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The
Presbyterian Church's Foundational Principles
for Governance
Chapter
4 - The Church and Its Members
The
Meaning of Membership
The incarnation of God in the life, death, and resurrection
of Jesus Christ gives to the church its understanding of membership.
One becomes an active member of the church through faith in Jesus
Christ as Savior and acceptance of his Lordship in all of life.
Baptism and a public profession of faith in Jesus as Lord are the
visible signs of entrance into the active membership of the church.
Accepting the privilege and responsibility of membership in the
church is a commitment to Jesus Christ that binds the individual
to fulfillment of the obligations of membership. Members shall regularly
review and evaluate the integrity of their commitment.
Inclusiveness
Each member shall seek the grace of openness in extending
the fellowship of Christ to all persons. The congregation shall
welcome all persons who respond in trust and obedience to God’s
grace in Jesus Christ and desire to become part of the membership
and ministry of the Church. Failure to do so constitutes a rejection
of Christ himself and causes a scandal to the gospel.
Preparation
for Membership
The session has responsibility for preparing those who
would become members of the congregation. It is left to the prudence
of the session to judge, after appropriate instruction and careful
examination, the readiness of those who apply for active membership.
No persons shall be denied membership for any reason not related
to profession of faith.
Membership
as Ministry
A faithful member accepts Christ’s call to be involved
responsibly in the ministry of his Church. Such involvement includes:
- proclaiming the good news,
- taking part in the common life and worship of a particular church,
- praying and studying Scripture and the faith of the Christian
Church,
- supporting the work of the church through the giving of money,
time,
and talents,
- participating in the governing responsibilities of the church,
- demonstrating a new quality of life within and through the church,
- responding to God’s activity in the world through service
to others,
- living responsibly in the personal, family, vocational, political,
cultural, and social relationships of life,
- working in the world for peace, justice, freedom, and human
fulfillment.
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