1689 Baptist Confession of Faith
Preface to the Second London Baptist Confession
1677
To The Judicial and Impartial Reader
Courteous Reader: It is now many years since divers of us (with other sober Christians then living, and walking in the way of the Lord, that we profess) did conceive ourselves to be under a necessity of publishing a Confession, of our Faith, for the information and satisfaction of those that did not thoroughly understand what our principles were, or had entertained prejudices against our profession, by reason of the strange representation of them by some men of note who had taken very wrong measures, and accordingly led others into misapprehension of us and them. And this was first put forth about the year 1643, in the name of seven congregations then gathered in London; since which time divers impressions thereof have been dispersed abroad, and our end proposed in good measure answered, inasmuch as many (and some of those men eminent both for piety and learning) were thereby satisfied that we were no way guilty of those heterodoxies and fundamental errors which had too frequently been charged upon us without ground or occasion given on our part.
CONFESSION
OF
FAITH
Put forth by the
ELDERS and BRETHREN
Of many
CONGREGATIONS
OF
Christians
(baptized upon Profession of their faith)
in London and the Country.
With the Heart mart believeth unto
righteousness, and with the
Mouth Confession is made unto Salvation, Rom. 10:10.
Search the Scriptures, John 5:39.
CONTENTS
FOREWORD
In England during the 1630's and 1640's
Congregationalists and Baptists of Calvinistic persuasion emerged from the Church of
England. Their early existence was marked by repeated cycles of persecution at the hands
of the established religion of crown and Parliament. The infamous Clarendon Code was
adopted in the 1660's to crush all dissent from the official religion of the state.
Periods of rigorous application and intervals of relaxation of these coercive acts haunted
Presbyterians, Congregationalists, and Baptists
alike.
Presbyterians and Congregationalists suffered less than did Baptists under this
harassment. No little reason for their relative success in resisting government tyranny
was their united front of doctrinal agreement. All Presbyterians stood by their
Westminster Confession of 1646. Congregationalists adopted virtually the same articles of
faith in the Savoy Confession of 1658. Feeling their substantial unity with paedobaptists
suffering under the same cruel injustice, Calvinistic Baptists met to publish their
substantial harmony with them in doctrine.
A circular letter was sent to particular Baptist churches in England and Wales asking each
assembly to send representatives to a meeting in London in 1677. A confession consciously
modeled after the Westminster Confession of Faith was approved and published. It has ever
since born the name of the Second London Confession. The First London Confession had been
issued by seven Baptist congregations of London in 1644. That first document had been
drawn up to distinguish newly organized Calvinistic Baptists from the Arminian Baptists
and the Anabaptists. Because this second London Confession was drawn up in dark hours of
oppression, it was issued anonymously.
A preface to the original publication of 1677 says in part: "... It is now many years
since diverse of us ... did conceive ourselves under a necessity of publishing a
Confession of our Faith, for the information and satisfaction of those that did not
thoroughly understand what our principles were, or had entertained prejudices against our
profession ... This was first put forth about the year 1643, in the name of seven
congregations then gathered in
London.. ."
"Forasmuch as this confession is not now commonly to be had; and also that many
others have since1 embraced the
same truth which is owned therein; it was judged necessary by us to join together in
giving a testimony to the world of our firm adhering to those wholesome principles ..
."
"We did conclude it necessary to confess ourselves the more fully and distinctly,...
and finding no defect in this regard in that fixed on by the Assembly 2, and after them by
those of the Congregational way, we did conclude it best to retain the same order in our
present confession ... for the most part without any variation of the terms ... making use
of the very same words with them both ... This we did to ... convince all that we have no
itch to clog religion with new words, but to readily acquiesce in that form of sound words
which hath been used by others before us ... In those things wherein we differ from
others, we have expressed ourselves with all candor and plainness ... Contention is most
remote from our design in all that we have done in this matter..."
