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The Scots
Confession
Three documents from the period of the Reformation are included
in the Book of Confessions, each originating in a different country:
Scotland, Germany, and Switzerland. These three centers of the
Reformation remain significant in Reformed and Presbyterian thought
to this day.
The Scots Confession was written at a turning point in the history
of the Scottish nation. When the Queen Regent Mary of Guise died
in her sleep in 1560, the Protestant nobility of Scotland was able to
secure English recognition of Scottish sovereignty in the Treaty
of Edinburgh. To the Scots, this favorable conclusion to the civil war with Mary’s
Frenchsupported forces represented a providential deliverance.
The Scottish Parliament, having declared Scotland a Protestant
nation, asked the clergy to frame a confession of faith. Six ministers,
including John Knox, completed their work in four
days. In 1560, the document was ratified by Parliament as “doctrine
grounded upon the infallible Word of God.”
Beginning with a pledge of unconditional commitment to the triune
God who creates, sustains, rules, and guides all things, the first
eleven chapters of the Scots Confession narrate God’s providential
acts in the events of biblical history. The kirk (church) of the
present and future is continuous with the kirk of
God’s people going back to Adam.
While affirming that the Bible is the norm by which the kirk judges
itself, the Scots Confession also sees the Scriptures as a sacred history in
which the present day church, through the Holy Spirit, participates
until the end of time. God’s providential deliverance is
a continuing, not merely a past, reality.
The Scots Confession sets forth three marks of the true and faithful
church: “the true preaching of the Word of God,” “the
right administration of the sacraments of Christ Jesus,” and “ecclesiastical
discipline . . . whereby vice is repressed and virtue nourished.”
“Cleave, serve, worship, trust” are key words in this
document. As a call to action in a turbulent time, the Scots Confession
reflects a spirit of trust and a commitment to the God whose miraculous deliverance
the Scots had experienced firsthand.
The
Scots Confession
CHAPTER I - God
We confess and acknowledge one God alone, to whom alone we must
cleave, whom alone we must serve, whom only we must worship, and
in whom alone we put our trust. Who is eternal, infinite, immeasurable,
incomprehensible, omnipotent, invisible; one in substance and yet
distinct in three persons, the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost.
By whom we confess and believe all things in heaven and earth,
visible and invisible, to have been created, to be retained in
their being, and to be ruled and guided by his inscrutable providence
for such end as his eternal wisdom, goodness, and justice have
appointed, and to the manifestation of his own glory.
CHAPTER II - The Creation of Man
We confess and acknowledge that
our God has created man, i.e., our first father, Adam, after his
own image and likeness, to whom
he gave wisdom, lordship, justice, free will, and self-consciousness,
so that in the whole nature of man no imperfection could be found.
From this dignity and perfection man and woman both fell; the woman
being deceived by the serpent and man obeying the voice of the
woman, both conspiring against the sovereign majesty of God, who
in clear words had previously threatened death if they presumed
to eat of the forbidden tree.
CHAPTER III - Original Sin
By this transgression, generally known as original sin, the image
of God was utterly defaced in man, and he and his children became
by nature hostile to God, slaves to Satan, and servants to sin.
And thus everlasting death has had, and shall have, power and dominion
over all who have not been, are not, or shall not be reborn from
above. This rebirth is wrought by the power of the Holy Ghost creating
in the hearts of God's chosen ones an assured faith in the promise
of God revealed to us in his Word; by this faith we grasp Christ
Jesus with the graces and blessings promised in him.
CHAPTER IV - The Revelation of the Promise
We
constantly believe that God, after the fearful and horrible departure
of man from his obedience, did seek Adam again, call
upon him, rebuke and convict him of his sin, and in the end made
unto him a most joyful promise, that "the seed of the woman
should bruise the head of the serpent," that is, that he should
destroy the works of the devil. This promise was repeated and made
clearer from time to time; it was embraced with joy, and most constantly
received by all the faithful from Adam to Noah, from Noah to Abraham,
from Abraham to David, and so onwards to the incarnation of Christ
Jesus; all (we mean the believing fathers under the law) did see
the joyful day of Christ Jesus, and did rejoice.
CHAPTER V - The Continuance, Increase, and Preservation
of the
Kirk
We most surely believe that God preserved, instructed, multiplied,
honored, adorned, and called from death to life his Kirk in all
ages since Adam until the coming of Christ Jesus in the flesh.
