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The Westminster Larger Catechism
Questions 1-98
Question 1: What is the chief and highest end
of man?
Answer : Man’s chief and highest end
is to glorify God, and fully to enjoy him forever.
Question 2: How does it appear that there is a God?
Answer: The very light of nature in man, and the works of
God, declare plainly that there is a God; but his Word and Spirit only
do sufficiently and effectually reveal him unto men for their
salvation.
Question 3: What is the Word of God?
Answer: The holy Scriptures of the Old and New Testaments
are the Word of God, the only rule of faith and obedience.
Question 4: How does it appear that the Scriptures are the Word of
God?
Answer: The Scriptures manifest themselves to be the Word
of God, by their majesty and purity; by the consent of all the parts,
and the scope of the whole, which is to give all glory to God; by
their light and power to convince and convert sinners, to comfort and
build up believers unto salvation: but the Spirit of God bearing
witness by and with the Scriptures in the heart of man, is alone able
fully to persuade it that they are the very Word of God.
Question 5: What do the Scriptures principally teach?
Answer: The Scriptures principally teach,: What man is to
believe concerning God, and: What duty God requires of man.
Question 6: What do the Scriptures make known of God?
Answer: The Scriptures make known: What God is, the persons
in the Godhead, his decrees, and the execution of his decrees.
Question 7: What is God?
Answer: God is a Spirit, in and of himself infinite in
being, glory, blessedness, and perfection; all-sufficient, eternal,
unchangeable, incomprehensible, everywhere present, almighty, knowing
all things, most wise, most holy, most just, most merciful and
gracious, long-suffering, and abundant in goodness and truth.
Question 8: Are there more Gods than one?
Answer: There is but one only, the living and true God.
Question 9: How many persons are there in the Godhead?
Answer: There be three persons in the Godhead, the Father,
the Son, and the Holy Ghost; and these three are one true, eternal
God, the same in substance, equal in power and glory; although
distinguished by their personal properties.
Question 10: What are the personal properties of the three persons
in the Godhead?
Answer: It is proper to the Father to beget the Son, and to
the Son to be begotten of the Father, and to the Holy Ghost to proceed
from the Father and the Son from all eternity.
Question 11: How does it appear that the Son and the Holy Ghost are
God equal with the Father?
Answer: The Scriptures manifest that the Son and the Holy
Ghost are God equal with the Father, ascribing unto them such names,
attributes, works, and worship, as are proper to God only.
Question 12: What are the decrees of God?
Answer: God’s decrees are the wise, free, and holy acts
of the counsel of his will, whereby, from all eternity, he has, for
his own glory, unchangeably foreordained: Whatsoever comes to pass in
time, especially concerning angels and men.
Question 13: What has God especially decreed concerning angels and
men?
Answer: God, by an eternal and immutable decree, out of his
mere love, for the praise of his glorious grace, to be manifested in
due time, has elected some angels to glory; and in Christ has chosen
some men to eternal life, and the means thereof: and also, according
to his sovereign power, and the unsearchable counsel of his own will
(whereby he extends or withholds favor as he pleases), has passed by
and foreordained the rest to dishonor and wrath, to be for their sin
inflicted, to the praise of the glory of his justice.
Question 14: How does God execute his decrees?
Answer: God executes his decrees in the works of creation
and providence, according to his infallible foreknowledge, and the
free and immutable counsel of his own will.
Question 15: What is the work of creation?
Answer: The work of creation is that wherein God did in the
beginning, by the word of his power, make of nothing the world, and
all things therein, for himself, within the space of six days, and all
very good.
Question 16: How did God create angels?
Answer: God created all the angels spirits, immortal, holy,
excelling in knowledge, mighty in power, to execute his commandments,
and to praise his name, yet subject to change.
Question 17: How did God create man?
