"Our Father....your kingdom come, your will be done on earth as it is in heaven"
Here at the Vineyard there are some key values that affect everything we do. Simply put, ever since the death and resurrection of Jesus, God continues to expand his love, influence, and power over the whole world.
God created us to experience him today in real and practical ways, so that we can in turn be his agents of reconciliation and compassion to a world divided and broken by isolation, hatred, bigotry, war, injustice, poverty and disease.
Everyone alive has a role, a God given purpose, gifting and invitation to participate with Him as he brings his kingdom to the earth as it is in heaven.
The Theology and Practice of the Kingdom of God
Vineyard is committed to the theology and
practice of the Kingdom of God, rooted in the vision of the Hebrew
prophets and fulfilled in the life and ministry of Jesus of Nazareth.
We have been commissioned to proclaim the good news of the kingdom
bearing witness to the already and not yet of the kingdom in words and
deeds.
Vineyard is a movement distinctively
centered in a renewed understanding of the centrality of the kingdom of
God in biblical thought. We view the kingdom of God as the overarching
and integrating theme of the Bible.
From our beginnings Vineyard has been
committed to the proclamation of the kingdom of God and bearing witness
to the deeds of the kingdom through healing (physical, emotional, and
social), doing justice, and delivering those held captive by evil.
Since the kingdom of God is the future reign of God breaking into the
present through the life and ministry of Jesus, we are a forward-leaning
movement emphasizing the ever-reforming nature of the church engaging
the world in love.
Experiencing God
The kingdom of
God is not a geo-political territory, nor is it the people of God.
Rather, the kingdom of God is a dynamic realm. When one enters the
kingdom she/he experiences the dynamic reality which exists within the
triune God - Father, Son and Holy Spirit. This means that the
experience of the kingdom of God (and thus, the experience of God's
presence) is central to our faith and Christian life.
God is eager to be known and
experienced by all. We believe that God is searching for lost humanity
in order to draw us into intimate relationship with Himself. In
response to God's initiative, we value the life-changing power of the
experience of His presence.
The primary place where that
relationship is nurtured and developed is in the act of worship - both
private and corporate. So, experience-based worship is the central
activity of all that we do in the Vineyard. It is worship that causes
all else that we do to become an act of worship. We experience God's
presence as a palpable reality when we worship. As we worship we become
increasingly sensitive and responsive to the Spirit's presence so that
we can do as Jesus did: "See what the Father is doing (John 5:19) and
support His work with our lives.
The experience of God flowing out of a
life of worship affects all aspect of our life so that all division
between the secular and the sacred vanish. We believe that the Spirit
distributes His gifts to us resulting in prophecy, prayer languages,
healing, miracles and many other gifts as we joyfully experience His
presence.
We value an approach to God's presence
that is respectful both of God and of those we are with. We eschew
hype and other efforts to manipulate either God's presence or the
response of others to His presence. We distinguish between the Holy
Spirit and the human response which shares in all the beauty and
brokenness of our humanity. We also believe that as we experience His
presence through Christ by the Spirit we will be made more fully human
and better reflections of the God-image that we were created to be.
Culturally Relevant Mission
The church
exists for the sake of those who are exiled from God. We are called to
bring the good news of the kingdom to every nook and cranny of creation,
faithfully translating the message of Jesus into language and forms
that are relevant to diverse peoples and cultures.
We seek to plant churches that are
culturally relevant in a wide variety of settings locally and
internationally. Each Vineyard church is encouraged to reach those in
its community not already reached by existing churches. To this end we
promote a creative, entrepreneurial and innovative approach to ministry
that is faithful to Jesus and expressive of His heart to reach those who
are far away from God.
Reconciling Community
Jesus is
reconciling humans to God, to each other, and to the entire creation,
breaking down divisions between Jew & non-Jew, slave & free,
male & female. Therefore we are committed to becoming healing
communities engaged in the work of reconciliation wherever sin and evil
hold sway.
We seek to be diverse communities of
hope that realize the power of the cross to reconcile what has been
separated by sin. This requires us to move beyond our personal
preferences to engage those who are perceived to be unlike us and to
actively break down barriers of race, culture, gender, social class and
ethnicity.
We are convinced that the church,
locally, nationally and globally, is meant to be a diverse community
precisely because Jesus is Lord over every nation, tribe and tongue. We
are not satisfied with the status quo when it doesn't reflect this
kingdom reality, but are eager to pray for the coming of God's kingdom
here and now and to realize this mark of the kingdom in our midst.
Compassionate Ministry
We lean toward
the lost, the poor, the outcast, and the outsider with the compassion of
Jesus as sinners whose only standing before God is utterly dependent on
the mercy of God. This mercy can only be truly received inasmuch as we
are willing to give it away.
We believe that ministry in Jesus' name
should be expressed in concrete ways through the local church. The
poor are to be served as though serving Jesus Himself. This is one of
the distinguishing characteristics of a church expressing the love of
Christ in a local community.
In all forms of ministry, compassion
is the hallmark of the one who was moved with compassion Himself in the
face of human need. This being the age of grace and "the year of the
Lord's favor," compassion should constitute the leading edge of our
service to God, each other and a broken world. As such, we seek to
avoid unauthorized judgements of others, realizing that we are all
fellow sufferers and strugglers with the rest of humanity.