THE CHRISTIANS FAITH
As
Christians, we are, above all, believers. We believe in the Bible, in God, in
Christ, in the Spirit, and in God's redemption and salvation.
The first item of our faith is that
the Bible is the Word of God. Concerning the Bible, the apostle Paul says, "All
Scripture is God-breathed" (2 Tim. 3:16a ). The Scriptures were written by godly
men under God's inspiration. We also believe that the Bible contains the
completed divine revelation. All aspects of our faith are founded on the Bible
and controlled by the Bible. We accept what the Bible says in full, from Genesis
to Revelation, and we reject any thought of man that goes beyond what the Bible
says. The Bible is the true and objective gift from God that offers to us His
revelation concerning Himself, His full salvation, and His plan, or economy, for
man. Because the Bible is the Word of God, we believe in its accuracy and
maintain its infallibility.
Concerning God
Of
course, the major topic of the Bible is God, and God is the object of our faith.
From the revelation of the Scriptures we believe that our God is uniquely one
yet triune. Although it is beyond our human comprehension, the Bible clearly
shows that God is at the same time uniquely one (1 Tim. 2:5 ) yet distinctly
three (Matt. 28:19 ). He is eternally the Father, the Son, and the Spirit. The
Three of the Divine Trinity are distinct but not separate. Where the Father is,
the Son is also, as the Lord Jesus tells us in John 10:38, "...the Father is in
Me and I am in the Father." The same mutual indwelling also exists between the
Son and the Spirit as well as between the Spirit and the Father. Among the Three
of the Trinity, the Father, as His name implies, is the source of the Divine
Trinity; the Son is the expression of the Father; and the Spirit is the
realization of all that the Son is and has. But these fine points of our faith
are not mere theological difficulties. Because our God is triune, we have a way
to experience and enjoy Him. The apostle Paul clearly relates the Three of the
Trinity to the experience of the believers: "The grace of the Lord Jesus Christ
and the love of God and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit be with you all" (2
Cor. 13:14). According to the New Testament, all Three--the Father, the Son, and
the Spirit--are in the believers (Eph. 4:6 ; Col. 1:27 ; John 14:17 ).
Concerning Christ
We
believers are called Christians because we are men and women of Christ. Christ
is the most wonderful Person in the universe, and we are joyfully called by His
name. Christ is eternally God. In eternity past, before creation, He was God; He
is God now; and He will be God forever. And yet one day He became a man, our
Lord Jesus. Hence, Christ is both the complete God and the perfect man. Without
abandoning His divinity, He was conceived in the womb of a human virgin, was
born as a baby, lived a human life on earth, and died a vicarious and
all-inclusive death on the cross, thereby accomplishing our redemption. But He
did not remain in death. After three days He resurrected to become a life-giving
Spirit (1 Cor. 15:45b ). The power of His divinity swallowed up death, and His
humanity was resurrected and glorified. Today He is both our Redeemer and our
life. He has ascended to the heavens and is in glory, ever yet fully God but
still fully man. As such, Christ is now the Author of our salvation and the
Perfecter of our faith (Heb 2:10; 12:2). He is seated in the heavens, carrying
out His heavenly ministry and accomplishing God's economy (Acts 5:31; Heb.
8:1-2). We look to His imminent return, when He will come back with the kingdom
of God and reign over the earth in the millennium (Rev. 1:7; 11:15; 20:6).
Concerning the Spirit
The
Third of the Trinity is the Spirit. As the Father is the source of the Divine
Trinity, the Spirit is the consummation of the Divine Trinity. All that the
Father has and is, is embodied in the Son; and all that the Son is, is realized
as the Spirit. For this reason, He is called the Spirit of reality (John 15:26;
16:13; 1 John 5:6). The reality of what Christ is and even of what the Triune
God is, is the Holy Spirit. This Holy Spirit carried out the incarnation of
Christ (Luke 1:35; Matt. 1:18, 20). Because He bears to us the humanity, human
living, and death of Jesus, He is called the Spirit of Jesus (Acts 16:7); and
because the divinity and resurrection of Christ are made real to us by Him, He
is called the Spirit of Christ (Rom. 8:9). He is also called the Spirit of Jesus
Christ, indicating that He is the source of the bountiful supply to the
believers (Phil. 1:19). The Spirit of Jesus Christ is compounded with His
humanity and death and with His divinity and resurrection. This Spirit is the
Spirit of life and the indwelling Spirit (Rom. 8:2, 11). As the Lord Spirit, He
transforms us by renewing us (2 Cor. 3:18; Titus 3:5). The all-inclusive Spirit
is our holy anointing (2 Cor. 1:21; 1 John 2:20, 27), as typified by the
compound ointment in Exodus 30:23-31. As such, He becomes a seal and a pledge to
us (Eph. 1:13-14). Daily the Spirit comforts us as our Paraclete (John
14:16-17), supplies us in our Christian walk, and intercedes for us (Rom 8:4,
26). Such a Spirit was breathed into us as our life essentially (John 20:22) and
was poured out upon us as power economically (Acts 2:1-4, 17). In the age of
degradation, this wonderful Spirit is intensified sevenfold as the seven Spirits
of God (Rev. 1:4; 4:5; 5:6). Eventually, this intensified Spirit, as the
consummation of the Triune God, becomes one with the redeemed, regenerated,
renewed, transformed, and glorified church, which is His bride, for the
manifestation and expression of the Triune God in eternity (Rev. 22:17)
Concerning God's Redemption and Salvation
The
Triune God is indeed wonderful, but man falls far short of what God intended him
to be. Man has fallen and is hopelessly lost in sin. Yet because of His great
love for man, God in Christ came to redeem man to Himself. Formerly, man
belonged to God; but through the fall of our first ancestors, all our race was
enslaved to the devil and to sin, and we came under the heavy demands of God's
righteousness, holiness, and glory. We were absolutely unable to fulfill the
requirements. But Christ fulfilled all the requirements through His death on the
cross. This accomplished an eternal redemption for us, and this redemption is
the base of God's full salvation. Because of Christ's death, God forgives
sinners of their sins (Eph. 1:7), reconciles them, His enemies, to Himself (Rom.
5:10), and justifies them by making Christ their righteousness (Rom. 3:24; 1 Cor.
1:30). Based on Christ's redemption, God regenerates the redeemed with His
Spirit (John 3:5-6) to consummate His salvation, that they may become His
children (John 1:12-13). Now possessing God's life and nature, the believers
enjoy a daily salvation in this age (Rom. 5:10; 1 Pet. 2:2; Phil. 2:12) and the
eternal salvation (Heb. 5:9) in the coming age and in eternity. This salvation
is a salvation in life (Rom. 5:10), not merely a salvation from eternal
punishment. The life that we enjoy in this salvation is the Triune God Himself
realized in Christ (1 John 5:20) as the eternal Spirit (Heb. 9:14). This is
symbolized by the river of water of life, flowing in the New Jerusalem, and by
the tree of life, growing in the river (Rev. 22:1-2), both of which are for the
eternal life supply of all God's redeemed people. This is God's full, complete,
and dynamic salvation. "So great a salvation" (Heb. 2:3)!