Biblical Distinctives

We subscribe to The 1689 Second London Baptist Confession of Faith. Below are our church’s biblical distinctives:

We believe that our Lord Jesus Christ, truly God and truly man, risen from the dead and now seated at the right hand of God the Father Almighty as King of all (Eph. 1:20-21), is worthy of a healthy church in Perryville, AR. We believe taking these ten distinctives together sets us apart as a local church in the location where God has planted us. These distinctives do not exhaust all of our beliefs as a body, but they are a non-negotiable part of who we are as a local church. We hold these truths according to the Bible for the purpose of the good of one another and our community and ultimately for Christ’s honor and glory.

  1. Biblical Sufficiency 

We believe the Bible is enough to reveal to us the triune God and how we are to live in response to all He has done for us in Christ and His gospel (2 Pt 1:3). The Bible is our highest authority, having been breathed out by God Himself (2 Tim. 3:16), so to disbelieve or disobey the Bible, or to fail to trust its sufficiency in all manner of godly living is an insult to God.

We look for no further word of God than that which has already been revealed in the Scriptures (the 66 canonical books of the Bible from Genesis to Revelation) with Christ Himself, and by extension, the ministry of His Apostles and their close associates, being God’s final Word to His people until the consummation of all things (Heb. 1:2). The Bible is enough to teach us to live for Christ, to order His church, to teach us how to reach every generation with the gospel, to counsel, to make disciples, and to know everything God requires His people to know in order to live a holy life pleasing unto Him.

Above all other ministries in the church, we prize the ministry of the Word. We preach the Word on Sundays. We teach it in Sunday School and on Wednesday Nights. We hide it in our hearts. We talk about it with one another. It is the Word of God that brings about reformation and revival and shows us every way a local church must go (Psalm 19:7-14). A church must constantly check itself according to the Word of God and always be reforming according to the Scriptures. In all that we do, we must always seek to be biblical.

  1. Biblical Holiness

We believe that God really and truly saves the vilest of sinners by His marvelous grace through the righteous life, prophetic fulfillment, vicarious death, and victorious resurrection of our Lord Jesus Christ. Those who are truly born again persevere in grace and holiness (Jeremiah 31:33). We acknowledge the sad reality of false converts in our day (Matthew 7:21-23) and teach and preach against false assurance, i.e., those who say they are Christians but display no demonstrable love for Christ, His Word, His ways, the local church, and His mission. We believe that genuine Christians desire to be a holy people (1 Peter 1:14-16) and, because they follow Christ, will ultimately be hated by the world (John 15:18-21). Holiness is defined by God’s Book (Jeremiah 6:16, John 17:17).

  1. Biblical Preaching

We believe the mainstay of our preaching is to be expository sermons through books of the Bible. We believe the biblical text itself must drive the sermon.

We believe sermons ought to be both weighty in theology and application. We believe the ultimate goal of every sermon is the exaltation of Christ our King. We believe there are appropriate times to preach topically, but the desire of the people of God must be to receive the full counsel of God’s Word (Acts 20:27). While we do not put a time requirement upon sermons, we believe that healthy exposition requires sufficient time and, therefore, the sermon ordinarily takes up the majority of our Sunday Morning gatherings.

  1. Biblical Leadership

We believe local churches are to be led by qualified, godly men who are able to teach (1 Tim. 3:1-7). In the Scriptures these men are referred to as Elders/Pastors/Bishops/Overseers (Titus 1:5, Eph. 4:11, Phil. 1:1). These different titles make up the one office ordinarily referred to as “Elders” or “Pastors”. In the New Testament, each local church had a plurality of Elders (Acts 14:23) who were responsible for shepherding God’s flock (Acts 20:28, 1 Peter 5:1-3). As churches are able, they ought to have a plurality of Elders as well. These pastors are equal in oversight over God’s church, but each is gifted differently so that the main preaching duties will ordinarily fall upon one man (1 Timothy 5:17), particularly in smaller churches.

We believe the only other office besides pastors in the local church is that of deacons (Phil. 1:1, 1 Tim. 3:8-13). All church members ought to serve the church, but the office of deacon is particularly designed by God for qualified men to assist elders with the physical needs of the church so as to help free the pastors for labor in the ministry of the Word & prayer (Acts 6:4).

  1. Biblical Membership

We are a Baptist church, which we equate with “biblical”. We believe that membership in a local church is a biblical and precious privilege. Membership in the local church is limited to regenerate persons, i.e., believers (1 Cor. 1:2), who have been baptized as believers by immersion upon a credible profession of faith (Acts 2:41).

Membership in the local church includes a covenantal commitment to weekly assembly with the body (Heb. 10:25), as well as covenanting to watch over one another in holy love (Gal. 6:1-2), to discipline one another when necessary (Matthew 18:15-17, 1 Cor. 5:12-13), and to contribute financially to the needs and mission of the church (Acts 2:42ff, 1 Cor. 16:1-2).

We believe all church members, both men and women each having various gifting, must serve the body of Christ for His glory and the advancement of His Kingdom (1 Cor. 12:14). No church will be successful in the eyes of the Lord without both holy men and holy women committed to the cause of Christ.

  1. Biblical Worship

We believe that our triune God alone determines how He is to be worshiped (Deut. 12:32) and has expressly set forth in His Word how He would have His local churches worship Him (John 4:24). We, therefore, seek to follow the regulative principle of worship. This means that we believe that only what God has expressly commanded His church to do in worship should be done.

