Waldenses Confession of 1120 A.D.
- We believe and firmly maintain all that is contained in the
twelve articles of the symbol, commonly called the apostles' creed, and we
regard as heretical whatever is inconsistent with the said twelve articles.
- We believe that there is one God - the Father, Son, and
Holy Spirit.
- We acknowledge for sacred canonical scriptures the books of
the Holy Bible. (Here follows the title of each, exactly conformable to our
received canon, but which it is deemed, on that account, quite unnecessary
to particularize.)
- The books above-mentioned teach us: That there is one GOD,
almighty, unbounded in wisdom, and infinite in goodness, and who, in His
goodness, has made all things. For He created Adam after His own image and
likeness. But through the enmity of the Devil, and his own disobedience,
Adam fell, sin entered into the world, and we became transgressors in and by
Adam.
- That Christ had been promised to the fathers who received
the law, to the end that, knowing their sin by the law, and their
unrighteousness and insufficiency, they might desire the coming of Christ to
make satisfaction for their sins, and to accomplish the law by Himself.
- That at the time appointed of the Father, Christ was born -
a time when iniquity everywhere abounded, to make it manifest that it was
not for the sake of any good in ourselves, for all were sinners, but that
He, who is true, might display His grace and mercy towards us.
- That Christ is our life, and truth, and peace, and
righteousness - our shepherd and advocate, our sacrifice and priest, who
died for the salvation of all who should believe, and rose again for their
justification.
- And we also firmly believe, that there is no other
mediator, or advocate with God the Father, but Jesus Christ. And as to the
Virgin Mary, she was holy, humble, and full of grace; and this we also
believe concerning all other saints, namely, that they are waiting in heaven
for the resurrection of their bodies at the day of judgment.
- We also believe, that, after this life, there are but two
places - one for those that are saved, the other for the damned, which [two]
we call paradise and hell, wholly denying that imaginary purgatory of
Antichrist, invented in opposition to the truth.
- Moreover, we have ever regarded all the inventions of men
[in the affairs of religion] as an unspeakable abomination before God; such
as the festival days and vigils of saints, and what is called holy-water,
the abstaining from flesh on certain days, and such like things, but above
all, the masses.
- We hold in abhorrence all human inventions, as proceeding
from Antichrist, which produce distress (Alluding probably to the voluntary
penances and mortification imposed by the Catholics on themselves), and are
prejudicial to the liberty of the mind.
- We consider the Sacraments as signs of holy things, or as
the visible emblems of invisible blessings. We regard it as proper and even
necessary that believers use these symbols or visible forms when it can be
done. Notwithstanding which, we maintain that believers may be saved without
these signs, when they have neither place nor opportunity of observing them.
- We acknowledge no sacraments [as of divine appointment] but
baptism and the Lord's supper.
- We honor the secular powers, with subjection, obedience,
promptitude, and payment.
