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This
page contains some facts regarding Apostolic beliefs,
doctrine, our view of holy living and the Apostolic lifestyle.
Hopefully it will help those who have surfed into this site and have
no idea what we are talking about!

An
Outline of Apostolic History and Doctrine
The United
Pentecostal Church International (UPCI) has been among the fastest
growing denominations in
North
America
since it was formed in 1945 by the merger of the
Pentecostal Church, Incorporated, and the Pentecostal Assemblies of
Jesus Christ. From 617 churches listed in 1946, the UPCI in North
America (United States and Canada) today lists 3,876 churches,
reports a
Sunday
School attendance of more than 400,000, and has an estimated
constituency of at least 600,000. Moreover, it is also located in
136 other nations with 15,882 licensed ministers, 21,407 churches
and meeting places, and a
foreign constituency
of over 1.9 million, making a total worldwide constituency of more
than 2.6 million.
History
of the UPCI
The UPCI emerged out
of the Pentecostal movement that began in Topeka, Kansas in 1901. It
traces its organizational roots to October 1916, when a large group
of ministers withdrew from the Assemblies of God over the doctrinal
issues of the oneness of God and water baptism in the name of Jesus
Christ.
The basic
governmental structure of the UPCI is congregational with local
churches being autonomous: the congregation elects its pastor and
its leaders, owns its property, decides its budget, establishes its
membership, and conducts all necessary business.
The central
organization embraces a modified Presbyterian system in that
ministers meet in sectional, district, and general conferences to
elect officials and to conduct business of the organization.
The UPCI headquarters
building, located in Hazelwood, Missouri, houses offices for its
general officials, the
Pentecostal
Publishing House, and a
Christian
bookstore. Among its endorsed institutions are
seven
Bible colleges, a
children's
home, a
residency
for troubled young men,
ministries
to those addicted to alcohol and other drugs, a
chaplaincy
for prisoners, and it endorses
chaplains
to the military.
Doctrinal
views
The
doctrinal
views of the UPCI reflect most of the beliefs of the
Holiness-Pentecostal movement, with the exception of the
"second work of grace," the historic doctrine of the
Trinity, and the traditional Trinitarian formula in water baptism.
It embraces the Pentecostal view that speaking in tongues is the
initial sign of receiving the Holy Spirit.
The UPCI holds a
fundamental view of the Bible: "The Bible is the only God-given
authority which man possesses; therefore all doctrine, faith, hope,
and all instructions for the church must be based upon and harmonize
with the Bible" (Manual of the United Pentecostal Church, 19).
The Bible is the Word of God, and therefore inerrant and infallible.
The UPCI rejects all extrabiblical revelations and writings, and
views church creeds and articles of faith only as the thinking of
men.
The UPCI holds that
salvation is by grace through faith in Jesus Christ, not by works.
Faith in Jesus is the means by which a person is justified. At the
same time, a sinner must believe the gospel; he is commanded to
repent of his sinful life, to be baptized in water in the name of
Jesus Christ, and to receive the gift of the Holy Spirit (Acts 2:38;
4:12; 8:12-17; 10:43-48; 19:1-6). Thus the various aspects of faith
and obedience work together in God's grace to reconcile us to God.
Oneness
of God
In distinction to the
doctrine of the Trinity, the UPCI holds to a oneness view of God. It
views the Trinitarian concept of God, that of God eternally existing
as three distinctive persons, as inadequate and a departure from the
consistent and emphatic biblical revelation of God being one.
The UPCI teaches that
the one God who revealed Himself in the Old Testament as Jehovah
revealed himself in His Son, Jesus Christ. Thus Jesus Christ was and
is God. In other words, Jesus is the one true God manifested in
flesh, for in Him dwells all the fullness of the Godhead bodily
(John 1:1-14; I Timothy 3:16; Colossians 2:9).
While fully God,
Jesus was also fully man, possessing a full and true humanity. He
was both God and man. Moreover, the Holy Spirit is God with us and
in us. Thus God is manifested as Father in creation and as the
Father of the Son, in the Son for our redemption, and as the Holy
Spirit in our regeneration.
Importance
of the Family Unit
The UPCI stresses and
supports the family unit as God's primary institution and teaches
that the church is God's redemptive fellowship for all believers.

Holiness
and Modesty
click
here for article
The
Way We Worship
click
here for article
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