These
articles are partly either denied or affirmed in a decisive manner, and partly
either denied or affirmed in a doubting manner, each of which methods signified
by certain indicative signs which are added to the different articles.  
[These distinguishing marks indicating whether or not Arminius agreed or disagreed with the statement in question (or whether he had reservations about his agreement or disagreement) have not survived in the copies we have, so the Articles below have to be read (and interpreted) with that caution. - AF]
 
 [These distinguishing marks indicating whether or not Arminius agreed or disagreed with the statement in question (or whether he had reservations about his agreement or disagreement) have not survived in the copies we have, so the Articles below have to be read (and interpreted) with that caution. - AF]
I.
ON THE SCRIPTURE AND HUMAN TRADITIONS
- The rule of theological
     verity is not two-fold, one primary and the other secondary; but it is one
     and simple, the Sacred Scriptures.  
- The Scriptures are the rule
     of all divine verity, from themselves, in themselves, and through
     themselves; and it is a rash assertion, “that they are indeed the rule,
     but only when understood according to the meaning of the confession of the
     Dutch churches, or when explained by the interpretation of the Heidelberg
     Catechism.”  
- No writing composed by men
     -- by one man, by few men, or by many -- (with the exception of the Holy
     Scriptures,) is either axiopison
     “creditable of itself,” or autopison
     “of itself deserving of implicit credence,” and, therefore, is not
     exempted from an examination to be instituted by means of the
     Scriptures.  
- It is a thoughtless
     assertion, “that the Confession and Catechism are called in question, when
     they are subjected to examination;” for they have never been placed beyond
     the hazard of being called in doubt, nor can they be so placed.  
- It is tyrannical and popish
     to bind the consciences of men by human writings, and to hinder them from
     being submitted to a legitimate examination, under what pretext soever
     such tyrannical conduct is adopted. 
     
II.
ON GOD CONSIDERED ACCORDING TO HIS NATURE
- GOD is good by a natural
     and internal necessity, not freely; which last word is stupidly explained
     by the terms “unconstrainedly” and “not slavishly.”  
- God foreknows future things
     through the infinity of his essence, and through the pre-eminent
     perfection of his understanding and prescience, not as he willed or
     decreed that they should necessarily be done, though he would not foreknow
     them except as they were future, and they would not be future unless God
     had decreed either to perform or to permit them.  
- God loves righteousness and
     his creatures, yet he loves righteousness still more than the creatures,
     from which, two consequences follow: 
     
- The First, that God does
     not hate his creature, except on account of sin.  
- The Second, that God
     absolutely loves no creature to life eternal, except when considered as
     righteous, either by legal or evangelical righteousness.  
- The will of God is both
     correctly and usefully distinguished into that which is antecedent, and
     that which is consequent.  
- The distinction of the will
     of God into that which is secret or of his good pleasure, and that which
     is revealed or signified, cannot bear a rigid examination.  
- Punitive justice and mercy
     neither are, nor can they be “the only moving” or final causes of the
     first decree, or of its first operation. 
     
- God is blessed in himself
     and in the knowledge of his own perfection. He is, therefore, in want of
     nothing, neither does he require the demonstration of any of his
     properties by external operations: Yet if he do this, it is evident that
     he does it of His pure and free will; although, in this declaration [of
     any of His properties] a certain order must be observed according to the
     various egresses or “goings forth” of his goodness, and according to the
     prescript of his wisdom and justice. 
     
III.
ON GOD, CONSIDERED ACCORDING TO THE RELATION BETWEEN THE PERSONS IN THE TRINITY
- The Son of God is not
     called by the ancient fathers “God from himself,” and this is a dangerous
     expression. For, Autoqeov [as thus
     interpreted, God from himself,] properly signifies that the Son has not
     the divine essence from another -- But it is by a catachresis, or
     improperly, that the essence which the Son has is not from another;
     because the relation of the subject is thus changed: for “the Son,” and “the
     divine essence,” differ in relation. 
     
- The divine essence is
     communicated to the Son by the Father, and this properly and truly.
     Wherefore it is unskillfully asserted “that the divine essence is indeed
     properly said to be common to the Son and to the Father, but is improperly
     said to be communicated:” For it is not common to both except in reference
     to its being communicated.  
- The Son of God is correctly
     called Autoqeov “very God,” as
     this word is received for that which is God himself, truly God. But he is
     erroneously designated by that epithet, so far as it signifies that he has
     an essence not communicated by the Father, yet has one in common with the
     Father.  
- “The Son of God, in regard
     to his essence, is from himself,” is an ambiguous expression, and, on that
     account, dangerous. Neither is the ambiguity removed by saying “The Son,
     with respect to his absolute essence, or to his essence absolutely
     considered, is from himself.” Besides, these modes of speaking are not only
     novel, but are also mere prattle.  
- The divine persons are not trowoi uparxewv or modes of being
     or of existing, or modes of the divine essence; For they are things with
     the mode of being or existing.  
- The divine persons are
     distinguished by a real distinction, not by the degree and mode of the
     thing.  
- A. person is an individual
     subsistence itself, not a characteristic property, nor is it an individual
     principle; though it be not an individual, nor a person, without a
     characteristic property or without an individual principle.  
- QUERIES. -- Is it not
     useful that the Trinity be considered, both as it exists in nature itself,
     according to the co-essential relation of the divine persons, and as it
     has been manifested in the economy of salvation, to be accomplished by God
     the Father, in Christ, through the Holy Spirit? And does not the former of
     these considerations appertain to religion universally, and to that which
     was prescribed to Adam, according to the law? But the latter consideration
     properly belongs to the gospel of Jesus Christ, yet not excluding that
     which I have mentioned as belonging to all religion universally, and
     therefore to that which is Christian. 
     
