What We Believe
With Christians of other communions we confess belief in the triune GodFather,
Son, and Holy Spirit. This confession embraces the biblical witness to God's activity in
creation, encompasses God's gracious self-involvement in the dramas of history, and
anticipates the consummation of God's reign.
The created order is designed for the well-being of all creatures and as the place of
human dwelling in covenant with God. As sinful creatures, however, we have broken that
covenant, become estranged from God, wounded ourselves and one another, and wreaked havoc
throughout the natural order. We stand in need of redemption.
We hold in common with all Christians a faith in the mystery of salvation in and
through Jesus Christ. At the heart
of the gospel of salvation is God's incarnation in Jesus of
Nazareth. Scripture witnesses to the redeeming love of God in Jesus' life and teachings,
His atoning death, His resurrection, His sovereign presence in history, His triumph over
the powers of evil and death, and His promised return. Because God truly loves us in spite
of our willful sin, God judges us, summons us to repentance, pardons us, receives us by
that grace given to us in Jesus Christ, and gives us hope of life eternal.
We share the Christian belief that God's redemptive love is realized in human life by the
activity of the Holy Spirit, both in personal experience and in the community of
believers. This community is the church, which the Spirit has brought into existence for
the healing of the nations.
Through faith in Jesus Christ we are forgiven, reconciled to God, and transformed as
people of the new covenant.
"Life in the Spirit" involves diligent use of the means of grace such as
praying, fasting, attending upon the sacraments, and inward searching in solitude. It also
encompasses the communal life of the church in worship, mission, evangelism, service, and
social witness.
We understand ourselves to be part of Chris
t's universal church when by adoration, proclamation, and
service we become conformed to Christ. We are initiated and incorporated into this
community of faith by Baptism, receiving the promise of the Spirit that re-creates and
transforms us. Through the regular celebration of Holy Communion, we participate in the
risen presence of Jesus Christ and are thereby nourished for faithful discipleship.
We pray and work for the coming of God's realm and reign to the world and rejoice in the
promise of everlasting life that overcomes death and the forces of
With other Christians we recognize that the reign of God is both a present and future
reality. The church is called to be that place where the first signs of the reign of God
are identified and acknowledged in the world. Wherever people are being made new creatures
in Christ, wherever the insights and resources of the gospel are brought to bear on the
life of the world, God's reign is already effective in its healing and renewing power.
We also look to the end time in which God's work will be fulfilled. This prospect gives us
hope in our present actions as individuals and as the Church. This expectation saves us
from resignation and motivates our continuing witness and service.
We share with many Christian communions a recognition of the authority of Scripture in
matters of faith, the confession that our justification as sinners is by grace through
faith, and the sober realization that the church is in need of continual reformation and
renewal.
We affirm the general ministry of all baptized Christians who share responsibility for
building up the church and reaching out in mission and service to the world.
With other Christians, we declare the essential oneness of the church in Christ Jesus.
This rich heritage of shared Christian belief finds expression in our hymnody and
liturgies. Our unity is affirmed in the historic creeds as we confess one holy, catholic,
and apostolic church. It is also experienced in joint ventures of ministry and in various
forms of ecumenical cooperation.
Nourished by common roots of this shared Christian heritage, the branches of Christ's
church have developed diverse traditions that enlarge our store of shared understandings.
Our avowed ecumenical commitment as United Methodists is to gather our own doctrinal
emphases into the larger Christian unity, there to be made more meaningful in a richer
whole.
If we are to offer our best gifts to the common Christian treasury, we must make a
deliberate effort as a church to strive for critical self-understanding. It is as
Christians involved in ecumenical partnership that we embrace and examine our distinctive
heritage.
Source: <http://www.umc.org/churchlibrary/discipline/doctrinalstandards/doctrinal_heritage.htm>