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A64246 The confession or declaration of the ministers or pastors which in the United Provinces are called Remonstrants, concerning the chief points of Christian religion; Confessio sive declaratio sententiae pastorum qui in Foederato Belgio Remonstrantes vocantur super praecipuis articulis religionis Christianae. English Remonstrantse Broederschap.; Episcopius, Simon, 1583-1643.; Taylor, Thomas, 1576-1632. 1676 (1676) Wing T564; ESTC R10771 123,629 274

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that are necessary and profitable for every Christian Congregation to know believe hope and do or at least did not use those forms of speaking which do clearly and perspicuously enough express those Divine Senses or Meanings which are chiefly savingly necessary and available to be believed but had need of Mens phrases and forms for the right understanding of them and application and use to make a due difference between Truth and falshood From whence afterward they say it comes to pass that the authority of the Scriptures is more and more weakned and at length wholly falleth and is transferred by degrees to those forms of Men as either more perfect or the more clear discoverers of what is right and false And certainly the experience of many ages seemeth not a little to confirm these Mens opinions in which say they for the most part it usually fell out that after forms of Confessions and Declarations began to be in esteem and the said honour to be given to them as though they did most fully express the hidden and involved sences of the Scriptures and most clearly and plainly propose those things which are necessarily to be held by the Churches of Jesus Christ the Majesty and Authority of the Scriptures began by little and little to decline and the truth as also the necessity of all Judgments and Opinions pertaining to the business of Religion to depend upon those forms in so much indeed that waving and undervaluing the Sacred Scripture they appealed unto them as the most certain Squares or Levels and unexceptionable Rules and he that swerved but a fingers breadth from them although moved thereto out of a regard to the Scriptures was without any further proof accused and condemned of Heresie And though at the beginning and in the very Cradles or Infancy of Forms as they say it fell not out but also over and above by Cautions or Restrictions and Protestations and other ways of that kind they obviated and withstood the same yet in tract of time by little and little their Authority prevailed and increased and through secret increasings by intervals and degrees it was insensibly established and confirmed until at length having spread its roots deep it began in a manner to over-top the very Scriptures So by this means in process of time some Oecumenical Councils and Forms of Belief or general Creeds which were concieved and maintained in them began to be so highly valued that a like and equal Authority was given to them with the Gospels themselves by the most of men Yea further even those things that were disputed determin'd by one single Augustine against Pelagius at length in process of time were advanc'd to that Dignity and Authority and that even among those who otherwise are not wont to set much by the Authority of Councils and Fathers that it is enough to condemn any one that teacheth in the Church if his opinion only seem to come near to Pelagius And that it doth commonly so fall out in other questions of Faith and hath fallen out from every age past they do very speciously affirm In brief these seem not to complain in vain that all Forms usually do together with their age receive the strength and increases o● too much Authority and that howsoever often-times they seem not op●nly and manifestly to be advanced and promoted to an unmeasurable greatness yet they become by degrees not withstanding even cautions protestations to the contrary notwithstanding the immutable Canons of Faith and at least secundary Rules and Levels and that indeed by so secret and imperceptible motions and advances that they are found of a certain not to come but to have come nor to grow but to have grown to the top of more than humane Authority and height of supreme Dignity They suppose also that these Forms do mightily endammage and prejudice the Liberty of Churches or Conscience and Prophesie for that where they are admitted into the Church it is impossible but that forthwith a tyrannical Law be brought in at the back door so that a man may not think speak write teach compare and interpret the Scriptu●es but according to what they prescribe and to call them into doubt or to contradict them though modestly is thought an heinous wickedness Nor do they want their pretence viz. That the publick Peace of the Church may be preserved entire Confusion avoided and Liberty turn not into Licentiousness from whence further they say it comes to pass that none especially if it be believed that the Common-Wealth also is interessed therein durst either inquire into those Formes