In this web site's
section on Christianity,
we have attempted to describe the full diversity of
beliefs taught by
various wings of Christianity. Unfortunately, this might lead our readers to
believe that there are few core beliefs that most Christian denominations accept
in common.
The Cardinal Doctrines of
Christianity are those beliefs which most Protestant denominations accept as forming
the foundational teachings of Christianity. Many, perhaps most Christian faith
groups feel that all Christians should believe each of these beliefs. Some
groups would classify a person as a non-Christian if they rejected even one belief
on their own list of Cardinal Doctrines.
There appears to be a general
consensus by conservative and some mainline Protestant faith groups that a list
of core beliefs might include:
But there does not appear to be an agreed upon single list that most
Protestant faith groups accept as "cardinal doctrines."
Beliefs of non-Protestant groups:
This essay deals with the cardinal beliefs of Protestant groups. However,
Protestants do not form the entirety of Christianity. Consider just two other
groups:
It is perhaps ironic that if one considers the very earliest Christian
movement -- the Jewish Christians in Jerusalem under
the leadership of James the "brother" of Jesus and in the period immediately
after Jesus' execution before the arrival of Paul -- they might not be
considered Christian by today's standards. That group apparently did not believe
in the Trinity, the deity of Jesus, salvation by grace, or the virgin birth.
They expected that Jesus' second coming would occur sometime in the first
century CE, not millennia later.
Roman Catholicism expects its members to believe
in a much larger list of cardinal beliefs than is listed above. One example
that is not shared by Protestants is the assumption of the Virgin Mary into
Heaven at death. Pope Pius XII wrote in Munificentissimus Deus:
"... we pronounce, declare, and define it to be a divinely
revealed dogma: that the Immaculate Mother of God, the ever Virgin Mary,
having completed the course of her earthly life, was assumed body and
soul into heavenly glory. Hence if anyone, which God forbid, should dare
willfully to deny or to call into doubt that which we have defined, let
him know that he has fallen away completely from the divine and Catholic
Faith." 13
We will attempt to document the cardinal beliefs of
non-Protestant Christians at a future date.
Cardinal doctrines according to the Niagara Bible Conference:
The Bible Conference of Conservative Christians at Niagara, initially
known as the Believers' Meeting for Bible Study, was organized in 1868
and met annually from 1883 to 1897 at Niagara-on-the-Lake, Ontario, Canada. In
1878 they created the "Niagara Creed" -- a list of fourteen fundamental
points of Christian belief.
Among the fourteen points, the five principal beliefs were:
These were later discussed in The Fundamentals -- a series of
pamphlets published between 1910 and 1915. From these pamphlets, the term
"Fundamentalism" developed; before that time, Fundamentalists were referred to
simply as conservatives. 10,11
A conflict over cardinal doctrines:
In 1910, the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in the USA (PCUSA)
derived the following essential tenets from the Westminister Confession of
Faith. This is the foundational document that they share with other Reform
denominations:
The inerrancy of Scripture.
The virgin birth
The substitutionary atonement
Jesus' bodily resurrection
The miracles generated by Jesus were authentic.
In 1916 and 1923, the General Assembly ruled that all ordination candidates
had to agree with all of the above beliefs to avoid rejection by the
denomination. A Fundamentalist / Modernist split occurred in the denomination
that focused around this requirement for ordination. Some ministers suggested
that the Bible was not necessarily
inerrant on matters
of science and history. Others believed that there were other valid principles
by which the
functioning of the atonement could be explained.
Debate reached a fever pitch, much like the conflict over
ordination of women
and ordination of gays
and lesbians in loving committed relationships were to generate conflict
within some denominations in later decades.
Some liberals in the denominationmet at the Auburn Seminary in northern New York state in 1924 and
agreed on the Auburn Affirmation. It stated, in part:
"...we are united in believing that these are not the only
theories allowed by the Scriptures and our standards as explanations of
these facts and doctrines of our religion, and that all who hold to these
facts and doctrines, whatever theories they may employ to explain them, are
worthy of all confidence and fellowship. 8
It asserted that Presbyterians at
the time should:
"Safeguard liberty of thought and teaching of its ministers";
Prohibit restricting the church to rigid interpretations of scripture
and doctrine; and
Refuse to rank ecclesiastical authority above the conscience swayed by
the [Holy] Spirit. 8
That document prompted the 1925 General Assembly to form a Special
Theological Commission "to study the present spiritual condition of our
Church and the causes making for unrest....to the end that the purity, peace and
unity and progress of the Church may be assured." Their report influenced
delegates to the 1927 General Assembly to institute a type of local option
within the denomination. They declared that it is the individual presbyteries,
not the General Assembly, which would determine what their clergy must affirm
theologically. A schism occurred in 1936 when Fundamentalist members left the
PCUSA to form the Orthodox Presbyterian Church in America under leader
J Gresham Machen. 9,14 A later
schism happened later over female ordination.