This also means that we believe only qualified men may preach or publicly lead in the singing, bible reading, and praying that occurs when the church is corporately gathered in our Lord’s Day main assembly (1 Tim. 2:8-15).

We prize the first day of the week, Sunday, as our day for worshiping God corporately (Acts 20:7). While there will be times of providential hindrance, we prioritize our meetings on this day, setting aside this day as sacred for worship and fellowship with the body of Christ. We believe that biblical worship is for all ages and that the entire church body and every family ought to worship God together. We, therefore, do not provide separate spaces for children’s classes during corporate worship (Matthew 19:14).

  1. Biblical Missions

The missions’ organization and sending agency of the New Testament is the local church (cf. Acts 13:1-3). Local churches should, as providence and the light of nature dictates, partner with other like-minded local churches to co-labor in missions and send out missionaries. Every local church is required to care about missions (cf. Matthew 28:18-20). Missions in the New Testament is not only “centered” in the local church, but in many ways is also about the local church. That is, the primary focus of missions’ giving ought to be for planting churches and helping local churches faithfully align themselves with the Word of God (cf. Acts 13:1-14:28, 15:36). Local churches ought to know the who, what, and why of their missions’ giving. Mission enterprises, missionaries, evangelists, etc., are all accountable to the local churches.

  1. Biblical Evangelism

We believe that before the foundation of the world, God elected a people for salvation out of the fallen mass of humanity (Eph. 1:3-14, Matthew 1:21). We believe it is the church’s great honor and obligation to proclaim the gospel – the life, death, burial, and resurrection of Christ for sinners –  to the nations. All persons regardless of ethnicity, gender, or sinful behaviors, must be told of the gospel of our Lord Jesus and offered a real opportunity of pardon from our gracious King (2 Cor. 5:20, Ezekiel 33:11). Those who do call upon the name of the Lord in saving faith and repentance will be forgiven, justified, adopted, sanctified, and eventually glorified, even as only God Himself in His sovereign grace is the very reason for their trust in Him as He has first drawn them to Himself and given them life (John 6:44, 6:63) – salvation from beginning to end belongs to the Lord! (Jonah 2:9)

Since we believe in the complete and gracious sovereignty of God in salvation, we believe we ought to be of all persons, the most evangelistic. God really and truly saves (cf. Heb. 7:25)! And He desires His church to proclaim His offer of pardon to all as it brings glory to Christ (Psalm 96:1-13). We believe, therefore, qualified men in the church should publicly preach the gospel to lost persons as providence grants opportunity even in the face of rejection and hostility  (2 Tim. 4:5, Acts 17:22-34). We believe that every church member is responsible to speak the gospel to their friends, neighbors, coworkers, and relatives (Matthew 28:18-20). To pass out tracts or write letters. To pray for and support those from the church who are engaged in evangelistic preaching.

Salvation is not achieved by a Sinner’s Prayer, Baptism, or any other work of man. Salvation is all of sovereign and unmerited grace, planned by the Father, accomplished by our Blessed Redeemer, and applied in time by the Holy Spirit. A person is saved when the gospel is proclaimed and the Spirit works through that proclamation in such a way that He moves the sinner from death to life, “turning on the light” so to speak. Only then can a person see his or her sin (the breaking of God’s Law) and turn from it in repentance. Only then can they, by faith, trust in Christ alone as their only suitable and all-sufficient Savior. It is the church’s privilege to take this message to the world.

  1. Biblical Homes

We believe that God’s design for marriage is between one man and one woman for life (Mark 10:1-9). We believe that the home ought to be a place where Christ’s reign is recognized and rejoiced in and where family worship happens frequently (Deut. 6:7).

We live in a society that hates biblical masculinity. We believe men must be the leaders of our homes (1 Cor. 11:3). We reject today’s idea that gender is fluid, and that men and women’s roles are interchangeable.  God’s design for the home consists in godly husbands loving their wives as Christ loved the church. In submissive wives seeking to follow their husband’s godly leadership. In children submissive to their parents. (Eph. 5:22-6:4, 1 Peter 3:1-7). We desire to order the home the way Christ would have us.

We disciple men to prize the Scriptures. To prize learning theology. To prize growing in the faith. To prize humbly and graciously leading their families to do the same. To learn from and disciple other men (Proverbs 27:17). We disciple women to prize the Scriptures and learning theology. To tangibly prioritize children and the home. To love and respect their husbands. To learn from and disciple other women (Titus 2:3-5). We disciple families to have regular times of family worship in the home (Joshua 24:15).

  1. Biblical Fellowship

A local church is not merely something one “goes to” like going to the movies. A local church is a family with bonds more lasting than those of our blood relatives (Eph. 3:6, 4:25). We believe local church members must intentionally and joyfully cultivate time together outside of our regular Sunday meetings as providence allows. We believe prioritizing time with one another will result in giving up other things at times, but that such fellowship is for the good of the church and the glory of Christ (John 13:35). This time together with other church members is not only for the enjoyment of one another’s company in the Lord but also for spurring one another in holiness (Hebrews 3:13).

All that we do as a church, our constitution, bylaws, policies, procedures, focus, everyday lives, interactions, affiliations, et al, are filtered through these ten biblical distinctives. These distinctives represent our very heartbeat. Soli Deo Gloria. Christ is King!

What is the Gospel? 

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