|
|
But
this I confess unto thee, that after the way which
they call heresy, so worship I the God of my fathers, believing all things
which are written in the law and in the prophets.
Acts
24:14
Introduction
The only complete and infallible
source of truth in the universe in contained in God's holy Scriptures.
These articles of faith represent a brief summary of many of the aspects
of the truth that God has revealed to us in His Word over time. Being
the work of men, we know that this writing will contain errors, though
none are put here intentionally. As God gives us more light in the future,
we expect and plan to add to and revise this document so as to accurately
represent our knowledge of His divine will for us.
The Scriptures
Nature
We believe that the Holy
Scriptures of the Old (Hebrews 1:1) and New Testament (2 Peter 3:15-16;
Revelation 1:1-2) only and exclusively, in whole and in part, are the
divinely inspired (2 Timothy 3:16-17), inerrant (Psalm 19:7-11), God breathed
(2 Samuel 23:2; 2 Peter 1:19-21), written word of God, and are the sole
and total rule together of our faith and practice(Psalm 119:104,128; Isaiah
8:20).
Identification
We believe the Authorized
or King James Version of 1611 is the Word of God in English. We believe
that God, according to His promises, has providentially preserved and
transmitted this Word through the scattered remnant of His true churches;
and has providentially directed the collating, editing, and translating
of the precious and essential text and manuscripts, the witness being
that these are the only texts God has ever used in all the great fruit-bearing
evangelical movements of history (Matthew 7:16-20), and also that these
texts have never been used in any of the awful and bloody ecclesiastical
persecutions of history. We therefore believe any production based in
whole or in part on any other texts, manuscripts (however ancient or accepted),
or versions to be not the Word of God but to be a fraud.
Interpretation
We believe that the Scripture
is to be interpreted only by itself (1 Corinthians 2:13), apart from any
private interpretation (2 Peter 1:10), by prayerful and diligent study
of the use of the words in the context of the work as a whole and with
careful consideration given to the context of each part in the light of
normal grammar and usage.
We believe that the Old
Testament is only properly interpreted in the light of the revelation
which God has given through His apostles and His Son, Jesus Christ (Hebrews
1:1-2), contained in the New Testament.
We believe that the divine
record is total and complete in its revelation of God's will to His creatures
(Deuteronomy 29:29), so that what is necessary for our knowledge of how
to serve and please Him is conveyed to us within the pages of Scripture
(Ecclesiastes 12:13; 2 Timothy 3:16-17), by precept or by example, and
that anything not specifically so imparted is not to be taught as God's
will. (The argument from silence, e.g. what the Scripture does not teach,
it does not teach, Hebrews 7:12-14.)
God
His attributes
We believe that there is
only one (Deuteronomy 6:4; 1 Corinthians 8:4-6) living and true God (1
Thessalonians 1:9; Jeremiah 10:10), who is infinite in being and perfection
(Job 11:7-9), a most pure spirit (John 4:24), invisible (1 Timothy 1:17),
immutable (Jam 1:17; Mal 3:6), immense (1 Kings 8:27; Jeremiah 23:23-24),
eternal (Psalm 90:2; 1 Timothy 1:17), incomprehensible (Psalm 145:3; Isaiah
40:28; Romans 11:33), almighty (Genesis 17:1; Daniel 4:34-35; Revelation
4:8), all wise (Psalm 147:5; Romans 11:33-34; 16:27; Jude 25), most holy
(Isaiah 6:3; Revelation 4:8), totally independent (Psalm 115:3; 135:6;
Isaiah 46:10), most absolute (Exodus 3:14), working all things according
to the counsel of His own immutable and most righteous will (Ephesians
1:9, 11) for His own glory (Proverbs 16:4; Romans 11:36).
We believe He is most loving
(1 John 4:8, 16), gracious (Exodus 22:27; Nehemiah 9:17, 31), merciful
(Psalm 86:5; 103:8-13), long-suffering (Psalm 86:15; 2 Peter 3:9), abundant
in goodness and truth, forgiving iniquity, transgression and sin (Exodus
34:6-7). He is the rewarder of those who diligently seek Him (Hebrews
11:6), and is most just and terrible in His judgments (Nehemiah 9:32-33),
hating all sin (Psalm 5:5-6) and who will by no means clear the guilty
(Nahum 1:2-3; Exodus 34:7).
We believe that He has all
life (Psalm 36:9; John 5:26; 1:4;Acts 17:25), glory, goodness, blessedness
in and of Himself;He is alone and unto Himself all-sufficient and independent,
not standing in need of any creatures which He has made (Exodus 3:14;
Acts 17:24-25), nor deriving any glory from them (Job 22:2-3), but only
manifesting His own glory in, by, unto, and upon them. He is the sole
foundation of all being, of Whom, through Whom, and to Whom are all things
(Romans 11:36);and He has most sovereign dominion over them to do by them,
for them, or upon them whatsoever He pleases (Revelation 4:11; 1 Timothy
6:15; Daniel 4:25, 35).
