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| The
Phoenix Affirmations ~ Full Version 3.7 |
The public face of Christianity
in America today bears little connection to the historic
faith of our ancestors. It represents even less our
own faith as Christians who continue to celebrate
the gifts of our Creator, revealed and embodied in
the life, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ.
Heartened by our experience of the transforming presence
of Christ’s Holy Spirit in our world, we find
ourselves in a time and place where we will be no
longer silent. We hereby mark an end to our silence
by making the following affirmations:
As people who are joyfully
and unapologetically Christian, we pledge ourselves
completely to the way of Love. We work to express
our love, as Jesus teaches us, in three ways: by loving
God, neighbor, and self.
Matt 22:34-40
// Mk 12:28-31 // Lk 10:25-28; Cf. Deut 6:5; Lev.
19:18
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Affirmation
1:
Walking fully in
the path of Jesus, without denying the legitimacy of
other paths God may provide humanity;
Matthew 11:28-29; John 8:12; John 10:16; Mark 9:40 |
As
Christians, we find spiritual awakening, challenge, growth,
and fulfillment in Christ’s birth, life, death,
and resurrection. While we have accepted the Path of Jesus
as our Path, we do not deny the legitimacy of other paths
God may provide humanity. Where possible, we seek lively
dialog with those of other faiths for mutual benefit and
fellowship.
We affirm that the Path of Jesus is found wherever love
of God, neighbor, and self are practiced together. Whether
or not the path bears the name of Jesus, such paths bear
the identity of Christ.
We confess that we have stepped away from Christ’s
Path whenever we have failed to practice love of God,
neighbor, and self, or have claimed Christianity is the
only way, even as we claim it to be our way. |
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Affirmation
2:
Listening for God’s
Word which comes through daily prayer and meditation,
through studying the ancient testimonies which we call
Scripture, and through attending to God’s present
activity in the world;
2 Timothy 3:16-17; 1 Corinthians 13:12 |
As
Christians, we listen for God’s Word in the living
presence of the Holy Spirit, praying every day, and
discerning God’s present activity in our world.
We also study and revere the ancient records which we
call Scripture, recognizing that they have been formed
within distinct historical and cultural contexts, yet
have been informed by God’s Spirit, which transcends
all ages and times. Most of all we seek the meaning
of salvation, of Jesus’ life, death, and resurrection
as it is presented in the Scriptures and discerned in
daily life.
We affirm that the Path of Jesus is found where Christ’s
followers engage in daily prayer and meditation, as
well as personal and community study and interpretation
of Scripture, as central ways God’s continuing
voice is discerned in everyday life.
We confess that we have moved away from Christ’s
Path when we have claimed that God’s Word is restricted
to that which may be contained in a written document,
or that either the recording of God’s Word in
Scripture, or our interpretation of it, are infallible.
Further, we have moved away from the Path when we have
allowed the mere fact of Scripture’s fallibility,
or our own, to dissuade us from seeking God’s
Word in Scripture, prayer, and reflection on daily life.
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Affirmation
3:
Celebrating the God
whose Spirit pervades and whose glory is reflected in
all of God’s Creation, including the earth and
its ecosystems, the sacred and secular, the Christian
and non-Christian, the human and non-human;
Genesis 1:31a; Psalm 96:1,11-12; Acts 17:23 |
As
Christians, we seek to act as righteous stewards of
the earth and its ecosystems. We celebrate the reflections
of the Creator’s glory in both the sacred and
secular, human and non-human, Christian and non-Christian.
We affirm that the Path of Jesus is found where Christ’s
followers act as caring stewards of the earth, and where
the presence of the living Christ is celebrated wherever
Christ’s spirit manifests itself, transcending
all preconceived human categories.
We confess that we have stepped away from this Path
when we have ignored our role as stewards of the earth,
or have interpreted Scripture in a way that fails to
account for the sacredness of the earth or the integrity
of its ecosystems. We have further moved away whenever
we have claimed that that the glorification and praise
of God is limited only to that which is consciously
and overtly Christian.
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Affirmation
4:
Expressing
our love in worship that is as sincere, vibrant, and
artful as it is scriptural. Genesis 2:7; Exodus 31:2-5l;
Revelation 18:22
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As
Christians, we strive to respond to God’s artistry
in Creation by integrating the arts in worship, education
and proclamation. We encourage the reclaiming of artistry
and artistic expression in all Christian endeavors,
both personal and communal.
We affirm that the Path of Jesus is found where Christ’s
followers make sincere and vibrant worship of God as
central to the life of their community as Jesus did.