For he called Abraham from his father's country, instructed him,
and multiplied his seed; he marvelously preserved him, and more
marvelously delivered his seed from the bondage and tyranny of
Pharaoh; to them he gave his laws, constitutions, and ceremonies;
to them he gave the land of Canaan; after he had given them judges,
and afterwards Saul, he gave David to be king, to whom he gave
promise that of the fruit of his loins should one sit forever upon
his royal throne. To this same people from time to time he sent
prophets, to recall them to the right way of their God, from which
sometimes they strayed by idolatry. And although, because of their
stubborn contempt for righteousness he was compelled to give them
into the hands of their enemies, as had previously been threatened
by the mouth of Moses, so that the holy city was burned with fire,
and the whole land desolate for seventy years, yet in mercy he
restored them again to Jerusalem, where the city and temple were
rebuilt, and they endured against all temptations and assaults
of Satan till the Messiah came according to the promise.
CHAPTER VI - The Incarnation of Christ Jesus
When
the fullness of time came God sent his Son, his eternal wisdom,
the substance of his own glory, into this world, who took the nature
of humanity from the substance of a woman, a virgin, by means of
the Holy Ghost. And so was born the "just seed of David," the "Angel
of the great counsel of God," the very Messiah promised, whom
we confess and acknowledge to be Emmanuel, true God and true man,
two perfect natures united and joined in one person. So by our
Confession we condemn the damnable and pestilent heresies of Arius,
Marcion, Eutyches, Nestorius, and such others as did either deny
the eternity of his Godhead, or the truth of his humanity, or confounded
them, or else divided them.
CHAPTER VII - Why the Mediator Had to Be True God
and True Man
We acknowledge and confess that this wonderful union between the
Godhead and the humanity in Christ Jesus did arise from the eternal
and immutable decree of God from which all our salvation springs
and depends.
CHAPTER VIII - Election
That same eternal God
and Father, who by grace alone chose us in his Son Christ Jesus
before the foundation of the world was
laid, appointed him to be our head, our brother, our pastor, and
the great bishop of our souls. But since the opposition between
the justice of God and our sins was such that no flesh by itself
could or might have attained unto God, it behooved the Son of God
to descend unto us and take himself a body of our body, flesh of
our flesh, and bone of our bone, and so become the Mediator between
God and man, giving power to as many as believe in him to be the
sons of God; as he himself says, "I ascend to my Father and
to your Father, to my God and to your God." By this most holy
brotherhood whatever we have lost in Adam is restored to us again.
Therefore we are not afraid to call God our Father, not so much
because he has created us, which we have in common with the reprobate,
as because he has given unto us his only Son to be our brother,
and given us grace to acknowledge and embrace him as our only Mediator.
Further, it behooved the Messiah and Redeemer to be true God and
true man, because he was able to undergo the punishment of our
transgressions and to present himself in the presence of his Father's
judgment, as in our stead, to suffer for our transgression and
disobedience, and by death to overcome him that was the author
of death. But because the Godhead alone could not suffer death,
and neither could manhood overcome death, he joined both together
in one person, that the weakness of one should suffer and be subject
to death--which we had deserved--and the infinite and invincible
power of the other, that is, of the Godhead, should triumph, and
purchase for us life, liberty, and perpetual victory. So we confess,
and most undoubtedly believe.
CHAPTER IX - Christ's Death, Passion, and Burial
That our Lord Jesus offered himself a voluntary sacrifice unto
his Father for us, that he suffered contradiction of sinners, that
he was wounded and plagued for our transgressions, that he, the
clean innocent Lamb of God, was condemned in the presence of an
earthly judge, that we should be absolved before the judgment seat
of our God; that he suffered not only the cruel death of the cross,
which was accursed by the sentence of God; but also that he suffered
for a season the wrath of his Father which sinners had deserved.
But yet we avow that he remained the only, well beloved, and blessed
Son of his Father even in the midst of his anguish and torment
which he suffered in body and soul to make full atonement for the
sins of his people. From this we confess and avow that there remains
no other sacrifice for sin; if any affirm so, we do not hesitate
to say that they are blasphemers against Christ's death and the
ever- lasting atonement thereby purchased for us.
CHAPTER X - The Resurrection
We undoubtedly believe, since it was impossible that the sorrows
of death should retain in bondage the Author of life, that our
Lord Jesus crucified, dead, and buried, who descended into hell,
did rise again for our justification, and the destruction of him
who was the author of death, and brought life again to us who were
subject to death and its bondage. We know that his resurrection
was confirmed by the testimony of his enemies, and by the resurrection
of the dead, whose sepulchres did open, and they did rise and appear
to many within the city of Jerusalem. It was also confirmed by
the testimony of his angels, and by the senses and judgment of
his apostles and of others, who had conversation, and did eat and
drink with him after his resurrection.
