
by Larry Taylor
HISTORY
Calvary
Chapel began in
the late 1960’s as a small non-denominational church
of 25 members pastored by Chuck Smith. As we approach the turn of the
century,
Calvary Chapel of Costa Mesa is home to some 30,000 believers, The Word
for Today publishes Bible study books and tapes all over the world,
KWVE
broadcasts God's Word to all of Southern California, and Calvary
Chapel's
Bible College provides Bible education to thousands at its home campus
in Twin Peaks, California and at over 20 extension campuses world wide.
Because of
its size and
influence, many Christians have asked exactly
what Calvary Chapel believes, what are its distinctives, what sets it
apart
from other Christian groups. At Calvary Chapel, we have always been
hesitant
to try and answer those questions, not because we are unsure of our
beliefs,
but because we are cautious to avoid division within the Body of
Christ.
After all, what really matters is what we have in common as Christians:
the “essential” doctrines of the infallibility of
God's Word, the
virgin
birth of Christ, His sinless life, death for our sins, bodily
resurrection.
ascension to glory, and personal return to rule the earth. These are
the
essence of Christianity, and agreed upon by virtually all born again
believers.
When we move
away from
the essential doctrines to those that are less
essential we risk setting barriers up in the church, something we at
Calvary
Chapel have no desire to do. Still, Calvary Chapel is distinct from
denominational
churches and other Protestant groups and people want to know what those
distinctions are. That is the purpose of this little booklet. It is not
our purpose to cause division or discord in the Body of Christ,
conversely,
we long for unity among God's people of all persuasions, and we allow
for
a great deal of flexibility even within our own ranks. Calvary Chapel
pastors
are not clones who all believe exactly the same thing. Still, there are
distinctives that make Calvary Chapel unique and which define our
mission.
THE BALANCE
In a broad
general
sense, Calvary Chapel is the middle ground between fundamentalism
and Pentecostalism in modern Protestant theology. In fact, we believe
that
this is at least part of the reason why God has raised up this
ministry.
Fundamentalism is that portion of Protestantism which holds to the
literal
interpretation of the Scriptures, believing that they are divinely
inspired
and inerrant. Hence, the “fundamentals” of the
faith are emphasized.
Although
the modem news media and the liberal church scorn fundamentalists as
backwards
and stupid, the truth is that fundamentalism has preserved the
integrity
of God's Word and held on to the essential doctrines of the orthodox
faith.
Pentecostalism
as a
modern movement grew out of the Azusa Street revival
in Los Angeles at the turn of the 20th century, and spawned
denominations
that emphasize the fullness of the Holy Spirit and the exercise of
spiritual
and Scriptural gifts of the Spirit which had fallen dormant in the main
line churches. Also criticized by the liberal church and news media as
being emotionally driven, Pentecostalism restored to the church the
importance
of gifts of the Spirit and the power of God for the believer today.
Over
the years, however, fundamentalism, while it clung to the integrity of
God's Word, tended to become rigid, legalistic, and unaccepting of
spiritual
gifts. Similarly, Pentecostalism became enthusiastic and emotional at
the
expense of the teaching of God's Word.
Calvary
Chapel is the
balance between the two. At Calvary Chapel we
believe in the gifts of the Holy Spirit mentioned in the Bible, and we
encourage their exercise, but always decently and in order, and with
the
primary emphasis on the Word of God which we look to as our primary
rule
of faith.
To quote
Pastor Chuck
Smith: “We believe in the gifts of the Holy Spirit
mentioned in the Scriptures, and that they are valid for today if they
are exercised within the Scriptural guidelines. We as believers are to
covet the best gifts, seeking to exercise them in love that the whole
Body
of Christ might be edified. We believe that love is more important than
the most spectacular gifts, and without this love all exercise of
spiritual
gifts is worthless.”
Because of
this balance,
Calvary Chapel services are designed to be
centered around the verse by verse teaching of God's Word, and special
“after glow” services are provided where the gifts
of the Holy Spirit
can
operate freely under the leadership of mature Christians. Many
Pentecostals
think Calvary Chapel is not emotional enough, and many fundamentalists
think Calvary Chapel is too emotional. That balance is indication, in
my
opinion, that we are right where God wants us to be. Calvary Chapel
also
differs from most mainline churches in its style of church government.
