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- Bethany Baptist Church | bethanybaptistswansea.co.uk
Bethany Baptist Church is an evangelical Christian church in the Mumbles area of Swansea. Join us on Sundays at 11am & 6.30pm, and Wednesdays for prayer and bible study 7pm. Welcome "They devoted themselves to the apostles’ teaching and to fellowship, to the breaking of bread and to prayer." Acts 2:4 2 We are an evangelical Christian church in the West Cross area of Mumbles, Swansea. As a church family, we regularly meet together to pray, sing and learn from the bible. Whether you are looking f o r a church home, or maybe beginning to consider who Jesus is and what it means to follow him, or just visiting - you ar e very welcome to join us at any of our meetings. Sundays 11am & 6:30pm Wednesdays Bible Study & Prayer Meeting 7pm
- Ephesians | Sermons from Bethany Baptist Church
Listen to sermons from Paul's letter to the Ephesians Ephesians
- Sermons | Bethany Baptist Church
Listen to our latest sermons and browse our bible teaching archive to hear more. Recent Sermons Listen to our most recent sermons in the playlist below: Recent Scripture Browse by scripture to listen to available sermons: Old Testament New Testament Genesis 2 Chronicles Daniel Exodus Ezra Hosea Leviticus Nehemiah Joel Numbers Esther Amos Deuteronomy Job Obadiah Joshua Psalms Jonah Judges Proverbs Micah Ruth Ecclesiastes Nahum 1 Samuel Song of Songs Habakkuk 2 Samuel Isaiah Zephaniah 1 Kings Jeremiah Haggai 2 Kings Lamentations Zechariah 1 Chronicles Ezekiel Malachi Matthew Ephesians Hebrews Mark Philippians James Luke Colossians 1 Peter John 1 Thessalonians 2 Peter Acts 2 Thessalonians 1 John Romans 1 Timothy 2 John 1 Corinthians 2 Timothy 3 John 2 Corinthians Titus Jude Galatians Philemon Revelation Scripture Topic Listen to bible teaching on various topics in the playlist below: Topical
- The Lies We Believe About Church
The Lies We Believe About Church Subtle untruths that shape our approach to gathering James Scott Pastor, Bethany Baptist Church, Swansea March 5th, 2025 The Lies We Believe About Church Subtle untruths that shape our approach to gathering Together, for each other, for Christ As a church we’ve been working our way through the Apostle Paul’s letter to the Ephesians in our Sunday bible teaching. The letter reminds us that Christians are a people who belong to each other as members of one body. We are joined together in the local church to build each other up in love as each one of us does our work, serving with the gifts that God has uniquely given to each of us. In summary we could say we are “Together, for each other, for Christ” – I think this would make a good inscription above the doors to our church buildings! But…God’s enemy, and therefore our enemy, the devil, doesn’t like this statement. He doesn’t want God’s people living this way and so he tells us lies. However, it’s not always the big obvious lies such as ‘God doesn’t exist’, which if this was believed, would guarantee our churches would be empty. No, Jesus calls the devil the father of lies, he knows what he’s doing, he’s crafty and much more subtle than that. He loves to tell us lies about the church, lies that keep the church building full, but the motivation and the meaning of what we do there, empty. So here are 3 common lies we’re tempted to believe, that work in opposition to God’s purpose for His church. Lie No.1 – Church is just a service I attend In my former life I worked in the construction industry for many years. My role involved a vast number of frequent meetings, long and boring meetings. Many of these meetings were part of the formula of whichever project we were working on. They became a necessary part of the rigmarole. I just go, sit, listen/speak, and leave. It was very easy to believe the lie that these meetings were not vital in some way to the whole project – believe it or not they actually were! We can approach church in the same way. The bible tells us that the church is the family of believers (1 Peter 2:17) who gather together. Someone will say I’m splitting hairs here – gathering, attending what’s the difference? Well, the difference is that whilst I cannot gather unless I attend it is possible for me to turn up in attendance with little thought to what the bible means by gathering. The original Greek word the New Testament mostly translates as ‘church’ is ‘ekklésia’ which literally means ‘an assembly of Christians who have been called out from the world and to God.’ So, church is not just a service I attend, it is not the religious Sunday box ticked. In fact, it’s not a service or tick box at all. The church is the people of God, not the place or time we meet. Next time you attend a service be sure not to believe the lie that this is all you’re doing, just turning up with some likeminded people to go through the Sunday rigmarole only to leave as soon as possible to get the roast dinner in the oven. No, the bible’s definition of the church, who and what we are, extends beyond the four walls of our buildings and the allotted hour or so we spend there on a Sunday. Lie No.2 – The Sunday service exists to lift me up If we’ve begun to believe the first lie, then it’s all too easy to slip into the second. Consider this question: Where do you go and what do you do when you need a pick-me-up? Have you ever thought about church this way? The answer for me is, yes I have, and it’s not helpful. When I think this way, I go to church expecting a boost and so the church falls into the category of a feel-good experience that will either deliver for me or it won’t, depending on how I feel and what I want out of the service this week. I’m sure we’ve all realised that at some point our expectations won’t be met – Maybe it’s the music, or the preaching, or perhaps I just wasn’t ‘feeling it’ today. What actually happens when church attendance is based on our personal preferences is that we inevitably miss the wood of worship for the trees of our emotions. The second begins to drive the first. I go for what I feel I need, I go for what I want to get out of it. Now, let me be really clear here. I’m not saying that we should wholeheartedly embrace boredom and misery week in, week out, from poorly led services, bad music, and unevenly weighted or poor preaching. It’s true that we all need encouragement. Life is full of challenges and trials no matter what age or stage you find yourself at. For the Christian, the week by week gathering of the church should be a watering hole of life and refreshment in the Lord Jesus. But the bible is clear. God blesses, he feeds and fills, he gives and grows the church, when first we as God’s people gather with our primary purpose being to praise God (Acts 2:47), approaching our gatherings focussed on bringing glory to Him, and coming with the mindset of lifting others up (Hebrews 10:24-25). So, when we come with ourselves to offer (Romans 12:1) for the glory God and for the building up of others, seeking first the kingdom of God (Matthew 6:33) then what we will surely find is all our needs graciously and generously met by God, whilst our fleshly preferences take a back seat. Lie No.3 – It doesn’t really matter if I don’t come to church Friend, it really matters that Christians gather. Hebrews 10:24-25 reminds us that Christians are to be proactively thinking about ways to encourage each other, which we do mainly by physically meeting together. As I’ve already mentioned, the life of the local church extends beyond our buildings on a Sunday, however, the Lord’s Day gathering – our Sunday morning service (and evening if you meet then too!) is one of the primary opportunities we have as Christians to meet together and live out the bible’s picture of the church. It’s clear from these verses that this third lie is easily believed and can actually become habitual unless we do something about it by obeying the command to gather. It’s also clear from these verses that to not gather when we could, is actually an act of neglect or abandonment of our fellow brothers and sisters in Christ. When we decide not to come, the health of the church declines and the growth of the church slows and stagnates and we leave our brothers and sisters without the encouragement that perhaps just our presence alone would have brought them. One thing that has made neglecting our gatherings easier is the customisable consumer comfort of online church. Log on, consume, log out. Online church is an oxymoron and is no replacement for our embodied worship, for we are an embodied people who are called the very body of Christ. God knows that in our sinful weakness we’re tempted not to gather, whether on a Sunday or at any other opportunity, and for all sorts of reasons too. It is ultimately between each of us and the Lord to determine a legitimate reason for not gathering, but I’m not dealing with those reasons here. But God tells us that the longer we live, the closer we get to heaven, the more important gathering to encourage each other becomes! Perhaps, this Sunday you could make a point of telling someone how great it is that they are there with you, let them know how their presence encourages you! So Christian, may God help us to not believe these lies! Don’t just attend your church service, meaningfully gather with all God’s people and do this as often as you possibly can in order that we all be encouraged in our walk with the Lord Jesus Christ as we journey home to meet him.
