The Canons of Dordt
The Decision of the Synod of Dordt on the
Five Main Points of Doctrine in Dispute in the Netherlands is
popularly known as the Canons of Dordt. It consists of
statements of doctrine adopted by the great Synod of Dordt which
met in the city of Dordrecht in 1618-19. Although this was a
national synod of the Reformed churches of the Netherlands, it
had an international character, since it was composed not only
of Dutch delegates but also of twenty-six delegates from eight
foreign countries.
The Synod of Dordt was held in order to
settle a serious controversy in the Dutch churches initiated by
the rise of Arminianism. Jacob Arminius, a theological professor
at Leiden University, questioned the teaching of Calvin and his
followers on a number of important points. After Arminius's
death, his own followers presented their views on five of these
points in the Remonstrance of 1610. In this document or in later
more explicit writings, the Arminians taught election based on
foreseen faith, universal atonement, partial depravity,
resistible grace, and the possibility of a lapse from grace. In
the Canons the Synod of Dordt rejected these views and set forth
the Reformed doctrine on these points, namely, unconditional
election, limited atonement, total depravity, irresistible
grace, and the perseverance of saints.
The Canons have a special character because
of their original purpose as a judicial decision on the
doctrinal points in dispute during the Arminian controversy. The
original preface called them a "judgment, in which both the true
view, agreeing with God's Word, concerning the aforesaid five
points of doctrine is explained, and the false view, disagreeing
with God's Word, is rejected." The Canons also have a limited
character in that they do not cover the whole range of doctrine,
but focus on the five points of doctrine in dispute.
Each of the main points consists of a
positive and a negative part, the former being an exposition of
the Reformed doctrine on the subject, the latter a repudiation
of the corresponding errors. Each of the errors being rejected
is shown in bold maroon type. Although in form
there are only four points, we speak properly of five points,
because the Canons were structured to correspond to the five
articles of the 1610 Remonstrance. Main Points 3 and 4 were
combined into one, always designated as Main Point III/IV.
This translation of the Canons, based on
the only extant Latin manuscript among those signed at the Synod
of Dordt, was adopted by the 1986 Synod of the Christian
Reformed Church. The biblical quotations are translations from
the original Latin and so do not always correspond to current
versions. Though not in the original text, subheadings have been
added to the positive articles and to the conclusion in order to
facilitate study of the Canons.
The Canons of Dordt
Formally Titled
The Decision of the Synod of Dordt on the Five Main
Points of Doctrine in Dispute in the Netherlands
The First Main Point of Doctrine
Divine Election and Reprobation
The Judgment Concerning Divine Predestination
Which the Synod Declares to Be in Agreement with the Word of God
and Accepted Till Now in the Reformed Churches,
Set Forth in Several Articles
Article 1: God's
Right to Condemn All People
Since all people
have sinned in Adam and have come under the sentence of the
curse and eternal death, God would have done no one an injustice
if it had been his will to leave the entire human race in sin
and under the curse, and to condemn them on account of their
sin. As the apostle says: The whole world is liable to the
condemnation of God (Rom. 3:19), All have sinned and are
deprived of the glory of God (Rom. 3:23), and The wages of sin
is death (Rom. 6:23).*
--*All quotations from Scripture are translations of the
original Latin manuscript.--
Article 2: The
Manifestation of God's Love
But this is how
God showed his love: he sent his only begotten Son into the
world, so that whoever believes in him should not perish but
have eternal life.
Article 3: The
Preaching of the Gospel
In order that
people may be brought to faith, God mercifully sends proclaimers
of this very joyful message to the people he wishes and at the
time he wishes. By this ministry people are called to repentance
and faith in Christ crucified. For how shall they believe in him
of whom they have not heard? And how shall they hear without
someone preaching? And how shall they preach unless they have
been sent? (Rom. 10:14-15).
Article 4: A
Twofold Response to the Gospel
God's anger
remains on those who do not believe this gospel. But those who
do accept it and embrace Jesus the Savior with a true and living
faith are delivered through him from God's anger and from
destruction, and receive the gift of eternal life.
Article 5: The
Sources of Unbelief and of Faith
The cause or
blame for this unbelief, as well as for all other sins, is not
at all in God, but in man. Faith in Jesus Christ, however, and
salvation through him is a free gift of God. As Scripture says,
It is by grace you have been saved, through faith, and this not
from yourselves; it is a gift of God (Eph. 2:8). Likewise: It
has been freely given to you to believe in Christ (Phil. 1:29).
Article 6: God's
Eternal Decision
The fact that
some receive from God the gift of faith within time, and that
others do not, stems from his eternal decision. For all his
works are known to God from eternity (Acts 15:18; Eph. 1:11). In
accordance with this decision he graciously softens the hearts,
however hard, of his chosen ones and inclines them to believe,
but by his just judgment he leaves in their wickedness and
hardness of heart those who have not been chosen. And in this
especially is disclosed to us his act--unfathomable, and as
merciful as it is just--of distinguishing between people equally
lost. This is the well-known decision of election and
reprobation revealed in God's Word. This decision the wicked,
impure, and unstable distort to their own ruin, but it provides
holy and godly souls with comfort beyond words.
Article 7: Election
Election [or
choosing] is God's unchangeable purpose by which he did the
following:
Before the
foundation of the world, by sheer grace, according to the free
good pleasure of his will, he chose in Christ to salvation a
definite number of particular people out of the entire human
race, which had fallen by its own fault from its original
innocence into sin and ruin. Those chosen were neither better
nor more deserving than the others, but lay with them in the
common misery. He did this in Christ, whom he also appointed
from eternity to be the mediator, the head of all those chosen,
and the foundation of their salvation. And so he decided to give
the chosen ones to Christ to be saved, and to call and draw them
effectively into Christ's fellowship through his Word and
Spirit. In other words, he decided to grant them true faith in
Christ, to justify them, to sanctify them, and finally, after
powerfully preserving them in the fellowship of his Son, to
glorify them.
God did all this
in order to demonstrate his mercy, to the praise of the riches
of his glorious grace.
As Scripture
says, God chose us in Christ, before the foundation of the
world, so that we should be holy and blameless before him with
love; he predestined us whom he adopted as his children through
Jesus Christ, in himself, according to the good pleasure of his
will, to the praise of his glorious grace, by which he freely
made us pleasing to himself in his beloved (Eph. 1:4-6). And
elsewhere, Those whom he predestined, he also called; and those
whom he called, he also justified; and those whom he justified,
he also glorified (Rom. 8:30).
Article 8: A Single
Decision of Election
This election is
not of many kinds; it is one and the same election for all who
were to be saved in the Old and the New Testament. For Scripture
declares that there is a single good pleasure, purpose, and plan
of God's will, by which he chose us from eternity both to grace
and to glory, both to salvation and to the way of salvation,
which he prepared in advance for us to walk in.
Article 9: Election
Not Based on Foreseen Faith
This same
election took place, not on the basis of foreseen faith, of the
obedience of faith, of holiness, or of any other good quality
and disposition, as though it were based on a prerequisite cause
or condition in the person to be chosen, but rather for the
purpose of faith, of the obedience of faith, of holiness, and so
on. Accordingly, election is the source of each of the benefits
of salvation. Faith, holiness, and the other saving gifts, and
at last eternal life itself, flow forth from election as its
fruits and effects. As the apostle says, He chose us (not
because we were, but) so that we should be holy and blameless
before him in love (Eph. 1:4).