IV.
ON THE DECREE OF GOD
- The decrees of God are the
     extrinsic acts of God, though they are internal, and, therefore, made by
     the free will of God, without any absolute necessity. Yet one decree seems
     to require the supposition of another, on account of a certain fitness of
     equity; as the decree concerning the creation of a rational creature, and
     the decree concerning the salvation or damnation [of that creature] on the
     condition of obedience or disobedience. The act of the creature also, when
     considered by God from eternity, may sometimes be the occasion, and
     sometimes the outwardly moving cause of making some decree; and this may
     be so fare that without such act [of the creature] the decree neither
     would nor could be made.  
- QUERY. -- Can the act of
     the creature impose a necessity on God of making some decree, and indeed a
     decree of a particular kind and no other -- and this not only according to
     some act to be performed respecting the creature and his act, but also
     according to a certain mode by which that act must be accomplished?  
- One and the same in number
     is the volition by which God decrees something and determines to do or to
     permit it, and by which he does or permits the very thing which he
     decreed.  
- About an object which is
     one and the same, and uniformly considered, there cannot be two decrees of
     God, or two volitions, either in reality, or according to any semblance of
     a contrary volition -- as to will to save man under conditions, and yet to
     will precisely and absolutely to condemn him.  
- A decree of itself imposes
     no necessity on any thing or event. But if any necessity exists through
     the decree of God, it exists through the intervention of the divine power,
     and indeed when he judges it proper to employ his irresistible power to
     effect what he has decreed.  
- Therefore, it is not
     correctly said, The will of God is the necessity of things.”  
- Nor is this a just
     expression: “All things happen necessarily with respect to the divine
     decree.”  
- As many distinct decrees
     are conceived by us, and must necessarily be conceived; as there are
     objects about which God is occupied in decreeing, or as there are axioms
     by which those decrees are enunciated. 
     
- Though all the decrees of
     God have been made from eternity, yet a certain order of priority and
     posteriority must be laid down, according to their nature, and the mutual
     relation between them.  
V.
ON PREDESTINATION TO SALVATION, AND ON DAMNATION CONSIDERED IN THE HIGHEST
DEGREE
- The first in order of the
     divine decrees is not that of predestination, by which God foreordained to
     supernatural ends, and by which he resolved to save and to condemn, to
     declare his mercy and his punitive justice, and to illustrate the glory of
     his saving grace, and of his wisdom and power which correspond with that
     most free grace.  
- The object of
     predestination to supernatural ends, to salvation and death, to the
     demonstration of the mercy and punitive justice, or of the saving grace,
     the wisdom, and the most free power of God, is not rational creatures
     indefinitely foreknown, and capable of salvation, of damnation, of
     creation, of falling, and of reparation or of being recovered.  
- Nor is the subject some
     particular creatures from among those who are considered in this
     manner.  
- The difference between the
     vessels to honour and those to dishonour, that is, of mercy and wrath,
     does not appertain to the adorning or perfection of the universe or of the
     house of God.  
- The entrance of sin into
     the world does not appertain to the beauty of the universe.  
- Creation in the upright
     state of original righteousness is not a means for executing the decree of
     predestination, or of election, or of reprobation.  
- It is horrid to affirm,
     that “the way of reprobation is creation in the upright state of original
     righteousness;” (Gomarus, in his Theses
     on Predestination;) and in this very assertion are propounded two
     contrary volitions of God concerning one and the same thing.  
- It is a horrible
     affirmation, that “God has predestinated whatsoever men he pleased not
     only to damnation, but likewise to the causes of damnation.” (Beza, vol.
     I, fol. 417.)  
- It is a horrible affirmation,
     that “men are predestinated to eternal death by the naked will or choice
     of God, without any demerit on their part.” (Calvin, Inst. l. I, c. 2, 3.)  
- This, also, is a horrible
     affirmation: “Some among men have been created unto life eternal, and
     others unto death eternal.”  
- It is not a felicitous
     expression, that “preparation unto destruction is not to be referred to
     any other thing, than to the secret counsel of God.”  
- Permission for the fall [of
     Adam] into sin, is not the means of executing the decree of
     predestination, or of election, or of reprobation.  
- It is an absurd assertion,
     that “the demerits of the reprobate are the subordinate means of bringing
     them onward to destined destruction.” 
     
- It is a false assertion,
     that “the efficient and sufficient cause and matter of predestination are
     thus found in those who are reprobated.” 
     
- The elect are not called “vessels
     of mercy” in the relation of means to the end, but because mercy is the
     only moving cause, by which is made the decree itself of predestination to
     salvation.  
- No small injury is
     inflicted on Christ as mediator, when he is called “the subordinate cause
     of destined salvation.”  
- The predestination of
     angels and of men differ so much from each other, that no property of God
     can be prefixed to both of them unless it be received in an ambiguous
     acceptation.  
VI.
ON THE CREATION, AND CHIEFLY THAT OF MAN
- The creation of things out
     of nothing is the very first of all the external acts of God; nor is it
     possible for any act to be prior to this, or conceived to be prior to it;
     and the decree concerning creation is the first of all the decrees of God;
     because the properties according to which he performs and operates all
     things, are, in the first impulse of his nature, and in his first egress,
     occupied about nihility or nothing, when those properties are borne, ad extra, “outwards.”  
- God has formed two
     creatures rational and capable of things divine; ONE of them is purely
     spiritual and invisible, and [that is the class of] angels; but the OTHER
     is partly corporeal and partly spiritual, visible and invisible, and [that
     is the class of] men; and the perfection of this universe seeing to have
     required the formation of these two [classes of] creatures.  
- QUERY. -- Did it not become
     the manifold wisdom of God, and was it not suitable to the difference by
     which these two rational creatures were distinguished at the very
     creation, that, in the mode and circumstances of imparting eternal life to
     angels and to men, he might act in a different manner with the former from
     that which he adopts towards the latter? It appears that he might do
     so.  
- But two general methods may
     be mentally conceived by us, ONE of which is through the strict observance
     of the law laid down, without hope of pardon if any transgression were
     committed; but the OTHER is through the remission of sins, though a law
     agreeable to their nature was likewise to be prescribed by a peremptory
     decree to men, with whom it was not the will of God to treat in a strict
     manner and according to the utmost rigor; and obedience was to be required
     from them without a promise or pardon. 
     
