What We Believe

I. A Commitment to Reformed Soteriology and Historic Baptist Convictions

We are Reformed and Baptist. This means that we stand with Baptists throughout history in affirming that the Bible teaches that baptism is a personal and public declaration of one’s faith in the Lord Jesus, and therefore that it is only properly administered to those who personally and credibly profess faith in him. Further, we stand with Christians in the Reformed tradition in affirming that the Bible teaches that God is entirely sovereign in salvation, and at the same time that we as human beings make real choices for which we are morally responsible.

II. A Commitment to Expositional Preaching

We believe that God gives life through his Word, the Bible. Therefore, we believe that the main diet of weekly teaching in the local church must consist of the live exposition of God’s Word to God’s people—that is, that the main preaching event in the life of the church should each week consist of reading, explaining, and applying a portion of the Bible.

III. A Commitment to Meaningful Membership and Discipline

We believe that local church membership is a biblical imperative—meaning that it is incumbent upon every Christian to be engaged in a formal, mutually-recognized relationship of accountability and responsibility with a local church. Further, we believe that it is incumbent upon local churches to be clear about precisely who are members of their bodies, and to both shepherd and disciple those members in the faith of the Lord Jesus. We also believe that church discipline—the correction of sin—begins privately and sometimes culminates in excommunication, or removal from the Lord’s Table and church membership.

IV. A Commitment to Elder-Led Congregationalism

We believe that the Bible teaches that the assembled local congregation must hold final earthly authority in church matters. Details and specifics of polity will vary among us, but this means at least that the assembled congregation must have formal authority to countermand an unbiblical decision of an elder board. We also believe that a local church should be led by a plurality of male elders/pastors/overseers—recognizing that each is a different name for the same office. We deny that the Bible differentiates between the “gift of pastoring” and the “office of pastoring,” and that women should in any instance take the title "pastor," and (following 1 Timothy 2:12) that women should carry out any obviously pastoral role with regard to the whole church.

V. A Commitment to One Unified Assembly

We believe that a local church is a singular assembly that meets together weekly in one place at one time. While budgetary or building constraints or other extenuating circumstances might temporarily mean a church has multiple services or sites, we deny this to be a biblically prescribed model of ministry. Rather, we believe that strides should be taken to align with the biblical model of a single church meeting at a single site at a single time. Furthermore, we believe that gathering as the unified assembly is the primary means for Christian discipleship. Practices will vary, but this means at least that we lead church members to prioritize the main gatherings over and above small groups or auxiliary ministries.

VI. A Commitment to Biblically-Ordered Public Worship

We believe that God alone has the right to determine how his people will worship him. Thus, we include in our public worship services only those elements which are commanded by God in Scripture, whether by precept or by right and proper inference from the example of the early church. We preach the Bible, pray the Bible, read the Bible, sing the Bible, and see the Bible (in the ordinances) to show that the Scriptures are sufficient to nourish and sustain the people of God.

VII. A Commitment to Church-Centered Evangelism and Missions

We believe that the Lord has given good, specific, and sufficient instruction to his church about how the local church is to be organized and how it is to carry out its mission. We believe that faithfulness requires us, as churches, to adhere as closely as we are able to those instructions, regardless of what we may think of their effectiveness or relevance. We deny that any ecclesiological or missiological practice is to be favored “because it works” or “because it produces results” or “because it reverse-engineers a movement.” We seek to follow the King’s commands as given in the Bible.