and examine the Opinions that are contained in them by the standard of Truth or if any one called upon for parts and industry for that end shall inquire into them and in his judgment find some things to be false he cannot without apparent danger publish and discover them for the amendment of others And that indeed by this means such like Forms of Confessions and Declarations did terminate in most rigid bonds and more than Adamantine Fetters wherewith Liberty together with Truth are most straitly tied up and that Errour which is once received and admitted becomes stable and firm yea eternal Lastly they affirm that a large gap is opened by these very Confessions and Declarations for Schisms and Separations because as they have been hitherto used they have been the open and publick signs of dissensions by which no otherwise then by certain partition-walls Christians who ought to be most strictly joyned together and who in very deed agree in the main of saving doctrine are divided each from other whilst one indeed saith I am of Paul another I am of Cephas another I am of Apollos another I am of Christ and every one believeth that the purity of Religion and the hope of immortal life consisteth within his particular Congregation So that whosoever belongeth not thereto he is almost judged altogether excluded out of Heaven and the Kingdom of Jesus Christ. Whence it is necessary that there arise and flow as it were from a continual Spring perpetual and immortal hatreds and divisions of minds and affections These for the most part are the chief props on which the first and second sort rely and whereby they support their opinion specious indeed they are if viewed at first sight for that they make shew of no ordinary zeal for the Authority of God's Word for Liberty of Conscience for the Peace and Concord of Churches yet such as if more nearly looked into have not appeared to us of so great weight as that for their sakes we should deem our selves bound to desist from our purpose of publishing this Declaration of ours For doubtless they seem not undeservedly to reprove so much the thing it self as the corruption and abuse of the thing which as a Wen to a fair body oftentimes is wont to grow and cleave even unto those things which are best and most sovereignly wholesome in themselves
THE CONFESSION OR DECLARATION OF THE Ministers or Pastors Which in the UNITED PROVINCES are called REMONSTRANTS Concerning the chief Points of Christian Religion LONDON Printed for Francis Smith at the Elephant and Castle in Cornhil near the Royal Exchange 1676. THE CONTENTS OF THE CHAPTERS     Page Chap. 1. OF the Sacred Scripture and its Authority Perfection and Perspicuity 59 Chap. 2. Of the Knowledg of the Essence of God or of the Divine Nature 78 Chap. 3. Of the Holy and Sacred Trinity 93 Chap. 4. Of the Knowledg of the Works of God 96 Chap. 5. Of the Creation of the World of Angels and of Men. 98 Chap. 6. Of the Providence of God or his Preservation and Government of things 105     Page Chap. 7. Of the Sin and Misery of Man 117 Chap. 8. Of the Work of Redemption and of the Person and Offices of Jesus Christ. 128 Chap. 9. Of the Knowledg of the Will of God revealed in the New-Covenant 138 Chap. 10. Of the Precepts or Commandments of Jesus Christ in general and of Faith and Repentance or Conversion unto God 141 Chap. 11. Of Faith in Jesus Christ. 145 Chap. 12. Of good Works in particular and of the exposition of the Decalogue 155 Chap. 13. Of directing and denying of our selves and bearing of the Cross of Christ. 170 Chap. 14. Of Prayer and Thanksgiving and in particular of the Lord's Prayer 181 Chap. 15. Of special Callings and of the Precepts and Traditions of Men. 193 Chap. 16. Of the Worship and Veneration       Page   of Jesus Christ the only Mediator and of the Invocation of Saints 196 Chap. 17. Of the Benefits and Promises of God and first of Election unto Grace or Calling unto Faith 200 Chap. 18. Of the Promises of God that are performed in this Life to those that are already converted and are Believers that is of Election unto Glory of Adoption Justification Sanctification and of Obsignation or Sealing 209 Chap. 19. Of the Promises of God pertaining to the Life to come or of the raising again of the Dead and eternal Life 216 Chap. 20. Of the Divine Threatnings and Punishments of the wicked pertaining both unto this Life and unto the Life to come to wit of Reprobation Hardening Blinding and of Eternal Death and Damnation 218     Page Chap. 21. Of the Ministry of the Word of God and of the Orders of Ministers 222 Chap. 22. Of the Church of Jesus Christ and its Marks or Notes 230   Of the Marks or Notes of a visible Church 224 Chap. 23. Of the Sacraments and other Sacred Rites 237   Of Baptism 238   Of the Sacred Supper of the Lord. 240   Of other Sacred Rites but yet such as are indifferent 242 Chap. 24. Of Church Discipline 246 Chap. 25. Of Synods or Councels and of their manner and use 254   The Conclusion 260 ERRATA PAge 29. line 14. read are so tied P. 35. l. 18. r. the very said P. 37. l. 12. r. by God for