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The Second
Helvetic Confession
Chapters I-X
CHAPTER I - Of The Holy Scripture Being The True Word of God
CANONICAL SCRIPTURE. We believe and confess the canonical Scriptures
of the holy prophets and apostles of both Testaments to be the
true Word of God, and to have sufficient authority of themselves,
not of men. For God himself spoke to the fathers, prophets, apostles,
and still speaks to us through the Holy Scriptures. And in this
Holy Scripture, the universal Church of Christ has the most complete
exposition of all that pertains to a saving faith, and also to
the framing of a life acceptable to God; and in this respect
it is expressly commanded by God that nothing be either added
to or taken from the same.
SCRIPTURE TEACHES FULLY ALL GODLINESS. We judge, therefore,
that from these Scriptures are to be derived true wisdom and
godliness, the reformation and government of severely rejected
by the Lord, indicating that the keeping of them hinders God's
law, and that God is worshipped in vain by such traditions (Matt.
15:1 ff.; Mark 7:1 ff.).
CHAPTER III - Of God, His Unity and Trinity
GOD IS ONE. We believe and teach that God is one in essence
or nature, subsisting in himself, all sufficient in himself,
invisible, incorporeal, immense, eternal, Creator of all things
both visible and invisible, the greatest good, living, quickening
and preserving all things, omnipotent and supremely wise, kind
and merciful, just and true. Truly we detest many gods because
it is expressly written: "The Lord your God is one Lord" (Deut.
6:4). "I am the Lord your God. You shall have no other gods
before me" (Ex. 20:2-3). "I am the Lord, and there
is no other god besides me. Am I not the Lord, and there is no
other God beside me? A righteous God and a Savior; there is none
besides me" (Isa. 45:5, 21). "The Lord, the Lord, a
God merciful and gracious, slow to anger, and abounding in steadfast
love and faithfulness" (Ex. 34:6). GOD IS THREE. Notwithstanding
we believe and teach that the same immense, one and indivisible
God is in person inseparably and without confusion distinguished
as Father, Son and Holy Spirit so, as the Father has begotten
the Son from eternity, the Son is begotten by an ineffable generation,
and the Holy Spirit truly proceeds from them both, and the same
from eternity and is to be worshipped with both. Thus there are
not three gods, but three persons, consubstantial, coeternal,
and coequal; distinct with respect to hypostases, and with respect
to order, the one preceding the other yet without any inequality.
For according to the nature or essence they are so joined together
that they are one God, and the divine nature is common to the
Father, Son and Holy Spirit. For Scripture has delivered to us
a manifest distinction of persons, the angel saying, among other
things, to the Blessed Virgin, "The Holy Spirit will come
upon you, and the power
CHAPTER IV - Of Idols or Images of God, Christ and The Saints
IMAGES OF GOD. Since God as Spirit is in essence invisible and
immense, he cannot really be expressed by any art or image. For
this reason we have no fear pronouncing with Scripture that images
of God are mere lies. Therefore we reject not only the idols
of the Gentiles, but also the images of Christians.
IMAGES OF CHRIST. Although Christ assumed human nature, yet
he did not on that account assume it in order to provide a model
for carvers and painters. He denied that he had come "to
abolish the law and the prophets" (Matt. 5:17). But images
are forbidden by the law and the prophets (Deut. 4:15; Isa. 44:9).
He denied that his bodily presence would be profitable for the
Church, and promised that he would be near us by his Spirit forever
(John 16:7). Who, therefore, would believe that a shadow or likeness
of his body would contribute any benefit to the pious? (II Cor.
5:5). Since he abides in us by his Spirit, we are therefore the
temple of God (I Cor. 3:16). But "what agreement has the
temple of God with idols?" (II Cor. 6:16).
IMAGES OF SAINTS. And since the blessed spirits and saints in
heaven, while they lived here on earth, rejected all worship
of themselves (Acts 3:12f.; 14:11ff.; Rev. 14:7; 22:9) and condemned
images, shall anyone find it likely that the heavenly saints
and angels are pleased with their own images before which men
kneel, uncover their heads, and bestow other honors? But in fact
in order to instruct men in religion and to remind them of divine
things and of their salvation, the Lord commanded the preaching
of the Gospel (Mark 16:15)--not to paint and to teach the laity
by means of pictures. Moreover, he instituted sacraments, but
nowhere did he set up images.
