Who We Are & What We Believe

ABOUT US

Who we are...

 St. Paul’s Episcopal Church is a community of people who share our journey of faith together. We are individuals, yet we are bound by the grace and love of God. We worship, pray, praise, celebrate, grow, and serve together. We also struggle, discern, grieve, and comfort together. Our community began this journey of faith together in 1869. Names, faces, and traditions have changed with the times, but the journey of faith remains the same. Whoever you are, and wherever you are on your journey, you are welcome!

What we believe...

Like all churches, we are often asked, “What do you believe?” What Episcopalians believe is simple, to some extent, but not simplistic.


A true answer might be to say that we believe in God, in Jesus Christ the Son of God, and in the Holy Spirit.


But in our world today, full of division and uncertainty, many people find that simple answer unsatisfying. After all, don’t ALL Christians believe those things? People want to know precisely what a church believes about God, not just that we believe in God. People want to know
specifics, so that they can decide if we’re “right” or “wrong,” if we have the right understanding, the right interpretation.


That is not how The Episcopal Church tends to approach faith and belief. Our list of “nonnegotiable” points are very few, and largely shared with most every other Christian tradition.


Those relatively few points are:

  • There is one God, who is a Trinity of Persons.
  • The First Person of the Trinity, traditionally called “Father,” created all things at the beginning of time.
  • Jesus Christ, the very human rabbi from 2000 years ago, was and is the Son of God, the Second Person of the Trinity, and our Savior.
  • The Holy Scriptures (the Bible) are the revealed word of God, written by human beings under the inspiration and guidance of the Holy Spirit, who is the Third Person of the Trinity. The Bible contains all things necessary for salvation.

 


Certainly there is more to be said, more that can be believed about God and Jesus. Many denominations or church traditions take very specific stances on issues or questions concerning things such as (for example) the nature of God or the method of salvation.


The Episcopal Church, though, is not bound together by a shared position on academic theological questions or by tests of doctrine. We are bound together by our love of God in Christ Jesus, by our shared traditions and experiences of God in the worship and the life of the community.


That is not to say that Episcopalians don’t believe specific or particular things. It is just that each member of our community is able to think for herself or himself, to wrestle with doubt and the questions of faith, and to arrive at conclusions which may be different than those of other members within the community.


This openness has led The Episcopal Church to a number of positions, what you might call beliefs, that actually are somewhat unique among Christian churches. These ideas and practices are not so much points of doctrine, like you might learn in Sunday School or a theology class, but they are defining characteristics of our church.

How we worship...

Our worship (or “liturgy”) varies in style and outward appearance, according to the needs and tastes of each local community in its own place and time. But the basic format and structure of our liturgy is the same everywhere you go, and has its roots in the earliest known Christian communities. Our Sunday services are not essentially different from those recorded in the Acts of the Apostles and continually offered by Christians for the last two thousand years. No matter how you're used to worshiping (or if you're looking to start) our services are easy to follow along with and are sure to leave you with a sense of comfort & peace. 

We are all The Church, together...

Our church as an organization - from the national governing structure all the way to the individual parish – is run by lay people and clergy working together, making decisions together, in an open and democratic process. We have no high council, no infallible leaders, and no elite ruling class. We’re all in this together.

All are welcome...

Not only does The Episcopal Church accept and welcome a wide range of theological ideas and thoughts, we also accept and welcome all people. We do not discriminate against anyone or any group for any reason. It saddens us that throughout our history, the Christian church has discriminated against particular groups. We strive to live into our Baptismal Covenant, with God’s help:

  • To continue in the apostles’ teaching and fellowship, in the breaking of bread, and in the prayers.
  • To persevere in resisting evil, and, whenever we fall into sin, repent and return to the Lord.
  • To proclaim by word and example the Good News of God in Christ.
  • To seek and serve Christ in all persons, loving our neighbor as our self.
  • To strive for justice and peace among all people, and respect the dignity of every human being.


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