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Back to Beliefs
Our Affirmation of Faith
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We believe the Bible to be the inspired and only infallible
written Word of God.
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We believe that there is One God, eternally existent in three
Persons; God the Father, God the Son, and God the Holy Spirit.
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We believe in the Blessed Hope, which is the rapture of the
Church of God, which is in Christ at His return.
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We believe that the only means of being cleansed from sin, is
through repentance, faith in the precious Blood of Jesus Christ
and being baptized in water.
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We believe that regeneration by the Holy Ghost is absolutely
essential for personal salvation.
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We believe that the redemptive work of Christ on the Cross
provides healing for the human body in answer to believing in
prayer.
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We believe that the baptism in the Holy Ghost, according to Acts
2:4, is given to believers who asks for it.
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We believe in the sanctifying power of the Holy Spirit, by whose
indwelling, the Christian is enabled to live a Holy and
separated life in this present world, Amen.
The Doctrine of the Church of God in Christ
We believe that the Bible is the Word
of God and contains one harmonious and sufficiently complete
system of doctrine. We believe in the full inspiration of the
Word of God. We hold the Word of God to be the only authority in
all matters and assert that no doctrine can be true or
essential, if it does not find a place in this Word.
We believe in God, the Father
Almighty, the Author and Creator of all things. The Old
Testament reveals God in diverse manners, by manifesting his
nature, character, and dominions. The Gospels in the New
Testament give us knowledge of God the "Father" or "My Father",
showing the relationship of God to Jesus as Father, or
representing Him as the Father in the Godhead, and Jesus himself
that Son (St. John 15:8, 14:20). Jesus also gives God the
distinction of "Fatherhood" to all believers when he explains
God in the light of "Your Father in Heaven" (St. Matthew 6:8).
We believe that Jesus Christ is the
Son of God, the Second person in the Godhead of the Trinity or
Triune Godhead. We believe that Jesus was and is eternal in his
person and nature as the Son of God who was with God in the
beginning of creation (St. John 1:1). We believe that Jesus
Christ was born of a virgin called Mary according to the
scripture (St. Matthew 1:18), thus giving rise to our
fundamental belief in the Virgin Birth and to all of the
miraculous events surrounding the phenomenon (St. Matthew
1:18-25). We believe that Jesus Christ became the "suffering
servant" to man; this suffering servant came seeking to redeem
man from sin and to reconcile him back to God, his Father
(Romans 5:10). We believe that Jesus Christ is standing now as
mediator between God and man (I Timothy 2:5)
We believe the Holy Ghost or Holy
Spirit is the third person of the Trinity, proceeds from the
Father and the Son, is of the same substance, equal to power and
glory, and is together with the Father and the Son, to be
believed in, obeyed, and worshipped. The Holy Ghost is a gift
bestowed upon the believer for the purpose of equipping and
empowering the believer, making him a more effective witness for
service in the world. He teaches and guides one into all truth
(John 16:13; Acts 1:8, 8:39).
THE BAPTISM OF THE HOLY GHOST
We believe that the Baptism of the
Holy Ghost is an experience subsequent to conversion and
sanctification and that tongue-speaking is the consequence of
the baptism in the Holy Ghost with the manifestations of the
fruit of the spirit (Galatians 5:22-23; Acts 10:46, 19:1-6). We
believe that we are not baptized with the Holy Ghost in order to
be saved (Acts 19:1-6; John 3:5). When one receives a baptismal
Holy Ghost experience, we believe one will speak with a tongue
unknown to oneself according to the sovereign will of Christ. To
be filled with the Spirit means to be Spirit controlled as
expressed by Paul in Ephesians 5:18-19. Since the charismatic
demonstrations were necessary to help the early church to be
successful in implementing the command of Christ, we therefore,
believe that a Holy Ghost experience is mandatory for all men
today.
We believe that man was created holy
by God, composed of body and soul. We believe that man, by
nature, is sinful and unholy. Being born in sin, he needs to be
born again, sanctified and cleansed from all sins by the blood
of Jesus. We believe that man is saved by confessing and
forsaking his sins, and believing on the Lord Jesus Christ, and
that having become a child of God, by being born again and
adopted into the family of God, he may, and should, claim the
inheritance of the sons of God, namely the baptism of the Holy
Ghost.
