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"For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that
whoever believes in him should not perish, but have eternal life." (John
3:16).
1.00 GOD SPEAKS TO THE HUMAN FAMILY
The Living God
1.01 We believe in the only true and living God, Father, Son, and Holy
Spirit; who is holy love, eternal, unchangeable in being, wisdom, power,
holiness, justice, goodness, and truth.
1.02 The one living God who is Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, the Holy
Trinity, speaks through the holy scriptures, the events of nature and
history, apostles, prophets, evangelists, pastors, teachers, but uniquely in
Jesus Christ, the Word made flesh.
1.03 By word and action God invites persons into a covenant
relationship. God promises to be faithful to the covenant and to make all
who believe his people. All who respond with trust and commitment to God's
invitation find the promise sure and rejoice in being members of God's
people, the covenant community.
The Holy Scriptures
1.04 God's words and actions in creation, providence, judgment, and
redemption are witnessed to by the covenant community in the scriptures of
the Old and New Testaments. *
1.05 God inspired persons of the covenant community to write the
scriptures. In and through the scriptures God speaks about creation,
sin, judgment, salvation, the church and the growth of believers. The
scriptures are the infallible rule of faith and practice, the authoritative
guide for Christian living.
1.06 God's word spoken in and through the scriptures should be
understood in the light of the birth, life, death, and resurrection of Jesus
of Nazareth. The authority of the scriptures is founded on the truth
contained in them and the voice of God speaking through them.
1.07 In order to understand God's word spoken in and through the
scriptures, persons must have the illumination of God's own Spirit.
Moreover, they should study the writings of the Bible in their historical
settings, compare scripture with scripture, listen to the witness of the
church throughout the centuries, and share insights with others in the
covenant community.
*Old Testament
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Genesis |
I Kings |
Ecclesiastes |
Obadiah |
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Exodus |
II Kings |
Song of Solomon |
Jonah |
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Leviticus |
I Chronicles |
Isaiah |
Micah |
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Numbers |
II Chronicles |
Jeremiah |
Nahum |
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Deuteronomy |
Ezra |
Lamentations |
Habakkuk |
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Joshua |
Nehemiah |
Ezekiel |
Zephaniah |
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Judges |
Esther |
Daniel |
Haggai |
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Ruth |
Job |
Hosea |
Zechariah |
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I Samuel |
Psalms |
Joel |
Malachi |
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II Samuel |
Proverbs |
Amos |
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*New Testament
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Matthew |
II Corinthians |
I Timothy |
II Peter |
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Mark |
Galatians |
II Timothy |
I John |
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Luke |
Ephesians |
Titus |
II John |
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John |
Philippians |
Philemon |
III John |
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Acts of the Apostles |
Colossians |
Hebrews |
Jude |
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Romans |
I Thessalonians |
James |
Revelation |
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I Corinthians |
II Thessalonians |
I Peter |
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God's Will
1.08 God's will for people and all creation is altogether wise and good.
Although revealed in the scriptures and in the events of nature and history,
God's will is made known supremely in the person of Jesus Christ, who did
God's will even to death.
1.09 God's will is sufficiently disclosed for persons to respond to it
in worship, love, and service, yet they should hold in reverence and wonder
the mystery of divine ways.
Creation
1.10 God is the creator of all that is known and unknown. All creation
discloses God's glory, power, wisdom, beauty, goodness, and love.
1.11 Among all forms of life, only human beings are created in God's own
image. In the sight of God, male and female are created equal and
complementary. To reflect the divine image is to worship, love, and serve
God.
1.12 The natural world is God's. Its resources, beauty, and order are
given in trust to all peoples, to care for, to conserve, to enjoy, to use
for the welfare of all, and thereby to glorify God.
Providence
1.13 God exercises providential care over all creatures, peoples,
nations, and things. The manner in which this care is provided is revealed
in the scripture.
1.14 God ordinarily exercises providence through the events of nature
and history, using such instruments as persons, laws, and the scriptures,
yet remains free to work with them or above them. The whole creation remains
open to God's direct activity.
1.15 The purpose of God's providence is that the whole creation be set
free from its bondage to sin and death, and be renewed in Jesus Christ.
