CORE VALUES
We Are a Christian People
As members of the Church Universal, we join with
all true believers in proclaiming the Lordship of Jesus Christ and
in embracing the historic Trinitarian creedal statements of Christian
faith. We value our Wesleyan-Holiness heritage and believe it to
be a way of understanding the faith that is true to Scripture, reason,
tradition, and experience.
We Are a Holiness People
God, who is holy, calls us to a life of holiness.
We believe that the Holy Spirit seeks to do in us a second work
of grace, called by various terms including "entire sanctification"
and "baptism with the Holy Spirit"-cleansing us from all
sin; renewing us in the image of God: empowering us to love God
with our whole heart, soul, mind, and strength, and our neighbors
as ourselves; and producing in us the character of Christ. Holiness
in the life of believers is most clearly understood as Christlikeness.
We Are a Missional People
We are a sent people, responding to the call of
Christ and empowered by the Holy Spirit to go into all the world,
witnessing to the Lordship of Christ and participating with God
in the building of the Church and the extension of His kingdom (2
Corinthians 6:1). Our mission (a) begins in worship, (b) ministers
to the world in evangelism and compassion, (c) encourages believers
toward Christian maturity through discipleship, and (d) prepares
women and men for Christian service through Christian higher education.
ESSAYS
We Are a Christian People
We are united with all believers in proclaiming
the Lordship of Jesus Christ. We believe that in divine love, God
offers to all people forgiveness of sins and restored relationship.
In being reconciled to God, we believe that we are also to be reconciled
to one another loving each other as we have been loved by God, forgiving
each other as we have been foigiven by God. We believe that our
life together is to exemplify the character of Christ. We stand
with Christians everywhere in affirming the historic Trinitarian
creeds and beliefs of the Christian faith and deeply value our heritage
in the Wesleyan-Holiness tradition. We look to Scripture as the
primary source of spiritual truth confirmed by reason, tradition,
and experience.
With all the people of God we confess and praise
Jesus Christ the Lord.
Jesus Christ is the Lord of the Church, which, as the Apostles'
Creed tells us, is one, holy, universal, and apostolic. In Jesus
Christ and through the Holy Spirit, God the Father offers forgiveness
of sin and reconciliation to all the world. Those who respond to
God's offer in faith become the people of God. Having been forgiven
and reconciled in Christ, we forgive and are reconciled to one another.
In this way, we are Christ's Church and Body and reveal the unity
of that Body. As the one Body of Christ, we have "one Lord,
one faith, one baptism." We affirm the unity of Christ's Church
and strive in all things to preserve it (Ephesians 4:5, 3).
Jesus Christ is the holy Lord. For this reason,
Christ's Church is not only one but also holy. It is to be holy
in its parts and in its totality holy in its members as it is in
its Head. The Church is both holy and called to be holy. It is holy
because it is the Body of Christ, who has become for us righteousness
and holiness. It is called to become holy by God, who chose us before
the foundation of the world that we should be holy and blameless.
As Christ's one Body, our life together as a church should embody
the holy character of Christ, who emptied himself and took on the
form of a slave. We affirm the holiness of Christ's Church, both
as a gift and as a calling.
Jesus Christ is the Lord of the Church. For this
reason, the Church is not only one and holy but also universal,
including all who affirm the essential beliefs of the Christian
faith. We affirm the apostolic faith that has been held by all Christians,
everywhere and at all times. We embrace John Wesley's concept of
the universal spirit, by which we have fellowship with all those
who affirm the vital center of Scripture, and we extend toleration
to those who disagree with us on matters not essential to salvation.
Jesus Christ is the Lord of the Scriptures. For
this reason, the Church is not only one, holy, and universal but
also apostolic. It is built on the foundation of the apostles and
prophets and continually devotes itself to the apostles' teaching.
The Church especially looks to the Scriptures, which are the Church's
only norm of faith and life. The Lordship of Jesus over the Scriptures
means that we are to understand the Scriptures through the witness
of the Holy Spirit as they testify to Jesus. To confirm and correct
our understanding of the Scriptures, we honor and heed the ancient
creeds and other voices of the Christian tradition that faithfully
explain the Scriptures. We also allow our understanding of the Scriptures
to be guided by the voice of the Holy Spirit speaking to us in repentance,
faith, and assurance. Finally we test our understanding of the Scriptures
by seeking the reasonableness and coherence of their witness to
Jesus Christ.
We are especially called to witness to the holiness
of Christ's Church as embraced in the Wesleyan-Holiness tradition.