Sin, the Bible teaches, began in the
angelic world (Ezekiel 28:11-19; Isaiah 14:12-20), and is
transmitted into the blood of the human race through
disobedience and deception motivated by unbelief (I Timothy
2:14). Adam's sin, committed by eating of the forbidden fruit
from the tree of knowledge of good and evil, carried with it
permanent pollution or depraved human nature to all his
descendants. This is called
"original sin." Sin can now be defined as a
volitional transgression against God and a lack of conformity to
the will of God. We, therefore, conclude that man by nature, is
sinful and that he has fallen from a glorious and righteous
state from which he was created, and has become unrighteous and
unholy. Man, therefore, must be restored to his state of
holiness from which he has fallen by being born again (St. John
3:7).
Salvation deals with the application
of the work of redemption to the sinner with his restoration to
divine favor and communion with God. This redemptive operation
of the Holy Ghost upon sinners is brought about by repentance
toward God and faith toward our Lord Jesus Christ which brings
conversion, faith, justification regeneration, sanctification,
and the baptism of the Holy Ghost. Repentance is the work of
God, which results in a change of mind in respect to man's
relationship to God. (St. Matthew 3:1-2, 4:17; Acts 20:21).
Faith is a certain conviction wrought in the heart by the Holy
Spirit, as to the truth of the Gospel and a heart trust in the
promises of God in Christ (Romans 1:17, 3:28; St. Matthew 9:22;
Acts 26:18). Conversion is that act of God whereby He causes the
regenerated sinner, in his conscious life, to turn to Him in
repentance and faith (II Kings 5:15; II Chronicles 33:12-13; St.
Luke 19:8, 9; Acts 8:30). Regeneration is that act of God by
which the principle of the new life is implanted in man, and the
governing disposition of soul is made holy and the first holy
exercise of this new disposition is secured. Sanctification is
that gracious and continuous operation of the Holy Ghost, by
which He delivers the justified sinner from the pollution of
sin, renews his whole nature in the image of God and enables him
to perform good works (Romans 6:4;5:6; Colossians 2:12; 3:1).
The Bible uses the term "angel" (a
heavenly body) clearly and primarily to denote messengers or
ambassadors of God with such scripture references as Revelations
4:5, which indicates their duty in heaven to praise God (Psalm
103:20), to do God's will (St. Matthew 18:10) and to behold his
face. But since heaven must come down to earth, they also have a
mission to earth. The Bible indicates that they accompanied God
in the Creation, and also that they will accompany Christ in His
return in Glory.
Demons denote unclean or evil spirits;
they are sometimes called devils or demonic beings. They are
evil spirits, belonging to the unseen or spiritual realm,
embodied in human beings. The Old Testament refers to the prince
of demons, sometimes called Satan (Adversary) or Devil, as
having power and wisdom, taking the habitation of other forms
such as the serpent (Genesis 3:1). The New Testament speaks of
the Devil as Tempter (St. Matthew 4:3) and it goes on to tell
the works of Satan, The Devil, and Demons as combating
righteousness and good in any form, proving to be an adversary
to the saints. Their chief power is exercised to destroy the
mission of Jesus Christ. It can well be said that the Christian
Church believes in Demons, Satan, and Devils. We believe in
their power and purpose. We believe they can be subdued and
conquered as in the commandment to the believer by Jesus. "In my
name they shall cast out Satan and the work of the Devil and to
resist him and then he will flee
(WITHDRAW) from you." (St. Mark 16:17).
The Church forms a spiritual unity of
which Christ is the divine head. It is animated by one Spirit,
the Spirit of Christ. It professes one faith, shares one hope,
and serves one King,. It is the citadel of the truth and God's
agency for communicating to believers all spiritual blessings.
The Church then is the object of our faith rather than of
knowledge. The name of our Church,
"CHURCH OF GOD IN CHRIST" is supported by I
Thessalonians 2:14 and other passages in the Pauline Epistles.
