The
United Methodist Mission, History, & Beliefs
Our Mission
The heart of
Christian ministry is Christ's ministry of outreaching love. All
Christians are called to minister wherever Christ would have them
serve and witness in deeds and words that heal and free.
The mission of
the United Methodist Church is to make disciples of Jesus Christ.
Introduction
The United
Methodist Church is part of the church universal. All persons,
regardless of race, color, national origin, status or economic
condition are welcome to attend its services, receive Holy Communion,
be baptized and after taking vows, admitted into membership.
Denominational
practices and standards are set by General Conferences that meet once
every four years. Delegates to that conference are elected by clergy
and lay representatives from the local churches in regional areas.
Our
History
In 1729 in
England, a small group of Oxford University students spent a great
amount of time in methodical prayer and Bible reading. They were
ridiculed by other students as the "Holy Club," "Bible
Bigots" and "Methodists". They were led by John and
Charles Wesley. The small group held their ground and went out to
preach and pray with those considered to be the least fortunate in
English society.
The United
Methodist Church is the result of the 1939 merger of three Methodist
bodies (Methodist Episcopal, Methodist Episcopal South and Methodist
Protestant churches), and a 1968 union of the Evangelical United
Brethren and The Methodist Churches.
Our
Beliefs
United
Methodist preaching and teaching is grounded in Scripture, informed
by Christian tradition, enlivened in personal experience, and tested
by reason.
Scripture
The Holy Bible
is our primary source for Christian doctrine. Biblical authors
testify to God's self-disclosure in the life, death, and resurrection
of Jesus Christ as well as in God's work of creation, in the
pilgrimage of Israel, and in the Holy Spirit's ongoing activity in
human history.
Tradition
Our attempt to
understand God does not start anew with each generation or each
person. Our faith also does not leap from New Testament times to the
present as though nothing could be learned from all Christian
thinkers and preachers in between. We learn from traditions found in
many cultures, but the Holy Bible remains the norm by which all
traditions are judged.
Experience
In our
theological task, we examine experience, both personal and church-wide,
to confirm the realities of God's grace attested in Scripture.
Experience is the personal appropriation of God's forgiving and
empowering grace. Experience authenticates in our own lives the
truths revealed in Scripture and illumined in tradition.
Reason
Although we
recognize that God's revelation and our experiences of God's grace
continually surpass the scope of reason, we also believe that
disciplined theological work calls for the careful use of reason. By
reason we read and interpret Scripture. By reason we determine
whether our Christian witness is clear. By reason we ask questions of
faith and seek to understand God's action and will.
A
Triune God
With Christians
of other communions, we believe in a triune God--Father, Son and Holy
Spirit. We believe in God's self revelation as three distinct but
inseparable parts.
The
Father
We believe in
one true, holy, and living God who is creator, sovereign and
preserver of all things visible and invisible. God is infinite in
power, wisdom, justice, goodness, and love, and rules with gracious
regard for the well-being and salvation of all people.
The
Son
We believe that
God is best known in the life of Jesus of Nazareth. He is the source
and measure of all valid Christian teaching. We believe in the
mystery of salvation in and through the redeeming love of God found
in the teachings of Jesus, in his resurrection, and in his promised
return. The Son is the Word of the Father and one substance with the
Father. Through him we are forgiven and reconciled to God.
The
Holy Spirit
We believe that
God's love is realized in human life by the activity of the Holy
Spirit, both in our personal lives and in the church. The Holy
Spirit, proceeding from the Father and the Son, is a constant
presence in our lives, whereby we find strength and help in time of
need. The spirit comforts, sustains, and empowers us.
God's
Grace
By grace we
mean the under-deserved, unmerited, and loving action of God in human
existence through the ever-present Holy Spirit. While the grace of God
is undivided, it precedes salvation as "irreverent
grace," continues in "justifying grace," and is
brought to fruition in "sanctifying grace in the life of the believer."
In spite of
suffering, violence, and evil, we assert that God's grace is present
everywhere. Despite our brokenness, we remain creatures brought into
being by a just and merciful God. The reign of God is both a present
and a future reality. God summons us to repentance, pardons us,
receives us by grace given to us in Jesus Christ and gives us hope of
life eternal.
Justification
and New Birth
In
justification we are, through faith, forgiven our sins and restored
to God's favor. This process of justification and new birth is often
referred to as conversion. Such a change may be sudden and dramatic,
or gradual and cumulative. In either case it marks anew beginning,
yet it is also part of an ongoing process.
We believe God
reaches out to the repentant believer in justifying grace with
accepting and pardoning love.
Sanctification
and Perfection
We hold that
the wonder of God's acceptance and pardon does not end God's saving
work, which continues to nurture our growth in grace. Through the
power of the Holy Spirit, we are enabled to increase in the knowledge
and love of God and in love for our neighbor.
Faith
and Good Works
We see God's grace and human activity working together in the relationship of faith and good works. God's grace calls for human response and discipline.
Faith is the
only response essential for salvation. However, salvation evidences
itself in good works. Both faith and good works belong within an all-encompassing
theology of grace, since they stem from God's gracious love.
Personal
salvation always involves service to the world. Personal faith,
witness to that faith, and social action are mutually reinforcing.
The
Sacraments
We believe that
the sacraments of Baptism and Communion, ordained by Christ, are
symbols and pledges of God's love for us.
Baptism
Entrance into
the church is acknowledged in Baptism and may include persons of all
ages. Baptism is followed by nurture and the awareness of the
baptized of Christ's claim upon their lives. For persons baptized as
children, this claim is ratified by the baptized in confirmation,
where the pledges of Baptism are accepted.
Communion
We believe the
Lord's Supper is a memorial of the suffering and death of Christ, and
a symbol of the union Christians have with Christ and with one
another. All persons, regardless of age and regardless of church
affiliation, are invited to the table of our Lord.
One
Universal Church
With other
Christians, we declare the essential oneness of the church in Christ
Jesus. Our unity with other Christian communities is affirmed in the
historic creeds as we confess one holy, catholic (universal), and
apostolic church. We are initiated into this community of faith by
Baptism and through the celebration of Holy Communion.
Service
to the World
John Wesley,
the founder of the Methodist movement, said there was no religion
except for social religion. In his name and in his spirit the United
Methodist church reaches out to establish peace and justice in the world.