I. GOD
There is one living and true God, the creator of the
universe. He is revealed in the unity of the Godhead as God the
Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit, who are equal in
every divine perfection.
- A. God the Father is the supreme ruler of the
universe. He providentially directs the affairs of history
according to the purposes of His grace.
B. God the Son is the Savior of the world. Born of
the virgin Mary, He declared His deity among men, died on
the cross as the only sacrifice for sin, arose bodily from
the grave, and ascended back to the Father. He is at the
right hand of the Father, interceding for believers until He
returns to rapture them from the world.
C. God the Holy Spirit is the manifest presence of
deity. He convicts of sin, teaches spiritual truths
according to the written Word, permanently indwells
believers, and confers on every believer at conversion the
ability to render effective spiritual service.
II. THE SCRIPTURES
- A. The Scriptures are God's inerrant revelation,
complete in the Old and New Testaments, written by divinely
inspired men as they were moved by the Holy Spirit. Those
men wrote not in words of human wisdom but in words taught
by the Holy Spirit.
B. The Scriptures provide the standard for the
believer's faith and practice, reveal the principles by
which God will judge all, and express the true basis of
Christian fellowship.
III. CREATION
- A. The World--God created all things for His own
pleasure and glory, as revealed in the biblical account of
creation.
B. The Angels--God created an innumerable host of
spirit beings called angels. Holy angels worship God and
execute His will; while fallen angels serve Satan, seeking
to hinder God's purposes.
C. Man--God created man in His own image. As the
crowning work of creation, every person is of dignity and
worth and merits the respect of all other persons.
IV. SATAN
Satan is a person rather than a personification of evil, and
he with his demons opposes all that is true and godly by
blinding the world to the gospel, tempting saints to do evil,
and warring against the Son of God.
V. DEPRAVITY
Although man was created in the image of God, he fell through
sin and that image was marred. In his unregenerate state, he is
void of spiritual life, is under the influence of the devil, and
lacks any power to save himself. The sin nature has been
transmitted to every member of the human race, the man Jesus
Christ alone being excepted. Because of the sin nature, man
possesses no divine life and is essentially and unchangeably
depraved apart from divine grace.
VI. SALVATION
- A. The Meaning of Salvation--Salvation is the
gracious work of God whereby He delivers undeserving sinners
from sin and its results. In justification He declares
righteous all who put faith in Christ as Savior, giving them
freedom from condemnation, peace with God, and full
assurance of future glorification.
B. The Way of Salvation--Salvation is based wholly
on the grace of God apart from works. Anyone who will
exercise repentance toward God and faith in the Lord Jesus
Christ will be saved.
C. The Provision of Salvation--Christ died for the
sins of the whole world. Through His blood, atonement is
made without respect of persons. Any sinner can be saved by
this gracious provision.
D. Divine Sovereignty and Human Freedom--God's
sovereignty and man's freedom are two inseparable factors in
the salvation experience. The two Bible truths are in no way
contradictory in the great salvation so freely provided.
God, in His sovereignty purposed, planned, and executed
salvation in eternity while man's freedom enables him to
make a personal choice in time, either to receive this
salvation and be saved, or to reject it and be damned.
VII. SANCTIFICATION
All believers are set apart unto God at the time of their
regeneration. They should grow in grace by allowing the Holy
spirit to apply God's Word to their lives, conforming them to
the principles of divine righteousness and making them partakers
of the holiness of God.
VIII. ETERNAL SECURITY
All believers are eternally secure in Jesus Christ. They are
born again, made new creatures in Christ, and indwelt by the
Holy Spirit, assuring their perseverance in good works. A
special providence watches over them, and they are kept by the
power of God.
IX. THE CHURCH
- A. The Nature of the Church--A New Testament Church
is a local congregation of baptized believers in Jesus
Christ who are united by covenant in belief of what God has
revealed and in obedience to what He has commanded.
B. The Autonomy of the Church--She acknowledges
Jesus as her only Head and the Holy Bible as her only rule
of faith and practice, governing herself by democratic
principles under the oversight of her pastors.
C. The Perpetuity of the Church--Instituted by
Jesus during His personal ministry on earth, true churches
have continued to the present and will continue until Jesus
returns.
D. The Ordinances of the Church--Her two
ordinances are baptism and the Lord's Supper.
- Baptism is the immersion in water of a believer
as a confession of his faith in Jesus Christ and is
prerequisite to church membership and participation in
the Lord's Supper.
The Lord's Supper is the sacred sharing of the
bread of communion and the cup of blessing by the
assembled church as a memorial to the crucified body and
shed blood of Jesus Christ.
Both ordinances must be administered by the authority of
a New Testament church.
E. The Officers of the Church--Pastors and deacons
are the permanent officers divinely ordained in a New
Testament church. Each church may select men of her choice
to fill those offices under the leading of the Holy Spirit
according to the divinely given qualifications.
- Pastors (elders, bishops) are authorized to
oversee and teach the churches under the Lordship of
Jesus Christ. Each church is responsible to follow them
as they follow Christ and to provide a livelihood for
them that they might fulfill their ministries. Pastors
are equal in the service of God.
Deacons (ministers, servants) are servants of the
churches and assistants to the pastors, particularly in
benevolent ministries. Each church may select her own
deacons according to her needs, and no church is bound
by the act of another church in that selection.
F. The Ministry of the Church--Her mission is
evangelizing sinners by preaching the gospel, baptizing
those who believe, and maturing them by instruction and
discipline.
G. The Fellowship of the Church--She is free to
associate with true churches in furthering the faith but is
responsible to keep herself from those who hold doctrines or
practices contrary to Holy Scripture. In association with
other churches, each church is equal and is the sole judge
of the measure and method of her cooperation. In all matters
of polity and practice, the will of each church is final.
X. CIVIL AUTHORITY
Human government was instituted by God to protect the
innocent and punish the guilty. It is separate from the church,
though both church and state exercise complementary ministries
for the benefit of society.
- A. Christians should submit to the authority of the
government under which they live, obeying all laws which
do not contradict the laws of God, respecting officers of
government, paying taxes, rendering military service, and
praying for the welfare of the nation and its leaders. They
should vote, hold office, and exercise influence to direct
the nation after the principles of Holy Scripture.
B. Civil authority is not to interfere in matters
of conscience or disturb the institutions of religion, but
it should preserve for every citizen the free exercise of
his religious convictions.
C. Churches should receive no subsidy from the
government, but they should be exempt from taxation on
property and money used for the common good through worship,
education, or benevolence.
XI. LAST THINGS
- A. Return--Our risen Lord will return personally in
bodily form to receive His redeemed unto Himself. His return
is imminent.
B. Resurrections--After Jesus returns, all of the
dead will be raised bodily, each in his own order: the
righteous dead in "the resurrection of life" and
the wicked dead in "the resurrection of
damnation".
C. Judgments--Prior to the eternal state, God will
judge everyone to confer rewards or to consign to
punishment.
D. Eternal States--
- Heaven is the eternal home of the redeemed,
who, in their glorified bodies, will live in the
presence of God forever in ultimate blessing.
Hell is the place of eternal punishment and
suffering for the devil, his angels, and the unredeemed.
|