I. We believe in the divine inspiration of the Holy Scriptures, and receive them
as a gracious revelation of the mind and
will of God (Deut. 4:2, Ps. 19:7, Prov. 30:5-6, 2 Pet. 1:19-21, Rev. 22:18-19,
John 5:39); and we believe that
therein are revealed all the doctrines and truths which we here state. (2 Tim.
3:15-17.)
II. We believe that there is but one living and true God (Exod. 3:14, Deut.
4:35, Deut. 6:4, Num. 23:19, 1 Sam.
2:2-3, Ps. 90:2, Ps. 115:3, Ps. 135:5, Ps. 139:7-10, Prov. 15:3, Ecc. 3:14, Is.
40:28, Is. 45:22, Is. 46:9, Jer.
10:10, Jer. 23:24, Mal. 3:6, Mark 12:29, John 4:24, 1 Cor. 8:6, Col. 1:16); that
there are Three Persons in the
Godhead, - the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost (Matt. 28:19, John 1:1, 2
Cor. 13:14, 1 John 5:7, Jude
20-21), and that these Three Persons are equal in nature, power, and glory; and
we believe that the Son and the Holy
Ghost are as truly and as properly God as the Father. (John 10:15, John 10:30,
Eph. 2:22, Heb. 1:3, Heb. 9:14.)
III. We believe in the everlasting and unchangeable love of God (Jer. 31:3); and
that before the foundation of the world
the Father did elect a certain number of the human race unto everlasting
salvation, whom He did predestinate unto the
adoption of children by Jesus Christ to Himself, according to the good pleasure
of His will (Gal. 4:5, Eph. 1:3-14, 1
Thess. 5:9, 2 Thess. 2:13, 2 Tim. 1:9, 1 John 3:1, 1 Pet. 1:2, 1 Pet. 2:9); and
we believe that in fulfilling this
gracious design, He did make a covenant of grace and peace with the Son and with
the Holy Ghost on behalf of those
persons thus chosen (2 Sam. 23:5, John 1:17), and that in this covenant the Son
was appointed a Saviour, and all
spiritual blessings provided for the elect, and also that their persons, with
all the grace and glory designed for them,
were put into the hands of the Son as their Covenant Head, and made His care and
charge. (Ps. 111:8-9, Is. 42:6, Is.
54:10, Is. 55:4, Jer. 31:3, John 6:37, John 17:2, Acts 4:12, Rom. 8:29-30, Eph.
1:3, Eph. 2:13, Heb. 2:13, Heb.
6:17-18, Heb. 8:8-9.)
IV. We believe in the Fall of our first parents, and that by it the whole of the
human race became involved in, and guilty
of, Original Sin; and that as they are born into the world, the whole of their
posterity are, in consequence, actual
transgressors against God. (Rom. 5:12-21, Ps. 58:3.) And we believe that by the
Fall all men were rendered both
unable and unwilling spiritually to believe in, seek after, or love God until
called and regenerated by the Holy Ghost.
(Gen. 6:5, Gen. 8:21, Job 14:4, Job 25:4, Ps. 51:5, Jer. 13:23, Jer. 17:9, Matt.
15:19, Rom. 3:10-24, Rom.
5:12-19, 1 Cor. 15:22, 1 Cor. 15:45-50, Eph. 2:3, 1 John 5:19.)
V. We believe that the Lord Jesus Christ, the only begotten Son of God, being
set up from everlasting as the Mediator
of the New Covenant, and having engaged to be the Surety of His people, did, in
the fulness of time, really and truly
assume human nature, and not before, either in whole or in part. (Prov. 8:23.)
And we believe that, though He existed
form all eternity as the eternal Son of God (John 1:18, Phil. 2:5-8, Heb. 1:5,
Heb. 1:8, Heb. 13:8, 2 John 3, Rev.