THE SCRIPTURES OF THE LAITY. Furthermore, wherever we turn our
eyes, we see the living and true creatures of God which, if they
be observed, as is proper, make a much more vivid impression
on the beholders than all the images or vain, motionless, feeble
and dead pictures made by men, of which the prophet truly said: "They
have eyes, but do not see" (Ps.115:5).
LACTANTIUS. Therefore we approved the judgment of Lactantius,
an ancient writer, who says: "Undoubtedly no religion exists
where there is an image."
EPIPHANIUS AND JEROME. We also assert that the blessed bishop
Epiphanius did right when, finding on the doors of a church a
veil on which was painted a picture supposedly of Christ or some
saint, he ripped it down and took it away, because to see a picture
of a man hanging in the Church of Christ was contrary to the
authority of Scripture. Wherefore he charged that from henceforth
no such veils, which were contrary to our religion, should be
hung in the Church of Christ, and that rather such questionable
things, unworthy of the Church of Christ and the faithful people,
should be removed. Moreover, we approve of this opinion of St.
Augustine concerning true religion: "Let not the worship
of the works of men be a religion for us. For the artists themselves
who make such things are better; yet we ought not to worship
them" (De Vera Religione, cap. 55).
CHAPTER V - Of The Adoration, Worship and Invocation of God
Through The Only Mediator Jesus Christ
GOD ALONE IS TO BE ADORED AND WORSHIPPED. We teach that the
true God alone is to be adored and worshipped. This honor we
impart to none other, according to the commandment of the Lord, "You
shall worship the Lord your God and him only shall you serve" (Matt.
4:10). Indeed, all the prophets severely inveighed against the
people of Israel whenever they adored and worshipped strange
gods, and not the only true God. But we teach that God is to
be adored and worshipped as he himself has taught us to worship,
namely, "in spirit and in truth" (John 4:23 f.), not
with any superstition, but with sincerity, according to his Word;
lest at any time he should say to us: "Who has required
these things from your hands?" (Isa. 1:12; Jer. 6:20). For
Paul also says: "God is not served by human hands, as though
he needed anything," etc. (Acts 17:25).
GOD ALONE IS TO BE INVOKED THROUGH THE MEDIATION OF CHRIST ALONE.
In all crises and trials of our life we call upon him alone,
and that by the mediation of our only mediator and intercessor,
Jesus Christ. For we have been explicitly commanded: "Call
upon me in the day of trouble; I will deliver you, and you shall
glorify me" (Ps. 1:15). Moreover, we have a most generous
promise from the Lord Who said: "If you ask anything of
the Father, he will give it to you" (John 16:23), and: "Come
to me, all who labor and are heavy laden and I will give you
rest" (Matt 11:28). And since it is written: "How are
men to call upon him in whom they have not believed?" (Rom.
10:14), and since we do believe in God alone, we assuredly call
upon him alone, and we do so through Christ. For as the apostle
says, "There is one God and there is one mediator between
God and men, the man Christ Jesus" (I Tim. 2:5), and, "If
any one does sin, we have an advocate with the Father, Jesus
Christ the righteous," etc. (I John 2:1).
THE SAINTS ARE NOT TO BE ADORED, WORSHIPPED OR INVOKED. For
this reason we do not adore, worship, or pray to the saints in
heaven, or to other gods, and we do not De Vera Religione: "Let
not our religion be the cult of men who have died. For if they
have lived holy lives, they are not to be thought of as seeking
such honors; on the contrary, they want us to worship him by
whose illumination they rejoice that we are fellow-servants of
his merits. They are therefore to be honored by way of imitation,
but not to be adored in a religious manner," etc.
RELICS OF THE SAINTS. Much less do we believe that the relics
of the saints are to be adored and reverenced. Those ancient
saints seemed to have sufficiently honored their dead when they
decently committed their remains to the earth after the spirit
had ascended on high. And they thought that the most noble relics
of their ancestors were their virtues, their doctrine, and their
faith. Moreover, as they commend these "relics" when
praising the dead, so they strive to copy them during their life
on earth.
SWEARING BY GOD'S NAME ALONE. These ancient men did not swear
except by the name of the only God, Yahweh, as prescribed by
the divine law. Therefore, as it is forbidden to swear by the
names of strange gods (Ex. 23:13; Deut. 10:20), so we do not
perform oaths to the saints that are demanded of us. We therefore
reject in all these matters a doctrine that ascribes much to
the saints in heaven.
