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Documentary Sources of the Confession
The 1689 London Baptist Confession comes principally from four sources:
A. The
Westminster Confession of Faith, 1646.
This confession is distinctively puritan, presbyterian and paedobapitst,
being the result of the sitting of the Westminster Assembly.
B. The Savoy Declaration of Faith and Order, 1658.
This confession is a revision of the Westminster which was Independent
or Congregational in that it differed in the matters of church government
and the autonomy of the local church.
C. The First London Baptist Confession (1644).
During the 17th Century, while under persecution, Baptists published
a number of Confessions to clarify their doctrinal position and to refute
errors with which they had been branded. This confession was subscribed
to by seven Particular Baptist congregations in the London area. It is
likely to have subsequently become the doctrinal position of many other
congregations. It was distinctively Calvinistic and Baptist while also
rejecting many of the Continental Anabaptist tenets of pelagianism, pacifism,
and the rejection of involvement of christians in civil office. Five of
the seven churches which signed the 1644 were also signatories to the 1689
Confession.
D. The work of William Collins and Nehemiah Coxe.
William Collins and Nehemiah
Coxe were elders of the Petty France church in London. It is likely
that they were responsible for the collation and editing of the above three
documents to produce this Confession of Faith. The first extant reference
to the Confession is found recorded in the Petty France Church Book on
the 26th of August 1677, it states, "It was agreed that a Confession
of Faith w(ith) the Appendix thereto having bene(been) read and considered
by the Bre(thren): should be published". Given the spiritual stature
of both Coxe and Collins, their involvement in other literary activities,
joined with the fact that it appears that the Petty France Church was intimately
aware of the Confession it make it very likely that they were its major
editors (see Origins of the Confession).
Although the Confession was published in 1677, it was done so anonymously
due to the persecution of the times. It was not until 1689, after the "Glorious
Revolution" under William and Mary of Orange that this Confession
was published with the names of the subscribers
and the churches they represented attached and has become known as the
1689 London Baptist Confession of Faith or the Second London Baptist Confession
of Faith.
Of the 160 paragraphs which make up the 1689 London Baptist Confession
of Faith, 146 are directly derived from the Savoy declaration, eight are
derived from the 1644 Confession and six from the editorial work Collins
and Coxe.
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