- The image and likeness of
     God, after which man was created, belongs partly to the very nature of
     man, so that, without it, man cannot be man; but it partly consists in
     those things which concern supernatural, heavenly and spiritual things.
     The former class comprises the understanding, the affections, and the
     will, which is free; but the latter, the knowledge of God and of things
     divine, righteousness, true holiness, &c.  
- With respect to essence and
     adequate objects, the faith by which Adam believed in God is not the same
     as that by which he believed in God after the promise made concerning the
     Blessed Seed, and not the same as that by which we believe the gospel of
     Christ.  
- Without doing any wrong to
     God, to Adam, and to the truth itself, it may be said, that in his
     primeval state Adam neither received or possessed a Proximate capability
     of understanding, believing, or performing anything whatsoever which could
     be necessary to be understood, believed, or performed by him, in any state
     whatsoever at which it was possible for him to arrive, either by his own
     endeavours or by the gift of God, though he must have had a remote
     capability, otherwise something essential would still have been to be
     created within man himself.  
- The liberty of the will
     consists in this -- when all the requisites for willing or not willing are
     laid down, man is still indifferent to will or not to will, to will this
     rather than that. This indifference is removed by the previous
     determination, by which the will is circumscribed and absolutely
     determined to the one part or to the other of the contradiction or
     contrariety; and this predetermination, therefore, does not consist with
     the liberty of the will, which requires not only free capability, but also
     tree use in the very exercise of it. 
     
- Internal necessity is as
     repugnant to liberty as external necessity is; nay, external necessity
     does not necessitate to act except by the intervention of that which is
     internal.  
- Adam either possessed, or
     had ready and prepared for him, sufficient grace, whether it were habitual
     or assisting, to obey the command imposed on him, both that command which
     was symbolical and ceremonial, and that which was moral.  
VII.
ON THE DOMINION OF GOD OVER THE CREATURES, AND CHIEFLY OVER MAN
- The dominion of God over
     the creatures rests on the communication of the good which he has bestowed
     on them: And since this good is not infinite, neither is the dominion itself
     infinite. But that dominion is infinite according to which it may be
     lawful and proper for God to issue his commands to the creature, to impose
     on him all his works, to use him in all those things which his omnipotence
     might be able to command and to impose upon him, and to engage his
     services or attention.  
- Therefore the dominion of
     God does not extend itself so far as to be able to inflict eternal death
     on a rational creature, or to destine him to death eternal, without the
     demerits of the creature himself.  
- It is, therefore, falsely
     asserted, that “though God destined and created for destruction any
     creatures (indefinitely considered) without any consideration of sin as
     the meritorious cause, yet he cannot be accused of injustice, because he
     possesses an absolute right of dominion over them.” (Gomarus’s Theses on Predestination.)  
- Another false assertion is
     this: “By the light of GLORY we shall understand by what right God can
     condemn an innocent person, or one who has not merited damnation, as by
     the light of GRACE we now understand by what right God saves unworthy and
     sinful men; yet this right we do not comprehend by the light of nature.”
     (Luther On the Servitude of the Will.)  
- But still more false is the
     following assertion: “Man is bound to acquiesce in this will of God, nay,
     to give thanks to God, that he has made him an instrument of the divine
     glory, to be displayed through wrath and power in his eternal destruction.”  
- God can make of his own
     whatsoever he wills. But he does not will, neither can he will, to make of
     that which is his own whatever it is possible for him to make according to
     his infinite and absolute power.  
VIII.
ON THE PROVIDENCE OF GOD
- The providence of God is
     subordinate to creation; and it is, therefore, necessary that it should
     not impinge against creation, which it would do, were it to inhibit or
     hinder the use of free will in man, or should deny to man its necessary
     concurrence, or should direct man to another end, or to destruction, than
     to that which is agreeable to the condition and state in which he was
     created; that is, if the providence of God should so rule and govern man
     that he should necessarily become corrupt, in order that God might
     manifest his own glory, both of justice and mercy, through the sin of man,
     according to his eternal counsel.  
- It appertains to the
     providence of God to act and permit; which two things are confounded when
     permission is changed into action under this pretext -- that it cannot be
     idle or unemployed.  
- Divine providence does not
     determine a free will to one part of a contradiction or contrariety, that
     is, by a determination preceding the actual volition itself; under other
     circumstances the concurrence of the very volition with the will is the
     concomitant cause, and thus determines the will with the volition itself,
     by an act which is not previous but simultaneous, as the schoolmen express
     themselves.  
- The permission of God by
     which he permits any one to fall into sin is not correctly defined as “the
     subtraction or withdrawing of divine grace, by which, while God executes
     the decrees of his will through his rational creatures, he either does not
     unfold to the creature his own will by which he wills that wicked work to
     be done, or he does not bend the will of the man to obey the divine will
     in that action.” (Ursinus On
     Providence, tom. I, fol. 178.)  
IX.
ON PREDESTINATION, CONSIDERED IN THE PRIMEVAL STATE OF MAN
- It is not a true assertion,
     that “out of men considered in puris
     naturalibus, (either without supernatural things or with them,) God
     has determined, by the decree of election, to elevate to supernatural
     felicity some particular men, but to leave others in nature.”  
- And it is rashly asserted
     that “it belongs to the relation or analogy of the universe, that some men
     be placed on the right and others on the left, even as the method of the
     master Builder requires, that some stones be placed on the left side, and
     others on the right, of a house which is to be built.”  
- The permission by which God
     permits that some men wander from and miss the supernatural end, is
     unwisely made subordinate to this predestination; for it appertains to
     providence to lead and conduct a rational creature to supernatural
     felicity in a manner which is agreeable to the nature of that creature.  
- The permission, also, by
     which God permitted our first parents to fall into sin, is rashly said to
     be subordinate to this predestination. 
     