1.16 God never leaves or forsakes his people. All who trust God find
this truth confirmed in awareness of his love, which includes judgment upon
sin, and which leads to repentance and to greater dependence upon divine
grace. All who do not trust God are, nevertheless, under that same
providence, even when they ignore or reject it. It is designed to lead them
also to repentance and to trust in divine grace.
1.17 God 's providence embraces the whole world, but is especially
evident in the creation of the church, the covenant community. Through
patient discipline, God guides this chosen community in her mission of
witness and service in the world.
1.18 God's providence is sufficiently displayed to be known and
experienced, but, at the same time, it partakes of divine mystery, and is
the occasion for wonder, praise, and thanksgiving. Thus even in illness,
pain, sorrow, tragedy, social upheaval, or natural disaster, persons may be
sure of God's presence and discover his grace to be sufficient.
The Law of God
1.19 God gives the moral law to govern human actions and relations. It
is the principle of justice woven into the fabric of the universe and is
binding upon all persons.
1.20 The moral law is a gift of God's grace. While it consists of the
basic principles of justice revealed in the scriptures and upheld by God, it
does not wholly describe the pattern of his actions toward persons. The
judgment of God, in which the moral law is upheld, is, at the same time, an
expression of redemptive love.
1.21 The moral law is fulfilled in the gospel. Therefore, the behavior
of Christians in human relations should reflect the pattern of God's
behavior toward them, in which love and justice are intertwined.
1.22 The purpose of the moral law is to create wholeness or health in
human life--spiritually, mentally, physically, socially. Therefore, it is
the intention of the moral law that the forces of human personality which
create integrity of life in all its aspects be used to achieve that
wholeness.
2.00 THE HUMAN FAMILY BREAKS RELATIONSHIP WITH GOD
Human Freedom
2.01 God, in creating persons, gives them the capacity and freedom to
respond to divine grace in loving obedience. Therefore, whoever will may be
saved.
2.02 Because of their God-given nature, persons are responsible for
their choices and actions toward God, each other, and the world.
The Abuse of Freedom
2.03 In rejecting their dependence on God and in willful disobedience,
the first human parents disrupted community with God, for which they had
been created. They became inclined toward sin in all aspects of their being.
2.04 As did Adam and Eve, all persons rebel against God, lose the right
relationship to God, and become slaves to sin and death. This condition
becomes the source of all sinful attitudes and actions.
2.05 In willfully sinning all people become guilty before God and are
under divine wrath and judgment, unless saved by God's grace through Jesus
Christ.
2.06 The alienation of persons from God affects the rest of creation, so
that the whole creation stands in need of God's redemption.
3.00 GOD ACTS THROUGH JESUS CHRIST TO RECONCILE THE WORLD
God's Covenant
3.01 God acts to heal the brokenness and alienation caused by sin and to
restore the human family to community through the reconciliation effected in
Jesus Christ.
3.02 God acts to restore sinful persons to a covenant relationship, the
nature of which is that of a family. It is established through God's
initiative and the human response of faith.
3.03 God's covenant is a relationship of grace. It appears in various
forms and manifestations in the scriptures but always as one of grace. The
new covenant in Jesus Christ is its ultimate and supreme expression.
3.04 Jesus Christ, the eternal Word made flesh, is always the essence of
the one covenant of grace. Before Christ's coming, it was made effective by
promises, prophecies, sacrifices, circumcision, the Passover lamb, and other
signs and ordinances delivered to the people of Israel. These were
sufficient through the ministry of the Holy Spirit to instruct persons
savingly in the knowledge of God and to lead them to believe God.
3.05 Since Christ's coming, the covenant of grace is made effective
chiefly by the preaching of the word and the administration of the
sacraments of baptism and the Lord's Supper. In these, together with other
acts of worship and acts of love toward the neighbor, the gospel of the
covenant of grace is set forth simply and yet in fullness and with spiritual
power.
3.06 Children have always been included with their parents in the
covenant of grace. Before Christ came, the appropriate sign and seal thereof
was circumcision. Since the advent of Christ the sign and seal is baptism.
Christ the Savior
3.07 God's mighty act of reconciling love was accomplished in Jesus
Christ, the divine Son who became flesh to be the means by which the sins of
the world are forgiven.
3.08 Jesus Christ, being truly human and truly divine, was tempted in
every respect as every person is, yet he did not sin. While fully sharing
human life, Christ continued to be holy, blameless, undefiled, and
thoroughly fitted to be the savior of the world, the only hope of
reconciliation between God and sinful persons.
