Principles and Morality of the Church

Current Series

The Conscience, as the inherent knowledge of right and wrong, cannot stand alone as a sovereign arbiter of morals. True Christians are obligated to form their Conscience by Devine Moral Law and the mind of Christ as revealed in the Holy Scriptures and by the teaching and Tradition of the Church. We hold that the Christian Conscience is thus properly informed and ruled; it must affirm the following moral principles:

Individual Responsibility:
All people, individually and collectively, are responsible to their creator for their acts, motives, thoughts, and words since "we must all appear before the judgment seat of Christ…. "

Sanctity of Human Life:
From the time of his conception, every human being is a creature and child of God, made in his image and likeness, an infinitely precious soul; and the unjustifiable or inexcusable taking of life is always sinful.

Man's Duty to God:
All people are bound by the dictates of the Natural Law and by the revealed Will of God insofar as they can discern them.

Family Life:
The God-given sacramental bond by marriage between one man and one woman is God's loving provision for procreation and family life, and sexual activity is to be practiced only within the bonds of Holy Matrimony.

Man as Sinner:
We recognize a man as the inheritor of original sin. Man is "far gone from original righteousness," and as a rebel against God's authority, he is liable to His righteous judgment.

Man and God's Grace:
We recognize, too, that God loves His children and particularly has shown it forth in the redemption work of the Lord Jesus Christ, and that man cannot be saved by any effort of his own, but by the Grace of God, through repentance and acceptance of God's forgiveness.

Christian's Duty to be Moral:
We believe, therefore, that it is the Church's duty, her members, to bear witness to Christian Morality, follow it in their lives, and reject the world's false standards.

Latest Message

John 14:1-3

Let not your heart be troubled: ye believe in God, believe also in me. In my Father's house are many mansions: if it were not so, I would have told you. I go to prepare a place for you. And if I go and prepare a place for you, I will come again, and receive you unto myself; that where I am, there ye may be also.

REad

News & Stories

Rogation Sunday – The Fifth Sunday after Easter

This sermon reflects on John 16:23–33, focusing especially on Jesus’ promise in verse 33: “In this world, you will have trouble, but take heart; I have overcome the world.” Delivered on Rogation Sunday, it emphasizes comfort, realism, and Christian joy amid suffering.

An altar scene with an open Bible and chalice in the foreground, light streaming from above, subtly suggesting Christ’s ascension and the Spirit’s ongoing presence. This single image visually unites Ascension, Holy Spirit, and Sacraments, which is the sermon’s theological core.

Fourth Sunday after Easter – John 16:5–14

In John 16:5–14, Jesus promises the Holy Spirit as our Helper. This sermon explores how Christ remains with His Church through the Spirit, granting forgiveness, righteousness, and resurrection life through Word and Sacraments.