Note: Bracketed text [ ] are words to be deleted from the current Manual. Underlined text ___ are words to be added to the current Manual.
Article II. Local Churches
23. The membership of a local church shall consist of
all who have been organized as a church by those authorized so to do and who
have been publicly received by those having proper authority, after having experienced
Christian baptism, and having declared their experience of salvation, their
belief in our doctrines, and their willingness to submit to our government.
(100-107)
107. Full
Membership. The full membership of
the local church shall be composed of all persons who have been organized into
a local church those authorized so to do, and all who have been publicly
received by the pastor, the district superintendent, or the general
superintendent, after having experienced Christian baptism, and having
declared their experience of salvation, and their belief in the doctrines of
the Church of the Nazarene, and their willingness to submit to its
government. The local church leadership
shall seek to place every member into a ministry of service and a circle of
care and support. (23, 107.2 111, 113.1, 516.1, 520, 532.8, 538.8-538.9)
704. RECEPTION OF CHURCH MEMBERS
It is expected that prospective members have been baptized and have professed the Christian faith and been instructed in the doctrine and practices of the Church of the Nazarene. They may come forward to stand before the congregation and the pastor shall address them as follows: . . .
FOR THE FOLLOWING REASONS:
1. It is generally accepted
that, as General Superintendent Emeritus, the Rev’d. Dr. William Greathouse,
has said, “In the New Testament church there simply were no unbaptized
Christians . . .” (Staples 11) Staples, Rob L. Outward Sign and Inward Grace: The Place of Sacraments in Wesleyan
Spirituality.
2. The Church, generally, for over 2000 years has understood baptism as the sign of initiation into the new covenant and the community of faith, the Church.
3. Jesus and the apostles command baptism (e.g.,
Matt. 28:19; Acts
4. The Scriptures consistently declare the
importance of baptism (e.g., Jesus declares that “no one can enter the
5. Article of Faith XII. Baptism, paragraph 12, indicates that Christian baptism is “commanded by our Lord,” that it “is a sacrament signifying acceptance of the benefits of the atonement and incorporation into the Body of Christ. Thus, those who refuse baptism are acting inconsistently with the membership requirements in paragraph 23, which states that they must declare “. . . their beliefs in our doctrines . . .”
6. The FIRST of our General Rules in V. The Covenant of Christian Character (par. 21) call us to do “. . . that which is enjoined in the Word of God, which is our rule of both faith and practice . . .”
7. Most denominations, including the two denominations most like the Church of the Nazarene (viz., The Wesleyan Church and the Free Methodist Church of North America) require baptism prior to membership. In fact, allowing members who are not baptized places us at odds with orthodox Christianity.
8. It is surely more important for people to be fully “Christian” than just “Nazarene.”
1 comment:
Amen totally concur
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