Answer: After God had made all other creatures, he created
man male and female; formed the body of the man of the dust of the
ground, and the woman of the rib of the man, endued them with living,
reasonable, and immortal souls; made them after his own image, in
knowledge, righteousness, and holiness; having the law of God written
in their hearts, and power to fulfill it, and dominion over the
creatures; yet subject to fall.
Question 18: What are God’s works of
providence?
Answer : God’s works of providence
are his most holy, wise, and powerful preserving and governing all his
creatures; ordering them, and all their actions, to his own glory.
Question 19: What is God’s providence towards the angels?
Answer: God by his providence permitted some of the angels,
willfully and irrecoverably, to fall into sin and damnation, limiting
and ordering that, and all their sins, to his own glory; and
established the rest in holiness and happiness; employing them all, at
his pleasure, in the administrations of his power, mercy, and justice.
Question 20: What was the providence of God toward man in the
estate in which he was created?
Answer: The providence of God toward man in the estate in
which he was created, was the placing him in paradise, appointing him
to dress it, giving him liberty to eat of the fruit of the earth;
putting the creatures under his dominion, and ordaining marriage for
his help; affording him communion with himself; instituting the
sabbath; entering into a covenant of life with him, upon condition of
personal, perfect, and perpetual obedience, of which the tree of life
was a pledge; and forbidding to eat of the tree of the knowledge of
good and evil, upon the pain of death.
Question 21: Did man continue in that estate wherein God at first
created him?
Answer: Our first parents being left to the freedom of
their own will, through the temptation of Satan, transgressed the
commandment of God in eating the forbidden fruit; and thereby fell
from the estate of innocency wherein they were created.
Question 22: Did all mankind fall in that first transgression?
Answer: The covenant being made with Adam as a public
person, not for himself only, but for his posterity, all mankind
descending from him by ordinary generation, sinned in him, and fell
with him in that first transgression.
Question 23: Into what estate did the fall bring mankind?
Answer: The fall brought mankind into an estate of sin and
misery.
Question 24: What is sin?
Answer: Sin is any want of conformity unto, or
transgression of, any law of God, given as a rule to the reasonable
creature.
Question 25: Wherein consists the sinfulness of that estate
whereinto man fell?
Answer: The sinfulness of that estate whereinto man fell,
consists in the guilt of Adam’s first sin, the want of that
righteousness wherein he was created, and the corruption of his
nature, whereby he is utterly indisposed, disabled, and made opposite
unto all that is spiritually good, and wholly inclined to all evil,
and that continually; which is commonly called original sin, and from
which do proceed all actual transgressions.
Question 26: How is original sin conveyed from our first parents
unto their posterity?
Answer: Original sin is conveyed from our first parents
unto their posterity by natural generation, so as all that proceed
from them in that way are conceived and born in sin.
Question 27: What misery did the fall bring upon mankind?
Answer: The fall brought upon mankind the loss of communion
with God, his displeasure and curse; so as we are by nature children
of wrath, bond slaves to Satan, and justly liable to all punishments
in this world, and that which is to come.
Question 28: What are the punishments of sin in this world?
Answer: The punishments of sin in this world are either
inward, as blindness of mind, a reprobate sense, strong delusions,
hardness of heart, horror of conscience, and vile affections; or
outward, as the curse of God upon the creatures for our sakes, and all
other evils that befall us in our bodies, names, estates, relations,
and employments; together with death itself.
Question 29: What are the punishments of sin in the world to come?
Answer: The punishments of sin in the world to come, are
everlasting separation from the comfortable presence of God, and most
grievous torments in soul and body, without intermission, in hell fire
forever.
Question 30: Does God leave all mankind to perish in the estate of
sin and misery?
Answer: God does not leave all men to perish in the estate
of sin and misery, into which they fell by the breach of the first
covenant, commonly called the covenant of works; but of his mere love
and mercy delivers his elect out of it, and brings them into an estate
of salvation by the second covenant, commonly called the covenant of
grace.
Question 31: With whom was the covenant of grace made?