Article 10:
Election Based on God's Good Pleasure
But the cause of
this undeserved election is exclusively the good pleasure of
God. This does not involve his choosing certain human qualities
or actions from among all those possible as a condition of
salvation, but rather involves his adopting certain particular
persons from among the common mass of sinners as his own
possession. As Scripture says, When the children were not yet
born, and had done nothing either good or bad..., she (Rebecca)
was told, "The older will serve the younger." As it is written,
"Jacob I loved, but Esau I hated" (Rom. 9:11-13). Also, All who
were appointed for eternal life believed (Acts 13:48).
Article 11:
Election Unchangeable
Just as God
himself is most wise, unchangeable, all-knowing, and almighty,
so the election made by him can neither be suspended nor
altered, revoked, or annulled; neither can his chosen ones be
cast off, nor their number reduced.
Article 12: The
Assurance of Election
Assurance of
this their eternal and unchangeable election to salvation is
given to the chosen in due time, though by various stages and in
differing measure. Such assurance comes not by inquisitive
searching into the hidden and deep things of God, but by
noticing within themselves, with spiritual joy and holy delight,
the unmistakable fruits of election pointed out in God's Word--
such as a true faith in Christ, a childlike fear of God, a godly
sorrow for their sins, a hunger and thirst for righteousness,
and so on.
Article 13: The
Fruit of This Assurance
In their
awareness and assurance of this election God's children daily
find greater cause to humble themselves before God, to adore the
fathomless depth of his mercies, to cleanse themselves, and to
give fervent love in return to him who first so greatly loved
them. This is far from saying that this teaching concerning
election, and reflection upon it, make God's children lax in
observing his commandments or carnally self-assured. By God's
just judgment this does usually happen to those who casually
take for granted the grace of election or engage in idle and
brazen talk about it but are unwilling to walk in the ways of
the chosen.
Article 14:
Teaching Election Properly
Just as, by
God's wise plan, this teaching concerning divine election has
been proclaimed through the prophets, Christ himself, and the
apostles, in Old and New Testament times, and has subsequently
been committed to writing in the Holy Scriptures, so also today
in God's church, for which it was specifically intended, this
teaching must be set forth--with a spirit of discretion, in a
godly and holy manner, at the appropriate time and place,
without inquisitive searching into the ways of the Most High.
This must be done for the glory of God's most holy name, and for
the lively comfort of his people.
Article 15:
Reprobation
Moreover, Holy
Scripture most especially highlights this eternal and undeserved
grace of our election and brings it out more clearly for us, in
that it further bears witness that not all people have been
chosen but that some have not been chosen or have been passed by
in God's eternal election-- those, that is, concerning whom God,
on the basis of his entirely free, most just, irreproachable,
and unchangeable good pleasure, made the following decision: to
leave them in the common misery into which, by their own fault,
they have plunged themselves; not to grant them saving faith and
the grace of conversion; but finally to condemn and eternally
punish them (having been left in their own ways and under his
just judgment), not only for their unbelief but also for all
their other sins, in order to display his justice. And this is
the decision of reprobation, which does not at all make God the
author of sin (a blasphemous thought!) but rather its fearful,
irreproachable, just judge and avenger.
Article 16:
Responses to the Teaching of Reprobation
Those who do not
yet actively experience within themselves a living faith in
Christ or an assured confidence of heart, peace of conscience, a
zeal for childlike obedience, and a glorying in God through
Christ, but who nevertheless use the means by which God has
promised to work these things in us--such people ought not to be
alarmed at the mention of reprobation, nor to count themselves
among the reprobate; rather they ought to continue diligently in
the use of the means, to desire fervently a time of more
abundant grace, and to wait for it in reverence and humility. On
the other hand, those who seriously desire to turn to God, to be
pleasing to him alone, and to be delivered from the body of
death, but are not yet able to make such progress along the way
of godliness and faith as they would like--such people ought
much less to stand in fear of the teaching concerning
reprobation, since our merciful God has promised that he will
not snuff out a smoldering wick and that he will not break a
bruised reed. However, those who have forgotten God and their
Savior Jesus Christ and have abandoned themselves wholly to the
cares of the world and the pleasures of the flesh--such people
have every reason to stand in fear of this teaching, as long as
they do not seriously turn to God.
Article 17: The
Salvation of the Infants of Believers
Since we must
make judgments about God's will from his Word, which testifies
that the children of believers are holy, not by nature but by
virtue of the gracious covenant in which they together with
their parents are included, godly parents ought not to doubt the
election and salvation of their children whom God calls out of
this life in infancy.
Article 18: The
Proper Attitude Toward Election and Reprobation
To those who
complain about this grace of an undeserved election and about
the severity of a just reprobation, we reply with the words of
the apostle, Who are you, O man, to talk back to God? (Rom.
9:20), and with the words of our Savior, Have I no right to do
what I want with my own? (Matt. 20:15). We, however, with
reverent adoration of these secret things, cry out with the
apostle: Oh, the depths of the riches both of the wisdom and the
knowledge of God! How unsearchable are his judgments, and his
ways beyond tracing out! For who has known the mind of the Lord?
Or who has been his counselor? Or who has first given to God,
that God should repay him? For from him and through him and to
him are all things. To him be the glory forever! Amen (Rom.
11:33-36).
Rejection of the Errors
by Which the
Dutch Churches Have for Some Time Been Disturbed
Having set forth
the orthodox teaching concerning election and reprobation, the Synod
rejects the errors of those
I
Who teach
that the will of God to save those who would
believe and persevere in faith and in the obedience of faith is the
whole and entire decision of election to salvation, and that nothing
else concerning this decision has been revealed in God's Word.
For they deceive
the simple and plainly contradict Holy Scripture in its testimony
that God does not only wish to save those who would believe, but
that he has also from eternity chosen certain particular people to
whom, rather than to others, he would within time grant faith in
Christ and perseverance. As Scripture says, I have revealed your
name to those whom you gave me (John 17:6). Likewise, All who were
appointed for eternal life believed (Acts 13:48), and He chose us
before the foundation of the world so that we should be holy...
(Eph. 1:4).
II
Who teach
that God's election to eternal life is of many kinds: one general
and indefinite, the other particular and definite; and the latter in
turn either incomplete, revocable, nonperemptory (or conditional),
or else complete, irrevocable, and peremptory (or
absolute). Likewise, who teach that there is one election to faith
and another to salvation, so that there can be an election to
justifying faith apart from a peremptory election to salvation.
For this is an
invention of the human brain, devised apart from the Scriptures,
which distorts the teaching concerning election and breaks up this
golden chain of salvation: Those whom he predestined, he also
called; and those whom he called, he also justified; and those whom
he justified, he also glorified (Rom. 8:30).
II
Who teach
that God's good pleasure and purpose, which Scripture mentions in
its teaching of election, does not involve God's choosing certain
particular people rather than others, but involves
God's choosing, out of all possible conditions (including the works
of the law) or out of the whole order of things, the intrinsically
unworthy act of faith, as well as the imperfect obedience of faith,
to be a condition of salvation; and it involves his graciously
wishing to count this as perfect obedience and to look upon it as
worthy of the reward of eternal life.
