Articles of Faith &
Practice
1. The Triune God Missionary Church
a. We believe that the one and only true God is Spirit:
self-existent, infinite, personal, unchangeable, and eternal in His
being; perfect in holiness, love, justice, goodness, wisdom, and truth;
omnipotent, omniscient, and omnipresent; Creator and Sustainer of all
things, visible and invisible; both immanent and transcendent to
creation; eternally existent in three persons, one in substance and
co-equal in power and glory, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.
Gen.1:1; Ex. 3:14; 34:6; Deut. 6:4; 32:4; I Kings 8:27; Neh. 9:6; Ps.
90:2; 103:8; 116:5; 147:5; Isa. 6:3; 40:28; 57:15; Jer. 23:23,24; Mal.
3:6; Matt. 28:19; John 4:24; 14:16; Acts 17:28; I Cor. 8:4; II Cor.
13:14; Col. 1:17; I Tim. 1:17; Heb. 1:2,12; 11:3; II Pet. 3:9; I John
4:10-16
b. We believe that the Father is begotten of none. He is the eternal
Father of the Lord Jesus Christ, the Author of salvation, the Father of
all who are begotten into newness of life through faith in Christ.
Gen. 1:1; Ps. 90:2; John 13:3; 16:28; Eph. 1:3,4; I Pet.
1:2,3; I John 2:23; 3:1
c. We believe in the deity of the Lord Jesus Christ; in His eternal
generation from the Father; in His incarnation by which He was conceived
by the Holy Spirit and born of the Virgin Mary, thus uniting the divine
and human natures in their completeness into the one unique person of
Jesus Christ; in His sinless life and miraculous works; in His vicarious
death to make atonement for the sins of the world; in His bodily
resurrection and ascension to the right hand of the Father; in His
sovereign power and lordship; in His present mediatorial ministry as the
believer's Advocate; in His imminent coming in power and glory.
Isa. 53:6; Matt. 28:18-20; Luke 1:35; John 1:1,14,18; Acts
2:22,24-32; Rom. 1:3,4; 8:34; II Cor. 5:18,19; Eph. 1:19-22; Col. 3:4;
Tit. 2:13; Heb. 1:8; 4:15; 7:25; I Pet. 1:18; 2:22,24; 3:18; I John
2:1,2
d. We believe that the Holy Spirit, the third person of the triune
God, proceeding from the Father and sent by the Son, is one substance,
majesty, and glory with the Father and the Son, very and eternally God.
His office and work is to reprove or convict the world of sin, of
righteousness, and of judgment; to regenerate such as repent of their
sins and believe on the Lord Jesus Christ; to sanctify, and endue with
power, teach, guide, and comfort the believer.
The Scriptures reveal the work of the Holy Spirit in the church to be
that of uniting believers into the body of Christ, possessing it as the
temple of God, equipping it with gifts and graces for service, giving it
the body of inspired truth and imparting to it the spirit of
illumination and guidance into all truth, and presiding over and guiding
the church into the will of God.
Matt. 28:19; Luke 24:49; John 3:5,6; 14:16-18,26; 15:26; 16:7-14;
Acts 1:8; 2:1-4; 13:2-4; 15:28; Rom. 12:6-8; I Cor. 2:10-12; 6:19,20;
12:4-11; 12:13; II Cor. 6:16; 13:14; Gal. 5:22,23; Eph. 2:21,22; II
Thess. 2:13; Tit. 3:5; I Pet. 1:2, I John 2:20-27
2. The Bible
We believe that the Bible, consisting of the sixty-six books of the
Old and New Testaments, is the Word of God given by divine inspiration
and is inerrant in the original manuscripts. The Bible today remains the
unchanging authority in matters of Christian faith and practice. It is
true and reliable in all the matters it addresses. (See Position Paper
IX: "Biblical Inerrancy.")
Ps. 119:9,89,105; Matt. 24:35; I Thess. 2:13; II Tim.
