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1. The Holy Trinity There is only one
living and true God. His existence is everlasting, without beginning
or end. As a spiritual being, not limited by a body and bodily
members, and free from bodily desires and impulses, his power, wisdom,
and goodness are infinite. He is the Creator and Preserver of all
things whether seen or unseen. In the unity of this one true God there
are three Persons, the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit, who are
one in being, power and eternity.
2. Of the Word or Son of God The Son, who is the Word of the
Father (Jn 1.1), is the Son of the Father from everlasting to
everlasting. He is truly and eternally God, one with the Father in
being. He took our human nature to himself in the womb of the virgin
Mary, so that two full and perfect natures, his divine and our human
nature, were united in the one person of the incarnate Son, never to
be divided. There is therefore one Christ who is truly God and truly
man, and who truly suffered, was crucified, died and was buried. By
Christ's sacrifice of himself, not only for original guilt but also
for all actual sins of men, God was reconciling the world to himself
(2 Cor 5.19).
3. Christ's descent to the grave As Christ died for us and
was buried, so also it is to be believed that the giving up of his
life was a reality.
4. Of the Resurrection of Christ Christ truly rose again
from the dead. His was a bodily resurrection, with flesh, bones and
all things that belong to the perfection of our human nature. His
ascension was a bodily ascension into heaven, where he is now
enthroned until the last day, when he will return to judge all men.
5. The Holy Spirit The Holy Spirit who proceeds from the
Father and the Son is one in being, majesty, and glory with the Father
and the Son, and thus is truly and eternally God.
6. The sufficiency of Holy Scripture for our salvation Holy
Scripture sets forth everything that is necessary for our salvation.
Consequently, nobody should be required to believe as an article of
the Christian faith, or to regard as necessary for salvation, anything
that is not found in Scripture.
By the term Holy Scripture we
mean the canonical books of the Old and New Testaments, namely:
Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, Deuteronomy, Joshua, Judges,
Ruth, 1 and 2 Samuel, 1 and 2 Kings, 1 and 2 Chronicles, Ezra,
Nehemiah, Esther, Job, Psalms, Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, Song of Songs,
Isaiah, Jeremiah, Lamentations, Ezekiel, Daniel, Hosea, Joel, Amos,
Obadiah, Jonah, Micah, Nahum, Habakkuk, Zephaniah, Haggai, Zechariah,
Malachi.
Matthew, Mark, Luke, John, Acts, Romans, 1 and 2
Corinthians, Galatians, Ephesians, Philippians, Colossians, 1 and 2
Thessalonians, 1 and 2 Timothy, Titus, Philemon, Hebrews, James, 1 and
2 Peter, 1, 2 and 3 John, Jude, Revelation.
The books known as
the Apocrypha are read by the Church, as Jerome said, because of the
examples they provide of the heroic lives and faithful conduct; but
the Church does not use these books to establish any doctrine.
7. The Old Testament The Old Testament is not contrary to
the New Testament. In the Old as well as in the New Testament,
everlasting life is offered to mankind through Christ; for Christ, who
is both God and man, is the only Mediator between God and man.
Therefore we must not pay attention to any who say that in the Old
Testament the patriarchs and others were limited in their expectation
to transitory promises. Although the ceremonies and rites of the Law
which God gave through Moses, are not binding on Christians, and the
civil precepts of the Law are not essential for the organization of
any state or commonwealth, yet no Christian is free from obedience to
the commandments known as moral.
8. The Three Creeds The three creeds, namely the Nicene
Creed, the Athanasian Creed, and what is commonly called the Apostles'
Creed, should be received and believed without reservation, because
they may be proved from Holy Scripture.
9. Original Sin Original sin does not consist in imitating
the sin of Adam, (as the Pelagians wrongly teach), but is the fault
and corruption of the nature with which all descendants of Adam are
born. It is due to original sin that we have departed very far from
the original righteousness in which we were created, and are naturally
inclined to evil, with the result that there is a constant war between
flesh and the spirit. Accordingly in every person born into this
world, original sin is deserving of God's wrath and condemnation. This
infection of our nature remains even in those who in Christ are
reborn. Because of it the desire of the flesh is not submissive to the
Law of God. True though it is that there is no condemnation awaiting
those who believe and are baptized, yet the Apostle asserts that all
ungodly desires are in themselves sinful.
10. Free Will Since the fall of Adam man's state is such
that he is unable, by his own natural strength and good works, to turn
and dispose himself to believe and call upon God. Consequently, we
have no power of our own to do good works that are pleasing and
acceptable to God, unless the grace of God is first given through
Christ, so that we may have a good will, and that same grace continues
at work within us to maintain that good will.
