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The Collaborative International Dictionary
Westminster Confession

Confession \Con*fes"sion\, n. [F. confession, L. confessio.]

  1. Acknowledgment; avowal, especially in a matter pertaining to one's self; the admission of a debt, obligation, or crime.

    With a crafty madness keeps aloof, When we would bring him on to some confession Of his true state.
    --Shak.

  2. Acknowledgment of belief; profession of one's faith.

    With the mouth confession is made unto salvation.
    --Rom. x. 10.

  3. (Eccl.) The act of disclosing sins or faults to a priest in order to obtain sacramental absolution.

    Auricular confession . . . or the private and special confession of sins to a priest for the purpose of obtaining his absolution.
    --Hallam.

  4. A formulary in which the articles of faith are comprised; a creed to be assented to or signed, as a preliminary to admission to membership of a church; a confession of faith.

  5. (Law) An admission by a party to whom an act is imputed, in relation to such act. A judicial confession settles the issue to which it applies; an extrajudical confession may be explained or rebutted.
    --Wharton.

    Confession and avoidance (Law), a mode of pleading in which the party confesses the facts as stated by his adversary, but alleges some new matter by way of avoiding the legal effect claimed for them.
    --Mozley & W.

    Confession of faith, a formulary containing the articles of faith; a creed.

    General confession, the confession of sins made by a number of persons in common, as in public prayer.

    Westminster Confession. See Westminster Assembly, under Assembly.

Usage examples of "westminster confession".

The words of the Westminster Confession, painstakingly learned by heart as a necessity of Presbyterian boyhood, still seemed, after many wanderings, to have the ring of indisputable authority.

This doctrine is found in the Westminster Confession and other like documents.