12; 1Jn 3:17-18; Gal
6:10.
2. Saints by profession are bound to maintain
an holy fellowship and communion in the worship of God, and in performing
such other spiritual services as tend to their mutual edification;4
as also in relieving each other in outward things according to their several
abilities, and necessities;5 which communion, according to the
rule of the gospel, though especially to be exercised by them, in the relation
wherein they stand, whether in families,6 or churches,7
yet, as God offereth opportunity, is to be extended to all the household
of faith, even all those who in every place call upon the name of the Lord
Jesus; nevertheless their communion one with another as saints, doth not
take away or infringe the title or propriety which each man hath in his
goods and possessions.8
4. Heb 10:24-25; Heb 3:12-13. 5. Ac 11:29-30.
6. Eph 6:4. 7. 1Co 12:14-27. 8. Ac 5:4; Eph 4:28.
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Chapter 28. Of Baptism and the Lord's Supper
1. 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.1
1. Mt 28:19-20; 1Co 11:26.
2. These holy appointments are to be administered
by those only who are qualified and thereunto called, according to the commission
of Christ.2
2. Mt 28:19; 1Co 4:1.
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Chapter 29. Of Baptism
1. Baptism is an ordinance of the New Testament,
ordained by Jesus Christ, to be unto the party baptized, a sign of his
fellowship with Him, in His death and resurrection; of his being engrafted
into Him;1 of remission of sins;2 and of giving
up into God, through Jesus Christ, to live and walk in newness of life.3
1. Ro 6:3-5; Col 2:12; Gal 3:27. 2. Mk 1:4;
Ac 22:16. 3. Ro 6:4.
2. Those who do actually profess repentance towards
God, faith in, and obedience to, our Lord Jesus Christ, are the only proper
subjects of this ordinance.4
4. Mk 16:16; Ac 8:36-37; Ac 2:41; Ac 8:12; Ac 18:8.
3. The outward element to be used in this ordinance
is water, wherein the party is to be baptized, in the name of the Father,
and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit.5
5. Mt 28:19-20; Ac 8:38.
4. Immersion, or dipping of the person in water,
is necessary to the due administration of this ordinance.6
6. Mt 3:16, Jn 3:23.
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Chapter 30. Of the Lord's
Supper
1. The supper of the Lord Jesus was instituted
by Him the same night wherein He was betrayed, to be observed in His churches,
unto the end of the world, for the perpetual remembrance, and shewing
forth the sacrifice of Himself in His death,1 confirmation
of the faith of believers in all the benefits thereof, their spiritual
nourishment, and growth in Him, their further engagement in, and to all
duties which they owe to Him; and to be a bond and pledge of their communion
with Him, and with each other.2
1. 1Co 11:23-26. 2. 1Co 10:16-17,21.
2. In this ordinance Christ is not offered up
to His Father, nor any real sacrifice made at all for remission of sin of
the quick or dead, but only a memorial of that one offering up of Himself
by Himself upon the cross, once for all;3 and a spiritual oblation
of all possible praise unto God for the same.4 So that the popish
sacrifice of the mass, as they call it, is most abominable, injurious to
Christ's own sacrifice the alone propitiation for all the sins of the elect.
3. Heb 9:25-26,28. 4. 1Co 11:24; Mt 26:26-27.
3. The Lord Jesus hath, in this ordinance, appointed
His ministers to pray, and bless the elements of bread and wine, and thereby
to set them apart from a common to a holy use, and to take and break the
bread; to take the cup, and, they communicating also themselves, to give
both to the communicants.5
5. 1Co 11:23-26.
4. The denial of the cup to the people, worshipping the elements,
the lifting them up, or carrying them about for adoration, and reserving
them for any pretended religious use, are all contrary to the nature of
this ordinance, and to the institution of Christ.6
6. Mt 26:26-28; Mt 15:9; Ex 20:4-5.
5. The outward elements in this ordinance, duly
set apart to the use ordained by Christ, have such relation to Him crucified,
as that truly, although in terms used figuratively, they are sometimes called
by the names of the things they represent, to wit, the body and blood of
Christ,7 albeit, in substance and nature, they still remain truly
and only bread and wine, as they were before.8
7. 1Co 11:27. 8. 1Co 11:26-28.