3.09 Jesus Christ willingly suffered sin and death for every person. On
the third day after being crucified, Christ was raised from the dead,
appeared to many disciples, afterward ascended to God, and makes
intercession for all persons.
3.10 Through the Holy Spirit, people are able to acknowledge and repent
of their sin, believe in Jesus Christ as Savior, and follow Christ as Lord.
Believers experience Christ's presence and guidance, which helps them to
overcome the powers of evil in ways consistent with God's nature and will.
3.11 God's work of reconciliation in Jesus Christ occurred at a
particular time and place. Yet its powers and benefits extend to the
believer in all ages from the beginning of the world. It is communicated by
the Holy Spirit and through such instruments as God is pleased to employ.
4.00 GOD ACTS THROUGH THE HOLY SPIRIT
The Call and Work of the Holy Spirit
4.01 God acted redemptively in Jesus Christ because of the sins of the
world and continues with the same intent in the Holy Spirit to call every
person to repentance and faith.
4.02 The Holy Spirit works through the scriptures, the sacraments, the
corporate worship of the covenant community, the witness of believers in
word and deed, and in ways beyond human understanding. The spirit moves on
the hearts of sinners, convincing them of their sins and their need for
salvation, and inclining them to repentance and faith toward God.
4.03 The call and work of the Holy Spirit is solely of God's grace and
is not a response to human merit. The call precedes all desire, purpose, and
intention of the sinner to come to Christ. While it is possible for all to
be saved with it, none can be saved without it. Whoever will, therefore, may
be saved, but not apart from the illuminating influence of the Holy Spirit.
4.04 Persons may resist and reject this call of the Holy Spirit, but for
all who respond with repentance and trustful acceptance of God's love in
Christ, there is salvation and life.
Repentance and Confession
4.05 Repentance is that attitude toward God wherein sinners firmly
resolve to forsake sin, trust in Christ, and live in grateful obedience to
God.
4.06 Persons do not merit salvation because of repentance or any other
human exercise. Yet repentance is necessary to partake of the saving grace
and forgiveness of God in Christ.
4.07 In response to God's initiative to restore relationships, persons
make honest confession of sin against God, their brothers and sisters, and
all of creation, and amend the past so far as is in their power.
Saving Faith
4.08 Saving faith is response to God, prompted by the Holy Spirit,
wherein persons rely solely upon God's grace in Jesus Christ for salvation.
Such faith includes trust in the truthfulness of God's promises in the
scriptures, sorrow for sin, and determination to serve God and neighbor.
4.09 Persons do not merit salvation because of faith, nor is faith a
good work. Faith is a gift made possible through God's love and initiative.
Yet God requires the response of faith by all who receive salvation and
reconciliation.
4.10 When persons repent of sin and in faith embrace God's salvation,
they receive forgiveness for their sin and experience acceptance as God's
children.
4.11 In the life of faith, believers are tested and suffer many
struggles, but the promise of ultimate victory through Christ is assured by
God's faithfulness. Both the scriptures and the experiences of the covenant
people throughout the centuries witness to this promise.
Justification
4.12 Justification is God's act of loving acceptance of believers
whereby persons are reconciled to him by the life, death, and resurrection
of Jesus Christ. When they in repentance and faith trust Christ, who is
their righteousness, God gives them peace and restores their relationship
with him.
4.13 In this relationship God continues to forgive sin. Although
believers sometimes disrupt their peace with God through sin and experience
separation from God, yet they are assured that it is by God's grace that
they are accepted and the relationship is sustained. Only by growth in grace
can the believer experience the fullness of relationship with God.
4.14 Those who are reconciled to God through Jesus Christ continue to
know a sinful nature. They continue to experience within themselves the
conflict between their old selves and their new selves, between good and
evil, between their wills and God's will, between life and death.
Regeneration and Adoption
4.15 Regeneration is God's renewal of believers and is solely of God's
grace. Those who trust in the Lord Jesus Christ are recreated, or born
again, renewed in spirit, and made new persons in Christ.
4.16 Regeneration is necessary because all persons who are separated
from Christ are spiritually dead and unable of themselves to love and
glorify God.