Answer: The covenant of grace was made with Christ as the
second Adam, and in him with all the elect as his seed.
Question 32: How is the grace of God manifested in the second
covenant?
Answer: The grace of God is manifested in the second
covenant, in that he freely provides and offers to sinners a Mediator,
and life and salvation by him; and requiring faith as the condition to
interest them in him, promises and gives his Holy Spirit to all his
elect, to work in them that faith, with all other saving graces; and
to enable them unto all holy obedience, as the evidence of the truth
of their faith and thankfulness to God, and as the way which he has
appointed them to salvation.
Question 33: Was the covenant of grace always administered after
one and the same manner?
Answer: The covenant of grace was not always administered
after the same manner, but the administrations of it under the Old
Testament were different from those under the New.
Question 34: How was the covenant of grace administered under the
Old Testament?
Answer: The covenant of grace was administered under the
Old Testament, by promises, prophecies, sacrifices, circumcision, the
passover, and other types and ordinances, which did all foresignify
Christ then to come, and were for that time sufficient to build up the
elect in faith in the promised Messiah, by whom they then had full
remission of sin, and eternal salvation.
Question 35: How is the covenant of grace administered under the
New Testament?
Answer: Under the New Testament, when Christ the substance
was exhibited, the same covenant of grace was and still is to be
administered in the preaching of the Word, and the administration of
the sacraments of Baptism and the Lord’s Supper; in which grace and
salvation are held forth in more fullness, evidence, and efficacy, to
all nations.
Question 36: Who is the Mediator of the covenant of grace?
Answer: The only Mediator of the covenant of grace is the
Lord Jesus Christ, who, being the eternal Son of God, of one substance
and equal with the Father, in the fullness of time became man, and so
was and continues to be God and man, in two entire distinct natures,
and one person, forever.
Question 37: How did Christ, being the Son of
God, become man?
Answer : Christ the Son of God became
man, by taking to himself a true body, and a reasonable soul, being
conceived by the power of the Holy Ghost in the womb of the virgin Mary,
of her substance, and born of her, yet without sin.
Question 38: Why was it requisite that the Mediator should be God?
Answer: It was requisite that the Mediator should be God,
that he might sustain and keep the human nature from sinking under the
infinite wrath of God, and the power of death; give worth and efficacy
to his sufferings, obedience, and intercession; and to satisfy God’s
justice, procure his favor, purchase a peculiar people, give his
Spirit to them, conquer all their enemies, and bring them to
everlasting salvation.
Question 39: Why was it requisite that the Mediator should be man?
Answer: It was requisite that the Mediator should be man,
that he might advance our nature, perform obedience to the law, suffer
and make intercession for us in our nature, have a fellow feeling of
our infirmities; that we might receive the adoption of sons, and have
comfort and access with boldness unto the throne of grace.
Question 40: Why was it requisite that the Mediator should be God
and man in one person?
Answer: It was requisite that the Mediator, who was to
reconcile God and man, should himself be both God and man, and this in
one person, that the proper works of each nature might be accepted of
God for us, and relied on by us, as the works of the whole person.
Question 41: Why was our Mediator called Jesus?
Answer: Our Mediator was called Jesus, because he saves his
people from their sins.
Question 42: Why was our Mediator called Christ?
Answer: Our Mediator was called Christ, because he was
anointed with the Holy Ghost above measure; and so set apart, and
fully furnished with all authority and ability, to execute the offices
of prophet, priest, and king of his church, in the estate both of his
humiliation and exaltation.
Question 43: How does Christ execute the office of a prophet?
Answer: Christ executes the office of a prophet, in his
revealing to the church, in all ages, by his Spirit and Word, in
divers ways of administration, the whole will of God, in all things
concerning their edification and salvation.
Question 44: How does Christ execute the office of a priest?
Answer: Christ executes the office of a priest, in his once
offering himself a sacrifice without spot to God, to be a
reconciliation for the sins of his people; and in making continual
intercession for them.