CHAPTER VI - Of The Providence of God
ALL THINGS ARE GOVERNED BY THE PROVIDENCE OF GOD. We believe
that all things in heaven and on earth, and in all creatures,
are preserved and governed by the providence of this wise, eternal
and almighty God. For David testifies and says: "The Lord
is high above all nations, and his glory above the heavens! Who
is like the Lord our God, who is seated on high, who looks far
down upon the heavens and the earth?" (Ps. 113:4 ff.). Again: "Thou
searchest out . . . all my ways. Even before a word is on my
tongue, lo, O Lord, Thou knowest it altogether" (Ps. 139:3
f.). Paul also testifies and declares: "In him we live and
move and have our being" (Acts 17:28), and "from him
and through him and to him are all things" (Rom. 11:36).
Therefore Augustine most truly and according to Scripture declared
in his book De Agone i, cap. 8, "The Lord said, 'Are not
two sparrows sold for a penny? And not one of them will fall
to the ground without your Father's will'" (Matt. 10:29).
By speaking thus, he wanted to show that what men regard as of
least value is governed by God's omnipotence. For he who is the
truth says that the birds of the air are fed by him and the lilies
of the field are clothed by him; he also says that the hairs
of our head are numbered (Matt. 6:26 ff.).
THE EPICUREANS. We therefore condemn the Epicureans who deny
the providence of God, and all those who blasphemously say that
God is busy with the heavens and neither sees nor cares about
us and our affairs. David, the royal prophet, also condemned
this when he said: "O Lord, how long shall the wicked exult?
They say, 'The Lord does not see; the God of Jacob does not perceive.'
Understand, O dullest of the people! Fools, when will you be
wise? He who planted the ear, does he not hear? He who formed
the eye, does he not see?" (Ps. 94:3, 7-9).
MEANS NOT TO BE DESPISED. Nevertheless, we do not spurn as useless
the means by which divine providence works, but we teach that
we are to adapt ourselves to them in so far as they are recommended
to us in the Word of God. Wherefore we disapprove of the rash
statements of those who say that if all things are managed by
the providence of God, then our efforts and endeavors are in
vain. It will be sufficient if we leave everything to the governance
of divine providence, and we will not have to worry about anything
or do anything. For although Paul understood that he sailed under
the providence of God who had said to him: "You must bear
witness also at Rome" (Acts 23:11), and in addition had
given him the promise, "There will be no loss of life among
you . . . and not a hair is to perish from the head of any of
you" (Acts 27:22, 34), yet when the sailors were nevertheless
thinking about abandoning ship the same Paul said to the centurion
and the soldiers: "Unless these men stay in the ship, you
cannot be saved" (Acts 27:31). For God, who has appointed
to everything its end, has ordained the beginning and the means
by which it reaches its goal. The heathen ascribe things to blind
fortune and uncertain chance. But St. James does not want us
to say: "Today or tomorrow we will go into such and such
a town and trade," but adds: "Instead you ought to
say, 'If the Lords wills, we shall live and we shall do this
or that' " (James 4:13, 15). And Augustine says: "Everything
which to vain men seems to happen in nature by accident, occurs
only by his Word, because it happens only at his command" (Enarrationes
in Psalmos 148). Thus it seemed to happen by mere chance when
Saul, while seeking his father's asses, unexpectedly fell in
with the prophet Samuel. But previously the Lord had said to
the prophet: "Tomorrow I will send to you a man from the
land of Benjamin" (I Sam. 9:16).
CHAPTER VII - Of The Creation of All Things: Of Angels, the
Devil, and Man
GOD CREATED ALL THINGS. This good and almighty God created all
things, both visible and invisible, by his co-eternal Word, and
preserves them by his co-eternal Spirit, as David testified when
he said: "By the word of the Lord the heavens were made,
and all their host by the breath of his mouth" (Ps. 33:6).
And, as Scripture says, everything that God had made was very
good, and was made for the profit and use of man. Now we assert
that all those things proceed from one beginning.
MANICHAEANS AND MARCIONITES. Therefore, we condemn the Manichaeans
and Marcionites who impiously imagined two substances and natures,
one good, the
OF ANGELS AND THE DEVIL. Among all creatures, angels and men
are most excellent. Concerning angels, Holy Scripture declares: "Who
makest the winds thy messengers, fire and flame thy ministers" (Ps.