4.17 Regeneration is accomplished by the Holy Spirit showing sinners the
truth of Christ, enabling them to repent and believe God in the light of
that truth and to receive the saving grace and forgiveness given in Jesus
Christ.
4.18 When empowered by the illuminating influence of the Holy Spirit,
believers are able to love and glorify God and to love and serve their
neighbors.
4.19 All persons dying in infancy and all who have never had the ability
to respond to Christ are regenerated and saved by God's grace.
4.20 Adoption is the action of God to include in the covenant family all
who are regenerated and made new persons in Christ. This action assures
community with God and one's brothers and sisters in Christ, both now and in
the full redemption of the family of God.
Sanctification and Growth in Grace
4.21 Sanctification is God's setting apart of believers as servants in
the world.
4.22 As believers continue to partake of God's covenant of grace, to
live in the covenant community, and to serve God in the world, they are able
to grow in grace and the knowledge of Jesus Christ as Lord. Believers never
achieve sinless perfection in this life, but through the ministry of the
Holy Spirit they can be progressively conformed to the image of Jesus
Christ, thereby growing in faith, hope, love, and other gifts of the Spirit.
4.23 The struggle with sin continues, for believers are still imperfect
in knowledge and the power to do God's will. Their freedom to trust, love,
and serve God and neighbors is compromised sometimes by distrust, hate and
selfishness. This inner struggle drives them again and again to rely on
God's power to conform them to the image of the new person in Jesus Christ.
Preservation of Believers
4.24 The transformation of believers begun in regeneration and
justification will be brought to completion. Although believers sin and
thereby displease God, the covenant relationship is maintained by God, who
will preserve them in eternal life.
4.25 The preservation of believers depends upon the nature of the
covenant of grace, the unchangeable love and power of God, the merits,
advocacy, and intercession of Jesus Christ, and the presence and ministry of
the Holy Spirit who renews God's image in believers.
4.26 As a consequence of temptation and the neglect of the means of
grace, believers sin, incur God's displeasure, and deprive themselves of
some of the graces and comforts promised to them. But believers will never
rest satisfied until they confess their sin and are renewed in their
consecration to God.
Christian Assurance
4.27 Believers who seek to know and to do the will of God, and who live
in him as he lives in them, may in this life be assured of salvation and
thus rejoice in the hope of fully sharing the glory God.
4.28 This comforting assurance is founded upon the divine promises, the
consciousness of peace with God through Christ, the witness of the Holy
Spirit with the believers' spirits that they truly are God's children.
Assurance is the promise of the believers' full inheritance.
4.29 This assurance may not immediately accompany initial trust in
Christ. It will increase, however, as the believer faithfully participates
in the worship, sacraments, ministry, witness, and life of the covenant
community, through which God confirms to believers the promise never to
leave or forsake them.
5.00 GOD CREATES THE CHURCH FOR MISSION
The Church
5.01 There is one, holy, universal, apostolic church. She is the body of
Christ, who is her Head and Lord.
5.02 The church is one because her Head and Lord is one, Jesus Christ.
Her oneness under her Lord is manifested in the one ministry of word and
sacrament, not in any uniformity of covenantal expression, organization, or
system of doctrine.
5.03 The church is holy because she is founded on the finished and
continuing work of Christ in setting her apart for God's glory and witness
in the world. Her holiness thus rests on God's sanctifying her for her
redemptive mission, not upon any personal holiness of her members.
5.04 The church is universal because God's act of salvation in Jesus
Christ is universal and cannot be limited to any place or time. Her
universal nature rests upon the universal activity of God's Holy Spirit to
make Christ's atonement effective for all peoples. It is expressed in the
church's commission to make disciples of all nations.
5.05 The church is apostolic because God calls her into being through
the proclamation of the gospel first entrusted to the apostles. The church
thus is built on the apostolic message which is faithfully proclaimed by
messengers who follow in the footsteps of the apostles.
5.06 The church, as the covenant community of believers who are
redeemed, includes all people in all ages, past, present, and future, who
respond in faith to God's covenant of grace, and all who are unable to
respond, for reasons known to God, but who are saved by his grace.
5.07 The church in the world consists of all who respond in faith to
God's saving grace and who enter into formal covenant with God and each
other. The children of believers are included in this covenant community and
are under the special care and instruction of the church and their parents
or guardians.
