Waldensian
Confession
A brief confession of faith of the Reformed Churches of Piedmont
Published with their Manifesto on the occasion
of the frightful massacres of the year 1655.
Having understood that our adversaries, not
contented to have most cruelly persecuted us, and robbed us of all our
goods and estates, have yet an intention to render us odious to the
world by spreading abroad many false reports, and so not only to defame
our persons, but likewise to asperse with most shameful calumnies that
holy and wholesome doctrine which we profess, we feel obliged, for the
better information of those whose minds may perhaps be preoccupied by
sinister opinions, to make a short declaration of our faith, such as we
have heretofore professed as conformable to the Word of God; and so
every one may see the falsity of those their calumnies, and also how
unjustly we are hated and persecuted for a doctrine so innocent.
I. That there is
one only God, who is a spiritual essence, eternal, infinite, all-wise,
all merciful, and all-just, in one word, all-perfect; and that there
are three persons in that one only and simple essence: the Father, Son,
and Holy Spirit.
II. That this God manifested himself to men by his works of Creation
and Providence, as also by his Word revealed unto us, first by oracles
in divers manners, and afterwards by those written books which are
called the Holy Scripture.
III. That we ought to receive this Holy Scripture (as we do) for divine
and canonical, that is to say, for the constant rule of our faith and
life: as also that the same is fully contained in the Old and New
Testament; and that by the Old Testament we must understand only such
books as God did entrust the Jewish Church with, and which that Church
has always approved and acknowledged to be from God: namely, the five
books of Moses, Joshua, the Judges, Ruth, I and II Samuel, I and II of
the Kings, I and II of the Chronicles, one of Ezra, Nehemiah, Esther,
Job, the Psalms, the Proverbs of Solomon, Ecclesiastes, the Song of
Songs, the four great and twelve minor Prophets: and the New Testament
containing the four gospels, the Acts of the Apostles, the Epistles of
St. Paul - 1 to the Romans, 2 to the Corinthians, 1 to the Galatians, 1
to the Ephesians, 1 to the Philippians, 1 to the Colossians {2 to the
Thessalonians, 2 to Timothy, 1 to Titus, 1 to Philemon}, and the
Epistle to the Hebrews; 1 of St. James, 2 of St. Peter, 3 of St. John,
1 of St. Jude, and the Revelation.
IV. We acknowledge the divinity of these sacred books, not only from
the testimony of the Church, but more especially because of the eternal
and indubitable truth of the doctrine therein contained, and of that
most divine excellency, sublimity, and majesty which appears therein;
and because of the operation of the Holy Spirit, who causes us to
receive with reverence the testimony of the Church in that point, who
opens our eyes to discover the beams of that celestial light which
shines in the Scripture, and correct our taste to discern the divine
savor of that spiritual food.
V. That God made
all things of nothing by his own free will, and by the infinite power
of the Word.
VI. That he governs and rules all by his providence, ordaining and
appointing whatsoever happens in this world, without being the author
or cause of any evil committed by the creatures, so that the guilt
thereof neither can nor ought to be in any way imputed unto him.
VII. That the angels were all in the beginning created pure and holy,
but that some of them have fallen into irreparable corruption and
perdition; and that the rest have persevered in their first purity by
an effect of divine goodness, which has upheld and confirmed them.
VIII. That man, who was created pure and holy, after the image of God,
deprived himself through his own fault of that happy condition by
giving credit to the deceitful words of the devil.
IX. That man by his transgression lost that righteousness and holiness
which he had received, and thus incurring the wrath of God, became
subject to death and bondage, under the dominion of him who has the
power of death, that is, the devil; insomuch that our free will has
become a servant and a slave to sin: and thus all men, both Jews and
Gentiles, are, are by nature children of wrath, being all dead in their
trespasses and sins, and consequently incapable of the least good
motion to any thing which concerns their salvation: yea, incapable of
one good thought without God's grace, all their imaginations being
wholly evil, and that continually.
X. That all the posterity of Adam is guilty in him of his disobedience,
infected by his corruption, and fallen into the same calamity with him,
even the very infants from their mother's womb, whence is derived the
name of original sin.
XI. That God saves
from this corruption and condemnation those whom he has chosen {from
the foundation of the world, not for any foreseen disposition, faith,
or holiness in them, but} of his mercy in Jesus Christ his Son; passing
by all the rest, according to the irreprehensible reason of his freedom
and justice.
XII. That Jesus Christ having been ordained by the eternal decree of
God to be the only Savior and only head of his body which is the
Church, he redeemed it with his own blood in the fullness of time, and
communicates unto the same all his benefits by means of the gospel.
XIII. That there are two natures in Jesus Christ, viz., divine and
human, truly united in one and the same person, without confusion,
division, separation, or alteration; each nature keeping its own
distinct proprieties; and that Jesus Christ is both true God and true
man.
XIV. That God so loved the world, that is to say, those whom he has
chosen out of the world, that he gave his own Son to save us by his
most perfect obedience (especially that obedience which he manifested
in suffering the cursed death of the cross), and also by his victory
over the devil, sin, and death.
XV. That Jesus Christ having made a full expiation for our sins by his
most perfect sacrifice once offered on the cross, it neither can nor
ought to be repeated upon any pretext whatsoever, as they pretend to do
in the mass.
XVI. That the Lord Jesus having fully reconciled us unto God, through
the blood of his cross, it is by virtue of his merits only, and not of
our works, that we are absolved and justified in his sight.
XVII. That we are united to Jesus Christ and made partakers of his
benefits by faith, which rests upon those promises of life which are
made to us in his gospel.