We believe that in His sight
all things are open and manifest (Hebrews 4:13),that His knowledge is
infinite, infallible, and independent of all creation (Romans 11:33-34;
Psalm 147:5), so that nothing is contingent or uncertain to Him (Acts
15:18; Ezekiel 11:5); that He is most holy in all His counsels, in all
His works, and in all His commands (Psalm 145:17; Romans 7:12), and that
to this Great and August Being is due from angels, men, and every other
creature, whatsoever worship, service or obedience that He is pleased
to require of them (Revelation 5:12-14).
His unity
We believe that there is
a Trinity of three Persons, the Father, the Word, and the Holy Spirit
(1 John 5:7), in the unity of the essence of the Godhead;that these three
Persons are equal in nature, power, and glory;and that the Word and the
Holy Spirit are as truly and as properly and as eternally God as is the
Father.
The Sonship of Christ
We believe that the Lord
Jesus Christ was set up by covenant from everlasting as the Mediator of
the Eternal Covenant;and He, having engaged to be the Surety of His elect
people, did, in the fullness of time (Galatians 4:4-5; Hebrews 1:5-6;
Luke 2:13-14) , really assume human nature (Hebrews 2:16-18), and not
before, neither in whole nor in part.
We believe that His human
soul and spirit, being created things, did not exist from eternity, but
were created and formed in His body by Him who forms the spirit of man
within him; and this occurred when that body was conceived in the womb
of the virgin (Luke 1:35).
We believe His human nature
consists of a true body (Hebrews 10:5), soul, and spirit all of which
together and at once the Word of God assumed into union with His divine
Person (John 1:14), when made of a woman and not before or any point of
time after (Galatians 4:4).
We believe this dual-natured
Being is the prophesied Son of God; His sonship beginning with and proceeding
from the virgin's conception (Luke 1:32, 35), and being everlasting in
duration.
We believe that the doctrine
of the eternal generation or begetting of the Son of God, by nature, to
be damnable heresy most grievous to God and most dangerous to those who
profess belief in such teaching, as it denies the Lord of glory.
His
Sovereign Rule (Providence)
We believe that God, the
great Creator of all things, upholds (Hebrews 1:3), directs, disposes
and governs all creatures, actions, and things (Daniel 4:34-35; Psalm
135:6; Acts 17:25-26, 28), from the greatest even to the least (Proverbs
21:1; Matthew 10:29-31), by His most wise and holy providence (Proverbs
15:3; Psalm 104:24; 145:17), according to His own will (Isaiah 46:10-11;
Ephesians 1:9, 11), to the praise of the glory of His wisdom, power, justice,
goodness, and mercy (Isaiah 63:14; Ephesians 3:10; Romans 9:17-23; Genesis
45:7; Psalm 145:7).
We believe that God, in
His ordinary providence, makes use of means (Acts 27:31, 44; Isaiah 55:10-11);
yet, He is free to work without (Hosea 1:7; Matthew 4:4), above (Romans
9:19-21), and against them (2 Kings 6:6; Daniel 3:27) at His pleasure.
We believe that the almighty
power, unsearchable wisdom, and infinite goodness of God so manifest themselves
in his providence that it extends even to the fall of man and all other
sins of angels and men (Romans 11:32-34; 2 Samuel 24:1; 1 Chronicles 21:1;
1 Kings 22:22-23; 1 Chronicles 10:4, 13-14; 2 Samuel 16:10; Acts 2:23),
and not to a bare permission only (Acts 14:16), but to the complete ordering
and governing of them to His own holy ends (Genesis 50:20; Isaiah 10:6-7,
12; Psalm 76:10; 2 Kings 19:28); yet the sinfulness of the acts thereof
proceed only and entirely from the creatures involved and not from God
Himself, who, being most holy and righteous, neither is nor can be the
author or approver of sin (James 1:13-14, 17; 1 John 2:16; Psalm 50:21).
We believe that our most
wise, righteous, and gracious God does often times leave, for a season,
His own children to many temptations and the corruption of their own hearts,
so as to chastise them for their former sins, or to reveal unto them the
hidden power of sin and the deceitfulness of their hearts, that they may
be humbled (2 Chronicles 32:25-26, 31; 2 Samuel 24:1) and raised to a
more close and steady dependence upon Him for their support, to make them
more watchful against future occasions of sin, and for various other just
and holy ends (2 Corinthians 12:7-9; Psalm 73; 77:1, 10, 12; Mark 14:66-72
+ John 21:15-17).