Question 45: How does Christ execute the office of a king?
Answer: Christ executes the office of a king, in calling
out of the world a people to himself, and giving them officers, laws,
and censures, by which he visibly governs them; in bestowing saving
grace upon his elect, rewarding their obedience, and correcting them
for their sins, preserving and supporting them under all their
temptations and sufferings, restraining and overcoming all their
enemies, and powerfully ordering all things for his own glory, and
their good; and also in taking vengeance on the rest, who know not
God, and obey not the gospel.
Question 46: What was the estate of Christ’s humiliation?
Answer: The estate of Christ’s humiliation was that low
condition, wherein he for our sakes, emptying himself of his glory,
took upon him the form of a servant, in his conception and birth,
life, death, and after his death, until his resurrection.
Question 47: How did Christ humble himself in his conception and
birth?
Answer: Christ humbled himself in his conception and birth,
in that, being from all eternity the Son of God, in the bosom of the
Father, he was pleased in the fullness of time to become the son of
man, made of a woman of low estate, and to be born of her; with divers
circumstances of more than ordinary abasement.
Question 48: How did Christ humble himself in his life?
Answer: Christ humbled himself in his life, by subjecting
himself to the law, which he perfectly fulfilled; and by conflicting
with the indignities of the world, temptations of Satan, and
infirmities in his flesh, whether common to the nature of man, or
particularly accompanying that his low condition.
Question 49: How did Christ humble himself in his death?
Answer: Christ humbled himself in his death, in that having
been betrayed by Judas, forsaken by his disciples, scorned and
rejected by the world, condemned by Pilate, and tormented by his
persecutors; having also conflicted with the terrors of death, and the
powers of darkness, felt and borne the weight of God’s wrath, he
laid down his life an offering for sin, enduring the painful,
shameful, and cursed death of the cross.
Question 50: Wherein consisted Christ’s humiliation after his
death?
Answer: Christ’s humiliation after his death consisted in
his being buried, and continuing in the state of the dead, and under
the power of death till the third day; which has been otherwise
expressed in these words, he descended into hell.
Question 51: What was the estate of Christ’s exaltation?
Answer: The estate of Christ’s exaltation comprehends his
resurrection, ascension, sitting at the right hand of the Father, and
his coming again to judge the world.
Question 52: How was Christ exalted in his resurrection?
Answer: Christ was exalted in his resurrection, in that,
not having seen corruption in death (of which it was not possible for
him to be held), and having the very same body in which he suffered,
with the essential properties thereof (but without mortality, and
other common infirmities belonging to this life), really united to his
soul, he rose again from the dead the third day by his own power;
whereby he declared himself to be the Son of God, to have satisfied
divine justice, to have vanquished death, and him that had the power
of it, and to be Lord of quick and dead: all which he did as a public
person, the head of his church, for their justification, quickening in
grace, support against enemies, and to assure them of their
resurrection from the dead at the last day.
Question 53: How was Christ exalted in his ascension?
Answer: Christ was exalted in his ascension, in that having
after his resurrection often appeared unto and conversed with his
apostles, speaking to them of the things pertaining to the kingdom of
God, and giving them commission to preach the gospel to all nations,
forty days after his resurrection, he, in our nature, and as our head,
triumphing over enemies, visibly went up into the highest heavens,
there to receive gifts for men, to raise up our affections thither,
and to prepare a place for us, where himself is, and shall continue
till his second coming at the end of the world.
Question 54: How is Christ exalted in his sitting at the right hand
of God?
Answer: Christ is exalted in his sitting at the right hand
of God, in that as God-man he is advanced to the highest favor with
God the Father, with all fullness of joy, glory, and power over all
things in heaven and earth; and does gather and defend his church, and
subdue their enemies; furnishes his ministers and people with gifts
and graces, and makes intercession for them.
Question 55: How does Christ make intercession?