Most denominational churches maintain either a congregational form of
church
government, a Presbyterian form, or an Episcopal form of running their
churches. These three terms should not be confused with the
denominations
that bear the same names because other churches of different names
share
the same styles of government.
The
congregational form
of church government is an American invention
and appeals to our American sense of democracy. Basically, the
congregation
as a whole makes all decisions in these churches by voting on matters
of
importance and appointing committees from its ranks to run the daily
operation
of the church. Most Congregational, Baptist, Pentecostal, Brethren, and
non-denominational churches are organized in this fashion. The
congregation
votes on hiring a pastor, votes on how to spend the money, and on
anything
else of importance. Although democratic people like the idea,
congregational
forms of church government often wind up at best causing the pastor to
be directed by the sheep he is supposed to lead, and at worst reducing
the pastor to a hireling.
The
Episcopal form of
church government, used by Episcopalian, Anglican,
Catholic, Orthodox, and Methodist churches (to name a few) is
controlled
by a church hierarchy which may have differing names. Basically, there
is a bishop, or someone of similar stature if called by a different
name,
who oversees the churches, appoints pastors to pulpits, sets policy,
and
guides the vision of the local congregations. Unfortunately, this style
of government, which grew out of European monarchies, leaves little
freedom
for the local pastor or congregation to follow the leading of the
Spirit.
The
Presbyterian form of
church government, which is typical in Presbyterian
and Reformed churches, puts the decisions of church polity in the hands
of a select group of elders (the “presbytery”) who
are appointed in
various
different ways, depending on the church. These elders are over the
pastor,
who in turn is over the congregation. The problem here too is that this
system puts the God-appointed leader, the pastor, under some of those
he
is supposed to lead.
Calvary Chapels are organized differently. Church government at Calvary
Chapel is very simple, not a complex bureaucracy, committees and
sub-committees
are essentially non-existent. Basically, at Calvary Chapel we believe
that
the pastor is responsible for the church, responsible to hear from God,
and responsible to feed and love His people faithfully. Elders are
appointed
in the larger churches to help the pastor care for the spiritual needs
of the congregation, as are deacons to help the pastor care for the
material
needs of the church.
In addition,
our churches
have church boards as required by most states
which vary in size depending on the size of the church, and which
usually
are made up of mature Christian businessmen who can advise the pastor
with
respect to the business operations and decisions of the church such as
property management and investments. At Calvary Chapel, church
organization
is de-emphasized, and only the organization that is needed to run the
church
is instituted. The pastor guides the church as he is lead by the Holy
Spirit,
and we trust God to put pastors where He wants them to be.
DOCTRINE
At Calvary
Chapel we
believe in all the fundamental doctrines of the evangelical
Protestant church. For example, we believe in the inerrancy of
Scripture,
that the Bible, Old and New Testaments, is the inspired, infallible
Word
of God.
We believe
that God is
eternally existent in three separate persons:
Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.
We believe
that God the
father is the personal, transcendent, and sovereign
creator of all things.
We believe
that Jesus
Christ is fully God and fully human, that He was
born of a virgin, lived a sinless life, provided for the atonement of
our
sins by His vicarious death on the Cross, was bodily resurrected by the
power of the Holy Spirit, ascended back to the right hand of God the
father,
and ever lives to make intercession for us.
After He
ascended to
Heaven, Jesus poured out His Holy Spirit on the
believers in Jerusalem, enabling them to fulfill His command to preach
the Gospel to the entire world, an obligation shared by all believers
today.
We believe
that all
people are by nature separated from God and responsible
for their own sin, but that salvation, redemption, and forgiveness of
sin
are freely offered to all by the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ. When a
person repents of sin and accepts Jesus Christ as personal Savior and
Lord,
trusting Him to save, that person is immediately born again and sealed
by the Holy Spirit, all his/her sins are forgiven, and that person
becomes
a child of God, destined to spend eternity with the Lord.
As we
previously
mentioned, we believe in the proper Scriptural exercise
of all the gifts of the Holy Spirit in the Bible, the greatest gift of
all being God's love.
At Calvary
Chapel, we
await the pre-tribulation rapture of the church.
Calvary Chapel is strongly committed to a belief that the church will
be
raptured before the seven year tribulation period described in
Revelation
chapters 6 through 18. We recognize that other believers hold a
different
view, but this is the way we see the Scripture's teaching on this
subject.