11. Justification It is not because of any good works or
deservings on our part, but only by faith which rests on the merit of
our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ, that we are accounted righteous
before God. Therefore, the doctrine of our justification by faith
alone is most edifying and full of strength and comfort. (This
doctrine is more fully explained in the Homily on Justification.)
12. Good works Although good works, which are the fruits of
faith and follow after our justification, cannot put away our sins,
and are subject to the severity of God's judgment, yet, inasmuch as
they are done in Christ and for His sake, they are pleasing and
acceptable to God; for they spring necessarily from a true and vital
faith, and are indeed the evidence of a vital faith, just as a tree is
recognized by its fruit.
13. Works before Justification Works that are done before
receiving the grace of Christ and the indwelling of his Spirit are not
pleasing to God, because they do not spring faith in Jesus Christ; nor
is it true (as some say) that they render us fit to receive grace or
are deserving of grace. On the contrary, the fact that such works are
not done as God has willed and commanded them to be done can only mean
that they have the nature of sin.
14. Works of Supererogation Works which are supposedly done
voluntarily beyond and in excess of what is required by God's
commandments (known as works of supererogation) cannot be taught
without self-centred arrogance and irreverence; for it is claimed that
persons who perform such works render to God not only as much as it is
their duty to render, but actually do for God more than is of bounden
duty required; whereas Christ plainly stated, "When you have done all
that is commanded, say, We are unprofitable servants." (Luke 17.10).
15. Christ alone without sin As our true fellow man Christ
was like us in all respects, with the exception only of sin, from
which he was completely free, both in his flesh and in his spirit. He
came into the world to be the Lamb without spot or blemish, and by his
once-for-all sacrifice of himself to take away the sins of the world
as the one in whom, as St John says, there was no sin (Jn 1.29; 1 Jn
3.5). But all the rest of us, though we have been baptized and born
again in Christ, continue to offend in many things; and "if we say we
have no sin we deceive ourselves and the truth is not in us" (1 John
1.8).
16. Sin after Baptism Not every serious sin committed after
our baptism is an unpardonable sin against the Holy Spirit. Therefore
persons who fall into sin after baptism should be encouraged to
repent. After we have received the Holy Spirit it is possible for us
to turn away from the grace we have experienced and to fall into sin,
and it is possible for us who have fallen to rise again and amend our
lives by the grace of God. Therefore persons who say that they cannot
sin any more as long as they continue in this life (claiming to have
attained sinless perfection), or who deny any opportunity of
forgiveness to those who truly repent, are to be condemned.
17. Predestination and Election Predestination to life
belongs to God's everlasting purpose. By this is meant that before
foundation of the world, it is his unchangeable decree, in accordance
with his secret counsel to deliver from curse and damnation those whom
he has chosen in Christ, and to bring them by him to everlasting
salvation, as vessels of his mercy (Rom 9.21ff). Therefore, those on
whom such an excellent blessing of God is bestowed are called
according to God's purpose by the Holy Spirit working in them in God's
good time; through grace they obey this calling and are freely
justified by God; they become the sons of God by adoption (Rom 3.24;
8.15f); they are conformed to the image of his only Son Jesus Christ;
they lead holy lives that are given to good works to the glory of God;
and at last, by God's mercy, they attain to everlasting bliss (Rom
8.29f; Eph 2.8-10).
The reverent consideration of our
predestination and election in Christ is full of sweet, pleasant, and
unspeakable strength to godly persons, who feel the working in
themselves of the Spirit of Christ, mortifying the works of the flesh
and their earthly passions and drawing their thoughts upward to high
and heavenly realities. This teaching is welcome to us both because it
strongly establishes and confirms our assurance of eternal salvation
to be enjoyed through Christ, and also because it kindles in us a
fervent love to God. For unregenerated persons, however, who are moved
by idle curiosity and who do not have the Spirit of Christ, to be
constantly confronted with the doctrine God's predestination is
dangerous and disastrous, since the devil uses it to drive them either
to despair or to abandon themselves to immoral and ungodly living,
which is no less perilous than despair.
Furthermore, we must
accept God's promises in the way in which they are ordinarily
presented to us in Holy Scripture, and in all that we do the will of
God is to be followed precisely as it is revealed to us in the Word of
God.
18. Salvation in Christ alone They are to be condemned as
false teachers who assert that persons will be saved no matter what
beliefs they hold or what sect they belong to, provided they sincerely
lead their lives according to those beliefs and to the light of
nature; for Holy Scripture insists that it only by the name of Jesus
Christ that we may be saved (Acts 4.12).