disturbing P. 38. l. 9. for those r. these P. 39. l. 2. r. use a thing well P. 55. l. 12. r. for such P. 80. l. 25. r. state and relation of each to other Ibid. l. 27. for of r. by P. 88. l. 5 6. r. no ways sworn to any P. 91. l. 19. r. of any other Enemies P. 124. l. 1. r. now long since P. 140. l. 2. for assent ●r assert P. 151. l. 10. r. come to P. 182. l. 18. r. both these parts P. 185. l. 5. r. and in whom P. 186. l. 8. r. to forsake P. 202. l. 14 to 18. r. nor for that thereby the will of him that is called is by an irresistible power or by some omnipotent force which is neither more nor less than Creation or raising from the dead so effectually determined to believe P 223. l. 27. for in r. to P. 242. l. 4. add after themselves as coverts of the Body and Blood of Jesus Christ. P. 243. l. 10. r. as also P. 250. l. 19 20 21 22. unto the Word Sin to be expunged and to read And also withal there is even in the first place an exact regard to be had of the diversity or difference of Sins P. 256. l. 24 25. add after brought in that they be taken away or removed THE PREFACE TO THE Christian Reader THERE is no doubt pious Reader but that this Declaration of Faith which is published by us will be liable to the various and different judgements of men For as every one stands perswaded in his own mind touching both the necessity profit form and manner of such-like Declarations so is he like also to pass judgment upon this of ours There are some who think we ought to abstain altogether from all Confessions or Declarations and judg that they are not only not necessary nor profitable for the Christian Weal-publick but that they are also unlawful dangerous and hurtful in the Church There are some who do not indeed think it altogether unadvised to publish Confessions or Declarations much less do they think it unlawful or hurtful but they judge they ought to be conceiv'd and framed onely in meer pure Scripture-words There are some who indeed do not altogether disallow of Confessions though conceiv'd in other than bare Scripture-words but will have them to be so general and brief that they shall contain and comprehend nothing but what is absolutely and precisely necessary to be known and believed unto Salvation There are lastly others far different from these who judge particular Confessions and Declarations even of several most minute and small Controversies not only so far profitable but also necessary that without them a Christian-Society can neither have being nor well-being The so various diverse and differing judgments of all these this our Declaration is doubtless like to undergo and these indeed severally have specious and no● altogether improbable grounds for their opinions whereon they build and relie Those who judg that we ought altogether to abstain from Confessions or Declarations or that they ought not to be conceived but in meer and plain Scripture words of which sort of men in this ●ge there are found not a few otherwise pious and good men they as far as we can gather pretend for the most part three things for their opinion 1. For that by reason of them there is done no ●ight prejudice to the Majesty and Authority of the Scriptures 2. For that ●y occasion of them there is mighty dammage and detriment done to the liberty of Churches or Conscience and Prophe●y 3. For that by the same a wide gap is open'd for Factions and Schisms in the Church And first indeed they think that by ●his very means the Majestie of the Scriptures is not a little derogated and detracted from for that both their sufficiency and perspicuity seem to be suspected and doubted of to wit as if they either did not fully and sufficiently contain all things
will not think them by some necessity constrained hereunto by a publick and solemn Declaration to obviate so atrocious and enormous slanders and by an ingenuous Confession of their judgment to testifie to the Christian World what and what manner of Persons they are in Religion and what in very ●eed they think touching the chief heads of belief and by this unblamable means ●s by a bolt bar firmly set against those ●nfamous revilings and slanders to vindicate and approve or commend to all good men the integrity of their good ●ame and esteem and the innocency of their lives Especially if they see that unless they do it all good men even the best will be estranged from them the weak will be turned aside from the love of the Truth or else that no light scruples will be cast into their minds that an occasion will be given to many in other respects in no wise bad men to continue in their errours or to return as it were to their vomit to their former filthiness which they had left that their Friends will be withdrawn from all affection of good-will towards them and violently deparated from their fraternity that more ●lenteous matter will be ministred to their Enemies and Foes to calumniatc and consequently that through the side of their wronged reputation the Truth of God will be wounded and all their labour ●are industry and pains hitherto spent or further to be spent in the