XVIII. That this faith is the gracious and efficacious work of the Holy
Spirit, who enlightens our souls, and persuades them to lean and rest
upon the mercy of God, and so to apply the merits of Jesus Christ.
XIX. That Jesus Christ is our true and only Mediator, not only
redeeming us, but also interceding for us, and that by virtue of his
merits and intercession we have access unto the Father, to make our
supplications unto him, with a holy confidence that he will grant our
requests, it being needless to have recourse to any other intercessor
besides himself.
XX. That as God
promised us regeneration in Jesus Christ, so those who are united to
him by a living faith ought to apply, and do really apply themselves,
unto good works.
XXI. That good works are so necessary to the faithful that they can not
attain the kingdom of heaven without the same, seeing that God has
prepared them that we should walk therein; and there fore we ought to
flee from vice, and apply ourselves to Christian virtues, making use of
fasting, and all other means which may conduce to so holy a thing.
XXII. That, although our good works can not merit any thing, yet the
Lord will reward or recompense them with eternal life, through the
merciful continuation of his grace, and by virtue of the unchangeable
constancy of his promises made unto us.
XXIII. That those who are already in the possession of eternal life in
consequence of their faith and good works ought to be considered as
saints and glorified persons, and to be praised for their virtue and
imitated in all good actions of their life, but neither worshipped nor
invoked, for God only is to be prayed unto, and that through Jesus
Christ.
XXVIII. That God
does not only instruct us by his Word, but has also ordained certain
sacraments to be joined with it, as means to unite us to Jesus Christ,
and to make us partakers of his benefits; and that there are only two
of them belonging in common to all the members of the Church under the
New Testament - to wit, Baptism and the Lord's Supper.
XXIX. That Christ has instituted the sacrament of Baptism to be a
testimony of our adoption, and that therein we are cleansed from our
sins by the blood of Jesus Christ, and renewed in holiness of life.
XXX. That he has instituted the Holy Supper, or Eucharist, for the
nourishment of our souls, to the end that eating effectually the flesh
of Christ, and drinking effectually his blood, by a true and living
faith, and by the incomprehensible virtue of the Holy Spirit, and so
uniting ourselves most closely and inseparably to Christ, we come to
enjoy in him and by him the spiritual and eternal life.
Now to the end that every one may clearly see what our belief is as to
this point, we here insert the very expressions of that prayer which we
make use of before the Communion, as they are written in our Liturgy or
form of celebrating the Holy Supper, and likewise in our public
Catechism, which are to be seen at the end of our Psalms; these are the
words of the prayer:
'Seeing our Lord has not only once offered his body and blood for the
remission of our sins, but is willing also to communicate the same unto
us as the food of eternal life, we humbly beseech thee to grant us this
grace that in true sincerity of heart and with an ardent zeal we may
receive from him so great a benefit; that is, that we may be made
partakers of his body and blood, or rather of his whole self, by a sure
and certain faith.'
The words of the Liturgy are these: 'Let us then believe first of all
the promises which Christ (who is the infallible truth) has pronounced
with his own mouth, viz., that he will make us truly partakers of his
body and blood, that so we may possess him entirely, in such a manner
that he may live in us and we in him.'
The words of our Catechism are the same, Nella Dominica 53.
XXXI. That it is
necessary the Church should have pastor known by those who are employed
for that purpose to be well instructed and of a good life, as well to
preach the Word of God as to administer the sacraments, and wait upon
the flock of Christ (according to the rules of a good and holy
discipline), together with elders and deacons, after the manner of the
primitive Church.
XXXII. That God has established kings and magistrates to govern the
people, and that the people ought to be subject and obedient unto them,
by virtue of that ordination, not only for fear, but also for
conscience' sake, in all things that are conformable to the Word of
God, who is the King of kings and the Lord of lords.
XXXIII. Finally, that we ought to receive the symbol of the Apostles,
the Lord's Prayer, and the Decalogue as fundamentals of our faith and
our devotion.
Conclusion
And for a more ample declaration of our faith
we do here reiterate the same protestation which we caused to be
printed in 1603, that is to say, that we do agree in sound doctrine
with all the Reformed Churches of France, Great Britain, the Low
Countries, Germany, Switzerland, Bohemia, Poland, Hungary, and others,
as it is set forth by them in their confessions; as also in the
Confession of Augsburg, as it was explained by the author,[1] promising
to persevere constantly therein with the help of God, both in life and
death, and being ready to subscribe to that eternal truth of God with
our own blood, even as our ancestors have done from the days of the
Apostles, and especially in these latter ages.
Therefore we humbly entreat all the
Evangelical and Protestant Churches, notwithstanding our poverty and
lowness, to look upon us as true members of the mystical body of
Christ, suffering for his name's sake, and to continue unto us the help
of their prayers to God, and all other effects of their charity, as we
have heretofore abundantly experienced, for which we return them our
most humble thanks, entreating the Lord with all our heart to be their
rewarder, and to pour upon them the most precious blessings of grace
and glory, both in this life and in that which is to come. Amen.
1. Viz., the editio variata of 1540, which Calvin subscribed at
Strasburg.
XXIV. That God has
chosen one Church in the world for the salvation of men, and that this
Church has one only head and foundation, which is Jesus Christ.
XXV. That this Church is the company of the faithful, who, having been
elected by God before the foundation of the world, and called with a
holy calling, unite themselves to follow the Word of God, believing
whatsoever he teaches them therein, and living in his fear.
XXVI. That this Church can not fail, nor be annihilated, but must
endure forever {and that all the elect are upheld and preserved by the
power of God in such sort that they all persevere in the faith unto the
end, and remain united in the holy Church, as so many living members
thereof}.
XXVII. That all men ought to join with that Church, and to continue in
the communion thereof.