 |
Article
of
Religion
¶
103.
SECTION
3—OUR
DOCTRINAL
STANDARDS
AND
GENERAL
RULES
THE
ARTICLES
OF
RELIGION
OF
THE
METHODIST
CHURCH3
[Bibliographical
Note:
The
Articles
of
Religion
are
here
reprinted
from
the
Discipline
of
1808
(when
the
first
Restrictive
Rule
took
effect),
collated
against
Wesley's
original
text
in
The
Sunday
Service
of
the
Methodists
(1784).
To
these
are
added
two
Articles:
“Of
Sanctification”
and
“Of
the
Duty
of
Christians
to
the
Civil
Authority,”
which
are
legislative
enactments
and
not
integral
parts
of
the
document
as
protected
by
the
Constitution
(see
Judicial
Council
Decisions
41,
176).
See
Book
of
Discipline
of
The
United
Methodist
Church,
p59]
Article
I—Of
Faith
in
the
Holy
Trinity
There
is
but
one
living
and
true
God,
everlasting,
without
body
or
parts,
of
infinite
power,
wisdom,
and
goodness;
the
maker
and
preserver
of
all
things,
both
visible
and
invisible.
And
in
unity
of
this
Godhead
there
are
three
persons,
of
one
substance,
power,
and
eternity—the
Father,
the
Son,
and
the
Holy
Ghost.
Article
II—Of
the
Word,
or
Son
of
God,
Who
Was
Made
Very
Man
The
Son,
who
is
the
Word
of
the
Father,
the
very
and
eternal
God,
of
one
substance
with
the
Father,
took
man's
nature
in
the
womb
of
the
blessed
Virgin;
so
that
two
whole
and
perfect
natures,
that
is
to
say,
the
Godhead
and
Manhood,
were
joined
together
in
one
person,
never
to
be
divided;
whereof
is
one
Christ,
very
God
and
very
Man,
who
truly
suffered,
was
crucified,
dead,
and
buried,
to
reconcile
his
Father
to
us,
and
to
be a
sacrifice,
not
only
for
original
guilt,
but
also
for
actual
sins
of
men.
Article
III—Of
the
Resurrection
of
Christ
Christ
did
truly
rise
again
from
the
dead,
and
took
again
his
body,
with
all
things
appertaining
to
the
perfection
of
man's
nature,
wherewith
he
ascended
into
heaven,
and
there
sitteth
until
he
return
to
judge
all
men
at
the
last
day.
Article
IV—Of
the
Holy
Ghost
The
Holy
Ghost,
proceeding
from
the
Father
and
the
Son,
is
of
one
substance,
majesty,
and
glory
with
the
Father
and
the
Son,
very
and
eternal
God.
Article
V—Of
the
Sufficiency
of
the
Holy
Scriptures
for
Salvation
The
Holy
Scripture
containeth
all
things
necessary
to
salvation;
so
that
whatsoever
is
not
read
therein,
nor
may
be
proved
thereby,
is
not
to
be
required
of
any
man
that
it
should
be
believed
as
an
article
of
faith,
or
be
thought
requisite
or
necessary
to
salvation.
In
the
name
of
the
Holy
Scripture
we
do
understand
those
canonical
books
of
the
Old
and
New
Testament
of
whose
authority
was
never
any
doubt
in
the
church.
The
names
of
the
canonical
books
are:
Genesis,
Exodus,
Leviticus,
Numbers,
Deuteronomy,
Joshua,
Judges,
Ruth,
The
First
Book
of
Samuel,
The
Second
Book
of
Samuel,
The
First
Book
of
Kings,
The
Second
Book
of
Kings,
The
First
Book
of
Chronicles,
The
Second
Book
of
Chronicles,
The
Book
of
Ezra,
The
Book
of
Nehemiah,
The
Book
of
Esther,
The
Book
of
Job,
The
Psalms,
The
Proverbs,
Ecclesiastes
or
the
Preacher,
Cantica
or
Songs
of
Solomon,
Four
Prophets
the
Greater,
Twelve
Prophets
the
Less.
