|
|
The
Mission Statement of the
Reformed Episcopal Church
Adopted by the Bishops of this
Church, December 3, 1992
Revised by the Council of Bishops, October 2, 2003
Built upon the foundation of the
authoritative Word of God, the Holy Scriptures, the Reformed
Episcopal Church sets her highest priority on biblical
worship and declares her commitment to the work of
evangelism, the bold and unadulterated
proclamation of salvation by grace through faith in the Lord
Jesus Christ (Acts 8:4). In keeping the faith once delivered to
the saints, the Reformed Episcopal Church, however, does not
believe evangelism to be the end, but rather the beginning of
her divinely given vocation.
In addition to being evangelical, she is
deeply committed to discipleship, the work of
training evangelized men and women in Christian living (St.
Matthew 28:20). When the Gospel is truly proclaimed and the
mercies of God are made known, redeemed men and women must be
led to offer their bodies as a living sacrifice, which is their
spiritual service (Romans 12:1). Thus, the Reformed Episcopal
Church understands the Christian life to be necessarily
corporate. The Gospel call of salvation is not only to a savior,
but also to a visible communion (I Cor.12:27)
being indwelt by Christ's Spirit, transcends both temporal and
geographic bounds.
Therefore, the Reformed Episcopal Church is
creedal, following the historic catholic faith
as it was confessed by the early undivided Church in the
Apostles' (A.D. 150), Nicene (A.D. 325) and Athanasian Creeds
(circa. A.D. 401); sacramental, practicing the
divinely ordained sacraments of Baptism and the Lord's Supper as
outward and visible signs of His inward and spiritual grace;
liturgical, using the historic Book of Common
Prayer; and Episcopal, finding unity with the
Church of the earliest Christian eras through submission to the
government of godly bishops.
In this fashion, by embracing the broad base of
doctrine and practice inherent in apostolic Christianity received by
the Church of the English Reformation and expressed in the
Thirty-Nine Articles of Religion, the Reformed Episcopal Church has
a foundation for effective ministry in the name of Christ to a world
which is lost and dying without Him.
Approved, General Committee, October 5,
2003
©
2003 The Reformed
Episcopal Church
Back
to Top | Home | Site
Contents | Site Search |