CHAPTER XI - The Ascension
We do not doubt but
that the selfsame body which was born of the virgin, was crucified,
dead, and buried, and which did rise again,
did ascend into the heavens, for the accomplishment of all things,
where in our name and for our comfort he has received all power
in heaven and earth, where he sits at the right hand of the Father,
having received his kingdom, the only advocate and mediator for
us. Which glory, honor, and prerogative, he alone amongst the brethren
shall possess till all his enemies are made his footstool, as we
undoubtedly believe they shall be in the Last Judgment. We believe
that the same Lord Jesus shall visibly return for this Last Judgment
as he was seen to ascend. And then, we firmly believe, the time
of refreshing and restitution of all things shall come, so that
those who from the beginning have suffered violence, injury, and
wrong, for righteousness' sake, shall inherit that blessed immortality
promised them from the beginning. But, on the other hand, the stubborn,
disobedient, cruel persecutors, filthy persons, idolators, and
all sorts of the unbelieving, shall be cast into the dungeon of
utter darkness, where their worm shall not die, nor their fire
be quenched. The remembrance of that day, and of the Judgment to
be executed in it, is not only a bridle by which our carnal lusts
are restrained but also such inestimable comfort that neither the
threatening of worldly princes, nor the fear of present danger
or of temporal death, may move us to renounce and forsake that
blessed society which we, the members, have with our Head and only
Mediator, Christ Jesus: whom we confess and avow to be the promised
Messiah, the only Head of his Kirk, our just Lawgiver, our only
High Priest, Advocate, and Mediator. To which honors and offices,
if man or angel presume to intrude themselves, we utterly detest
and abhor them, as blasphemous to our sovereign and supreme Governor,
Christ Jesus.
CHAPTER XII - Faith in the Holy Ghost
Our faith and its assurance do not proceed from flesh and blood,
that is to say, from natural powers within us, but are the inspiration
of the Holy Ghost; whom we confess to be God, equal with the Father
and with his Son, who sanctifies us, and brings us into all truth
by his own working, without whom we should remain forever enemies
to God and ignorant of his Son, Christ Jesus. For by nature we
are so dead, blind, and perverse, that neither can we feel when
we are pricked, see the light when it shines, nor assent to the
will of God when it is revealed, unless the Spirit of the Lord
Jesus quicken that which is dead, remove the darkness from our
minds, and bow our stubborn hearts to the obedience of his blessed
will. And so, as we confess that God the Father created us when
we were not, as his Son our Lord Jesus redeemed us when we were
enemies to him, so also do we confess that the Holy Ghost does
sanctify and regenerate us, without respect to any merit proceeding
from us, be it before or be it after our regeneration. To put this
even more plainly; as we willingly disclaim any honor and glory
for our own creation and redemption, so do we willingly also for
our regeneration and sanctification; for by ourselves we are not
capable of thinking one good thought, but he who has begun the
work in us alone continues us in it, to the praise and glory of
his undeserved grace.
CHAPTER XIII - The Cause of Good Works
The cause of good works, we confess, is not our free will, but
the Spirit of the Lord Jesus, who dwells in our hearts by true
faith, brings forth such works as God has prepared for us to walk
in. For we most boldly affirm that it is blasphemy to say that
Christ abides in the hearts of those in whom is no spirit of sanctification.
Therefore we do not hesitate to affirm that murderers, oppressors,
cruel persecuters, adulterers, filthy persons, idolators, drunkards,
thieves, and all workers of iniquity, have neither true faith nor
anything of the Spirit of the Lord Jesus, so long as they obstinately
continue in wickedness. For as soon as the Spirit of the Lord Jesus,
whom God's chosen children receive by true faith, takes possession
of the heart of any man, so soon does he regenerate and renew him,
so that he begins to hate what before he loved, and to love what
he hated before. Thence comes that continual battle which is between
the flesh and the Spirit in God's children, while the flesh and
the natural man, being corrupt, lust for things pleasant and delightful
to themselves, are envious in adversity and proud in prosperity,
and every moment prone and ready to offend the majesty of God.