All
the
books
of
the
New
Testament,
as
they
are
commonly
received,
we
do
receive
and
account
canonical.
Article
VI—Of
the
Old
Testament
The
Old
Testament
is
not
contrary
to
the
New;
for
both
in
the
Old
and
New
Testament
everlasting
life
is
offered
to
mankind
by
Christ,
who
is
the
only
Mediator
between
God
and
man,
being
both
God
and
Man.
Wherefore
they
are
not
to
be
heard
who
feign
that
the
old
fathers
did
look
only
for
transitory
promises.
Although
the
law
given
from
God
by
Moses
as
touching
ceremonies
and
rites
doth
not
bind
Christians,
nor
ought
the
civil
precepts
thereof
of
necessity
be
received
in
any
commonwealth;
yet
notwithstanding,
no
Christian
whatsoever
is
free
from
the
obedience
of
the
commandments
which
are
called
moral.
Article
VII—Of
Original
or
Birth
Sin
Original
sin
standeth
not
in
the
following
of
Adam
(as
the
Pelagians
do
vainly
talk),
but
it
is
the
corruption
of
the
nature
of
every
man,
that
naturally
is
engendered
of
the
offspring
of
Adam,
whereby
man
is
very
far
gone
from
original
righteousness,
and
of
his
own
nature
inclined
to
evil,
and
that
continually.
Article
VIII—Of
Free
Will
The
condition
of
man
after
the
fall
of
Adam
is
such
that
he
cannot
turn
and
prepare
himself,
by
his
own
natural
strength
and
works,
to
faith,
and
calling
upon
God;
wherefore
we
have
no
power
to
do
good
works,
pleasant
and
acceptable
to
God,
without
the
grace
of
God
by
Christ
preventing
us,
that
we
may
have
a
good
will,
and
working
with
us,
when
we
have
that
good
will.
Article
IX—Of
the
Justification
of
Man
We
are
accounted
righteous
before
God
only
for
the
merit
of
our
Lord
and
Saviour
Jesus
Christ,
by
faith,
and
not
for
our
own
works
or
deservings.
Wherefore,
that
we
are
justified
by
faith,
only,
is a
most
wholesome
doctrine,
and
very
full
of
comfort.
Article
X—Of
Good
Works
Although
good
works,
which
are
the
fruits
of
faith,
and
follow
after
justification,
cannot
put
away
our
sins,
and
endure
the
severity
of
God's
judgment;
yet
are
they
pleasing
and
acceptable
to
God
in
Christ,
and
spring
out
of a
true
and
lively
faith,
insomuch
that
by
them
a
lively
faith
may
be
as
evidently
known
as a
tree
is
discerned
by
its
fruit.
Article
XI—Of
Works
of
Supererogation
Voluntary
works—besides,
over
and
above
God's
commandments—which
they
call
works
of
supererogation,
cannot
be
taught
without
arrogancy
and
impiety.
For
by
them
men
do
declare
that
they
do
not
only
render
unto
God
as
much
as
they
are
bound
to
do,
but
that
they
do
more
for
his
sake
than
of
bounden
duty
is
required;
whereas
Christ
saith
plainly:
When
you
have
done
all
that
is
commanded
you,
say,
We
are
unprofitable
servants.
Article
XII—Of
Sin
After
Justification
Not
every
sin
willingly
committed
after
justification
is
the
sin
against
the
Holy
Ghost,
and
unpardonable.
Wherefore,
the
grant
of
repentance
is
not
to
be
denied
to
such
as
fall
into
sin
after
justification.
After
we
have
received
the
Holy
Ghost,
we
may
depart
from
grace
given,
and
fall
into
sin,
and,
by
the
grace
of
God,
rise
again
and
amend
our
lives.
And
therefore
they
are
to
be
condemned
who
say
they
can
no
more
sin
as
long
as
they
live
here;
or
deny
the
place
of
forgiveness
to
such
as
truly
repent.