1:8), the human soul of the Lord Jesus did not exist before it was created and
formed in His body by Him who forms
the soul of man within him, when that body was conceived under the overshadowing
of the Holy Ghost, in the womb of
the Virgin Mary. (Is. 7:14, Matt. 1:23, Luke 1:26-38, John 1:14, Gal. 4:4.) And
we believe that Christ's human
nature consists of a true body and reasonable soul, both of which, together and
at once, the Son of God assumed into
union with His Divine Person, when made of a woman and not before (Luke 2:40,
Heb. 2:14-17), that this human
nature was not sinful, peccable, or mortal (Ps.16:10, Acts 2:27), though capable
of death by a voluntary act (John
10:17-18), but essentially and intrinsically pure and holy (Song 5:9-16, Heb.
7:26); and that in it He really suffered,
bled, and died, as the Substitute and Surety of His church and people, in their
room and stead, and for no others (John
10:15, John 10:26, John 17:9, John 17:13), whereby, together with His holy,
spotless life, He fulfilled the law, and
satisfied all the claims of justice, as well as made a way for all those
blessings which are needful for His people, both for
time and eternity. (Heb. 9:22-28.)
VI. We believe that the eternal redemption which Christ has obtained by the
shedding of His blood is special and
particular (Gal. 3:13, Heb. 9:12-15); that is to say, that it was intentionally
designed only for the Elect of God, the
Sheep of Christ, who therefore alone share in the special and peculiar blessings
thereof. (Isa. 35:10, John 10:15, John
10:25-28, Acts 2: 47, Acts 13: 48, Acts 20:28, Rom. 5:8-10, 8:33-34, Rom. 9:13,
Rom. 9:15-16, Rev. 14:4.)
VII. We believe that the justification of God's elect is only by the
righteousness of the Lord Jesus Christ imputed to
them (Isa. 45:24, Isa. 64:6, Jer. 23:6, Matt. 7:18, Luke 18:13, Acts 13:39, Rom.
4:4-5, Rom. 5:19, Rom. 10:4, 1
Cor. 1:30, 2 Cor. 5:21, Phil. 3:9, Tit. 3:5), without consideration of any works
of righteousness, before or after
calling, done by them, and that the full and free pardon of all their sins,
past, present, and to come, is only through the
blood of Christ, according to the riches of His grace. (Rom. 3:20-27, Rom. 4:22,
Rom. 9:11, 2 Tim. 1:9, Heb. 1:3,
Heb. 9:22, 1 Pet. 3:18, 1 John 2:1.)
VIII. We believe that the work of regeneration is not an act of man's free will
and natural power, but that it springs from
the operation of the mighty, efficacious and invincible grace of God. (Jer.
50:20, Ps. 110:3, John 1:13, John 6:29,
John 6:63, John 6:65, John 14:8, Rom. 8:16, Rom. 11:4, Rom. 11:6, James 1:18.)
IX. We believe that all those who were chosen by the Father and redeemed by the
Son, and no others, shall, at the
appointed time, certainly be convinced in their hearts of sin, by the Spirit
(John 16:8, 1 Cor. 2:14, Eph. 2:1), be
brought in guilty before God, and made the recipients of eternal life, coming to
Christ for salvation, and believing on
Him as the Anointed of the Father, and the only Mediator between God and man (1
Tim. 2:5, Heb. 8:6, Heb. 9:15,
Heb 12:24); but that none can spiritually come to Christ unless drawn by the
Father (John 6:44, John 6:65); and that
all the elect shall be thus drawn to Christ, and shall finally persevere; so
that not one of the elect shall perish, but all
arrive safely in glory. (Job 17:9, Matt. 24:34, John 4:14 ; John 5:24, John
6:37, John 6:44-47, John 10:28, John
17:6, John 17:12, John 17:24, Acts 2:47, Rom. 8:29-39, Phil. 1:6, 1 Pet. 1:3-5.)
X. We believe that all men are by nature so completely dead in trespasses and
sins that they cannot, while in that state,
know or feel anything of God in Christ, spiritually, graciously and savingly.