But the Spirit of God, who bears witness to our spirit that we
are the sons of God, makes us resist filthy pleasures and groan
in God's presence for deliverance from this bondage of corruption,
and finally to triumph over sin so that it does not reign in our
mortal bodies. Other men do not share this conflict since they
do not have God's Spirit, but they readily follow and obey sin
and feel no regrets, since they act as the devil and their corrupt
nature urge. But the sons of God fight against sin; sob and mourn
when they find themselves tempted to do evil; and, if they fall,
rise again with earnest and unfeigned repentance. They do these
things, not by their own power, but by the power of the Lord Jesus,
apart from whom they can do nothing.
CHAPTER XIV - The Works Which Are Counted Good
Before God
We confess and acknowledge that God has given
to man his holy law, in which not only all such works as displease
and offend his
godly majesty are forbidden, but also those which please him and
which he has promised to reward are commanded. These works are
of two kinds. The one is done to the honor of God, the other to
the profit of our neighbor, and both have the revealed will of
God as their assurance. To have one God, to worship and honor him,
to call upon him in all our troubles, to reverence his holy Name,
to hear his Word and to believe it, and to share in his holy sacraments,
belong to the first kind. To honor, father, mother, princes, rulers,
and superior powers; to love them, to support them, to obey their
orders if they are not contrary to the commands of God, to save
the lives of the innocent, to repress tyranny, to defend the oppressed,
to keep our bodies clean and holy, to live in soberness and temperance,
to deal justly with all men in word and deed, and, finally, to
repress any desire to harm our neighbor, are the good works of
the second kind, and these are most pleasing and acceptable to
God as he has commanded them himself. Acts to the contrary are
sins, which always displease him and provoke him to anger, such
as, not to call upon him alone when we have need, not to hear his
Word with reverence, but to condemn and despise it, to have or
worship idols, to maintain and defend idolatry, lightly to esteem
the reverend name of God, to profane, abuse, or condemn the sacraments
of Christ Jesus, to disobey or resist any whom God has placed in
authority, so long as they do not exceed the bounds of their office,
to murder, or to consent thereto, to bear hatred, or to let innocent
blood be shed if we can prevent it. In conclusion, we confess and
affirm that the breach of any other commandment of the first or
second kind is sin, by which God's anger and displeasure are kindled
against the proud, unthankful world. So that we affirm good works
to be those alone which are done in faith and at the command of
God who, in his law, has set forth the things that please him.
We affirm that evil works are not only those expressly done against
God's command, but also, in religious matters and the worship of
God, those things which have no other warrant than the invention
and opinion of man. From the beginning God has rejected such, as
we learn from the words of the prophet Isaiah and of our master,
Christ Jesus, "In vain do they worship Me, teaching the doctrines
and commandments of men."
CHAPTER XV - The Perfection of the Law and The Imperfection
of
Man
We confess and acknowledge that the law of God is most just, equal,
holy, and perfect, commanding those things which, when perfectly
done, can give life and bring man to eternal felicity; but our
nature is so corrupt, weak, and imperfect, that we are never able
perfectly to fulfill the works of the law. Even after we are reborn,
if we say that we have no sin, we deceive ourselves and the truth
of God is not in us. It is therefore essential for us to lay hold
on Christ Jesus, in his righteousness and his atonement, since
he is the end and consummation of the Law and since it is by him
that we are set at liberty so that the curse of God may not fall
upon us, even though we do not fulfill the Law in all points. For
as God the Father beholds us in the body of his Son Christ Jesus,
he accepts our imperfect obedience as if it were perfect, and covers
our works, which are defiled with many stains, with the righteousness
of his Son. We do not mean that we are so set at liberty that we
owe no obedience to the Law--for we have already acknowledged its
place--but we affirm that no man on earth, with the sole exception
of Christ Jesus, has given, gives, or shall give in action that
obedience to the Law which the Law requires. When we have done
all things we must fall down and unfeignedly confess that we are
unprofitable servants. Therefore, whoever boasts of the merits
of his own works or puts his trust in works of supererogation,
boasts of what does not exist, and puts his trust in damnable idolatry.
