|
Home Creeds
|
Canons of
Dort
(1619 AD)
These were produced by the Synod of Dort (1618-1619) as a response to Arminianism. (Dort is in Holland.) The Five Points of Calvinism produced here were in response to five points presented by the Arminians. The Synod was an international body and so made the Canons of Dort the most international of the Reformed documents.
________________
FIRST HEAD: ARTICLE 1. As all men have
sinned in Adam, lie under the curse, and are deserving of eternal death,
God would have done no injustice by leaving them all to perish and
delivering them over to condemnation on account of sin, according to the
words of the apostle: "that every mouth may be silenced and the
whole world held accountable to God." (Rom 3:19). And: "for
all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God," (Rom 3:23).
And: "For the wages of sin is death." (Rom 6:23).
FIRST HEAD: ARTICLE 2. but in this the love of God was manifested, that
He "sent his one and only Son into the world, that whoever believes
in him shall not perish but have eternal life." (1 John 4:9, John
3:16).
FIRST HEAD: ARTICLE 3. And that men may be brought to believe, God
mercifully sends the messengers of these most joyful tiding to whom He
will and at what time He pleases; by whose ministry men are called to
repentance and faith in Christ crucified. "How, then, can they call
on the one they have not believed in? And how can they believe in the
one of whom they have not heard? And how can they hear without someone
preaching to them? And how can they preach unless they are sent?"
(Rom 10:14-15).
FIRST HEAD: ARTICLE 4. The wrath of God abides upon those who believe
not this gospel. But such as receive it and embrace Jesus the Savior by
a true and living faith are by Him delivered from the wrath of God and
from destruction, and have the gift of eternal life conferred upon them.
FIRST HEAD: ARTICLE 5. The cause or guilt of this unbelief as well as of
all other sins is no wise in God, but in man himself; whereas faith in
Jesus Christ and salvation through Him is the free gift of God, as it is
written: "For it is by grace you have been saved, through
faith--and this not from yourselves, it is the gift of God" (Eph
2:8). Likewise: "For it has been granted to you on behalf of Christ
not only to believe on him, but also to suffer for him" (Phil 1:29)
FIRST HEAD: ARTICLE 6. That some receive the gift of faith from God, and
others do not receive it, proceeds from God's eternal decree. "For
now unto God are all his works from the beginning of the world"
(Acts 15:18 A.V.). "who works out everything in conformity with the
purpose of his will" (Eph 1:11). According to which decree He
graciously softens the hearts of the elect, however obstinate, and
inclines them to believe; while He leaves the non-elect in His just
judgment to their own wickedness and obduracy. And herein is especially
displayed the profound, the merciful, and at the same time the righteous
discrimination between men equally involved in ruin; or that decree of
election and reprobation, revealed in the Word of God, which, though men
of perverse, impure, and unstable minds wrest it to their own
destruction, yet to holy and pious souls affords unspeakable
consolation.
FIRST HEAD: ARTICLE 7. Election is the unchangeable purpose of God,
whereby, before the foundation of the world, He has out of mere grace,
according to the sovereign good pleasure of His own will, chosen from
the whole human race, which had fallen through their own fault from the
primitive state of rectitude into sin and destruction, a certain number
of persons to redemption in Christ, whom He from eternity appointed the
Mediator and Head of the elect and the foundation of salvation. This
elect number, though by nature neither better nor more deserving than
others, but with them involved in one common misery, God has decreed to
give to Christ to be saved by Him, and effectually to call an draw them
to His communion by His Word and Spirit; to bestow upon them true faith,
justification, and sanctification; and having powerfully preserved them
in the fellowship of His son, finally to glorify them for the
demonstration of His mercy, and for the praise of the riches of His
glorious grace; as it is written "For he chose us in him before the
creation of the world to be holy and blameless in his sight. In love he
predestined us to be adopted as his sons through Jesus Christ, in
accordance with his pleasure and will-- to the praise of his glorious
grace, which he has freely given us in the One he loves." (Eph
1:4-6). And elsewhere: "And those he predestined, he also called;
those he called, he also justified; those he justified, he also
glorified." (Rom 8:30).
FIRST HEAD: ARTICLE 8. There are not various decrees of election, but
one and the same decree respecting all those who shall be saved, both
under the Old and New Testament; since the Scripture declares the good
pleasure, purpose, and counsel of the divine will to be one, according
to which He has chosen us from eternity, both to grace and to glory, to
salvation and to the way of salvation, which He has ordained that we
should walk therein (Eph 1:4, 5; 2:10).
FIRST HEAD: ARTICLE 9. This election was not founded upon foreseen faith
and the obedience of faith, holiness, or any other good quality or
disposition in man, as the prerequisite, cause, or condition of which it
depended; but men are chosen to faith and to the obedience of faith,
holiness, etc. Therefore election is the fountain of every saving good,
from which proceed faith, holiness, and the other gifts of salvation,
and finally eternal life itself, as its fruits and effects, according to
the testimony of the apostle: "For he chose us (not because we
were, but) in him before the creation of the world to be holy and
blameless in his sight." (Eph 1:4).
FIRST HEAD: ARTICLE 10. The good pleasure of God is the sole cause of
this gracious election; which does not consist herein that out of all
possible qualities and actions of men God has chosen some as a condition
of salvation, but that He was pleased out of the common mass of sinners
to adopt some certain persons as a peculiar people to Himself, as it is
written: "Yet, before the twins were born or had done anything good
or bad--in order that God's purpose in election might stand: not by
works but by him who calls--she (Rebekah) was told, 'The older will
serve the younger.' Just as it is written: 'Jacob I loved, but Esau I
hated.'" (Rom 9:11-13). "When the Gentiles heard this, they
were glad and honored the word of the Lord; and all who were appointed
for eternal life believed." (Acts 13:48).
FIRST HEAD: ARTICLE 11. And as God Himself is most wise, unchangeable,
omniscient, and omnipotent, so the election made by Him can neither be
interrupted nor changed, recalled, or annulled; neither can the elect be
cast away, nor their number diminished.
FIRST HEAD: ARTICLE 12. The elect in due time, though in various degrees
and in different measures, attain the assurance of this their eternal
and unchangeable election, not by inquisitively prying into the secret
and deep things of God, but by observing in themselves with a spiritual
joy and holy pleasure the infallible fruits of election pointed out in
the Word of God - such as, a true faith in Christ, filial fear, a godly
sorrow for sin, a hungering and thirsting after righteousness, etc.
FIRST HEAD: ARTICLE 13. The sense and certainty of this election afford
to the children of God additional matter for daily humiliation before
Him, for adoring the depth of His mercies, for cleansing themselves, and
rendering grateful returns of ardent love to Him who first manifested so
great love towards them. The consideration of this doctrine of election
is so far from encouraging remissness in the observance of the divine
commands or from sinking men in carnal security, that these, in the just
judgment of God, are the usual effects of rash presumption or of idle
and wanton trifling with the grace of election, in those who refuse to
walk in the ways of the elect.
