The Consensus Tigurius
A document stating the mutual ideas
surrounding the sacraments between the Swiss ministers and John Calvin.
The Consensus
Tigurinus
by John Calvin
translated by Henry Beveridge
Mutual Consent in Regard to the
Sacraments Between the Ministers of the Church of Zurich and John
Calvin, Minister of the Church of Geneva. Now published by those who
framed it.
Article 1. The Whole Spiritual
Government of the Church Leads us to Christ.
Seeing that Christ is the end of the law,
and the knowledge of him comprehends in itself the whole sum of the
gospel, there is no doubt that the object of the whole spiritual
government of the Church is to lead us to Christ, as it is by him alone
we come to God, who is the final end of a happy life. Whosoever deviates
from this in the slightest degree, can never speak duly or appositely of
any ordinances of God.
Article 2. A True Knowledge of the
Sacraments from the Knowledge of Christ.
As the sacraments are appendages of the
gospel, he only can discourse aptly and usefully of their nature,
virtue, office, and benefit, who begins with Christ: and that not by
adverting cursorily to the name of Christ, but by truly holding for what
end he was given us by the Father, and what blessings he has conferred
upon us.
Article 3. Nature of the Knowledge of
Christ.
We must hold therefore that Christ, being
the eternal Son of God, and of the same essence and glory with the
Father, assumed our flesh, to communicate to us by right of adoption
that which he possessed by nature, namely, to make us sons of God. This
is done when ingrafted by faith into the body of Christ, and that by the
agency of the Holy Spirit we are first counted righteous by a free
imputation of righteousness, and then regenerated to a new life: whereby
being formed again in the image of our heavenly Father, we renounce the
old man.
Article 4. Christ a Priest and King.
Thus Christ, in his human nature, is to
be considered as our priest, who expiated our sins by the one sacrifice
of his death, put away all our transgressions by his obedience, provided
a perfect righteousness for us, and now intercedes for us, that we may
have access to God. He is to be considered as a repairer, who, by the
agency of his Spirit, reforms whatever is vicious in us, that we may
cease to live to the world and the flesh, and God himself may live in
us. He is to be considered as a king, who enriches us with all kinds of
blessings, governs and defends us by his power, provides us with
spiritual weapons, delivers us from all harm, and rules and guides us by
the sceptre of his mouth. And he is to be so considered, that he may
raise us to himself, the true God, and to the Father, until the
fulfilment of what is finally to take place, viz., God be all in all.
Article 5. How Christ Communicates
Himself to Us.
Moreover, that Christ may thus exhibit
himself to us and produce these effects in us, he must be made one with
us, and we must be ingrafted into his body. He does not infuse his life
into us unless he is our head, and from him the whole body, fitly joined
together through every joint of supply, according to his working, maketh
increase of the body in the proportion of each member.
Article 6. Spiritual Communion.
Institution of the Sacraments.
The spiritual communion which we have
with the Son of God takes place when he, dwelling in us by his Spirit,
makes all who believe capable of all the blessings which reside in him.
In order to testify this, both the preaching of the gospel was
appointed, and the use of the sacraments committed to us, namely, the
sacraments of holy Baptism and the holy Supper.
Article 7. The Ends of the Sacraments
The ends of the sacraments are to be
marks and badges of Christian profession and fellowship or fraternity,
to be incitements to gratitude and exercises of faith and a godly life;
in short, to be contracts binding us to this. But among other ends the
principal one is, that God may, by means of them, testify, represent,
and seal his grace to us. For although they signify nothing else than is
announced to us by the Word itself, yet it is a great matter, first,
that there is submitted to our eye a kind of living images which make a
deeper impression on the senses, by bringing the object in a manner
directly before them, while they bring the death of Christ and all his
benefits to our remembrance, that faith may be the better exercised;
and, secondly, that what the mouth of God had announced is, as it were,
confirmed and ratified by seals.
Article 8. Gratitude.