CHAPTER XVI - The Kirk
As we believe in one God, Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, so we firmly
believe that from the beginning there has been, now is, and to
the end of the world shall be, one Kirk, that is to say, one company
and multitude of men chosen by God, who rightly worship and embrace
him by true faith in Christ Jesus, who is the only Head of the
Kirk, even as it is the body and spouse of Christ Jesus. This Kirk
is catholic, that is, universal, because it contains the chosen
of all ages, of all realms, nations, and tongues, be they of the
Jews or be they of the Gentiles, who have communion and society
with God the Father, and with his Son, Christ Jesus, through the
sanctification of his Holy Spirit. It is therefore called the communion,
not of profane persons, but of saints, who, as citizens of the
heavenly Jerusalem, have the fruit of inestimable benefits, one
God, one Lord Jesus, one faith, and one baptism. Out of this Kirk
there is neither life nor eternal felicity. Therefore we utterly
abhor the blasphemy of those who hold that men who live according
to equity and justice shall be saved, no matter what religion they
profess. For since there is neither life nor salvation without
Christ Jesus; so shall none have part therein but those whom the
Father has given unto his Son Christ Jesus, and those who in time
come to him, avow his doctrine, and believe in him. (We include
the children with the believing parents.) This Kirk is invisible,
known only to God, who alone knows whom he has chosen, and includes
both the chosen who are departed, the Kirk triumphant, those who
yet live and fight against sin and Satan, and those who shall live
hereafter.
CHAPTER XVII - The Immortality of Souls
The chosen
departed are in peace, and rest from their labors; not that they
sleep and are lost in oblivion as some fanatics hold,
for they are delivered from all fear and torment, and all the temptations
to which we and all God's chosen are subject in this life, and
because of which we are called the Kirk Militant. On the other
hand, the reprobate and unfaithful departed have anguish, torment,
and pain which cannot be expressed. Neither the one nor the other
is in such sleep that they feel no joy or torment, as is testified
by Christ's parable in St. Luke XVI, his words to the thief, and
the words of the souls crying under the altar, "O Lord, thou
that art righteous and just, how long shalt thou not revenge our
blood upon those that dwell in the earth?"
CHAPTER XVIII - The Notes by Which the True Kirk Shall
Be Determined From The False, and Who Shall Be Judge of Doctrine
Since Satan has labored from the beginning to adorn his pestilent
synagogue with the title of the Kirk of God, and has incited cruel
murderers to persecute, trouble, and molest the true Kirk and its
members, as Cain did to Abel, Ishmael to Isaac, Esau to Jacob,
and the whole priesthood of the Jews to Christ Jesus himself and
his apostles after him. So it is essential that the true Kirk be
distinguished from the filthy synagogues by clear and perfect notes
lest we, being deceived, receive and embrace, to our own condemnation,
the one for the other. The notes, signs, and assured tokens whereby
the spotless bride of Christ is known from the horrible harlot,
the false Kirk, we state, are neither antiquity, usurped title,
lineal succession, appointed place, nor the numbers of men approving
an error. For Cain was before Abel and Seth in age and title; Jerusalem
had precedence above all other parts of the earth, for in it were
priests lineally descended from Aaron, and greater numbers followed
the scribes, pharisees, and priests, than unfeignedly believed
and followed Christ Jesus and his doctrine . . . and yet no man
of judgment, we suppose, will hold that any of the forenamed were
the Kirk of God. The notes of the true Kirk, therefore, we believe,
confess, and avow to be: first, the true preaching of the Word
of God, in which God has revealed himself to us, as the writings
of the prophets and apostles declare; secondly, the right administration
of the sacraments of Christ Jesus, with which must be associated
the Word and promise of God to seal and confirm them in our hearts;
and lastly, ecclesiastical discipline uprightly ministered, as
God's Word prescribes, whereby vice is repressed and virtue nourished.
Then wherever these notes are seen and continue for any time, be
the number complete or not, there, beyond any doubt, is the true
Kirk of Christ, who, according to his promise, is in its midst.
This is not that universal Kirk of which we have spoken before,
but particular Kirks, such as were in Corinth, Galatia, Ephesus,
and other places where the ministry was planted by Paul and which
he himself called Kirks of God. Such Kirks, we the inhabitants
of the realm of Scotland confessing Christ Jesus, do claim to have
in our cities, towns, and reformed districts because of the doctrine
taught in our Kirks, contained in the written Word of God, that
is, the Old and New Testaments, in those books which were originally
reckoned canonical. We affirm that in these all things necessary
to be believed for the salvation of man are sufficiently expressed.
The interpretation of Scripture, we confess, does not belong to
any private or public person, not yet to any Kirk for pre-eminence
or precedence, personal or local, which it has above others, but
pertains to the Spirit of God by whom the Scriptures were written.