promoting of the same will be rendred unprofitable and fruitless Certainly he that i● toucht with any desire of the publick good any care of the glory of God an● desire of the truth and peace of th● Church he cannot but believe and certainly conclude that in such a case the● is some kind of necessity laid upon those men if they can with a good conscience and men of highest degree and lowest degree require it even in conceived Form of Declarations to purge themseves from those false reports and calumnies and to testifie to the whole Christian World their innocency Nor indeed can it see● sufficient for the washing away of th● said Calumnies if they contain themselves within the meer and bare expressions of the Scripture and deliver their Opinions or Judgments in so man Scripture-Words and Phrases For seeing that this very thing is charged up on them as a crime that under Scripture-words they in their Bosom cherish their worst meanings and most prejudicial to the Glory of God and the Salvation 〈◊〉 Men that they do upon occasion either readily sought after or offered by others disseminate or spread the same ●hen they perceive it is for their advantage verily they are reduced to that necessity whether they will or no as for the Glory of the Truth of God the edifying of the weak and the detection of Calumnies by that means which seems ●est and most profitable that is by some publick Declaration of their Judgment ●o purge themselves and to maintain and defend the sincerity of their belief Which things being so so far is it that Confessions or Declarations of Faith ought to seem hurtful or unprofitable of themselves that they are sometimes to be accounted of in the Church of Jesus Christ for useful vindications of the Truth and ●n a manner necessary remedies of the greatest evils Howbeit because such is either the ●nconsiderateness or sloth or malice of the most of Men that those things which of themselves might be useful and pious documents of our duty or most present remedies of great evils they suffer them by reason of their additional corruption and abuse by degrees to become superstitious bands of Consciences and insensibly to degenerate into idols and hurtful Poysons yea often they themselves turn them to the dammage and detriment of the best things we ought diligently to beware and endeavour with the greatest care that may be to vindicate such forms from all manner of abuse and corruption and to inculcate and assert at all times their right and true use which we indeed believe may be commodiously done if we have always these three things before our eyes and carefully observe them First if in the Church there be no Authority that is unquestionable that is irrefragable and beyond all exception under any title pretence or show whatsoever either directly or indirectly in things pertaining to Religion given to these Forms nor suffered to be given them to wit in such sort as that the Consciences of any should be tied or obliged to the same as Rules of Faith either primary or secondary Which indeed that it may be easily provided against is beyond all doubt if they be only had in that esteem and place as indeed they ought to be had to wit for bare expositions of our belief or for such Forms which do not define or determine what is to be held for true or false what is to be believed or not to be believed after what manner any thing is to be expressed or uttered but which only may make known and testifie what they hold for true and false what they believe or do not believe how they express the meanings of their Mind whose own those Forms and Declarations are For if they be had in no other account or greater esteem there is no danger that their Authority we say not should be equalled much less be preferred before the Scriptures but that they find not indeed any place though the lowest in the Church For doubeless as we have already said before they will not then be held for Squares and Rules of Faith whereby Truth or Falshood Heresie or Errour may and ought to be known and which are published for that end that by them what is true or false may be known and discovered or sound but only for bare Signals and Symbols or Tokens which only show and declare what the Authors believed and judged of those and the other Articles and Meanings of Christian Religion And truly if we consult the ancient Annals of the Church they who first put forth such Symbols Ecclesiastical Canons Confessions and Declarations had no other design aim or end but thereby to testifie not what was to be believed but what they themselves believed and that these Symbols c. should be even instead of Watch-Towers to declare shew to the unwary and imprudent the Shelves and Quicks of Errours that were hurtful to Piety and Salvation or also to serve against Calumniators for Apologies whereby every one might understand how far they were from those Errours Blasphemies and Crimes which through Calumny were by men ill-imployed fastened upon them And certainly if all Declarations and Confessions had at all times kept within these bounds they had not indeed at any time obtained any Dictator-like Dignity or Authority much less greater than or equal to the Scriptures in the Church Wherefore that the Church may in the first place alway hold this firm unalterable we are to endeavour again and again and