We affirm the principles of salvation by grace alone through faith
in Jesus Christ our Savior. In doing so, we continue to affirm that
Christ's Church is one, universal, and apostolic. But our special
calling is to hold before the eyes of the world and the Church the
centrality of holiness and to encourage the people of God to live
in the fullness of the Father's holy love. For this reason we affirm
the Wesleyan-Holiness understanding of the Christian faith and seek
to remain faithful to its principal teachings: God's prevenient
grace and the means of grace, repentance, faith, the new birth,
justification, assurance, the Christian community and its disciplines,
and the perfection of love.
We Are a Holiness People
We are called by Scripture and drawn by grace to
worship God and to love Him with our whole heart, soul, mind, and
strength, and our neighbors as ourselves. To this end we commit
ourselves fully and completely to God, believing that we can be
"sanctified wholly," as a second crisis experience. We
believe that the Holy Spirit convicts, cleanses, fills and empowers
us as the grace of God transforms us day by day into a people of
love and spiritual discipline, ethical and moral purity, and compassion
and justice. It is the work of the Holy Spirit that restores us
in the image of God and produces in us the character of Christ.
Holiness in the life of be-lievers is most clearly understood as
Christlikeness.
We believe in God the Father, the Creator, who calls
into being what does not exist. We once were not, but God called
us into being, made us for himself, and fashioned us in His own
image. We have been commissioned to bear the image of God: "I
am the LORD your God; consecrate yourselves and be holy because
I am holy" (Leviticus 11:44).
Our hunger to be a Holiness people is rooted in the holi-ness of
God himself. The holiness of God refers to His Deity His utter singularity
of being. There is none like Him in majesty and glory The appropriate
human response in the presence of such a glorious being is worship
of God as God. God's holiness is expressed in His gracious redemptive
acts. Encounter with the God who reveals and gives himself makes
worship possible, and worship becomes the primary way of knowing
Him. We worship the holy redeeming God by loving what He loves.
Our worship of the great and gracious God takes many forms. Often
it is praise and prayer with the faith community. It also expresses
itself in acts of private devotion, thanksgiving and praise, and
obedience. Evangelistic sharing of the faith, compassion toward
our neighbor, working for justice, and moral uprightness are all
acts of worship before our God of blazing holiness. Even the ordinary
tasks of life become acts of worship and take on a sacramental significance
as worship of a holy God becomes our way of life.
Jesus Christ revealed the one holy God to us and
modeled worshipful holy living for us. Jesus informs our understanding
of holiness through His life, sacrifice, and teachings as found
in the Gospels, particularly the Sermon on the Mount. As a Holiness
people we seek to be like Jesus in every atti-tude and action. By
His grace God enables believers who worship Him with their whole
hearts to live Christlike lives. This we understand to be the essence
of holiness.
God has also given us the gift and responsibility
of choice. Because we were born with a tendency to sin, we are inclined
to choose our own way rather than God's (Isaiah 53:6). Having corrupted
God's creation with our sin, we are dead in trespasses and sins
(Ephesians 2:1). If we are to live again spiritually God, who calls
into being what does not exist, must graciously create us anew through
the redemp-tive acts of His own Son.
We believe that God uniquely entered our world through
the incarnation of His only Son, Jesus of Nazareth, the his-torical
God-man. Jesus came to renew the image of God in us, enabling us
to become holy people. We believe that holiness in the life of the
believer is the result of both a crisis ex-perience and a lifelong
process. Following regeneration, the Spirit of our Lord draws us
by grace to the full consecration of our lives to Him. Then, in
the divine act of entire sanctification, also called the baptism
with the Holy Spirit, He cleanses us from original sin and indwells
us with His holy presence. He perfects us in love, enables us to
live in moral uprightness, and empowers us to serve! The Spirit
of Jesus works within us to reproduce in us His own character of
holy love. He enables us to "put on the new self, created to
be like God in true righteousness and holiness" (Ephesians
4:24). To be like God is to be like Je-sus. Having had the divine
image restored in us in God's act of entire sanctification, we acknowledge
that we have not yet arrived spiritually; our lifelong goal is Christlikeness
in every word, thought, and deed. By continued yieldedness, obedience,
and faith, we believe that we are "being transformed in his
[Christ's] likeness with ever-increasing glory" (2 Corinthians
3:18). We participate further in this process as we live a life
of worship expressed in many ways, including embracing the spiritual
disciplines and the fellowship and accountability of the local church.