FIRST HEAD: ARTICLE 14. As the doctrine of election by the most wise
counsel of God was declared by the prophets, by Christ Himself, and by
the apostles, and is clearly revealed in the Scriptures both of the Old
and the New Testament, so it is still to be published in due time and
place in the Church of God, for which it was peculiarly designed,
provided it be done with reverence, in the spirit of discretion and
piety, for the glory of God's most holy Name, and for enlivening and
comforting His people, without vainly attempting to investigate the
secret ways of the Most High (Acts 20:27; Rom 11:33f; 12:3; Heb 6:17f).
FIRST HEAD: ARTICLE 15. What peculiarly tends to illustrate and
recommend to us the eternal and unmerited grace of election is the
express testimony of sacred Scripture that not all, but some only, are
elected, while others are passed by in the eternal decree; whom God, out
of His sovereign, most just, irreprehensible, and unchangeable good
pleasure, has decreed to leave in the common misery into which they have
willfully plunged themselves, and not to bestow upon them saving faith
and the grace of conversion; but, permitting them in His just judgment
to follow their own ways, at last, for the declaration of His justice,
to condemn and punish them forever, not only on account of their
unbelief, but also for all their other sins. And this is the decree of
reprobation, which by no means makes God the Author of sin (the very
though of which is blasphemy), but declares Him to be an awful,
irreprehensible, and righteous Judge and Avenger thereof.
FIRST HEAD: ARTICLE 16. Those in whom a living faith in Christ, and
assured confidence of soul, peace of conscience, an earnest endeavor
after filial obedience, a glorying in God through Christ, is not as yet
strongly felt, and who nevertheless make use of the means which God has
appointed for working these graces in us, ought not to be alarmed at the
mention of reprobation, nor to rank themselves among the reprobate, but
diligently to persevere in the use of means, and with ardent desires
devoutly and humble to wait for a season of richer grace. Much less
cause to be terrified by the doctrine of reprobation have they who,
though they seriously desire to be turned to God, to please Him only,
and to be delivered from the body of death, cannot yet reach that
measure of holiness and faith to which they aspire; since a merciful God
has promised that He will not quench the smoking flax, nor break the
bruised reed. But this doctrine is justly terrible to those who,
regardless of God and of the Savior Jesus Christ, have wholly given
themselves up to the cares of the world and the pleasures of the flesh,
so long as they are not seriously converted to God.
FIRST HEAD: ARTICLE 17. Since we are to judge of the will of God from
His Word, which testifies that the children of believers are holy, not
by nature, but in virtue of the covenant of grace, in which they
together with the parents are comprehended, godly parents ought not to
doubt the election and salvation of their children whom it pleases God
to call out of this life in their infancy (Gen 17:7; Acts 2:39; 1 Cor
7:14).
FIRST HEAD: ARTICLE 18. To those who murmur at the free grace of
election and the just severity of reprobation we answer with the apostle
"But who are you, O man, to talk back to God?" (Rom 9:20), and
quote the language of our Savior: "Don't I have the right to do
what I want with my own?" (Matt 20:15). And therefore, with holy
adoration of these mysteries, we exclaim in the words of the apostle:
"Oh, the depth of the riches of the wisdom and knowledge of God!
How unsearchable his judgments, and his paths beyond tracing out! 'Who
has known the mind of the Lord? Or who has been his counselor?' 'Who has
ever given to God, that God should repay him?' For from him and through
him and to him are all things. To him be the glory forever! Amen."
(Rom 11:33-36).
REJECTION OF ERRORS
The true doctrine concerning election and
reprobation having been explained, the Synod rejects the errors of those:
FIRST HEAD: PARAGRAPH 1. Who teach: That
the will of God to save those who would believe and would persevere in
faith and in the obedience of faith is the whole and entire decree of
election, and that nothing else concerning this decree has been revealed
in God's Word.
For these deceive the simple and plainly contradict the Scriptures,
which declare that God will not only save those who will believe, but
that He has also from eternity chosen certain particular persons to
whom, above others, He will grant in time, both faith in Christ and
perseverance; as it is written "I have revealed you to those whom
you gave me out of the world. (John 17:6). "and all who were
appointed for eternal life believed. (Acts 13:48)". And "For
he chose us in him before the creation of the world to be holy and
blameless in his sight. (Eph 1:4)."
FIRST HEAD: PARAGRAPH 2. Who teach: That there are various kinds of
election of God unto eternal life: the one general and indefinite, the
other particular and definite; and that the latter in turn is either
incomplete, revocable, non-decisive, and conditional, or complete,
irrevocable, decisive, and absolute. Likewise: That there is one
election unto faith and another unto salvation, so that election can be
unto justifying faith, without being a decisive election unto salvation.
For this is a fancy of men's minds, invented regardless of the
Scriptures, whereby the doctrine of election is corrupted, and this
golden chain of our salvation is broken: "And those he predestined,
he also called; those he called, he also justified; those he justified,
he also glorified. (Rom 8:30)."
FIRST HEAD: PARAGRAPH 3. Who teach: That the good pleasure and purpose
of God, of which Scripture makes mention in the doctrine of election,
does not consist in this, that God chose certain persons rather than
others, but in this, that He chose out of all possible conditions (among
which are also the works of the law), or out of the whole order of
things, that act of faith which from its very nature is undeserving, as
well as it incomplete obedience, as a condition of salvation, and that
He would graciously consider this in itself as a complete obedience and
count it worthy of the reward of eternal life.
For by this injurious error the pleasure of God and the merits of Christ
are made of none effect, and men are drawn away by useless questions
from the truth of gracious justification and from the simplicity of
Scripture, and this declaration of the apostle is charged as untrue:
"who has saved us and called us to a holy life, not because of
anything we have done but because of his own purpose and grace. This
grace was given us in Christ Jesus before the beginning of time (2 Tim
1:9)."
FIRST HEAD: PARAGRAPH 4. Who teach: That in the election unto faith this
condition is beforehand demanded that man should use the light of nature
aright, be pious, humble, meek, and fit for eternal life, as if on these
things election were in any way dependent.
For this savors of the teaching of Pelagius, and is opposed to the
doctrine of the apostle when he writes: "All of us also lived among
them at one time, gratifying the cravings of our sinful nature and
following its desires and thoughts. Like the rest, we were by nature
objects of wrath. But because of his great love for us, God, who is rich
in mercy, made us alive with Christ even when we were dead in
transgressions--it is by grace you have been saved. And God raised us up
with Christ and seated us with him in the heavenly realms in Christ
Jesus, in order that in the coming ages he might show the incomparable
riches of his grace, expressed in his kindness to us in Christ Jesus.
For it is by grace you have been saved, through faith--and this not from
yourselves, it is the gift of God-- not by works, so that no one can
boast (Eph 2:3-9)."