104:4). Also it says: "Are they not all ministering spirits
sent forth to serve, for the sake of those who are to obtain
salvation?" (Heb. 1:14). Concerning the devil, the Lord
Jesus himself testifies: "He was a murderer from the beginning,
and has nothing to do with the truth, because there is no truth
in him. When he lies, he speaks according to his own nature,
for he is a liar and the father of lies" (John 8:44). Consequently
we teach that some angels persisted in obedience and were appointed
for faithful service to God and men, but others fell of their
own free will and were cast into destruction, becoming enemies
of all good and of the faithful, etc.
OF MAN. Now concerning man, Scripture says that in the beginning
he was made good according to the image and likeness of God:
(10) that God placed him in Paradise and made all things subject
to him (Gen., ch. 2). This is what David magnificently sets forth
in Psalm 8. Moreover, God gave him a wife and blessed them. We
also affirm that man consists of two different substances in
one person: an immortal soul which, when separated from the body,
neither sleeps nor dies, and a mortal body which will nevertheless
be raised up from the dead at the last judgment, in order that
then the whole man, either in life or in death, abide forever.
THE SECTS. We condemn all who ridicule or by subtle arguments
cast doubt upon the immortality of souls, or who say that the
soul sleeps or is a part of God. In short, we condemn all opinions
of all men, however many, that depart from what has been delivered
unto us by the Holy Scriptures in the apostolic Church of Christ
concerning creation, angels, and demons, and man.
CHAPTER VIII - Of Man's Fall, Sin and the Cause of Sin
THE FALL OF MAN. In the beginning, man was made according to
the image of God, in righteousness and true holiness, good and
upright. But when at the instigation of the serpent and by his
own fault he abandoned goodness and righteousness, he became
subject to sin, death and various calamities. And what he became
by the fall, that is, subject to sin, death and various calamities,
so are all those who have descended from him.
SIN. By sin we understand that innate corruption of man which
has been derived or propagated in us all from our first parents,
by which we, immersed in perverse desires and averse to all good,
are inclined to all evil. Full of all wickedness, distrust, contempt
and hatred of God, we are unable to do or even to think anything
good of ourselves. Moreover, even as we grow older, so by wicked
thoughts, words and deeds committed against God's law, we bring
forth corrupt fruit worthy of an evil tree (Matt. 12:33 ff.).
For this reason by our own deserts, being subject to the wrath
of God, we are liable to just punishment, so that all of us would
have been cast away by God if Christ, the Deliverer, had not
brought us back.
DEATH. By death we understand not only bodily death, which all
of us must once suffer on account of sins, but also eternal punishment
due to our sins and corruption. For the apostle says: "We
were dead through trespasses and sins . . . and were by nature
children of wrath, like the rest of mankind. But God, who is
rich in mercy . . . even when we were dead through our trespasses,
made us alive together with Christ" (Eph. 2:1 ff.). Also: "As
sin came into the world through one man and death through sin,
and so death spread to all men because all men sinned" (Rom.
5:12).
ORIGINAL SIN. We therefore acknowledge that there is original
sin in all men.
ACTUAL SINS. We acknowledge that all other sins which arise
from it are called and truly are sins, no matter by what name
they may be called, whether mortal, venial or that which is said
to be the sin against the Holy Spirit which is never forgiven
(Mark 3:29; I John 5:16). We also confess that sins are not equal;
although they arise from the same fountain of corruption and
unbelief, some are more serious than others. As the Lord said,
it will be more tolerable for Sodom than for the city that rejects
the word of the Gospel (Matt. 10:14 f.; 11:20 ff.).
THE SECTS. We therefore condemn all who have taught contrary
to this, especially Pelagius and all Pelagians, together with
the Jovinians who, with the Stoics, regard all sins as equal.
In this whole matter we agree with St. Augustine who derived
and defended his view from Holy Scriptures. Moreover, we condemn
Florinus and Blastus, against whom Irenaeus wrote, and all who
make God the author of sin.
GOD IS NOT THE AUTHOR OF SIN, AND HOW FAR HE IS SAID TO HARDEN.
It is expressly written: "Thou art not a God who delights
in wickedness. Thou hatest all evildoers. Thou destroyest those
who speak lies" (Ps. 5:4 ff.). And again: "When the
devil lies, he speaks according to his own nature, for he is
a liar and the father of lies" (John 8:44). Moreover, there
is enough sinfulness and corruption in us that it is not necessary
for God to infuse into us a new or still greater perversity.