absolutely bind the Consciences of Men before God and therefore none should depart from it even in the least to wit neither in Matter nor in Words nay nor in method or manner of Teaching Far be so proud a vanity from us who know that this honour agreeth not with any Writings of Men how accurate soever and diligently and long and much considered but only with the Word of God contained in the Holy Scriptures and who both know that from the abuse of such Writings which is too frequent and too common new Schisms Sects Condemnations Persecutions and other Scandals of that kind have more often arisen and do seriously bewail the same And this was our principal aim To satisfie the often earnest requests of those who judged that we owed this Service both to the Church and Common-Wealth and indeed for to promote the Publick good that is both for the more ample illustrating the Truth of God and for the the more happy procuring and on every side propagating of Peace in them both Another end is that we might by this means the more commodiously vindicate the truth of our Opinions and our Innocency against the inique accusations of those who when as themselves hold grievous and very hurtful errours among others that in the first place concerning fatal Predestination and other points annext thereto as also concerning the killing of Hereticks yet will be thought the only Orthodox Men and the altogether pure Reformed and stick not to fasten upon us not only Errours but also Heresies and Blaspemies yea who while themselves exercise new dominion in the Church and do not only cause Schisms and Sects but do also every where raise up direful Persecutions and Banishments against harmless Men do nevertheless complain of us whom having in part indeed cited in their Conventicle of Dort they very lately condemned yet unheard and without making our defence more than Calumniously as of the true Authors forsooth of all the Scandals and Disturbances that have been hitherto made in the Belgick Churches For the fuller conviction therefore of these Men before God and the whole Christian World of their manifest calumnie and manifold injustice hitherto used against us and withal for the truer information of all that are pious and lovers or studious of the Truth of God and the Churches Peace we have thought not without weighty and just cause that we were bound to set forth this publick and unanimous Declaration of our judgment touching almost the whole Christian Religion In the sraming indeed whereof we have first of all diligently endeavoured that there might not be omitted therein any Opinion or Doctrine either necessary or very useful and that there might not be any thing either false or confused or lastly any thing idle and superfluous contained in the same But that it might comprehend in it the very form of sound or rather of healing words which abundantly express unto us Christian Faith and Piety both briefly and plainly and no less methodically and as it were in a brief survey hold forth the whole thereof to be viewed of all and that by the unanimous consent of all the Brethren not so much as excepting those who are held shut up in Goals all which jointly and severally diligently read it before and in the fear of the Lord examined it by the rule of the Holy Scripture as far as they might by reason of the iniquity of the times and at length with one Heart and one Mouth did all approve of it And indeed we have called it not only a Confession of our Faith but also a Declaration of our Mind and Judgment for that such a Declaration promiseth somewhat more full and pregnant than a bare Confession of Faith alone doth For indeed we were willing to satisfie the hope and expectation of those who desired a more copious full and clear exposition or unfolding of our Judgment concerning for the most part all the Articles of the Christian Religion and withal also to put a bolt upon the mouth of those who having nothing justly to carp at in us would perswade the people that we would never agree together upon any common clear and uniform Judgment touching the chief heads of Religion that we did conceal some things of which we were ashamed to give our judgment in publick and that they were such which did overthrow the very chief heads and as it were the 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 the Tenths or chief of the Spoils of Christianity or if we did sometimes also publish or utter these that we did hide and cover them by obscure doubtful and uncertain expressions or some general and deceitful coverings of words This false accusation of theirs although long since elsewhere often detected and sufficiently refuted by us yet had we rather obviate it even by a publick and general Declaration of our Belief than by other means more lyable to calumnie So secure is a good