- Articles
Read a variety of articles by our pastor and others on a range of topics from a biblical perspective. Articles Something Old, Something New, Something Borrowed, Nothing Blue Balancing the diet of songs in our church gatherings January 27th, 2025 James Scott Pastor, Bethany Baptist Church, Swansea The Lies We Believe About Church Subtle untruths that shape our approach to gathering March 5th, 2025 James Scott Pastor, Bethany Baptist Church, Swansea
- Something Old, Something New, Something Borrowed, Nothing Blue
Something Old, Something New, Something Borrowed, Nothing Blue Balancing the diet of songs in our church gatherings James Scott Pastor, Bethany Baptist Church, Swansea January 27th, 2025 Something Old, Something New, Something Borrowed, Nothing Blue Balancing the diet of songs in our church gatherings God Loves to Hear us Singing Within the Psalms we find well over sixty commands to sing. When the songs God inspired by his Spirit are telling you to sing, you know that God loves to hear our singing! Singing together as God’s people is really important because singing together is God’s will for us. In Ephesians 5:15-19 we find that Christians singing together follows on from the Apostle Paul’s word of caution to live careful and wise lives in dark days. Our singing with and to one another is set as the contrast to foolishly feeding ourselves with all that the world has to offer, which only produces sin in our lives. Our tuneful, Godly output comes, says Paul, when the input is God himself in the person of the Holy Spirit. To put it another way, the Christian, doesn’t choose substance-fuelled sinning but rather we embrace Spirit-filled singing. Earlier in Ephesians, Paul has gone to great lengths to remind us of the unity of the Spirit we share as Christians in the local church. This unity, however, does not mean uniformity. In both his letter to the Ephesians and to the Colossians Paul presents a threefold variety of Spirit-filled singing in the shape of Psalms, hymns, and songs from the Spirit. He likely has in mind the deep well of Old Testament Psalms that he could be turned to from memory, but we can also see in the infancy of the first century church, that there are different styles, a variety of expressions of praise available to the Christian – a Psalm is not a hymn is not a song from the Spirit – they are different categories in Paul’s mind. The purpose of our singing together (Colossians 3:16) is to teach the good news of Jesus to our hearts – Oh how God’s people need to be refreshed over and over again in the gospel, and in various ways! I don’t think this triplet of different kinds of singing is meant as an exhaustive list, rather I think it actually conveys something about the greatness of our God and of His Gospel. Christians sing a variety of songs in a variety of ways because ultimately our worship of our Almighty God who cannot be contained, ought not be constrained. Ok, so what then do we sing and how do we choose? First, let’s consider the setting for most of our Christian singing – the local church. A Diverse Bunch The Spirit-united church is a church of great diversity. Our local churches are people of different ages and life stages and experiences. Different hearts and minds that are moved and stirred differently, who do not think and respond in the same ways. We are all at different levels of understanding in relation to the things of God. But I think there’s a key point that is often overlooked – We’re all musically different too, and I don’t just mean how high or low we can sing, or if we sing in tune or we’re one of the joyful-noise out-of-tune types. Practically speaking, we each have a musical language shaped by, among other things, our upbringing and culture and the place music has held in our lives at different times. This plays no small part in our church singing. Generally speaking, the boomer generation (b.1946-1964) with everything from Bing Crosby to the Beatles with a bit of Elvis thrown in are going to respond differently to music in comparison to millennials (b.1981-1996) brought up on a diet of Dire Straits to Madonna with a generous helping of Oasis (or Blur). Then there’s the Gen-Z’ers (b.1997-2012) who have been steeped in the pop world of Coldplay and Taylor Swift. And that’s all music outside the church. I’m not even touching on the hymns we were each brought up on in the church, if indeed we were even brought up in the church, which is increasingly not the case in our time. All that to say, the local church is a diverse bunch, with some typical stylistic preferences among particular age groups and church backgrounds as well as maybe a growing proportion of others for whom these generalisations simply don’t fit. Some might find their affections easily stirred by the combination of melodic phrasing and the language syntax of an old Isaac Watts, Charles Wesley or Fanny Crosby hymn, while others may find these almost totally inaccessible for the very same reasons. On the other hand, some might find their hearts greatly warmed as they sing modern songs by Sovereign Grace, the Getty’s, or Stuart Townend for example, while others might consider them uninspiring. But one thing remains the same – We all need the same word of Christ to dwell richly among us all as we sing. First and most importantly, we recognise that the common denominator in all singing that the Christian is commanded to do is not musical ability or understanding or a close match in our preferences from pew to pew, but rather it is the influence of the Holy Spirit who inspires our praises as a fitting response to the gospel. He both fuels and fills our singing. This is the same Holy Spirit who unites Christians in the bonds of peace (Ephesians 4:3). Through Jesus Christ, we enjoy peace with God and peace with one another. Reconciled vertically and horizontally, which incidentally are the same two directions the bible calls us to sing in. So, when it comes to the four or five songs we sing as a church each week, how can we choose a balanced diet of songs that seek to maintain unity in the church’s diversity? Let me suggest 4 ways we could think about this. Well, 3 with 1 important principle. Something Old It would be a cheap stereotype