Article
XIII—Of
the
Church
The
visible
church
of
Christ
is a
congregation
of
faithful
men
in
which
the
pure
Word
of
God
is
preached,
and
the
Sacraments
duly
administered
according
to
Christ's
ordinance,
in
all
those
things
that
of
necessity
are
requisite
to
the
same.
Article
XIV—Of
Purgatory4
The
Romish
doctrine
concerning
purgatory,
pardon,
worshiping,
and
adoration,
as
well
of
images
as
of
relics,
and
also
invocation
of
saints,
is a
fond
thing,
vainly
invented,
and
grounded
upon
no
warrant
of
Scripture,
but
repugnant
to
the
Word
of
God.
Article
XV—Of
Speaking
in
the
Congregation
in
Such
a
Tongue
as
the
People
Understand
It
is a
thing
plainly
repugnant
to
the
Word
of
God,
and
the
custom
of
the
primitive
church,
to
have
public
prayer
in
the
church,
or
to
minister
the
Sacraments,
in a
tongue
not
understood
by
the
people.
Article
XVI—Of
the
Sacraments
Sacraments
ordained
of
Christ
are
not
only
badges
or
tokens
of
Christian
men's
profession,
but
rather
they
are
certain
signs
of
grace,
and
God's
good
will
toward
us,
by
which
he
doth
work
invisibly
in
us,
and
doth
not
only
quicken,
but
also
strengthen
and
confirm,
our
faith
in
him.
There
are
two
Sacraments
ordained
of
Christ
our
Lord
in
the
Gospel;
that
is
to
say,
Baptism
and
the
Supper
of
the
Lord.
Those
five
commonly
called
sacraments,
that
is
to
say,
confirmation,
penance,
orders,
matrimony,
and
extreme
unction,
are
not
to
be
counted
for
Sacraments
of
the
Gospel;
being
such
as
have
partly
grown
out
of
the
corrupt
following
of
the
apostles,
and
partly
are
states
of
life
allowed
in
the
Scriptures,
but
yet
have
not
the
like
nature
of
Baptism
and
the
Lord's
Supper,
because
they
have
not
any
visible
sign
or
ceremony
ordained
of
God.
The
Sacraments
were
not
ordained
of
Christ
to
be
gazed
upon,
or
to
be
carried
about;
but
that
we
should
duly
use
them.
And
in
such
only
as
worthily
receive
the
same,
they
have
a
wholesome
effect
or
operation;
but
they
that
receive
them
unworthily,
purchase
to
themselves
condemnation,
as
St.
Paul
saith.
Article
XVII—Of
Baptism
Baptism
is
not
only
a
sign
of
profession
and
mark
of
difference
whereby
Christians
are
distinguished
from
others
that
are
not
baptized;
but
it
is
also
a
sign
of
regeneration
or
the
new
birth.
The
Baptism
of
young
children
is
to
be
retained
in
the
Church.5
Article
XVIII—Of
the
Lord's
Supper
The
Supper
of
the
Lord
is
not
only
a
sign
of
the
love
that
Christians
ought
to
have
among
themselves
one
to
another,
but
rather
is a
sacrament
of
our
redemption
by
Christ's
death;
insomuch
that,
to
such
as
rightly,
worthily,
and
with
faith
receive
the
same,
the
bread
which
we
break
is a
partaking
of
the
body
of
Christ;
and
likewise
the
cup
of
blessing
is a
partaking
of
the
blood
of
Christ.
Transubstantiation,
or
the
change
of
the
substance
of
bread
and
wine
in
the
Supper
of
our
Lord,
cannot
be
proved
by
Holy
Writ,
but
is
repugnant
to
the
plain
words
of
Scripture,
overthroweth
the
nature
of a
sacrament,
and
hath
given
occasion
to
many
superstitions.
The
body
of
Christ
is
given,
taken,
and
eaten
in
the
Supper,
only
after
a
heavenly
and
spiritual
manner.
And
the
mean
whereby
the
body
of
Christ
is
received
and
eaten
in
the
Supper
is
faith.
The
Sacrament
of
the
Lord's
Supper
was
not
by
Christ's
ordinance
reserved,
carried
about,
lifted
up,
or
worshiped.
