Our Vision

Building strong local churches with people, filled with the Word and the Spirit, touching the World.

What We Believe

We believe that the Bible is the infallible, inerrant Word of God.

We believe in the Divine Trinity, that God is one, but is manifested in three persons – Father, Son and Holy Spirit - co-equal and co-eternal.

We believe in the deity of the Lord Jesus Christ.

We believe in the person of the Holy Spirit.

We believe that salvation is the gift of God to man, separate from works and law, and is made operative by grace through faith in Jesus Christ, producing works acceptable to God.

We believe in water baptism by immersion as a direct commandment of the Lord and that this ordinance is for believers only as a symbol of the Christian identification with Christ in His death, burial, and resurrection.

We believe that the baptism in the Holy Spirit is a gift from God as promised by the Lord Jesus Christ to all believers in this dispensation and is received subsequent to the new birth.

We also believe that this experience is accompanied by the initial evidence of speaking in other tongues as the Holy Spirit gives utterance.

We believe that healing is for the physical ills of the human body and is wrought by the power of God through the prayer of faith, and by the laying on of hands.

We believe that healing is provided for in the atonement of Christ, and is the privilege of every member in the church today.

We believe that the Lord Jesus Christ shall return for the church and that His coming is imminent.

We believe that following the tribulation, He shall return to earth as King of kings and Lord of lords, and together with His saints who shall be kings and priests, He shall reign a thousand years.

We believe that those who physically die in their sins without accepting Christ are hopelessly and eternally lost in the lake of fire and, therefore, have no further opportunity of hearing the Gospel or repenting.

We believe that the lake of fire is literal, and the terms “Eternal” and “Everlasting, used in describing the duration of the punishment of the damned in the lake of fire, carry the same thought and meaning of endless existence as used in denoting the duration of joy and ecstasy of saints in the presence of God.