3:16; Heb. 4:12; I Pet. 1:25; II Pet. 1:21
3. Man
a. His Creation. We believe that man was created by an immediate act
of God and not by a process of evolution. He was created in the image
and likeness of God, possessing personality and holiness; in his
original state man enjoyed sweet fellowship with God, the purpose of his
creation being that he might glorify God and enjoy Him forever. Man
having been created in the likeness of God is a self-conscious
personality capable of free and rational choice.
Gen. 1:27; Eph. 1:5,6
b. His Fall. We believe that our first parents did not remain in the
happy state of their original creation, but, being deluded through the
subtlety of Satan, voluntarily disobeyed the positive command of God,
and thus were alienated from God and incurred upon themselves and their
posterity the sentence of death both physical and spiritual. Even the
earth was cursed because of man's sin. In consequence of this act of
disobedience, the entire human race has become so corrupted that in
every heart there is by nature that evil disposition which eventually
leads to responsible acts of sin and to just condemnation. Also through
the fall of Adam, man has become so completely ruined that he has
neither will nor power to turn to God and if left to himself would
remain in his sin forever.
Gen. 3:13,16,17; Isa. 64:6; Rom. 7:7ff.; I John 1:8
c. His Redemption. We believe that God has provided redemption for
all men through the mediatorial work of Christ, who voluntarily offered
Himself on Calvary as a perfect sacrifice for sin, the just suffering
for the unjust, bearing sin's curse and tasting death for every man.
John 10:17,18; Acts 4:12; I Tim. 1:15; 2:5,6; Tit.
2:11,12;
Heb. 2:9; I Pet. 3:18
4. Salvation
We believe since all men are sinners and guilty before God and are
dead in trespasses and sin and therefore are unable to save themselves,
God has out of His infinite love given His Son, the Lord Jesus Christ,
to become man's Savior.
Matt. 1:21; John 3:14-17; 6:44; Rom. 3:10-12,19,20,23;
Eph. 2:1-3,8,9
a. Repentance. We believe that genuine repentance is a necessary
attitude and act of man that makes it possible for a holy and just God
to forgive man's sins. As an attitude it involves a knowledge of, a
change of mind toward, and a godly sorrow for sin; a proper reverence
for God's holiness; and a surrender to God. As an act it means
confessing and forsaking sin. Repentance is man's appropriate response
to the grace of God in conviction. As a fruit of repentance, insofar as
possible where sin has been committed against man, restitution should be
made.
Ps. 51:3,4; Prov. 28:13; Isa. 6:1-5; 55:6,7; Matt. 3:2,8; 4:17; Luke
13:3, 15:18; 18:13; 19:8; John 16:8-11; Acts 11:18; Rom. 2:4; 10:9,10;
II Cor. 7:9,10; II Tim. 2:25
b. Faith. We believe faith must accompany repentance and is the act
of the will whereby man embraces the promises of God and appropriates to
himself personally the provisions of God's grace. It is resting in the
completeness and adequacy of the atoning merit of Christ's sacrifice as
the sole ground and hope of salvation. Faith must be active throughout
the life of the believer and must manifest itself in obedience and good
works.
Acts 13:38,39; 16:31; Rom. 4:3; 5:1; Eph. 2:8-10; Heb.
11:6; James 2:17
c. Justification and Regeneration. We believe that when the
requirements of repentance and faith have been met, God justifies and
regenerates the sinner. Justification is a judicial act absolving from
guilt and punishment and restoring to divine favor. Justification has to
do with the changing of the sinner's standing before God. Regeneration
has to do with the changing of the sinner's nature through the
impartation of divine life. Regeneration is a spiritual quickening, a
new birth. This experience is witnessed to by the indwelling Holy Spirit
who produces in the heart a desire to do the will of God.
John 3:3,5; 5:24; Acts 22:10; Rom. 5:1,9; 4:4,5; 8:16,33;
II Cor. 5:17; Eph. 2:1; II Pet. 1:4
d. Sanctification and Filling with the Holy Spirit. We believe that
sanctification is the work of God in making men holy. It is the will of
God. It is provided in the atonement, and is experienced through faith
by the operation of the Holy Spirit through the Word and the blood.