When, therefore, it is said in Scripture that God hardens, blinds
and delivers up to a reprobate mind, it is to be understood that
God does it by a just judgment as a just Judge and Avenger. Finally,
as often as God in Scripture is said or seems to do something
evil, it is not thereby said that man does not do evil, but that
God permits it and does not prevent it, according to his just
judgment, who could prevent it if he wished, or because he turns
man's evil into good, as he did in the case of the sin of Joseph's
brethren, or because he governs sins lest they break out and
rage more than is appropriate. St. Augustine writes in his Enchiridion: "What
happens contrary to his will occurs, in a wonderful and ineffable
way, not apart from his will. For it would not happen if he did
not allow it. And yet he does not allow it unwillingly but willingly.
But he who is good would not permit evil to be done, unless,
being omnipotent, he could bring good out of evil." Thus
wrote Augustine.
CURIOUS QUESTIONS. Other questions, such as whether God willed
Adam to fall, or incited him to fall, or why he did not prevent
the fall, and similar questions, we reckon among curious questions
(unless perchance the wickedness of heretics or of other churlish
men compels us also to explain them out of the Word of God, as
the godly teachers of the Church have frequently done), knowing
that the Lord forbade man to eat of the forbidden fruit and punished
his transgression. We also know that what things are done are
not evil with respect to the providence, will, and power of God,
but in respect of Satan and our will opposing the will of God.
CHAPTER IX - Of Free Will, and Thus of Human Powers
In this matter, which has always produced many conflicts in
the Church, we teach that a threefold condition or state of man
is to be considered.
WHAT MAN WAS BEFORE THE FALL. There is the state in which man
was in the beginning before the fall, namely, upright and free,
so that he could both continue in goodness and decline to evil.
However, he declined to evil, and has involved himself and the
whole human race in sin and death, as has been said already.
WHAT MAN WAS AFTER THE FALL. Then we are to consider what man
was after the fall. To be sure, his reason was not taken from
him, nor was he deprived of will, and he was not entirely changed
into a stone or a tree. But they were so altered and weakened
that they no longer can do what they could before the fall. For
the understanding is darkened, and the will which was free has
become an enslaved will. Now it serves sin, not unwillingly but
willingly. And indeed, it is called a will, not an unwill (ing).
MAN DOES EVIL BY HIS OWN FREE WILL. Therefore, in regard to
evil or sin, man is not forced by God or by the devil but does
evil by his own free will, and in this respect he has a most
free will. But when we frequently see that the worst crimes and
designs of men are prevented by God from reaching their purpose,
this does not take away man's freedom in doing evil, but God
by his own power prevents what man freely planned otherwise.
Thus Joseph's brothers freely determined to get rid of him, but
they were unable to do it because something else seemed good
to the counsel of God.
MAN IS NOT CAPABLE OF GOOD Per Se. In regard to goodness and
virtue man's reason does not judge rightly of itself concerning
divine things. For the evangelical and apostolic Scripture requires
regeneration of whoever among us wishes to be saved. Hence our
first birth from Adam contributes nothing to our salvation. Paul
says: "The unspiritual man does not receive the gifts of
the Spirit of God," etc. (I Cor. 2:14). And in another place
he denies that we of ourselves are capable of thinking anything
good (II Cor. 3:5). Now it is known that the mind or intellect
is the guide of the will, and when the guide is blind, it is
obvious how far the will reaches. Wherefore, man not yet regenerate
has no free will for good, no strength to perform what is good.
The Lord says in the Gospel: "Truly, truly, I say to you,
everyone who commits sin is a slave to sin" (John 8:34).
And the apostle Paul says: "The mind that is set on the
flesh is hostile to God; it does not submit to God's law, indeed
it cannot" (Rom. 8:7). Yet in regard to earthly things,
fallen man is not entirely lacking in understanding.
UNDERSTANDING OF THE ARTS. For God in his mercy has permitted
the powers of the intellect to remain, though differing greatly
from what was in man before the fall. God commands us to cultivate
our natural talents, and meanwhile adds both gifts and success.
And it is obvious that we make no progress in all the arts without
God's blessing. In any case, Scripture refers all the arts to
God; and, indeed, the heathen trace the origin of the arts to
the gods who invented them.
