NOTE. This confession was drawn up by the Particular Baptists to distinguish
them from the, more numerous, General (Arminian) Baptists. There are
two, or more, editions of this confession of faith. This one has the
appearance of being original; though, apart from the prologue, the
spelling and grammar has apparently been modernised. The Scripture
quotations are from an edition of the King James Version subsequent
to the 1611 edition but prior to the 1672 edition, which we have been
able to check; this is evidence of authenticity. The Geneva Translation
was not available to these brethren because its publication in England
had been banned in1616.
John Cargill.
A CONFESSION OF FAITH of seven congregations
(or churches) of Christ in London, which are commonly, but unjustly,
called Anabaptists; published for the vindication of the truth and
information of the ignorant; likewise for the taking off those aspersions
which are frequently, both in pulpit and print, unjustly cast upon
them.
Printed in London, Anno 1646.
But this I confesse
unto thee, that after the way which they call heresie so worship I
the God of my Fathers, beleeving all things that are written in the
Law and the Prophets, and have hope towards God, which they themselves
also allow, that there shall be a resurrection of the dead both of
the just and unjust. - Acts xxiv. 14, 15.
For we cannot but speak the things that we have seen and heard. Acts
iv. 20.
If I have spoken evill, bear witnesse of the evill; but if well,
why smitest thou me? John xviii. 23.
Blessed are yee when men revile you, and say all manner of evil against
you falsly for my sake. Rejoice, etc. Matt. v.11, 12. & xix. 29.
- That God as He is in Himself cannot
be comprehended of any but himself, dwelling in that inaccessible
light, that no eye can attain unto, whom never man saw, nor can see;
that
there is but one God, one Christ, one Spirit, one Faith, one Baptism;
one rule of holiness and obedience for all Saints, at all times,
in all places to be observed.
(1) 1 Tim. 6:16 (2) 1 Tim. 2:5; Eph. 4:4-6; 1 Cor. 12: 4-6,13; John
14
(3) 1 Tim. 6:3,13,14; Gal. 1:8-9; 2 Tim. 3:15
- That God is of Himself, that is, neither from another, nor
of another, nor by another, nor for another: But is a Spirit, who
as
his being
is of Himself, so He gives being, moving, and preservation to all
other things, being in Himself eternal, most holy, every way infinite
in
greatness, wisdom, power, justice, goodness, truth, etc. In this
Godhead, there is the Father, the Son, and the Spirit; being every
on of them
one and the same God; and therefore not divided, but distinguished
one from another by their several properties; the Father being from
Himself, the Son of the Father from everlasting, the Holy Spirit
proceeding from the Father and the Son.
(1) Isa. 43:11; 46:9 (2) John 4:24 (3) Exod. 3:14 (4) Rom. 11:36;
Acts 17:28
(5) 1 Cor. 8:6 (6) Prov. 8:22-23 7) John 15:16; Gal. 4:6
- That God has decreed in Himself from everlasting touching all
things, effectually to work and dispose them according to the counsel
of His
own will, to the glory of His name; in which decree appears His wisdom,
constancy, truth, and faithfulness; Wisdom is that whereby He contrives
all things; Constancy is that whereby the decree of God remains always
immutable; Truth is that whereby He declares that alone which He
has decreed, and though His sayings may seem to sound sometimes another
thing, yet the sense of them does always agree with the decree; Faithfulness
is that whereby He effects that He has decreed, as He has decreed.
And touching His creature man, God had in Christ before the foundation
of the world, according to the good pleasure of His will, foreordained
some men to eternal life through Jesus Christ, to the praise and
glory
of His grace, leaving the rest in their sin to their just condemnation,
to the praise of His justice.
(1) Isa. 46:10 2) Eph. 1:11 (3) Col. 2:3 (4) Num. 23:19-20 (5) Jer.
10:10; Rom. 3:4
(6) Isa. 44:10 (7) Eph. 1:3-7; 2 Tim. 1:9; Acts 13:48; Rom. 8:29-30
(8) Jude 4,6; Rom. 9:11-13; Prov. 16:4
- In the beginning God made all things very good, created man after
His own image and likeness, filling him with all perfection of all
natural excellency and uprightness, free from all sin. But long he
abode not in this honour, but by the subtlety of the Serpent, which
Satan used as his instrument, himself with his angels having sinned
before and not kept their first estate, but left their own habitation;
first Eve, then Adam being seduced did wittingly and willingly fall
into disobedience and transgression of the Commandment of their great
Creator, for the which death came upon all, and reigned over all,
so that all since the Fall are conceived in sin, and brought forth
in
iniquity, and so by nature children of wrath, and servants of sin,
subjects of death, and all other calamities due to sin in this world
and for ever, being considered in the state of nature, without relation
to Christ.