We believe that, because
of their sins, God blinds and hardens wicked and ungodly men (Romans 1:24,
26, 28; 11:7-8), sometimes withdraws what light of understanding they
have naturally (Matthew 13:12; 25:29), exposes them to opportunities that
their corrupt natures will exploit (Deuteronomy 2:30; 2 Kings 8:12-13)
and gives them over to their own lusts, the temptations of the world,
and the power of Satan (Psalm 81:11-12; 2 Thessalonians 2:10-12) whereby
they harden themselves, even under the same means that God uses to soften
others (Exodus 7:3; 8:15, 32; 2 Corinthians 2:15-16; Isaiah 8:14; 1 Peter
2:7-8; Isaiah 6:9-10; Acts 28:26-27).
Creation
We believe the Triune God,
for the manifestation of the glory of His eternal power, wisdom, and goodness
(Revelation 4:11), did create out of nothing (Hebrew 11:3), in six days
of one hundred forty-four sixty-minute hours (Genesis 1; 2:2-3; Exodus
20:11), the heavens and the earth and all that in them is, whether visible
or invisible (Colossians 1:16; Psalm 102:25; Isaiah 44:24; John 1:3; Hebrews
1:2).
We believe this was accomplished
with no gaps or unknown ages before, during, or between the six days;
that God ceased creation upon the seventh day (Genesis 2:2-3; Exodus 20:11);
and that the first eleven chapters of Genesis to be actual and accurate
history with the rest of Scripture.
Sin and
Man's Fall
Man's creation state
We believe that God created
the first man, Adam, after His own image and likeness (Genesis 1:26-27);that
he was upright (Ecclesiastes 7:29), holy, innocent and possessed of undying
natural life; that he was given dominion over all of the creatures of
the earth (Genesis 1:26; 9:2; Psalm 8:4-8); that he had a will able to
choose to obey or disobey the commandments of his good and wise Creator;
and that he enjoyed the blessing of full and joyful communion with God
(Genesis 2:8-15).
The fall into sin
We believe that Adam was
capable of continuing in that state of righteousness, but sinned against
God, changing his nature to sinful and mortal natural life (Genesis 2:17);
that his race without exception sinned in him (Romans 5:12-18), the guilt
of that sin imputed to all and a corrupt nature passed unto them all who
descended from him by ordinary and natural generation.
The effects of sin
We believe, therefore, that
the entire human race are by their first birth carnal and unclean, averse
to all that is good (Romans 3:12), incapable of doing any good (Romans
3:10) , prone to every sin, totally unable to recover themselves, without
strength, enemies of God, by nature the children of wrath (Ephesians 2:3),
under a sentence of condemnation and therefore subject to physical death,
involved in spiritual death, and appointed to eternal death, from all
of which there is no deliverance but by the blood and works of Christ
the Second Adam, and Him alone.
Salvation
We believe that the Scripture
shows five distinct divisions, aspects or phases of the work of God in
the salvation of His people, and they are as follows:
Eternal - Election
We believe that before the
world was created, God elected (Ephesians 1:4) a certain and invariable
number of people (Romans 8:29-30), out of Adam's fallen race (Romans 9:21),
to be delivered from the condemnation which they justly deserved (Romans
6:23) and to be adopted as His own children (Ephesians 2:1-3), this choice
not based on any conceivable or foreseen compliance of those chosen (Psalm
14:2-3; Romans 3:9-19), but simply upon the free grace and sovereign will
of God (Ephesians 1:3-11).
We believe that in pursuance
of this design, God the Father did determine and make a covenant with
the Word and the Holy Spirit on behalf of those persons alone, wherein
all the duties and necessary actions were appointed to the Godhead to
perform, and all the spiritual blessings provided for the elect.
We believe that this salvation,
being decreed by Him who calls those things which are not as though they
were (Romans 4:17), was considered as accomplished and finished before
the world began.
We believe the eternal redemption
and salvation which Christ has obtained by the shedding of His blood is
special and particular;it was intentionally designed exclusively for the
elect of God (Romans 8:33), the sheep of Christ (John 10:26-29), and they
only share the benefits and blessings of it, and that infallibly (Romans
8:31-39), the rest of fallen mankind left in the state of condemnation
it received from Adam's transgression in the garden of Eden (Romans 5:12;
9:21-22).
Legal - Justification
We believe the legal sentence
of death against the elect was executed upon the Lord Jesus Christ upon
the cross of Calvary, His pure and sinless life being the perfect and
only substitute for the filthy rags of their righteousness, and His holy
blood being the only acceptable propitiation for their sins (Romans 3:24-26;
2 Corinthian 5:21).
We believe that the Father
received this offering of the Lamb of God (Hebrews 10:10, 14), and that
He accordingly justifies the elect, seeing in them not their sins, but
the spotless righteousness of His only begotten Son, Jesus Christ, their
sins being forgotten and covered by His precious blood.
