A Confessional Statement

We Confess Jesus Christ
The Son, The Savior, The Lord

Preamble
During the First week of Easter, 1994, a group of 92 laity,
clergy, bishops, and professors gathered to consult about the future of The
United Methodist Church. We issued "An Invitation to the Church" for
others to join us in exalting Jesus Christ as we confront the crisis of faith
within The United Methodist Church. In love for the Church we [a gathering of
over 800 United Methodists meeting in Atlanta, Ga. April 28-29, 1995] now
present this Confessional Statement for the renewal and reform of The United
Methodist Church.
The crisis before us is this: Will The United Methodist Church
confess, and be unified by, the apostolic faith in Jesus Christ; or will The
United Methodist Church challenge the primacy of Scripture and justify the
acceptance of beliefs incompatible with our Articles of Religion and Confession
of Faith?
The United Methodist Church is now incapable of confessing
with one voice the orthodox Trinitarian faith, particularly Jesus Christ as the
Son of God, the Savior of the world, and the Lord of history and the Church.
While giving assent to Jesus Christ as Lord, our denomination tolerates opinions
that "strike at the root of Christianity" (John Wesley). Our Church
suffers from private versions of the faith that do not find their root in
Scripture.
The purpose of this Confessional Statement is to call The
United Methodist Church, all laity and all clergy, to confess the person, work,
and reign of Jesus Christ. This Statement confronts and repudiates teachings and
practices in The United Methodist Church that currently challenge the truth of
Jesus Christ--the Son of God, the Savior of the world, and the Lord of all.
Aware of our own sinfulness, we who make this Confession submit our common
witness and our lives to the judgment and mercy of God, as attested in
Scripture, the written Word of God.

We Confess Jesus Christ
The Son
"He (Jesus)... said to them, 'But who do you say
that I am?' Simon Peter answered, 'You are the Messiah, the Son of the living
God.' And Jesus answered him, 'Blessed are you, Simon son of Jonah! For flesh
and blood has not revealed this to you, but my Father in heaven." (Matthew
16:15-17 NRSV)
We confess, in accordance with Holy Scripture
and with the Holy Spirit's help, that Jesus Christ is the one and only Son of
God. Confession of Jesus as the Son is essential, not a matter of personal
opinion. It is a matter of revelation, which was given to Peter and to the
Church by God whom Jesus called Father. With Peter and the other Apostles, we
confess that Jesus is the Christ. We confess with John and the other Apostles
that in Jesus of Nazareth, the Word made flesh, the eternal Son of God has come
into the world to make known the fullness of God's glory in grace and truth
(John I). Therefore we confess, in continuity with the apostolic witness of the
Church, that Jesus Christ is "true God from true God" (the Nicene
Creed), the Second Person of the Holy Trinity: Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.
We repudiate teachings that claim the person of
Jesus Christ is not adequate to reveal the fullness of God (Heb. 1:1-3). We
reject the claim that the maleness of Jesus disqualifies him as the true
revelation of God. We reject the claim that God can be fully known apart from
Jesus Christ. According to the apostolic faith, such teachings are false and
unfaithful to the Gospel.

The Savior
"There is salvation in no one else, for there is no
other name under heaven given among mortals by which we must be saved." (Acts
4:12 NRSV)
We confess, in accordance with Holy Scripture
and with the Holy Spirit's help, that Jesus Christ is the one and only Savior of
the world. In him, we see not only the fullness and the glory of God, but also
the model and power for our own freedom from the bondage of sin and death (Heb.
2:14-18). Through his obedient life, teaching, and ministry, his death on the
cross for the sins of the world, and his bodily resurrection, he is the Savior
of the world. God through Jesus Christ conquers sin and death, brings salvation
to this rebellious world, and reconciles "the world to himself" (2 Cor.
5:18-21).
We repudiate teachings that repress, turn away
from, or offer substitutes for the atoning death and life-giving resurrection of
Jesus. We oppose any redefinition of the Christian faith that diminishes or
eliminates the saving work of Jesus Christ in order to make dialogue with others
more agreeable. We reject any claim that regards the incarnation, crucifixion,
and resurrection as merely one salvation among others. According to the
apostolic faith, such teachings are false and unfaithful to the Gospel.

The Lord
"As you therefore have received Christ Jesus the
Lord, continue to live your lives in him, rooted and built up in him and
established in the faith, just as you were taught, abounding in thanksgiving.
See to it that no one takes you captive through philosophy and empty deceit,
according to human tradition, according to the elemental spirits of the
universe, and not according to Christ. For in him the whole fullness of deity
dwells bodily, and you have come to fullness in him, who is the head of every
ruler and authority." (Colossians 2:6-10 NRSV)
We confess, in accordance with Holy Scripture
and with the Holy Spirit's help, that Jesus Christ is the one and only Lord of
creation and history. In the midst of many competing voices, the Church seeks to
hear, trust, and obey Jesus the Lord and his commandments (1 Cor. 8:5,6). True
authority in the Church derives from, and furthers obedience to this Lord. True
authority in the Church holds the community accountable to this Lord, especially
when teachings and practices arise that undermine or deny his Lordship.
We repudiate
teachings and practices that MISUSE principles of inclusiveness and tolerance to
distort the doctrine and discipline of the Church. We deny the claim that the
individual is free to decide what is true and what is false, what is good and
what is evil. We reject widespread and often unchallenged practices in and by
the Church that rebel against the Lordship of Jesus Christ. For example:
Any new teachings in the Church that seek to set aside the
biblical witness cannot be established by votes, or appeals to personal
experience, or by responding to contemporary social pressures. According to the
apostolic faith, such teachings and practices are false and unfaithful to the
Gospel.

This, then, is our confession: We confess that Jesus
Christ is the Son, the Savior, and the Lord, according to the Scriptures.
The United Methodist Church has never had an institutional guarantee of
[doctrinal] diversity without boundaries. We implore other United Methodists,
laity and clergy, to join us in this confession. Relying upon the power of the
Holy Spirit, we vow to make this confession in the congregations, boards,
divisions, agencies, seminaries, and conferences of our denomination. We will
faithfully support United Methodist activities, groups, programs, and
publications that further this confession, and we will vigorously challenge and
hold accountable those that undermine this confession. All the while, readying
for the coming of Jesus Christ in power and glory, we welcome ecumenical
partnerships in the advancement of this confession.
April 29, 1995