There is a concern that a similar schism may happen in the future to
mainline Presbyterian, Methodist and
Episcopalian denominations over issues related to
homosexuality.
Recent listings of cardinal doctrines by various para-church organizations:
The Christian Research Institute lists:
The authority of Scripture.
The Trinity
Man is a physical and spiritual being adversely affected by sin.
Christ is fully God and fully man who was sent to save humanity.
The church is God's ordained institution headed by Christ.
Living by the Word differentiates between:
Five "Essential Christian Doctrines" which one must believe
in order to be saved
The deity of Jesus Christ.
Jesus' bodily resurrection from the dead.
The Trinity.
Christ's vicarious atonement for man's sin.
Salvation by grace alone through faith alone.
"Cardinal Christian Doctrines" which may not be required for
salvation, but which are extremely important:
The Virgin Birth
Inerrancy of Scripture
The second coming of Christ 1
Lamb & Lion Ministries lists five "Cardinal Doctrines of the
Christian Faith:"
The Bible is the divinely inspired inerrant Word of God.
The Virgin Birth.
Jesus' bodily resurrection.
Salvation is a "free gift of God's grace" obtained by
trusting Jesus as Lord and Savior.
The deity of Jesus Christ. 2
The Congregational HolinessChurch lists as the "cardinal
Christian doctrines" that they hold in common with most other Christian
denominations:
The Trinity.
The inspiration of the Scriptures.
The Virgin Birth.
Jesus' bodily resurrection.
The second coming of Christ.
They also hold a key belief that is generally restricted to Charismatic
and Pentecostal denominations: the "Baptism of the Holy Ghost with the
initial evidence of speaking in other tongues..." 3
Christian Apologetics & Research Ministry (CARM) lists four
beliefs of Christianity which were declared "by scripture to be essential:"
The deity of Christ. including belief in the Trinity, monotheism,
and Jesus as both God and man.
Salvation by grace.
Jesus' bodily resurrection.
The Gospels' teaching that "Jesus is God in flesh, who died for
sins, rose from the dead, and freely gives the gift of eternal life to
those who believe." 4
The Moorings has a study in Bible doctrine which lists basic
Christian doctrines as:
Inerrancy of the Bible.
The Incarnation.
Jesus is both God and man.
The personhood and deity of the Holy Spirit.
The Trinity.
Heaven. 5
Online Christian Discipleship School has a Bible study on
"Basic Doctrine of Christianity." They list:
The Trinity.
The inspiration of the Bible.
God created humans in his image and deserves our love and obedience.
Sin entered the world through Adam.
The atonement.
The resurrection.
Salvation through trusting Jesus.
Spirit possession of believers by Jesus. 6
Marty Rothwell, an author on a Roman Catholic site "Christ's
Faithful People," suggests that prior to the Protestant Reformation in
the early 16th century, all Christians were expected to believe in many key
doctrines.
Some of these are still shared by most Protestants:
"God the Son is of the same substance and nature as God the
Father."
The Trinity.
Jesus is fully God and fully human.
However, there are also beliefs
not shared by most Protestants, or not shared to the same extent:
The Body and Blood of Christ are present in the Eucharist.
The Apostolic Succession.
Beliefs are grounded in both the Bible and church tradition.
The Holy Spirit guides the Church away from error.
The effects of baptism.
Believers are saved by Grace and faith.
Salvation can achieved and later lost.
Baptism of infants.
The Deuterocanonical books / Apocrypha form an integral part of the
Bible.
Clergy are restricted to males.
The Pope is the head of the Christian church.
Canonization and veneration of saints.
Effectiveness of the prayers of deceased saints.
Confession of sins to a priest.
Penance is needed after sinning.
Purgatory as the destination of many persons after death.
To which we would add another belief that runs as a frequently appearing
theme throughout the Bible, but is almost never mentioned in sermons or books on
theology or apologetics because it is considered immoral by so many religious
and secular systems of morality:
We plan to write other essays in the future which deal with the Trinity, the
deity of Jesus, his ascension to Heaven, Jesus as God and man, the incarnation, and possession by
indwelling spirits.
Books on cardinal Christian beliefs:
Gilbert Bilezikian: "Christianity 101," Zondervan (1993). "This
accessible book presents the eight basic doctrines of the Christian church
in plain language for both old and new curious Christians interested in
sharpening their understanding and defense of the faith."
Read reviews or order this book safely from Amazon.com online book store
Emmaus Bible School staff, "What Christians Believe: Basic Studies in
Bible Doctrine and Christian Living," Moody Publishers, (1951).
Read reviews or order this book
David O. Beale, "S.B.C. House on the Sand?" Although this essay
is available on the Internet, the publisher states that "Permission must
be obtained...to link to this page." We have requested such permission.