6. That doctrine which maintains a change of
the substance of bread and wine, into the substance of Christ's body and
blood, commonly called transubstantiation, by consecration of a priest,
or by any other way, is repugnant not to Scripture alone,9 but
even to common sense and reason, overthroweth the nature of the ordinance,
and hath been, and is, the cause of manifold superstitions, yea, of gross
idolatries.10
9. Ac 3:21; Lk 24:6,39. 10. 1Co 11:24-25.
7. Worthy receivers, outwardly partaking of the
visible elements in this ordinance, do them also inwardly by faith, really
and indeed, yet not carnally and corporally, but spiritually receive, and
feed upon Christ crucified, and all the benefits of His death; the body
and blood of Christ being then not corporally or carnally, but spiritually
present to the faith of believers in that ordinance, as the elements themselves
are to their outward senses.11
11. 1Co 10:16; 1Co 11:23-26.
8. All ignorant and ungodly persons, as they
are unfit to enjoy communion with Christ, so are they unworthy of the Lord's
table, and cannot, without great sin against Him, while they remain such,
partake of these holy mysteries, or be admitted thereunto;12
yea, whosoever shall receive unworthily, are guilty of the body and blood
of the Lord, eating and drinking judgment to themselves.13
12. 2Co 6:14-15. 13. 1Co 11:29; Mt 7:6.
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Chapter 31. Of the State of Man After Death,
and of the Resurrection of the Dead
1. The bodies of men after death return to
dust, and see corruption1 but their souls, which neither die
nor sleep, having an immortal subsistence, immediately return to God who
gave them.2 The souls of the righteous being then made perfect
in holiness, are received into paradise, where they are with Christ, and
behold the face of God in light and glory, waiting for the full redemption
of their bodies;3 and the souls of the wicked are cast into
hell; where they remain in torment and utter darkness, reserved to the
judgment of the great day;4 besides these two places, for souls
separated from their bodies, the Scripture acknowledgeth none.
1. Ge 3:19; Ac 13:36. 2. Ecc 12:7. 3. Lk
23:43; 2Co 5:1,6,8; Php 1:23, Heb 12:23.
4. Jude 6-7; 1Pe 3:19; Lk 16:23-24.
2. At the last day, such of the saints as are
found alive, shall not sleep, but be changed;5 and all the dead
shall be raised up with the selfsame bodies, and none other;6
although with different qualities, which shall be united again to their
souls for ever.7
5. 1Co 15:51-52; 1Th 4:17. 6. Job 19:26-27.
7. 1Co 15:42-43.
3. The bodies of the unjust shall, by the power
of Christ, be raised to dishonour; the bodies of the just, by His Spirit,
unto honour, and be made conformable to His own glorious body.8
8. Ac 24:15; Jn 5:28-29; Php 3:21.
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Chapter 32. Of the Last Judgment
1. God hath appointed a day wherein He will
judge the world in righteousness, by Jesus Christ;1 to whom
all power and judgment is given of the Father; in which day, not only
the apostate angels shall be judged,2 but likewise all persons
that have lived upon the earth 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 in the body, whether good or evil.3
1. Ac 17:31; Jn 5:22, 27. 2. 1Co 6:3; Jude
6. 3. 2Co 5:10; Ecc 12:14; Mt 12:36; Ro 14:10,12; Mt 25:32-46.
2. 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 of His justice, in the eternal damnation of the reprobate,
who are wicked and disobedient:4 for then shall the righteous
go into everlasting life, and receive that fullness of joy and glory with
everlasting rewards, 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,5 and punished with everlasting destruction,
from the presence of the Lord, and from the glory of His power.6
4. Ro 9:22-23. 5. Mt 25:21,34; 2Ti 4:8.
6. Mt 25:46; Mk 9:48; 2Th 1:7-10.
3. As Christ would have us to be certainly persuaded
that there shall be a day of judgment, both to deter all men from sin,7
and for the greater consolation of the godly in their adversity,8
so will He have the day unknown to men, that they may shake off all carnal
security, and be always watchful, because they know not at what hour the
Lord will come,9 and may ever be prepared to say, "Come Lord
Jesus; come quickly".10 Amen.
7. 2Co 5:10-11. 8. 2Th 1:5-7. 9. Mk 13:35-37;
Lk 12:35-40. 10. Rev 22:20.
* The remainder of this section
in the original 1689 Confession has been deleted.
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