|


Listen to our Sunday morning sermons at our
Sermons Page
| | Statements of Beliefs
Statements of Belief
Our Covenant Commitments
The Divinely Inspired Word

We Believe
 | the Bible is the mind of Christ-the only inspired, infallible,
authoritative written Word of God. |
 | there is only one God manifested in three persons-Father, Son and
Holy Spirit. |
 | in the virgin birth, deity and sinless life of our Lord Jesus
Christ. |
 | in Christ's vicarious and atoning death through His shed blood. |
 | in Jesus resurrection unto a glorious spiritual body in which He
reigns at the right hand of the Heavenly Father. |
 | in the resurrection of all people unto the judgment of Jesus
Christ. |
 | that the righteous will receive a resurrected glorious body, and the
unrighteous will be condemned. |
 | in the present supernatural ministry of the Holy Spirit who
bestows spiritual gifts to those who obey Him. |
 | that God has established the principle of spiritual authority by which
He sovereignly rules all creation. |

Our Covenantal Commitments
Where we are placed in the local church for service is not a
matter of personal preference, but rather a matter of God's leading in the
believer's life, to be confirmed in the local church setting. The
Scripture states that God places members in the body as it pleases Him (1 Cor.
12:18). God places us in local fellowship with His people so that we can
live in covenant together, grow together, and support one another in the body of
Christ. Privilege, responsibility, and accountability should be practiced
and lived out in the local church. Because of this understanding, we
practice covenantal commitments.
The Church Should Expect Me To:
 | Faithfully attend its services.
|
 |
Be aware of the total church program at home and
abroad and to support it by prayer.
|
 |
Live a consistent Christian life.
|
 |
Serve in the church and its outreach according to my
abilities.
|
 |
Share my Christian testimony by word and life on a person-to-person basis.
|
 |
Support its work by the methods of tithing (giving a
tenth of my income) and offerings.
|
|
I Should Expect The Church To:
 | Minister to my spiritual needs, especially through the preaching of
the Word.
|
 |
Assist me with Godly counsel especially in times of
decision, stress and difficulty.
|
 |
Provide me with opportunities for Christian
fellowship.
|
 |
Serve me and the members of my family in matters of
religious instruction.
|
 |
Sustain me by the prayers and concern of pastors and
fellow believers in any of the distressing circumstances of life.
|
 |
Be a sound steward of my financial and personal
investments in the Kingdom of God.
|
|

 |
The Divinely
Inspired Word
|
|
In some liberal circles, the Holy Bible has come under scrutiny and been
labeled as a bias literary piece written solely by the intellects of common men.
This undermines the very foundation of the Christian faith. The great theologian
Charles Spurgeon said it well: "The Book is a divine production; it is
perfect, and is the last court of appealthe judge which ends all strife.
I would as soon dream of blaspheming my Maker as of questioning the
infallibility of His Word."
As Christians, we look to the Scriptures for truth and understanding, and in
them we find these divinely inspired words:
All Scripture is given by inspiration of God
(II Tim. 3:16).
In the Greek, this text literally means the Scriptures were
"God-breathed," and not just part of them but all of them.
Second Peter 1:20-21 declares
no prophecy of Scripture is of any private interpretation, for
prophecy never came by the will of man, but holy men of God spoke as they
were moved by the Holy Spirit.
By inspiration, we do not mean that God dictated to the individual writers
what they should say, but that His Holy Spirit so guided and controlled the
writers that what they wrote was true and was the particular truth that God
wanted to be communicated to His people. God allowed the writers to use their
own intellects, language, and style, but when they wrote, His Holy Spirit
supernaturally kept their writing free from error and rendered it the exact
truth which God wanted conveyed down through the ages. The Bible thus becomes a
unit, parts of which cannot be cut off without irreparable injury to the whole.
We look to the Bible as
our source of truth. For Second Timothy 3:16-17 goes on to say:
(All Scripture) is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction,
for instruction in righteousness, that the man of God may be complete,
thoroughly equipped for every good work.
To believe that the Bible is anything less than what it declares itself to be
is to not be completely equipped to do Gods will.
|
|