Conscience and the Confidence of a good Cause which we have thought worth our while even upon this occasion publickly to declare And this among others was a cause why we conceived or framed it not in meer Scripture-Words lest we should indeed nourish that suspition to wit that we sought lurking Holes and hid as some indeed think mischievous and prophane meanings under an equivocal covering of the words of the Sacred Scripture and that we might by this means cut off all new matter of calumniating from those whose solemn study and chief labour it is to blu● and stain under any pretence or colour whatsoever the credit and good name of the Remonstrants with heinous reproaches or at least with sinister suspicions As to thorny and too subtile questions which are proper to your Universities and Schools and which neither advantage the knower nor prejudice the ignorant we have purposedly waved them leaving them to idle and to curious Wits and which are troubled with an incurable evil habit of disputing to whom it is matter of pleasure to make shew of their acuteness and from this kind of paste made to comfort the stomach with to seek or purchase to themselves the petty Garland of Victory We have bestowed our time and service on that Truth alone which is according to Godliness and indeed in conjunction with an ingenuous and open simplicity the which even the Unlearned may understand and the Learned ought not to disdain Lastly we have thought it best and safest to keep within the bounds of things necessary and in our judgment profitable waving and passing all other things of set purpose and that indeed the more commodiously to avoid both the extreams towit the excess and the defect For neither do we like their Opinion who will have nothing contained in Consessions and Declarations but what is precisely necessary to be known and believed We have thought it meet to have a regard o● those things that are profitable also especially of those which in this kind excel the rest
But where we have not the Spirit of God going before us there we upon good right demu●● and with-hold our assent and do both beg and grant pardon by course remembring that which our Saviour adviseth us Judg not that ye be not judged and which the Apostle Judg not any thing before the time untill the Lord come who will bring to light the hidden things of darkness and make manifest the Councils of Mens Hearts and then shall every Man have praise of God Hence we do not easily denounce an Anathema to him who we believe is held with a pure meer errour if he be otherwise pious fearing God and studious of a good Conscience and Divine Truth that is if he seem to us to love the Lord Jesus and highly to prize his Gospel by which alone he is willing to maintain his errour through which he ignorantly errs For we know how ready a matter it is in so great a multitude of Opinions so great a company of those that err so great a variety of wits or dispositions so great a plenty of hinderances and scruples so great weakness of judgments in such to slip and err and how easy it is by arguments true in appearance to be deceived and mistaken how harmless also it is in it self to err and to mistake in many things how great also clemency and kindness God is like to use towards such as simply err who pardoneth and remitteth even willful sins themselves to those that repent and how aliene or far from the gentle and meek disposition of our Lord Jesus it is not to pittie those that stray Lastly how sad and tragical disturbances that both rash and proud confidence of condemning hath at all times occasioned and made For Anathema's are wont to provoke Anathema's and where this chance is once cast all 's past and there is an end of all hope of remedy For the direful hatreds of parties suceed and the reins of hatreds being let loose they commonly at length with deadly and spiteful minds rush upon the slaughtering and Butchering of one another and the last fruit of these Condemnings and Anathematizings is an everlasting despair of cure That we might therefore avoid these mischiefs we have carefully and purposely forborn Anathema's deeming it sufficient ingenuously to have spoken the Truth and to have shewed the errour leaving in the mean time unto others a free judgment touching every errour and the greatness of the errour but chiefly to him who alone judgeth righteously and searcheth the Hearts and Reins of Men. We have already sufficiently sacrificed to unseasonable Anathema's and to those direful forms of sentencing to punishment each other we condemn we execrate and curse c. It is now time that we sacrifice to Christian Concord Meekness and Charity After so many sad and dismal cursings whereby on every side the fiercen●is of hatreds and mortal fallings out hath been irritated and exasperated let us lay aside such Enemy-like and exulcerated Minds and by gentleness by long-suffering by kindness by the Holy Spirit of Christ by love unfeigned by the word of Truth by the power of God by the Armour of Righteousness on the right hand and on the left after the example of our