We further affirm artistic expression as a way of reflecting
God’s creativity, joy, and prophetic voice in
what may be seen, heard, felt, tasted, sung and spoken.
We confess that we have moved away from Christ’s
Path when we have failed to make worship the product
of our best efforts to experience and express love for
God, neighbor and self in community with others. We
have moved further from this path when we have considered
the arts as trivial or merely tangential to the life
of a mature Christian community. |
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Affirmation
5:
Engaging people authentically,
as Jesus did, treating all as creations made in God’s
very image, regardless of race, gender, sexual orientation,
age, physical or mental ability, nationality, or economic
class;
Genesis 1:27; Psalm 8:3-5; 1 Corinthians 12:3-7 |
As
Christians, we welcome those of every race, gender,
sexual orientation, age, physical and mental ability,
nationality, and economic class into the full life of
our community.
We affirm that the Path of Jesus is found where Christ’s
followers uplift and celebrate the worth and integrity
of all people as created in God’s very image and
likeness. We further affirm that Christ’s Path
includes treating people authentically rather than as
mere categories or classes, challenging and inspiring
all people to live according to their high identity.
We confess that we have stepped away from this Path
whenever we have failed to recognize the essential goodness
of God’s Creation by treating some classes of
human beings as more godly than others. We have moved
further from Christ’s Path when we have treated
people superficially, as objects to be used rather than
human beings with depth and distinction. |
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Affirmation
6:
Standing,
as Jesus does, with the outcast and oppressed, the denigrated
and afflicted, seeking peace and justice with or without
the support of others;
Micah 6:8; Luke 12:48 |
As
Christians, we advocate and care for those who experience
oppression and poverty, either physically or spiritually,
within our faith communities, our country, and the world.
We recognize the local congregation as the primary context
for offering such care, even as we seek to extend it
beyond our faith communities into the wider world.
We affirm that the Path of Jesus is found where Christ’s
followers honor the essential unity of spirit and matter
by connecting worship and theology with concrete acts
of justice and righteousness, kindness and humility,
with or without the support of others.
We confess that we have moved away from this Path when
we have suggested that Christianity is concerned with
only the spiritual in contrast to the material, or vice-versa.
We have moved further away when we have celebrated blessings
given by God without also acknowledging responsibilities
that come with blessing. |
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Affirmation
7:
Preserving religious
freedom and the Church’s ability to speak prophetically
to government by resisting the commingling of Church
and State;
Luke 20:25; 1 Peter 2:17 |
As
Christians, we strive to live as responsible citizens
of our country, just as we seek to live as Christ’s
disciples. We celebrate the separation of Church and
State as much for the protection of the Church, and
other faith communities, as the State.
We affirm that the Path of Jesus is found where Christ’s
followers honor the role of the State in maintaining
justice and peace, so far as human discernment and ability
make possible. We affirm the separation of Church and
State, even as we endeavor to support the state in as
far as Christian conscience allows.
We confess that we have moved away from this Path when
we have confused the role of the State with that of
the Church. We have moved further from the Path when
we have renounced the Church’s calling to speak
prophetically to the State by suggesting that the Church
should or could take on the nature, tasks and dignity
which belong to the State, thus becoming itself an organ
of the State. |
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Affirmation
8:
Walking humbly with
God, acknowledging our own shortcomings while honestly
seeking to understand and call forth the best in others,
including those who consider us their enemies;
Luke 18:9-14; Luke 6:27-29; Galatians 5:22-23; John
15:18-19 |
As
Christians, we recognize that we are misfits both with
respect to God’s Realm and the world. We are misfits
with respect to God’s Realm in that we rarely
live up to the principles and ideals we espouse. We
are misfits with respect to the world in that the ideals
for which we strive frequently do not conform to the
ways of the world.
We affirm that the Path of Jesus is found where Christ’s
followers love those who consider them their enemies
as much as they love themselves, striving humbly to
embody the “fruits of the Spirit”: love,
joy, peace, patience, kindness, generosity, faithfulness,
gentleness, and self-control.
We confess that we have moved away from this Path when
we have promoted a notion that people of faith are morally
or ethically superior to those without faith. Further,
we have moved away when we have supported any cause,
no matter how just or righteous, without reflecting
the “fruits of the Spirit” toward all. |
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Affirmation 9:
Basing our lives
on the faith that, in Christ, all things are made new,
and that we, and all people, are loved beyond our wildest
imagination – for eternity;
Psalm 22:27-29; Psalm 23:4-6; Psalm 139:7-12; John 3:16-17;
Romans 14:7-11; Philippians 1:20-26 |
As
Christians, we bear witness to, and nurture faith in,
all persons who are hungry for, or open to the revelation,
love, and salvation of God in Christ. We do not seek
to evangelize those who have no desire to explore the
Christian Path. We trust, rather, that God’s love,
grace and invitation, has been, and will be, revealed
in other paths, witnesses and times.