19. The Church The visible Church of Christ is a gathering
of believing people in the which the pure Word of God is preached and
the sacraments are ministered with due order and discipline as
ordained by Christ. Together with other churches, the Church of Rome
has erred, not only matters of conduct and ceremonial but also in
matters of doctrine.
20. The Authority of the Church The Church has power to
prescribe rites and ceremonies and has authority in theological
controversies; but it is not lawful for the Church to prescribe
anything that is contrary to God's written Word, or to expound one
passage of Scripture in such a way that it disagrees with another.
Therefore, although the Church is a witness and a guardian of Holy
Scripture, yet it is not open to it to prescribe anything contrary to
Scripture, or to enforce anything not found in Scripture to be
believed as necessary to salvation.
21. The authority of General Councils Even general councils
may err when they meet, and sometimes have erred, even in issues of
theological importance - for such councils are composed of men, not
all of whom may be governed by the Spirit and the Word of God.
Therefore, nothing declared by such councils as necessary for
salvation has binding power or authority unless it is plainly taught
in Holy Scripture.
22. Purgatory The Romish teaching about purgatory, pardons,
the worship and adoration of images and relics, and also the practice
of praying to saints, is a futile deception, which, far from being
grounded in Scripture, is repugnant to the Word of God.
23. Ministering in the Congregation No man is permitted to
take upon himself the office of public preaching or ministration of
the sacraments before he has been called and appointed to fulfil this
office. Those persons should be accepted as lawfully called and
appointed who have been selected and called to this work by men
entrusted with public authority in the Church to call and send
ministers into the Lord's vineyard.
24. The Language of Public Worship It is plainly
incompatible with the Word of God, and with the custom of the
primitive Church to conduct public worship or to minister the
sacraments in the Church in a language the people do not understand.
25. The Sacraments The sacraments prescribed by Christ are
badges and tokens of our profession as Christians, and, more
particularly, they are trustworthy witnesses and effectual signs of
God's grace and good will to us. By them God works invisibly in us,
both arousing and also strengthening and confirming our faith in him.
Christ our Lord has ordained two gospel sacraments, namely
baptism and the Lord's supper.
The five that are commonly
called sacraments, namely, confirmation, penance, ordination,
matrimony, and extreme unction are not to be received as sacraments of
the gospel, since they have in part developed from a false
understanding of apostolic practice and in part represent states of
life allowed in the Scriptures. Moreover, because they have no visible
sign or ceremony commanded by God, they do not belong in the same
category as the sacraments of baptism and the Lord's supper.
The sacraments were not appointed by Christ to be a public spectacle
or to be paraded for adoration, but to be used with due discipline.
They have a beneficial effect or working only in those who receive
them worthily; whereas those who receive them unworthily bring
condemnation on themselves, as St Paul teaches (1 Cor 11.27ff).
26. The Unworthiness of Ministers Although in the visible
Church there is always a mingling of evil good, and at times evil
persons hold the chief positions in the ministry of the Word and
sacraments, yet, because they do so not in their own but in Christ's
name and perform their ministry by his commission and authority, we
may avail ourselves of their ministry both in hearing the Word of God
and in receiving the sacraments. The effect of Christ's ordinance is
not taken away by their wickedness, nor is the grace of God's gifts
diminished in the case of those who receive the sacraments rightly and
by faith; for, although ministered by evil men, these are effectual on
account of Christ's institution and promise.
Nevertheless, it
belongs to the discipline of the Church that evil ministers should be
investigated and that they should be accused by those who have
knowledge of their offences, and, further, that, on being found
guilty, they should by just judgment be deposed.
27. Baptism Baptism is a sign of the faith we profess and a
mark that differentiates Christian persons from those who are
unbaptized; and it is also a sign of regeneration or new birth by
which, as by an instrument, those who receive baptism rightly are
grafted into the Church, the promises of forgiveness of sin and of our
adoption to be the sons of God are visibly signified and sealed, and
faith is confirmed and grace increased by virtue of prayer to God.
The baptism of young children is under all circumstances to be
retained in the Church as a practice fully agreeable with the
institution of Christ.
28. The Lord's Supper The supper of the Lord is not only a
sign of the love that Christians ought to have among themselves for
each other, but is especially a sacrament of our redemption by
Christ's death. Accordingly, for those who rightly, worthily, and with
faith receive it the bread that is broken is a partaking of the body
of Christ and the cup of blessing is a partaking of the blood of
Christ (1 Cor 10.16).