(Eph. 2:1-3). And we believe that, when
quickened into everlasting life in Christ (as the elect alone are, or can be, or
will be), the vessel of mercy then first feels
spiritually the guilt of sin, and is taught to know in his own experience, the
fall and ruin of man. (1sa. 1:6, Rom.
3:10-19, Rom. 7:18.) Thus every quickened child of God is brought, in God's own
time and way, through the Spirit's
teaching, from necessity to depend for salvation on Christ's blood and
righteousness alone. (John 6:68, John 10:9,
John 14:6, Acts 4:12, Eph. 2:8-10, Heb. 6:18.) And we believe that this teaching
will not lead him to licentiousness,
but make him willing to walk in good works, to which he is ordained, and which
are acceptable to God only through
Jesus Christ. (Rom. 8:14, Gal. 5:16-25, Gal. 6:14-16.)
XI. We believe that man can never do a good work, properly so called, until the
grace of God is implanted in his heart
(Rom. 8:8), and that nothing is spiritually good but what God Himself is pleased
to communicate to, and work in, the
soul, both to will and to do of His good pleasure. (Phil. 2:13.) And we also
believe that man's works, good or bad,
have not anything to do with his call, or being quickened, by the Holy Spirit.
(2 Cor. 3:5, Eph. 2:3-9, Tit. 3:5, Heb.
13:21.)
XII. We believe in the effectual calling of all the elect vessels of mercy out
of the ruins of the Fall in God's appointed
time, and that the work of regeneration, or new birth, is the sovereign work of
God, and His work only, the sinner
being as passive therein as in his first birth, and previously thereto dead in
trespasses and sins. (John 3:3-8, John
6:37-65, Rom. 8:30, 1 Cor. 1:26-29, Eph. 2:4-5.) We believe in the application
of the Law to the elect sinner's
conscience by the Spirit of God (Rom. 7:7, Rom. 7:9, Rom. 7:12), showing the
sinner how greatly he has broken that
law, and feelingly condemning him for the same; and in the manifestation of
mercy and pardon through Christ alone
made known to the soul by God the Holy Ghost. (Ps. 30:3 ; Ps. 130:7, Isa. 40:2,
Jer. 33:8, Mic. 7:18, Rom.
7:5-10.)
XIII. We believe that faith is the gift of God (Eph. 2:8), as well as true
spiritual repentance and hope (Acts 5:31, Rom.
15:13, 2 Thess. 2:16, 1 Pet. 1:3), and a manifestation of pardon to the soul ;
that through faith Christ is made precious
to the soul (1 Pet. 2:7), and the soul drawn out in love to God (1 John 4:19);
that all are the fruits and effects of the
blessed Spirit, and that they will most certainly be productive of good works,
and a walk and conversation becoming
the Gospel. (Gal. 2:16-21, Gal. 5:22-26.)
XIV. We believe in the Resurrection of the body, both of the just and the unjust
(Acts 24:15), that the just (the elect)
shall be raised up in glory and honour (Matt. 24:31, Matt. 25:31-40), and be
openly acknowledged and fully
acquitted in the Judgment Day, before angels, devils and sinners, and made fully
and eternally blest both in body and
soul; and that the wicked shall be raised up to be condemned, body and soul, to
the unspeakable torments of hell for
ever and ever. (Isa. 26:19, Dan. 12:2, Matt. 25:31-46, John 5:28-29, Acts 23:6,
Rom. 6:23, Rom. 8:11, Rom.
8:23, Rom. 14:10-12, 1 Cor. 15:52, 2 Cor. 5:10, Rev. 20:12-15.)
XV. We believe that Baptism and the Lord's Supper (1 Cor. 11:2, 1 Cor. 11:26, 1
Cor.14:40, Col. 2:5-8) are
ordinances of Christ, to be continued till His Second Coming; and that the
former is requisite to the latter; that is to say,
that those only can scripturally sit down to the Lord's Supper who, upon their
profession of faith, have been baptised
by immersion in the Name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost;
and that, therefore, what is called
"Mixed Communion" (Rom. 16:17) is unscriptural, improper, and not to be allowed
in the churches of Christ. (Matt.