The word
"CHURCH" or
"EKKLESIA" was first applied to the Christian
society by Jesus Christ in St. Matthew 16:18, the occasion being
that of his benediction of Peter at Caesarea Phillippi.
THE SECOND COMING OF CHRIST
We believe in the second coming of
Christ; that He shall come from heaven to earth, personally,
bodily, visibly (Acts 1:11; Titus 2:11-13; St. Matthew 16:27;
24:30; 25:30; Luke 21:27; John 1:14, 17; Titus 2:11) and that
the Church, the bride, will be caught up to meet Him in the air
(I Thessalonians, 4:16-17). We admonish all who have this hope
to purify themselves as He is pure.
The Church of God in Christ believes
in and practices Divine Healing. It is a commandment of Jesus to
the Apostles (St. Mark 16:18). Jesus affirms his teachings on
healing by explaining to His disciples, who were to be Apostles,
that healing the afflicted is by faith (St. Luke 9:40-41).
Therefore, we believe that healing by faith in God has
scriptural support and ordained authority. St. James' writings
in his epistle encourage Elders to pray for the sick, lay hands
upon them and to anoint them with oil, and that prayers with
faith shall heal the sick and the Lord shall raise them up.
Healing is still practiced widely and frequently in the Church
of God in Christ, and testimonies of healing in our Church
testify to this fact.
The Church of God in Christ believes
that miracles occur to convince men that the Bible is God's
Word. A miracle can be defined as an extraordinary visible act
of Divine power, wrought by the efficient agency of the will of
God, which has as its final cause the vindication of the
righteousness of God's word. We believe that the works of God,
which were performed during the beginnings of Christianity, do
and will occur even today where God is preached, Faith in Christ
is exercised, The Holy Ghost is active, and the Gospel is
promulgated in the truth (Acts 5:15; 6:8; 9:40; Luke 4:36,
7:14-15; 5:5-6; St. Mark 14:15).
THE ORDINANCES OF THE CHURCH
It is generally admitted that for an
ordinance to be valid, it must have been instituted by Christ.
When we speak of ordinances of the church, we are speaking of
those instituted by Christ, in which by sensible signs the grace
of God in Christ, and the benefits of the covenant of grace are
represented, sealed, and applied to believers, and these in turn
give expression to their faith and allegiance to God. The Church
Of God In Christ recognizes three ordinances as having been
instituted by Christ himself and therefore, binding upon the
church practice.
A. THE LORD'S SUPPER (HOLY COMMUNION)
The Lord's Supper symbolizes the
Lord's death and suffering for the benefit and in the place of
His people. It also symbolizes the believer's participation in
the crucified Christ. It represents not only the death of Christ
as the object of faith which unites the believers to Christ, but
also the effect of this act as the giving of life, strength, and
joy to the soul. The communicant by faith enters into a special
spiritual union of his soul with the glorified Christ.
B. FEET WASHING
Feet Washing is practiced and
recognized as an ordinance in our Church because Christ, by His
example, showed that humility characterized greatness in the
Kingdom of God, and that service, rendered to others gave
evidence that humility, motivated by love, exists. These
services are held subsequent to the Lord's Supper; however, its
regularity is left to the discretion of the Pastor in charge.
C. WATER BAPTISM
We believe that Water Baptism is
necessary as instructed by Christ in St. John 3:5,
"UNLESS MAN BE BORN AGAIN OF WATER AND OF THE SPIRIT."
However, we do not believe that water
baptism alone is a means of salvation, but is an outward
demonstration that one has already had a conversion experience
and has accepted Christ as his personal Savior. As Pentecostals,
we practice immersion in preference to
"SPRINKLING" , because immersion corresponds
more closely to the death, burial, and resurrection of our Lord
(Colossians 2:12). It also symbolizes regeneration and
purification more than any other mode. Therefore, we practice
immersion as our mode of Baptism. We believe that we should use
the Baptismal Formula given us by Christ for all
"...IN THE NAME OF THE FATHER , AND OF THE SON, AND OF THE HOLY
GHOST." (St. Matthew 28:19) |