Attached to the ecclesial constitution
is most likely “A Statement of the Faith of
the Christadelphians”. Christadelphians have
from their beginnings felt it necessary to define
their distinctive beliefs in an orderly, logical fashion
— so as to make plain the difference between
ourselves and the various churches around us.
The
Bible does not formulate its teaching in the form
of a Creed; and because men have laid hold of isolated
statements as the basis of their teaching the authority
of the Bible has been claimed for very contradictory
views. Thus, two men could each say, “I believe
what the Bible teaches”, and yet hold absolutely
opposing ideas.
The
Lord Jesus expounded the Scriptures and gave an infallible
interpretation of them; but his opponents did not
accept that interpretation. They searched the Scriptures
to establish their own peculiar beliefs and misused
the texts they relied upon to prove those erroneous
views. This has also been the state of things throughout
the history of Christendom: the trinitarian and the
immortal soulist both quote their own favorite Bible
passages, and both are very much mistaken.
But
everyone who speaks or writes in exposition of the
Scriptures is attempting to define its meaning. Those
who object to a Statement of Faith make a statement
of their own faith in their own teaching, which they
seek to sustain by Scripture testimony. It is, therefore,
not sufficient that a man say, “I believe such
a passage of Scripture”; what is required is
a declaration of what in his view Scripture means.
A man, then, and also a community must define the
beliefs held. Only then can there be set forth the
teaching for which the community stands.