FIRST HEAD: PARAGRAPH 5. Who teach: That the incomplete and non-decisive
election of particular persons to salvation occurred because of a
foreseen faith, conversion, holiness, godliness, which either began or
continued for some time; but that the complete and decisive election
occurred because of foreseen perseverance unto the end in faith,
conversion, holiness, and godliness; and that this is the gracious and
evangelical worthiness, for the sake of which he who is chosen is more
worthy than he who is not chosen; and that therefore faith, the
obedience of faith, holiness, godliness, and perseverance are not fruits
of the unchangeable election unto glory, but are conditions which, being
required beforehand, were foreseen as being met by those who will be
fully elected, and are causes without which the unchangeable election to
glory does not occur.
This is repugnant to the entire Scripture, which constantly inculcates
this and similar declarations: Election is "not by works but by him
who calls (Rom 9:12)." "And all who were appointed for eternal
life believed (Acts 13:48)." "For he chose us in him before
the creation of the world to be holy and blameless in his sight (Eph
1:4)." "You did not choose me, but I chose you and appointed
you to go and bear fruit that will last. Then the Father will give you
whatever you ask in my name (John 15:16)." "And if by grace,
then it is no longer by works (Rom 11:6)." "This is love: not
that we loved God, but that he loved us and sent his Son (1 John
4:10)."
FIRST HEAD: PARAGRAPH 6. Who teach: That not every election unto
salvation is unchangeable, but that some of the elect, any decree of God
notwithstanding, can yet perish and do indeed perish.
By this gross error they make God be changeable, and destroy the comfort
which the godly obtain out of the firmness of their election, and
contradict the Holy Scripture, which teaches that the elect can not be
led astray (Matt 24:24), that Christ does not lose those whom the Father
gave him (John 6:39), and that God also glorified those whom he
foreordained, called, and justified (Rom 8:30).
FIRST HEAD: PARAGRAPH 7. Who teach: That there is in this life no fruit
and no consciousness of the unchangeable elect to glory, nor any
certainty, except that which depends on a changeable and uncertain
condition.
For not only is it absurd to speak of an uncertain certainty, but also
contrary to the experience of the saints, who by virtue of the
consciousness of their election rejoice with the apostle and praise this
favor of God (Eph 1); who according to Christ's admonition rejoice with
his disciples that their names are written in heaven (Luke 10:20); who
also place the consciousness of their election over against the fiery
darts of the devil, asking: "Who will bring any charge against
those whom God has chosen? (Rom 8:33)."
FIRST HEAD: PARAGRAPH 8. Who teach: That God, simply by virtue of His
righteous will, did not decide either to leave anyone in the fall of
Adam and in the common state sin and condemnation, or to pass anyone by
in the communication of grace which is necessary for faith and
conversion.
For this is firmly decreed: "God has mercy on whom he wants to have
mercy, and he hardens whom he wants to harden (Rom 9:18)." And also
this: "The knowledge of the secrets of the kingdom of heaven has
been given to you, but not to them (Mat 13:11)." Likewise: "I
praise you, Father, Lord of heaven and earth, because you have hidden
these things from the wise and learned, and revealed them to little
children. Yes , Father, for this was your good pleasure (Mat
11:25-26)."
FIRST HEAD: PARAGRAPH 9. Who teach: That the reason why God sends the
gospel to one people rather than to another is not merely and solely the
good pleasure of God, but rather the fact that one people is better and
worthier than another to which the gospel is not communicated.
For this Moses denies , addressing the people of Israel as follows:
"To the LORD your God belong the heavens, even the highest heavens,
the earth and everything in it. Yet the LORD set his affection on your
forefathers and loved them, and he chose you, their descendants, above
all the nations, as it is today (Deu 10:14-15)." And Christ said:
"Woe to you, Korazin! Woe to you, Bethsaida! If the miracles that
were performed in you had been performed in Tyre and Sidon, they would
have repented long ago in sackcloth and ashes (Mat 11:21)."
SECOND HEAD OF DOCTRINE. THE DEATH
OF CHRIST, AND THE REDEMPTION OF MEN THEREBY
SECOND HEAD: ARTICLE 1. God is not only
supremely merciful, but also supremely just. And His justice requires
(as He has revealed Himself in His Word) that our sins committed against
His infinite majesty should be punished, not only with temporal but with
eternal punishments, both in body and soul; which we cannot escape,
unless satisfaction be made to the justice of God.
SECOND HEAD: ARTICLE 2. Since, therefore, we are unable to make that
satisfaction in our own persons, or to deliver ourselves from the wrath
of God, He has been pleased of His infinite mercy to give His only
begotten Son for our Surety, who was made sin, and became a curse for us
and in our stead, that He might make satisfaction to divine justice on
our behalf.
SECOND HEAD: ARTICLE 3. The death of the Son of God is the only and most
perfect sacrifice and satisfaction for sin, and is of infinite worth and
value, abundantly sufficient to expiate the sins of the whole world.
SECOND HEAD: ARTICLE 4. This death is of such infinite value and dignity
because the person who submitted to it was not only begotten Son of God,
of the same eternal and infinite essence with the Father and the Holy
Spirit, which qualifications were necessary to constitute Him a Savior
for us; and, moreover, because it was attended with a sense of the wrath
and curse of God due to us for sin.
SECOND HEAD: ARTICLE 5. Moreover, the promise of the gospel is that
whosoever believes in Christ crucified shall not perish, but have
eternal life. This promise, together with the command to repent and
believe, ought to be declared and published to all nations, and to all
persons promiscuously and without distinction, to whom God out of His
good pleasure sends the gospel.
SECOND HEAD: ARTICLE 6. And, whereas many who are called by the gospel
do not repent nor believe in Christ, but perish in unbelief, this is not
owing to any defect or insufficiency in the sacrifice offered by Christ
upon the cross, but is wholly to be imputed to themselves.
SECOND HEAD: ARTICLE 7. But as many as truly believe, and are delivered
and saved from sin and destruction through the death of Christ, are
indebted for this benefit solely to the grace of God given them in
Christ from everlasting, and not to any merit of their own.
SECOND HEAD: ARTICLE 8. For this was the sovereign counsel and most
gracious will and purpose of God the Father that the quickening and
saving efficacy of the most precious death of His Son should extend to
all the elect, for bestowing upon them alone the gift of justifying
faith, thereby to bring them infallibly to salvation; that is, it was
the will of God that Christ by the blood of the cross, whereby He
confirmed the new covenant, should effectually redeem out of every
people, tribe, nation, and language, all those, and those only, who were
from eternity chosen to salvation and given to Him by the Father; that
He should confer upon them faith, which, together with all the other
saving gifts of the Holy Spirit, He purchased for them by His death;
should purge them from all sin, both original and actual, whether
committed before or after believing; and having faithfully preserved
them even to the end, should at last bring them, free from every spot
and blemish, to the enjoyment of glory in His own presence forever.
SECOND HEAD: ARTICLE 9. This purpose, proceeding from everlasting love
towards the elect, has from the beginning of the world to this day been
powerfully accomplished, and will henceforeward still continue to be
accomplished, notwithstanding all the ineffectual opposition of the
gates of hell; so that the elect in due time may be gathered together
into one, and that there never may be wanting a Church composed of
believers, the foundation of which is laid in the blood of christ; which
may stedfastly love and faithfully serve Him as its Savior (who, as a
bridegroom for his bride, laid down His life for them upon the cross);
and which may celebrate His praises here and through all eternity.
