March 22, 2010

The Westminster Standards Database

…looks to be a very helpful resource for searching and for learning The Westminster Standards.

Especially helpful is the quiz you can take to help you memorise the Larger & Shorter Catechism. Their site will ask you a question (from your nominated starting position) and you must type in the correct answer. Punctuation isn’t important, but if you do get it wrong it allows you to compare your answer with the correct one. It’s even colour coded!

Go and visit The Westminster Standards Database.

Thanks to Providence OPC for putting this together and to Enrique who brought it to my attention.

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January 17, 2010

Read the Westminster Standards in 40 Days

Joe Holland has organised a group of people online to read through the Westminster Standards in 40 days. His reading plan began yesterday / today (depending on your timezone) but it isn’t too late to start. I’ll be beginning today.

The Westminster Standards include the Westminster Confession of Faith (WCF), the Westminster Larger Catechism (WLC) and the Westminster Shorter Catechism (WSC).

You may also be blessed listening to Dr. Wayne Spear give five lectures on the history of the Westminster Assembly that I posted here last year.

If you’re on Twitter be sure to use the official hashtag, #wcs40.

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November 23, 2009

11 Arguments for Limited Atonement

Dr. Robert Shaw offers 11 arguments for limited atonement as he comments on WCF 8:8:

The sacrifice of Christ derived infinite value from the dignity of his person; it must, therefore, have been intrinsically sufficient to expiate the sins of the whole human race had it been so intended; but, in the designation of the Father, and in the intention of Christ himself, it was limited to a definite number, who shall ultimately obtain salvation. This important truth may be confirmed by the following arguments:

1. Restrictive terms are frequently employed in Scripture to express the objects of the death of Christ: “He bare the sin of many.” “He gave his life a ransom for many.” (Isa. 53:12; Matt. 20:28). Does not this intimate that Christ died, not for all men, but only for many?

2. Those for whom Christ died are distinguished from others by discriminating characters. They are called the sheep, John x 15; the church (Eph. 5:25); God’s elect (Rom. 8:33); the children of God (John 11:52).

3. Those whom Christ redeemed by his blood are said to be “redeemed from among men” (Rev. 14:4), which, if Christ had redeemed all men, would be an unmeaning and inconsistent phrase; they are also said to be “redeemed out of every kindred,” &c. (Rev. 5:9), which certainly implies that only some of every kindred are redeemed.

4. The redemption obtained by Christ is restricted to those who were “chosen in him,” and whom the Father gave to him to redeem by his death (Eph. 1:4, 7; John 17:2).

5. Christ died in the character of a surety, and therefore he laid down his life only for those whom he represented, or for his spiritual seed (Isa. 53:10).

6. The intention of Christ in laying down his life was, not merely to obtain for those for whom he died a possibility of salvation, but actually to save them—to bring them to the real possession and enjoyment of eternal salvation (Eph. 5:25, 26; Tit. 2:14; 1 Pet. 3:18; 1 Thess. 5:10). From this, it inevitably follows, that Christ died only for those who shall be saved in him with an everlasting salvation.

7. The intercession of Christ proceeds upon the ground of his atoning sacrifice; they must, therefore, be of the same extent with regard to their objects; but he does not pray for the world, but only for those who were given him out of the world; his sacrifice must, therefore, be restricted to that definite number (1 John 2:1, 2; John 17:9).

8. An apostle infers from the greatness of God’s love in delivering up his Son to death for sinners, that he will not withhold from them any of the blessings of salvation; we must, therefore, conclude that Christ did not die for all mankind (Rom. 8:32).

9. The same apostle infers the certainty of our salvation by the life of Christ, from our reconciliation to God by his death; now, since all are not saved by his life, we must conclude that all were not reconciled by his death (Rom. 5:10).

10. Christ, by his death, procured for his people not only salvation, but all the means leading to the enjoyment of it; consequently, his intention in dying must be limited to those who do repent and believe, and not extended to the whole human race.

11. The doctrine that Christ died for all men leads to many absurd consequences, such as: That Christ shed his blood for many in vain, since all are not saved; that he laid down his life in absolute uncertainty whether any of the human race would be eventually saved; that he shed his blood for millions who, at the very moment of his death, were consigned to the pit of everlasting destruction; that he died for those for whom he does not intercede; that he died for those to whom he never sent the means of salvation, yea, to some of whom he even forbade his gospel to be preached (Matt. 10:5; Rom. 10:14); and that God acts unjustly in inflicting everlasting punishment upon men for those very transgressions for which he has already received full satisfaction by the death of Christ. To affirm any of these things, would be blasphemous in the highest degree, and, therefore, that doctrine which involves such consequences must be unscriptural.

