Canons of Dordt
The Second Main Point of Doctrine
Christ's Death and Human Redemption Through Its
Article 1: The Punishment Which God's Justice
Requires
God is not only supremely merciful, but also
supremely just. His justice requires (as he has revealed himself
in the Word) that the sins we have committed against his infinite
majesty be punished with both temporal and eternal punishments, of
soul as well as body. We cannot escape these punishments unless
satisfaction is given to God's justice.
Article 2: The Satisfaction Made by Christ
Since, however, we ourselves cannot give this
satisfaction or deliver ourselves from God's anger, God in his
boundless mercy has given us as a guarantee his only begotten Son,
who was made to be sin and a curse for us, in our place, on the
cross, in order that he might give satisfaction for us.
Article 3: The Infinite Value of Christ's Death
This death of God's Son is the only and entirely
complete sacrifice and satisfaction for sins; it is of infinite
value and worth, more than sufficient to atone for the sins of the
whole world.
Article 4: Reasons for This Infinite Value
This death is of such great value and worth for
the reason that the person who suffered it is--as was necessary to
be our Savior--not only a true and perfectly holy man, but also
the only begotten Son of God, of the same eternal and infinite
essence with the Father and the Holy Spirit. Another reason is
that this death was accompanied by the experience of God's anger
and curse, which we by our sins had fully deserved.
Article 5: The Mandate to Proclaim the Gospel to
All
Moreover, it is the promise of the gospel that
whoever believes in Christ crucified shall not perish but have
eternal life. This promise, together with the command to repent
and believe, ought to be announced and declared without
differentiation or discrimination to all nations and people, to
whom God in his good pleasure sends the gospel.
Article 6: Unbelief Man's Responsibility
However, that many who have been called through
the gospel do not repent or believe in Christ but perish in
unbelief is not because the sacrifice of Christ offered on the
cross is deficient or insufficient, but because they themselves
are at fault.
Article 7: Faith God's Gift
But all who genuinely believe and are delivered
and saved by Christ's death from their sins and from destruction
receive this favor solely from God's grace--which he owes to no
one--given to them in Christ from eternity.
Article 8: The Saving Effectiveness of Christ's
Death
For it was the entirely free plan and very
gracious will and intention of God the Father that the enlivening
and saving effectiveness of his Son's costly death should work
itself out in all his chosen ones, in order that he might grant
justifying faith to them only and thereby lead them without fail
to salvation. In other words, it was God's will that Christ
through the blood of the cross (by which he confirmed the new
covenant) should effectively redeem from every people, tribe,
nation, and language all those and only those who were chosen from
eternity to salvation and given to him by the Father; that he
should grant them faith (which, like the Holy Spirit's other
saving gifts, he acquired for them by his death); that he should
cleanse them by his blood from all their sins, both original and
actual, whether committed before or after their coming to faith;
that he should faithfully preserve them to the very end; and that
he should finally present them to himself, a glorious people,
without spot or wrinkle.
Article 9: The Fulfillment of God's Plan
This plan, arising out of God's eternal love for
his chosen ones, from the beginning of the world to the present
time has been powerfully carried out and will also be carried out
in the future, the gates of hell seeking vainly to prevail against
it. As a result the chosen are gathered into one, all in their own
time, and there is always a church of believers founded on
Christ's blood, a church which steadfastly loves, persistently
worships, and--here and in all eternity--praises him as her Savior
who laid down his life for her on the cross, as a bridegroom for
his bride.

Rejection of the Errors
Having set forth the orthodox teaching, the
Synod rejects the errors of those
I
Who teach that God the Father
appointed his Son to death on the cross without a fixed and
definite plan to save anyone by name, so that the necessity,
usefulness, and worth of what Christ's death obtained could have
stood intact and altogether perfect, complete and whole, even if
the redemption that was obtained had never in actual fact been
applied to any individual.
For this assertion is an insult to the wisdom of
God the Father and to the merit of Jesus Christ, and it is
contrary to Scripture. For the Savior speaks as follows: I lay
down my life for the sheep, and I know them (John 10:15, 27). And
Isaiah the prophet says concerning the Savior: When he shall make
himself an offering for sin, he shall see his offspring, he shall
prolong his days, and the will of Jehovah shall prosper in his
hand (Isa. 53:10). Finally, this undermines the article of the
creed in which we confess what we believe concerning the Church.
II
Who teach that the purpose of
Christ's death was not to establish in actual fact a new covenant
of grace by his blood, but only to acquire for the Father the mere
right to enter once more into a covenant with men, whether of
grace or of works.
For this conflicts with Scripture, which teaches
that Christ has become the guarantee and mediator of a
better--that is, a new-covenant (Heb. 7:22; 9:15), and that a will
is in force only when someone has died (Heb. 9:17).
III
Who teach that Christ, by the
satisfaction which he gave, did not certainly merit for anyone
salvation itself and the faith by which this satisfaction of
Christ is effectively applied to salvation, but only acquired for
the Father the authority or plenary will to relate in a new way
with men and to impose such new conditions as he chose, and that
the satisfying of these conditions depends on the free choice of
man; consequently, that it was possible that either all or none
would fulfill them.
For they have too low an opinion of the death of
Christ, do not at all acknowledge the foremost fruit or benefit
which it brings forth, and summon back from hell the Pelagian
error.
IV
Who teach that what is
involved in the new covenant of grace which God the Father made
with men through the intervening of Christ's death is not that we
are justified before God and saved through faith, insofar as it
accepts Christ's merit, but rather that God, having withdrawn his
demand for perfect obedience to the law, counts faith itself, and
the imperfect obedience of faith, as perfect obedience to the law,
and graciously looks upon this as worthy of the reward of eternal
life.
For they contradict Scripture: They are
justified freely by his grace through the redemption that came by
Jesus Christ, whom God presented as a sacrifice of atonement,
through faith in his blood (Rom. 3:24-25). And along with the
ungodly Socinus, they introduce a new and foreign justification of
man before God, against the consensus of the whole church.
V
Who teach that all people
have been received into the state of reconciliation and into the
grace of the covenant, so that no one on account of original sin
is liable to condemnation, or is to be condemned, but that all are
free from the guilt of this sin.
For this opinion conflicts with Scripture which
asserts that we are by nature children of wrath.
VI
Who make use of the
distinction between obtaining and applying in order to instill in
the unwary and inexperienced the opinion that God, as far as he is
concerned, wished to bestow equally upon all people the benefits
which are gained by Christ's death; but that the distinction by
which some rather than others come to share in the forgiveness of
sins and eternal life depends on their own free choice (which
applies itself to the grace offered indiscriminately) but does not
depend on the unique gift of mercy which effectively works in
them, so that they, rather than others, apply that grace to
themselves.
For, while pretending to set forth this
distinction in an acceptable sense, they attempt to give the
people the deadly poison of Pelagianism.
VII
Who teach that Christ neither
could die, nor had to die, nor did die for those whom God so
dearly loved and chose to eternal life, since such people do not
need the death of Christ.
For they contradict the apostle, who says:
Christ loved me and gave himself up for me (Gal. 2:20), and
likewise: Who will bring any charge against those whom God has
chosen? It is God who justifies. Who is he that condemns? It is
Christ who died, that is, for them (Rom. 8:33-34). They also
contradict the Savior, who asserts: I lay down my life for the
sheep (John 10:15), and My command is this: Love one another as I
have loved you. Greater love has no one than this, that one lay
down his life for his friends (John 15:12-13).

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