Article
XIX—Of
Both
Kinds
The
cup
of
the
Lord
is
not
to
be
denied
to
the
lay
people;
for
both
the
parts
of
the
Lord's
Supper,
by
Christ's
ordinance
and
commandment,
ought
to
be
administered
to
all
Christians
alike.
Article
XX—Of
the
One
Oblation
of
Christ,
Finished
upon
the
Cross
The
offering
of
Christ,
once
made,
is
that
perfect
redemption,
propitiation,
and
satisfaction
for
all
the
sins
of
the
whole
world,
both
original
and
actual;
and
there
is
none
other
satisfaction
for
sin
but
that
alone.
Wherefore
the
sacrifice
of
masses,
in
the
which
it
is
commonly
said
that
the
priest
doth
offer
Christ
for
the
quick
and
the
dead,
to
have
remission
of
pain
or
guilt,
is a
blasphemous
fable
and
dangerous
deceit.
Article
XXI—Of
the
Marriage
of
Ministers
The
ministers
of
Christ
are
not
commanded
by
God's
law
either
to
vow
the
estate
of
single
life,
or
to
abstain
from
marriage;
therefore
it
is
lawful
for
them,
as
for
all
other
Christians,
to
marry
at
their
own
discretion,
as
they
shall
judge
the
same
to
serve
best
to
godliness.
Article
XXII—Of
the
Rites
and
Ceremonies
of
Churches
It
is
not
necessary
that
rites
and
ceremonies
should
in
all
places
be
the
same,
or
exactly
alike;
for
they
have
been
always
different,
and
may
be
changed
according
to
the
diversity
of
countries,
times,
and
men's
manners,
so
that
nothing
be
ordained
against
God's
Word.
Whosoever,
through
his
private
judgment,
willingly
and
purposely
doth
openly
break
the
rites
and
ceremonies
of
the
church
to
which
he
belongs,
which
are
not
repugnant
to
the
Word
of
God,
and
are
ordained
and
approved
by
common
authority,
ought
to
be
rebuked
openly,
that
others
may
fear
to
do
the
like,
as
one
that
offendeth
against
the
common
order
of
the
church,
and
woundeth
the
consciences
of
weak
brethren.
Every
particular
church
may
ordain,
change,
or
abolish
rites
and
ceremonies,
so
that
all
things
may
be
done
to
edification.
Article
XXIII—Of
the
Rulers
of
the
United
States
of
America
The
President,
the
Congress,
the
general
assemblies,
the
governors,
and
the
councils
of
state,
as
the
delegates
of
the
people,
are
the
rulers
of
the
United
States
of
America,
according
to
the
division
of
power
made
to
them
by
the
Constitution
of
the
United
States
and
by
the
constitutions
of
their
respective
states.
And
the
said
states
are
a
sovereign
and
independent
nation,
and
ought
not
to
be
subject
to
any
foreign
jurisdiction.
Article
XXIV—Of
Christian
Men's
Goods
The
riches
and
goods
of
Christians
are
not
common
as
touching
the
right,
title,
and
possession
of
the
same,
as
some
do
falsely
boast.
Notwithstanding,
every
man
ought,
of
such
things
as
he
possesseth,
liberally
to
give
alms
to
the
poor,
according
to
his
ability.
Article
XXV—Of
a
Christian
Man's
Oath
As
we
confess
that
vain
and
rash
swearing
is
forbidden
Christian
men
by
our
Lord
Jesus
Christ
and
James
his
apostle,
so
we
judge
that
the
Christian
religion
doth
not
prohibit,
but
that
a
man
may
swear
when
the
magistrate
requireth,
in a
cause
of
faith
and
charity,
so
it
be
done
according
to
the
prophet's
teaching,
in
justice,
judgment,
and
truth.
[The
following
Article
from
the
Methodist
Protestant
Discipline
is
placed
here
by
the
Uniting
Conference
(1939).
It
was
not
one
of
the
Articles
of
Religion
voted
upon
by
the
three
churches.]