X.
ON THE CAUSE OF SIN UNIVERSALLY
- Though sin can be committed
     by none except by a rational creature, and, therefore, ceases to be sin by
     this very circumstance if the cause of it be ascribed to God; yet it seems
     possible, by four arguments, to fasten this charge on our divines. “It
     follows from their doctrine that God is the author of sin.”  
- First reason. -- Because
     they teach that, “without foresight of sin, God absolutely determined to
     declare his own glory through punitive justice and mercy, in the salvation
     of some men and in the damnation of others.” Or, as others of them assert,
     “God resolved to illustrate his own glory by the demonstration of saving
     grace, wisdom, wrath, ability, and most free power, in the salvation of
     some particular men, and in the eternal damnation of others; which neither
     can be done, nor has been done, without the entrance of sin into the
     world.”  
- Second reason. -- Because
     they teach “that, in order to attain to that chief and supreme end, God
     ordained that man should sin and become corrupt, by which thing God might
     open a way to himself for the execution of this decree.”  
- Third reason. -- Because
     they teach “that God has either denied to man, or has withdrawn from man,
     before he sinned, grace necessary and sufficient to avoid sin;” which is
     equivalent to this -- as if God had imposed a law on man which was simply
     impossible to be performed or observed by his very nature.  
- Fourth reason. -- Because
     they attribute to God some acts, partly external, partly mediate, and
     partly immediate, which, being once laid down, man was not able to do
     otherwise than commit sin by necessity of a consequent and antecedent to
     the thing itself, which entirely takes away all liberty; yet without this
     liberty a man cannot be considered, or reckoned, as being guilty of the
     commission of sin.  
- A Fifth reason. --
     Testimonies of the same description may be added in which our divines
     assert, in express words, that “the reprobate cannot escape the necessity
     of sinning, especially since this kind of necessity is injected through
     the appointment of God.” (Calvin’s Institutes,
     Lib. 2, 23.)  
XI.
OF THE FALL OF ADAM
- Adam was able to continue
     in goodness and to refrain from sinning, and this in reality and in
     reference to the issue, and not only by capability not to be brought into
     action on account of some preceding decree of God, or rather not possible
     to lead to an act by that preceding decree.  
- Adam sinned freely and
     voluntarily, without any necessity, either internal or external.  
- Adam did not fall through
     the decree of God, neither through being ordained to fall nor through
     desertion, but through the mere permission of God, which is placed in
     subordination to no predestination either to salvation or to death, but
     which belongs to providence so far as it is distinguished in opposition to
     predestination.  
- Adam did not fall
     necessarily, either with respect to a decree, appointment, desertion, or
     permission, from which it is evident what kind of judgment ought to be
     formed concerning expressions of the following description:  
- “I confess, indeed, that by
     the will of God all the sons of Adam have fallen into this miserable
     condition in which they are bound and fastened.” (Calvin’s Institute, lib. 3, cap. 23.)  
- “They deny, in express
     words, the existence of this fact -- that it was decreed by God that Adam
     should perish by his own defection.” 
     
- “God foreknew what result
     man would have, became he thus ordained it by his decree.”  
- “God not only foresaw the
     fall of the first man, but by his own will he ordained it.”  
XII.
ON ORIGINAL SIN
- Original sin is not that
     actual sin by which Adam transgressed the law concerning the tree of
     knowledge of good and evil, and on account of which we have all been
     constituted sinners, and rendered obnoxious or liable to death and
     condemnation.  
- QUERIES. -- Is original sin
     only the absence or want of original righteousness and of primeval
     holiness, with an inclination to commit sin, which likewise formerly
     existed in man, though it was not so vehement nor so inordinate as now it
     is, on account of the lost favour of God, his malediction, and the loss of
     that good by which that inclination was reduced to order? Or is it a
     certain infused habit (or acquired ingress) contrary to righteousness and
     holiness, after that sin had been committed,  
- Does original sin render
     men obnoxious to the wrath of God, when they have been previously
     constituted sinners on account of the actual sin of Adam, and rendered
     liable to damnation?  
- Adam, when considered in
     this state, after sin and prior to restoration, was not bound at once to
     punishment and obedience, but only to punishment.  
XIII.
ON THE PREDESTINATION OF MAN CONSIDERED PARTLY IN HIS PRIMEVAL STATE, AND
PARTLY IN THE FALL
- IT is rashly asserted that “the
     matter of predestination, as it is opposed to reprobation, is man in
     common or absolutely, if regard be had to the foreordaining of the end;
     but if regard be had to the means for the end, it is man about to perish
     by and in himself and guilty in Adam.” (Trelcatii Institut., lib. 2. On
     Predestination.)  
- With equal infelicity is it
     asserted that “one reprobation is negative or passive, another affirmative
     or active -- that the former is before all things and causes in things
     foreknown and considered, or that will arise from things; and that this
     act is respective of sin, and is called predamnation.”  
- It may become a subject of
     discussion in what manner the following things can be said agreeably to
     this doctrine: “The impulsive cause of this predestination is the
     benevolent inclination of the will of God in Christ; and predestination is
     an eternal act of God, by which he resolves to make in Christ some
     creatures partakers of his grace and glory.”  
- This is a stupid assertion:
     “The just desertion of God, by which he does not confer grace on a
     reprobate man, and which appertains to predestination and to its
     execution, is that of exploration or trial.” This also cannot be
     reconciled with the expressions in the preceding paragraph.  
XIV.
ON PREDESTINATION CONSIDERED AFTER THE FALL
- QUERIES. -- Out of the
     fallen human race, or out of the mass of corruption and perdition, has God
     absolutely chosen some particular men to life, and absolutely reprobated
     others to death, without any consideration of the good of the one or of
     the evil of the other? And from a just decree, which is both gracious and
     severe, is there such a requisite condition as this in the object which
     God is about to elect and to save, or to reprobate and condemn?  
- Is any man damned with
     death eternal, solely on account of the sin of Adam?  
- Are those who are thus the
     elect necessarily saved on account of the efficacy of grace, which has
     been destined to them only that they may not be able to do otherwise than
     assent to it, as it is irresistible, 
     
