"But there are so many
creeds, all claiming to be right, that I should not know which to take.
They were all made by learned men, and if they can not agree on the kind
of a creed, how am I to decide which is right?" says one. It is a matter
of great moment and of much relief that, aside from all these
conflicting, clashing, and erring creeds, there is one book that all
parties concede is right. They all agree that the Bible is right — that
it came from God. They all further agree that it contains the law of God
— that the law of the Lord is perfect. The only wonder is, that man ever
attempted to make any other creed or law for the Church. Such an
undertaking could not have commenced without two wicked assumptions:
1. That the law of God,
as set forth in the Bible, is not sufficient — is a failure.
2. That the insufficiency
or failure can be remedied by weak, erring, and uninspired men.
No man of intelligence
will affirm, in plain terms, that the Bible is not sufficient for the
government of the saints; or that man — uninspired man — can make a
creed that will serve a better purpose than the Bible. Still such
affirmations are implied in every attempt made by uninspired men to make
a creed. If you admit, as all are bound to do, that the law of God is in
the Bible; that nothing may be added to it, nothing taken from it, and
that no part of it may be changed, there is not an excuse in the world
for making another law. The law of God in the Bible is the law, the
divine law, the supreme law, in the kingdom of God; and it is a
treasonable movement to attempt to get up another constitution, law,
name, body, or officers, apart from the constitution, law, name, body,
and officers as found in the Bible.
But the matter now in
hand is to find a safe course to pursue. Can this be done? All admit the
Bible is right. All admit that the law of God in the Bible is right. All
admit that those who follow the Bible honestly and faithfully, in faith
and practice, will be saved. All admit that wherever any creed differs
from the Bible is wrong. Then it is infallibly safe to take the Bible
and follow it. When men undertake to prove that a human creed is a good
one, they argue that it is like the Bible. If a creed like the Bible is
a good one, why will not the Bible itself do? If the Bible will not
serve the purpose — is insufficient and a failure — a creed like it
would be equally insufficient. When men make a creed to do what the
Bible would not do, they should certainly make it different from the
Bible, or it would serve no better purpose than the Bible itself.
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