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Article I - Bibliology - The Doctrine of the Bible
Article II - Theology Proper - The Study of God
Article III, Christology-The Study of Jesus Christ
Article IV - Pneumatology - The Study of the Holy Spirit
Article V - The Study of Angels
Article VI - Anthropology and Hamartiology (Man and Sin)
Article VII - Dispensationalism
Article 8--Soteriology- The Doctrine of Salvation
Article IX - The Gospel Message- The Object and Content of Saving Faith
Article X - The Great Commission
Article XI - Christian Stewardship and the Gospel
Article XII - Ecclesiology - The study of the Church
Article XIII - Eschatology - The Study of Last Things
Article XIV - The Christian Walk

DOCTRINAL STATEMENT

OF

CLEAR GOSPEL

CAMPAIGN

 

Welcome to Clear Gospel Campaign.  The following doctrinal statement represents a detailed view of our beliefs.  You will note a detailed theme on the purity of the Gospel message not present in most doctrinal statements.  We hope that, in your reading of it, you not only evaluate the doctrinal positions of Clear Gospel Campaign, but that it may also illuminate to you any errors or weaknesses in your own Christian experience, whether worship, tithing, witnessing, or other Christian activity, and that you might be edified by it.  Although this doctrinal statement is copyrighted under the Berne Convention, Clear Gospel Campaign hereby extends permission to any Christian group to adopt this doctrinal statement, in part, or in the whole, as the doctrinal statement of their own church or organization.  Although Clear Gospel Campaign does not require notification of such use, we would be greatly encouraged to learn that this labor has been used of God, and humbly request notification of such usage or adoption.  We further request, but do not require, that any extensive usage might be acknowledged by a footnote or headnote.  Clear Gospel Campaign has drawn many well crafted sentences and phrases from the doctrinal statements of  Dallas Theological Seminary and Chafer Theological Seminary, and appreciates the fine work that went into crafting those documents.

Ronald R. Shea, Th.M., J.D.

Founder and President

 

Article I - BIBLIOLOGY

(The Study of the Word of God)

 

Section 1 - Revelation.

 

The Bible is the Word of God given unto man to reveal God and to show forth His eternal plan to mankind, including the meaning and purpose of our humanity, which is first and foremost to know, enjoy, worship, honor, and appreciate our Creator.

 

 

Section 2 - Inspiration and Authority.

 

We believe that all Scripture was given by inspiration of God, or "God Breathed" - (2nd Timothy 3:16).  By this statement, we do not deny the participation of man in greater or lesser degrees in the writing of most of the Scriptures.  The Bible came to us through a great variety of lowly methods, very few having the outward appearance of any supernatural content.  In drafting his gospel, Luke interviewed people, read accounts, collected documents, and whatever else an historian would do in researching a work (Luke 1:2).  Paul analyzed the Old Testament according to his disciplined training as a Pharisee, crafting carefully reasoned theological arguments (Romans 4:3-4).  Paul also appears to take a popular expression, or a stanza from a popular hymn of the day and repeats it in one of his letters, thereby making it a part of Scripture (1st Timothy 1:15).  In a similar manner, archeologists have discovered that some of the Psalms and Proverbs appear to have been adapted from known writings of pagan cultures.  Paul advances one theological argument by quoting a pagan Greek poet (Acts 17:28), and Jude quotes from apocryphal Jewish writings (Jude 6).  In each of these cases, the compilation of these thoughts into Scripture is indelibly etched with the fingerprint of man, and without the outward appearance of divine origin.

 

Yet regardless of the form of literature, or the outward method by which the author gathered the thoughts before writing them, Scripture affirms that, in every case, the authors were "born along" or "superintended" by the Holy Spirit as they put pen to parchment (1st Peter 20:21).  Accordingly we believe that, after gathering data or formulating theological arguments, the Holy Spirit was active in guiding the author in the actual writing of Scripture so that every word and every statement penned in Scripture, whether spiritual, historical, or scientific, was without error.

 

We believe that the humble origins of Scripture mirror the humble origins of our Lord Jesus Christ, who, though born in a lowly stable as a descendent of Adam's fallen race, was nevertheless preserved from sin by the Holy Spirit, and came to man as the incarnate Word of God.  So also is Scripture, from its humble origins, is without flaw or error, fully of God, and fully of man, mirroring the divine union of God and man in the incarnate Word of God.

 

Section 3 - Lower Criticism

 

  We believe that the inerrancy of Scripture extends only to the original manuscripts or "autographa."  We believe, however, that the Holy Spirit has been active in world history to preserve his Word (Psalm 12:7), and that through godly men who have been yielded to his Spirit in their analysis of the existing manuscripts, God has made available for believers today, Scripture that, in its essence, partakes in the inerrancy of the autographa.  We believe, however, it is the duty of each believer, to the extent possible, to prayerfully and intelligently investigate the textual and philosophical basis of the various translations of Scripture that are available, and to select for study that which is a faithful and accurate rendition of the Word of God.

 

Section 4 - Canonicity

 

The canon of Scripture is a closed collection of all writings and only those writings inspired by God.  The 39 books of the Hebrew Old Testament and the 27 books of the Greek New Testament comprise the whole canon of Scripture (2nd Timothy 3:16; Jude 3; Revelation 22:18-22).  Because Scripture is God's only written revelation to men, it is our sole source of infallible guidance for faith and practice.  We do not accept the apocryphal books as canonical (Matthew 5:17-18; cf. Revelation 22:18-19; Jude 3).


Article I - Bibliology - The Doctrine of the Bible

 

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