5.08 Because the church in the world consists of persons who are
imperfect in knowledge and in the power to do God's will, she waits with
eager longing for the full redemption of the family of God. Until that time
God wills that all believers worship and witness through the church in the
world and promises to guide her life and growth through the Holy Spirit.
5.09 The church in the world never exists for herself alone, but to
glorify God and work for reconciliation through Christ. Christ claims the
church and gives her the word and sacraments in order to bring God's grace
and judgment to persons.
Christian Communion
5.10 All who are united to Christ by faith are also united to one
another in love. In this communion they are to share the grace of Christ
with one another, to bear one another's burdens, and to reach out to all
other persons.
5.11 The communion of believers has special meaning for members of the
same organized body. Beyond this particular community believers have special
relationship with other organized bodies who embrace similar creeds,
historical heritage, and forms of the covenant community.
Christian Worship
5.12 Christian worship is the affirmation of God's living presence and
the celebration of God's mighty acts. It is central to the life of the
church and is the appropriate response of all believers to the lordship and
sovereignty of God.
5.13 In worship God claims persons in Christ and offers assurance of
love, forgiveness, guidance, and redemption. Believers respond to God with
praise, confession, thanksgiving, love, and commitment to service.
5.14 Christian worship includes proclaiming the gospel of Jesus Christ,
celebrating the sacraments, reading and hearing the scriptures, praying,
singing, and committing life and resources to God. This common worship of
the church validates and sustains such other worship as the church finds
meaningful for celebrating the living presence of God.
5.15 God is to be worshiped both corporately and privately. Corporate
worship is practiced in the gathered congregation, in small groups within
the church, and in larger gatherings of believers. Private worship, through
meditation, prayer, and study of the scriptures, is practiced in various
settings, especially in the home by individuals and by the family.
Sacraments
5.16 Sacraments are signs and testimonies of God's covenant of grace.
Circumcision and passover are the sacraments of the Old Testament; baptism
and the Lord's Supper are the sacraments of the New Testament. They are
given by God and through his presence, word, and will are made effective.
5.17 Jesus Christ ordained the sacraments of baptism and the Lord's
Supper for the church. They are administered by and through the church as
part of her common worship, being entrusted to properly ordained ministers
under the authority of a judicatory of the church.
Baptism
5.18 Baptism symbolized the baptism of the Holy Spirit and is the
external sign of the covenant which marks membership in the community of
faith. In this sacrament the church witnesses to God's initiative to claim
persons in Christ, forgive their sins, grant them grace, shape and order
their lives through the work of the Holy Spirit, and set them apart for
service.
5.19 The sacrament of baptism is administered to infants, one or both of
whose parents or guardians affirm faith in Jesus Christ and assume the
responsibilities of the covenant, and to all persons who affirm personal
faith in Jesus Christ and have not received the sacrament.
5.20 Water is the element to be used in this sacrament. The person
receiving the sacrament is to be baptized in the name of the Father and of
the Son and of the Holy Spirit.
5.21 In administering the sacrament the pouring or sprinkling of water
on the person by the minister fittingly symbolizes the baptism of the Holy
Spirit; however, the validity of the sacrament is not dependent upon its
mode of administration.
5.22 It is the privilege and duty of all believers to seek baptism for
themselves and their children, and to accept its benefits. However, baptism
is neither an indispensable condition of salvation nor effective apart from
life in Christ and the church.
The Lord's Supper
5.23 The Lord's Supper was instituted by Jesus Christ on the night of
his betrayal. It is a means by which the church remembers and shows forth
Christ's passion and death on the cross. The sacrament is also a perpetual
means given to the church to celebrate and experience the continuing
presence of the risen Lord and her expectation of the Lord's return.
5.24 The elements used in this sacrament are bread and the fruit of the
vine, which represent the body and blood of Christ. The elements themselves
are never to be worshiped, for they are never anything other than bread and
the fruit of the vine. However, because the sacrament represents the
Savior's passion and death, it should not be received without due
self-examination, reverence, humility, and grateful awareness of Christ's
presence.
5.25 This sacrament is a means of spiritual nourishment and growth, an
act of grateful obedience to Christ, and a commitment to the work and
service of Christ's church for all who celebrate it.
5.26 All persons who are part of the covenant community and are
committed to the Christian life are invited and encouraged to receive this
sacrament.