OF WHAT KIND ARE THE POWERS OF THE REGENERATE, AND IN WHAT WAY
THEIR WILLS ARE FREE. Finally, we must see whether the regenerate
have free wills, and to what extent. In regeneration the understanding
is illumined by the Holy Spirit in order that it may understand
both the mysteries and the will of God. And the will itself is
not only changed by the Spirit, but it is also equipped with
faculties so that it wills and is able to do the good of its
own accord (Rom. 8:1 ff.) Unless we grant this, we will deny
Christian liberty and introduce a legal bondage. But the prophet
has God saying: "I will put my law within them, and I will
write it upon their hearts" (Jer. 31:33; Ezek. 36:26 f.).
The Lord also says in the Gospel: "If the Son makes you
free, you will be free indeed" (John 8:36). Paul also writes
to the Philippians: "It has been granted to you that for
the sake of Christ you should not only believe in him but also
suffer for his sake" (Phil. 1:29). Again: "I am sure
that he who began a good work in you will bring it to completion
at the day of Jesus Christ" (v. 6). Also: "God is at
work in you, both to will and to work for his good pleasure" (ch.
2:13).
THE REGENERATE WORK NOT ONLY PASSIVELY BUT ACTIVELY. However,
in this connection we teach that there are two things to be observed:
First, that the regenerate, in choosing and doing good, work
not only passively but actively. For they are moved by God that
they may do themselves what they do. For Augustine rightly adduces
the saying that "God is said to be our helper. But no one
can be helped unless he does something." The Manichaeans
robbed man of all activity and made him like a stone or a block
of wood.
THE FREE WILL IS WEAK IN THE REGENERATE. Secondly, in the regenerate
a weakness remains. For since sin dwells in us, and in the regenerate
the flesh struggles against the Spirit till the end of our lives,
they do not easily accomplish in all things what they had planned.
These things are confirmed by the apostle in Rom., ch. 7, and
Gal., ch. 5. Therefore that free will is weak in us on account
of the remnants of the old Adam and of innate human corruption
remaining in us until the end of our lives. Meanwhile, since
the powers of the flesh and the remnants of the old man are not
so efficacious that they wholly extinguish the work of the Spirit,
for that reason the faithful are said to be free, yet so that
they acknowledge their infirmity and do not glory at all in their
free will. For believers ought always to keep in mind what St.
Augustine so many times inculcated according to the apostle: "What
have you that you did not receive? If then you received it, why
do you boast as if it were not a gift?" To this he adds
that what we have planned does not immediately come to pass.
For the issue of things lies in the hand of God. This is the
reason Paul prayed to the Lord to prosper his journey (Rom. 1:10).
And this also is the reason the free will is weak.
IN EXTERNAL THINGS THERE IS LIBERTY. Moreover, no one denies
that in external things both the regenerate and the unregenerate
enjoy free will. For man has in common with other living creatures
(to which he is not inferior) this nature to will some things
and not to will others. Thus he is able to speak or to keep silent,
to go out of his house or to remain at home, etc. However, even
here God's power is always to be observed, for it was the cause
that Balaam could not go as far as he wanted (Num., ch. 24),
and Zacharias upon returning from the temple could not speak
as he wanted (Luke, ch. 1).
HERESIES. In this matter we condemn the Manichaeans who deny
that the beginning of evil was for man [created] good, from his
free will. We also condemn the Pelagians who assert that an evil
man has sufficient free will to do the good that is commanded.
Both are refuted by Holy Scripture which says to the former, "God
made man upright" and to the latter, "If the Son makes
you free, you will be free indeed" (John 8:36).
CHAPTER X - Of the Predestination of God and the Election of
the Saints
GOD HAS ELECTED US OUT OF GRACE. From eternity God has freely,
and of his mere grace, without any respect to men, predestinated
or elected the saints whom he wills to save in Christ, according
to the saying of the apostle, "God chose us in him before
the foundation of the world" (Eph. 1:4). And again: "Who
saved us and called us with a holy calling, not in virtue of
our works but in virtue of his own purpose and the grace which
he gave us in Christ Jesus ages ago, and now has manifested through
the appearing of our Savior Christ Jesus" (II Tim. 1:9 f.).