We believe
that the
second coming of Jesus Christ with His saints to
rule on the earth will be personal, pre-millennial, and visible. This
motivates
us to heartfelt worship, committed service, diligent study of God's
Word,
regular fellowship with other Christians, and participation in both
adult
baptism by immersion and in Holy Communion.
Calvary
Chapel rejects
the teaching of “amillennialism” which
spiritualizes
Scripture and denies the literal 1,000 year reign of Christ on the
earth
as described in Revelation chapter 20.
WHAT WE DO
NOT BELIEVE
At Calvary
Chapel, we
reject some popular doctrines of some Christian groups
because we believe them to be in error Scripturally. This does not mean
that we will not fellowship with those holding these views, it simply
means
that such views are outside the boundaries of what constitutes a
Calvary
Chapel church.
For example,
we reject,
as we have already mentioned, “amillennialism”,
post-millennialism, as well as a mid or post-tribulation rapture view.
At Calvary Chapel, we are strongly pre-millennialists and
pre-tribulation
rapturists.
We also
reject the
belief, held by some Pentecostals and charismatics,
that Christians can be demon possessed. The Scripture says
“greater is
He that is in you than he who is in the world” which makes no
sense if
a believer can be simultaneously indwelt by both the Holy Spirit and
evil
spirits. Christians can be attacked by demons, but they cannot be
possessed
or controlled by them.
In addition,
we reject
“5-point Calvinism”. For a deeper understanding
of what Calvinism is, see my book Calvinism versus Arminianism, but for
our purposes here, suffice it to say that Calvary Chapel rejects two of
the five points of five point Calvinism. First, Calvinism teaches that
Jesus’ atonement on the Cross was limited, that is, that He
died only
for
a chosen group, His “elect”, not for the sins of
the entire world. At
Calvary
Chapel, we believe that Jesus died on the Cross for all the sins of all
people, and that anyone who wants to can accept Him as Lord and savior
and be born again. Strict five point Calvinists believe that only the
elect
can be saved and that God has elected others to spend eternity in hell.
Secondly, we
reject the
Calvinistic teaching called “irresistible grace”,
which is the belief that man cannot, even if he wants to, resist the
wooing
and calling of God to salvation. Instead, at Calvary Chapel we believe
that man has a free will and he can resist the call of God if he
chooses
to do so. Therefore, those who hold to five point Calvinism are outside
of the borders of what defines Calvary Chapel.
At Calvary
Chapel, we
also reject the teaching of “positive confession”
which is the doctrine put forth by the faith movement teachers that
says
that we as human beings can have unlimited health and wealth because
we,
like God, have the ability to create our own reality by the confession
of our lips. These people teach that if a person will confess health
and
wealth consistently, then that is what they will have, and, conversely,
the Christian living in sickness or poverty is settling for less than
his
full inheritance in Christ. At Calvary Chapel, we believe that many
believers
both in the Bible and in daily life are often afflicted not because
their
confession is wrong, but simply because we live in a foreign world. We
believe that the health and prosperity doctrine is a perversion of
Scripture
and is often used to fleece the flock of God. We do not believe that
God
can be commanded by man to heal or provide, but that we must always
submit
to His perfect will even in affliction.
Additionally,
we reject
the teaching that uses human prophecy to supersede
the Word of God. There are some Christian groups around which claim to
have prophets and apostles of equal validity with those who wrote the
Bible.
Moreover, they claim that the prophetic utterances from these people
take
precedence over the Word of God. At Calvary Chapel, we believe that the
Bible is the final authority and the complete Word of God for His
church
today, and that no prophecy or teaching can ever supersede it.
Some
churches have
incorporated human secular psychology and philosophy
into their teaching programs, creating sermons that are more based on
secular
humanistic theory than on the Word of God. While we respect our fellow
believers who work in mental health related fields, we at Calvary
Chapel
believe that the central mission of the church is to proclaim God's
Word
to a lost and hurting world. Moreover, it has been our experience that
humanistic psychology and philosophy often do more harm than good, and
people respond best when God's Word is proclaimed in the power and love
of the Holy Spirit. It is God's Word that changes lives for the better.
At Calvary Chapels our services remain centered on the teaching of the
Bible.
This is not
to imply that
we object to the work of the many dedicated
Christian mental health professionals; conversely, we thank God for
them.