- Are those who are thus the
     reprobate necessarily damned, because either no grace at all, or not
     sufficient, has been destined to them, that they may assent to it and
     believe,  
- Or rather, according to St.
     Augustine, Are those who are thus the elect assuredly saved, because God
     decreed to employ grace on them as he knew was suitable and congruous that
     they might be persuaded and saved; though if regard be had to the internal
     efficacy of grace, they may not be advanced or benefited by it,  
- Are those who have thus
     been reprobated certainly damned, because God does not apply to them grace
     as he knows to be suitable and congruous, though in the mean time they are
     supplied with sufficient grace, that they may be able to yield their
     assent and be saved,  
XV.
ON THE DECREES OF GOD WHICH CONCERN THE SALVATION OF SINFUL MEN, ACCORDING TO
HIS OWN SENSE
- The first decree concerning
     the salvation of sinful men, as that by which God resolves to appoint his
     Son Jesus Christ as a saviour, mediator, redeemer, high priest, and one
     who may expiate sins, by the merit of his own obedience may recover lost
     salvation, and dispense it by his efficacy.  
- The SECOND DECREE is that
     by which God resolves to receive into favour those who repent and believe,
     and to save in Christ, on account of Christ, and through Christ, those who
     persevere, but to leave under sin and wrath those who are impenitent and
     unbelievers, and to condemn them as aliens from Christ.  
- The THIRD DECREE is that by
     which God resolves to administer such means for repentance and faith as
     are necessary, sufficient, and efficacious. And this administration is
     directed according to the wisdom of God, by which he knows what is
     suitable or becoming to mercy and severity; it is also according to his
     righteousness, by which he is prepared to follow and execute [the
     directions] of his wisdom.  
- From these follows a FOURTH
     DECREE, concerning the salvation of these particular persons, and the
     damnation of those. This rests or depends on the prescience and foresight
     of God, by which he foreknew from all eternity what men would, through
     such administration, believe by the aid of preventing or preceding grace,
     and would persevere by the aid of subsequent or following grace, and who
     would not believe and persevere.  
- Hence, God is said to “know
     those who are his;” and the number both of those who are to be saved, and
     of those who are to be damned, is certain and fixed, and the quod and the qui, [the substance and the parties
     of whom it is composed,] or, as the phrase of the schools is, both
     materially and formally.  
- The second decree
     [described in § 2] is predestination to salvation, which is the foundation
     of Christianity, salvation, and of the assurance of salvation; it is also
     the matter of the gospel, and the substance of the doctrine taught by the
     apostles.  
- But that predestination by
     which God is said to have decreed to save particular creatures and persons
     and to endue them with faith, is neither the foundation of Christianity,
     of salvation, nor of the assurance of salvation.  
XVI.
ON CHRIST
- QUERIES. -- After the
     entrance of sin into the world, was there no other remedy for the expiation
     of sin, or of rendering satisfaction to God, than through the death of the
     Son of God,  
- Had the human nature in
     Christ any other thing, than substance alone, immediately from the LOGOS,
     that is, without the intervention of the Holy Spirit,  
- Have the holy conception of
     Christ through the Holy Ghost, and his birth from the Virgin Mary, this
     tendency -- to cover the corruption of our nature lest it should come into
     the sight of God,  
- Does the holy life of
     Christ, in which he fulfilled all righteousness according to the prescript
     of the moral law concerning the love of God and of our neighbour, conduce
     only to this purpose -- that Christ may be a pure and innocent High Priest
     and an uncontaminated victim, But was it not like-wise for this purpose --
     that this righteousness [of the holy life of Christ] may be our
     righteousness before God, and by this means performed by him for us, that
     is, in our name and in our stead,  
- Do those things which
     Christ suffered prior to his being placed before the tribunal of Pilate,
     concur with those which he afterwards endured, for the purging away and
     expiation of sins, and the redemption and reconciliation of sinners with
     God?  
- Was the oblation by which
     Christ offered himself to the Father as a victim for sin, so made on the
     cross that he has not offered himself and his blood to his Father in
     Heaven,  
- Is not the oblation by
     which Christ presents himself to his Father in heaven sprinkled with his
     own blood, a perpetual and continuous act, on which intercession rests or
     depends?  
- Is not the redemption which
     has been obtained by the blood of Christ, common to every man in
     particular, according to the love and affection of God by which he gave
     his Son for the world, though, according to the peremptory decree
     concerning the salvation of believers alone, it belongs only to some
     men?  
XVII.
ON THE VOCATION OF SINNERS TO COMMUNION WITH CHRIST, AND TO A PARTICIPATION OF
HIS BENEFITS
- Sinful man, after the
     perpetration of sin, has such a knowledge of the law as is sufficient for
     accusing, convicting, and condemning him; and this knowledge itself is
     capable of being employed by God when calling him to Christ, that he may,
     through it, compel man to repent and to flee to Christ.  
- An unregenerate man is
     capable of omitting more evil external works than he omits, and can
     perform more outward works which have been commanded by God than he
     actually performs; that is, it is possible for him to rule his inducements
     for abstaining in another and a better manner than that in which he does
     rule them; although if he were to do so, he would merit nothing by that
     deed.  
- The distribution of
     vocation into internal and external, is not the distribution of a genus
     into its species, or of a whole into its parts.  
- Internal vocation is granted
     even to those who do not comply with the call.  
- All unregenerate persons
     have freedom of will, and a capability of resisting the Holy Spirit, of
     rejecting the proffered grace of God, of despising the counsel of God
     against themselves, of refusing to accept the gospel of grace, and of not
     opening to Him who knocks at the door of the heart; and these things they
     can actually do, without any difference of the elect and of the
     reprobate.  
- Whomsoever God calls, he
     calls them seriously, with a will desirous of their repentance and
     salvation. Neither is there any volition of God about or concerning those
     whom he calls as being uniformly considered, that is, either affirmatively
     or negatively contrary to this will. 
     