REJECTION OF ERRORS
The true doctrine having been explained,
the Synod rejects the errors of those:
SECOND HEAD: PARAGRAPH 1. Who teach: That
God the Father has ordained His Son to the death of the cross without a
certain and definite decree to save any, so that the necessity,
profitableness, and worth of what christ merited by His death might have
existed, and might remain in all its parts complete, perfect, and
intact, even if the merited redemption had never in fact been applied to
any person.
For this doctrine tends to the despising of the wisdom of the Father and
of the merits of Jesus Christ, and is contrary to Scripture. For thus
says our Savior: "I lay down my life for the sheep ... and I know
them. (John 10:15, 27)." And the prophet Isaiah says concerning the
Savior: "Yet it was the Lord's will to crush him and cause him to
suffer, and though the LORD makes his life a guilt offering, he will see
his offspring and prolong his days, and the will of the LORD will
prosper in his hand (Isa 53:10)." Finally, this contradicts the
article of faith according to which we believe the catholic Christian
Church.
SECOND HEAD: PARAGRAPH 2. Who teach: That it was not the purpose of the
death of Christ that He should confirm the new covenant of grace through
His blood, but only that He should acquire for the Father the mere right
to establish with man such a covenant as He might please, whether of
grace or of works.
For this is repugnant to Scripture which teaches that "Jesus has
become the guarantee of a better covenant that is a new covenant
..." and that "it never takes effect while the one who made it
is living. (Heb 7:22; 9:15, 17)."
SECOND HEAD: PARAGRAPH 3. Who teach: That Christ by His satisfaction
merited neither salvation itself for any one, nor faith, whereby this
satisfaction of Christ unto salvation is effectually appropriated; but
that He merited for the Father only the authority or the perfect will to
deal again with man, and to prescribe new conditions as He might desire,
obedience to which, however, depended on the free will of man, so that
it therefore might have come to pass that either none or all should
fulfill these conditions.
For these adjudge too contemptuously of the death of Christ, in no wise
acknowledge that most important fruit or benefit thereby gained and
bring again out of the hell the Pelagian error.
SECOND HEAD: PARAGRAPH 4. Who teach: That the new covenant of grace,
which God the Father, through the mediation of the death of Christ, made
with man, does not herein consist that we by faith, in as much as it
accepts the merits of Christ, are justified before God and saved, but in
the fact that God, having revoked the demand of perfect obedience of
faith, regards faith itself and the obedience of faith, although
imperfect, as the perfect obedience of the law, and does esteem it
worthy of the reward of eternal life through grace.
For these contradict the Scriptures, being: "justified freely by
his grace through the redemption that came by Christ Jesus. God
presented him as a sacrifice of atonement, through faith in his blood
(Rom 3:24-25)." And these proclaim, as did the wicked Socinus, a
new and strange justification of man before God, against the consensus
of the whole Church.
SECOND HEAD: PARAGRAPH 5. Who teach: That all men have been accepted
unto the state of reconciliation and unto the grace of the covenant, so
that no one is worthy of condemnation on account of original sin, and
that no one shall be condemned because of it, but that all are free from
the guilt of original sin.
For this opinion is repugnant to Scripture which teaches that we are by
nature children of wrath (Eph 2:3).
SECOND HEAD: PARAGRAPH 6. Who use the difference between meriting and
appropriating, to the end that they may instil into the minds of the
imprudent and inexperienced this teaching that God, as far as He is
concerned, has been minded to apply to all equally the benefits gained
by the death of Christ; but that, while some obtain the pardon of sin
and eternal life, and others do not, this difference depends on their
own free will, which joins itself to the grace that is offered without
exception, and that it is not dependent on the special gift of mercy,
which powerfully works in them, that they rather than others should
appropriate unto themselves this grace.
For these, while they feign that they present this distinction in a
sound sense, seek to instil into the people the destructive poison of
the Pelagian errors.
SECOND HEAD: PARAGRAPH 7. Who teach: That Christ neither could die, nor
needed to die, and also did not die, for those whom God loved in the
highest degree and elected to eternal life, since these do not need the
death of Christ.
For the contradict the apostle, who declares, Christ: "loved me and
gave himself for me (Gal 2:20)." Likewise: "Who will bring any
charge against those whom God has chosen? It is God who justifies. Who
is he that condemns? Christ Jesus, who died (Rom 8:33-34)", namely,
for them; and the Savior who says: "I lay down my life for the
sheep (John 10:15)." And: "My command is this: Love each other
as I have loved you. Greater love has no one than this, that he lay down
his life for his friends (John 15:12-13)."
THIRD AND FOURTH HEADS OF DOCTRINE.
THE CORRUPTION OF MAN, HIS CONVERSION TO GOD, AND THE MANNER THEREOF
THIRD AND FOURTH HEAD: ARTICLE 1. Man was
originally formed after the image of God. His understanding was adorned
with a true and saving knowledge of his Creator, and of spiritual
things; his heart and will were upright, all his affections pure, and
the whole man was holy. But, revolting from God by the instigation of
the devil and by his own free will, he forfeited these excellent gifts;
and an in the place thereof became involved in blindness of mind,
horrible darkness, vanity, and perverseness of judgment; became wicked,
rebellious, and obdurate in heart and will, and impure in his
affections.
THIRD AND FOURTH HEAD: ARTICLE 2. Man after the fall begat children in
his own likeness. A corrupt stock produced a corrupt offspring. Hence
all the posterity of Adam, Christ only excepted, have derived corruption
from their original parent, not by limitation, as the Pelagians of old
asserted, but by the propagation of a vicious nature, in consequence of
the just judgment of God.
THIRD AND FOURTH HEAD: ARTICLE 3. Therefore all men are conceived in
sin, and are by nature children of wrath, incapable of saving good,
prone to evil, dead in sin, and in bondage thereto; and without the
regenerating grace of the Holy Spirit, they are neither able nor willing
to return to God, to reform the depravity of their nature, or to dispose
themselves to reformation
THIRD AND FOURTH HEAD: ARTICLE 4. There remain, however, in man since
the fall, the glimmerings of natural light, whereby he retains some
knowledge of God, or natural things, and of the difference between good
and evil, and shows some regard for virtue and for good outward
behavior. But so far is this light of nature from begin sufficient to
bring him to a saving knowledge of God and to true conversion that he is
incapable of using it aright even in things natural and civil. Nay
further, this light, such as it is , man in various ways renders wholly
polluted, and hinders in unrighteousness, by doing which he becomes
inexcusable before God.
THIRD AND FOURTH HEAD: ARTICLE 5. In the same light are we to consider
the law of the decalogue, delivered by God to His peculiar people, the
Jews, by the hands of Moses. For though it reveals the greatness of sin,
and more and more convinces man thereof, yet, as it neither points out a
remedy nor imparts strength to extricate him from his misery, but, being
weak through the flesh, leaves the transgressor under the curse, man
cannot by this law obtain saving grace.