For by this
pernicious error the good pleasure of God and the merit of Christ
are robbed of their effectiveness and people are drawn away, by
unprofitable inquiries, from the truth of undeserved justification
and from the simplicity of the Scriptures. It also gives the lie to
these words of the apostle: God called us with a holy calling, not
in virtue of works, but in virtue of his own purpose and the grace
which was given to us in Christ Jesus before the beginning of time
(2 Tim. 1:9).
IV
Who teach
that in election to faith a prerequisite condition is that man
should rightly use the light of nature, be upright,
unassuming, humble, and disposed to eternal life, as though election
depended to some extent on these factors.
For this smacks of
Pelagius, and it clearly calls into question the words of the
apostle: We lived at one time in the passions of our flesh,
following the will of our flesh and thoughts, and we were by nature
children of wrath, like everyone else. But God, who is rich in
mercy, out of the great love with which he loved us, even when we
were dead in transgressions, made us alive with Christ, by whose
grace you have been saved. And God raised us up with him and seated
us with him in heaven in Christ Jesus, in order that in the coming
ages we might show the surpassing riches of his grace, according to
his kindness toward us in Christ Jesus. For it is by grace you have
been saved, through faith (and this not from yourselves; it is the
gift of God) not by works, so that no one can boast (Eph. 2:3-9).
V
Who teach
that the incomplete and nonperemptory election of particular persons
to salvation occurred on the basis of a foreseen
faith, repentance, holiness, and godliness, which has just begun or
continued for some time; but that complete and peremptory election
occurred on the basis of a foreseen perseverance to the end in
faith, repentance, holiness, and godliness. And that this is the
gracious and evangelical worthiness, on account of which the one who
is chosen is more worthy than the one who is not chosen. And
therefore that faith, the obedience of faith, holiness, godliness,
and perseverance are not fruits or effects of an unchangeable
election to glory, but indispensable conditions and causes, which
are prerequisite in those who are to be chosen in the complete
election, and which are foreseen as achieved in them.
This runs counter
to the entire Scripture, which throughout impresses upon our ears
and hearts these sayings among others: Election is not by works, but
by him who calls (Rom. 9:11-12); All who were appointed for eternal
life believed (Acts 13:48); He chose us in himself so that we should
be holy (Eph. 1:4); You did not choose me, but I chose you (John
15:16); If by grace, not by works (Rom. 11:6); In this is love, not
that we loved God, but that he loved us and sent his Son (1 John
4:10).
VI
Who teach
that not every election to salvation is unchangeable, but that some
of the chosen can perish and do in fact perish
eternally, with no decision of God to prevent it.
By this gross error
they make God changeable, destroy the comfort of the godly
concerning the steadfastness of their election, and contradict the
Holy Scriptures, which teach that the elect cannot be led astray
(Matt. 24:24), that Christ does not lose those given to him by the
Father (John 6:39), and that those whom God predestined, called, and
justified, he also glorifies (Rom. 8:30).
VII
Who teach
that in this life there is no fruit, no awareness,
and no assurance of one's unchangeable election to glory, except as
conditional upon something changeable and contingent.
For not only is it
absurd to speak of an uncertain assurance, but these things also
militate against the experience of the saints, who with the apostle
rejoice from an awareness of their election and sing the praises of
this gift of God; who, as Christ urged, rejoice with his disciples
that their names have been written in heaven (Luke 10:20); and
finally who hold up against the flaming arrows of the devil's
temptations the awareness of their election, with the question Who
will bring any charge against those whom God has chosen? (Rom.
8:33).
VIII
Who teach
that it was not on the basis of his just will alone that God decided
to leave anyone in the fall of Adam and in the common state of sin
and condemnation or to pass anyone by in the
imparting of grace necessary for faith and conversion.
For these words
stand fast: He has mercy on whom he wishes, and he hardens whom he
wishes (Rom. 9:18). And also: To you it has been given to know the
secrets of the kingdom of heaven, but to them it has not been given
(Matt. 13:11). Likewise: I give glory to you, Father, Lord of heaven
and earth, that you have hidden these things from the wise and
understanding, and have revealed them to little children; yes,
Father, because that was your pleasure (Matt. 11:25-26).
IX
Who teach
that the cause for God's sending the gospel to one people rather
than to another is not merely and solely God's good
pleasure, but rather that one people is better and worthier than the
other to whom the gospel is not communicated.
For Moses
contradicts this when he addresses the people of Israel as follows:
Behold, to Jehovah your God belong the heavens and the highest
heavens, the earth and whatever is in it. But Jehovah was inclined
in his affection to love your ancestors alone, and chose out their
descendants after them, you above all peoples, as at this day (Deut.
10:14-15). And also Christ: Woe to you, Korazin! Woe to you,
Bethsaida! for if those mighty works done in you had been done in
Tyre and Sidon, they would have repented long ago in sackcloth and
ashes (Matt. 11:21).
The Second Main Point of Doctrine
Christ's Death and Human Redemption Through Its
Article 1: The
Punishment Which God's Justice Requires
God is not only
supremely merciful, but also supremely just. His justice requires
(as he has revealed himself in the Word) that the sins we have
committed against his infinite majesty be punished with both
temporal and eternal punishments, of soul as well as body. We cannot
escape these punishments unless satisfaction is given to God's
justice.
Article 2: The
Satisfaction Made by Christ
Since, however, we
ourselves cannot give this satisfaction or deliver ourselves from
God's anger, God in his boundless mercy has given us as a guarantee
his only begotten Son, who was made to be sin and a curse for us, in
our place, on the cross, in order that he might give satisfaction
for us.
Article 3: The
Infinite Value of Christ's Death
This death of God's
Son is the only and entirely complete sacrifice and satisfaction for
sins; it is of infinite value and worth, more than sufficient to
atone for the sins of the whole world.
Article 4: Reasons
for This Infinite Value
This death is of
such great value and worth for the reason that the person who
suffered it is--as was necessary to be our Savior--not only a true
and perfectly holy man, but also the only begotten Son of God, of
the same eternal and infinite essence with the Father and the Holy
Spirit. Another reason is that this death was accompanied by the
experience of God's anger and curse, which we by our sins had fully
deserved.
Article 5: The
Mandate to Proclaim the Gospel to All
Moreover, it is the
promise of the gospel that whoever believes in Christ crucified
shall not perish but have eternal life. This promise, together with
the command to repent and believe, ought to be announced and
declared without differentiation or discrimination to all nations
and people, to whom God in his good pleasure sends the gospel.
Article 6: Unbelief
Man's Responsibility
However, that many
who have been called through the gospel do not repent or believe in
Christ but perish in unbelief is not because the sacrifice of Christ
offered on the cross is deficient or insufficient, but because they
themselves are at fault.
Article 7: Faith
God's Gift
But all who
genuinely believe and are delivered and saved by Christ's death from
their sins and from destruction receive this favor solely from God's
grace--which he owes to no one--given to them in Christ from
eternity.
Article 8: The
Saving Effectiveness of Christ's Death
For it was the
entirely free plan and very gracious will and intention of God the
Father that the enlivening and saving effectiveness of his Son's
costly death should work itself out in all his chosen ones, in order
that he might grant justifying faith to them only and thereby lead
them without fail to salvation. In other words, it was God's will
that Christ through the blood of the cross (by which he confirmed
the new covenant) should effectively redeem from every people,
tribe, nation, and language all those and only those who were chosen
from eternity to salvation and given to him by the Father; that he
should grant them faith (which, like the Holy Spirit's other saving
gifts, he acquired for them by his death); that he should cleanse
them by his blood from all their sins, both original and actual,
whether committed before or after their coming to faith; that he
should faithfully preserve them to the very end; and that he should
finally present them to himself, a glorious people, without spot or
wrinkle.