- God is not bound to employ
     all the modes which are possible to him for the salvation of all men. He
     has performed his part, when he has employed either one or more of these
     possible means for saving.  
- “That man should be
     rendered inexcusable,” is neither the proximate end, nor that which was intended
     by God, to the divine vocation when it is first made and has not been
     repulsed.  
- The doctrine which is
     manifested only for the purpose of rendering those who hear it
     inexcusable, cannot render them inexcusable either by right or by
     efficacy.  
- The right of God -- by
     which he can require faith in Christ from those who do not possess the
     capability of believing in him, and on whom he refuses to bestow the grace
     which is necessary and sufficient for believing, without any demerit on
     account of grace repulsed -- does not rest or depend on the fact that God
     gave to Adam, in his primeval state, and in him to all men, the capability
     of believing in Christ.  
- The right of God -- by
     which he can condemn those who reject the gospel of grace, and by which he
     actually condemns the disobedient -- does not rest or depend on this fact,
     that all men have, by their own fault, lost the capability of believing
     which they received in Adam.  
- Sufficient grace must
     necessarily be laid down; yet this sufficient grace, through the fault of
     him to whom it is granted, does not [always] obtain its effect. Were the
     fact otherwise, the justice of God could not be defended in his condemning
     those who do not believe.  
- The efficacy of saving
     grace is not consistent with that omnipotent act of God, by which he so
     inwardly acts in the heart and mind of man, that he on whom that act is
     impressed cannot do otherwise than consent to God who calls him; or, which
     is the same thing, grace is not an irresistible force.  
- QUERY. -- Are efficacious
     and sufficient grace correctly distinguished according to a congruous or
     suitable vocation and one that is incongruous, so that it may be called
     efficacious grace, which God employs according to his purpose of
     absolutely saving some particular man, as he knows it to be congruous or
     suitable that this man should be moved and persuaded to obedience; and so
     that it may be called sufficient grace which he employs, not for such a
     purpose, though, from his general love towards all mankind, some are affected
     or moved by it, on whom, by a peremptory decree, he had resolved not to
     have mercy?  
- The efficacy which is
     distinguished from efficiency itself, seems not to differ at all from
     sufficiency.  
- Those who are obedient to
     the vocation or call of God, freely yield their assent to grace; yet they
     are previously excited, impelled, drawn and assisted by grace; and in the
     very moment in which they actually assent, they possess the capability of
     not assenting.  
- In the very commencement of
     his conversion, man conducts himself in a purely passive manner; that is,
     though, by a vital act, that is, by feeling, he has a perception of the
     grace which calls him, yet he can do no other than receive it and feel it.
     But, when he feels grace affecting or inclining his mind and heart, he
     freely assents to it, so that he is able at the same time to withhold his
     assent.  
XVIII.
ON PENITENCE
- The doctrine concerning
     repentance is not legal but evangelical; that is, it appertains to the
     gospel and not to the law, although the law solicits and impels to
     repentance.  
- The knowledge or confession
     of sins, sorrow on account of sin and a desire for deliverance, with a
     resolution to avoid sin, are pleasing to God as the very beginnings of
     conversion.  
- In propriety of speech,
     these things are not the mortification itself of the flesh or of sin but
     necessarily precede it.  
- Repentance is prior to
     faith in Christ; but it is posterior to that faith by which we believe
     that God is willing to receive into his favour the penitent sinner.  
- QUERIES. -- Is the
     repentance of Judas properly called legal? 
     
- Was the penitence or
     repentance of the inhabitants of Tyre and Sidon, of which Christ speaks in
     Matt. 11:21, dissembled and feigned, or true repentance?  
XIX.
ON FAITH
- Justifying faith is not
     that by which any one believes that his sins are remitted to him for the
     sake of Christ; for the latter faith follows justification itself or
     remission of sins, which is the effect of justifying faith.  
- Justifying faith is not
     that by which any one believes himself to be elected.  
- All men are not bound to
     believe themselves to be elected.  
- The knowledge and faith by
     which any one knows and believes that he is in possession of faith, is
     prior by nature to that knowledge and faith by which any one knows and
     believes himself to be elected.  
- From these remarks, some
     judgment may be formed concerning that which is sometimes asserted, “A
     believing and elect person is bound to believe that he is elected.”  
- Justifying faith is that by
     which men believe in Jesus Christ, as in the saviour of those universally
     who believe, and of each of them in particular, even the saviour of him
     who, through Christ, believes in God, who justifies the ungodly.  
- Evangelical and saving
     faith is of such vast excellency as to exceed the entire nature of man,
     and all his understanding, even that of Adam, when placed in a state of
     innocence.  
- God cannot of right require
     faith in Christ from that man whom, by an absolute will, he has
     reprobated, either without consideration of any sin, or as fallen in Adam;
     therefore, it was not his will that Christ should be of the least
     advantage to this man; or, rather, he willed that Christ should not profit
     him.  
- Faith is a gracious and
     gratuitous gift of God, bestowed according to the administration of the
     means necessary to conduce to the end, that is, according to such an
     administration as the justice of God requires, either towards the side of
     mercy or towards that of severity. It is a gift which is not bestowed
     according to an absolute will of saving some particular men; for it is a
     condition required in the object to be saved, and it is in fact a
     condition before it is the means for obtaining salvation.  
- Saving faith is that of the
     elect of God; it is not the faith of all men, of perverse and wicked men,
     not of those who repel the word of grace, and account themselves unworthy
     of life eternal, not of those who resist the Holy Spirit, not of those who
     reject the counsel of God against themselves, nor of those who have not
     been ordained to life eternal. No man believes in Christ except he has
     been previously disposed and prepared, by preventing or preceding grace,
     to receive life eternal on that condition on which God wills to bestow it,
     according to the following passage of Scripture: “If any man will do his
     will, he shall know of the doctrine, whether it be of God, or whether I
     speak of myself.” (John 8:17.)  
XX.
ON REGENERATION AND THE REGENERATE
- The proximate subject of
     regeneration, which is effected in the present life by the Spirit of
     Christ, is the mind and the affections of man, or the will considered
     according to the mode of nature, not the will considered according to the
     mode of liberty. It is not the body of man, though man, when renewed by
     regeneration through his mind and feelings, actually wills in a good
     manner, and performs well through the instruments of the body.  
- Though regeneration is not
     perfected in a moment, but by certain steps and intervals; yet, as soon as
     ever it is perfected according to its essence, that is, through the
     renovation of the mind and affections, it renders the man spiritual, and
     capable of resisting sin through the assisting grace of God. Hence, also,
     from the Spirit, which predominates in him, he is called spiritual and not
     carnal, though he still has within him the flesh lusting against the
     Spirit. For these two, a carnal man and a spiritual man, are so
     denominated in opposition, and according to [that which is in each of
     them] the more powerful, prevailing or predominant party.  
- The regenerate are able to
     perform more true good, and of such as is pleasing to God, than they
     actually perform, and to omit more evil than they omit; and, therefore, if
     they do not perform and omit what they ought to do, that must not be
     ascribed to any decree of God or inefficacy of divine grace, but it must
     be attributed to the negligence of the regenerate themselves.  
- He who asserts that “it is
     possible for the regenerate, through the grace of Christ, perfectly to
     fulfill the law in the present life,” is neither a Pelagian, nor inflicts
     any injury on the grace of God, nor establishes justification through
     works.  
- The regenerate are capable
     of committing sin designedly and in opposition to their consciences, and
     of so laying waste their consciences, through sin, as to hear nothing from
     them except the sentence of condemnation. 
     