When controversy arises about the right understanding of any passage
or sentence of Scripture, or for the reformation of any abuse within
the Kirk of God, we ought not so much to ask what men have said
or done before us, as what the Holy Ghost uniformly speaks within
the body of the Scriptures and what Christ Jesus himself did and
commanded. For it is agreed by all that the Spirit of God, who
is the Spirit of unity, cannot contradict himself. So if the interpretation
or opinion of any theologian, Kirk, or council, is contrary to
the plain Word of God written in any other passage of the Scripture,
it is most certain that this is not the true understanding and
meaning of the Holy Ghost, although councils, realms, and nations
have approved and received it. We dare not receive or admit any
interpretation which is contrary to any principal point of our
faith, or to any other plain text of Scripture, or to the rule
of love.
CHAPTER XIX - The Authority of the Scriptures
As we believe and confess the Scriptures of God sufficient to
instruct and make perfect the man of God, so do we affirm and avow
their authority to be from God, and not to depend on men or angels.
We affirm, therefore, that those who say the Scriptures have no
other authority save that which they have received from the Kirk
are blasphemous against God and injurious to the true Kirk, which
always hears and obeys the voice of her own Spouse and Pastor,
but takes not upon her to be mistress over the same.
CHAPTER XX - General Councils, Their Power, Authority, and the
Cause of Their Summoning
As we do not rashly condemn what good men, assembled together
in general councils lawfully gathered, have set before us; so we
do not receive uncritically whatever has been declared to men under
the name of the general councils, for it is plain that, being human,
some of them have manifestly erred, and that in matters of great
weight and importance. So far then as the council confirms its
decrees by the plain Word of God, so far do we reverence and embrace
them. But if men, under the name of a council, pretend to forge
for us new articles of faith, or to make decisions contrary to
the Word of God, then we must utterly deny them as the doctrine
of devils, drawing our souls from the voice of the one God to follow
the doctrines and teachings of men. The reason why the general
councils met was not to make any permanent law which God had not
made before, nor yet to form new articles for our belief, nor to
give the Word of God authority; much less to make that to be his
Word, or even the true interpretation of it, which was not expressed
previously by his holy will in his Word; but the reason for councils,
at least of those that deserve that name, was partly to refute
heresies, and to give public confession of their faith to the generations
following, which they did by the authority of God's written Word,
and not by any opinion or prerogative that they could not err by
reason of their numbers. This, we judge, was the primary reason
for general councils. The second was that good policy and order
should be constituted and observed in the Kirk where, as in the
house of God, it becomes all things to be done decently and in
order. Not that we think any policy or order of ceremonies can
be appointed for all ages, times, and places; for as ceremonies
which men have devised are but temporal, so they may, and ought
to be, changed, when they foster superstition rather than edify
the Kirk.
CHAPTER XXI - The Sacraments
As the fathers under the Law, besides the reality of the sacrifices,
had two chief sacraments, that is, circumcision and the passover,
and those who rejected these were not reckoned among God's people;
so do we acknowledge and confess that now in the time of the gospel
we have two chief sacraments, which alone were instituted by the
Lord Jesus and commanded to be used by all who will be counted
members of his body, that is, Baptism and the Supper or Table of
the Lord Jesus, also called the Communion of His Body and Blood.
These sacraments, both of the Old Testament and of the New, were
instituted by God not only to make a visible distinction between
his people and those who were without the Covenant, but also to
exercise the faith of his children and, by participation of these
sacraments, to seal in their hearts the assurance of his promise,
and of that most blessed conjunction, union, and society, which
the chosen have with their Head, Christ Jesus. And so we utterly
condemn the vanity of those who affirm the sacraments to be nothing
else than naked and bare signs. No, we assuredly believe that by
Baptism we are engrafted into Christ Jesus, to be made partakers
of his righteousness, by which our sins are covered and remitted,
and also that in the Supper rightly used, Christ Jesus is so joined
with us that he becomes the very nourishment and food of our souls.
Not that we imagine any transubstantiation of bread into Christ's
body, and of wine into his natural blood, as the Romanists have
perniciously taught and wrongly believed; but this union and conjunction
which we have with the body and blood of Christ Jesus in the right
use of the sacraments is wrought by means of the Holy Ghost, who
by true faith carries us above all things that are visible, carnal,
and earthly, and makes us feed upon the body and blood of Christ
Jesus, once broken and shed for us but now in heaven, and appearing
for us in the presence of his Father.