to say that all older saints love the old hymns. This is not the basis for this category of songs, even if it might be generally true for your church. Jesus’ church spans 2000 years of history. That’s approximately 70-80 generations. In that time there have been seasons of great growth and blessing in God’s kingdom as well as times of deep darkness. This is true in the life of the global church but equally true of the local gatherings of Christians down through the years. When we sing old songs, we’re embracing a bigger picture of Christianity, we’re connected to those Christians who have gone before us. We stand in our own time, facing our own suffering for example, still clinging to the words of Horatio Spafford from 1873, as he penned ‘It is well with my soul’ in the face of his own immense grief at the loss of his daughters. As we sing, we’re reminded that God is faithful in sustaining his people by His sovereign will, then, just as he is now. Each local church has to decide what it considers an ‘old’ song, and having said it is a cheap stereotype, we shouldn’t ignore the fact that many (not all) older saints do generally (not always) enjoy and prefer what they may call the traditional hymns of their younger Sunday school days. Singing something old will most likely mean, that for the sake of unity, we embrace the kinds of songs that do our older brothers and sisters good, while we may not enjoy them as much. Remember, we sing to stir our affections for God. Our worship is the gift God receives from us that is his due and not the warmth of the feeling that we experience when singing. One caveat to bear in mind here is that not all old songs are good or accessible. We have to think carefully when choosing old hymns that speak with both a syntax we no longer use and a vocabulary which is foreign to many. So, whatever your take on using the old English words (Thee’s, Thy’s, Thou’s etc), we need to remember that it is possible for the language used, or the way it is structured, or the tune that is played to hinder or even obscure the truth the song is trying to convey, which means that ultimately the good news of Jesus is not going to dwell richly. With that in mind, it has to be said that there are many old songs that still convey the glory of God in a way that fan the flames of worship in the hearts of young and old alike. These are the songs that have stood the test of time, are still intelligible and are well-worth singing. So, discover and sing these old songs. Something New In recent years there has been and continues to be many gifted song writers and music groups emerging out of local churches from across the world with a heart and a gift to serve the local church with new songs. Many of these songs provide a familiar hymnal musicality which makes them intuitive to sing for both the musical and non-musical alike, whilst using a modern vernacular that makes them accessible to old and young believers as well as the unchurched new convert. However, modernity is the not the basis for this category of songs. When we consider the unfathomable glory of God revealed to us in God’s word and God’s world, we ought to conclude that we are never short of fresh reasons to sing. I think this is why at least four times in the Psalms we read a similar command to God’s people and to our own individual souls – “Sing to the Lord a new song.” I don’t think we have any reason whatsoever not to take this literally. While Jesus Christ is the same yesterday, today and forever (Hebrews 13:8) that doesn’t mean that our worship of him should be. A good bakery doesn’t serve up yesterday’s stale bread and pastries for today’s hungry people. Such is God’s great faithfulness that His mercies are new every morning (Lamentations 3:22-23). God is not using up yesterday’s stale mercies, they are freshly baked for us, and so we can come with fresh appetite to enjoy them. Each generation, each local church, each Christian has the opportunity to sing new songs in response to God’s unchanging glory. Incidentally this is exactly the same reason we can sing old songs, because the truth of who God is for us in Christ remains unchanged, but this is equally a reason to sing new songs that frame our sung worship in today’s common vocabulary and syntax, using today’s musical languages. We do well to remember that the old songs were once new too. Our sinfulness conspires with our finite minds and limited heart-grasp of God to dull our spiritual creativity for new things, tempting us to settle for what we know and fear what is new or different. But those in Christ are new creations (2 Corinthians 5:17) indwelled by God’s Spirit who fuels and fills our worship. As such, the church ought to embrace the refreshing view new songs can bring to old truth. So, Christians, let’s articulate our sung worshipful thanks and praise to him in new ways, with new songs. Something Borrowed I’ve reached an age where I can now hear in new music, samples of older music, or the recycling of musical motifs from the songs of my youth. By and large my young children are totally oblivious to this borrowing of the old in the new and are surprised to know that their new music isn’t that new at all (some would argue it’s not music at all). Something more up my street is the music of film. I was pleased, in the latest reimagining of ‘Superman’, to hear the old familiar theme of John Williams being given a new lease of life. It appears new, but it’s old, familiar, borrowed for a new-ish telling of the same great story. We find this first in the bible. There are striking and glorious similarities between the song of Mary, known as the Magnificat, found in Luke 1:46-55 and Hannah’s song, found some 1100 years earlier in 1 Samuel 2:1-10. As Mary’s soul magnifies the Lord and her spirit rejoices in God her saviour, she does so by rehearsing the mighty saving power of the God of Israel for the humble and lowly sinner, she does so whilst carrying the king of the universe in her womb, the same anointed king that it would seem Hannah sings of all those years before. Mary doesn’t need to reinvent the wheel, she most likely knows the song of Hannah from her grasp of the Jewish scriptures. Mary’s Magnificat is neither singing