- The regenerate are capable
     of grieving the Holy Spirit by their sins, so that, for a season, until
     they suffer themselves to be brought back to repentance, he does not exert
     his power and efficacy in them.  
- Some of the regenerate
     actually thus sin, thus lay waste their conscience, and thus grieve the
     Holy Spirit.  
- If David had died in the
     very moment in which he had sinned against Uriah by adultery and murder,
     he would have been condemned to death eternal.  
- God truly hates the sins of
     the regenerate and of the elect of God, and indeed so much the more, as
     those who thus sin have received more benefits from God, and a greater
     power of resisting sin.  
- There are distinctions by
     which a man is said to sin with a full will, or with a will that is not
     full -- fully to destroy conscience, or not fully but only partly, and to
     sin according to his unregenerate part. When these distinctions are
     employed in the sense in which some persons use them, they are noxious to
     piety and injurious to good morals. 
     
XXI.
ON THE PERSEVERANCE OF SAINTS
- QUERIES. -- Is it possible
     for true believers to fall away totally and finally:  
- Do some of them, in
     reality, totally and finally fall from the faith?  
- The opinion which denies “that
     true believers and regenerate persons are either capable of falling away
     or actually do fall away from the faith totally and finally,” was never,
     from the very times of the apostles down to the present day, accounted by
     the church as a catholic doctrine. Neither has that which affirms the
     contrary ever been reckoned as a heretical opinion; nay, that which
     affirms it possible for believers to fall away from the faith, has always
     had more supporters in the church of Christ, than that which denies its
     possibility of its actually occurring. 
     
XXII.
ON THE ASSURANCE OF SALVATION
- QUERIES. -- Is it possible
     for any believer, without a special revelation, to be certain or assured
     that he will not decline or fall away from the faith,  
- Are those who have faith,
     bound to believe that they will not decline from the faith?  
- The affirmative of either
     of these questions was never accounted in the church of Christ as a
     catholic doctrine; and the denial of either of them has never been
     adjudged by the church universal as a heresy.  
- The persuasion by which any
     believer assuredly persuades himself that it is impossible for him to
     decline from the faith, or that, at least, he will not decline from the
     faith, does not conduce so much to consolation against despair or against
     the doubting that is adverse to faith and hope, as it contributes to
     security, a thing directly opposed to that most salutary fear with which
     we are commanded to work out our salvation, and which is exceedingly
     necessary in this scene of temptations. 
     
- He who is of opinion that
     it is possible for him to decline from the faith, and who, therefore, is
     afraid lest he should decline, is neither destitute of necessary
     consolation, nor is he on this account, tormented with anxiety of mind.
     For it suffices to inspire consolation and to exclude anxiety, when he
     knows that he will decline from the faith through no force of Satan, of
     sin, or of the world, and through no inclination or weakness of his own
     flesh, unless he willingly and of his own accord, yield to temptation, and
     neglect to work out his salvation in a conscientious manner.  
XXIII.
ON THE JUSTIFICATION OF MAN AS A SINNER, BUT YET ABELIEVER, BEFORE GOD
- QUERIES. -- was it possible
     for the justice of God to be satisfied unless the law were likewise
     satisfied?
- Is the satisfaction which
     has been rendered in Christ to the justice of God, the same as that
     rendered to the law through Christ? 
     
- Do legal righteousness and
     that of the gospel differ in essence? Or, Is the essence of both of them
     the same, that is, the matter -- the obedience performed to God, and the
     universal form -- the necessary conformity to the law?  
- Are there three parts of
     the righteousness of Christ by which believers are constituted righteous?
     Is the first of them the holiness of the nature of Christ, which is
     denominated habitual righteousness? Is the second those sufferings which,
     from infancy to the moment of his decease, he sustained on our account,
     and is this denominated his passive obedience, or that of his death? Is
     the third the most perfect, nay, the more than perfect fulfillment of the
     moral law, (add also that of the ceremonial law,) through the whole of his
     life to the period of his death; and is this denominated his active
     obedience, or that of his life?  
- Were not the acts of that
     obedience which Christ performed, and by which we are justified, imposed
     on him according to the peculiar command of the Father, and according to a
     peculiar compact or covenant entered into between him and the Father, in
     which he prescribed and stipulated those acts of obedience, with the
     addition of a promise that he should obtain eternal redemption for them,
     [the human race] and should see his seed, whom this obedience should
     justify through his knowledge, that is, through faith in him,  
- To which of the offices of
     Christ do those acts of obedience belong, 
     
- Is the righteousness of
     Christ the righteousness of a believer or of an elect person, before God
     imputes it to him?  
- Does God impute this
     righteousness to him before he justifies him through faith?  
- Or, which is the same
     thing, Is the object about which God is occupied in the act of
     justification, an elect person, unrighteous indeed in himself but
     righteous in Christ his head; so that he accounts him righteous because he
     is already righteous in Christ, that is, because the punishment due to him
     has been paid and endured by him in His Surety and Head, or because he has
     thus performed the obedience which was due from him?  
- Has an elect person really
     endured punishment in Christ and performed obedience, or only in the
     divine estimation or reckoning! And is this divine estimation, by which
     the elect person is reckoned to have endured punishment and performed
     obedience, an act preceding justification? 
     
- Does not the act of
     acceptation, by which God accepted the obedience of his Son, precede the
     oblation by which, through the gospel, he offers his Son for
     righteousness,  
- Is the accepted imputation
     of the righteousness of Christ justification itself, or a preliminary to
     justification?  
- Is not the act of
     apprehension, by which faith apprehends Christ and his righteousness, or
     Christ for righteousness, prior to justification itself?  
- If this act [of
     apprehension] be prior to justification, how is faith the instrumental
     cause of our justification; that is, at once the instrumental cause of the
     apprehending which precedes justification, and of justification itself
     which succeeds this apprehending,  
- Or, Does not faith
     apprehend Christ offered for righteousness, before faith is imputed for
     righteousness?
- In this enunciation, “faith
     is imputed to the believer for righteousness,” is the word “faith” to be
     properly received as the instrumental act by which Christ has been
     apprehended for righteousness? Or is it to be improperly received, that
     is, by a metonymy, for the very object which faith apprehends?  
- Is this phrase, “faith is
     received relatively and instrumentally,” the same as “by the word Faith is
     signified, through a metonymy, the very object of faith”?  
- Or, Is it the same thing to
     say “we are justified by faith correlatively, and as it is an instrumental
     act, by which we apprehend Christ for righteousness” as we say “we are
     justified by obedience or righteousness”? 
     