Notwithstanding the distance between his glorified body in heaven
and mortal men on earth, yet we must assuredly believe that the
bread which we break is the communion of Christ's body and the
cup which we bless the communion of his blood. Thus we confess
and believe without doubt that the faithful, in the right use of
the Lord's Table, do so eat the body and drink the blood of the
Lord Jesus that he remains in them and they in him; they are so
made flesh of his flesh and bone of his bone that as the eternal
Godhood has given to the flesh of Christ Jesus, which by nature
was corruptible and mortal, life and immortality, so the eating
and drinking of the flesh and blood of Christ Jesus does the like
for us. We grant that this is neither given to us merely at the
time nor by the power and virtue of the sacrament alone, but we
affirm that the faithful, in the right use of the Lord's Table,
have such union with Christ Jesus as the natural man cannot apprehend.
Further we affirm that although the faithful, hindered by negligence
and human weakness, do not profit as much as they ought in the
actual moment of the Supper, yet afterwards it shall bring forth
fruit, being living seed sown in good ground; for the Holy Spirit,
who can never be separated from the right institution of the Lord
Jesus, will not deprive the faithful of the fruit of that mystical
action. Yet all this, we say again, comes of that true faith which
apprehends Christ Jesus, who alone makes the sacrament effective
in us. Therefore, if anyone slanders us by saying that we affirm
or believe the sacraments to be symbols and nothing more, they
are libelous and speak against the plain facts. On the other hand
we readily admit that we make a distinction between Christ Jesus
in his eternal substance and the elements of the sacramental signs.
So we neither worship the elements, in place of that which they
signify, nor yet do we despise them or undervalue them, but we
use them with great reverence, examining ourselves diligently before
we participate, since we are assured by the mouth of the apostle
that "whosoever shall eat this bread, and drink this cup of
the Lord, unworthily, shall be guilty of the body and blood of
the Lord."
CHAPTER XXII - The Right Administration of the Sacraments
Two
things are necessary for the right administration of the sacraments.
The first is that they should be ministered by lawful ministers,
and we declare that these are men appointed to preach the Word,
unto whom God has given the power to preach the gospel, and who
are lawfully called by some Kirk. The second is that they should
be ministered in the elements and manner which God has appointed.
Otherwise they cease to be the sacraments of Christ Jesus. This
is why we abandon the teaching of the Roman Church and withdraw
from its sacraments; firstly, because their ministers are not true
ministers of Christ Jesus (indeed they even allow women, whom the
Holy Ghost will not permit to preach in the congregation to baptize)
and, secondly, because they have so adulterated both the sacraments
with their own additions that no part of Christ's original act
remains in its original simplicity. The addition of oil, salt,
spittle, and such like in baptism, are merely human additions.
To adore or venerate the sacrament, to carry it through streets
and towns in procession, or to reserve it in a special case, is
not the proper use of Christ's sacrament but an abuse of it. Christ
Jesus said, "Take ye, eat ye," and "Do this in remembrance
of Me." By these words and commands he sanctified bread and
wine to be the sacrament of his holy body and blood, so that the
one should be eaten and that all should drink of the other, and
not that they should be reserved for worship or honored as God,
as the Romanists do. Further, in withdrawing one part of the sacrament--the
blessed cup--from the people, they have committed sacrilege. Moreover,
if the sacraments are to be rightly used it is essential that the
end and purpose of their institution should be understood, not
only by the minister but by the recipients. For if the recipient
does not understand what is being done, the sacrament is not being
rightly used, as is seen in the case of the Old Testament sacrifices.
Similarly, if the teacher teaches false doctrine which is hateful
to God, even though the sacraments are his own ordinance, they
are not rightly used, since wicked men have used them for another
end than what God commanded. We affirm this has been done to the
sacraments in the Roman Church, for there the whole action of the
Lord Jesus is adulterated in form, purpose, and meaning. What Christ
Jesus did, and commanded to be done, is evident from the Gospels
and from St. Paul; what the priest does at the altar we do not
need to tell. The end and purpose of Christ's institution, for
which it should be used, is set forth in the words, "Do this
in remembrance of Me," and "For as often as ye eat this
bread and drink this cup ye do show"--that is, extol, preach,
magnify, and praise--"the Lord's death, till He come." But
let the words of the mass, and their own doctors and teachings
witness, what is the purpose and meaning of the mass; it is that,
as mediators between Christ and his Kirk, they should offer to
God the Father, a sacrifice in propitiation for the sins of the
living and of the dead. This doctrine is blasphemous to Christ
Jesus and would deprive his unique sacrifice, once offered on the
cross for the cleansing of all who are to be sanctified, of its
sufficiency; so we detest and renounce it.
