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From the
Cambridge Declaration
We
reaffirm the inerrant Scripture to be the sole source of written
divine revelation, which alone can bind the conscience. The Bible alone
teaches all that is necessary for our salvation from sin and is the
standard by which all Christian behavior must be measured.
We
deny that any creed, council or individual may bind a Christian's
conscience, that the Holy Spirit speaks independently or contrary to what
is set forth in the Bible, or that personal spiritual experience can ever
be a vehicle of revelation.
REVELATION
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We believe God has desired
throughout human history to make Himself known to Mankind . The act of
God making Himself known is called Revelation. This Revelation is manifest
in both general and special modes. It is concerned with the revelation of
God's Person and His purposes.
General
Revelation
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We believe in
general revelation, which is mediated through nature (Ps.19:1;
Rom. 1:18-20), conscience (Rom. 2:14,15), and the providential ordering of
history, as a universal witness to God's existence and character (Acts
14:17).
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We believe this
general revelation is relative to human nature. God, having created
us, knows how to communicate with us. God, by an act of His grace, has
made this revelation known to man through the created order by reason and
experience. Man's reason and experience are both mediators of revelation
(Rom 1:19f).
Special
Revelation
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We believe that revelation
must be particular or special to be effective . The secret nature of
God and His will for man are provided by a supernatural revelatory
disclosure, through God's acts (Acts 2:11) and words (Heb. 1:1-5), to a
particular people (Ps. 78). This is called special revelation.
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We believe special
revelation is a self-revelation of God to particular persons at definite
historical times and places . God's revelation of His Person comes
before and gives meaning to the revelation of His purposes. This
self-disclosure is mediated progressively through historical events (Ex.
14), divine speech (Jer. 2:1-5), climaxing in the Incarnation (Jn.
1:1,14), and culminating in the inspired writings of the Apostles.
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We believe its purpose of
special revelation is redemptive. It is to restore and guide Mankind into
a redemptive relationship with God (Jn. 1:1-14; Rom. 15:4; Rev.
19:10).
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We believe this special
revelation is mediated to Mankind in and through the books of Holy
Scripture that are found in the Protestant Canon .
Inspiration
Special revelation
generates Scripture making it the primary mediator of special revelation.
Both become inseparable.
We believe in
inspiration as the work in which God, by His Spirit, through human
writers, gave us the Holy Scripture as His revealed Word.
This belief
in inspiration is grounded in the teaching of the Bible about inspiration
(II Tim. 3:16; II Pet. 1:21). While the origin of Scripture is divine, the
mode of inspiration remains, for the most part, a mystery.
We believe that God in
His work of inspiration utilized distinctive personalities and literary
styles of the writers whom He had chosen and prepared.
We believe that
inspiration pertains to the whole of Scripture; that all it parts,
down to the very words (Jn. 8:58; Gal. 3:16; Heb. 12:27) of the original
manuscripts were given by divine inspiration (II Tim. 3:16; I Cor. 2:13).
By "the whole" of Scripture We imply our belief in the unity and internal
consistency of Scripture (Lk. 24:44f; II Pet. 3:15f). This also means, we
believe special revelation and inspiration are completed with the N.T.
Canon.
We believe the Holy
Spirit has so guarded this inspiration of Scripture to provide all
generations accurate copies and translations of the original writings of
Scripture.
We believe that
Scripture, having been given by divine inspiration, is infallible, so
that, it is true and reliable in all the matters it addresses (Jn.
10:35).
"Infallibility" in this sense means that divine inspiration
preserves Scripture from all falsehood, fraud, or deceit (Tit. 1:1-3).
Illumination
We believe in the
clarity of Scripture, made possible by the Holy Spirit, so that the truth
of the gospel can be known by all who read it (Dt. 30:11-14; Jn.
5:39).
We believe that the Holy
Spirit continues to illumine actively and graciously all believers to
understand and rightfully interpret the inspired Scriptures.
The Holy
Spirit teaches, clarifies, and directs believers in the application of
Scripture both in their individual lives and in the work and life of the
Church (Jn. 14:26; 15:26; 16:13; I Jn. 2:20,27; I Cor. 2:12-16).
Biblical
Authority
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We believe that the
Scripture is the supreme written norm by which
God binds the conscience, because it derives this authority from God
through divine inspiration. Also, that the authority of the Church is
subordinate to that of Scripture (Mt. 5:17f; Jn. 10:35; I Pet. 1:12; I
Thess. 2:13; 4:2; II Thess. 2:15; 3:15; I Cor. 14:37).
We believe that the
confession of inspiration, infallibility, and full authority of Scripture
is vital to a sound understanding of the whole Christian faith.
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