Of
Sanctification
Sanctification
is
that
renewal
of
our
fallen
nature
by
the
Holy
Ghost,
received
through
faith
in
Jesus
Christ,
whose
blood
of
atonement
cleanseth
from
all
sin;
whereby
we
are
not
only
delivered
from
the
guilt
of
sin,
but
are
washed
from
its
pollution,
saved
from
its
power,
and
are
enabled,
through
grace,
to
love
God
with
all
our
hearts
and
to
walk
in
his
holy
commandments
blameless.
[The
following
provision
was
adopted
by
the
Uniting
Conference
(1939).
This
statement
seeks
to
interpret
to
our
churches
in
foreign
lands
Article
XXIII
of
the
Articles
of
Religion.
It
is a
legislative
enactment
but
is
not
a
part
of
the
Constitution.
(See
Judicial
Council
Decisions
41,
176,
and
Decision
6,
Interim
Judicial
Council.)]
Of
the
Duty
of
Christians
to
the
Civil
Authority
It
is
the
duty
of
all
Christians,
and
especially
of
all
Christian
ministers,
to
observe
and
obey
the
laws
and
commands
of
the
governing
or
supreme
authority
of
the
country
of
which
they
are
citizens
or
subjects
or
in
which
they
reside,
and
to
use
all
laudable
means
to
encourage
and
enjoin
obedience
to
the
powers
that
be.
THE
CONFESSION
OF
FAITH
OF
THE
EVANGELICAL
UNITED
BRETHREN
CHURCH6
[Bibliographical
Note:
The
text
of
the
Confession
of
Faith
is
identical
to
that
of
its
original
in
The
Discipline
of
The
Evangelical
United
Brethren
Church
(1963).]
Article
I—God
We
believe
in
the
one
true,
holy
and
living
God,
Eternal
Spirit,
who
is
Creator,
Sovereign
and
Preserver
of
all
things
visible
and
invisible.
He
is
infinite
in
power,
wisdom,
justice,
goodness
and
love,
and
rules
with
gracious
regard
for
the
well-being
and
salvation
of
men,
to
the
glory
of
his
name.
We
believe
the
one
God
reveals
himself
as
the
Trinity:
Father,
Son
and
Holy
Spirit,
distinct
but
inseparable,
eternally
one
in
essence
and
power.
Article
II—Jesus
Christ
We
believe
in
Jesus
Christ,
truly
God
and
truly
man,
in
whom
the
divine
and
human
natures
are
perfectly
and
inseparably
united.
He
is
the
eternal
Word
made
flesh,
the
only
begotten
Son
of
the
Father,
born
of
the
Virgin
Mary
by
the
power
of
the
Holy
Spirit.
As
ministering
Servant
he
lived,
suffered
and
died
on
the
cross.
He
was
buried,
rose
from
the
dead
and
ascended
into
heaven
to
be
with
the
Father,
from
whence
he
shall
return.
He
is
eternal
Savior
and
Mediator,
who
intercedes
for
us,
and
by
him
all
men
will
be
judged.
Article
III—The
Holy
Spirit
We
believe
in
the
Holy
Spirit
who
proceeds
from
and
is
one
in
being
with
the
Father
and
the
Son.
He
convinces
the
world
of
sin,
of
righteousness
and
of
judgment.
He
leads
men
through
faithful
response
to
the
gospel
into
the
fellowship
of
the
Church.
He
comforts,
sustains
and
empowers
the
faithful
and
guides
them
into
all
truth.
Article
IV—The
Holy
Bible
We
believe
the
Holy
Bible,
Old
and
New
Testaments,
reveals
the
Word
of
God
so
far
as
it
is
necessary
for
our
salvation.
It
is
to
be
received
through
the
Holy
Spirit
as
the
true
rule
and
guide
for
faith
and
practice.
Whatever
is
not
revealed
in
or
established
by
the
Holy
Scriptures
is
not
to
be
made
an
article
of
faith
nor
is
it
to
be
taught
as
essential
to
salvation.