(1) Gen. 1; Col. 1:16; Heb. 11:3; Isa. 45:12 (2) Gen. 1:26; 1 Cor.
15:45-46; Ecc. 7:31
(3) Psa. 49:20 (4) Gen. 3:1, 4, 5; 2 Cor. 11:3 (5) 2 Peter 2:4; Jude
6; John 8:44
(6) Gen. 3:1, 2, 6; 1 Tim. 2:14; Ecc. 7:31; Gal. 3:32 (7) Rom. 5:12,
18, 19; 6:23; Eph. 2:3
- All mankind being thus fallen, and become altogether dead in
sins and trespasses, and subject to the eternal wrath of the great
God
by transgression; yet the elect, which God has loved with an everlasting
love, are redeemed, quickened, and saved, not by themselves, neither
by their own works, lest any man should boast himself, but wholly
and
only by God of His free grace and mercy through Jesus Christ, who
of God is made unto us wisdom, righteousness, sanctification and
redemption,
that as it is written he that rejoices, let him rejoice in the Lord.
(1) Jer. 31:2 (2) Gen 3:15; Eph. 1:3, 7; 2:4, 9; 1 Thes. 5:9; Acts
13:38
(3) 1 Cor.5:21; Jer. 9:23, 24
- This therefore is life eternal, to know the only true God, and
whom He has sent Jesus Christ. And on the contrary, the Lord will
render
vengeance in flaming fire to them that know not God, and obey not
the Gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ.
(1) John 17:3; Heb. 5:9; Jer. 23:5, 6 (2) 2 Thes. 1:8; John 3:36
- The rule of this knowledge, faith, and obedience, concerning
the worship and service of God, and all other Christian duties, is
not
mans inventions, opinions, devices, laws, constitutions, or traditions
unwritten whatsoever, but only the word of God contained in the Canonical
Scriptures.
John 5:39; 2 Tim. 3:15-17; Col. 21:18, 23; Mat. 15:9
- In this written Word God has plainly revealed whatsoever He has
thought needful for us to know, believe, and acknowledge, touching
the nature and office of Christ, in whom all the promises are Yea
and Amen to the praise of God.
Acts 3:22, 23; Heb. 1:1, 2; 2 Tim 3:15-17; 2 Cor. 1:20
- Touching the Lord Jesus, of whom Moses and the Prophets wrote,
and whom the Apostles preached, is the Son of God the Father, the
brightness
of His glory, the ingrave form of His being, God with Him and with
His Holy Spirit, by whom He made the world, by whom He upholds and
governs all the works He has made, who also when the fullness of
time was come was, was made man of a woman, of the Tribe of Judah,
of the
seed of Abraham and David, to wit, of Mary that blessed Virgin, by
the Holy Spirit coming upon her, and the power of the most High overshadowing
her, and was also in all things like unto us, sin only excepted.
(1) Gen. 3:15; 22:18; 49:10; Dan. 7:13; 9:24-26 (2) Prov. 8:23; John
1:1-3; Col. 1:1, 15-17 (3) Gal. 4:4 (4) Heb. 7:14; Rev. 5:5 with
Gen. 49:9-10
(5) Rom. 1:3; 9:5; Mat. 1:16; Luke 3:23, 26; Heb. 2:16 (6) Isa.53:3-5;
Phil. 2:8
- Touching His office, Jesus Christ only is made the Mediator
of the New Covenant, even the everlasting covenant of grace between
God and man, to be perfectly and fully the Prophet, Priest and King
of
the Church of God for evermore.
(1) 2 Tim. 2:15; Heb. 9:15; John 14:6 (2) Heb. 1:2; 3:1, 2; 7:24;
Acts 5:31
- Unto this office He was fore-ordained from everlasting, by the
authority of the Father, and in respect of His manhood, from the
womb called and separated, and anointed also most fully and abundantly
with
all gifts necessary, God having without measure poured the Spirit
upon Him.
(1) Prov. 8:23; Isa. 42:6; 49:1,5
(2) Isa. 11:2-5; 61:1-3 with Luke 4:17, 22; John1:14,16; 3:34
- In this call the Scripture hold forth two special things considerable;
first, the call to the office; secondly the office its self. First,
that none takes this honour but he that is called of God, as was
Aaron, so also Christ, it being an action especially of God the Father,
whereby
a special covenant being made, He ordains His Son to this office:
which Covenant is, that Christ should be made a sacrifice for sin,
that He
shall see His seed, and prolong His days, and the pleasure of the
Lord shall prosper in His hand; which calling therefore contains
in it self
choosing, for-ordaining, sending. choosing respects the end, foreordaining
the means, sending the execution it self, all of mere grace, without
any condition fore-seen wither in men, on in Christ Himself.
