| Paras | |
| 1 | I. Its necessity (or indispensability) |
| A. The sphere of its indispensability: "all saving knowledge, faith, and obedience" | |
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| 2-3 | II. Its identity |
| 2 | A. Defined positively or inclusively - "all the books of the Old and New Testament" |
| 3 | B. Defined negatively or exclusively - not the Apocrypha |
| 4-5 | III. Its authority |
| 4 | A. In itself (or the fact of its divine authority) |
| 5 |
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| 6 | IV. Its sufficiency |
| A. The statement of its sufficiency | |
| 1. The scope of its sufficiency | |
| 2. The mode of its sufficiency | |
| 3. The implications of its sufficiency | |
| B. The qualifications of its sufficiency | |
| 1. As to the illumination of the Spirit | |
| 2. As to sanctified common sense | |
| 7 | V. Its clarity |
| A. Its qualification | |
| B. Its articulation | |
| 8 | VI. Its availability |
| A. The fact of its availability: its preservation | |
| B. The necessity of its availability: its translation | |
| 1. The need for its translation | |
| 2. The warrant for its translation | |
| 3. The extent of its translation | |
| 4. Th purposes of its translation | |
| 9-10 | VII. Its finality |
| 9 | A. For scriptural interpretation in particular |
| 10 | B. For religious questions in general |
From: Samuel E. Waldron, A Modern Exposition of the 1689 Baptist Confession of Faith, (Evangelical Press, 1989), p28-29. Used by permission.