THIRD AND FOURTH HEAD: ARTICLE 6. What, therefore, neither the light of
nature nor the law could do, that God performs by the operation of the
Holy Spirit through the word or ministry of reconciliation; which is the
glad tidings concerning the Messiah, by means whereof it has pleased God
to save such as believe, as well under the Old as under the New
Testament.
THIRD AND FOURTH HEAD: ARTICLE 7. This mystery of His will God reveals
to but a small number under the Old Testament; under the New Testament
(the distinction between various peoples having been removed) He reveals
it to many. The cause of this dispensation is not to be ascribed to the
superior worth of one nation above another, nor to their better use of
the light of nature, but results wholly from the sovereign good pleasure
and unmerited love of God. Hence they to whom so great and so gracious a
blessing is communicated, above their desert, or rather notwithstanding
their demerits, are bound to acknowledge it with humble and grateful
hearts, and with the apostle to adore, but in no wise curiously to pry
into, the severity and justice of God's judgments displayed in others to
whom this grace is not given.
THIRD AND FOURTH HEAD: ARTICLE 8. As many as are called by the gospel
are unfeignedly called. For God has most earnestly and truly declared in
His Word what is acceptable to Him, namely, that those who are called
should come unto Him. He also seriously promises rest of soul and
eternal life to all who come to Him and believe.
THIRD AND FOURTH HEAD: ARTICLE 9. It is not the fault of the gospel, nor
of Christ offered therein, nor of God, who calls men by the gospel and
confers upon them various gifts, that those who are called by the
ministry of the Word refuse to come and be converted. The fault lies in
themselves; some of whom when called, regardless of their danger, reject
the Word of life; other, though they receive it, suffer it not to make a
lasting impression on their heart; therefore, their joy, arising only
from a temporary faith, soon vanishes, and they fall away; while others
choke the seed of the Word by perplexing cares and the pleasures of this
world, and produce no fruit. This our Savior teaches in the parable of
the sower (Matt 13).
THIRD AND FOURTH HEAD: ARTICLE 10. But that others who are called by the
gospel obey the call and are converted is not to be ascribed to the
proper exercise of free will, whereby one distinguishes himself above
others equally furnished with grace sufficient for faith and conversion
(as the proud heresy of Pelagius maintains); but it must be wholly
ascribed to God, who, as He has chosen His own from eternity in Christ,
so He calls them effectually in time, confers upon them faith and
repentance, rescues them from the power of darkness, and translates them
into the kingdom of His own Son; that they may show forth the praises of
Him who has called them out of darkness into His marvelous light, and
may glory not in themselves but in the Lord, according to the testimony
of the apostles in various places.
THIRD AND FOURTH HEAD: ARTICLE 11. But when God accomplishes His good
pleasure in the elect, or works in them true conversion, He not only
cause the gospel to be externally preached to them, and powerfully
illuminates their minds by His Holy Spirit, that they may rightly under
and discern the things of the Spirit of God; but by the efficacy of the
same regenerating Spirit He pervades the inmost recesses of man; He
opens the closed and softens the hardened heart, and circumcises that
which was uncircumcised; infuses new qualities into the will, which,
though heretofore dead, He quickens; from being evil, disobedient, and
refractory, He renders it good, obedient, and pliable; actuates and
strengthens it, that like a good tree, it may bring forth the fruits of
good actions.
THIRD AND FOURTH HEAD: ARTICLE 12. And this is that regeneration so
highly extolled in Scripture, that renewal, new creation, resurrection
from the dead, making alive, which God works in us without out aid. But
this is in no wise effected merely by the external preaching of the
gospel, by moral suasion, or such a mode of operation that, after God
has performed His part, it still remains in the power of man to be
regenerated or not, to be converted or to continue unconverted; but it
is evidently a supernatural work, most powerful, and at the same time
most delightful, astonishing, mysterious, and ineffable; not inferior in
efficacy to creation or the resurrection from the dead, as the Scripture
inspired by the Author of this work declares; so that all in whose heart
God works in this marvelous manner are certainly, infallibly, and
effectually regenerated, and do actually believe. Whereupon the will
thus renewed is not only actuated and influenced by God, but in
consequence of this influence becomes itself active. Wherefore also man
himself is rightly said to believe and repent by virtue of that grace
received.
THIRD AND FOURTH HEAD: ARTICLE 13. The manner of this operation cannot
be fully comprehended by believers in this life. Nevertheless, they are
satisfied to know and experience that by this grace of God they are
enabled to believe with the heart and to love their Savior.
THIRD AND FOURTH HEAD: ARTICLE 14. Faith is therefore to be considered
as the gift of God, not on account of its being offered by God to man,
to be accepted or rejected at his pleasure, but because it is in reality
conferred upon him, breathed and infused into him; nor even because God
bestows the power or ability to believe, and then expects that man
should by the exercise of his own free will consent to the terms of
salvation and actually believe in Christ, but because He who works in
man both to will and to work, and indeed all things in all, produces
both the will to believe and the act of believing also.
THIRD AND FOURTH HEAD: ARTICLE 15. God is under no obligation to confer
this grace upon any; for how can He be indebted to one who had no
previous gifts to bestow as a foundation for such recompense? Nay, how
can He be indebted to one who has nothing of his own but sin and
falsehood? He, therefore, who becomes the subject of this grace owes
eternal gratitude to God, and gives Him thanks forever. Whoever is not
made partaker thereof is either altogether regardless of these spiritual
gifts and satisfied with his own condition, or is in no apprehension of
danger, and vainly boasts the possession of that which he has not.
Further, with respect to those who outwardly profess their faith and
amend their lives, we are bound, after the example of the apostle, to
judge and speak of them in the most favorable manner; for the secret
recesses of the heart are unknown to us. And as to others who have not
yet been called, it is our duty to pray for them to God, who calls the
things that are not as if they were. But we are in no wise to conduct
ourselves towards them with haughtiness, as if we had made ourselves to
differ.
THIRD AND FOURTH HEAD: ARTICLE 16. But as man by the fall did not cease
to be a creature endowed with understanding and will, nor did sin which
pervaded the whole race of mankind deprive him of the human nature, but
brought upon him depravity and spiritual death; so also this grace of
regeneration does not treat men as senseless stocks and blocks, nor take
away their will and it properties, or do violence thereto; but is
spiritually quickens, heals, corrects, and at the same time sweetly and
powerfully bends it, that where carnal rebellion and resistance formerly
prevailed, a ready and sincere spiritual obedience begins to reign; in
which the true and spiritual restoration and freedom of our will
consist. Wherefore, unless the admirable Author of every good work so
deal with us, man can have no hope of being able to rise from his fall
by his own free will, by which, in a state of innocence, he plunged
himself into ruin.