3:13-16, Matt. 28:19-20, John 3:22-23, Acts 2:37-42, Acts 8:12, Acts 9:18, Acts
10:47-48, Acts 16:14-15, Acts
16:30-33, Acts 18:8, Acts 19:1-6, Rom. 6:3, Col. 2:12.)
XVI. We believe that the Believer's Rule of conduct is the gospel, and not the
law, commonly called the Moral Law,
issued on Mount Sinai, which hath no glory in it by reason of the glory that
excelleth; that is to say, the gospel (Gal.
6:15-16, 2 Cor. 3:10, Rom. 7:2-4); the gospel containing the sum and substance
and glory of all the laws which God
ever promulgated from His throne, and the Jews, because of the hardness of their
hearts, being permitted some things
which the gospel forbids. (Deut. 14:1, Matt. 19:8-9.)
XVII. We deny and reject, as unscriptural and erroneous, the baptism of infants,
whether by immersion, sprinkling,
pouring, or any other mode. (Heb. 11:6, Acts 8:12, Acts 8:37.)
XVIII. We reject as blasphemous the doctrine of Baptismal Regeneration; that is,
that the person baptised is or can be
regenerated in, by or through baptism, much less, if possible, by infant
sprinkling. (John 1:13, 1 Pet. 1:23.)
XIX. We believe in the sanctification of God's people, the term sanctification
signifying a separation and setting apart by
and for God. This, in the child of God, is three-fold: i, by election by God the
Father (Jude I); ii, by redemption by
God the Son (John 17:19); and iii, by the almighty regenerating operation of God
the Holy Ghost (Rom. 15:16.) We
believe that the blessed Spirit is the Author of what is styled in Scripture the
new creature, or creation (2 Cor. 5:17,
Eph. 4:24), or new heart (Ezek. 36:26); being, in truth, an implantation of the
Divine nature (2 Pet. 1:4), through
which the child of God would, according to the inner man (Rom. 7:22), be holy as
God is holy, and perfectly fulfil all
the good pleasure of the Father's will; but groans being burdened, being
constantly opposed by the contrary workings
of the old man. (Rom. 7, Gal. 5:17.) We reject the doctrine of progressive
sanctification, or that a child of God
experiences such a gradual weakening, subduing, or rectification of the old
nature, called in Scripture the old man (Eph. 4:22, Col. 3:9), or such a
continued general improvement as shall make him at any time less dependent upon
the
communications of the Spirit and grace of Christ for all goodness, or less a
poor, vile, wretched, helpless sinner in
himself, and in his own estimation. (John 15:part of 5, 2 Cor. 3:5, Rev. 3:17.)
XX. We believe that the grace of God produces a real change in a man and teaches
him to deny ungodliness and
worldly lusts, and to live godly (Tit. 2:11-12), and that there is a growth in
grace (2 Pet. 3:18, Phil. 3:8-10, Mark
4:26-29, 1 John 2:12-13), which consists principally in a growing experimental
knowledge of a man's sinful self (1
Kings 8:38, Ezra. 9:6, Job 40:4-6, Ps. 73:22, Dan. x. 8), the vanity of the
creature, the glory of God, the spirituality
of His law, and the want and worth of Jesus Christ. This is accompanied by a
deepening distrust of everything but the
grace and love of God in Christ for salvation, and is not a growth in conscious
goodness, but in felt necessity and the
knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. (John 3:30, 1 Cor. 2:2, Tit.
3:3-8, Eph. 3:8, 1 Tim. 1:15.)
XXI. We reject the doctrine of perfection in the flesh, or that the believer
ever becomes free from indwelling sin in this
life, or whilst in the body. "If we say that we have no sin, we deceive
ourselves, and the truth is not in us." (1 John 1:8,
1 Kings 8:46, Job 9:2, Job 15:14, Ps. 119:96, Prov. 20:9, Ecc. 7:20, Rom. 7:18.)
XXII. We reject the doctrines that the children of God cannot backslide, and
that God does not chastise His people for
sin. (1 Cor. 11:32.) For, though we believe that a child of God is called from a
death in sin to a life of righteousness,
and would, according to the law of his mind, or new nature, in all respects obey
God's holy will as declared in the
Scriptures, yet through the temptations of Satan, the allurements of the world,
and the power and deceitfulness of
indwelling sin, he may fall for a season like David, Peter, and other Bible
saints did. (Jer. 3:14, Jer. 3:22, Hos. 14.)