While the divine work of making men holy begins in repentance and
regeneration, yet through a subsequent crisis experience the believer is
to die to self, to be purified in heart, and to be filled with the Holy
Spirit so that he may be separated wholly unto God to serve Him in
righteousness and holiness. After the crisis experience, the believer is
to be perfected in holiness in the fear of God and to grow in grace and
in the knowledge of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ.
Ps. 4:3; John 17:17; Acts 15:8,9; Rom. 6:19,22; 12:1,2; II Cor. 7:1;
Gal. 2:20; 6:14; Eph. 5:26; Col. 3:3, I Thess. 4:3; 5:23; II Thess.
2:13; Heb. 12:14; I Pet. 1:2,15,16; II Pet. 3:18; I John 5:6
e. Resurrection and Glorification. We believe in the bodily
resurrection of Christ, and that because He lives we too shall live. The
Scriptures teach that at the return of the Lord the bodies of the
righteous dead will be raised and the living believers with them shall
be caught up to meet the Lord in the air and will be changed so that
both will have literal, spiritual, and immortal bodies like unto
Christ's own glorious body. Our glorification is God's final act in our
salvation and will be realized when we see Him as He is.
I Cor. 15:3-8; 19-23; Phil. 3:20,21; I Thess. 4:14-17; I
John 3:2
5. The Church
a. We believe that the invisible and universal church is an organism
composed of all believers in the Lord Jesus Christ who have been called
out from the world, separated from sin, and vitally united by faith to
Christ, its believing Head and sovereign Lord.
Acts 15:14; I Cor. 12:12-27; Eph. 1:22,23; 4:15,16; Heb. 12:23
b. We believe that the visible and local church is an organized body
of believers in Christ who are voluntarily joined together, and who meet
at regular times for teaching in the Word, fellowship of the saints,
observance of the ordinances, administration of discipline, exercise in
prayer, and participation in public worship and evangelism.
Matt. 18:15-17; Acts 2:42,46,47; 20:7; I Cor. 5:1-4; 16:2
c. We believe the characteristic marks of the members of the true
church are faith in Jesus as the Son of God, love for God and for those
of like faith, obedience to God's commandments, and victory over the
world.
John 13:35; I John 3:14; 4:2; 5:1-5
d. We believe the primary duties of the church consist of glorifying
God and exalting the Lord Jesus Christ, of building itself up in the
most holy faith, and of preaching the Gospel in all the world as a
witness to all men.
Matt. 28:18-20; Acts 1:8, 20:32; Eph. 1:5,6; 3:21; 4:11-16; I Pet.
4:11; Jude 20,21
6. The Last Things
a. The Return of Christ. We believe that the second advent of Christ
is the hope of the church and will be personal, bodily, visible,
premillennial, and redemptive. It is the source of encouragement and
consolation, the motive for purification and holiness, and the
inspiration for activity and service. Christ will first descend into the
clouds, where His church, the waiting bride, will be caught up to meet
Him. After the tribulation judgments, which will be poured out upon the
earth, He will return with His church to judge the nations and to
establish His kingdom wherein He will rule upon the earth for a thousand
years.
Dan. 7:13,14; Matt. 24:21; Mark 13:34-37; Luke 1:32,33; 21:34-36;
John 14:1-3; Acts 1:11; Rom. 8:16-19,23,24; I Thess. 3:12,13; 4:16-18;
5:11; II Thess. 1:3-10; I Tim. 6:12-14; Tit. 2:12,13; James 5:7,8; I
John 2:28; 3:3; Jude 14; Rev. 3:10; 5:9,10; 19:7,8,14; 20:4-6
b. The Millennium. We believe the millennium or thousand years reign
of Christ upon the earth will be ushered in by His return with the
saints. During this period Satan will be bound, the curse will be
lifted, such evils as war, poverty, and injustice shall vanish from the
earth, and Christ will reign in righteousness.