THIRD AND FOURTH HEAD: ARTICLE 17. As the almighty operation of God
whereby He brings forth and supports this our natural life does not
exclude but require the use of means by which God, of His infinite mercy
and goodness, has chosen to exert His influence, so also the
aforementioned supernatural operation of God by which we are regenerated
in no wise excludes or subverts the use of the gospel, which the most
wise God has ordained to be the seed of regeneration and food of the
soul. Wherefore, as the apostles and the teachers who succeeded them
piously instructed the people concerning this grace of God, to His glory
and to the abasement of all pride, and in the meantime, however,
neglected not to keep them, by the holy admonitions of the gospel, under
the influence of the Word, the sacraments, and ecclesiastical
discipline; so even now it should be far from those who give or receive
instruction in the Church to presume to tempt God by separating what He
of His good pleasure has most intimately joined together. For grace is
conferred by means of admonitions; and the more readily we perform our
duty, the more clearly this favor of God, working in us, usually
manifest itself, and the more directly His work is advanced; to whom
alone all the glory, both for the means and for their saving fruit and
efficacy, is forever due. Amen.
REJECTION OF ERRORS
The true doctrine having been explained,
the Synod rejects the errors of those:
THIRD AND FOURTH HEAD: PARAGRAPH 1. Who
teach: That it cannot properly be said that original sin in itself
suffices to condemn the whole human race or to deserve temporal and
eternal punishment.
For these contradict the apostle, who declares: "Therefore, just as
sin entered the world through one man, and death through sin, and in
this way death came to all men, because all sinned (Rom 5:12)."
And: "The judgment followed one sin and brought condemnation (Rom
5:16)." And "the wages of sin is death (Rom 6:23)."
THIRD AND FOURTH HEAD: PARAGRAPH 2. Who teach: That the spiritual gifts
or the good qualities and virtues, such as goodness, holiness,
righteousness, could not belong to the will of man when he was first
crated, and that these, therefore, cannot have been separated therefrom
in the fall.
For such is contrary to the description of the image of God which the
apostle gives in Eph. 4:24, where he declares that it consists in
righteousness and holiness, which undoubtedly belong to the will.
THIRD AND FOURTH HEAD: PARAGRAPH 3. Who teach: That in spiritual death
the spiritual gifts are not separate from the will of man, since the
will in itself has never been corrupted, but only hindered through the
darkness of the understanding and the irregularity of the affection; and
that, these hindrances having been removed, the will can then bring into
operation its nature powers, that is, that the will of itself is able to
will and to choose, or not to will and not to choose, all manner of good
which may be presented to it.
This is an innovation and an error, and tends to elevate the powers of
the free will, contrary to the declaration of the prophet: "The
heart is deceitful above all things and beyond cure (Jer 17:9)";
and of the apostle: "All of us also lived among them at one time,
gratifying the cravings of our sinful nature and following its desires
and thoughts (Eph 2:3)."
THIRD AND FOURTH HEAD: PARAGRAPH 4. Who teach: That the unregenerate man
is not really nor utterly dead in sin, nor destitute of all powers unto
spiritual good, but that he can yet hunger and thirst after
righteousness and life, and offer the sacrifice of a contrite and broken
spirit, which is pleasing to God.
For these things are contrary to the express testimony of Scripture:
"you were dead in your transgressions and sins (Eph 2:1, 5)."
And: "every inclination of the thoughts of his heart was only evil
all the time. (Gen 6:5, 8:21)." Moreover, to hunger and thirst
after deliverance from misery and after life, and to offer unto God the
sacrifice of a broken spirit, is peculiar to the regenerate and those
that are called blessed (Ps 51:17; Matt 5:6).
THIRD AND FOURTH HEAD: PARAGRAPH 5. Who teach: That the corrupt and
natural man can so well use the common grace (by which they understand
the light of nature), or the gifts still left him after the fall, that
he can gradually gain by their good use a greater, that is, the
evangelical or saving grace, and salvation itself; and that in this way
God on His part shows Himself ready to reveal Christ unto all men, since
He applies to all sufficiently and efficiently the means necessary to
conversion.
For both the experience of all ages and the Scriptures testify that this
is untrue. "He has revealed his word to Jacob, his laws and decrees
to Israel. He has done this for no other nation; they do not know his
laws (Psa 147:19-20)." "In the past, he let all nations go
their own way (Acts 14:16)." And: "Paul and his companions
traveled throughout the region of Phrygia and Galatia, having been kept
by the Holy Spirit from preaching the word in the province of Asia. When
they came to the border of Mysia, they tried to enter Bithynia, but the
Spirit of Jesus would not allow them to (Acts 16:6-7)."
THIRD AND FOURTH HEAD: PARAGRAPH 6. Who teach: That in the true
conversion of man no new qualities, powers, or gifts can be infused by
God into the will, and that therefore faith, through which we are first
converted and because of which we are called believers, is not a quality
or gift infused by God but only an act of man, and that it cannot be
said to be a gift, except in respect of the power to attain to this
faith.
For thereby they contradict the Holy Scriptures, which declare that God
infuses new qualities of faith, of obedience, and of the consciousness
of His love into our hearts: ""This is the covenant I will
make with the house of Israel after that time," declares the LORD.
"I will put my law in their minds and write it on their hearts (Jer
31:33)." And: "For I will pour water on the thirsty land, and
streams on the dry ground; I will pour out my Spirit on your offspring,
and my blessing on your descendants (Isa 44:3)." And: "God has
poured out his love into our hearts by the Holy Spirit, whom he has
given us (Rom 5:5)." This is also repugnant to the constant
practice of the Church, which prays by the mouth of the prophet thus:
"Restore me, and I will return (Jer 31:18)."
THIRD AND FOURTH HEAD: PARAGRAPH 7. Who teach: That the grace whereby we
are converted to God is only a gentle advising, or (as others explain
it) that this is the noblest manner of working in the conversion of man,
and that this manner of working, which consists in advising, is most in
harmony with man's nature; and that there is no reason why this advising
grace alone should not be sufficient to make the natural man spiritual;
indeed, that God does not produce the consent of the will except through
this manner of advising; and that the power of the divine working,
whereby it surpasses the working of Satan, consists in this that God
promises eternal, while Satan promise only temporal good.
But this is altogether Pelagian and contrary to the whole Scripture,
which, besides this, teaches yet another and far more powerful and
divine manner of the Holy Spirit's working in the conversion of man, as
in Ezekiel: "I will give you a new heart and put a new spirit in
you; I will remove from you your heart of stone and give you a heart of
flesh (Ezek 36:26)."
THIRD AND FOURTH HEAD: PARAGRAPH 8. Who teach: That god in the
regeneration of man does not use such powers of His omnipotence as
potently and infallibly bend man's will to faith and conversion; but
that all the works of grace having been accomplished, which God employs
to convert man, man may yet so resist god and the Holy Spirit, when God
intends man's regeneration and wills to regenerate him, and indeed that
man often does so resist that he prevents entirely his regeneration, and
that it therefore remains in man's power to be regenerated or not.