Answer: Christ makes intercession, by his appearing in our
nature continually before the Father in heaven, in the merit of his
obedience and sacrifice on earth, declaring his will to have it
applied to all believers; answering all accusations against them, and
procuring for them quiet of conscience, notwithstanding daily
failings, access with boldness to the throne of grace, and acceptance
of their persons and services.
Question 56: How is Christ to be exalted in his coming again to
judge the world?
Answer: Christ is to be exalted in his coming again to
judge the world, in that he, who was unjustly judged and condemned by
wicked men, shall come again at the last day in great power, and in
the full manifestation of his own glory, and of his Father’s, with
all his holy angels, with a shout, with the voice of the archangel,
and with the trumpet of God, to judge the world in righteousness.
Question 57: What benefits has Christ procured by his mediation?
Answer: Christ, by his mediation, has procured redemption,
with all other benefits of the covenant of grace.
Question 58: How do we come to be made partakers of the benefits
which Christ has procured?
Answer: We are made partakers of the benefits which Christ
has procured, by the application of them unto us, which is the work
especially of God the Holy Ghost.
Question 59: Who are made partakers of redemption through Christ?
Answer: Redemption is certainly applied, and effectually
communicated, to all those for whom Christ has purchased it; who are
in time by the Holy Ghost enabled to believe in Christ according to
the gospel.
Question 60: Can they who have never heard the gospel, and so know
not Jesus Christ, nor believe in him, be saved by their living according
to the light of nature?
Answer: They who, having never heard the gospel, know not
Jesus Christ, and believe not in him, cannot be saved, be they never
so diligent to frame their lives according to the light of nature, or
the laws of that religion which they profess; neither is there
salvation in any other, but in Christ alone, who is the Savior only of
his body the church.
Question 61: Are all they saved who hear the gospel, and live in
the church?
Answer: All that hear the gospel, and live in the visible
church, are not saved; but they only who are true members of the
church invisible.
Question 62: What is the visible church?
Answer: The visible church is a society made up of all such
as in all ages and places of the world do profess the true religion,
and of their children.
Question 63: What are the special privileges of the visible church?
Answer: The visible church has the privilege of being under
God’s special care and government; of being protected and preserved
in all ages, not withstanding the opposition of all enemies; and of
enjoying the communion of saints, the ordinary means of salvation, and
offers of grace by Christ to all the members of it in the ministry of
the gospel, testifying, that whosoever believes in him shall be saved,
and excluding none that will come unto him.
Question 64: What is the invisible church?
Answer: The invisible church is the whole number of the
elect, that have been, are, or shall be gathered into one under Christ
the head.
Question 65: What special benefits do the members of the invisible
church enjoy by Christ?
Answer: The members of the invisible church by Christ enjoy
union and communion with him in grace and glory.
Question 66: What is that union which the elect have with Christ?
Answer: The union which the elect have with Christ is the
work of God’s grace, whereby they are spiritually and mystically,
yet really and inseparably, joined to Christ as their head and
husband; which is done in their effectual calling.
Question 67: What is effectual calling?
Answer: Effectual calling is the work of God’s almighty
power and grace, whereby (out of his free and special love to his
elect, and from nothing in them moving him thereunto) he does, in his
accepted time, invite and draw them to Jesus Christ, by his Word and
Spirit; savingly enlightening their minds, renewing and powerfully
determining their wills, so as they (although in themselves dead in
sin) are hereby made willing and able freely to answer his call, and
to accept and embrace the grace offered and conveyed therein.
Question 68: Are the elect only effectually called?
Answer: All the elect, and they only, are effectually
called; although others may be, and often are, outwardly called by the
ministry of the Word, and have some common operations of the Spirit;
who, for their willful neglect and contempt of the grace offered to
them, being justly left in their unbelief, do never truly come to
Jesus Christ.
Question 69: What is the communion in grace which the members of
the invisible church have with Christ?