(1) Heb. 5:4-6 (2) Isa. 53:10 (3) Isa. 42:13 (4)1 Peter 1:20
(5) John 3:17; 9:27; 10:36 (6) John 8:32
- So that this office to be Mediator, that is, to be Prophet,
Priest, and King of the Church of God, is so proper to Christ, as
neither
in the whole, not in any part thereof, it can be transferred from
Him
to any other.
1 Tim. 2:15; Heb. 7:24; Dan. 5:14; Acts 4:12; Luke 1:23; John 14:6
- This office it self to which Christ was called, is three fold,
of a Prophet, of Priest, and of King: this number and order of offices
is showed; first by mens necessities grievously labouring under ignorance,
by reason whereof they stand in infinite necessity of the Prophetical
office of Christ to relieve them. Secondly, alienation from God,
wherein they stand in need of the Priestly office to reconcile them.
Thirdly,
our utter disability to return to Him, by which they stand in need
of the power of Christ in His Kingly office to assist and govern
them.
(1) Deut. 18:15 with Acts 3:22-23 (2) Psal. 110:3; Heb. 3:1; 4:14-15;
5:6
(3) Psal. 2:6 (4) Acts 26:18; Col. 1:3 (5) Col. 1:21; Eph. 2:12
(6) Song of Sol. 1:3; John 6:44
- Touching the Prophesy of Christ, it is that whereby He has perfectly
revealed the whole will of God out of the bosom of the Father, that
is needful for His servants to know, believe, and obey; and therefore
is called not only a Prophet and a Doctor, and the Apostle of our
profession, and the Angel of the Covenant; but also the very wisdom
of God, and
the treasures of wisdom and understanding.
(1) John 1:18; 12:49-50; 15; 17:8; Deut. 18:15 (2) Mat. 23:10 (3)
Heb. 3:1
(4) Mal. 3:1 (5) 1 Cor. 1:24 )6) Col. 2:3
- That He might be such a Prophet as thereby to every way complete,
it was necessary that He should be God, and withall also that He
should be man; for unless He had been God, He could have never perfectly
understood
the will of God, neither had He have been able to reveal it throughout
all ages; and unless He had been man, He could not fitly have unfolded
it in His own person to man.
(1) John 1:18; 3:13 (2) 1 Cor. 2:11, 16 (3) Acts 3:22 with Deut.
18:15; Heb. 1:1
- Touching His Priesthood, Christ being consecrated, has appeared
once to put away sin by the offering and sacrifice of Himself, and
to this end has fully performed and suffered all those things by
which God, through the blood of that His Cross in an acceptable sacrifice,
might reconcile His elect only; and having broken down the partition
wall, and therewith finished and removed all the rites, shadows,
and
ceremonies, is now entered within the vail, into the Holy of Holiest,
that is, to the very Heavens, and presence of God, where He for ever
lives and sits at the right hand of Majesty, appearing before the
face of His Father to make intercession for such as come to the Throne
of
Grace by that new and living way; and not that only, but makes His
people a spiritual House, an holy Priesthood, to offer up spiritual
sacrifice acceptable to God through Him; neither does the Father
accept, or Christ offer to the Father any other worship or worshipers.
(1) John 17:19; Heb. 5:7-9; 9:26; Rom. 5:19; Eph. 5:12; Col. 1:20
(2) Eph. 2:14-16; Rom. 8:34 (3) 1 Peter 2:5; John 4:23, 24
- This Priesthood was not legal, or temporary, but according to
the order of Melchisecdec; not by a carnal commandment, but by the
power
of endless life; not by an order that is weak and lame, but stable
and perfect, not for a time, but for ever, admitting no successor,
but perpetual and proper to Christ, and of Him that ever lives. Christ
Himself was the Priest, Sacrifice and Alter: He was Priest, according
to both natures, He was a sacrifice most properly according to His
human nature: where in Scripture it is wont to be attributed to His
body, to His blood; yet the chief force whereby this sacrifice was
made effectual, did depend upon His divine nature, namely, that the
Son of God did offer Himself for us: He was the alter properly according
to His divine nature, it belonging to the Alter to sacrifice that
which is offered upon it, and so it ought to be of greater dignity
then the
Sacrifice itself.