For this is nothing less than the denial of all that efficiency of God's
grace in our conversion, and the subjecting of the working of Almighty
God to the will of man, which is contrary to the apostles, who teach
that we believe accord to the working of the strength of his might (Eph
1:19); and that God fulfills every desire of goodness and every work of
faith with power (2 Th 1:11); and that "His divine power has given
us everything we need for life and godliness (2 Pet 1:3)."
THIRD AND FOURTH HEAD: PARAGRAPH 9. Who teach: That grace and free will
are partial causes which together work the beginning of conversion, and
that grace, in order of working, does not precede the working of the
will; that is, that God does not efficiently help the will of man unto
conversion until the will of man moves and determines to do this.
For the ancient Church has long ago condemned this doctrine of the
Pelagians according to the words of the apostle: "It does not,
therefore, depend on man's desire or effort, but on God's mercy (Rom
9:16)." Likewise: "For who makes you different from anyone
else? What do you have that you did not receive? And if you did receive
it (1 Cor 4:7)?" And: "for it is God who works in you to will
and to act according to his good purpose (Phil 2:13)."
FIFTH HEAD OF DOCTRINE. THE
PERSEVERANCE OF THE SAINTS
FIFTH HEAD: ARTICLE 1. Those whom God,
according to His purpose, calls to the communion of His Son, our Lord
Jesus Christ, and regenerates by the Holy Spirit, He also delivers from
the dominion and slavery of sin, though in this life He does not deliver
them altogether form the body of sin and from the infirmities of the
flesh.
FIFTH HEAD: ARTICLE 2. Hence spring forth the daily sins of infirmity,
and blemishes cleave even to the best works of the saints. These are to
them a perpetual reason to humiliate themselves before God and to flee
for refuge to Christ crucified; to mortify the flesh more and more by
the spirit of prayer and by holy exercises of piety; and to press
forward to the goal of perfection, until at length, delivered from this
body of death, they shall reign with the Lamb of God in heaven.
FIFTH HEAD: ARTICLE 3. By reason of these remains of indwelling sin, and
also because the temptations of the world and of Satan, those who are
converted could not persevere in that grace if left to their own
strength. But God is faithful, who, having conferred grace, mercifully
confirms and powerfully preserves them therein, even to the end.
FIFTH HEAD: ARTICLE 4. Although the weakness of the flesh cannot prevail
against the power of God, who confirms and preserves true believers in a
state of grace, yet converts are not always so influenced and actuated
by the Spirit of God as not in some particular instances sinfully to
deviate from the guidance of divine grace, so as to be seduced by and to
comply with the lusts of the flesh; they must, therefore, be constant in
watching and prayer, that they may not be led into temptation. When
these are great and heinous sins by the flesh, the world, and Satan, but
sometimes by the righteous permission of God actually are drawn into
these evils. This, the lamentable fall of David, Peter, and other saints
described in Holy Scripture, demonstrates.
FIFTH HEAD: ARTICLE 5. By such enormous sins, however, they very highly
offend God, incur a deadly guilt, grieve the Holy Spirit, interrupt the
exercise of faith, very grievously wound their consciences, and
sometimes for a while lose the sense of God's favor, until, when they
change their course by serious repentance, the light of God's fatherly
countenance again shines upon them.
FIFTH HEAD: ARTICLE 6. But God, who is rich in mercy, according to His
unchangeable purpose of election, does not wholly withdraw the Holy
Spirit from His own people even in their grievous falls; nor suffers
them to proceed so far as t lose the grace of adoption and forfeit the
state of justification, or to commit the sin unto death or against the
Holy Spirt; nor does He permit them to be totally deserted, and to
plunge themselves into everlasting destruction.
FIFTH HEAD: ARTICLE 7. For in the first place, in these falls He
preserves in them the incorruptible seed of regeneration from perishing
or being totally lost; and again, by His Word and Spirit He certainly
and effectually renews them to repentance, to a sincere and godly sorrow
for their sins, that they may seek and obtain remission in the blood of
the Mediator, may again experience the favor of a reconciled God,
through faith adore His mercies, and henceforward more diligently work
out their own salvation with fear and trembling.
FIFTH HEAD: ARTICLE 8. Thus it is not in consequence of their own merits
or strength, but of God's free mercy, that they neither totally fall
from faith and grace nor continue and perish finally in their
backslidings; which, with respect to themselves is not only possible,
but would undoubtedly happen; but with respect to God, it is utterly
impossible, since His counsel cannot be changed nor His promise fail;
neither can the call according to His purpose be revoked, nor the merit,
intercession, and preservation of Christ be rendered ineffectual, nor
the sealing of the Holy Spirit be frustrated or obliterated.
FIFTH HEAD: ARTICLE 9. Of this preservation of the elect to salvation
and of their perseverance in the faith, true believers themselves may
and do obtain assurance according to the measure of their faith, whereby
they surely believe that they are and ever will continue true and living
members of the Church, and that they have the forgiveness of sins and
life eternal.
FIFTH HEAD: ARTICLE 10. This assurance, however, is not produced by any
peculiar revelation contrary to or independent of the Word of God, but
springs from faith in God's promises, which He has most abundantly
revealed in His Word for our comfort; from the testimony of the Holy
Spirit, witnessing with our spirit that we are children and heirs of God
(Rom 8:16); and lastly, from a serious and holy desire to preserve a
good conscience and to perform good works. And if the elect of God were
deprived of this solid comfort that they shall finally obtain the
victory, and of this infallible pledge of eternal glory, they would be
of all men the most miserable.
FIFTH HEAD: ARTICLE 11. The Scripture moreover testifies that believers
in this life have to struggle with various carnal doubts, and that under
grievous temptations they do not always feel this full assurance of
faith and certainty of persevering. But God, who is the Father of all
consolation, does not suffer them to be tempted above that they are
able, but will with the temptation make also the way of escape, that
they may be able to endure it (1 Cor 10:13), and by the Holy Spirit
again inspires them with the comfortable assurance of persevering.
FIFTH HEAD: ARTICLE 12. This certainty of perseverance, however, is so
far from exciting in believers a spirit of pride, or of rendering them
carnally secure, that on the contrary it is the real source of humility,
filial reverence, true piety, patience in every tribulation, fervent
prayers, constancy in suffering and in confessing the truth, and of
solid rejoicing in God; so that the consideration of this benefit should
serve as an incentive to the serious and constant practice of gratitude
and good works, as appears from the testimonies of Scripture and the
examples of the saints.
FIFTH HEAD: ARTICLE 13. Neither does renewed confidence of persevering
produce licentiousness or a disregard of piety in those who are
recovered from backsliding; but it renders them much more careful and
solicitous to continue in the ways of the Lord, which He has ordained,
that they who walk therein may keep the assurance of persevering; lest,
on account of their abuse of His fatherly kindness, God should turn away
His gracious countenance from them (to behold which is to the godly
dearer than life, and the withdrawal of which is more bitter than death)
and they in consequence thereof should fall into more grievous torments
of conscience.