Vital - Regeneration,
the New Birth
We believe that those elected
by God and justified by Christ's blood are, in the course of this life,
given a new and sinless nature, created in true holiness, and capable
of receiving and acting upon the spiritual realities taught in the Scriptures.
We believe that the same
powerful Spirit that moved upon the face of the deep in the creation of
the world moves on the nature of the elect to create spiritual life where
there was death and corruption, that Spirit following the spoken direction
of the Son of God to give life to His child, His sheep, and that the soul
of the child of God is totally passive in this process, just as a natural
child is passive in his conception, gestation and birth.
Practical - Conversion
We believe that God provides
the means for His elect, regenerate children to know Him and have fellowship
with Him during this life through the preaching of and obedience to the
Scripture, and that conversion is, accordingly, an educational process
whereby the born again child of God learns of his helpless condition in
Adam, of the wonderful salvation that His heavenly Father has provided
through the life giving blood of Jesus Christ, and what His God requires
of him to enjoy fellowship with Him in his pilgrimage of life.
We believe that God grants
to the elect the opportunity to repent and acknowledge the truth, but
that, repentance, having been granted, it is their responsibility to exercise
their God given faith (Philippians 2:12) and repentance to obtain the
blessings that He offers in this life, and that this aspect of salvation,
if they harden their hearts, can be lost and replaced by God's severe
chastisement.
We believe that, in general,
those whom God has chosen to be His own will believe and obey the gospel
call when they hear it, though we acknowledge that God, as the Sovereign
Lord of the universe, can leave some individuals in ignorance of the glorious
salvation that Christ secured for them, these being a small exception.
Final - Glorification
We believe that all of those
chosen by the Father, redeemed by the Son, and regenerated by the Spirit,
shall be glorified together with Christ when He returns to judge the quick
and the dead, their mortal forms clothed with immortality, and their sin
wracked bodies resurrected or changed to be like the sinless body that
our Lord Jesus Christ now inhabits.
We believe that God will
preserve His elect unto this glorious day, and that Jesus Christ shall
present them unto the Father pure and spotless, clothed in His own righteousness,
regardless of their works of righteousness or lack thereof.
Good Works
Definition
We believe that good works
are only such as God commands in His holy Word, and not such as are devised
by men out of blind zeal, or upon any pretense of good intentions.
Source
We believe that the ability
to do good works is something not at all of man himself, but wholly derived
from the Spirit of God to do His good pleasure, and are an outgrowth of
a renewed heart given by God in regeneration.
Purpose
We believe that good works,
done in obedience to God's commandments, are the fruits and evidences
of a true and lively faith;and by them believers manifest their thankfulness,
strengthen their assurance, edify their brethren, adorn the profession
of the gospel, stop the mouths of the adversaries, and glorify God, whose
workmanship they are, created in Christ Jesus thereunto.
Evangelism
Purpose of true evangelism
We believe that the gospel
is the good news of salvation for God's elect, declaring salvation through
the death, burial and resurrection of Jesus Christ alone, and that this
salvation is the only hope of eternal life, the gospel being merely the
message of this glorious event, and having no power in and of itself to
give life to those who hear it, the giving of life being the sole province
of the Lord Jesus Christ.
We believe that the preaching
of the gospel will be viewed as foolishness and will be rejected by natural,
unregenerate men, who thereby show their ungodly and unrepentant natures,
while the same message will be viewed as the power and wisdom of God by
those who have been regenerated by the grace of God.
We believe that all who
hear the gospel have the responsibility to believe and obey it, and those
who do not believe and obey it receive to themselves damnation, the unbelieving
elect receiving the just chastisement of God while in this life, and the
non-elect receiving God's judgment both now and in eternity.
Means of true evangelism
We believe that the gospel
is to be proclaimed by any and all means available to those who will hear
it; the normal course of this proclamation to be through the preaching
of the Word of God by means of the ministry that God has left in this
world, who are to be supported in this endeavor by their congregations
for this work.
We believe that the gospel
is also proclaimed through the godly witness of believing saints, who
are ready to give an answer of the reason of the hope that is within them
to those who ask them.
We believe that public teaching
of the gospel, by whatever means (i.e. seminars,home neighborhood Bible
studies), are good, proper, and should be encouraged among God's people.
The "Great Commission"
We believe that the "Great
Commission" as taught in Matthew 28 and related passages was fulfilled
by those whom Christ appointed and empowered (Matthew 28:16-20; Mark 16:14-18),
with many mighty signs and wonders (2 Corinthians 12:12; Romans 15:18-19),
to perform that task, those being the apostles; and that the commission
was completed before the destruction of the nation of Israel in 70 AD
(Matthew 24:14; Colossians 1:23; Romans 10:18).