(1) Heb. 7:17 (2) Heb. 7:16 (3) Heb. 7:18-21 (4) Heb. 7:24-25 (5)
Heb. 5:6
(6) Heb. 10:10; 1 Peter 1:18-19; Col. 1:20-21; Isa. 53: 10; Mat.
20:28
(7) Acts 20:28; Rom. 8:3 (8) Heb. 9:14; 13:10, 12, 15; Mat. 23:17;
John 17:19
- Touching His Kingdom, Christ being risen from the dead, ascended
into Heaven, sat on the right hand of God the Father, having all
power in Heaven and earth, given unto Him, He does spiritually govern
His
Church, exercising His power over all angels and men, good and bad,
to the preservation and salvation of the elect, to the over-ruling
and destruction of His enemies, which are reprobates, communicating
and applying the benefits, virtue, and fruit of His Prophecy and
Priesthood to His elect, namely, to the subduing and taking away
of their sins,
to their justification and adoption of Sons, regeneration, sanctification,
preservation and strengthening in all their conflicts against Satan,
the World, the Flesh, and the temptations of them, continually dwelling
in, governing and keeping their hearts in faith and filial fear by
His Spirit, which having given it, He never takes it away from them,
but by it still begets and nourishes in them faith, repentance, love,
joy, hope, and all heavenly light in the soul unto immortality, notwithstanding
through our own unbelief, and the temptations of Satan, the sensible
sight of this light and love be clouded and overwhelmed for the time.
And on the contrary, ruling in the world over His enemies, Satan,
and all the vessels of wrath, limiting, using, restraining them by
His
mighty power, as seems good in His divine wisdom and justice to the
execution of His determinate counsel, delivering them up to a reprobate
mind, to be kept through their own deserts, in darkness and sensuality
unto judgement.
(1) 1 Cor. 15:4; 1 Peter 3:21-22; Mat. 28:18-20; Luke 24:51; Acts
1:11; 5:30-31; John 19:36; Rom. 14:17 (2) Mark 1:27; Heb. 1:14; John
16:7,15
(3) John 5:26-27;
Rom. 5:5-7; 14:17; Gal. 5:22,23; John 1:4,13 (4) John 13:1; 10:28-29;
14:16-17; Rom. 11:29; Psal. 51:10-11; Job 33:29-30; 2 Cor. 12:7,
9
(5) Job 1, 2; Rom. 1:21; 2:4-6; 9:17-18; 2 Peter 2
- This Kingdom shall be then fully perfected when He shall the
second time come in glory to reign among His saints, and to be admired
of
all them which do believe, when He shall put down all rule and authority
under His feet, that the glory of the Father my be full and perfectly
manifested in His Son, and the glory of the Father and the Son in
all His members.
1 Cor. 15:24,28; Heb. 9:28; 2 Thes. 1:9, 10; 1 Thes. 4:15-17; John
17:21,26
- That Christ Jesus by His death did bring fourth salvation and
reconciliation only for the elect, which were those which God the
Father gave Him;
and that the Gospel which is to be preached to all men as the ground
of faith, is, that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of the ever blessed
God, filled with the perfection of all heavenly and spiritual excellencies,
and that salvation is only and alone to be had through the believing
in His name.
(1) John 15:13; Rom. 8:32-34; 5:11; 3:25 (2) Job 17:2 with 6:37
(3) Mat. 16:16; Luke 2:26; John 6:9; 7:3; 20:31; 1 John 5:11
- That faith is the gift of God wrought in the hearts of the elect
by the Spirit of God, whereby they come to see, know, and believe
the truth of the Scriptures, and not only so, but the excellency
of them
above all other writing and things in the world, as they hold forth
the glory of God in His attributes, the excellency of Christ in His
nature and offices, and the power of the fullness of the Spirit in
His workings and operations; and thereupon are enabled to cast the
weight of their souls upon this truth thus believed.
(1) Eph. 2:8; John 6:29; 4:10; Phil. 1:29; Gal. 5:22
(2) John 17:17; Heb. 4:11-12; John 6:63
- Those that have this precious faith wrought in them by the Spirit,
can never finally nor totally fall away; and though many storms and
floods do arise and beat against them, yet they shall never be able
to take them off that foundation and rock which by faith they are
fastened upon, but shall be kept by the power of God to salvation,
where they
shall enjoy their purchased possession, they being formerly engraven
upon the palms of God's hands.