5.27 Each congregation should celebrate this sacrament regularly. Every
Christian should receive it frequently.
The Church in Mission
5.28 The church, being nurtured and sustained by worship, by
proclamation and study of the word, and by the celebration of the
sacraments, is commissioned to witness to all persons who have not received
Christ as Lord and Savior.
5.29 Growth is natural to the church's life. The church is called into
being and exists to reach out to those who have not experienced God's grace
in Christ, and to nourish them with all the means of grace.
5.30 In carrying out the apostolic commission, the covenant community
has encountered and continues to encounter people who belong to religions
which do not acknowledge Jesus Christ as Lord. While respecting persons who
adhere to other religions, Christians are responsible to share with them the
good news of salvation through Jesus Christ.
5.31 The covenant community is responsible to give witness to the mighty
acts of God in the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ. Where and
when this witness is lacking, God is not without a witness. Therefore, it
does not belong to the covenant community to judge where and in what manner
God acts savingly through Jesus Christ.
Church Government
5.32 Jesus Christ as Lord and Head of the church has entrusted the
government of the church to officers who make those decisions that will
guide the life and ministry of the covenant community.
5.33 These officers have the responsibility to serve the church, to
examine and receive members into the communion of the church, to care for
and nurture them in the faith, and to discipline with love and justice those
who offend the gospel and the laws of the church.
Church Judicatories
5.34 The Cumberland Presbyterian Church and Cumberland Presbyterian
Church in America are governed by certain representative bodies: session,
presbytery, synod, and General Assembly. Each of these church bodies in its
special areas of responsibility has legislative, judicial, and executive
authority, yet all are to be conducted in recognition of their
interdependence and Christian mission.
5.35 It is the responsibility of these representative bodies, consistent
with the church's constitution, to determine matters of faith, practice, and
government, propose forms of worship and witness, exercise discipline, and
resolve appeals properly brought before them.
6.00 CHRISTIANS LIVE AND WITNESS IN THE WORLD
Christian Freedom
6.01 Through Jesus Christ, God frees persons from the shackles,
oppression, and shame of sin and sinful forces, from the guilt and penal
consequences of sin, and enables them to have free access to God. This
freedom, rooted in love, not fear, enables persons to become who God intends
them to be, to bear witness to their Lord, and to serve God and neighbors in
the vocations of their common life.
6.02 While God alone is Lord of the conscience and in matters of faith
and worship God frees believers from the opinions and commandments of others
that are contrary to his word, this does not preclude their need for the
instruction and discipline of the church.
6.03 Believers who, under the pretext of Christian freedom practice sin,
thereby violate the nature and purpose of Christian freedom. Believers are
free to love and serve the Lord rather than evil.
6.04 Believers who, under the pretext of Christian freedom, defy the
proper exercise of just and lawful authority, either civil or
ecclesiastical, are subject to the discipline of the church.
6.05 Christians owe ultimate allegiance to Jesus Christ as Lord, and
must never yield that ultimate allegiance to any government or nation, and
should in Christian conscience oppose any form of injustice.
Good Works
6.06 Believers are saved by grace through faith which produces the
desire to do the good works for which God creates persons in Christ Jesus.
6.07 Good works are done in thankful response to the gift of God's
grace. God graciously accepts the works of believers despite their many
weaknesses and imperfect motives.
6.08 Good works are the result of and not the means of salvation.
6.09 Good works encompass not only those deeds of service and mercy
exemplified by Christ, but also those ethical and moral choices that reflect
Christian values and principles in all of life's relationships.
Christian Stewardship
6.10 Christian stewardship acknowledges that all of life and creation is
a trust from God, to be used for God's glory and service. It includes the
conservation and responsible use of natural resources as well as the
creative use of human skills and energies. These gifts of God are to be
shared with all, especially with the poor.
6.11 The motive for Christian stewardship is gratitude for God's
abundant love and mercy, accompanied by the desire to share all of God's
good gifts with others.
6.12 God gives to the human family a variety of gifts, including gifts
to each person for which each person has responsibility. God desires that
each person engage in the mutual sharing of these gifts so that all may be
enriched.
6.13 Proportionate and regular giving of all that God entrusts to the
human family is an act of devotion and a means of grace. Giving to and
through the church is the privilege of every believer. Tithing as a
scriptural guide for giving, is an adventure of faith and a rich and
rewarding practice. The tither not only experiences the grace of God but
even the grace of sharing.