CHAPTER XXIII - To Whom Sacraments Appertain
We hold that baptism applies as much to the children of the faithful
as to those who are of age and discretion, and so we condemn the
error of the Anabaptists, who deny that children should be baptized
before they have faith and understanding. But we hold that the
Supper of the Lord is only for those who are of the household of
faith and can try and examine themselves both in their faith and
their duty to their neighbors. Those who eat and drink at that
holy table without faith, or without peace and goodwill to their
brethren, eat unworthily. This is the reason why ministers in our
Kirk make public and individual examination of those who are to
be admitted to the table of the Lord Jesus.
CHAPTER XXIV - The Civil Magistrate
We confess and acknowledge that empires, kingdoms, dominions,
and cities are appointed and ordained by God; the powers and authorities
in them, emperors in empires, kings in their realms, dukes and
princes in their dominions, and magistrates in cities, are ordained
by God's holy ordinance for the manifestation of his own glory
and for the good and well being of all men. We hold that any men
who conspire to rebel or to overturn the civil powers, as duly
established, are not merely enemies to humanity but rebels against
God's will. Further, we confess and acknowledge that such persons
as are set in authority are to be loved, honored, feared, and held
in the highest respect, because they are the lieutenants of God,
and in their councils God himself doth sit and judge. They are
the judges and princes to whom God has given the sword for the
praise and defense of good men and the punishment of all open evil
doers. Moreover, we state that the preservation and purification
of religion is particularly the duty of kings, princes, rulers,
and magistrates. They are not only appointed for civil government
but also to maintain true religion and to suppress all idolatry
and superstition. This may be seen in David, Jehosaphat, Hezekiah,
Josiah, and others highly commended for their zeal in that cause.
Therefore we confess and avow that those who resist the supreme
powers, so long as they are acting in their own spheres, are resisting
God's ordinance and cannot be held guiltless. We further state
that so long as princes and rulers vigilantly fulfill their office,
anyone who denies them aid, counsel, or service, denies it to God,
who by his lieutenant craves it of them.
CHAPTER XXV - The Gifts Freely Given to the Kirk
Although the Word of God truly preached, the sacraments rightly
ministered, and discipline executed according to the Word of God,
are certain and infallible signs of the true Kirk, we do not mean
that every individual person in that company is a chosen member
of Christ Jesus. We acknowledge and confess that many weeds and
tares are sown among the corn and grow in great abundance in its
midst, and that the reprobate may be found in the fellowship of
the chosen and may take an outward part with them in the benefits
of the Word and sacraments. But since they only confess God for
a time with their mouths and not with their hearts, they lapse,
and do not continue to the end. Therefore they do not share the
fruits of Christ's death, resurrection, and ascension. But such
as unfeignedly believe with the heart and boldly confess the Lord
Jesus with their mouths shall certainly receive his gifts. Firstly,
in this life, they shall receive remission of sins and that by
faith in Christ's blood alone; for though sin shall remain and
continually abide in our mortal bodies, yet it shall not be counted
against us, but be pardoned, and covered with Christ's righteousness.
Secondly, in the general judgment, there shall be given to every
man and woman resurrection of the flesh. The seas shall give up
her dead, and the earth those who are buried within her. Yea, the
Eternal, our God, shall stretch out his hand on the dust, and the
dead shall arise incorruptible, and in the very substance of the
selfsame flesh which every man now bears, to receive according
to their works, glory or punishment. Such as now delight in vanity,
cruelty, filthiness, superstition, or idolatry, shall be condemned
to the fire unquenchable, in which those who now serve the devil
in all abominations shall be tormented forever, both in body and
in spirit. But such as continue in well doing to the end, boldly
confessing the Lord Jesus, shall receive glory, honor, and immortality,
we constantly believe, to reign forever in life everlasting with
Christ Jesus, to whose glorified body all his chosen shall be made
like, when he shall appear again in judgment and shall render up
the Kingdom to God his Father, who then shall be and ever shall
remain, all in all things, God blessed forever. To whom, with the
Son and the Holy Ghost, be all honor and glory, now and ever. Amen.
Arise, O Lord, and let thine enemies be confounded; let them flee
from thy presence that hate the godly Name. Give thy servants strength
to speak thy Word with boldness, and let all nations cleave to
the true knowledge of thee. Amen.
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