The Use of the Law
We believe that the law
of God, as contained in the Old Testament Scripture, has relevance for
the New Testament believer in the following ways:
We believe it shows man
what sin is (its terrible nature and its effects) and our need of the
Savior, Jesus Christ (Galatians 3:24).
We believe it shows man
what God requires and forbids of His children for their sanctification,
as it reveals God's moral nature, which does not change (John 14:15).
We believe it gives us examples
of God's dealing with His people in all times, giving us hope of blessings
for obedience and the sure knowledge of His cursing for disobedience (1
Corinthians 10:11).
We believe that it provides
wise rules in dealing with men to live by while in this life.
We believe that the ceremonial
law given to the Jews was filled with types and shadows of Him Who was
to come, even our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ, Who personally and in
His life and ministry fulfilled all.
We believe that the restrictions
given in the Old Testament regarding foods and the observance of Jewish
holy days have been done away with in the New Testament and are not binding
upon Christ's saints in His churches (Acts 15:19-31; Romans 14:1-3; 1
Corinthians 10:23-31; Colossians 2:16-23).
We believe that God gave
man to rest one day out of seven, and we believe that New Testament believers
should follow this practice. We believe that believers are to assemble
on the Lord's Day (Sunday) to worship Him, as was practiced by the early
church. But we believe that the Sabbath, as taught in the Old Testament,
has been fulfilled in Jesus Christ, and that we rest from our works for
righteousness in Him.
The Church
Its identity
We believe that the church,
as referred to most often in the New Testament, is a local congregation
or body of disciples of Jesus Christ; that it is identified by its location
and membership, and referred to under various titles and descriptions,
singularly considered as the church, the whole church, the body, the body
of Christ, the bride of Christ, the temple of the Holy Ghost, and collectively
known as the churches of Christ and the churches of God.
We believe that a church
is formed by the mutual consent and commitment of individual believers
to perform their Scriptural duties. It does not require any pastor, church
or other body to ordain them as a church, though there is nothing unscriptural
with a pastor or another church assisting or aiding in the forming of
a new church.
We believe that this is
the kingdom foretold by the Old Testament prophets, proclaimed by John
the Baptist, and established by the ministry of the apostles of our Lord
Jesus Christ.
Its independence
We believe that each church
stands alone under Christ as its head, independent of any pope, cardinal,
president or moderator and separate from any other body, group or organization
in this world.
We believe that fellowship,
as described in Scripture, is a function of individual members of a local
body and not of churches in conventions, associations, denominations or
other such structures, and, while praying for God's blessing on His churches
where ever they may be and being willing to help those whom we encounter,
we believe it to be improper to form any alliance between our congregation
and any other body or congregation.
Its membership
We believe that a church
is composed of individuals who have professed belief in Jesus Christ as
their only Lord and Savior from sin, have been baptized in the name of
the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, and have mutually agreed together to
worship God and perform their Scriptural duties towards one another.
We believe that a member
is received into a congregation by unanimous consent of all of the members
of that congregation. Therefore a member is put out or released from membership
only by unanimous consent of the members of the congregation.
Its rulership
We believe that a church
is properly ruled by a pastor (bishop or elder being other terms to describe
the office and individual in the same office), ordained of God and set
aside for his task by the laying on of hands by a duly ordained minister,
whose task it is to feed the flock of God and direct the congregation's
affairs in the light of the Scriptures.
We believe that the pastor
is to rule over the congregation as Christ's ambassador with the power
to enforce the oracles of God upon His people, his leadership being to
declare God's mind as taught in His Scripture, to insist upon its obedience,
and to guide by the example of his own godly life and deportment.
We believe that they that
preach the gospel should, where at all possible, be completely supported
by their congregation so as to give themselves wholly to the work of the
ministry, to prayer and study of the Word.
We believe that God has
given the office of deacon to the church to serve the congregation in
carnal necessities; that deacons are to be selected by the congregation
and ordained to their office by the pastor, under whose authority they
serve; and that they are to be men who are sound and exemplary in their
spiritual lives and conduct before the congregation and the world in general.
We believe that these two
offices, that of pastor and deacon, are the only offices that God has
ordained for His congregations. We believe that the Reformed practice
of distinguishing between "ruling " and "teaching"
elders is unscriptural and a misinterpretation of the Scriptures.
We believe that women are
to be silent in the church and under the authority of their fathers or
husbands and are not to be in positions of authority over a man, but have
a proper role in teaching each other and their children.
Its worship and practice
We believe that the worship
of God as given by precept and example in the New Testament consists of
assembling to pray, sing, praise God, offer up thanksgiving, exhort one
another to our duties, make collection for poor saints and for the support
of the ministry, and hear God's word taught and proclaimed.