from an old hymn sheet or penning a completely new song of her own. It is both Hannah and Mary’s story. Both point to the same Lord Jesus Christ. There is more to this, I know, I don’t mean to over-simplify the prophetic fulfilment of Hannah’s song in Mary’s, but I think it serves as an illustration of the intersection of old and new. An excellent example of a borrowed song is the hymn ‘He will hold me fast’ which is neither old or new. An original version of this hymn was written in 1906 by Ada Ruth Habershon from London. Much later, in 2013, Matt Merker of Capitol Hill Baptist Church, Washington, D.C. combined Habershon’s original four verses into two, added an extra verse and set the song to a new tune. A century (and an ocean) apart and this borrowed song continues to help us today to sing joyfully of God’s enduring love, grace and mercy in the face of our sin, doubt and apathy. So, whether it’s a Psalm sang to a familiar tune, an old hymn with modernised language, or a great song that might not be in the familiar style you’re used to in your church circles – There can be great blessing for our churches to sing something borrowed. Nothing Blue Now we come, not to a fourth category, but to a foundational principle for any and all of our songs. We all know what the blue dot on our sink tap means. Blue is the universal colour for cold. Cold means no warmth. In terms of our affections – cold is deadly. The reason we sing together and we don’t just simply recite words aloud in our congregations is because music is an indescribably wonderful gift from God. When combined wisely with the written truth about God and his gospel, our music is administered by his Spirit to help this good news of Jesus the Son dwell richly among us. When we sing, our hearts feel what our eyes read, or at least that’s what is supposed to happen. If we are singing good songs that are centred on God’s word the bible, then as we sing we will find 2 Timothy 3:16 at work. Our hearts are taught, we are reproved and corrected through conviction of our sin, and we are trained and directed in righteousness as we sing of the saviour, Jesus Christ. When I say ‘good’ songs I mean a song that combines tune and words appropriately, to engage both mind and heart with theological truth that is clear rather than ambiguous and vague, set within a vocal range that suits the majority of people in the gathering. I’m not talking about a song that gives us a nice warm feeling. Music is meant to stir the affections for God. A good song is one that doesn’t use music as a means of pulling at our emotions, drawing an emotional response without grounding our minds in the truth of the gospel. A good song is one that demands an appropriate heart response to the truth it conveys. At different times this response might be to cry tears of sorrow or joy as we sing, or to beam from ear to ear with gladness in God, or to engage our whole being in ways that outwardly and physically display our inward submission to and humility before God. You might identify with some, all or none of these responses, but it remains that there is no place in Christian singing for blue. Nothing blue. Blue is cold, cold is unaffected by the universe-shaking reality that God has overcome our spiritual deadness and has made us alive in Christ. A blue response has as much to do with the heart of the worshipper as it does the song choice on a Sunday. We have to be mindful of both our attitude as we prepare to open our mouths to sing, as well as our song choice so that we don’t alienate hearts, minds or both. And so, we end where we began with an exhortation to address one another in psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, singing and making melody to the Lord with your heart. The way this sounds in your local church will vary, maybe significantly from context to context, but I think that the diet of songs in all of our churches would be better balanced if we considered singing something old, something new, something borrowed, but nothing blue.
- Proverbs | Sermons from Bethany Baptist Church
Listen to sermons from the Proverbs Proverbs
- Haggai | Sermons from Bethany Baptist Church
Listen to sermons from Haggai Haggai
- Leadership | Bethany Baptist Church
Find out a bit about our leaders. Leadership The bible shows us that the Church belongs to Jesus as our chief shepherd. He gives biblically qualified men to be leaders of the local church. The bible calls these men elders / overseers / pastors, interchangeably. They are called to be the servant-leaders of the church. James Scott Pastor James is our full-time pastor. He is from England and moved from Kent to Wales in 2021. He was converted as a young teenager and has served in pastoral and bible teaching roles over the years. James had an 18 year career in the construction industry before being called to full-time pastoral ministry here at Bethany. James loves music, Indian foo d and Arsenal F.C. James is married to Celina and they have 3 children. Robert Barnes Elder Robert is an elder in the church and also serves as church secretary. He was converted in Bethany and has served as a church officer since 1967. He has retired from a career in University administration and has served as lay-pastor of Trinity Chapel, Penclawdd for over 30 years. His interests include local history, railway history as well as classic cars. Robert is married to Joan and they have 2 adult daughters and 7 grandchildren. Anthony Gwyther-Jones Elder Anthony is an elder in the church. He came to Bethany as a boy and was converted here before being called into full-time pastoral ministry. He served as a pastor in Somerset for 7 years followed by 23 years as pastor of Paraclete Congregational Church, Newton, Swansea before returning to Bethany later in life. Anthony is married to Joan and they have 3 adult children, 7 grandchildren and 9 great-grandchildren. Deacons The bible shows us that the church sets aside specific members of the church called 'deacons' to be the leading-servants in the church. Deacons enable elders to concentrate on prayer and the ministry of God's word among the church. Bethany is faithfully served by deacons who take care of the financial and physical needs of the church.