6.14 All believers are responsible to God and to the covenant community
for their stewardship.
Marriage and the Family
6.15 God created the family as the primary community in which persons
experience love, companionship, support, protection, discipline,
encouragement, and other blessings. It is the normal relationship into which
children are born.
6.16 The church recognizes and ministers to people living in a variety
of family patterns, including those persons who by choice or circumstances
are single. It seeks to embrace each person and all groups of persons within
the family life of the covenant community.
6.17 Marriage is between a man and a woman for the mutual benefit of
each, their children, and society. While marriage is subject to the
appropriate civil law, it is primarily a covenant relationship under God. As
such, it symbolizes the relationship of Jesus Christ and the church, and is
that human relationship in which love and trust are best known.
6.18 As a covenant relationship under God, marriage is a lifetime
commitment, and should not be taken lightly.
6.19 Because marriage is primarily a covenant relationship under God,
between a man and a woman, it is morally wrong and unlawful for any person
to have more than one living marriage partner.
6.20 When human weakness and sin threaten a marriage relationship, the
covenant community has responsibility to uphold the sanctity of marriage and
to help partners strengthen their relationship. If a marriage is dissolved
by divorce, the covenant community is responsible to minister to the
victims, including any children of the marriage, and to counsel divorced
persons who are considering remarriage.
6.21 The church has responsibility to help persons prepare for marriage,
for parental responsibilities, and for family life under the lordship of
Jesus Christ.
6.22 The church has responsibility to minister to the needs of persons
in every crisis, including physical and emotional illness, economic
distress, natural disasters, accidents due to carelessness, and death.
The Lord's Day
6.23 The Creator has given one day in seven for special reflection on
God's nature and deeds. From the beginning of the world to the resurrection
of Christ the seventh day of the week, known as the sabbath, was the Lord's
Day. Subsequent to Christ's resurrection, Christians celebrate the first day
of the week as the Lord's Day.
6.24 Appropriate activities on the Lord's Day include worship, study,
doing good works, and other activities leading to renewal. The proper
observance of the Lord's Day enriches the quality of life for all other
days.
Lawful Oaths and Vows
6.25 Christians should bind themselves by oath or pledge only to those
good and just promises they are reasonably able to perform.
6.26 A vow is similar to an oath and should be made with care, performed
with faithfulness, and honored with integrity. Persons should vow to do only
that which is consistent with the scriptures.
Civil Government
6.27 The purpose of civil government is to enable God's creation to live
under the principles of justice and order. As it faithfully upholds the
welfare of God's creation, civil government lies within the purpose of God
and functions as a useful instrument to enable people to live in harmony and
peace.
6.28 It is the duty of people to participate in civil government in such
ways as are open to them, especially in exercising the right to vote. It is
the duty of Christians to enter civil offices for which they are qualified
and for the purpose of working for justice, peace, and the common welfare.
6.29 Civil government and persons elected to civil office may not assume
control over or administration of the church in matters of faith or
practice. Yet their duty is to protect the religious freedom of all persons
and to guard the right of religious bodies to assemble without interference.
6.30 The covenant community, governed by the Lord Christ, opposes,
resists, and seeks to change all circumstances of oppression--political,
economic, cultural, racial--by which persons are denied the essential
dignity God intends for them in the work of creation.
6.31 The covenant community affirms the lordship of Christ who sought
out the poor, the oppressed, the sick, and the helpless. In her corporate
life and through her individual members, the church is an advocate for all
victims of violence and all those whom the law or society treats as less
than persons for whom Christ died. Such advocacy involves not only
opposition to all unjust laws and forms of injustice but even more support
for those attitudes and actions which embody the way of Christ, which is to
overcome evil with good.
6.32 God gives the message and ministry of reconciliation to the church.
The church, corporately and through her individual members, seeks to promote
reconciliation, love, and justice among all persons, classes, races, and
nations.
7.00 GOD CONSUMMATES ALL LIFE AND HISTORY
Death and Resurrection
7.01 Death is both a spiritual and physical reality. Therefore the
church has the privilege and duty to proclaim that in Jesus Christ, God acts
to redeem persons from bondage to death both in spirit and body.
7.02 Those who have been regenerated in Christ live with joyful and
confident expectation that after death the |