Lord Jesus Christ and of his Apostles let us fight against Errours that to our utmost power we may save those that err and deliver them out of the danger of Eternal Perdition Let us not be many masters for one is our Master Let us assent to or approve of the wholsome words of our Lord Jesus Christ and that doctrine which is according to Godliness Let us shun vain questions and strifes of words from which arise envy strife railings evil surmisings perverse disputings of men of corrupt minds and destitute of the truth supposing that gain is godliness Let not us condemn or shut out of the Communion of the Church those that Christ doth not condemn nor shut out of his Kingdom Again let us not become the Servants of Men but withal neither let us be Lords over the Faith of others Let our moderation appear unto all and in modesty and mutual charity bear with one another being certainly perswaded that none is lightly to be condemned or blotted out of the register of Christians that holds fast his Faith in Christ and in hope of the good things promised by him doth seek from the heart to obey his Commands though in the mean time he err in many things that in some sort or other concern Religion the which holy and worthily to be praised moderation or equanimity when the best and greatest God shall have inspired the hearts either of all or at least of the most of those who bear rule in Churches and Commonwealths with then at length the Truth of the Gospel will every where flourish and an holy peace in the Lord and Concord will set up a settled place of abode among all that are truly Godly The which that it may shortly come to pass in the whole World especially in the Christian but most of all in the Reformed we humbly beseech of God through Jesus Christ in Spirit and Truth These things thus premised we shall now come directly to the heads of our Declaration as those which we would have alwayes joyned by an indissoluble tye with this very Preface The Confession or Declaration of the Ministers or Pastours which in the United Provinces are called Remonstrants concerning the chief points of Christian Religion CHAP. I. Of the Sacred Scripture and its Authority Perfection and Perspicuity I. WHosoever desireth to worship God aright and certainly and undoubtedly to be everlastingly saved he must of necessity first of all believe that God is and that he is a bounteous rewarder of those that seek him and therefore must conform himself according to that Rule and Square which it is undoubtedly manifest was delivered and prescribed by the true God himself the supream Law-giver and established upon the promise of Eternal Life 2. That God is and that he hath at sundry times and in divers manners spoken in times past unto the Fathers by the Prophets and that he hath at length in the last times most fully declared and manifested his last Will by his only-begotten Son hath been a thing confirmed by so many and great Proofs Signs Wonders mighty Deeds or Works Gifts or Distributions of the Holy Ghost and other wonderful Effects and certain Events of several Prophesies and Testimonies of Men worthy of belief that any more certain more substantial and more compleat cannot be given or justly desired 3. The whole Declaration of the Divine Will which pertaineth unto Religion is contained in the Books of the Old and New Testaments and indeed authentically only in those which are called Canonical or which it can upon no just ground be doubted but that they were written or approved of by those Men who were inspired with and
they are necessary and as far as or how and upon what accounts they are so and that Men honest teachable and truly fearing God do really most easily understand them 15. But because there be very many even amongst Christians who either do not at all or else not with sufficient attention read these Books nor with care and Judgment consider what they read or do not frequently as is meet piously implore the Divine Help and Assistance or else being tainted or filled with Prejudice Self-Confidence Hatred Envy Ambition or other corrupt Affections are imploi'd in reading of these Books and then indeed next because even in these very Books themselves we often meet with here and there as well things as phrases peculiar to the said ancient times and also tropical and figurative manners of speech which at this time afford us some darkness and difficulty and which are such that unless one be solidly instructed in all these or else bring with him a mind very docile honest and void of Affection or Partiality unto the judging or discerning of them they may easily be wrested to a wrong sence yea to a perverse and such as is prejudicial to Salvation from hence ariseth not only just reason alone that we may not treat of many other now why the interpretation and explication of the Scriptures profitably may yea and alwaies ought to have its place allowed it in the Church 16. But the best Interpretation of Scripture is that which most faithfully expresseth the native and literal sence thereof or at least cometh nearest to it as that