But we believe that when the children of God thus sin against God, and
transgress His holy revealed will, God does in
vaijous ways and degrees chastise them for it (Ps. 89:30-33, Prov. 3:11-12), not
in vindictive anger, but in tender
love, as a father does the son in whom he delighteth. (Job. 5:17, Ps. 94:12, Ps.
119:67, Isa. 54:7-8, Heb. 12:5-11.)
We believe, too, that in this matter of chastisement for sin God will deal in a
most sovereign way, and as a God of
judgment; so that, though the punished child shall be made to discern the reason
of the rod (Mic. 6:9), it is seldom safe
for others to judge according to the outward appearance. We further believe that
no man living in habitual sin gives any
proof that he is a child of God, and we cannot, therefore, have fellowship with
him, be his profession what it may.
XXIII. We believe, as expressed in Article IX., in the doctrine of the final
perseverance of the saints, and that, however
much the elect of God may be tried by sin, and opposed by Satan, they shall all
eventually attain to everlasting glory.
Not one of them shall perish, for none can pluck them out of the Father's hand.
(Isa. 51:11, John 10:28-29.)
XXIV. We believe that the invitations of the Gospel, being spirit and life,* are
intended only for those who have been
made by the blessed Spirit to feel their lost state as sinners and their need of
Christ as their Saviour, and to repent of
and forsake their sins. (Isa. 55:1, John 7:37, Prov. 28:13, Matt. 11:28-30, John
6:37.)
Note - * That is, under the influence of the Holy Spirit.
XXV. We deny that Christ died for all mankind. (Matt. 25:31-46, John 10:11, John
10:15, John 10:26.)
XXVI. We deny duty faith and duty repentance - these terms signifying that it is
every man's duty spiritually and savingly
to repent and believe (Gen. 6:5, Gen 8:21, Matt. 15:19, Jer. 17:9, John 6:44,
John 6:65.) We deny also that there
is any capability in man by nature to any spiritual good whatever. So that we
reject the doctrine that men in a state of
nature should be exhorted to believe in or turn to God of themselves. (John
12:39-40, Eph. 2:8, Rom. 8:7-8, 1 Cor.
4:7.)
Note - The words supplied in italics (of themselves) are suggested by Mr.
J. K. Popham in the Gospel
Standard for December 1906, to clarify the intended meaning of the Article.
XXVII. We deny that the Holy Spirit ever enlightens the non-elect, to make them
capable at all of receiving grace. (1sa.
6:9-10, John 14:17, Rom. 11:7-8, Mark 4:11-12, Luke 8:10, John 12:39-40.)
XXVIII. We reject the doctrine called "Baxterianism"; that is to say, that while
all the elect shall assuredly be saved,
there is a residuum of grace in Christ for the rest, or any of the rest, if they
will only accept it. (John 3:27, 1 Cor.
2:14.)
XXIX. While we believe that the gospel is to be preached in or proclaimed to all
the world, as in Mark 16:15, we deny
offers of grace; that is to say, that the gospel is to be offered
indiscriminately to all. (2 Cor. 4:3-4.) See Articles
XXIV., XXVI.
XXX. We believe that the glorified body of the Lord Jesus Christ is the same
flesh and bones now in heaven as that
which hung upon the cross. (1 Cor. 15:16, 1 Cor. 15:20, Luke 24:39, Acts 1:9,
Acts 1:11.)
XXXI. We reject the doctrine of the annihilation of the wicked, and believe that
all who die out of Christ shall be turned
into hell, the fire of which shall never be quenched, the wicked there suffering
for ever the torments of eternal fire.