Article 9: The
Fulfillment of God's Plan
This plan, arising
out of God's eternal love for his chosen ones, from the beginning of
the world to the present time has been powerfully carried out and
will also be carried out in the future, the gates of hell seeking
vainly to prevail against it. As a result the chosen are gathered
into one, all in their own time, and there is always a church of
believers founded on Christ's blood, a church which steadfastly
loves, persistently worships, and--here and in all eternity--praises
him as her Savior who laid down his life for her on the cross, as a
bridegroom for his bride.
Rejection of the Errors
Having set forth the orthodox teaching, the Synod rejects
the errors of those
I
Who
teach that God the Father appointed his Son to death on the
cross without a fixed and definite plan to save anyone by name, so
that the necessity, usefulness, and worth of what Christ's death
obtained could have stood intact and altogether perfect, complete
and whole, even if the redemption that was obtained had never in
actual fact been applied to any individual.
For this assertion
is an insult to the wisdom of God the Father and to the merit of
Jesus Christ, and it is contrary to Scripture. For the Savior speaks
as follows: I lay down my life for the sheep, and I know them (John
10:15, 27). And Isaiah the prophet says concerning the Savior: When
he shall make himself an offering for sin, he shall see his
offspring, he shall prolong his days, and the will of Jehovah shall
prosper in his hand (Isa. 53:10). Finally, this undermines the
article of the creed in which we confess what we believe concerning
the Church.
II
Who teach that the
purpose of Christ's death was not to establish in actual fact a new
covenant of grace by his blood, but only to acquire for the Father
the mere right to enter once more into a covenant with men, whether
of grace or of works.
For this conflicts
with Scripture, which teaches that Christ has become the guarantee
and mediator of a better--that is, a new-covenant (Heb. 7:22; 9:15),
and that a will is in force only when someone has died (Heb. 9:17).
III
Who teach that
Christ, by the satisfaction which he gave, did not certainly merit
for anyone salvation itself and the faith by which this satisfaction
of Christ is effectively applied to salvation, but only acquired for
the Father the authority or plenary will to relate in a new way with
men and to impose such new conditions as he chose, and that the
satisfying of these conditions depends on the free choice of man;
consequently, that it was possible that either all or none would
fulfill them.
For they have too
low an opinion of the death of Christ, do not at all acknowledge the
foremost fruit or benefit which it brings forth, and summon back
from hell the Pelagian error.
IV
Who teach that what
is involved in the new covenant of grace which God the Father made
with men through the intervening of Christ's death is not that we
are justified before God and saved through faith, insofar as it
accepts Christ's merit, but rather that God, having withdrawn his
demand for perfect obedience to the law, counts faith itself, and
the imperfect obedience of faith, as perfect obedience to the law,
and graciously looks upon this as worthy of the reward of eternal
life.
For they contradict
Scripture: They are justified freely by his grace through the
redemption that came by Jesus Christ, whom God presented as a
sacrifice of atonement, through faith in his blood (Rom. 3:24-25).
And along with the ungodly Socinus, they introduce a new and foreign
justification of man before God, against the consensus of the whole
church.
V
Who teach that all
people have been received into the state of reconciliation and into
the grace of the covenant, so that no one on account of original sin
is liable to condemnation, or is to be condemned, but that all are
free from the guilt of this sin.
For this opinion
conflicts with Scripture which asserts that we are by nature
children of wrath.
VI
Who make use of the
distinction between obtaining and applying in order to instill in
the unwary and inexperienced the opinion that God, as far as he is
concerned, wished to bestow equally upon all people the benefits
which are gained by Christ's death; but that the distinction by
which some rather than others come to share in the forgiveness of
sins and eternal life depends on their own free choice (which
applies itself to the grace offered indiscriminately) but does not
depend on the unique gift of mercy which effectively works in them,
so that they, rather than others, apply that grace to themselves.
For, while
pretending to set forth this distinction in an acceptable sense,
they attempt to give the people the deadly poison of Pelagianism.
VII
Who teach that
Christ neither could die, nor had to die, nor did die for those whom
God so dearly loved and chose to eternal life, since such people do
not need the death of Christ.
For they contradict
the apostle, who says: Christ loved me and gave himself up for me
(Gal. 2:20), and likewise: Who will bring any charge against those
whom God has chosen? It is God who justifies. Who is he that
condemns? It is Christ who died, that is, for them (Rom. 8:33-34).
They also contradict the Savior, who asserts: I lay down my life for
the sheep (John 10:15), and My command is this: Love one another as
I have loved you. Greater love has no one than this, that one lay
down his life for his friends (John 15:12-13).
The Third and Fourth Main Points of Doctrine
Human Corruption, Conversion to God, and the Way It Occurs
Article 1: The
Effect of the Fall on Human Nature
Man was originally created in the
image of God and was furnished in his mind with a true and
salutary knowledge of his Creator and things spiritual, in his
will and heart with righteousness, and in all his emotions with
purity; indeed, the whole man was holy. However, rebelling
against God at the devil's instigation and by his own free will,
he deprived himself of these outstanding gifts. Rather, in their
place he brought upon himself blindness, terrible darkness,
futility, and distortion of judgment in his mind; perversity,
defiance, and hardness in his heart and will; and finally
impurity in all his emotions.
Article 2: The
Spread of Corruption
Man brought forth children of the
same nature as himself after the fall. That is to say, being
corrupt he brought forth corrupt children. The corruption
spread, by God's just judgment, from Adam to all his
descendants-- except for Christ alone--not by way of imitation
(as in former times the Pelagians would have it) but by way of
the propagation of his perverted nature.
Article 3: Total
Inability
Therefore, all people are
conceived in sin and are born children of wrath, unfit for any
saving good, inclined to evil, dead in their sins, and slaves to
sin; without the grace of the regenerating Holy Spirit they are
neither willing nor able to return to God, to reform their
distorted nature, or even to dispose themselves to such reform.
Article 4: The
Inadequacy of the Light of Nature
There is, to be sure, a certain
light of nature remaining in man after the fall, by virtue of
which he retains some notions about God, natural things, and the
difference between what is moral and immoral, and demonstrates a
certain eagerness for virtue and for good outward behavior. But
this light of nature is far from enabling man to come to a
saving knowledge of God and conversion to him--so far, in fact,
that man does not use it rightly even in matters of nature and
society. Instead, in various ways he completely distorts this
light, whatever its precise character, and suppresses it in
unrighteousness. In doing so he renders himself without excuse
before God.
Article 5: The
Inadequacy of the Law
In this respect, what is true of
the light of nature is true also of the Ten Commandments given
by God through Moses specifically to the Jews. For man cannot
obtain saving grace through the Decalogue, because, although it
does expose the magnitude of his sin and increasingly convict
him of his guilt, yet it does not offer a remedy or enable him
to escape from his misery, and, indeed, weakened as it is by the
flesh, leaves the offender under the curse.
Article 6: The
Saving Power of the Gospel
What, therefore, neither the light
of nature nor the law can do, God accomplishes by the power of
the Holy Spirit, through the Word or the ministry of
reconciliation. This is the gospel about the Messiah, through
which it has pleased God to save believers, in both the Old and
the New Testament.