alone which is the true and living Word of God whereby as by incorruptible Seed we are begotten again unto the Hope of Eternal Life Now we call the native and literal sence not so much that which the Words properly taken hold forth as indeed it very often falls out as that which though the words rigedly taken do not insinuate or hint it yet is most agreeable to right reason and the very mind and intention of him that uttered the words whether it were expressed properly or figuratively The which may and ought to be known and discovered by the scope and occasion of every place also from the Subject Matter Antecedents and Consequents that is things going before and following also from comparing of like places with like and from palpable Absurdities otherwise like to follow and other Arguments of that kind or from the consideration and weighing of things together 17. But to desire to fetch or take this exposition from any other Author Head or Fountain whatsoever to wit from any Symbol or Creed of Mens making or Analogy of Faith in this or that place received or any publick Confession of Churches which we also before advised in our Preface which we would never have at any time severed or divided from this our Declaration or from the Decrees of Councils or Consent of Fathers one or other though even the most or greatest part of them is a thing too uncertain and oftentimes dangerous 18. And yet do we not therefore lightly despise the pious probable or long-since received interpretations of others especially of the ancient Fathers whether Greek or Latin much less so as proudly or arrogantly to reject their unanimous consent but we do then at length and that indeed modestly recede from them when we find in our Conscience that they alledg things aliene from or not agreeable with the true sence of the Scriptures or things contrary to it Nor do we think that we do by this means do them any wrong Since not only every of them apart but also the most of them jointly yea all of them taken together might in many things err and themselves also have freely acknowledged it of themselves with one accord and therefore do expresly forbid that their writings be simply or without any more ado believed but desire that we at length so far approve of them as they agree with the Sacred Scriptures and on the contrary that we freely reject them so far as they disagree with the same CHAP. II. Of the Knowledg of the Essence of God o● of the Divine Nature 1. FUrthermore our whole Religion contained in these very Books doth briefly consist in our right knowledg of the one only true God and Jesus Christ the Mediator whom he hath sent and in a lawful or due Worship of both in or under the hope of a Life eternal and immortal after Death to be certainly obtained and enjoyed in the Heavens according to the free promise of the same 2. And that God may be rightly known and piously worshipped and that according to the Scriptures three things offer themselves necessarily to be considered and held by us his Nature Works and Will The Nature indeed of God that we may understand that he is of or in himself most worthy to be worshiped of us his Works that we may know that he may rightfully and defervedly require of us what manner of worship soever he please lastly his Will that we may be clearly convinced that he will be worshipped of us and withall know after what manner he will and ought to be worshipped by us that we may assuredly hope for Eternal Salvation from him Howbeit concerning the Nature and Works of God all those things are not necessarily to be held which in every respect at least whatsoever belongs to the Divine Essence and all the modes or manners of its working and kinds of operations much less all those things which either according to the likely and specious placits of the Schools or from the probable discourse of Reason are wont to be affirmed of them but those only without which the Divine Will revealed in the Scriptures either cannot be rightly understood or performed by us Since they only who do the will of God and keep his Commandments are every where in the Scripture said truly to know God and on the contrary they that do not the same are said not to know God So that that alone deserveth to be called the saving Knowledg of God which is joyned with the practice of Piety But other things pertaining hereunto although haply they may be profitable more or less either for the promoting of Piety or for the better understanding and more happy composing of Controversies of Religion that may happen yet they ought not to be held for necessary doctrines of Faith which we cannot be ignorant of without the loss of Salvation 3. As to the Nature of God the Scripture holds forth God unto us under a twofold consideration 1. Absolutely and generally in his essential Attributes to wit whereby he doth unfold or declare unto us his Spiritual Nature and glorious Majesty common to the distinct or several Persons sofar as is requisite for our Faith and Salvation in this Life 2. Distinctly relatively in the mystery of the Sacred Trinity