(Matt. 25:46, Rev. 19: last part of 20, Rev. 14:10-11, Rev. 20:10, Rev 20:15.)
Note - It is the same word in the Greek which, in Matt. 25:46, declares the
eternity of life for the sheep
which declares the eternity of punishment for the goats. So (Rev. 20:15),
those who are "not written in the
book of life" are "cast into the lake of fire," where they are "tormented
for ever and ever." (Rev. 20:10.)
Now the same words which are there translated "for ever and ever" are also
used in Rev. 10:6, where the
angel "sware by Him that liveth for ever and ever." Therefore if God is "to
live for ever and ever," the
torment in the lake of fire is to be for ever and ever; for the words are
exactly the same in both passages.
XXXII. We believe that it would be unsafe, from the brief records we have of the
way in which the apostles, under the
immediate direction of the Lord, addressed their hearers in certain special
cases and circumstances, to derive absolute
and universal rules for ministerial addresses in the present day under
widely-different circumstances. And we further
believe that an assumption that others have been inspired as the apostles were
has led to the grossest errors amongst
both Romanists and professed Protestants.
XXXIII. Therefore, that for ministers in the present day to address unconverted
persons, or indiscriminately all in a
mixed congregation, calling upon them savingly to repent, believe, and receive
Christ, or perform any other acts
dependent upon the new creative power of the Holy Ghost, is, on the one hand, to
imply creature power, and, on the
other, to deny the doctrine of special redemption.
XXXIV. We believe that any such expressions as convey to the hearers the belief
that they possess a certain power to
flee to the Saviour, to close in with Christ, to receive Christ, while in an
unregenerate state, so that unless they do thus
close with Christ, etc., they shall perish, are untrue, and must, therefore, be
rejected. And we further believe that we
have no Scripture warrant to take the exhortations in the Old Testament intended
for the Jews in national covenant with
God, and apply them in a spiritual and saving sense to unregenerated men.
XXXV. We believe that there are various degrees of faith, as little faith and
great faith (Matt. 6:30, Matt. 15:28), that
when a man is quickened by the blessed Spirit, he has faith given to him to know
and feel he is a sinner against God
(Luke 18:13), and that without a Saviour he must sink in black despair. And we
further believe that such a man will be
made to cry for mercy, to mourn over and on account of his sins (Matt. 5:4),
and, being made to feel that he has no
righteousness of his own (Isa. 64:6, Phil. 3:9), to hunger and thirst after
Christ's righteousness being led on by the
Spirit until, in the full assurance of faith, he has the Spirit's witness in his
heart that his sins are for ever put away (Rom.
8:16, Eph. 4:30, Heb. 9:12, Heb. 9:26, Heb. 7:27, Heb.10:14); but that the faith
is the same in nature as is imparted
in his first awakenings, though now grown to the full assurance thereof.
Now all and each of these doctrines and ordinances we can honestly say it is our
desire to maintain and defend in one
spirit and with one mind, striving together for the faith of the gospel.
And we desire, by the grace of God, that our conversation, both in the world and
in the church, may be such as
becometh the gospel of Christ, and that we may live soberly, righteously, and
godly in the present world.
And, as it regards each other in church communion, we desire to walk with each
other in all humility and brotherly love;
to watch over each other's conversation, to stir up one another to love and good
works; not forsaking the assembling
of ourselves together, but, as we have opportunity, to worship God according to
His revealed will; and when the case
requires, to warn and admonish one another according to God's Word.
Moreover, we desire to sympathise with each other in all conditions, both inward
and outward, into which God, in His
providence, may bring us; as also to bear with one another's weaknesses,
failings, and infirmities; and particularly to
pray for one another, and for all saints, and that the gospel and the ordinances
thereof may be blessed to the edification
and comfort of each other's souls, and for the gathering in of vessels of mercy
unto Christ.
And for every blessing and favour, both temporal and spiritual, we, who are as
deserving of hell as the vilest of the vile,
desire to ascribe all the praise to the glory of the grace of a Triune God.