CAMPUS CHRISTIANS
– STATEMENT OF FAITH –
The sole basis of our beliefs is the Bible, God’s
infallible written Word, the sixty-six books of the Old and New Testaments. We
believe that it was uniquely, verbally, and fully inspired by the Holy Spirit,
and that it was written without error in the original manuscripts. It is the
supreme and final authority in all matters on which it speaks.
We accept those large areas of doctrinal teaching
on which, historically, there has been general agreement among all true
Christians. Because of the specialized calling of our movement, we desire to
allow for freedom of conviction on other matters, provided that any
interpretation is based upon the Bible, and that no such interpretation shall
become an issue which hinders the ministry to which God has called us.
We explicitly affirm our belief in basic Bible
teachings, as follows:
1. There is one true God, eternally existing in
three persons – Father, Son, and Holy Spirit – each of whom possesses equally
all the attributes of Deity and the characteristics of personality.
2. Jesus Christ is God, the living Word, who
became flesh through His miraculous conception by the Holy Spirit and His
virgin birth. Hence, He is perfect Deity and true humanity united in one person
forever.
3. He lived a sinless life and voluntarily atoned
for the sins of people by dying on the cross as their substitute, thus
satisfying divine justice and accomplishing salvation for all who trust in Him
alone.
4. He arose from the dead in the same body, though
glorified, in which He had lived and died.
5. He ascended bodily into heaven and sat down at
the right hand of God the Father, where He, the only mediator between God and
man, continually makes intercession for His own.
6. Man was originally created in the image of
God. He sinned by disobeying God; thus, he was alienated from his Creator. That
historic fall brought all mankind under divine condemnation.
7. Man’s nature is corrupted, and he is thus
totally unable to please God. Every person is in need of regeneration and
renewal by the Holy Spirit.
8. The salvation of man is wholly a work of God’s
free grace and is not the work, in whole or in part, of human works or goodness
or religious ceremony. God imputes His righteousness to those who put their
faith in Christ alone for salvation, and thereby justifies them in His sight.
9. It is a privilege of all who are born again of
the Spirit to be assured of their salvation from the very moment in which they
trust Christ as their Savior. This assurance is not based upon any kind of
human merit, but is produced by the witness of the Holy Spirit, who confirms in
the believer the testimony of God in His written Word.
10.
The Holy Spirit has come into the world to reveal and glorify Christ and to
apply the saving work of Christ to men. He convicts and draws sinners to
Christ, imparts new life to them, continually indwells them from the moment of
spiritual birth and seals them until the day of redemption. His fullness, power,
and control are appropriated in the believer’s life by faith.
11.
Every believer is called to live in the power of the indwelling Spirit that
they will not fulfill the lust of the flesh but will bear fruit to the glory of
God.
12.
Jesus Christ is the Head of the Church, His Body, which is composed of all
people, living and dead, who have been joined to Him through saving faith.
13. God admonishes His people to assemble together
regularly for worship, for participation in ordinances, for edification through
the Scriptures and for mutual encouragement.
14. At physical death the believer enters
immediately into eternal, conscious fellowship with the Lord and awaits the
resurrection of his body to everlasting glory and blessing.
15. At physical death the unbeliever enters
immediately into eternal, conscious separation from the Lord and awaits the
resurrection of his body to everlasting judgment and condemnation.
16. Jesus Christ will come again to the earth –
personally, visibly and bodily – to consummate history and the eternal plan of
God.
17. The Lord Jesus Christ commanded all believers
to proclaim the gospel throughout the world and to disciple men of every
nation. The fulfillment of that Great Commission requires that all worldly and
personal ambitions be subordinated to a total commitment to “Him who loved us
and gave Himself for us.”