As a Body of Believers in a specific congregation, we endeavor to
be a Christlike community, worshiping God with our whole hearts
and re-ceiving His gifts of love, purity power, and compassion.
As a Holiness people we do not exist in a historical
and ecclesiastical vacuum. We identify with the New Testament and
the Early Church. Our articles of faith clearly place us in the
tradition of classical Christianity We identify with the Arminian
tradition of free grace (Jesus died for all) and human freedom--the
God-given capacity of all to choose God and salvation. We also trace
our ecclesiastical heritage to the Wesleyan Revival of the 18th
century and to the Holiness Movement of the 19th and 20th centuries.
Through the centuries the Holiness people have had
a "magnificent obsession" with Jesus. We worship Jesus!
We love Jesus! We think Jesus! We talk Jesus! We live Jesus! This
is the essence and overflow of holiness for us. This is what characterizes
Holiness people.
We Are a Missional People
3a Our Mission of Worship
The mission of the church in the world begins in
worship. It is as we are gathered together before God in worship-singing,
hearing the public reading of the Bible, giving our tithes and offerings,
praying, hearing the preached Word, baptizing, and sharing the Lords
Supper--that we know most clearly what it means to be the people
of God. Our belief that the work of God in the world is accomplished
primarily through worshiping congregations leads us to understand
that our mission includes the receiving of new members into the
fellowship of the church and the organizing of new worshiping congregations.
Worship is the highest expression of our love for
God. It is God-centered adoration honoring the One who in grace
and mercy redeems us. The primary context for worship is the local
church where God's people gather, not in self-cen-tered experience
or for self-glorification, but in self-surrender and self-offering.
Worship is the church in loving, obedient service to God.
Worship is the first privilege and responsibility
of God's people. It is the gathering of the covenant community before
God in proclamation and celebrative response of who He is, what
He has done, and what He promises to do.
The local church in worship is at the core of our
identity The Church of the Nazarene is essentially local worshiping
congregations, and it is in and through the local congregation that
our mission is fulfilled. The mission of the church finds its meaning
and orientation in worship. It is in the preaching of the Word,
the celebration of the sacraments, the public reading of the Scripture,
the singing of hymns and choruses, corporate prayer, and the presenting
of our tithes and offerings that we know most clearly what it means
to be the people of God. It is in worship that we understand most
clearly what it means to participate with God in the work of redemption.
It is with a spirit of hope and optimism that we
engage our God-given mission in the world. It is more than an expression
of human concern or human effort. Our mission is a response to God's
call. It is our participation with God in the Kingdom mission of
reconciliation. It is the church's faithful witness to and expression
of the love of God in the world-in evangelism, compassion, and justice.
It is our faith in the ability of God's grace to transform the lives
of people broken by sin and to restore them in His own image.
3c. Our Mission of Discipleship
We are committed to being-and inviting others to
become-disciples of Jesus. With this in mind, we are committed to
providing the means (Sunday School, Bible studies, small accountability
groups, etc.) through which believers are en-couraged to grow in
their understanding of the Christian faith and in their relationship
with each other and with God. We understand discipleship to include
submitting ourselves to obeying God and to the disciplines of the
faith. We believe we are to help each other live the holy life through
mutual support, Christian fellowship, and loving accountability
Wesley said, "God has given us to each other to strengthen
each other's hands." Christian discipleship is a way of life.
It is the process of learning how God would have us live in the
world. As we learn to live in obedience to the Word of God, in submission
to the disciplines of the faith, and in accountability to one another,
we begin to understand the true joy of the disciplined life and
the Christian meaning of freedom. Discipleship is not merely human
effort, submitting to rules and regulations. It is the means through
which the Holy Spirit gradually brings us to maturity in Christ.
It is through discipleship that we become people of Christian character.
The ultimate goal of discipleship is to be transformed into the
likeness of Jesus Christ (2 Corinthians 3:18).
By studying and meditating on the Scriptures, Christians discover
fountains of refreshment in every thirsty valley on their discipleship
journey Invigorated by the washing of the Word, refined by immersion
in the Word, drinking deeply the truths of the Word, the disciples
discover to their happy surprise that they are being "transformed
by the renewing of [their] mind" (Romans 12:2). The Christian
way opens before them like a high and open road. Nerved by God,
they proceed on a way of life that eclipses mere human and cul-tural
values. Refreshed by the fountain of the Word, disciples give their
life away in self-transcending service.