- May the righteousness of
     Christ be correctly said to be graciously imputed for righteousness, or to
     be graciously accounted for righteousness? 
     
- When the apostle expresses
     himself in this manner, “Faith is imputed for righteousness,” must not
     this be understood concerning the imputation which is made, not according
     to debt, but according to grace?  
- May that of which we are
     made partakers through faith, or by faith, be called the instrumental
     effect of faith?  
- When God has decreed to
     justify no one through grace and mercy, except him who believes in Christ,
     and, therefore, through the preaching of the gospel, requires faith in
     Christ from him who desires to be justified, can it not be said “when God
     is graciously judging according to the gospel, he is occupied about faith,
     as about a condition, which is required from, and performed by, him who
     appears before the throne of grace to be judged and justified”?  
- If this may be asserted,
     what crime is there in saying “through the gratuitous and gracious
     acceptance [of God] is faith accounted for righteousness on account of the
     obedience of Christ”?  
- Is “If the work of men who
     are born again were perfect, they might be justified by them, though they
     may have perpetrated many evil works when [or before] they obtain the remission
     of them” a correct assertion?  
XXIV.
ON THE GOOD WORKS OF BELIEVERS
- QUERIES. -- Is it truly
     said, concerning the good works of believers “they are unclean like a
     menstruous cloth”, And does this confession, “We are all as an unclean
     thing, and all our righteousness are as filthy rags,” &c., (Isa. 64:6,)
     belong to those works?  
- In what sense is it
     correctly said “Believers sin mortally in every one of their good works”?  
- Do the good works of
     believers come into the judgment of God so far only as they are
     testimonies of faith; or like-wise so far as they have been prescribed by
     God, and sanctioned and honoured with the promise of a reward, although
     this reward be not bestowed on them except “of grace” united with mercy,
     and on account of Christ, whom God hath appointed and set forth as a
     propitiation through faith in his blood, and, therefore, with reference to
     faith in Christ?  
XXV.
ON PRAYER
- QUERIES. -- Does prayer, or
     the invocation of God, hold relation only to the performance of worship to
     his honour?  Or, does it likewise
     bear the relation of means necessary for obtaining that which is asked --
     means, indeed, which God foresaw would be employed before he absolutely
     determined to bestow the blessing on the petitioner,  
- Is the faith with which we
     ought to pray, that faith by which he who prays believes assuredly that he
     will obtain what he asks? Or is it that faith by which he is assuredly
     persuaded, that he is asking according to the will of God, and will obtain
     what he asks, provided God knows that it will conduce to his glory and to
     the salvation of the petitioner?  
XXVI.
ON THE INFANTS OF BELIEVERS WHEN THEY ARE OFFERED FOR BAPTISM
QUERY.
-- When the children of believers are offered for baptism, are they considered
as “the children of wrath,” or as the children of God and of grace? And if they
be considered in both ways, is this relation according to the same time, or
according to different times?  
XXVII.
ON THE SUPPER OF THE LORD
QUERY.
-- Is not the proximate and most appropriate, and, therefore, the immediate end
of the Lords Supper, both as it was at first instituted and as it is now used,
the memory, or commemoration, or annunciation of the Lord’s death, and this
with thanksgiving for the gift of God, in delivering up his Son to death for
us, and in having given his flesh to be eaten and his blood to be drank through
faith in him?  
XXVIII.
ON MAGISTRACY
- The chief magistrate is not
     correctly denominated political or secular, because those epithets are
     opposed to the ecclesiastical and spiritual power.  
- In the hands and at the
     disposal of the chief magistrate is placed, under God, the supreme and
     sovereign power of caring and providing for his subjects, and of governing
     them, with respect to animal and spiritual life.  
- The care of religion has
     been committed by God to the chief magistrate, more than to priests and to
     ecclesiastical persons.  
- It is in the power of the
     magistrate to enact laws concerning civil and ecclesiastical polity, yet
     not unless those persons have been asked and consulted who are the best
     versed in spiritual matters, and who are peculiarly designed for teaching
     the church.  
- It is the duty of the
     magistrate to preserve and defend the ecclesiastical ministry -- to
     appoint the ministers of God’s word, after they have previously undergone
     a lawful examination before a presbytery -- to take care that they perform
     their duty -- to require an account of their ministry -- to admonish and
     incite those among them who are negligent -- to bestow rewards on those
     ministers who preside well over their flocks, and to remove such as are
     pertinaciously negligent, or who bring a scandal on the church.  
- Also to invoke councils,
     whether general, national or provincial; by his own authority to preside
     as moderator of the assembly, either in person or through deputies
     suitable for discharging such an office. 
     
- QUERY -- Is it useful to
     ecclesiastical conventions or assemblies, that those persons preside over
     them whose interest it is that matters of religion and church discipline
     should be transacted in this manner rather than in that?  
- For the discharge of these
     duties, the magistrate must understand those mysteries of religion which
     are absolutely necessary for the salvation of men; for in this part [of
     his high office] he cannot depend upon and confide in the conscience of
     another person.  
- The Christian magistrate
     both presides in those ecclesiastical assemblies in which he is present,
     and pronounces a decisive and definitive sentence, or has the right of
     delivering a decisive and definitive sentence.  
XXIX.
ON THE CHURCH OF ROME
- QUERIES. -- Must a
     difference be made between the court of Rome, (that is, the Roman pontiff,
     the cardinals, and the other sworn retainers and satellites of his
     kingdom,) and the Church which is denominated Romish?  
- Can those persons by no
     means be called “the church of Christ,” who, having been deceived by the
     Roman pontiff consider him as the successor of St. Peter and the head of
     the church?  
- Has God sent a bill of
     divorcement to those persons, so that he does not at all acknowledge them
     as his, any more than he does Mahometans and Jews?  
