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The
Cambridge Declaration
Evangelical churches
today are increasingly dominated by the spirit of this age rather
than by the Spirit of Christ. As evangelicals, we call ourselves
to repent of this sin and to recover the historic Christian faith.
In the course of
history words change. In our day this has happened to the word
"evangelical." In the past it served as a bond of unity between
Christians from a wide diversity of church traditions. Historic
evangelicalism was confessional. It embraced the essential truths
of Christianity as those were defined by the great ecumenical
councils of the church. In addition, evangelicals also shared a
common heritage in the"solas" of the sixteenth century Protestant
Reformation.
Today the light
of the Reformation has been significantly dimmed. The consequence
is that the word "evangelical" has become so inclusive as to have
lost its meaning. We face the peril of losing the unity it has
taken centuries to achieve. Because of this crisis and because of
our love of Christ, his gospel and his church, we endeavor to
assert anew our commitment to the central truths of the
Reformation and of historic evangelicalism. These truths we affirm
not because of their role in our traditions, but because we
believe that they are central to the Bible.
Sola Scriptura: The Erosion Of Authority
Scripture alone is the inerrant rule of the church's life, but
the evangelical church today has separated Scripture from its
authoritative function. In practice, the church is guided, far too
often, by the culture. Therapeutic technique, marketing
strategies, and the beat of the entertainment world often have far
more to say about what the church wants, how it functions and what
it offers, than does the Word of God. Pastors have neglected
their rightful oversight of worship, including the doctrinal
content of the music. As biblical authority has been abandoned in
practice, as its truths have faded from Christian consciousness,
and as its doctrines have lost their saliency, the church has been
increasingly emptied of its integrity, moral authority and
direction.
Rather than
adapting Christian faith to satisfy the felt needs of consumers,
we must proclaim the law as the only measure of true righteousness
and the gospel as the only announcement of saving truth. Biblical
truth is indispensable to the church's understanding, nurture and
discipline.
Scripture must
take us beyond our perceived needs to our real needs and liberate
us from seeing ourselves through the seductive images, cliches,
promises, and priorities of mass culture. It is only in the light
of God's truth that we understand ourselves aright and see God's
provision for our need. The Bible, therefore, must be taught and
preached in the church. Sermons must be expositions of the Bible
and its teachings, not expressions of the preachers opinions or
the ideas of the age. We must settle for nothing less than what
God has given.
The work of the
Holy Spirit in personal experience cannot be disengaged from
Scripture. The Spirit does not speak in ways that are independent
of Scripture. Apart from Scripture we would never have known of
God's grace in Christ. The biblical Word, rather than spiritual
experience, is the test of truth.
Thesis One: Sola Scriptura 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 of or contrary to what
is set forth in the Bible, or that personal spiritual experience
can ever be a vehicle of revelation.
Solus Christus: The Erosion Of Christ-Centered
Faith
As evangelical faith becomes secularized, its interests
have been blurred with those of the culture. The result is a loss
of absolute values, permissive individualism, and a substitution
of wholeness for holiness, recovery for repentance, intuition for
truth, feeling for belief, chance for providence, and immediate
gratification for enduring hope. Christ and his cross have moved
from the center of our vision.
Thesis Two: Solus Christus We
reaffirm that our salvation is accomplished by the mediatorial
work of the historical Christ alone. His sinless life and
substitutionary atonement alone are sufficient for our
justification and reconciliation to the Father. We deny that the
gospel is preached if Christ's substitutionary work is not
declared and faith in Christ and his work is not solicited.
Sola Gratia: The Erosion Of The Gospel
Unwarranted confidence in human ability is a product of fallen
human nature. This false confidence now fills the evangelical
world from the self-esteem gospel to the health and wealth gospel,
from those who have transformed the gospel into a product to be
sold and sinners into consumers who want to buy to others who
treat Christian faith as being true simply because it works. This
silences the doctrine of justification regardless of the official
commitments of our churches.
God's grace in
Christ is not merely necessary but is the sole efficient cause of
salvation. We confess that human beings are born spiritually dead
and are incapable even of cooperating with regenerating grace.
Thesis Three: Sola Gratia We
reaffirm that in salvation we are rescued from God's wrath by his
grace alone. It is the supernatural work of the Holy Spirit that
brings us to Christ by releasing us from our bondage to sin and
raising us from spiritual death to spiritual life.
We deny that
salvation is in any sense a human work. Human methods, techniques
or strategies by themselves cannot accomplish this transformation.
Faith is not produced by our unregenerated human nature.