We believe that the New
Testament emphasizes the teaching aspect of God's worship, so that this
is given preeminence over other forms of worship, with the aim of proper
instruction being to guide members to better performance of their duties,
first of all toward God, then to each other, and finally toward men with
whom they associate in this world.
We believe that the proper
form of musical expression in New Testament churches is congregational
singing unaccompanied by musical instruments, the purpose being to praise
God and to edify each other.
Its relationship to auxiliaries
We believe that any additions
to or departures from those things taught in Scripture are to be rejected
as unnecessary and ungodly; such things as Sunday schools, church camps,
bus ministries, Christian schools, choirs, gospel clowns and the like
have nothing to do with the worship of God in His church and should be
forbidden. This does not preclude members of a congregation, voluntarily
and apart from the assembly, in banding together to engage in profitable
enterprises such as the education of their children or arranging for times
of recreation together, but such activities are clearly not to be part
of the ministry of a New Testament church.
The Duties
of Church Membership
Regular assembly
We believe that it is the
duty of every member to be in regular attendance whenever the church assembles
for the comfort of our mutual faith and the exercise our duties one to
another, such absences as caused by illness, performance of special acts
of charity and other reasonable circumstances being excepted.
Exercise of gifts
We believe that God has placed
the members within His churches as it has pleased Him, and that He has
blessed them with a variety of natural and spiritual gifts for the benefit
of the entire body. Each member should be exhorted and encouraged to use
the gift or gifts that he has been given for the blessing and profit of
the congregation in general and the other members in particular, whether
public or private.
Judgment of members in
sin
We believe that a church
is responsible before God to judge those of its own who are publicly known
to be living in sin or error, as the New Testament teaches that there
are offences which are not to be named once among saints. Those found
guilty of such offences are to be removed from the membership of the body,
turned over to Satan for the destruction of the flesh, and exhorted to
repentance, for the glory of Christ and their own salvation. Upon demonstration
of repentance such should be reinstated as members of the congregation.
We believe that it is the
duty of each member to work for the recovery of any brother or sister
that is privately known to have committed sin or be in error, and upon
demonstration of godly repentance such matters should be covered, forgiven
and forgotten, even as Christ covers, forgives and forgets our sins when
we confess them to Him and forsake them.
We believe that the church
has the right to judge between members in small matters of this life as
they arise, and that such judgment is binding upon all; any member failing
to abide by the church's judgment in such matters is to be removed from
the membership, as discussed above.
Christian Liberty of
Conscience
We believe that only what
the Scripture positively teaches or negatively forbids should be held
and enforced upon believers, the silence of Scripture to be echoed by
the church. Where the Bible speaks and declares It must be followed, but
other areas are to be left to the conscience of the individual believer
before God.
We believe that our liberty
is not to be used as a cover for wickedness, and that it is to be limited
by a charitable consideration of the conscience of others and our own
faith.
Scriptural
Ordinances
Importance of all that
God commands on any subject
We believe that it is an
error to select certain points of doctrine and practice, or "fundamentals",for
special enforcement or for establishing grounds for fellowship, and then
to leave the remainder of God's revelation to the whim of the individual
or congregation as to what is to be believed and practiced.
We believe that every word
of God is pure and should be obeyed in its sphere of reference. While
not all passages are of equal weight on every subject, yet each is to
be followed and obeyed in the area of life to which it speaks, being the
mind of God on that subject and an ordinance to be followed by His saints.
Denial of sacramentalism
We believe that obedience
to God's revealed commandments brings His blessing upon the life of those
who are exercised therein; but it is a grievous error and heresy promulgated
by the church of Rome and her offspring to believe that by keeping God's
ordinances of any kind supernatural grace is imparted to the soul or life
of the person, or that partaking in any observance given in Scripture
makes a person holy intrinsically.
Baptism
Purpose
We believe that baptism is
the first act of gospel obedience for the child of God;he publicly declares
his allegiance to Jesus Christ and witnesses his dependence on Christ's
death, burial and resurrection for his salvation, of which baptism is
a symbol and picture.
Nature
We believe that baptism
is totally figurative and emblematic in nature, no special grace or supernatural
power being conferred upon the recipient;that it is simply the answer
of a good conscience toward God, and not a means of imparting regeneration
to a soul, as the Roman Whore and other heretical groups maintain.
We believe that baptism
is a picture of the death, burial, and resurrection of Jesus Christ; a
symbol of the believer's death to sin, and its power over him, and his
resurrection to walk in newness of life in Christ; and a figure of his
hope, that being his resurrection at the last day to be with his Lord
and Savior forever in glory.
Subject
We believe that baptism is
only properly administered to a person who is of sufficient age and sensibilities
to express belief and confidence in Jesus Christ for the saving of his
soul.