Our point is simply that in our church services, we emphasize the
teaching
of God's Word.
And finally,
as we have
mentioned before, Calvary Chapel rejects the
over-emphasis of spiritual gifts and experiential signs and wonders to
the exclusion of Biblical teaching. Again, we are a Bible based
ministry
that avoids programs and gimmicks in favor of the simple teaching of
the
Word of God in love to His people. In our services, we focus on a
personal
relationship with God through worship, prayer, and the teaching of the
Word of God. We offer both expository and topical studies; we do not
allow
speaking in tongues loudly during services because we do not believe
that
the Holy Spirit Would interrupt Himself.
WORSHIP
Many
people are under
the impression that a particular style of worship
is insisted upon at Calvary Chapel, that style being the soft
contemporary
Sound made popular by Maranatha! Music and by Asaph Records (which both
originated at Calvary Chapel). Although most Calvary Chapels do utilize
a form of contemporary worship, there is actually a great variety of
styles
Of Music found In our churches. Some are very traditional and
conservative,
with organs or pianos and hymns, while others prefer electric guitars
and
drums. There is no set style of worship makes a Calvary Chapel unique;
instead there is wide latitude in expression. All of us desire, of
course,
that whatever the style of worship, it come from our hearts. Similarly,
some of the worship services at Calvary Chapels are quite traditional,
while others are more contemporary. Some of our churches are filled
with
elderly people in suits and ties, some are filled with young people in
jeans and tee shirts, and many are a combination of all different ages,
styles, and races of folks who come together with one common focus:
love
for Jesus Christ and the desire to know Him more intimately.
I recently
spoke at one
of the larger Calvary Chapel affiliates where
seven different ethnic groups of people who range in age from teens to
quite elderly gather every week filled with the love of Jesus. That is
typical of a Calvary Chapel church. Most are places where anybody with
any style of dress or musical taste or culture feels welcome.
STATEMENT
OF FAITH
To better
help people
not familiar with the Calvary Chapel ministries understand
who we are, we at Calvary Chapel's Bible College developed the
following
statement of faith, most of which was written by, and all of which was
approved by Pastor Chuck Smith, the founder of the Calvary Chapel
movement,
pastor of Calvary Chapel of Costa Mesa, and President of the Bible
College.
Calvary
Chapel has been
formed as a fellowship of believers in the Lordship
of Jesus Christ. Our supreme desire is to know Christ and be conformed
to His image by the power of the Holy Spirit. We are not a
denominational
church, nor are we opposed to denominations as such, only to their
over-emphasis
of the doctrinal differences that have led to the division of the Body
of Christ. We believe the only true basis of Christian fellowship is
Christ's
(Agape) love, which is greater than any differences we possess, and
without
which we have no right to claim ourselves Christians.
We believe
worship of God
should be spiritual. Therefore, we remain
flexible and yielded to the leading of the Holy Spirit to direct our
worship.
We believe
worship of God
should be inspirational. Therefore, we give
great place to music in our worship.
We believe
worship of God
should be intelligent. Therefore, our services
are designed with great emphasis upon the teaching of the Word of God
that
He might instruct us how He should be worshipped.
We believe
worship of God
should be fruitful. Therefore, we look for
His love in our lives as the supreme manifestation that we have been
truly
worshipping Him.
We believe
in all the
fundamental doctrines of orthodox evangelical
Christianity.
We believe
in the
inerrancy of Scripture, that the Bible, Old and New
Testaments is the inspired, infallible Word of God.
We believe
that God is
eternally existent in three separate persons:
Father, Son and Holy Spirit.
We believe
that God the
Father is the personal, transcendent, and sovereign
Creator of all things.
We believe
that Jesus
Christ is fully God and fully human, that He was
born of a virgin, lived a sinless life, provided for the atonement of
our
sins by His vicarious death on the Cross, was bodily resurrected by the
power of the Holy Spirit, ascended back to the right hand of God the
Father,
and ever lives to make intercession for us.
After Jesus
ascended to
Heaven, He poured out His Holy Spirit on the
believers in Jerusalem, enabling them to fulfill His command to preach
the Gospel to the entire world, an obligation shared by all believers
today.