- What We Believe | Bethany Baptist Church
Read Bethany Baptist Church's statement of faith. What We Believe As a church we express our Christian beliefs in the following statement of faith: 1. God There is one God, who exists eternally in three distinct but equal persons: the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit. God is unchangeable in his holiness, justice, wisdom and love. He is the almighty Creator; Saviour and Judge who sustains and governs all things according to his sovereign will for his own glory. 2. The Bible God has revealed himself in the Bible, which consists of the Old and New Testaments alone. Every word was inspired by God through human authors, so that the Bible as originally given is in its entirety the Word of God, without error and fully reliable in fact and doctrine. The Bible alone speaks with final authority and is always sufficient for all matters of belief and practice. 3. Humanity All men and women, being created in the image of God, have inherent and equal dignity and worth. Their greatest purpose is to obey, worship and love God. As a result of the fall of our first parents, every aspect of human nature has been corrupted and all men and women are without spiritual life, guilty sinners and hostile to God. Every person is therefore under the just condemnation of God and needs to be born again, forgiven and reconciled to God in order to know and please him. 4. The Lord Jesus Christ The Lord Jesus Christ is fully God and fully man. He was conceived by the Holy Spirit, born of a virgin, and lived a sinless life in obedience to the Father. He taught with authority and all his words are true. On the cross he died in the place of sinners, bearing God’s punishment for their sin, redeeming them by his blood. He rose from the dead and in his resurrection body ascended into heaven where he is exalted as Lord of all. He intercedes for his people in the presence of the Father. 5. Salvation Salvation is entirely a work of God’s grace and cannot be earned or deserved. It has been accomplished by the Lord Jesus Christ and is offered to all in the gospel. God in his love forgives sinners whom he calls, granting them repentance and faith. All who believe in Christ are justified by faith alone, adopted into the family of God and receive eternal life. 6. The Holy Spirit The Holy Spirit has been sent from heaven to glorify Christ and to apply his work of salvation. He convicts sinners, imparts spiritual life and gives a true understanding of the Scriptures. He indwells all believers, brings assurance of salvation and produces increasing likeness to Christ. He builds up the Church and empowers its members for worship, service and mission. 7. The Church The universal Church is the body of which Christ is the head and to which all who are saved belong. It is made visible in local churches, which are congregations of believers who are committed to each other for the worship of God, the preaching of the Word, the administering of Baptism and the Lord’s Supper; for pastoral care and discipline, and for evangelism. The unity of the body of Christ is expressed within and between churches by mutual love, care and encouragement. True fellowship between churches exists only where they are faithful to the gospel. 8. Baptism and the Lord’s Supper Baptism and the Lord’s Supper have been given to the churches by Christ as visible signs of the gospel and a means of His grace to His people. Baptism is a symbol of union with Christ and entry into his Church but does not impart spiritual life. Baptism is the immersion in water into the name of the Father, the Son and Holy Spirit, of those who have professed repentance towards God and faith in our Lord Jesus Christ. The Lord’s Supper is a commemoration of Christ’s sacrifice offered once for all and involves no change in the bread and wine. All its blessings are received by faith. 9. The Future The Lord Jesus Christ will return in glory. He will raise the dead and judge the world in righteousness. The wicked will be sent to eternal punishment and the righteous will be welcomed into a life of eternal joy in fellowship with God. God will make all things new and will be glorified forever.
- 1 Corinthians | Sermons from Bethany Baptist Church
Listen to sermons from Paul's first letter to the Corinthians 1 Corinthians
- 2 Corinthians | Sermons from Bethany Baptist Church
Listen to sermons from Paul's second letter to the Corinthians 2 Corinthians