Mat. 7:24, 25; John 13:1; 1 Peter 1:4-6; Isa. 49:13-16
- That faith is ordinarily begot by the preaching of the Gospel,
or word of Christ, without respect to any power or capacity in the
creature, but it is wholly passive, being dead in sins and trespasses,
does believe, and is converted by no less power, then that which
raised Christ from the dead.
(1) Rom. 10:17; 1 Cor. 1:21 (2) Rom. 9:16 3) Rom. 2:1, 2; Ezek. 16:6;
Rom 3:12
(4) Rom. 1:16; Eph. 1:19; Col 2:12
- That the tenders of the Gospel to the conversion of sinners,
is absolutely free, no way requiring, as absolutely necessary, any
qualifications,
preparations, terrors of the Law, or preceding ministry of the Law,
but only and alone the naked soul, as a sinner and ungodly to receive
Christ, as Christ, as crucified, dead, and buried, and risen again,
being made a Prince and a Saviour for such sinners.
(1) John 3:14, 15; 1:12; Isa. 55:1; John 7:37 (2) 1 Tim. 1:15; Rom.
4:5; 5:8
(3) Acts 5:30-31; 2:36; 1 Cor. 1:22-24
- That the same power that converts to faith in Christ, the same
power carries on the soul still through all duties, temptations,
conflicts, sufferings, and continually what ever a Christian is,
he is by grace,
and by a constant renewed operation from God, without which he cannot
perform any duty to God, or undergo any temptations from Satan, the
world, or men.
(1) 1 Peter 1:5; 2 Cor. 12:9 (2) 1 Cor. 15:10
(3) Phil. 2:12, 13; John 15:5; Gal. 2:19-20
- That God the Father, and Son, and Spirit, is one with all believers,
in their fullness, in relations, as head and members, as house and
inhabitants, as husband and wife, one with Him, as light and love,
and one with Him in His inheritance, and in all His glory; and that
all believers by virtue of this union and oneness with God, are the
adopted sons of God, and heirs of Christ, co-heirs and joint heirs
with Him of the inheritance of all the promises of this life, and
that which is to come.
(1) 1 Thes. 1:1; John 14:10, 20; 17:21 (2) Col. 2:9, 10; 1:19; John
1:17
(3) John 20:17; Heb. 2:11 (4) Col. 1:18; Eph. 5:30 (5) Eph. 2:22;
1Cor. 3:16-17
(6) Isa. 16:5; 2 Cor. 11:3 (7) Gal. 3:26 (8) John 17:24
- That those which have union with Christ, are justified from
all their sins, past, present, and to come, by the blood of Christ;
which
justification we conceive to be a gracious and free acquittance of
a guilty, sinful creature, from all sin by God, through the satisfaction
that Christ has made by His death; and this applied in the manifestation
of it through faith.
(1) John 1:7; Heb 10:14; 9:26; 2 Cor. 5:19; Rom. 3:23
(2) Acts 13:38, 39; Rom. 5:1; 3:25, 30
- That all believers are a holy and sanctified people, and that
sanctification is a spiritual grace of the New Covenant, and effect
of the love of
God, manifested to the soul, whereby the believer is in truth and
reality separated, both in soul and body, from all sin and dead works,
through
the blood of the everlasting Covenant, whereby he also presents after
a heavenly and evangelical perfection, in obedience to all the commands,
which Christ as Head and King in this New Covenant has prescribed
to him.
(1) 1 Cor. 1:1; 1 Peter 2:9 (2) Eph. 1:4 (3) 1 John 4:16 (4) Eph.
4:24 (5) Phil. 3:15 (6) Mat. 28:20
- All believers through the knowledge of that justification of
life given by the Father, and brought forth by the blood of Christ,
have
this as their great privilege of that New Covenant, peace with God,
and reconciliation, whereby they that were afar off, were brought
nigh by that blood, and have (as the Scripture speaks) peace passing
all
understanding, yes, joy in God, through our Lord Jesus Christ, by
whom we have received the Atonement.
(1) 2 Cor. 5:19 (2) Isa. 54:10; 26:12 (3) Eph. 2:13-14 (4) Phil.
4:7
(5) Rom. 5:10-11
- That all believers in the time of this life, are in a continual
warfare, combat, and opposition against sin, self, the world, and
the Devil, and liable to all manner of afflictions, tribulations,
and persecutions,
and so shall continue until Christ comes in His Kingdom, being predestined
and appointed there unto; and whatsoever the saints, any of them
do possess or enjoy of God in this life, is only by faith.