Article
V—The
Church
We
believe
the
Christian
Church
is
the
community
of
all
true
believers
under
the
Lordship
of
Christ.
We
believe
it
is
one,
holy,
apostolic
and
catholic.
It
is
the
redemptive
fellowship
in
which
the
Word
of
God
is
preached
by
men
divinely
called,
and
the
sacraments
are
duly
administered
according
to
Christ's
own
appointment.
Under
the
discipline
of
the
Holy
Spirit
the
Church
exists
for
the
maintenance
of
worship,
the
edification
of
believers
and
the
redemption
of
the
world.
Article
VI—The
Sacraments
We
believe
the
Sacraments,
ordained
by
Christ,
are
symbols
and
pledges
of
the
Christian's
profession
and
of
God's
love
toward
us.
They
are
means
of
grace
by
which
God
works
invisibly
in
us,
quickening,
strengthening
and
confirming
our
faith
in
him.
Two
Sacraments
are
ordained
by
Christ
our
Lord,
namely
Baptism
and
the
Lord's
Supper.
We
believe
Baptism
signifies
entrance
into
the
household
of
faith,
and
is a
symbol
of
repentance
and
inner
cleansing
from
sin,
a
representation
of
the
new
birth
in
Christ
Jesus
and
a
mark
of
Christian
discipleship.
We
believe
children
are
under
the
atonement
of
Christ
and
as
heirs
of
the
Kingdom
of
God
are
acceptable
subjects
for
Christian
Baptism.
Children
of
believing
parents
through
Baptism
become
the
special
responsibility
of
the
Church.
They
should
be
nurtured
and
led
to
personal
acceptance
of
Christ,
and
by
profession
of
faith
confirm
their
Baptism.
We
believe
the
Lord's
Supper
is a
representation
of
our
redemption,
a
memorial
of
the
sufferings
and
death
of
Christ,
and
a
token
of
love
and
union
which
Christians
have
with
Christ
and
with
one
another.
Those
who
rightly,
worthily
and
in
faith
eat
the
broken
bread
and
drink
the
blessed
cup
partake
of
the
body
and
blood
of
Christ
in a
spiritual
manner
until
he
comes.
Article
VII—Sin
and
Free
Will
We
believe
man
is
fallen
from
righteousness
and,
apart
from
the
grace
of
our
Lord
Jesus
Christ,
is
destitute
of
holiness
and
inclined
to
evil.
Except
a
man
be
born
again,
he
cannot
see
the
Kingdom
of
God.
In
his
own
strength,
without
divine
grace,
man
cannot
do
good
works
pleasing
and
acceptable
to
God.
We
believe,
however,
man
influenced
and
empowered
by
the
Holy
Spirit
is
responsible
in
freedom
to
exercise
his
will
for
good.
Article
VIII—Reconciliation
Through
Christ
We
believe
God
was
in
Christ
reconciling
the
world
to
himself.
The
offering
Christ
freely
made
on
the
cross
is
the
perfect
and
sufficient
sacrifice
for
the
sins
of
the
whole
world,
redeeming
man
from
all
sin,
so
that
no
other
satisfaction
is
required.
Article
IX—Justification
and
Regeneration
We
believe
we
are
never
accounted
righteous
before
God
through
our
works
or
merit,
but
that
penitent
sinners
are
justified
or
accounted
righteous
before
God
only
by
faith
in
our
Lord
Jesus
Christ.
We
believe
regeneration
is
the
renewal
of
man
in
righteousness
through
Jesus
Christ,
by
the
power
of
the
Holy
Spirit,
whereby
we
are
made
partakers
of
the
divine
nature
and
experience
newness
of
life.
By
this
new
birth
the
believer
becomes
reconciled
to
God
and
is
enabled
to
serve
him
with
the
will
and
the
affections.
We
believe,
although
we
have
experienced
regeneration,
it
is
possible
to
depart
from
grace
and
fall
into
sin;
and
we
may
even
then,
by
the
grace
of
God,
be
renewed
in
righteousness.