Transubstantiation (the teaching that
the substance the bread and wine is changed into the actual flesh and
blood of Christ) in the supper of the Lord cannot be proved by Holy
Scripture, but is repugnant to the plain words of Scripture,
overthrows the nature of a sacrament, and has given rise to many
superstitions.
In the Lord's supper the body of Christ is
given, taken and eaten only in a heavenly or spiritual manner, and
faith is the means by which the body of Christ is received and eaten
in the supper.
The Sacrament of the Lord's supper was not
commanded by Christ to be reserved, carried about, lifted up, or
worshipped.
29. The Participation of Unbelievers Though wicked persons,
and all in whom a vital faith is absent, physically and visibly press
the sacrament of the body and blood of Christ with their teeth (as
Saint Augustine says), yet in no sense are they partakers of Christ;
on the contrary, they eat and drink the sign or sacrament of so great
a reality to their own condemnation.
30. Communion in both kinds The cup of the Lord is not to be
denied to the laity, for both parts of the Lord's sacrament, the wine
as well as the bread, ought by Christ's ordinance and commandment to
be ministered alike to all Christian persons.
31. The One Offering of Christ Finished in the cross
Christ's offering of himself on the cross, once for all, is the
perfect redemption, propitiation, and satisfaction for all the sins of
the whole world, both original and actual, and there is no other
satisfaction for sin, but that alone. Therefore the sacrifices of
masses, in which it is commonly said that the Priest offers Christ for
the living and the dead, to obtain the remission of their punishment
or guilt, are blasphemous fables and dangerous deceits.
32. The Marriage of Ministers Bishops, presbyters, and
deacons are not commanded by God's Law to take vows of celibacy or to
abstain from marriage; therefore it is lawful for them, as for all
other Christian persons, to marry at their own discretion, where they
judge that it serves better to godliness for them to do so.
33. Excommunicated persons Any person who by open
denunciation of the Church is rightly cut off from the unity of the
Church and excommunicated ought to be treated by the whole company of
the faithful as a heathen and a traitor, until such time as he is
reconciled by penitence and received back into the Church by a judge
with authority to do so (cf Mt 18.17).
34. The traditions of the church It is not necessary that
traditions and ceremonies should be uniform and identical in every
place; for these have at all times been diversified, and they may be
changed to accord with the diversities of countries, times, and human
customs, provided that nothing be ordained contrary to God's Word.
Anyone who by his private judgment willingly and deliberately breaks
the traditions and ceremonies of the Church which are not repugnant to
the Word of God, and are appointed and approved by common authority,
ought to be openly rebuked (so that others may fear to follow his
example) as one who offends against the common order of the Church,
undermines authority, and wounds the consciences of weak fellow
Christians.
Every particular or national church has authority
to prescribe, change and abolish ceremonies or rites of the Church
which have been ordered only by human authority, providing that all
things are done for edification.
35. The Homilies The two books of Homilies, which were set
forth in the times of Edward VI and Elizabeth I respectively, contain
godly and wholesome teaching.
36. The Consecration of Bishops and Ministers The form of
consecration of Archbishops and bishops and the ordering of presbyters
and deacons, set forth in the time of Edward VI, contain all things
necessary for such consecration and ordering and nothing that of
itself is superstitious and ungodly. Therefore anyone who is
consecrated or ordained according to these rites we declare to be
rightly, orderly, and lawfully consecrated and ordained.
37. Civil Magistrates We do not give to our princes or
rulers the right to minister either God's Word or the sacraments. The
only prerogative which we recognise as having been given by God
himself in Holy Scripture to all godly rulers is that they should rule
all states and classes committed to their charge by God, whether
ecclesiastical or secular, and restrain with the civil sword stubborn
persons and evildoers. The Bishop of Rome has no jurisdiction in this
realm. Christians may be punished by the laws of the realm with death
for heinous and grievous offences.
It is lawful for Christian
men to carry weapons and serve in wars at the command of the civil
ruler.
38. Private property The wealth and possessions of
Christians are not common to all nor is their right and title to own
private property to be questioned. Nevertheless, every person ought to
give liberally and according to his ability from the things he
possesses to the poor.
39. Oath-taking While we acknowledge that vain and rash
swearing is forbidden to Christians by our Lord Jesus Christ, and St
James (Mt 5.34-37; Jam 5.12), we judge that our Christian religion
does not prohibit us from swearing an oath when it is required by the
magistrate in the cause of good faith and charity, providing it is
done according to the prophet's teaching in justice, judgment and
truth.
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