Article 7: God's
Freedom in Revealing the Gospel
In the Old Testament, God revealed
this secret of his will to a small number; in the New Testament
(now without any distinction between peoples) he discloses it to
a large number. The reason for this difference must not be
ascribed to the greater worth of one nation over another, or to
a better use of the light of nature, but to the free good
pleasure and undeserved love of God. Therefore, those who
receive so much grace, beyond and in spite of all they deserve,
ought to acknowledge it with humble and thankful hearts; on the
other hand, with the apostle they ought to adore (but certainly
not inquisitively search into) the severity and justice of God's
judgments on the others, who do not receive this grace.
Article 8: The
Serious Call of the Gospel
Nevertheless, all who are called
through the gospel are called seriously. For seriously and most
genuinely God makes known in his Word what is pleasing to him:
that those who are called should come to him. Seriously he also
promises rest for their souls and eternal life to all who come
to him and believe.
Article 9: Human
Responsibility for Rejecting the Gospel
The fact that many who are called
through the ministry of the gospel do not come and are not
brought to conversion must not be blamed on the gospel, nor on
Christ, who is offered through the gospel, nor on God, who calls
them through the gospel and even bestows various gifts on them,
but on the people themselves who are called. Some in
self-assurance do not even entertain the Word of life; others do
entertain it but do not take it to heart, and for that reason,
after the fleeting joy of a temporary faith, they relapse;
others choke the seed of the Word with the thorns of life's
cares and with the pleasures of the world and bring forth no
fruits. This our Savior teaches in the parable of the sower
(Matt. 13).
Article 10:
Conversion as the Work of God
The fact that others who are
called through the ministry of the gospel do come and are
brought to conversion must not be credited to man, as though one
distinguishes himself by free choice from others who are
furnished with equal or sufficient grace for faith and
conversion (as the proud heresy of Pelagius maintains). No, it
must be credited to God: just as from eternity he chose his own
in Christ, so within time he effectively calls them, grants them
faith and repentance, and, having rescued them from the dominion
of darkness, brings them into the kingdom of his Son, in order
that they may declare the wonderful deeds of him who called them
out of darkness into this marvelous light, and may boast not in
themselves, but in the Lord, as apostolic words frequently
testify in Scripture.
Article 11: The
Holy Spirit's Work in Conversion
Moreover, when God carries out
this good pleasure in his chosen ones, or works true conversion
in them, he not only sees to it that the gospel is proclaimed to
them outwardly, and enlightens their minds powerfully by the
Holy Spirit so that they may rightly understand and discern the
things of the Spirit of God, but, by the effective operation of
the same regenerating Spirit, he also penetrates into the inmost
being of man, opens the closed heart, softens the hard heart,
and circumcises the heart that is uncircumcised. He infuses new
qualities into the will, making the dead will alive, the evil
one good, the unwilling one willing, and the stubborn one
compliant; he activates and strengthens the will so that, like a
good tree, it may be enabled to produce the fruits of good
deeds.
Article 12:
Regeneration a Supernatural Work
And this is the regeneration, the
new creation, the raising from the dead, and the making alive so
clearly proclaimed in the Scriptures, which God works in us
without our help. But this certainly does not happen only by
outward teaching, by moral persuasion, or by such a way of
working that, after God has done his work, it remains in man's
power whether or not to be reborn or converted. Rather, it is an
entirely supernatural work, one that is at the same time most
powerful and most pleasing, a marvelous, hidden, and
inexpressible work, which is not lesser than or inferior in
power to that of creation or of raising the dead, as Scripture
(inspired by the author of this work) teaches. As a result, all
those in whose hearts God works in this marvelous way are
certainly, unfailingly, and effectively reborn and do actually
believe. And then the will, now renewed, is not only activated
and motivated by God but in being activated by God is also
itself active. For this reason, man himself, by that grace which
he has received, is also rightly said to believe and to repent.
Article 13: The
Incomprehensible Way of Regeneration
In this life believers cannot
fully understand the way this work occurs; meanwhile, they rest
content with knowing and experiencing that by this grace of God
they do believe with the heart and love their Savior.
Article 14: The Way
God Gives Faith
In this way, therefore, faith is a
gift of God, not in the sense that it is offered by God for man
to choose, but that it is in actual fact bestowed on man,
breathed and infused into him. Nor is it a gift in the sense
that God bestows only the potential to believe, but then awaits
assent--the act of believing--from man's choice; rather, it is a
gift in the sense that he who works both willing and acting and,
indeed, works all things in all people produces in man both the
will to believe and the belief itself.
Article 15:
Responses to God's Grace
God does not owe this grace to
anyone. For what could God owe to one who has nothing to give
that can be paid back? Indeed, what could God owe to one who has
nothing of his own to give but sin and falsehood? Therefore the
person who receives this grace owes and gives eternal thanks to
God alone; the person who does not receive it either does not
care at all about these spiritual things and is satisfied with
himself in his condition, or else in self-assurance foolishly
boasts about having something which he lacks. Furthermore,
following the example of the apostles, we are to think and to
speak in the most favorable way about those who outwardly
profess their faith and better their lives, for the inner
chambers of the heart are unknown to us. But for others who have
not yet been called, we are to pray to the God who calls things
that do not exist as though they did. In no way, however, are we
to pride ourselves as better than they, as though we had
distinguished ourselves from them.
Article 16:
Regeneration's Effect
However, just as by the fall man
did not cease to be man, endowed with intellect and will, and
just as sin, which has spread through the whole human race, did
not abolish the nature of the human race but distorted and
spiritually killed it, so also this divine grace of regeneration
does not act in people as if they were blocks and stones; nor
does it abolish the will and its properties or coerce a
reluctant will by force, but spiritually revives, heals,
reforms, and--in a manner at once pleasing and powerful--bends
it back. As a result, a ready and sincere obedience of the
Spirit now begins to prevail where before the rebellion and
resistance of the flesh were completely dominant. It is in this
that the true and spiritual restoration and freedom of our will
consists. Thus, if the marvelous Maker of every good thing were
not dealing with us, man would have no hope of getting up from
his fall by his free choice, by which he plunged himself into
ruin when still standing upright.
Article 17: God's
Use of Means in Regeneration
Just as the almighty work of God
by which he brings forth and sustains our natural life does not
rule out but requires the use of means, by which God, according
to his infinite wisdom and goodness, has wished to exercise his
power, so also the aforementioned supernatural work of God by
which he regenerates us in no way rules out or cancels the use
of the gospel, which God in his great wisdom has appointed to be
the seed of regeneration and the food of the soul. For this
reason, the apostles and the teachers who followed them taught
the people in a godly manner about this grace of God, to give
him the glory and to humble all pride, and yet did not neglect
meanwhile to keep the people, by means of the holy admonitions
of the gospel, under the administration of the Word, the
sacraments, and discipline. So even today it is out of the
question that the teachers or those taught in the church should
presume to test God by separating what he in his good pleasure
has wished to be closely joined together. For grace is bestowed
through admonitions, and the more readily we perform our duty,
the more lustrous the benefit of God working in us usually is
and the better his work advances. To him alone, both for the
means and for their saving fruit and effectiveness, all glory is
owed forever. Amen.
Rejection of the Errors
Having set forth the orthodox teaching, the Synod rejects
the errors of those
I
Who teach that, properly speaking, it cannot be said that
original sin in itself is enough to condemn the whole human race or
to warrant temporal and eternal punishments.