We believe
that all
people are by nature separated from God and responsible
for their own sin, but that salvation, redemption, and forgiveness are
freely offered to all by the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ. When a
person
repents of sin and accepts Jesus Christ as personal Savior and Lord,
trusting
Him to save, that person is immediately born again and sealed by the
Holy
Spirit, all his/her sins are forgiven, and that person becomes a child
of God, destined to spend eternity with the Lord.
We believe
in the gifts
of the Holy Spirit mentioned in the Scriptures,
and that they are valid for today if they are exercised within the
Scriptural
guidelines. We as believers are to covet the best gifts, seeking to
exercise
them in love that the whole Body of Christ might be edified. We believe
that love is more important than the most spectacular gifts, and
without
this love all exercise of spiritual gifts is worthless.
We believe
that church
government should be simplistic rather than a
complex bureaucracy, and we depend on the Holy Spirit to lead, rather
than
on fleshly promotion.
We await the
pre-tribulation rapture of the church, and we believe that
the second coming of Christ with His saints to rule on the earth will
be
personal, pre-millennial, and visible. This motivates us to holy
living,
heartfelt worship, committed service, diligent study of God's Word,
regular
fellowship, and participation in adult baptism by immersion and Holy
Communion.
We seek to
teach the Word
of God in such a way that its message can
be applied to an individual's life, leading that person to greater
maturity
in Christ.
We reject:
(1) The belief
that true Christians can be demon possessed;
(2) “5-point Calvinism” (i.e., a fatalistic
Calvinistic view that
leaves
no room for free will; specifically, we reject the belief that
Jesus’
atonement
was limited, instead we believe that He died for all people, and we
reject
the assertion that God's wooing grace cannot be resisted or that He has
elected some people to go to hell; instead we believe that anyone who
wills
to come to Christ may do so); (3) “positive
confession” (the faith
movement
belief that God can be commanded to heal or work miracles according to
man's will), (4) human prophecy that supersedes the Scripture, (5) the
incorporation of humanistic and secular psychology and philosophy into
Biblical teaching, and (6) the over-emphasis of spiritual gifts,
experiential
signs and wonders to the exclusion of Biblical teaching.
In our
services, we focus
on a personal relationship with God through
worship, prayer, and the teaching of the Word of God. We teach both
expositorily
and topically. We do not allow speaking in tongues loudly during
services,
nor prophecy while a Bible study is in progress because we do not
believe
that the Holy Spirit would interrupt Himself. We have specific
“after-glow
services” and believer's meetings when these gifts of the
Spirit may be
exercised.
CONCLUSION
By
clarifying some of
what we believe at Calvary Chapel, our purpose has
been simply to help others less familiar with the movement gain insight
into who we are. It has not been our intention to say that we are right
and everyone else is wrong, nor has it been our intention to argue our
position with any Christian believer. We are content to agree to
disagree,
and we desire to have nothing but love and fellowship with anyone who
calls
on the name of our Lord in truth and sincerity . While there are many
additional
areas of polity and doctrine we could discuss, and while we could write
volumes in an effort to defend all our positions against other
positions,
this is not our desire. Our desire is to simply adore Jesus, and we
invite
all God's people to join us as we do so.
On the other
hand, there
have been people who have started churches
and called them Calvary Chapel that hold views and practices very
different
from what has been described here. In our opinion, it would be better
if
they would take a different name for their churches that more
accurately
reflects what they believe and practice so as not to confuse people who
are looking for a ministry that is in line with what we have described
on the previous pages.
While many
different
kinds of people attend and pastor Calvary Chapel
affiliated churches, all of the Calvary Chapel leadership (men such a
Raul
Ries, Greg Laurie, Mike MacIntosh, Jeff Johnson, Jon Courson, Skip
Heitzig,
Don McClure, Steve Mays, Oden Fong, and Wayne Taylor) agree on the
essential
elements of this booklet, although their individual styles of ministry,
methods of preaching, and visions for outreach vary greatly.
As a
potential Calvary
Chapel affiliated pastor, we welcome you to start
a ministry under the direction of the Holy Spirit and to join our
fellowship
of independent autonomous churches if you are in harmony with our
vision.
As an individual believer in the Lord Jesus Christ, we welcome you to
our
churches and Bible College programs regardless of your background or
doctrinal
position. We seek the unity of the Spirit in a bond of peace and love
and
believe that God has called us to a unique ministry that fulfills His
special
purpose in this generation. May God bless you as you seek to draw near
to Him in love.