Eph. 6:10-13; 2 Cor. 10:3; Rev. 2:9, 10
- That the only strength by which the saints are enabled to encounter
with all opposition, and to overcome all afflictions, temptations,
persecutions, and trails, is only by Jesus Christ, who is the Captain
of their salvation, being made perfect through sufferings, who has
engaged His strength to assist them in all their afflictions, and
to uphold them under all their temptations, and to preserve them
by His
power to His everlasting Kingdom.
John 16:33; Heb. 2:9, 10; John 15:5
- That Christ has here on earth a spiritual Kingdom, which is
the Church, which He has purchased and redeemed to Himself, as a
particular
inheritance: which Church, as it is visible to us, is a company of
visible saints, called and separated from the world, by the Word
and the Spirit of God, to the visible profession of the faith of
the Gospel,
being baptized into the faith, and joined to the Lord, and each other,
by mutual agreement, in the practical enjoyment of the ordinances,
commanded by Christ their head and King.
(1) 1 Cor. 1:1; Eph. 1:1 (2) Rom. 1:1; Acts 26:18; 1 Thes. 1:9; 2
Cor. 6:17; Rev. 18:18
(3) Acts 2:37 with Acts 10:37
(4) Rom. 10:10; Acts 2:42; 20:21; Mat. 18:19, 20; 1 Peter 2:5
- To this Church He has made His promises, and given the signs
of His Covenant, presence, love, blessing, and protection: here are
the
fountains and springs of His heavenly grace continually flowing forth;
thither ought all men to come, of all estates, that acknowledge Him
to be their Prophet, Priest, and King, to be enrolled amongst His
household servants, to under His heavenly conduct and government,
to lead their
lives in His walled sheepfold, and watered garden, to have communion
here with the saints, that they may be made to be partakers of their
inheritance in the Kingdom of God.
(1) Mat. 28:18-20; 2 Cor. 6:18 (2) Isa. 8:16; 1 Tim. 3:15; 4:16;
6:3, 5; Acts 2:41,47;
Song of Sol. 4:12; Gal. 6:10; Eph. 2:19
- And all His servants are called thither, to present their bodies
and souls, and to bring their gifts God has given them; so being
come, they are here by Himself bestowed in their several order, peculiar
place, due use, being fitly compact and knit together, according
to
the effectual working of every part, to the edification of itself
in love.
1 Cor. 12:6, 7, 12, 18; Rom. 12:4-6; 1 Peter 4:10;Eph. 4:16; Col.
2:5, 6, 19; 1 Cor. 12:12ff
- That being thus joined, every Church has power given them from
Christ for their better well-being, to choose to themselves fitting
persons into the office of Pastors, Teachers, Elders, Deacons, being
qualified according to the Word, as those which Christ has appointed
in His Testament, for the feeding, governing, serving, and building
up of His Church, and that none other have to power to impose them,
either these or any other.
(1) Acts 1:2; 6:3; 15:22, 25; 1 Cor. 16:3
(2) Rom. 12:7, 8; 16:1; 1 Cor. 12:8, 28; 1 Tim. 3 chapt.; Heb. 13:7;
1 Peter 5:1-3
- That the Ministers aforesaid, lawfully called by the Church,
where they are to administer, ought to continue is their calling,
according
to God's ordinance, and carefully to feed the flock of Christ committed
to them, nor for filthy lucre, but of a ready mind.
Heb. 5:4; Acts 4:23; 1 Tim. 4:14; John 10:3, 4; Acts 20:28; Rom.
12:7, 8; Heb. 13:7, 17
- That the due maintenance of the officers aforesaid, should be
the free and voluntary communication of the Church, that according
to Christ's
ordinance, they that preach the Gospel, should live on the Gospel
and not by constraint to be compelled from the people by a forced
law.
1 Cor. 9:7,14; Gal. 6:6; 1 Thes. 5:13; 1 Tim. 5:17-18; Phil. 4:15-16
- That Baptism is an ordinance of the New Testament, given by
Christ, to be dispensed only upon persons professing faith, or that
are Disciples,
or taught, who upon a profession of faith, ought to be baptized (Added
later: "...and after to partake of the Lord's Supper.")
Acts 2:37, 38; 8:36-38; 18:8
- The way and manner of the dispensing of this ordinance the Scripture
holds out to be dipping or plunging the whole body under water: it
being a sign, must answer the thing signified, which are these: first,
the washing the whole soul in the blood of Christ; secondly, that
interest the saints have in death, burial, and resurrection (of Christ)
; thirdly,
together with a confirmation of out faith, that as certainly as the
body is buried under water, and rises again, so certainly shall the
bodies of the saints by raised by the power of Christ, in the day
of the resurrection, to reign with Christ.