Sola Fide: The Erosion Of The Chief Article
Justification is by grace alone through faith alone because
of Christ alone. This is the article by which the church stands or
falls. Today this article is often ignored, distorted or sometimes
even denied by leaders, scholars and pastors who claim to be
evangelical. Although fallen human nature has always recoiled from
recognizing its need for Christ's imputed righteousness, modernity
greatly fuels the fires of this discontent with the biblical
Gospel. We have allowed this discontent to dictate the nature of
our ministry and what it is we are preaching.
Many in the
church growth movement believe that sociological understanding of
those in the pew is as important to the success of the gospel as
is the biblical truth which is proclaimed. As a result,
theological convictions are frequently divorced from the work of
the ministry. The marketing orientation in many churches takes
this even further, erasing the distinction between the biblical
Word and the world, robbing Christ's cross of its offense, and
reducing Christian faith to the principles and methods which bring
success to secular corporations.
While the
theology of the cross may be believed, these movements are
actually emptying it of its meaning. There is no gospel except
that of Christ's substitution in our place whereby God imputed to
him our sin and imputed to us his righteousness. Because he bore
our judgment, we now walk in his grace as those who are forever
pardoned, accepted and adopted as God's children. There is no
basis for our acceptance before God except in Christ's saving
work, not in our patriotism, churchly devotion or moral decency.
The gospel declares what God has done for us in Christ. It is not
about what we can do to reach him.
Thesis
Four: Sola Fide We reaffirm that justification is by
grace alone through faith alone because of Christ alone. In
justification Christ's righteousness is imputed to us as the only
possible satisfaction of God's perfect justice.
We deny that
justification rests on any merit to be found in us, or upon the
grounds of an infusion of Christ's righteousness in us, or that an
institution claiming to be a church that denies or condemns sola
fide can be recognized as a legitimate church.
Soli Deo Gloria: The Erosion Of God-Centered
Worship
Wherever in the church biblical authority has been
lost, Christ has been displaced, the gospel has been distorted, or
faith has been perverted, it has always been for one reason: our
interests have displaced God's and we are doing His work in our
way. The loss of God's centrality in the life of today's church is
common and lamentable. It is this loss that allows us to transform
worship into entertainment, gospel preaching into marketing,
believing into technique, being good into feeling good about
ourselves, and faithfulness into being successful. As a result,
God, Christ and the Bible have come to mean too little to us and
rest too inconsequentially upon us.
God does not exist
to satisfy human ambitions, cravings, the appetite for
consumption, or our own private spiritual interest. We must focus
on God in our worship, rather than the satisfaction of our
personal needs. God is sovereign in worship; we are not. Our
concern must be for God's kingdom, not our own empires, popularity
or success.
Thesis Five: Soli Deo Gloria We reaffirm that because
salvation is of God and has been accomplished by God, it is for
God's glory and that we must glorify him always. We must live our
entire lives before the face of God, under the authority of God
and for his glory alone.
We deny that we
can properly glorify God if our worship is confused with enter-tainment,
if we neglect either Law or Gospel in our preaching, or if
self-improvement, self-esteem or self-fulfillment are allowed to
become alternatives to the gospel.
A Call To Repentance And Reformation
The Faithfulness of the evangelical church in the past
contrasts sharply with its unfaithfulness in the present. Earlier
in this century, evangelical churches sustained a remarkable
missionary endeavor, and built many religious institutions to
serve the cause of biblical truth and Christ's kingdom. That was a
time when Christian behavior and expectations were markedly
different from those in the culture. Today they often are not. The
evangelical world today is losing its biblical fidelity, moral
compass and missionary zeal.
We repent of our
worldliness. We have been influenced by the "gospels" of our
secular culture, which are not gospels. We have weakened the
church by our own lack of serious repentance, our blindness to the
sins in ourselves which we see so clearly in others, and our
inexcusable failure adequately to tell others about God's saving
work in Jesus Christ.
We also
earnestly call back erring professing evangelicals who have
deviated from God's Word in the matters discussed in this
Declaration. This includes those who declare that there is hope of
eternal life apart from explicit faith in Jesus Christ, who claim
that those who reject Christ in this life will be annihilated
rather than endure the just judgment of God through eternal
suffering, or who claim that evangelicals and Roman Catholics are
one in Jesus Christ even where the biblical doctrine of
justification is not believed.
The Alliance of
Confessing Evangelicals asks all Christians to give consideration
to implementing this Declaration in the church's worship, ministry
policies, life and evangelism.
For Christ's
sake. Amen. |