Answer: The communion in grace which the members of the
invisible church have with Christ, is their partaking of the virtue of
his mediation, in their justification, adoption, sanctification, and:
Whatever else, in this life, manifests their union with him.
Question 70: What is justification?
Answer: Justification is an act of God’s free grace unto
sinners, in which he pardons all their sins, accepts and accounts
their persons righteous in his sight; not for any thing wrought in
them, or done by them, but only for the perfect obedience and full
satisfaction of Christ, by God imputed to them, and received by faith
alone.
Question 71: How is justification an act of God’s free grace?
Answer: Although Christ, by his obedience and death, did
make a proper, real, and full satisfaction to God’s justice in the
behalf of them that are justified; yet inasmuch as God accepts the
satisfaction from a surety, which he might have demanded of them, and
did provide this surety, his own only Son, imputing his righteousness
to them, and requiring nothing of them for their justification but
faith, which also is his gift, their justification is to them of free
grace.
Question 72: What is justifying faith?
Answer: Justifying faith is a saving grace, wrought in the
heart of a sinner by the Spirit and Word of God, whereby he, being
convinced of his sin and misery, and of the disability in himself and
all other creatures to recover him out of his lost condition, not only
assents to the truth of the promise of the gospel, but receives and
rests upon Christ and his righteousness, therein held forth, for
pardon of sin, and for the accepting and accounting of his person
righteous in the sight of God for salvation.
Question 73: How does faith justify a sinner in the sight of God?
Answer: Faith justifies a sinner in the sight of God, not
because of those other graces which do always accompany it, or of good
works that are the fruits of it, nor as if the grace of faith, or any
act thereof, were imputed to him for his justification; but only as it
is an instrument by which he receives and applies Christ and his
righteousness.
Question 74: What is adoption?
Answer: Adoption is an act of the free grace of God, in and
for his only Son Jesus Christ, whereby all those that are justified
are received into the number of his children, have his name put upon
them, the Spirit of his Son given to them, are under his fatherly care
and dispensations, admitted to all the liberties and privileges of the
sons of God, made heirs of all the promises, and fellow heirs with
Christ in glory.
Question 75: What is sanctification?
Answer: Sanctification is a work of God’s grace, whereby
they whom God has, before the foundation of the world, chosen to be
holy, are in time, through the powerful operation of his Spirit
applying the death and resurrection of Christ unto them, renewed in
their whole man after the image of God; having the seeds of repentance
unto life, and all other saving graces, put into their hearts, and
those graces so stirred up, increased, and strengthened, as that they
more and more die unto sin, and rise unto newness of life.
Question 76: What is repentance unto life?
Answer: Repentance unto life is a saving grace, wrought in
the heart of a sinner by the Spirit and Word of God, whereby, out of
the sight and sense, not only of the danger, but also of the
filthiness and odiousness of his sins, and upon the apprehension of
God’s mercy in Christ to such as are penitent, he so grieves for and
hates his sins, as that he turns from them all to God, purposing and
endeavoring constantly to walk with him in all the ways of new
obedience.
Question 77: Wherein do justification and sanctification differ?
Answer: Although sanctification be inseparably joined with
justification, yet they differ, in that God in justification imputes
the righteousness of Christ; in sanctification his Spirit infuses
grace, and enables to the exercise thereof; in the former, sin is
pardoned; in the other, it is subdued: the one does equally free all
believers from the revenging wrath of God, and that perfectly in this
life, that they never fall into condemnation; the other is neither
equal in all, nor in this life perfect in any, but growing up to
perfection.
Question 78: Whence arises the imperfection of sanctification in
believers?
Answer: The imperfection of sanctification in believers
arises from the remnants of sin abiding in every part of them, and the
perpetual lusting of the flesh against the spirit; whereby they are
often foiled with temptations, and fall into many sins, are hindered
in all their spiritual services, and their best works are imperfect
and defiled in the sight of God.