(1) Mat. 3:16; John 3:23; Acts 8:38 (2) Rev. 1:5; 7:14; Heb. 10:22
(3) Rom. 6:3-5 4) 1 Cor. 15:28, 29
- The persons designed by Christ, to dispense this ordinance,
the Scriptures hold forth to a preaching Disciple, it being no where
tied to a particular church, officer, or person extraordinarily sent,
the
commission enjoining the administration, being given to them under
no other consideration, but as considered Disciples.
Isa. 8:16; Mat. 28:16-19; John 4:1-2; Acts 20:7; Mat. 26:26
- Christ has likewise given power to His whole church to receive
in and cast out, by way of Excommunication, any member; and this
power is given to every particular congregation, and not one particular
person,
either member or officer, but the whole.
Acts 2:47; Rom. 16:2; Mat. 18:17; 1 Cor. 5:4; 2 Cor. 2:6-8
- And every particular member of each Church how excellent, great,
or learned soever, ought to be subject to this censor and judgement
of Christ; and the church ought with great care and tenderness, with
due advise to proceed against her members.
Mat. 18:16-18; Acts 11:2. 3; 1 Tim. 5:19-21
- And as Christ for the keeping of this church in holy and orderly
communion, places some special men over the church, who by their
office are to govern, oversee, visit, watch; so likewise for the
better keeping
thereof in all places, by the members, He has given authority, and
laid duty upon all, to watch over one another.
(1) Acts. 20:27, 28; Heb. 13:17, 24; Mat. 24:25; 1 Thes. 5:14 (2)
Mark 13:34, 37; Gal. 6:1; 1 Thes. 5:11; Jude 3, 20; Heb. 10:34-35;
12:15.
- That also such to whom God has given gifts, being tried in the
church, may and ought by the appointment of the congregation, to
prophesy, according to the proportion of faith, and so teach publicly
the Word
of God, for the edification, exhortation, and comfort of the Church.
1 Cor. 14 chapter; Rom. 12:6; 1 Peter 4:10-11; 1 Cor. 12:7; 1 Thes.
5:17-19
- Thus being rightly gathered, established, and still proceeding
in Christian communion, and obedience of the Gospel of Christ, none
ought to separate for faults and corruptions, which may, and as long
as the church consists of men subject to failings, will fall out
and arise amongst them, even in true constituted churches, until
they have
in due order sought redress thereof.
Rev. 2, 3 chapters; Acts 15:12; 1 Cor. 1:10; Eph. 2:16; 3:15-16;
Heb. 10:25; Jude 15; Mat. 18:17; 1 Cor. 5:4, 5
- And although the particular congregation be distinct
and several bodies, every one a ompact and knit city in itself; yet
are they
all to walk by one and the same Rule, and by all means convenient
to have
the counsel and help one of another in all needful affairs of the
church, as members of one body in the common faith under Christ their
only
Head.
1 Cor. 4:17; 14:33, 36; 16:1; Mat. 28:20; 1 Tim.3:15; 6:13-14; Rev.
22:18-19;
Col. 2:6, 19; 4:16
- That a civil magistrate is an ordinance of God set up by God
for the punishment of evil doers, and for the praise of them that
do well;
and that all lawful things commanded by them, subjection ought to
be given by us in the Lord: and that we are to make supplication
and prayer
for Kings, and all that are in authority, that under them we may
live a peaceable and quiet life in all godliness and honesty.
Rom. 13:1-4; 1 Peter 2:13, 14; 1 Tim. 2:2
- The supreme Magistrate of this Kingdom we believe to be the
King and Parliament freely chosen by the Kingdom, and that in all
those
civil laws which have been acted by them, or for the present is or
shall by ordained, we are bound to yield subjection and obedience
unto in the Lord, as conceiving our selves bound to defend both the
persons
of those chosen, and all civil laws made by them, with our persons,
liberties, and estates, with all that is called ours, although we
should suffer never so much from them in not actively submitting
to some ecclesiastical
laws, which might be conceived by them to be their duties to establish
which we for the present could not see, nor our consciences could
submit unto; yet are we bound to yield our persons to their pleasures.
- And if God should provide such a mercy for us, as to incline
the magistrates hearts so far to tender our consciences, as that
we might
be protected by them from wrong, injury, oppression and molestation,
which long we formerly have groaned under by the tyranny and oppression
of the Prelatical Hierarchy, which God through mercy has made this
present King and Parliament wonderful honourable; as an instrument
is His hand, to throw down; and we thereby have had some breathing
time, we shall, we hope, look at it as a mercy beyond our expectation,
and conceive ourselves further engaged for ever to bless God for
it.
