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"Who We Are" in the Body of Christ
DR. DENNIS F. KINLAW
The Francis Asbury Society was
organized to perpetuate the biblical message of heart
holiness, that message for which Francis Asbury gave his
life and which influenced Methodism, Asbury College, and
Asbury Seminary from their beginnings. The Society was
founded with the conviction that this message, clear in
Scripture though often overshadowed, forgotten, or denied in
the history of the church, was in danger of being lost, not
just in the church at large, but particularly within the
very segments of the church, the Methodist and the Asbury
world, which historically were its natural home.
The essence of this concern is
found expressed in the biblical command: "be ye holy for I
am holy." It is our belief that this command is also a
promise. What God commands He is capable of
performing.
It is our observation that the
new birth in and of itself is not necessarily a fulfillment
of this command but is rather an initial step toward its
fulfillment. We believe that the answer to all of our
sin lies in Christ's atoning work on Calvary and that the
benefits of that work are available now to us. We do
not have to wait until death to be delivered from all sin.
Such deliverance, we believe, comes through faith in the
bloody sacrifice of Christ.
We believe that it is the new
birth that quickens us and brings alive within us those
hungers that can enable us to think of life lived not in the
flesh but in the Spirit Himself. Those hungers in the
believer's heart, we believe, are fulfilled in an experience
of grace subsequent to the new birth that cleanses and
perfects the heart in a divine love that leaves Christ as
absolute Lord in the believer's life.
We believe that with this
cleansing, the Spirit is free to fill and to bear His fruit
and manifest His gifts and callings as He will without
hindrance within the heart of the believer. We see the
proclamation of this full gospel as the fulfillment of the
Great Commission and our reason for existence.
Our concern for this truth
differentiates us from other fellow believers whom we
respect and revere. It differentiates us from those in
the body of Christ who do not believe that God will deliver
a person now from all sin and entirely sanctify the heart in
this life. Thus we are not Calvanist nor Lutheran.
We do not stand in these traditions.
This also differentiates us
from those within the Christian Church who do not believe in
or else do not feel it necessary to emphasize this deeper
cleansing but who feel led to emphasize activities of the
Spirit other than regeneration, renewal, and sanctification.
Thus we find ourselves differentiated from the Pentecostal
and Charismatic movements that place their emphasis upon
gifts and signs and wonders. We feel that (1) these
emphases turn attention away from the deeper purposes for
which Christ died and that (2) such should be left to the
disposition of the Holy Spirit Himself. We believe
that if we seek God alone, He will give us as He will.
Thus we can be saved from the flesh and from the intrusion
of our desires into our relationship with Him and with other
believers. We believe that it is only in this way that
the unity of the body of Christ can be preserved.
The premises implicit within
the above statements are central to the world which God has
given FAS to proclaim to our society and world.
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