Question 79: May not true believers, by reason of their
imperfections, and the many temptations and sins they are overtaken with,
fall away from the state of grace?
Answer: True believers, by reason of the unchangeable love
of God, and his decree and covenant to give them perseverance, their
inseparable union with Christ, his continual intercession for them,
and the Spirit and seed of God abiding in them, can neither totally
nor finally fall away from the state of grace, but are kept by the
power of God through faith unto salvation.
Question 80: Can true believers be infallibly assured that they are
in the estate of grace, and that they shall persevere therein unto
salvation?
Answer: Such as truly believe in Christ, and endeavor to
walk in all good conscience before him, may, without extraordinary
revelation, by faith grounded upon the truth of God’s promises, and
by the Spirit enabling them to discern in themselves those graces to
which the promises of life are made, and bearing witness with their
spirits that they are the children of God, be infallibly assured that
they are in the estate of grace, and shall persevere therein unto
salvation.
Question 81: Are all true believers at all times assured of their
present being in the estate of grace, and that they shall be saved?
Answer: Assurance of grace and salvation not being of the
essence of faith, true believers may wait long before they obtain it;
and, after the enjoyment thereof, may have it weakened and
intermitted, through manifold distempers, sins, temptations, and
desertions; yet are they never left without such a presence and
support of the Spirit of God as keeps them from sinking into utter
despair.
Question 82: What is the communion in glory which the members of
the invisible church have with Christ?
Answer: The communion in glory which the members of the
invisible church have with Christ, is in this life, immediately after
death, and at last perfected at the resurrection and day of judgment.
Question 83: What is the communion in glory with Christ which the
members of the invisible church enjoy in this life?
Answer: The members of the invisible church have
communicated to them in this life the firstfruits of glory with
Christ, as they are members of him their head, and so in him are
interested in that glory which he is fully possessed of; and, as an
earnest thereof, enjoy the sense of God’s love, peace of conscience,
joy in the Holy Ghost, and hope of glory; as, on the contrary, sense
of God’s revenging wrath, horror of conscience, and a fearful
expectation of judgment, are to the wicked the beginning of their
torments which they shall endure after death.
Question 84: Shall all men die?
Answer: Death being threatened as the wages of sin, it is
appointed unto all men once to die; for that all have sinned.
Question 85: Death, being the wages of sin, why are not the
righteous delivered from death, seeing all their sins are forgiven in
Christ?
Answer: The righteous shall be delivered from death itself
at the last day, and even in death are delivered from the sting and
curse of it; so that, although they die, yet it is out of God’s
love, to free them perfectly from sin and misery, and to make them
capable of further communion with Christ in glory, which they then
enter upon.
Question 86: What is the communion in glory with Christ, which the
members of the invisible church enjoy immediately after death?
Answer: The communion in glory with Christ, which the
members of the invisible church enjoy immediately after death, is, in
that their souls are then made perfect in holiness, and received into
the highest heavens, where they behold the face of God in light and
glory, waiting for the full redemption of their bodies, which even in
death continue united to Christ, and rest in their graves as in their
beds, till at the last day they be again united to their souls.
Whereas the souls of the wicked are at their death cast into hell,
where they remain in torments and utter darkness, and their bodies
kept in their graves, as in their prisons, till the resurrection and
judgment of the great day.
Question 87: What are we to believe concerning the resurrection?
Answer: We are to believe, that at the last day there shall
be a general resurrection of the dead, both of the just and unjust:
when they that are then found alive shall in a moment be changed; and
the selfsame bodies of the dead which were laid in the grave, being
then again united to their souls forever, shall be raised up by the
power of Christ. The bodies of the just, by the Spirit of Christ, and
by virtue of his resurrection as their head, shall be raised in power,
spiritual, incorruptible, and made like to his glorious body; and the
bodies of the wicked shall be raised up in dishonor by him, as an
offended judge.
Question 88: What shall immediately follow after the resurrection?