William and Mary assumed England's throne in 1689. On May 24 of that very year the Act of
Toleration was enacted. Within two months, seven London pastors called for a general
meeting of Baptists from England and Wales. Representatives of one hundred and seven
congregations met in London from September third to the twelfth. They adopted the
Confession of 1677 with the following endorsement:
Preface to the Second London Baptist Confession
1689
WE the MINISTERS and MESSENGERS of and concerned for upwards of one hundred baptized congregations in England and Wales (denying Arminianism), being met together in London, from the third of the seventh month to the eleventh of the same, 1689, to consider of some things that might be for the glory of God, and the good of these congregations, have thought meet (for the satisfaction of all other Christians that differ from us in the point of Baptism) to recommend to their perusal the confession of our faith, which confession we own, as containing the doctrine of our faith and practice, and do desire that the members of our churches respectively do furnish themselves therewith,
| Hanserd Knollys | Pastor | Broken Wharf | London |
| William Kiffin | Pastor | Devonshire-square | London |
| John Harris | Pastor | Joiner's Hall | London |
| William Collins | Pastor | Petty France | London |
| Hercules Collins | Pastor | Wapping | London |
| Robert Steed | Pastor | Broken Wharf | London |
| Leonard Harrison | Pastor | Limehouse | London |
| George Barret | Pastor | Mile End Green | London |
| Isaac Lamb | Pastor | Pennington-street | London |
| Richard Adams | Minister | Shad Thames | Southwark |
| Benjamin Keath | Pastor | Horse-lie-down | Southwark |
| Andrew Gifford | Pastor | Bristol, Fryars | Som. & Glouc. |
| Thomas Vaux | Pastor | Broadmead | Som. & Glouc. |
| Thomas Winnel | Pastor | Taunton | Som. & Glouc. |
| James Hitt | Preacher | Dalwood | Dorset |
| Richard Tidmarsh | Minister | Oxford City | Osen |
| William Facey | Pastor | Reading | Berks |
| Samuel Buttel | Minister | Plymouth | Devon |
| Christopher Price | Minister | Abergavenny | Monmouth |
| Daniel Finch | Minister | Kingsworth | Herts |
| John Ball | Minister | Tiverton | Devon |
| Edmond White | Pastor | Evershall | Bedford |
| William Pritchard | Pastor | Blaenau | Monmouth |
| Paul Fruin | Minister | Warwick | Warwick |
| Richard Ring | Pastor | Southampton | Hants |
| John Tompkins | Minister | Abingdon | Berks |
| Toby Willes | Pastor | Bridewater | Somerset |
| John Carter | Steventon | Bedford | |
| James Webb | Devizes | Wilts. | |
| Richard Sutton | Pastor | Tring | Herts |
| Robert Knight | Pastor | Stukeley | Bucks |
| Edward Price | Pastor | Hereford-City | Hereford |
| William Phipps | Pastor | Exon | Devon |
| William Hankins | Pastor | Dimmock | Gloucester |
| Samuel Ewer | Pastor | Hemstead | Herts |
| Edward Man | Pastor | Houndsditch | London |
| Charles Archer | Pastor | Hick-Norton | Oxon |
Because the title page of the newly
subscribed creed bore the title "TheBaptist Confession of Faith adopted by the
ministers and messengers of the General Assembly which met in London in 1689" the
Second London Confession, originally composed in 1677, has ever since been called
"The 1689 Confession".
This became the most popular confession of Calvinistic Baptists in the English speaking
world. It enjoyed editions in Britain in 1693, 1699, 1719, 1720, 1791, 1809. In 1855 C. H.
Spurgeon issued a new edition. It was only the second year of his ministry at the New Park
Street Chapel. Spurgeon wrote, "I have thought it right to reprint in a cheap form
this excellent list of doctrines, which were subscribed to by the Baptist Ministers in the
year 1689. We need a banner because of the truth; it may be that this small volume may aid
the cause of the glorious gospel by testifying plainly what are its leading doctrines ...
May the Lord soon restore unto Zion a pure language, and may her watchmen see eye to
eye." He addressed these remarks to "all the Household of Faith, who rejoice in
the glorious doctrines of Free Grace." Other British editions have appeared in 1958,
1963, 1966, 1970, 1972, 1974.
In the later 1600's Benjamin Keach and another minister of London published the 1689
Confession with two articles added, one on "the laying on of hands" and
another''the singing of psalms". When Elias Keach, son of Benjamin, became a Baptist
minister in America in 1688, he became a part of the Calvinistic Baptists who formed the
Philadelphia Baptist Association in 1707. Through him the Second London Confession with
his father's addenda was adopted by the Philadelphia Association. For years the
association appealed to the confession, formally adopting it in 1742. The first edition of
the "Philadelphia Confession of Faith" was printed by Benjamin Franklin in 1743.
Under this name the 1689 confession became the definitive doctrinal statement of
Calvinistic Baptists throughout the colonial and early United States periods. Associations
in Virginia (1766) Rhode Island (1767), South Carolina (1767), Kentucky (1785), and
Tennessee (1788) adopted the confession. It came to be known in America 85 "The
Baptist Confession".
Familiarity with the Confession and its doctrines declined in the latter half of the 1 9th
and first half of the 20th centuries. But since God has remarkably revived Biblical
Calvinism among Baptists in recent days, interest in this historic confession has been
renewed.
In this edition care has been taken to be faithful to the original edition of 1677.
Changes have been made in spelling and punctuation to suit modern usage.
The words of C. H. Spurgeon are an appropriate conclusion to this introduction:
"This little volume," he wrote, "is not issued as an authoritative rule, or
code of faith, whereby you are to be fettered, but as an assistance to you in controversy,
a confirmation in faith, and a means of edification in righteous- ness. Here the younger
members of our church will have a body of divinity in small compass, and by means of the
Scriptural proofs, will be ready to give a reason for the hope that is in them.
Be not ashamed of your faith; remember it is the ancient gospel of martyrs, confessors,
reformers and saints. Above all, it is the truth of God, against which the gates of Hell
cannot prevail.
Let your lives adorn your faith, let your example adorn your creed. Above all live in
Christ Jesus, and walk in Him, giving credence to no teaching but that which is manifestly
approved of Him, and owned by the Holy Spirit. Cleave fast to the Word of God which is
here mapped out for you."
The Elders
Grace Baptist Church
Carlisle, Pennsylvania
1These early Baptists were conscious that the 1644 Calvinistic Baptist Confession predated the 1646 Presbyterian Confession and the 1658 Congregationalist Confession.
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