Mode
We believe that the mode
dictated in Scripture (by the meaning of the words used, by the nature
of what it symbolizes, and by the examples given in the New Testament)
is immersion of the candidate into water and the raising of him up out
of water. Therefore pouring, sprinkling or any other wetting is not Bible
baptism.
Administrator
We believe that baptism is
only to be administered by a duly ordained minister of the gospel.
Relationship to church
membership
We believe that baptism is
a prerequisite for a person who is seeking to join a New Testament church,
but, as it is the personal act of a believer answering a good conscience
toward God, that it is erroneous to view baptism as a rite that adds a
person to a church.
The Lord's
Supper
Purpose and nature
We believe that the Lord's
supper is an observance given to New Testament churches as a memorial
of the death, burial and resurrection of Jesus Christ until He returns.
It is totally symbolic in nature and serves to remind God's people of
the price that was paid for their redemption.
We believe that the Mass,
transubstantiation, consubstantiation and all other forms of Roman Catholic
sacramentalism are doctrines from the father of lies himself and are to
be rejected as gross heresy.
For members only of the
local body
We believe that the Scripture
clearly teaches that communion - common union - can only exist among members
of a body, the same local body that is responsible for maintaining its
purity through church judgment; therefore, only those who are members
of our local body are allowed to partake of the Lord's table in our assembly.
Duty of self examination
We believe that God expects
His children to judge themselves and to come to His table with clean hearts,
having confessed their sins to Him, and that those who come without such
preparation bring upon themselves His chastisement and judgment.
The example of foot washing
We believe that the example
given by Christ in John 13 was to teach His disciples the importance of
humility and service to one another; but the absence of further instructions
on the subject in the Pauline and General epistles as well as no further
examples in the New Testament lead us to conclude that this is not a practice
that is required of New Testament saints.
Separation
Personal
We believe that God has called
His children to be light and salt in a dark and corrupt world, so that
it is incumbent upon every believer to walk in wisdom toward those who
are in the world, to be renewed in his mind, to think soberly and righteously,
to keep his body under subjection, and to keep himself unspotted from
the world.
Holy days
We believe that the religious
holidays observed by the world, such as Christmas, Easter, and Halloween,
are, at best, mixtures of pagan practices and doctrines with portions
of God's truth. They are products of the Mother of Harlots and abominations
of the earth (the Roman Catholic church). We believe they are strictly
forbidden and condemned by God in His holy Word, and cannot be participated
in by godly, knowledgeable Christians, but should be separated from and
taught against in His churches.
Secret orders
We believe that the religion
of Jesus Christ is one of light, not darkness, and one of revealed truth,
not hidden mysteries, so that it is impossible for a Christian to be a
member of a secret society or esoteric fraternal order.
Authority
The purpose for authority
We believe that God, as the
Supreme Lord and King of all creation, has ordained positions or offices
of authority over men for the orderly functioning of society, for the
good of those under them, and for His own honor and glory.
The offices God has ordained
Husbands - We believe that
God has ordained for men to rule over women in the relationship of marriage
(Ephesians 5:22-24; Colossians 3:18; 1 Peter 3:1,5; 1 Corinthians 14:35;
Titus 2:5; 1 Corinthians 11:9).
Parents - We believe that
God has ordained parents to rule over children in the relationship of
a family.
Masters - We believe that
God has ordained that masters rule over servants in the business relationship.
Pastors - We believe that
God has ordained priests (OT) and pastors (NT) to rule over His people
in the congregation.
Governors - We believe that
God has ordained kings and magistrates to rule over citizens in political
and national relationships.
The response to authority
We believe that, in their
proper spheres, each officer represents God directly and should be prayed
for, honored, paid their appropriate tribute and dues, reverenced and
feared as God's personal representative, and not from a motive of personal
regard for the man in the office, but out of respect for the office and
for God's appointment of the individual in that office; and those who
disobey or resist those officers in their rightful exercise of their authority
do get to themselves damnation and should be in fearful expectation of
judgment for their folly.
We believe that it is right
and proper for God's children, in order to maintain a godly reputation
in this world and that the ignorance of foolish men be silenced, to subject
themselves to every civil ordinance of man for the Lord's sake (1 Peter
2:13-16), and in particular to be ready and willing to pay taxes to the
state and nation in which they reside, rendering unto Caesar the things
that are Caesar's (Matthew 22:21; Mark 12:17; Luke 20:25; Matthew 17:24-27).
Spiritual Gifts and the
Charismatic Movement
We believe that it is proper
to divide the spiritual gifts listed in the New Testament into ordinary
gifts, which are given by God to His churches throughout all ages for
their profit and edification, and special gifts, which are further divided
into the sign gifts and the revelatory gifts.