1 Tim. 1:2-4; Psal. 126:1; Acts 9:31
- But if God with hold the magistrates allowance and furtherance
herein; yet we must not withstanding proceed together in Christian
communion, not daring to give place to suspend our practice, but
to walk in obedience to Christ in the profession and holding forth
this
faith before mentioned, even in the midst of all trails and afflictions,
not accounting our goods, lands, wives, husbands, children, fathers,
mothers, brethren, sisters, yea, and our own lives dear unto us,
so we may finish our course with joy: remembering always we ought
to obey
God rather then men, and grounding upon the commandment, commission,
and promise of our Lord and Master Jesus Christ, who as He has power
in heaven and earth, so also has promised, if we keep His commandments
which He has given us, to be with us to the end of the world: and
when we have finished our course, and kept the faith, to give us
the crown
of righteousness, which is laid up for all that love His appearing,
and to whom we must give an account of all our actions, no man being
able to discharge us of the same.
(1) Acts 2:40,41; 4:19; 5:28,29,41; 20:23; 1 Thes. 3:3; Phil. 1:27-29;
Dan. 3:16,17; 6:7, 10, 22, 23. (2) Matth. 28:18-20; 1 Tim. 6:13-15;
Rom. 12:1.8;
1 Cor. 14:37; 2 Tim. 4:7,8; Rev. 2:10; Gal 2:4,5
- And likewise unto all men is to be given whatsoever is their
due; tributes, customs, and all such lawful duties, ought willingly
to be
by us paid and performed, our lands, goods, and bodies, to submit
to the magistrate in the Lord, and the magistrate every way to be
acknowledged,
reverenced, and obeyed, according to godliness; not because of wrath
only but for conscience sake. And finally, all men so to be esteemed
and regarded, as is due and appropriate for their place, age, estate,
and condition.
Rom. 13:5-7; Mat. 22:21; Titus 3; 1 Peter 3:13; 5:5; Eph. 5:21, 22;
6:1, 9
- [sic]. And thus we desire to give God that which is God's, and
unto Ceasor that which is Ceasor's, and unto all men that which belongs
unto them, endeavouring ourselves to have always a clear conscience
void of offence towards God, and towards man. And if they take this
that we have said, to be heresy, then do we with the Apostle freely
confess, that after the way which they call heresy, worship we the
God of our Fathers, believing all things which are written in the Law
and in the Prophets and Apostles, desiring from our souls to disclaim
all heresies and opinions which are not after Christ, and to be steadfast,
unmovable, always abounding in the work of the Lord, as knowing our
labour shall not be in vain in the Lord.
Mat. 22:21; Acts 24:14-16; John 5:28; 2 Cor. 4:17; 1 Tim. 6:3-5; 1
Cor. 15:58, 59
Conclusion
Thus we desire to give unto Christ that which is His, and unto all
lawful Authority that which is their due, and to owe nothing to any
many but love, to live quietly and peaceably, at is becometh saints,
endeavouring in all things to keep a good conscience, and to do unto
every man (of what judgement soever) as we would they should do unto
us, that as our practice is, so it may prove us to a conscionable,
quiet, and harmless people, (no ways dangerous or troublesome to
human Society) and to labour and work with our hands, that we may
not be chargeable to any, but to give to him that needeth both friends
and enemies, accounting it more excellent to give than to receive.
Also we confess that we know but in part, and that we are ignorant
of many things which we desire and seek to know: and if any do show
us that friendly part to show us from the Word of God that we see
not, we shall have cause to be thankful to God and them. But if any
man shall impose upon us anything that we see not to be commanded
by out Lord Jesus Christ, we should in His strength, rather embrace
all reproaches and tortures of men, to be stripped of all outward
comforts, and if it were possible, to die a thousand deaths, rather
than to do anything against the least tittle of the truth of God,
or against the light of our own consciences. And if any shall call
what we have said heresy, then do we with the Apostle acknowledge,
that after the way they call heresy, worship we the God of our Fathers,
disclaiming all heresy (rightly so called) because they are against
Christ, and to be steadfast and immovable, always abounding in obedience
to Christ, as knowing our labour shall not be in vain in the Lord.
1 Corinthians 1:24
Not that we have dominion over your faith, but
are helpers of your joy: for by faith we stand.
Psalm 74:21, 22
Arise, O God, plead mine own cause. Remember how the foolish man
blasphemeth Thee daily. O let not the oppressed return ashamed,
but let the poor
and needy praise Thy name. Come, Lord Jesus, come quickly.
FINIS
|