We affirm the life-giving value of the classic spiritual
disciplines in the training of women and men as disciples of Christ.
The disciplines of prayer and fasting, worship, study solitude,
service, and simplicity are at the same time natural expressions
and intentional commitments in the life of the believer. Discipleship
requires mutual support and loving accountability. On our own, few
of us will develop the spiritual disciplines that lead to Christian
maturity. We believe that we are to encourage the mutual support
provided through such means as Sunday School classes, discipleship
groups, Bible study groups, prayer meetings, accountability groups,
and Christian mentoring as necessary to our spiritual formation
and maturity. Recognizing the role of accountability in the Wesleyan
class meetings encourages us to support its place within the contemporary
Christian congregation.
3d. Our Mission of Christian Higher Education
We are committed to Christian education, through
which men and women are equipped for lives of Christian service.
In our seminaries, Bible colleges, colleges, and universities, we
are committed to the pursuit of knowledge, the development of Christian
character, and the equipping of leaders to accomplish our God-given
calling of serving in the church and in the world.
Christian higher education is a central part of
the mission of the Church of the Nazarene. In the early years of
the Church of the Nazarene, institutions of Christian higher education
were organized for the purpose of preparing men and women of God
for leadership and Christian service in the global spread of the
Wesleyan-Holiness revival. Our continued commitment to Christian
higher education through the years has produced a worldwide network
of seminaries, Bible schools, colleges, and universities. Our mission
of Christian higher education comes directly out of what it means
to be God's people. We are to love God with our whole "heart,
soul, and mind." We are therefore, to be good stewards in the
development of our minds, our academic resources, and in the application
of our knowledge. In this light, we are committed to the open and
honest pursuit of knowledge and truth coupled with the integrity
of our Christian faith. Christian higher education is an essential
arena for the development of the stewardship of our minds. It is
intended to be an arena characterized by the discussion and discovery
of truth and knowledge about God and all of God's creation.
In Christian higher education faith is not compartmentalized,
but wonderfully integrated with knowledge as faith and learning
are developed together. The whole person is cultivated with every
area of thought and life understood in relationship to the desire
and design of God. Christian char-acter and the equipping of Christian
leaders for service in the church and the world are forged in the
context of learning about God, humanity and the world. This commitment
of Christian higher education to the formation of the whole person
is critical for the development of Christian men and women for missional
leadership in the church and the world.
As a redeemed people called to Christlikeness and
sent as agents of God's love in the world, we participate with God
in the work of redeeming humanity Christian higher education contributes
significantly to our being such a missional people-offering the
broad range of knowledge-and it is necessary for effective service
to God in our various vocations. Our faithful participation in God's
redemptive work requires that we raise up men and women of God who
can take their place as Christian servant leaders in the church
and in the world.
The world in which we are called to serve is becoming
more closely connected and more profoundly complicated each day.
As God's work of redemption advances in present and future generations,
our faithful witness to the Lordship of Christ and effective participation
with God in the building of the church will continue to require
a vital commitment to Christian higher education.
CONCLUSION
At the turn of the 20th century, the Church of the
Nazarene was born! P.F. Bresee and others were deeply convicted
that God had raised them up for the express purpose of proclaiming
to the church and world the gospel of Jesus Christ in the Wesleyan-Holiness
tradition. There are unmistakable marks of providence on this denomination.
From a fledgling movement, the Church of the Nazarene now exceeds
1.3 million in membership and is ministering in 135 countries of
the world.
At the turn of the 21st century, the future of this denomination
has never been brighter! Many believe that we were raised up, not
for the 20th century, but for the 21st century. We are positioned
to make a major contribution to our post-modern world. This affirmation
is grounded in our Wesleyan-Holiness heritage with its radical optimism
of grace. We believe that human nature, and ultimately society can
be radically and permanently changed by the grace of God. We have
an irrepressible confidence in this message of hope, which flows
from the heart of our holy God.
P.F. Bresee was fond of saying, 'The sun never sets
in the morning." It is still morning in the Church of the Nazarene,
and the sun never sets on our denomination around the world. We
are radically optimistic about impacting our 21st-century world
with the Holiness message! With clarity of vision, total commitment,
and firm faith, we view this new century as our day of greatest
opportunity for making Christlike disciples of all nations.
All Scripture quotations are taken from the
Holy Bible, New International Versions (NIV). Copyright © 1973,
1978, 1984 by International Bible Society. Used by permission of
Zondervan Publishing House. All rights reserved.