FIFTH HEAD: ARTICLE 14. And as it has pleased God, by the preaching of
the gospel, to begin this work of grace in us, so He preserves,
continues, and perfects it by the hearing and reading of His Word, by
meditation thereon, and by the exhortations, threatenings, and promises
thereof, and by the use of the sacraments.
FIFTH HEAD: ARTICLE 15. The carnal mind is unable to comprehend this
doctrine of the perseverance of the saints and the certainty thereof,
which God has most abundantly revealed in His Word, for the glory of His
Name and the consolation of pious souls, and which He impresses upon the
hearts of the believers. Satan abhors it, the world ridicules it, the
ignorant and hypocritical abuse it, and the heretics oppose it. But the
bride of Christ has always most tenderly loved and constantly defended
it as an inestimable treasure; and God, against whom neither counsel nor
strength can prevail, will dispose her so to continue to the end. Now to
this one God, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, be honor and glory forever.
Amen.
REJECTION OF ERRORS
The true doctrine having been explained,
the Synod rejects the errors of those:
FIFTH HEAD: PARAGRAPH 1. Who teach: That
the perseverance of the true believers is not a fruit of election, or a
gift of God gained by the death of Christ, but a condition of the new
covenant which (as they declare) man before his decisive election and
justification must fulfil through his free will.
For the Holy Scripture testifies that this follows out of election, and
is given the elect in virtue of the death, the resurrection, and the
intercession of Christ: "What Israel sought so earnestly it did not
obtain, but the elect did. The others were hardened (Rom 11:7)."
Likewise: "He who did not spare His own Son, but gave him up for us
all--how will he not also, along with him, graciously give us all
things? Who will bring any charge against those whom God has chosen? It
is God who justifies. Who is he that condemns? Christ Jesus, who
died--more than that, who was raised to life--is at the right hand of
God and is also interceding for us. Who shall separate us from the love
of Christ (Rom 8:32-35)?"
FIFTH HEAD: PARAGRAPH 2. Who teach: That God does indeed provide the
believer with sufficient powers to persevere, and is ever ready to
preserve these in him if he will do his duty; but that, though all
though which are necessary to persevere in faith and which God will use
to preserve faith are made us of, even then it ever depends on the
pleasure of the will whether it will persevere or not.
For this idea contains outspoken Pelagianism, and while it would make
men free, it make them robbers of God's honor, contrary to the
prevailing agreement of the evangelical doctrine, which takes from man
all cause of boasting, and ascribes all the praise for this favor to the
grace of God alone; and contrary to the apostle, who declares that it is
God, "He will keep you strong to the end, so that you will be
blameless on the day of our Lord Jesus Christ (1 Cor 1:8)."
FIFTH HEAD: PARAGRAPH 3. Who teach: That the true believers and
regenerate not only can fall from justifying faith and likewise from
grace and salvation wholly and to the end, but indeed often do fall from
this and are lost forever. For this conception makes powerless the
grace, justification, regeneration, and continued preservation by
Christ, contrary to the expressed words of the apostle Paul: "While
we were still sinners, Christ died for us. Since we have now been
justified by his blood, how much more shall we be saved from God's wrath
through him (Rom 5:8-9)." And contrary to the apostle John:
"No one who is born of God will continue to sin, because God's seed
remains in him; he cannot go on sinning, because he has been born of God
(1 John 3:9)." And also contrary to the words of Jesus Christ:
"I give them eternal life, and they shall never perish; no one can
snatch them out of my hand. My Father, who has given them to me, is
greater than all ; no one can snatch them out of my Father's hand (John
10:28-29)."
FIFTH HEAD: PARAGRAPH 4. Who teach: That true believers and regenerate
can sin the sin unto death or against the Holy Spirit.
Since the same apostle John, after having spoken in the fifth chapter of
his first epistle, vs. 16 and 17, of those who sin unto death and having
forbidden to pray for them, immediately adds to this in vs. 18: "We
know that anyone born of God does not continue to sin (meaning a sin of
that character); the one who was born of God keeps him safe, and the
evil one cannot harm him (1 John 5:18)."
FIFTH HEAD: PARAGRAPH 5. Who teach: That without a special revelation we
can have no certainty of future perseverance in this life.
For by this doctrine the sure comfort of the true believers is taken
away in this life, and the doubts of the papist are again introduced
into the Church, while the Holy Scriptures constantly deduce this
assurance, not from a special and extraordinary revelation, but from the
marks proper to the children of God and from the very constant promises
of God. So especially the apostle Paul: "neither height nor depth,
nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the
love of God that is in Christ Jesus our Lord (Rom 8:39)." And John
declares: "Those who obey his commands live in him, and he in them.
And this is how we know that he lives in us: We know it by the Spirit he
gave us (1 John 3:24)."
FIFTH HEAD: PARAGRAPH 6. Who teach: That the doctrine of the certainty
of perseverance and of salvation from its own character and nature is a
cause of indolence and is injurious to godliness, good morals, prayers,
and other holy exercises, but that on the contrary it is praiseworthy to
doubt. For these show that they do not know the power of divine grace
and the working of the indwelling Holy Spirit. And they contradict the
apostle John, who teaches that opposite with express words in his first
epistle: "Dear friends, now we are children of God, and what we
will be has not yet been made known. But we know that when he appears,
we shall be like him, for we shall see him as he is. Everyone who has
this hope in him purifies himself, just as he is pure (1 John
3:2-3)." Furthermore, these are contradicted by the example of the
saints, both of the Old and the New Testament, who though they were
assured of their perseverance and salvation, were nevertheless constant
in prayers and other exercises of godliness.
FIFTH HEAD: PARAGRAPH 7. Who teach: That the faith of those who believe
for a time does not differ from justifying and saving faith except only
in duration.
For Christ Himself, in Matt 13:20, Luke 8:13, and in other places,
evidently notes, beside this duration, a threefold difference between
those who believe only for a time and true believers, when He declares
that the former receive the seed on stony ground, but the latter in the
good ground or heart; that the former are without root, but the latter
have a firm root; that the former are without fruit, but that the latter
bring forth their fruit in various measure, with constancy and
steadfastness.
FIFTH HEAD: PARAGRAPH 8. Who teach: That it is not absurd that one
having lost his first regeneration is again and even often born anew.
For these deny by this doctrine the incorruptibleness of the seed of
God, whereby we are born again; contrary to the testimony of the apostle
Peter: "For you have been born again, not of perishable seed, but
of imperishable (1 Pet 1:23)."
FIFTH HEAD: PARAGRAPH 9. Who teach: That Christ has in no place prayed
that believers should infallibly continue in faith.
For the contradict Christ Himself, who says: "I have prayed for
you, Simon, that your faith may not fail (Luke 22:32)", and the
evangelist John, who declares that Christ has not prayed for the
apostles only, but also for those who through their word would believe:
"Holy Father, protect them by the power of your name," and
"My prayer is not that you take them out of the world but that you
protect them from the evil one (John 17:11, 15, 20)."
|