Now, seeing that these things which the
Lord has given as testimonies and seals of his grace are true, he
undoubtedly truly performs inwardly by his Spirit that which the
sacraments figure to our eyes and other senses; in other words, we
obtain possession of Christ as the fountain of all blessings, both in
order that we may be reconciled to God by means of his death, be renewed
by his Spirit to holiness of life, in short, obtain righteousness and
salvation; and also in order that we may give thanks for the blessings
which were once exhibited on the cross, and which we daily receive by
faith.
Article 9. The Signs and the Things
Signified Not Disjoined but Distinct.
Wherefore, though we distinguish, as we
ought, between the signs and the things signified, yet we do not disjoin
the reality from the signs, but acknowledge that all who in faith
embrace the promises there offered receive Christ spiritually, with his
spiritual gifts, while those who had long been made partakers of Christ
continue and renew that communion.
Article 10. The Promise Principally to
Be Looked To in the Sacraments.
And it is proper to look not to the bare
signs, but rather to the promise thereto annexed. As far, therefore, as
our faith in the promise there offered prevails, so far will that virtue
and efficacy of which we speak display itself. Thus the substance of
water, bread, and wine, by no means offers Christ to us, nor makes us
capable of his spiritual gifts. The promise rather is to be looked to,
whose office it is to lead us to Christ by the direct way of faith,
faith which makes us partakers of Christ.
Article 11. We Are Not to Stand Gazing
on the Elements.
This refutes the error of those who stand
gazing on the elements, and attach their confidence of salvation to
them; seeing that the sacraments separated from Christ are but empty
shows, and a voice is distinctly heard throughout proclaiming that we
must adhere to none but Christ alone, and seek the gift of salvation
from none but him.
Article 12. The Sacraments Effect
Nothing by Themselves.
Besides, if any good is conferred upon us
by the sacraments, it is not owing to any proper virtue in them, even
though in this you should include the promise by which they are
distinguished. For it is God alone who acts by his Spirit. When he uses
the instrumentality of the sacraments, he neither infuses his own virtue
into them nor derogates in any respect from the effectual working of his
Spirit, but, in adaptation to our weakness, uses them as helps; in such
manner, however, that the whole power of acting remains with him alone.
Article 13. God Uses the Instrument,
but All the Virtue Is His.
Wherefore, as Paul reminds us, that
neither he that planteth nor he that watereth is any thing, but God
alone that giveth the increase; so also it is to be said of the
sacraments that they are nothing, because they will profit nothing,
unless God in all things make them effectual. They are indeed
instruments by which God acts efficaciously when he pleases, yet so that
the whole work of our salvation must be ascribed to him alone.
Article 14. The Whole Accomplished by
Christ.
We conclude, then, that it is Christ
alone who in truth baptizes inwardly, who in the Supper makes us
partakers of himself, who, in short, fulfils what the sacraments figure,
and uses their aid in such manner that the whole effect resides in his
Spirit.
Article 15. How the Sacraments
Confirm.
Thus the sacraments are sometimes called
seals, and are said to nourish, confirm, and advance faith, and yet the
Spirit alone is properly the seal, and also the beginner and finisher of
faith. For all these attributes of the sacraments sink down to a lower
place, so that not even the smallest portion of our salvation is
transferred to creatures or elements.
Article 16. All Who Partake of the
Sacraments Do Not Partake of the Reality.
Besides, we carefully teach that God does
not exert his power indiscriminately in all who receive the sacraments,
but only in the elect. For as he enlightens unto faith none but those
whom he hath foreordained to life, so by the secret agency of his Spirit
he makes the elect receive what the sacraments offer.
Article 17. The Sacraments Do Not
Confer Grace.
By this doctrine is overthrown that
fiction of the sophists which teaches that the sacraments confer grace
on all who do not interpose the obstacle of mortal sin. For besides that
in the sacraments nothing is received except by faith, we must also hold
that the grace of God is by no means so annexed to them that whoso
receives the sign also gains possession of the thing. For the signs are
administered alike to reprobate and elect, but the reality reaches the
latter only.
Article 18. The Gifts Offered to All,
but Received by Believers Only.
It is true indeed that Christ with his
gifts is offered to all in common, and that the unbelief of man not
overthrowing the truth of God, the sacraments always retain their
efficacy; but all are not capable of receiving Christ and his gifts.
