The first of our three foundations (core values) for relating the gospel to academic study is our shared confession.
We believe that Jesus is the Christ the Son of God, and that by believing we have life in his name. To those who believed he gave the right to be called children of God. As people of this gospel - or the 'evangel' - we find our identity in him who is 'our representative and substitute', as our statement of faith puts it. What does this mean? Our doctrinal statement provides our point of reference for unity as the International Fellowship of Evangelical Students. The use of the word 'evangelical' dates from the earliest generations of church history, and was used frequently during the time of the Reformation. In some contexts today it is used sociologically or politically and this can be confusing. We are using the word with particular reference to our doctrine.
Scripture models the use of mini-confessions where key tenets of the faith are listed out in a brief form (cf. John 1:1-18, 20:31; Rom 1:2-5; 1 Cor 15:3-7; 1 Tim 1:15 & 3:16; Phil 2:6-11; Col 1:15-20; Heb 1:1-4). Their points are like tent pegs - they are not the whole tent: they are not expected to set out a full intellectual vision or clarify our mission. But they are the points which together secure the whole. Because they are so important these foundational truths come under significant attack (1 John 2:22; Gal 1:6-10; Phil 3:2; 2 Pet. 3:16; 2 Tim 2:17, 3:13-17). Our evangelical confession is classical, Protestant and non-denominational:
Our mission and doctrine are closely linked. While there is much to be learned from other traditions, our own focus is to cultivate the evangelical mind, so that a clear gospel-centred intellectual perspective can contribute to the wider 'faith and academia' conversation. In some of those contexts briefer creeds have been chosen, such as the Apostles’ Creed or the Nicene Creed. While we of course affirm these creeds we are grateful that our confession also includes the following key elements:
As the church encounters new questions or challenges - sometimes on topics not included in our doctrinal statement - church history shows that the characteristic response of faithfulness is to work internally together on clarifications which help us to apply our historic confession consistently in a changing world.
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