WE ARE ELECTED OR PREDESTINATED IN CHRIST. Therefore, although
not on account of any merit of ours, God has elected us, not
directly, but in Christ, and on account of Christ, in order that
those who are now ingrafted into Christ by faith might also be
elected. But those who were outside Christ were rejected, according
to the word of the apostle, "Examine yourselves, to see
whether you are holding to your faith. Test yourselves. Do you
not realize that Jesus Christ is in you?--unless indeed you fail
to meet the test!" (II Cor. 13:5).
WE ARE ELECTED FOR A DEFINITE PURPOSE. Finally, the saints are
chosen in Christ by God for a definite purpose, which the apostle
himself explains when he says, "He chose us in him for adoption
that we should be holy and blameless before him in love. He destined
us for adoption to be his sons through Jesus Christ that they
should be to the praise of the glory of his grace" (Eph.
1:4 ff.).
WE ARE TO HAVE A GOOD HOPE FOR ALL. And although God knows who
are his, and here and there mention is made of the small number
of elect, yet we must hope well of all, and not rashly judge
any man to be a reprobate. For Paul says to the Philippians, "I
thank my God for you all" (now he speaks of the whole Church
in Philippi), "because of your fellowship in the Gospel,
being persuaded that he who began a good work in you will bring
it to completion at the day of Jesus Christ. It is also right
that I have this opinion of you all" (Phil. 1:3 ff.).
WHETHER FEW ARE ELECT. And when the Lord was asked whether there
were few that should be saved, he does not answer and tell them
that few or many should be saved or damned, but rather he exhorts
every man to "strive to enter by the narrow door" (Luke
13:24): as if he should say, It is not for you curiously to inquire
about these matters, but rather to endeavor that you may enter
into heaven by the straight way.
WHAT IN THIS MATTER IS TO BE CONDEMNED. Therefore we do not
approve of the impious speeches of some who say, "Few are
chosen, and since I do not know whether I am among the number
of the few, I will enjoy myself." Others say, "If I
am predestinated and elected by God, nothing can hinder me from
salvation, which is already certainly appointed for me, no matter
what I do. But if I am in the number of the reprobate, no faith
or repentance will help me, since the decree of God cannot be
changed. Therefore all doctrines and admonitions are useless." Now
the saying of the apostle contradicts these men: "The Lord's
servant must be ready to teach, instructing those who oppose
him, so that if God should grant that they repent to know the
truth, they may recover from the snare of the devil, after being
held captive by him to do his will" (II Tim. 2:23 ff.).
ADMONITIONS ARE NOT IN VAIN BECAUSE SALVATION PROCEEDS FROM
ELECTION. Augustine also shows that both the grace of free election
and predestination, and also salutary admonitions and doctrines,
are to be preached (Lib. de Dono Perseverantiae, cap. 14 ff.).
WHETHER WE ARE ELECTED. We therefore find fault with those who
outside of Christ ask whether they are elected. (12) And what
has God decreed concerning them before all eternity? For the
preaching of the Gospel is to be heard, and it is to be believed;
and it is to be held as beyond doubt that if you believe and
are in Christ, you are elected. For the Father has revealed unto
us in Christ the eternal purpose of his predestination, as I
have just now shown from the apostle in II Tim. 1:9-10. This
is therefore above all to be taught and considered, what great
love of the Father toward us is revealed to us in Christ. We
must hear what the Lord himself daily preaches to us in the Gospel,
how he calls and says: "Come to me all who labor and are
heavy-laden, and I will give you rest" (Matt. 11:28). "God
so loved the world, that he gave his only Son, that whoever believes
in him should not perish, but have eternal life" (John 3:16).
Also, "It is not the will of my Father that one of these
little ones should perish" (Matt. 18:14). Let Christ, therefore
be the looking glass, in whom we may contemplate our predestination.
We shall have a sufficiently clear and sure testimony that we
are inscribed in the Book of Life if we have fellowship with
Christ, and he is ours and we are his in true faith.
TEMPTATION IN REGARD TO PREDESTINATION. In the temptation in
regard to predestination, than which there is scarcely any other
more dangerous, we are confronted by the fact that God's promises
apply to all the faithful, for he says: "Ask, and everyone
who seeks, shall receive" (Luke 11:9 f.). This finally we
pray, with the whole Church of God, "Our Father who art
in heaven" (Matt. 6:9), both because by baptism we are ingrafted
into the body of Christ, and we are often fed in his Church with
his flesh and blood unto life eternal. Thereby, being strengthened,
we are commanded to work out our salvation with fear and trembling,
according to the precept of Paul.
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