We affirm that the Path of Jesus is found where Christ’s
followers are continually discovering, and rediscovering
that they – and all people – are loved beyond
their wildest imagination, and they determine to live
their lives according to this discovery. We find in
this discovery and surrender the very essence of salvation,
which is a process, not an end-point, within an eternal
journey.
We confess that we have moved away from this Path whenever
we have denied God’s love for all people, or have
denied the effectiveness of God’s eternal will
that all be saved. We have moved further from Christ’s
path when we have not actively born witness to God’s
love and grace with those who seek it. |
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Affirmation
10:
Claiming the sacredness
of both our minds and our hearts, recognizing that faith
and science, doubt and belief serve the pursuit of truth;
Proverbs 1:20-22; 1 Corinthians 3:18-19; 1 Corinthians
14:15 |
As
Christians, we seek to develop intellectually as sincerely
as we seek emotional development. We further seek to
clarify that the truths contained in Scripture are not
conveyed primarily through scientific revelations, but
through wisdom which may be gleaned frequently in story
and song, symbol and parable.
We affirm that the Path of Jesus is found where Christ’s
followers value the pursuit of wisdom, which is found
at the intersection of head and heart, where God seeks
relationship with the human soul.
We confess that we have moved away from this Path when
we have denied either the role of the mind, or that
of the heart, in the seeking of wisdom. Further, we
have moved off the Path when we have denigrated the
role of doubt or pursuit of scientific knowledge as
if they were enemies rather than allies of faith. |
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Affirmation
11:
Caring for our bodies,
and insisting on taking time to enjoy the benefits of
prayer, reflection, worship and recreation in addition
to work;
Exodus 5:4-8; 1 Corinthians 6:19; 1 Thessalonians 5:16-19
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As
Christians, we strive to embrace and embody ways of
living that promote the health of the body, the joy
of living, and the benefits attained when work is combined
with rest and recreation, reflection and prayer. We
do this for our sake, for the sake of others, for the
sake of the earth, and for the sake of Christ.
We affirm that the Path of Jesus is found where Christ’s
followers care for their bodies as temples of the holy,
and take time to pray and play, to worship, and to reflect,
as essential parts of their vocation.
We confess that we have moved away from this Path when
we have supported the ethics of Pharaoh over the ethics
of God by promoting systems of production and consumption
without attending to the disciplines of rest and recreation,
reflection and prayer. We have further moved from the
Path when we have denigrated or abused our bodies, or
those of others, or denied the rights and responsibilities
of others to make decisions about how they care for
the bodies God gave them. |
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Affirmation
12:
Acting on the faith
that we are born with a meaning and purpose; a vocation
and ministry that serves to strengthen and extend God’s
realm of love.
Jeremiah 1:5; Luke 5:15-16; Romans 12:4-8; 1 Corinthians
12:4-31 |
As
Christians, we practice prayer as a daily discipline,
seeking in prayer both to enjoy God’s presence
and to discern God’s will for our lives and our
faith communities. We accept it as one of our highest
responsibilities and privileges to help those in our
communities of faith discern God’s direction for
their lives, and to celebrate and value their discernment
in the worship and missional life of the church. In
every available way, we seek to help people develop
and use their diverse callings as an expression of their
faith.
We affirm that the Path of Jesus is found where all
of Christ’s followers are understood to be called
into a ministry. God’s intention for us can be
found and followed, however haltingly and imperfectly,
in obedience to the guidance and insights, which come
in prayer. We hold this conviction to be true of the
Church as well as of each of its members.
We confess that we have moved away from this Path when
we have claimed that one form of ministry is any higher
or more sacred than any other, in or outside a church
Further, we have moved from the Path when we have failed
to concretely value meaningful input and participation
by both laypeople and clergy in the worship and mission
of our communities. |
| THE
AMERICAN CATHOLIC CHURCH OF NEW ENGLAND
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Most
Rev. Stephen Edward Burke, MGC, Bishop Emeritus
Most
Rev. Michael J. Scalzi
The Faith Community of Saint Joseph
2804 Market Street, Suite 2
Camp Hill, PA 17011
Phone: (717) 737-5520
Email: accnemjs@comcast.net
Most
Rev. Rosemary Ananis
St. Francis of Assisi Faith Community
1107 Littlefield Road
Wells, ME 04090
Phone: (207) 646-2820
Email: rananis@maine.rr.com
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