Taken from The Reformed Faith: An Exposition of the Westminster Confession of Faith (pp. 158-59)

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October 28, 2009

Hoagies & Stogies: Sabbath

Following on from my recent link to A Sabbath of Solemn Rest; those interested in the Sabbath may find the recent Hoagies & Stogies debate on the matter edifying.

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September 29, 2009

“Improving” Our Baptism

Question 167 of the Larger Catechism asks, “How is our baptism to be improved by us?” The catechism’s answer is as follows:

The needful but much neglected duty of improving our baptism, is to be performed by us all our life long, especially in the time of temptation, and when we are present at the administration of it to others; by serious and thankful consideration of the nature of it, and of the ends for which Christ instituted it, the privileges and benefits conferred and sealed thereby, and our solemn vow made therein; by being humbled for our sinful defilement, our falling short of, and walking contrary to, the grace of baptism, and our engagements; by growing up to assurance of pardon of sin, and of all other blessings sealed to us in that sacrament; by drawing strength from the death and resurrection of Christ, into whom we are baptized, for the mortifying of sin, and quickening of grace; and by endeavoring to live by faith, to have our conversation in holiness and righteousness, as those that have therein given up their names to Christ; and to walk in brotherly love, as being baptized by the same Spirit into one body.

Thanks to The Whittenberg Door I became aware of an article by Alan D. Strange of the OPC where he comments:

This answer suggests that “improving our baptism” is frequently neglected to our detriment. We ought to make much of our baptism, especially in the time of temptation and when we are present at the baptism of others. Luther, when tempted, would often reply, “I am a baptized man.” This was his vivid way of resisting the devil and reminding himself that, because he was declared God’s freedman, his freedom was to be used, not in servitude to sin, but in joyful service to Christ. Temptation always involves the enticement to idolize the creature, perverting God’s good gifts from their proper usage, enlisting the creature to provide what only the Creator can provide. As we remember that we are Christ’s, signed and sealed as his, we are strengthened to die to sin and live to righteousness.

We ought, then, seriously and thankfully to consider the nature of our baptism. Christ instituted it to apply the blood that cleanses us from all sin, both to justify and to sanctify us. Our baptism speaks to us of that unqualified acceptance that we have with our God by his declaration of righteousness that we enjoy in justification, and that perfectly in this life. It also speaks to us of the transformative work that goes on in sanctification, a work neither equal in all, nor in this life perfect in any, but growing up to perfection (WLC 77). Considering all the ways that WLC 167 speaks about improving our baptism, Vos writes that “these various experiences and duties, taken together, mean a continuous, serious undertaking to live a faithful, consistent Christian life, according to the teachings of the Word of God, all along the line. As baptism stands for salvation from sin, improving our baptism involves taking salvation from sin seriously, in actual living experience.”

Strange discusses baptism further in his article Baptism in our Confessional Standards.

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September 18, 2009

Spear on The History of the Westminster Assembly

Dr. Wayne Spear is professor emeritus of systematic theology at the Reformed Presbyterian Theological Seminary, having served for thirty-five years as an active faculty member. His doctoral dissertation was on The Form of Presbyterian Church Government, and he has become a recognized expert on the Assembly and the Confession. Dr. Spear currently serves as a ruling elder in his local church. He and his wife of fifty years, Mary, have five children and twenty-six grandchildren.

In April 2009, Dr. Wayne Spear delivered a series of five edifying lectures on the history of the Westminster Assembly.

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September 16, 2009

The Westminster Confession of Faith Today

And so it is that chapter by chapter, the Westminster Confession of Faith traces with bold strokes the great history of our redemption. The sad realities of the fall, God’s gracious covenants with man, the stunning announcement of salvation, and our sure hope of eternal life – all these are sketched out here in bold, but considered strokes. Who can read this text and not be warned that those who ignore the Holy Scripture are doomed to stumble through the world in darkness? And who can read this Confession and not see that those who embrace the true God, believe what he promises, and walk by his precepts, will never be without a guide or a light for this life? It is because of the clarity of this gospel message in all of its parts that the Westminster Confession of Faith finds itself in the first rank of great Christian creeds. Perhaps it is the wisest of creeds in its teaching and the finest in its doctrinal expression. Certainly it is a reliable guide to the Scriptures, which are the only guide to God. It is my hope that all who follow its directions will find their way to the Father’s home, through the grace and mercy of the Son and by the power of his Holy Spirit.

Read the rest of Chad Van Dixhoorn’s thoughts on the Westminster Confession of Faith at Reformation21

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September 7, 2009

Westminster Confession of Faith: Supra or Infra?

A question that has received some treatment in the secondary literature of late centers on whether the WCF is a supralapsarian or infralapsarian document.  Despite the recent work of Guy Richard, I remain persuaded that the Confession is non-committal, and therefore allows a spectrum of opinions.

Read the whole article at Meet the Puritans

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