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Agreed Statement of Belief
These are the beliefs Nazarenes hold to be true:
We believe in one God—the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.
We believe that the Old and New Testament Scriptures, given by plenary inspiration, contain all truth necessary to faith and Christian living.
We believe that man is born with a fallen nature, and is, therefore, inclined to evil, and that continually.
We believe that the finally impenitent are hopelessly and eternally lost.
We believe that the atonement through Jesus Christ is for the whole human race; and that whosoever repents and believes on the Lord Jesus Christ is justified and regenerated and saved from the dominion of sin.
We believe that believers are to be sanctified wholly, subsequent to regeneration, through faith in the Lord Jesus Christ.
We believe that the Holy Spirit bears witness to the new birth, and also to the entire sanctification of believers.
We believe that our Lord will return, the dead will be raised, and the final judgment will take place.
10. We believe that sanctification is the work of God which transforms believers into the likeness of Christ. It is wrought by God’s grace through the Holy Spirit in initial sanctification, or regeneration (simultaneous with justification), entire sanctification, and the continued perfecting work of the Holy Spirit culminating in glorification. In glorification we are fully conformed to the image of the Son.
We believe that entire sanctification is that act of God, subsequent to regeneration, by which believers are made free from original sin, or depravity, and brought into a state of entire devotement to God, and the holy obedience of love made perfect.
It is wrought by the baptism with or infilling of the Holy Spirit, and comprehends in one experience the cleansing of the heart from sin and the abiding, indwelling presence of the Holy Spirit, empowering the believer for life and service. Entire sanctification is provided by the blood of Jesus, is wrought instantaneously by grace through faith, preceded by entire consecration; and to this work and state of grace the Holy Spirit bears witness.
This experience is also known by various terms representing its different phases, such as “Christian perfection,” “perfect love,” “heart purity,” “the baptism with or infilling of the Holy Spirit,” “the fullness of the blessing,” and “Christian holiness.”
Thanks for the info.Here is the Nazarene Statement of Faith
I draw your attention to the bolded and underlined sections. The main emphasis of Nazarene doctrine surrounds the teaching of entire sanctification. In general, it is taught that a person a "second act of Grace" where by become instantly and entirely sanctified. No progressive sanctification here! From the Article of Faith"
There are numerous other differences such as: the mode of baptism, inclusion of children in baptism, eternal security, government. I spent 13 years with the Untied Methodist and one year as an intentional interim with the CotN. I also spent tens of thousands of dollars learning the differences between Wesleyan Arminianism and the brand found in a Free Will Baptist church.
Aren't you a Baptarene? Or is it Naztist?Thanks for the info.
Sent from my TARDIS
No. I'm Dort-ish with a twist. Think Calvinistic before it bloomed, minus some baggage the Reformers forgot to leave behind, and then toss in a bit more biblical perspective that had been overlooked.....you know....Dort-ish .Aren't you a Baptarene? Or is it Naztist?
Dortish? No. Sounds more like Deformed Baptist mixed with some delusional thinking.No. I'm Dort-ish with a twist. Think Calvinistic before it bloomed, minus some baggage the Reformers forgot to leave behind, and then toss in a bit more biblical perspective that had been overlooked.....you know....Dort-ish .
But I do like tangerines, if that counts. Thumbsup
Aren't you a Baptarene? Or is it Naztist?
Nah...I left that bunch decades ago. Was a member of your denomination for a brief time, but moved closer to biblical theology by God's grace. I simply kept growing in Christ (we call it sanctification and discipleship).Dortish? No. Sounds more like Deformed Baptist mixed with some delusional thinking.![]()
Obviously you do dare to say. I wouldn't have as that has the potential to be severely misunderstood (but the thought crossed my mind as well....I just let it continue on and slip out the other earOr dare say I.....
I pray you realize that was meant to be a joke. I honestly meant no harm. I'm sorry if that offended you and hurt your feelings.Obviously you do dare to say. I wouldn't have as that has the potential to be severely misunderstood (but the thought crossed my mind as well....I just let it continue on and slip out the other ear).
Don't be silly, brother. I'm not offended at all (like I said, reading IT's statement that same idea crossed my mind). I was playing off your "dare I say" comment because, quite frankly, there are a few responses I've reeled back because I realized it could be taken wrong. I'd never, for example, abbreviate "First Assembly of Gnostic Stoicism" in jest simply because I'd fear someone would take offense.I pray you realize that was meant to be a joke. I honestly meant no harm. I'm sorry if that offended you and hurt your feelings.
What are the differences between Nazarene and Free-Will Baptist doctrine?
I'm surprised that PCUSA is 44% Republican.Interesting statistic, Nazarene and Southern Baptists are very near to each other in party affiliation http://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tan...6-02-22_religionpoliticalaffiliation_640px-2/