We believe that the sign
gifts recorded in the New Testament were given for the purpose of convincing
unbelieving Jews that the preaching of the gospel by the apostles was
of God (1 Corinthians 14:21-22), and that they ceased by 70 AD, when God
had ended His witness to the Jews by destroying them as a nation.
We believe that the revelatory
gifts recorded in the New Testament were given to reveal the fullness
of God's truth in the New Covenant to his churches until such time as
His apostles had completed writing the New Testament, at which time they
ended.
We believe that the modern
Charismatic movement with its emphasis of love over truth, its disdain
for sound doctrine, its love of compromising associations, and ungodly
rejection of Scriptural guidelines for the use of tongues shows itself
to be part of the prophesied lying sins and wonders of these, the last
days.
Prophesy
Purpose
We believe that prophecy
is given to confirm the saints' faith when it occurs and is not given
as a source for speculation on the future; that history shows the fulfillment
of the events that God foretold and His people can take comfort and strength
from the fact that God has demonstrated His power in the affairs of men
and that He told them about those things before they happened.
Methodology for Studying
We believe that God has
spoken in signs and similitudes, figurative and symbolic language describing
spiritual realities and applications that need to be carefully interpreted;
and that to engage in a totally literalistic scheme of interpretation,
as the followers of C.I. Scofield, John Darby, and others of the Dispensational
school do, is to wrest and pervert the Scripture.
We believe that the present
gospel age contains the reality fulfilling the prophecies of the Old Testament,
and that fulfillment in Jesus Christ, His life and ministry, should be
sought above all else; and we believe that the Old Testament prophecies
must be viewed in the light of the revelation given to the apostles and
writers of the New Testament.
The place of the Jews
We believe that the nation
of Israel, called the Jews in the New Testament, was God's chosen people
to convey, until the time of Christ, His worship, testimonies, commandments,
and oracles to the world, and His vehicle for bringing the Son of God
into the world through the lineage of David, and as such was accorded
blessing and honor that no other nation or people on earth had.
The place of the Church
We believe that the gospel
church is the fulfillment of the Old Testament prophets' message concerning
the rebuilding of God's temple; that it is the visible portion of God's
kingdom consisting of both Jews and Gentiles; and that it, as a bride
adorned for her husband, will be glorified with Jesus Christ when He returns.
The identity of the Man
of Sin
We believe that the testimony
of Scripture, as confirmed by the witness of history, amply shows the
man of sin to be the Papacy of Rome, which has been a steady and constant
adversary of the truth of Jesus Christ and His saints during the Dark
Ages and up to the present.
The 70th Week of Daniel
We believe that the events
described in Daniel 9:24-27 referring to the last of the seventy weeks
were fulfilled in the time from Christ's earthly ministry, beginning with
His baptism and ending with His ascension to His throne on high, to the
destruction of Jerusalem in 70 AD; and that it is an absurd delusion to
think that those events are yet waiting fulfillment.
Matthew 24 and the Olivet
Discourse
We believe that the events
described and prophesied in the Olivet discourse were fulfilled in God's
destruction of the city of Jerusalem, and the Jewish nation thereby, in
70 AD by the Roman armies under Tragan.
The Final Judgment and
the Future State of Man
We believe that there shall
be a general resurrection of the dead and a final judgment where all men
shall give account of themselves and be judged by their works.
We believe that the unregenerate,
being justly and righteously condemned for their wicked and abominable
works, shall be cast into the lake of fire, a real and literal place of
torment, which they shall inhabit with the Devil and his angels for eternity.
We believe that the elect,
while some will initially be ashamed at the Lord's coming because of their
slothfulness and lack of godly diligence, yet all, their sins having been
fully and completely paid for by the propitiation of Jesus Christ, and
being judged pure and holy through His substituted righteousness, shall
enjoy everlasting fellowship with God in perfect, glorified bodies in
the new heavens and new earth created for them by God.
We believe that God's saints
who die before these events occur go to be with the Lord Jesus Christ
in heaven and shall return with Him at the general resurrection, therefore
the doctrine of soul sleep is unscriptural and damnable.
Church Covenant
Now all and each of these
doctrines together with the entirety of Holy Scripture we covenant together
as a church, in common faith of the Lord Jesus Christ, to embrace, maintain,
and defend, believing it our duty to stand fast, in one spirit with one
mind striving together for the faith once delivered to the saints.
We esteem it our duty to
walk with each other in all humility and brotherly love, to watch over
each other's conversation, to stir up each other to love and good works,
overlooking one another in love for good and not for evil; not forsaking
the assembly of ourselves together as we have opportunity to worship God
according to His revealed will; and when the case requires, to warn, rebuke,
and admonish one another according to the rules of the Gospel. We earnestly
desire to contribute together also, to the need of the poor saints, to
the support of the ministry, and the furtherance of the Gospel as the
possessions of life and the providence of God may enable and direct us.
|