(i) The full inspiration of the Holy Scriptures; their inerrancy, infallibility, authority and sufficiency as not only containing, but being in themselves, the Word of God; the reliability of the New Testament in its testimony to the character and authorship of the Old Testament; and the need of the teaching of the Holy Spirit to a true and spiritual understanding of the whole.
(ii) The unity of the Godhead and the divine co-equality of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit; the Sovereignty of God in Creation, Providence and Redemption.
(iii) The total depravity of human nature in consequence to the fall and the necessity for regeneration.
(iv) The true and proper Deity of our Lord Jesus Christ; His virgin birth; His real and perfect manhood; the authority of His teaching; and the infallibility of all His utterances; His work of atonement for sinners of mankind and His vicarious suffering and death; His bodily resurrection and His ascension into Heaven; and His present priestly intercession for His people at the right hand of the Father.
(v) The justification of the sinner solely by faith, through the atoning merits of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ.
(vi) The necessity of the work of the Holy Spirit in regeneration, conversion, and sanctification; also in ministry and worship.
(vii) The ordinances of Baptism and the Lord’s Supper as being instituted by our Lord Jesus Christ, but not in Baptism as conveying regenerating grace, neither in the Lord’s Supper as being a sacrifice for sin, nor involving any change in the substance of the bread and wine.
(viii) The personal return of the Lord Jesus Christ in glory.
(ix) The resurrection of the body; the judgement of the world by our Lord Jesus Christ, with the eternal blessedness of the righteous and the eternal punishment of the wicked.
Evangelical Times also adheres to the Cambridge Declaration, drawn up by the Alliance of Confessing Evangelicals in April 1996.
We recommend The Creation Manifesto, published by the Biblical Creation Society, as giving a helpful and biblically based summary about Creation and its implications, that reflects the credal teaching of the historic Reformed confessions.