For they contradict the apostle when he says: Sin entered the world
through one man, and death through sin, and in this way death passed
on to all men because all sinned (Rom. 5:12); also: The guilt
followed one sin and brought condemnation (Rom. 5:16); likewise: The
wages of sin is death (Rom. 6:23).
II
Who teach that the spiritual gifts or the good dispositions
and virtues such as goodness, holiness, and righteousness could not
have resided in man's will when he was first created, and therefore
could not have been separated from the will at the fall.
For this conflicts with the apostle's description of the image of
God in Ephesians 4:24, where he portrays the image in terms of
righteousness and holiness, which definitely reside in the will.
III
Who teach that in spiritual death the spiritual gifts have
not been separated from man's will, since the will in itself has
never been corrupted but only hindered by the darkness of the mind
and the unruliness of the emotions, and since the will is able to
exercise its innate free capacity once these hindrances are removed,
which is to say, it is able of itself to will or choose whatever
good is set before it--or else not to will or choose it.
This is a novel idea and an error and has the effect of elevating
the power of free choice, contrary to the words of Jeremiah the
prophet: The heart itself is deceitful above all things and wicked
(Jer. 17:9); and of the words of the apostle: All of us also lived
among them (the sons of disobedience) at one time in the passions of
our flesh, following the will of our flesh and thoughts (Eph. 2:3).
IV
Who teach that unregenerate man is not strictly or totally
dead in his sins or deprived of all capacity for spiritual good but
is able to hunger and thirst for righteousness or life and to offer
the sacrifice of a broken and contrite spirit which is pleasing to
God.
For these views are opposed to the plain testimonies of Scripture:
You were dead in your transgressions and sins (Eph. 2:1, 5); The
imagination of the thoughts of man's heart is only evil all the time
(Gen. 6:5; 8:21). Besides, to hunger and thirst for deliverance from
misery and for life, and to offer God the sacrifice of a broken
spirit is characteristic only of the regenerate and of those called
blessed (Ps. 51:17; Matt. 5:6).
V
Who teach that corrupt and natural man can make such good
use of common grace(by which they mean the light of nature)or of the
gifts remaining after the fall that he is able thereby gradually to
obtain a greater grace-- evangelical or saving grace--as well as
salvation itself; and that in this way God, for his part, shows
himself ready to reveal Christ to all people, since he provides to
all, to a sufficient extent and in an effective manner, the means
necessary for the revealing of Christ, for faith, and for
repentance.
For Scripture, not to mention the experience of all ages, testifies
that this is false: He makes known his words to Jacob, his statutes
and his laws to Israel; he has done this for no other nation, and
they do not know his laws (Ps. 147:19-20); In the past God let all
nations go their own way (Acts 14:16); They (Paul and his
companions) were kept by the Holy Spirit from speaking God's word in
Asia; and When they had come to Mysia, they tried to go to Bithynia,
but the Spirit would not allow them to (Acts 16:6-7).
VI
Who teach that in the true conversion of man new qualities,
dispositions, or gifts cannot be infused or poured into his will by
God, and indeed that the faith [or believing] by which we first come
to conversion and from which we receive the name "believers" is not
a quality or gift infused by God, but only an act of man, and that
it cannot be called a gift except in respect to the power of
attaining faith.
For these views contradict the Holy Scriptures, which testify that
God does infuse or pour into our hearts the new qualities of faith,
obedience, and the experiencing of his love: I will put my law in
their minds, and write it on their hearts (Jer. 31:33); I will pour
water on the thirsty land, and streams on the dry ground; I will
pour out my Spirit on your offspring (Isa. 44:3); The love of God
has been poured out in our hearts by the Holy Spirit, who has been
given to us (Rom. 5:5). They also conflict with the continuous
practice of the Church, which prays with the prophet: Convert me,
Lord, and I shall be converted (Jer. 31:18).
VII
Who teach that the grace by which we are converted to God is
nothing but a gentle persuasion, or(as others explain it) that the
way of God's acting in man's conversion that is most noble and
suited to human nature is that which happens by persuasion, and that
nothing prevents this grace of moral suasion even by itself from
making natural men spiritual; indeed, that God does not produce the
assent of the will except in this manner of moral suasion, and that
the effectiveness of God's work by which it surpasses the work of
Satan consists in the fact that God promises eternal benefits while
Satan promises temporal ones.
For this teaching is entirely Pelagian and contrary to the whole of
Scripture, which recognizes besides this persuasion also another,
far more effective and divine way in which the Holy Spirit acts in
man's conversion. As Ezekiel 36:26 puts it: I will give you a new
heart and put a new spirit in you; and I will remove your heart of
stone and give you a heart of flesh....
VIII
Who teach that God in regenerating man does not bring to
bear that power of his omnipotence whereby he may powerfully and
unfailingly bend man's will to faith and conversion, but that even
when God has accomplished all the works of grace which he uses for
man's conversion, man nevertheless can, and in actual fact often
does, so resist God and the Spirit in their intent and will to
regenerate him, that man completely thwarts his own rebirth; and,
indeed, that it remains in his own power whether or not to be
reborn.
For this does away with all effective functioning of God's grace in
our conversion and subjects the activity of Almighty God to the will
of man; it is contrary to the apostles, who teach that we believe by
virtue of the effective working of God's mighty strength (Eph.
1:19), and that God fulfills the undeserved good will of his
kindness and the work of faith in us with power (2 Thess. 1:11), and
likewise that his divine power has given us everything we need for
life and godliness (2 Pet. 1:3).
IX
Who teach that grace and free choice are concurrent partial
causes which cooperate to initiate conversion, and that grace does
not precede--in the order of causality--the effective influence of
the will;that is to say,that God does not effectively help man's
will to come to conversion before man's will itself motivates and
determines itself.
For the early church already condemned this doctrine long ago in the
Pelagians, on the basis of the words of the apostle: It does not
depend on man's willing or running but on God's mercy (Rom. 9:16);
also: Who makes you different from anyone else? and What do you have
that you did not receive? (1 Cor. 4:7); likewise: It is God who
works in you to will and act according to his good pleasure (Phil.
2:13).
The Fifth Main Point of Doctrine
The Perseverance of the Saints
Article 1: The
Regenerate Not Entirely Free from Sin
Those people whom God according to
his purpose calls into fellowship with his Son Jesus Christ our
Lord and regenerates by the Holy Spirit, he also sets free from
the reign and slavery of sin, though in this life not entirely
from the flesh and from the body of sin.
Article 2: The
Believer's Reaction to Sins of Weakness
Hence daily sins of weakness
arise, and blemishes cling to even the best works of God's
people, giving them continual cause to humble themselves before
God, to flee for refuge to Christ crucified, to put the flesh to
death more and more by the Spirit of supplication and by holy
exercises of godliness, and to strain toward the goal of
perfection, until they are freed from this body of death and
reign with the Lamb of God in heaven.
Article 3: God's
Preservation of the Converted
Because of these remnants of sin
dwelling in them and also because of the temptations of the
world and Satan, those who have been converted could not remain
standing in this grace if left to their own resources. But God
is faithful, mercifully strengthening them in the grace once
conferred on them and powerfully preserving them in it to the
end.