Wherefore nothing is changed on the part of God, but in regard to man
each receives according to the measure of his faith.
Article 19. Believers Before, and
Without the Use of the Sacraments, Communicate with Christ.
As the use of the sacraments will confer
nothing more on unbelievers than if they had abstained from it, nay, is
only destructive to them, so without their use believers receive the
reality which is there figured. Thus the sins of Paul were washed away
by baptism, though they had been previously washed away. So likewise
baptism was the laver of regeneration to Cornelius, though he had
already received the Holy Spirit. So in the Supper Christ communicates
himself to us, though he had previously imparted himself, and
perpetually remains in us. For seeing that each is enjoined to examine
himself, it follows that faith is required of each before coming to the
sacrament. Faith is not without Christ; but inasmuch as faith is
confirmed and increased by the sacraments, the gifts of God are
confirmed in us, and thus Christ in a manner grows in us and we in him.
Article 20. The Benefit Not Always
Received in the Act of Communicating.
The advantage which we receive from the
sacraments ought by no means to be restricted to the time at which they
are administered to us, just as if the visible sign, at the moment when
it is brought forward, brought the grace of God along with it. For those
who were baptized when mere infants, God regenerates in childhood or
adolescence, occasionally even in old age. Thus the utility of baptism
is open to the whole period of life, because the promise contained in it
is perpetually in force. And it may sometimes happen that the use of the
holy Supper, which, from thoughtlessness or slowness of heart does
little good at the time, afterward bears its fruit.
Article 21. No Local Presence Must Be
Imagined.
We must guard particularly against the
idea of any local presence. For while the signs are present in this
world, are seen by the eyes and handled by the hands, Christ, regarded
as man, must be sought nowhere else than in Heaven, and not otherwise
than with the mind and eye of faith. Wherefore it is a perverse and
impious superstition to inclose him under the elements of this world.
Article 22. Explanation of the Words
"This Is My Body."
Those who insist that the formal words of
the Supper, "This is my body; this is my blood," are to be
taken in what they call the precisely literal sense, we repudiate as
preposterous interpreters. For we hold it out of controversy that they
are to be taken figuratively, the bread and wine receiving the name of
that which they signify. Nor should it be thought a new or unwonted
thing to transfer the name of things figured by metonomy [modern
spelling: metonymy] to the sign, as similar modes of expression occur
throughout the Scriptures, and we by so saying assert nothing but what
is found in the most ancient and most approved writers of the Church.
Article 23. Of the Eating of the Body.
When it is said that Christ, by our
eating of his flesh and drinking of his blood, which are here figured,
feeds our souls through faith by the agency of the Holy Spirit, we are
not to understand it as if any mingling or transfusion of substance took
place, but that we draw life from the flesh once offered in sacrifice
and the blood shed in expiation.
Article 24. Transubstantiation and
Other Follies.
In this way are refuted not only the
fiction of the Papists concerning transubstantiation, but all the gross
figments and futile quibbles which either derogate from his celestial
glory or are in some degree repugnant to the reality of his human
nature. For we deem it no less absurd to place Christ under the bread or
couple him with the bread, than to transubstantiate the bread into his
body.
Article 25. The Body of Christ Locally
in Heaven.
And that no ambiguity may remain when we
say that Christ is to be sought in Heaven, the expression implies and is
understood by us to intimate distance of place. For though
philosophically speaking there is no place above the skies, yet as the
body of Christ, bearing the nature and mode of a human body, is finite
and is contained in Heaven as its place, it is necessarily as distant
from us in point of space as Heaven is from Earth.
Article 26. Christ Not to Be Adored in
the Bread.
If it is not lawful to affix Christ in
our imagination to the bread and the wine, much less is it lawful to
worship him in the bread. For although the bread is held forth to us as
a symbol and pledge of the communion which we have with Christ, yet as
it is a sign and not the thing itself, and has not the thing either
included in it or fixed to it, those who turn their minds towards it,
with the view of worshipping Christ, make an idol of it.
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