BAPTISMAL VOW AND BAPTISM— CHURCH MANUAL AMENDMENT
Voted, To amend the Church Manual, Chapter 5, Church Membership, page 30, Baptismal Vow and Baptism, to read as follows:
Certificate of Baptism and Commitment— The commitment will read as follows:
Commitment
1. I believe there is one God: Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, a unity of three co-eternal Persons.
2. I accept the death of Jesus Christ on Calvary as the atoning sacrifice for my sins. I believe that by God’s grace through faith in His shed blood that I am saved from sin and its penalty.
3. I accept Jesus Christ as my Lord and personal Saviour and believe that God, in Christ, has forgiven my sins and given me a new heart, and I renounce the sinful ways of the world.
4. I accept by faith the righteousness of Christ, my Intercessor in the heavenly sanctuary, and accept His promise of transforming grace and power to live a loving, Christ-centered life in my home and before the world.
5. I believe the Bible is God’s inspired Word, the only rule of faith and practice for the Christian. I covenant to spend time regularly in prayer and Bible study.
6. I accept the Ten Commandments as a transcript of the character of God and a revelation of His will. It is my purpose by the power of the indwelling Christ to keep this law, including the fourth commandment, which requires the observance of the seventh day of the week as the Sabbath of the Lord and the memorial of Creation.
7. I look forward to the soon coming of Jesus and the blessed hope when “this mortal shall . . . put on immortality.” As I prepare to meet the Lord, I will witness to His loving salvation by using my talents in personal soul-winning endeavor to help others to be ready for His glorious appearing.
8. I accept the biblical teaching of spiritual gifts and believe that the gift of prophecy is one of the identifying marks of the remnant church.
9. I believe in church organization. It is my purpose to worship God and to support the church through my tithes and offerings and by my personal efforts and influence.
10. I believe that my body is the temple of the Holy Spirit; and I will honor God by caring for it, avoiding the use of that which is harmful; abstaining from all unclean foods, from the use, manufacture, or sale of alcoholic beverages; the use, manufacture, or sale of tobacco in any of its forms for human consumption; and from the misuse of or trafficking in narcotics or other drugs.
11. I know and understand the fundamental Bible principles as taught by the Seventh-day Adventist Church. I purpose, by the grace of God, to fulfill His will by ordering my life in harmony with these principles.
12. I accept the New Testament teaching of baptism by immersion and desire to be so baptized as a public expression of faith in Christ and His forgiveness of my sins.
13. I accept and believe that the Seventh-day Adventist Church is the remnant church of Bible prophecy and that people of every nation, race, and language are invited and accepted into its fellowship. I desire to be a member of this local congregation of the world church.
http://www.adventistreview.org/2000-bulletin7/actions-proceedings.htmlI missed the part about jewelry, child custody, having old horror films in your house, make-up, listening to Bob Seger, hubby's video games, watching television (in my case, PBS and science fiction), believing in science AND God (the latter more so than the former), painting my daughter's toenails, being divorced, being 20 pounds overweight, preferring to be baptized in a creek (remember, it's immodest!), reading Harry Potter, wearing blue jeans, tattoos, piercings (even though the holes are there, I don't wear anything in them), husband buying beer, etc.
I also don't see anything about the pastor "needing" to come inspect your house beforehand. I'm sure when he sees my Universal Monster Movie posters up and science fiction novels it's all over. It's probably over the minute he sees all the subversive wall hangings from NorthernSun.com. The Margaret Mead quote poster (that was actually in an issue of the Adventist Review, along with other quotes on Compassion). My husband's Blues Brothers film poster. The Dr Who fridge magnets. Toenail polish. The soda in the fridge (hubby's). The books by Henri Nouwen (he's...gasp!... Catholic).
So, when does helping someone live a more godly life cross the line into micro-management and legalism? Maybe I shouldn't have that Boris Karloff movie, but should the pastor disrupt my Sabbath meal with my family late Friday night to tell me I'm not eligible for baptism? If he gets to wear a pinky ring, why should we gals take off our wedding bands? If the pastor's wife wears a gob of make-up and dyes her hair, why can't I paint my toenails? (My husband like them, and no one else ever sees my toes, anyhow.)
Why does the church have a Christmas tree? Isn't that a pagan tradition? Why does the lady who runs the Sabbath school wear tight, short dresses, open-toed shoes and no hose?
Why turn a single mother away because she never married the baby's father? Why turn my best friend away because she's shacking up with her children's father? Why turn someone away because her husband drinks beer occasionally?
I understand the admonishment to rebuke, but try some love. A lot of Christians are never going to understand that when you start criticizing folks as soon as they darken the door, they're going to leave. If I could get across one point, it is this. I speak for myself, my husband, and two of my dear friends tonight (we're all in the same boat... the life raft that got thrown overboard earlier today):
Yes, we know we've done wrong. Thanks, but we're already ashamed. We would love to turn back time and slap our teenaged selves for getting married the first time. Some of us would take back the tattoos. We're humiliated that "our man" is getting the milk for free. We WISH we'd had more sense than to sleep with that boy. It WOULD be lovely if we could afford before tax refund time to get nicer, better-looking Sabbath clothes for ourselves and our kids. We would LOVE to have full physical custody of ALL of our children. Sadly, justice isn't blind. She is sold to the highest bidder. Look, we're getting up onSaturday mornings after grueling school schedules, plus work, plus dealing with children, ex-husbands, finals, car problems, the account being $497 overdrawn, PT at 5:30 every morning followed by working through lunch and more loading trucks until 6 or 7, dealing with crazy ex-girlfriends who want our husbands, deaths in the family, hospitalizations, going to the oncologist, getting told our son was kicked out of school for drawing his father being decapitated, being gossiped about by church members, not being able to make up a final even though we were at a funeral when it was going on and that's not a good enough excuse to our lab prof.... and GOING TO CHURCH. We're dragging the kids out of bed, getting them cleaned up and in dress clothes. We're hoping we have enough gas to make the trip and toss some money in the plate and make it until payday. WE'RE THERE. WE'RE GRATEFUL TO BE THERE. WE'VE BEEN LOOKING FORWARD TO SABBATH ALL WEEK. WE'RE EXCITED TO WALK IN AND SEE ALL OF YOU.
Jesus ate with us, and so can you.