What we believe
Why we believe what we believe
Our beliefs are not based on what feels true to us or on what agrees with our human reason, but on what God has revealed to be true. So we base our beliefs on God’s words in the Bible and seek to understand more and more deeply what God has spoken there.
The following statement of faith is an attempt to summarise the key truths of the Christian faith. The statement is taken from the Evangelical Fellowship in the Anglican Communion in Australia and lays special emphasis on the grace of God:
1. God as the source of Grace.
In continuity with the teaching of Holy Scripture and the Christian creeds, we worship one God in three Persons – Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. God has created all things and us in his own image; all life, truth, holiness, and beauty come from him. His Son Jesus Christ, fully God and fully human, was conceived through the Holy Spirit and born of the Virgin, Mary, was crucified, died, rose, and ascended to reign in glory.
2. The Bible as the Revelation of Grace.
We receive the canonical books of the Old and New Testaments as the wholly reliable revelation and record of God’s grace, given by the Holy Spirit as the true word of God written. The Bible has been given to lead us to salvation, to be the ultimate rule for Christian faith and conduct, and the supreme authority by which the Church must ever reform itself and judge its traditions.
3. The Atonement as the work of Grace.
We believe that Jesus Christ came to save lost sinners. Though sinless, he bore our sins and their judgement, on the cross, thus accomplishing our salvation. By raising Christ bodily from the dead, God vindicated him as Lord and Saviour and proclaimed his victory. Salvation is in Christ alone.
4. The Church as the Community of Grace.
We hold that the Church is God’s covenant community, whose members, drawn from every nation, having been justified by grace through faith, inherit the promises made to Abraham and fulfilled in Christ. As a fellowship of the Spirit manifesting his fruit and exercising his gifts, it is called to worship God, grow in grace, and bear witness to him and his kingdom. God’s Church is one body and must ever strive to discover and experience that unity in truth and love which it has in Christ, especially through its confession of the apostolic faith and in its observance of the dominical Sacraments.
5. The Sacraments as the Signs and Seals of Grace.
We maintain that the Sacraments of Baptism and Holy Communion proclaim the gospel as effective and visible signs of our justification and sanctification, and as the means of God’s grace to those who repent and believe. Baptism is the sign of forgiveness of sin, the gift of the Spirit, new birth to righteousness and entry into the fellowship of the People of God. Holy Communion is the sign of the living, nourishing presence of Christ through his Spirit to his people; the memorial of his one, perfect completed and all-sufficient sacrifice for sin, from whose achievement all may benefit but in whose atoning self-offering none can share; and an occasion, to offer through him our sacrifice of thanksgiving and praise.
6. Ministry as the Stewardship of Grace.
We share, as the People of God, in a royal priesthood common to the whole Church, and in the community of the Suffering Servant. Our mission is the proclamation of the gospel by the preaching of the word as well as by caring for the needy, challenging evil and promoting justice and a more responsible use of the world’s resources. It is the particular vocation of bishops and presbyters, together with deacons, to build up the body of Christ in truth and love, as pastors, teachers, and servants of the servants of God.
7. Christ’s Return as the Triumph of Grace.
We look forward expectantly to the final manifestation of Christ’s grace and glory when he comes again to raise the dead, judge the world, vindicate his chosen and bring his Kingdom to its eternal fulfilment in the new heaven and the new earth.