Article 4: The
Danger of True Believers' Falling into Serious Sins
Although that power of God
strengthening and preserving true believers in grace is more
than a match for the flesh, yet those converted are not always
so activated and motivated by God that in certain specific
actions they cannot by their own fault depart from the leading
of grace, be led astray by the desires of the flesh, and give in
to them. For this reason they must constantly watch and pray
that they may not be led into temptations. When they fail to do
this, not only can they be carried away by the flesh, the world,
and Satan into sins, even serious and outrageous ones, but also
by God's just permission they sometimes are so carried
away--witness the sad cases, described in Scripture, of David,
Peter, and other saints falling into sins.
Article 5: The
Effects of Such Serious Sins
By such monstrous sins, however,
they greatly offend God, deserve the sentence of death, grieve
the Holy Spirit, suspend the exercise of faith, severely wound
the conscience, and sometimes lose the awareness of grace for a
time--until, after they have returned to the way by genuine
repentance, God's fatherly face again shines upon them.
Article 6: God's
Saving Intervention
For God, who is rich in mercy,
according to his unchangeable purpose of election does not take
his Holy Spirit from his own completely, even when they fall
grievously. Neither does he let them fall down so far that they
forfeit the grace of adoption and the state of justification, or
commit the sin which leads to death (the sin against the Holy
Spirit), and plunge themselves, entirely forsaken by him, into
eternal ruin.
Article 7: Renewal
to Repentance
For, in the first place, God
preserves in those saints when they fall his imperishable seed
from which they have been born again, lest it perish or be
dislodged. Secondly, by his Word and Spirit he certainly and
effectively renews them to repentance so that they have a
heartfelt and godly sorrow for the sins they have committed;
seek and obtain, through faith and with a contrite heart,
forgiveness in the blood of the Mediator; experience again the
grace of a reconciled God; through faith adore his mercies; and
from then on more eagerly work out their own salvation with fear
and trembling.
Article 8: The
Certainty of This Preservation
So it is not by their own merits
or strength but by God's undeserved mercy that they neither
forfeit faith and grace totally nor remain in their downfalls to
the end and are lost. With respect to themselves this not only
easily could happen, but also undoubtedly would happen; but with
respect to God it cannot possibly happen, since his plan cannot
be changed, his promise cannot fail, the calling according to
his purpose cannot be revoked, the merit of Christ as well as
his interceding and preserving cannot be nullified, and the
sealing of the Holy Spirit can neither be invalidated nor wiped
out.
Article 9: The
Assurance of This Preservation
Concerning this preservation of
those chosen to salvation and concerning the perseverance of
true believers in faith, believers themselves can and do become
assured in accordance with the measure of their faith, by which
they firmly believe that they are and always will remain true
and living members of the church, and that they have the
forgiveness of sins and eternal life.
Article 10: The
Ground of This Assurance
Accordingly, this assurance does
not derive from some private revelation beyond or outside the
Word, but from faith in the promises of God which he has very
plentifully revealed in his Word for our comfort, from the
testimony of the Holy Spirit testifying with our spirit that we
are God's children and heirs (Rom. 8:16-17), and finally from a
serious and holy pursuit of a clear conscience and of good
works. And if God's chosen ones in this world did not have this
well-founded comfort that the victory will be theirs and this
reliable guarantee of eternal glory, they would be of all people
most miserable.
Article 11: Doubts
Concerning This Assurance
Meanwhile, Scripture testifies
that believers have to contend in this life with various doubts
of the flesh and that under severe temptation they do not always
experience this full assurance of faith and certainty of
perseverance. But God, the Father of all comfort, does not let
them be tempted beyond what they can bear, but with the
temptation he also provides a way out (1 Cor. 10:13), and by the
Holy Spirit revives in them the assurance of their perseverance.
Article 12: This
Assurance as an Incentive to Godliness
This assurance of perseverance,
however, so far from making true believers proud and carnally
self-assured, is rather the true root of humility, of childlike
respect, of genuine godliness, of endurance in every conflict,
of fervent prayers, of steadfastness in crossbearing and in
confessing the truth, and of well-founded joy in God. Reflecting
on this benefit provides an incentive to a serious and continual
practice of thanksgiving and good works, as is evident from the
testimonies of Scripture and the examples of the saints.
Article 13:
Assurance No Inducement to Carelessness
Neither does the renewed
confidence of perseverance produce immorality or lack of concern
for godliness in those put back on their feet after a fall, but
it produces a much greater concern to observe carefully the ways
of the Lord which he prepared in advance. They observe these
ways in order that by walking in them they may maintain the
assurance of their perseverance, lest, by their abuse of his
fatherly goodness, the face of the gracious God (for the godly,
looking upon his face is sweeter than life, but its withdrawal
is more bitter than death) turn away from them again, with the
result that they fall into greater anguish of spirit.
Article 14: God's
Use of Means in Perseverance
And, just as it has pleased God to
begin this work of grace in us by the proclamation of the
gospel, so he preserves, continues, and completes his work by
the hearing and reading of the gospel, by meditation on it, by
its exhortations, threats, and promises, and also by the use of
the sacraments.
Article 15:
Contrasting Reactions to the Teaching of Perseverance
This teaching about the
perseverance of true believers and saints, and about their
assurance of it--a teaching which God has very richly revealed
in his Word for the glory of his name and for the comfort of the
godly and which he impresses on the
hearts of believers--is something which the flesh does not
understand, Satan hates, the world ridicules, the ignorant and
the hypocrites abuse, and the spirits of error attack. The bride
of Christ, on the other hand, has always loved this teaching
very tenderly and defended it steadfastly as a priceless
treasure; and God, against whom no plan can avail and no
strength can prevail, will ensure that she will continue to do
this. To this God alone, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, be honor
and glory forever. Amen.
Rejection of the Errors
Concerning the Teaching of the Perseverance of the Saints
Having set
forth the orthodox teaching, the Synod rejects the errors of those
I
Who teach that the
perseverance of true believers is not an effect of election or a
gift of God produced by Christ's death, but a condition of the new
covenant which man, beforewhat they callhis "peremptory" election
and justification, must fulfill by his free will.
For Holy Scripture
testifies that perseverance follows from election and is granted to
the chosen by virtue of Christ's death, resurrection, and
intercession: The chosen obtained it; the others were hardened (Rom.
11:7); likewise, He who did not spare his own son, but gave him up
for us all--how will he not, along with him, grant us all things?
Who will bring any charge against those whom God has chosen? It is
God who justifies. Who is he that condemns? It is Christ Jesus who
died--more than that, who was raised--who also sits at the right
hand of God, and is also interceding for us. Who shall separate us
from the love of Christ? (Rom. 8:32-35).
II
Who teach that God
does provide the believer with sufficient strength to persevere and
is ready to preserve this strength in him if he performs his duty,
but that even with all those things in place which are necessary to
persevere in faith and which God is pleased to use to preserve
faith, it still always depends on the choice of man's will whether
or not he perseveres.
For this view is
obviously Pelagian; and though it intends to make men free it makes
them sacrilegious. It is against the enduring consensus of
evangelical teaching which takes from man all cause for boasting and
ascribes the praise for this benefit only to God's grace. It is also
against the testimony of the apostle: It is God who keeps us strong
to the end, so that we will be blameless on the day of our Lord
Jesus Christ (1 Cor. 1:8).
III
Who teach that
those who truly believe and have been born again not only can
forfeit justifying faith as well as grace and salvation totally and
to the end, but also in actual fact do often forfeit them and are
lost forever.