Answer: Immediately after the resurrection shall follow the
general and final judgment of angels and men; the day and hour whereof
no man knows, that all may watch and pray, and be ever ready for the
coming of the Lord.
Question 89: What shall be done to the wicked at the day of
judgment?
Answer: At the day of judgment, the wicked shall be set on
Christ’s left hand, and, upon clear evidence, and full conviction of
their own consciences, shall have the fearful but just sentence of
condemnation pronounced against them; and thereupon shall be cast out
from the favorable presence of God, and the glorious fellowship with
Christ, his saints, and all his holy angels, into hell, to be punished
with unspeakable torments, both of body and soul, with the devil and
his angels forever.
Question 90: What shall be done to the righteous at the day of
judgment?
Answer: At the day of judgment, the righteous, being caught
up to Christ in the clouds, shall be set on his right hand, and there
openly acknowledged and acquitted, shall join with him in the judging
of reprobate angels and men, and shall be received into heaven, where
they shall be fully and forever freed from all sin and misery; filled
with inconceivable joys, made perfectly holy and happy both in body
and soul, in the company of innumerable saints and holy angels, but
especially in the immediate vision and fruition of God the Father, of
our Lord Jesus Christ, and of the Holy Spirit, to all eternity. And
this is the perfect and full communion, which the members of the
invisible church shall enjoy with Christ in glory, at the resurrection
and day of judgment.
Question 91: What is the duty which God requires of man?
Answer: The duty which God requires of man, is obedience to
his revealed will.
Question 92: What did God at first reveal unto man as the rule of
his obedience?
Answer: The rule of obedience revealed to Adam in the
estate of innocence, and to all mankind in him, besides a special
command not to eat of the fruit of the tree of the knowledge of good
and evil, was the moral law.
Question 93: What is the moral law?
Answer: The moral law is the declaration of the will of God
to mankind, directing and binding everyone to personal, perfect, and
perpetual conformity and obedience thereunto, in the frame and
disposition of the whole man, soul and body, and in performance of all
those duties of holiness and righteousness which he owes to God and
man: promising life upon the fulfilling, and threatening death upon
the breach of it.
Question 94: Is there any use of the moral law to man since the
fall?
Answer: Although no man, since the fall, can attain to
righteousness and life by the moral law; yet there is great use
thereof, as well common to all men, as peculiar either to the
unregenerate, or the regenerate.
Question 95: Of what use is the moral law to all men?
Answer: The moral law is of use to all men, to inform them
of the holy nature and will of God, and of their duty, binding them to
walk accordingly; to convince them of their disability to keep it, and
of the sinful pollution of their nature, hearts, and lives; to humble
them in the sense of their sin and misery, and thereby help them to a
clearer sight of the need they have of Christ, and of the perfection
of his obedience.
Question 96: What particular use is there of the moral law to
unregenerate men?
Answer: The moral law is of use to unregenerate men, to
awaken their consciences to flee from wrath to come, and to drive them
to Christ; or, upon their continuance in the estate and way of sin, to
leave them inexcusable, and under the curse thereof.
Question 97: What special use is there of the moral law to the
regenerate?
Answer: Although they that are regenerate, and believe in
Christ, be delivered from the moral law as a covenant of works, so as
thereby they are neither justified nor condemned; yet, besides the
general uses thereof common to them with all men, it is of special
use, to show them: How much they are bound to Christ for his
fulfilling it, and enduring the curse thereof in their stead, and for
their good; and thereby to provoke them to more thankfulness, and to
express the same in their greater care to conform themselves thereunto
as the rule of their obedience.
Question 98: Where is the moral law summarily comprehended?
Answer: The moral law is summarily comprehended in the ten
commandments, which were delivered by the voice of God upon Mount
Sinai, and written by him in two tables of stone; and are recorded in
the twentieth chapter of Exodus. The four first commandments
containing our duty to God, and the other six our duty to man.
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