Skip to main content
The First Advent
L
Written by Lizzie Mastrangelo
Updated over a month ago

We believe that, as provided and purposed by God and as preannounced in the prophecies of the Scriptures, the eternal Son of God came into this world that He might manifest God to men, fulfill prophecy, and become the Redeemer of a lost world. To this end He was born of the virgin and received a human body and a sinless human nature. (Luke 1:30-35; John 1:18; 3:16; Hebrews 4:15.)

We believe that on the human side He became and remained a perfect man, but sinless throughout His life; yet He retained His absolute deity, being at the same time very God and very man, and that His earth-life sometimes functioned within the sphere of that which was human and sometimes within the sphere of that which was divine. (Luke 2:40; John 1:1-2; Philippians 2:5-8.)

We believe that in fulfillment of prophecy He came first to Israel as her Messiah-King, and that being rejected of that nation; He according to the eternal counsels of God gave His life as a ransom for all. (John 1:11; Acts 2:22-24; 1 Timothy 2:6.)

We believe that in infinite love for the lost He voluntarily accepted His Father's will and became the divinely provided sacrificial Lamb and took away the sin of the world, bearing the holy judgments against sin which the righteousness of God must impose. His death was therefore substitutionary in the most absolute sense–the just for the unjust–and by His death He became the Savior of the lost. (John 1:29; Romans 3:25-26; 2 Corinthians 5:14; Hebrews 10:5-14; 1 Peter 3:18.)

We believe that according to the Scriptures He arose from the dead in the same body, though glorified, in which He had lived and died, and that His resurrection body is the pattern of that body which ultimately will be given to all believers. (John 20:20; Philippians 3:20-21.)

We believe that on departing from the earth He was accepted of His Father and that His acceptance is a final assurance to us that His redeeming work was perfectly accomplished. (Hebrews 1:3.)

He ceases not to intercede and advocate for the saved. (Ephesians 1:22-23; Hebrews 7:25; 1 John 2:1.)

Did this answer your question?