WHAT WE BELIEVE

There is nothing more important in the life of the local church than what that local church believes regarding the truths of God’s Word. Faith Family Fellowship is in agreement with two, biblically faithful, confessions of faith: the New Hampshire Confession of Faith and the Baptist Faith and the Message 2000. In an age of doctrinal confusion,these two confessions serve as “guardrails” to help us “guard the good deposit entrusted to us” (2 Timothy 1:14). Come join us as we “contend earnestly for the faith, once for all delivered to the saints” (Jude 3).

- Pastor David Sullivan

The New Hampshire Confession of Faith

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Though it does not have the quality of exposition found in the Second London Confession, The New Hampshire Confession is a noble confession, orthodox in its theology and Christology, uncompromised in its affirmation of the holy and wise sovereignty of God over his creation, the purely gratuitous character of salvation, clear in its baptistic understanding of the church, and firm in the reality of the eternal destinies of the righteous (esteemed so by the grace of God in the work of Christ) and the wicked, judged so by their continual transgression of the law and their wicked unbelief.
— Tom Nettles

The Baptist Faith and Message 2000

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By the end of the twentieth century, several denominations had revised their confessions of faith or creeds, but almost all had done so in order to accommodate theological liberalism. Clear doctrinal affirmations gave way to ambiguous language. In other cases, required doctrines simply disappeared. . . . . The historical importance of the Baptist Faith and Message revision of 2000 lies in its nearly unprecedented status as an intentionally conservative revision of a major denomination’s confession of faith. This event came as a capstone achievement of what is commonly referred to as the Conservative Resurgence in the Southern Baptist Convention.
— Albert Mohler