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title: "3. Confession, Doctrine, and the Local Rule of Life"
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# 3. Confession, Doctrine, and the Local Rule of Life

<a id="3-confession-doctrine-and-the-local-rule-of-life"></a>

A plant needs more than a list of doctrinal positions. It needs to show how confession becomes a worshiping and moral life. The formal confession should be broad enough to name the apostolic and creedal center and exact enough that teachers can be corrected. The local rule of life should name the repeated practices through which the congregation receives that confession.

Begin with the biblical and creedal center: one God, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit; creation; humanity in God's image; sin and corruption; the incarnation, life, death, resurrection, ascension, reign, and return of Jesus Christ; the Spirit's person and work; Scripture; the Church; baptism and the Lord's Table; repentance, faith, grace, holiness, mission, judgment, resurrection, and the life of the world to come. Then state the tradition-specific commitments that actually govern the plant: baptismal subjects and mode, Eucharistic discipline, ordination and office, membership, marriage and sexual ethics, church discipline, gifts, relation to denomination or bishop, and other questions the plant cannot honestly leave undefined.

State disagreements instead of hiding them under vague unity, and keep secondary questions from becoming tests of salvation. The Cape Town Commitment's language of breadth within boundaries describes a useful prudential posture: name the gospel center on which the church must stand together, then name where faithful Christians differ and where this local church has nevertheless made a governing decision. Members should know what is confessed, what is required for teaching or office, what remains open to discussion, and how a disputed judgment can be revisited.

<a id="a-claim-ladder"></a>

## A Claim Ladder

Classify important statements before placing institutional weight on them:

- Scriptural claim: what a text says in context.
- Doctrinal synthesis: what the Church confesses from the canonical whole.
- Tradition-specific judgment: how this communion receives and orders a disputed question.
- Pastoral judgment: what care or discipline this person or situation requires.
- Empirical claim: what happened or is happening.
- Clinical, legal, financial, or safety claim: what a qualified role can establish within its competence.
- Prudential decision: what seems wise here under present conditions.
- Analogy or speculation: what may illuminate but cannot carry authority as proof.

Acts 15 shows why the ladder matters. Apostolic testimony, the Spirit's work among Gentiles, Scripture, communal judgment, concern about burdens, holiness, and a written decision are related without becoming identical. The Greek edoxen in Acts 15:28 names a judgment---"it seemed good"---made with the Holy Spirit and the gathered leaders, not a claim that every later meeting can identify its preference with divine speech.

For any contested decision, ask: What exactly are we saying? What kind of claim is it? What supports it? Who bears harm if it is wrong? What evidence would make us revise? Record the answers before the meeting ends.

<a id="from-confession-to-calendar"></a>

## From Confession to Calendar

Now translate doctrine into repeated life. If the church confesses creation as good, its worship should not teach escape from bodies or the earth. If it confesses incarnation, presence and care cannot become content delivery alone. If it confesses the Spirit, planning cannot become self-sufficiency. If it confesses forgiveness, confession and repair must have paths. If it confesses resurrection, funerals, disability, aging, ecological responsibility, and institutional decline must be faced without despair or denial.

Write a twelve-month rule of life that includes:

- weekly gathered worship and the preparation it requires;
- baptismal preparation and the Lord's Table;
- daily and weekly prayer patterns for leaders and congregation;
- catechesis for children, youth, new Christians, and adults;
- ordinary meals, hospitality, groups, and mutual care;
- mercy, evangelism, and public service in the local place;
- seasons of lament, fasting, thanksgiving, celebration, and rest;
- leader review, financial review, safeguarding review, and member voice;
- remembrance of the global Church, Israel and the nations, persecuted Christians, and the dead in Christ; and
- an annual return to the received-life rule.

Before you move on. A doctrinal rule with claim categories and revision authority; a twelve-month local rule of life that gives the confession repeated form.