For this opinion
nullifies the very grace of justification and regeneration as well
as the continual preservation by Christ, contrary to the plain words
of the apostle Paul: If Christ died for us while we were still
sinners, we will therefore much more be saved from God's wrath
through him, since we have now been justified by his blood (Rom.
5:8-9); and contrary to the apostle John: No one who is born of God
is intent on sin, because God's seed remains in him, nor can he sin,
because he has been born of God (1 John 3:9); also contrary to the
words of Jesus Christ: I give eternal life to my sheep, and they
shall never perish; no one can snatch them out of my hand. My
Father, who has given them to me, is greater than all; no one can
snatch them out of my Father's hand (John 10: 28-29).
IV
Who teach that
those who truly believe and have been born again can commit the sin
that leads to death (the sin against the Holy Spirit).
For the same
apostle John, after making mention of those who commit the sin that
leads to death and forbidding prayer for them (1 John 5: 16-17),
immediately adds: We know that anyone born of God does not commit
sin (that is, that kind of sin), but the one who was born of God
keeps himself safe, and the evil one does not touch him (v. 18).
V
Who teach that
apart from a special revelation no one can have the assurance of
future perseverance in this life.
For by this
teaching the well-founded consolation of true believers in this life
is taken away and the doubting of the Romanists is reintroduced into
the church. Holy Scripture, however, in many places derives the
assurance not from a special and extraordinary revelation but from
the marks peculiar to God's children and from God's completely
reliable promises. So especially the apostle Paul: Nothing in all
creation can separate us from the love of God that is in Christ
Jesus our Lord (Rom. 8:39); and John: They who obey his commands
remain in him and he in them. And this is how we know that he
remains in us: by the Spirit he gave us (1 John 3:24).
VI
Who teach that the
teaching of the assurance of perseverance and of salvation is by its
very nature and character an opiate of the flesh and is harmful to
godliness, good morals, prayer, and other holy exercises, but that,
on the contrary, to have doubt about this is praiseworthy.
For these people
show that they do not know the effective operation of God's grace
and the work of the indwelling Holy Spirit, and they contradict the
apostle John, who asserts the opposite in plain words: Dear friends,
now we are children of God, but what we will be has not yet been
made known. But we know that when he is made known, we shall be like
him, for we shall see him as he is. Everyone who has this hope in
him purifies himself, just as he is pure (1 John 3:2-3). Moreover,
they are refuted by the examples of the saints in both the Old and
the New Testament, who though assured of their perseverance and
salvation yet were constant in prayer and other exercises of
godliness.
VII
Who teach that the
faith of those who believe only temporarily does not differ from
justifying and saving faith except in duration alone.
For Christ himself
in Matthew 13:20ff. and Luke 8:13ff. clearly defines these further
differences between temporary and true believers: he says that the
former receive the seed on rocky ground, and the latter receive it
in good ground, or a good heart; the former have no root, and the
latter are firmly rooted; the former have no fruit, and the latter
produce fruit in varying measure, with steadfastness, or
perseverance.
VIII
Who teach that it
is not absurd that a person, after losing his former regeneration,
should once again, indeed quite often, be reborn.
For by this
teaching they deny the imperishable nature of God's seed by which we
are born again, contrary to the testimony of the apostle Peter: Born
again, not of perishable seed, but of imperishable (1 Pet. 1:23).
IX
Who teach that
Christ nowhere prayed for an unfailing perseverance of believers in
faith.
For they contradict
Christ himself when he says: I have prayed for you, Peter, that your
faith may not fail (Luke 22:32); and John the gospel writer when he
testifies in John 17 that it was not only for the apostles, but also
for all those who were to believe by their message that Christ
prayed: Holy Father, preserve them in your name (v. 11); and My
prayer is not that you take them out of the world, but that you
preserve them from the evil one (v. 15).
Conclusion
Rejection of False Accusations
And so this is the
clear, simple, and straightforward explanation of the orthodox
teaching on the five articles in dispute in the Netherlands, as well
as the rejection of the errors by which the Dutch churches have for
some time been disturbed. This explanation and rejection the Synod
declares to be derived from God's Word and in agreement with the
confessions of the Reformed churches. Hence it clearly appears that
those of whom one could hardly expect it have shown no truth,
equity, and charity at all in wishing to make the public believe:
--that the teaching of the
Reformed churches on predestination and on the points associated
with it by its very nature and tendency draws the minds of
people away from all godliness and religion, is an opiate of the
flesh and the devil, and is a stronghold of Satan where he lies
in wait for all people, wounds most of them, and fatally pierces
many of them with the arrows of both despair and self-assurance;
--that this teaching makes
God the author of sin, unjust, a tyrant, and a hypocrite; and is
nothing but a refurbished Stoicism, Manicheism, Libertinism, and
Mohammedanism;
--that this teaching makes
people carnally self-assured, since it persuades them that
nothing endangers the salvation of the chosen, no matter how
they live, so that they may commit the most outrageous crimes
with self-assurance; and that on the other hand nothing is of
use to the reprobate for salvation even if they have truly
performed all the works of the saints;
--that this teaching means
that God predestined and created, by the bare and unqualified
choice of his will, without the least regard or consideration of
any sin, the greatest part of the world to eternal condemnation;
that in the same manner in which election is the source and
cause of faith and good works, reprobation is the cause of
unbelief and ungodliness; that many infant children of believers
are snatched in their innocence from their mothers' breasts and
cruelly cast into hell so that neither the blood of Christ nor
their baptism nor the prayers of the church at their baptism can
be of any use to them; and very many other slanderous
accusations of this kind which the Reformed churches not only
disavow but even denounce with their whole heart.
Therefore this
Synod of Dordt in the name of the Lord pleads with all who devoutly
call on the name of our Savior Jesus Christ to form their judgment
about the faith of the Reformed churches, not on the basis of false
accusations gathered from here or there, or even on the basis of the
personal statements of a number of ancient and modern
authorities--statements which are also often either quoted out of
context or misquoted and twisted to convey a different meaning--but
on the basis of the churches' own official confessions and of the
present explanation of the orthodox teaching which has been endorsed
by the unanimous consent of the members of the whole Synod, one and
all.
Moreover, the Synod
earnestly warns the false accusers themselves to consider how heavy
a judgment of God awaits those who give false testimony against so
many churches and their confessions, trouble the consciences of the
weak, and seek to prejudice the minds of many against the fellowship
of true believers.
Finally, this Synod
urges all fellow ministers in the gospel of Christ to deal with this
teaching in a godly and reverent manner, in the academic
institutions as well as in the churches; to do so, both in their
speaking and writing, with a view to the glory of God's name,
holiness of life, and the comfort of anxious souls; to think and
also speak with Scripture according to the analogy of faith; and,
finally, to refrain from all those ways of speaking which go beyond
the bounds set for us by the genuine sense of the Holy Scriptures
and which could give impertinent sophists a just occasion to scoff
at the teaching of the Reformed churches or even to bring false
accusations against it.
May God's Son Jesus
Christ, who sits at the right hand of God and gives gifts to men,
sanctify us in the truth, lead to the truth those who err, silence
the mouths of those who lay false accusations against sound
teaching, and equip faithful ministers of his Word with a spirit of
wisdom and discretion, that all they say may be to the glory of God
and the building up of their hearers. Amen.
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