The Reformed were particularly zealous to apply this doctrine to the practice of Christian worship. The Westminster Divines had experience with attempts by the Anglican establishment to bind their consciences and those of their forebears. As early as the 1540s, it became clear that there were those within Anglicanism who did not accept the doctrine of sola Scriptura as authorities sought to impose certain priestly (not merely ministerial) vestments upon the ministers.
In April 1521, when Martin Luther stood before the powers of this world at the Diet of Worms, he did so on the basis of the sole, unique, and final authority of God’s Word. Luther confessed that his conscience was bound by the Word of God. Popes and councils have erred and have contradicted each other. So they have. We call Luther’s principle, Sola Scriptura, by Scripture alone. This principle does not mean what it has often been made to say by American evangelicals, i.e., “No creed but Christ,” or “We read Scripture as if no one else has ever read it before,” or “I and my Bible are the sole authority.” The first is contradictory on its face because it is a very short, very inadequate creed. It also contradicts Scripture, since Scripture itself contains creedal statements, e.g., Deuteronomy 6:4 and 1 Timothy 3:16 (not to mention the several “faithful sayings” of the pastoral epistles). The second contradicts Scripture itself, since the Scriptures themselves seek to understand Scripture in light of the rest of Scripture and redemptive history (e.g., 1 Pet 1:10). It never occurred to the writers of the New Testament Scripture that they were reading the Hebrew Scriptures as if no one had ever read them before nor as if they were reading them in isolation from each other. They read the Hebrew Scriptures together at the Jerusalem Council (Acts 15). The third is self-contradictory because it make the “I” and not actually Scripture the final authority . It is biblicistic and radically individualistic. The Anabaptists were radical individualists. The Socinians were radical individualists. The children of the Second Great Awakening are radical individualists, but the Reformed are not and have never been. On this see Recovering the Reformed Confession.
Sola Scriptura asserts that the Scriptures are the final, unique, and therefore sole magisterial authority for the Christian faith and the Christian life. It asserts the sufficiency of Holy Scripture for the Christian faith, Christian worship, and the Christian life. It does not make the Scriptures into a manual for mechanics and bakers but recognizes that Scripture is enough for what it intends to do, that its authority is final where it speaks. This is what Luther was confessing at Worms against Rome, who sought to impose imagined continuing revelation (via the fabricated unwritten apostolic tradition and here). We confess that Scripture is sufficiently clear (perspicuitas) so that what must be known for salvation, the Christian life, and worship can be known in Scripture. As we say in Westminster Confession 1.7,
All things in Scripture are not alike plain in themselves, nor alike clear unto all: yet those things which are necessary to be known, believed, and observed for salvation, are so clearly propounded, and opened in some place of Scripture or other, that not only the learned, but the unlearned, in a due use of the ordinary means, may attain unto a sufficient understanding of them.
Thus, the Reformed confess:
We believe that those Holy Scriptures fully contain the will of God, and whatsoever man ought to believe unto salvation is sufficiently taught therein. For since the whole manner of worship which God requires of us is written in them at large, it is unlawful for any one, though an apostle, to teach otherwise than we are now taught in the Holy Scriptures: nay, though it were an angel from heaven, as the apostle Paul says. For since it is forbidden to add unto or take away anything from the Word of God, it does thereby evidently appear that the doctrine thereof is most perfect and complete in all respects. Neither may we consider any writings of men, however holy these men may have been, of equal value with those divine Scriptures, nor ought we to consider custom, or the great multitude, or antiquity, or succession of times and persons, or councils or decrees or statutes, as of equal value with the truth of God, since the truth is above all; for all men or of themselves liars, and more van than vanity itself. Therefore we reject with all our hearts whatever does not agree with this infallible rule, as the apostles have taught us saying, Test the spirits, whether they are of God. Likewise: any one comes to you and brings not this teaching, receive him not into your house (Belgic Confession, art. 7).
We confess this final, unique, and thus sole (sola) against the imagined unwritten apostolic tradition of the Roman communion but also against Protestant communions who compromise the sufficiency of Scripture and thus its unique authority. The Reformed were particularly zealous to apply this doctrine to the practice of Christian worship. The Westminster Divines had experience with attempts by the Anglican establishment to bind their consciences and those of their forebears. As early as the 1540s, it became clear that there were those within Anglicanism who did not accept the doctrine of sola Scriptura as authorities sought to impose certain priestly (not merely ministerial) vestments upon the ministers. When some objected to being made to dress like Roman priests as a condition of conducting their ministry, the authorities said that the vestments were “indifferent” (adiaphora). The Reformed replied that if they are indifferent, then ministers are free not to wear them but, of course, as you can predict, that did not satisfy the authorities at all. They argued that since Scripture has not forbidden vestments, the church is free to impose them. This was, in principle, a fatal compromise of the sola Scriptura principle. The Reformed rebelled in the spirit of Luther. The tension between these two principles would emerge time and again and ultimately helped to produce the Westminster Assembly itself in the 1640s.
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