Article
X—Good
Works
We
believe
good
works
are
the
necessary
fruits
of
faith
and
follow
regeneration
but
they
do
not
have
the
virtue
to
remove
our
sins
or
to
avert
divine
judgment.
We
believe
good
works,
pleasing
and
acceptable
to
God
in
Christ,
spring
from
a
true
and
living
faith,
for
through
and
by
them
faith
is
made
evident.
Article
XI—Sanctification
and
Christian
Perfection
We
believe
sanctification
is
the
work
of
God's
grace
through
the
Word
and
the
Spirit,
by
which
those
who
have
been
born
again
are
cleansed
from
sin
in
their
thoughts,
words
and
acts,
and
are
enabled
to
live
in
accordance
with
God's
will,
and
to
strive
for
holiness
without
which
no
one
will
see
the
Lord.
Entire
sanctification
is a
state
of
perfect
love,
righteousness
and
true
holiness
which
every
regenerate
believer
may
obtain
by
being
delivered
from
the
power
of
sin,
by
loving
God
with
all
the
heart,
soul,
mind
and
strength,
and
by
loving
one's
neighbor
as
one's
self.
Through
faith
in
Jesus
Christ
this
gracious
gift
may
be
received
in
this
life
both
gradually
and
instantaneously,
and
should
be
sought
earnestly
by
every
child
of
God.
We
believe
this
experience
does
not
deliver
us
from
the
infirmities,
ignorance,
and
mistakes
common
to
man,
nor
from
the
possibilities
of
further
sin.
The
Christian
must
continue
on
guard
against
spiritual
pride
and
seek
to
gain
victory
over
every
temptation
to
sin.
He
must
respond
wholly
to
the
will
of
God
so
that
sin
will
lose
its
power
over
him;
and
the
world,
the
flesh,
and
the
devil
are
put
under
his
feet.
Thus
he
rules
over
these
enemies
with
watchfulness
through
the
power
of
the
Holy
Spirit.
Article
XII—The
Judgment
and
the
Future
State
We
believe
all
men
stand
under
the
righteous
judgment
of
Jesus
Christ,
both
now
and
in
the
last
day.
We
believe
in
the
resurrection
of
the
dead;
the
righteous
to
life
eternal
and
the
wicked
to
endless
condemnation.
Article
XIII—Public
Worship
We
believe
divine
worship
is
the
duty
and
privilege
of
man
who,
in
the
presence
of
God,
bows
in
adoration,
humility
and
dedication.
We
believe
divine
worship
is
essential
to
the
life
of
the
Church,
and
that
the
assembling
of
the
people
of
God
for
such
worship
is
necessary
to
Christian
fellowship
and
spiritual
growth.
We
believe
the
order
of
public
worship
need
not
be
the
same
in
all
places
but
may
be
modified
by
the
church
according
to
circumstances
and
the
needs
of
men.
It
should
be
in a
language
and
form
understood
by
the
people,
consistent
with
the
Holy
Scriptures
to
the
edification
of
all,
and
in
accordance
with
the
order
and
Discipline
of
the
Church.
Article
XIV—The
Lord's
Day
We
believe
the
Lord's
Day
is
divinely
ordained
for
private
and
public
worship,
for
rest
from
unnecessary
work,
and
should
be
devoted
to
spiritual
improvement,
Christian
fellowship
and
service.
It
is
commemorative
of
our
Lord's
resurrection
and
is
an
emblem
of
our
eternal
rest.
It
is
essential
to
the
permanence
and
growth
of
the
Christian
Church,
and
important
to
the
welfare
of
the
civil
community.
Article
XV—The
Christian
and
Property
We
believe
God
is
the
owner
of
all
things
and
that
the
individual
holding
of
property
is
lawful
and
is a
sacred
trust
under
God.
Private
property
is
to
be
used
for
the
manifestation
of
Christian
love
and
liberality,
and
to
support
the
Church's
mission
in
the
world.
All
forms
of
property,
whether
private,
corporate
or
public,
are
to
be
held
in
solemn
trust
and
used
responsibly
for
human
good
under
the
sovereignty
of
God.
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