Gospel Halls claim to follow the pattern of New Testament church doctrine and practice found in the
Acts of the Apostles and expounded by the
Apostle Paul in his epistles, notably 1 Corinthians and 1 Timothy. Assemblies meeting in Gospel Halls do not usually print an official statement of faith, but rather, prefer to reference the Bible alone as their authority. The following basic doctrines would be held very widely among them:
Bibliology • The verbal, plenary inspiration of the Bible (all 66 books, but not the
Apocrypha) •
Biblical inerrancy •
Sola scriptura Theology • There is one God existing as three co-equal and co-eternal
divine persons – Father, Son and Holy Spirit.
Creation • The creation of the world and human beings is a supernatural act of God
Christology • Virgin birth of Christ • Christ is both
fully God and fully man (See also --
Hypostatic union) • Christ is the eternal Son of the Father • Christ was/is perfectly sinless and impeccable • Christ is the Head of the universal Church
Soteriology • All humanity is universally condemned as a result of the fall in Eden • Faith in Christ and His substitutionary death and bodily resurrection are the basis of salvation • The new birth is required for sinners to be made right with God •
Justification by grace alone, through faith alone, in Christ alone • Baptism is by immersion in water as a public declaration after personal faith. Baptism contributes nothing to salvation.
Pneumatology • The Holy Spirit indwells believers immediately upon conversion • The ministry of the Holy Spirit in conversion, sanctification, and witnessing
Ecclesiology • Two aspects of "the Church" – firstly the "body of Christ" composed of all believers from Pentecost to the return of Christ, and secondly local assemblies composed of baptized believers who have been received into fellowship. • No
ordained or salaried ministers/priests/pastors • Each assembly is an autonomous locally functioning body of baptized believers • Local assemblies are led by a plurality of pastors/elders and acknowledged • There is no central ecclesiastical authority, formal
creed, or prescribed
liturgy. Although a formal liturgy is not adopted or acknowledged, the generally assumed liturgy follows what is known as the "open meeting," consisting of prayer, bible reading, hymns, and partaking of the Lord's Supper (also referred to as "communion" amongst many denominations), which is common in Open Brethren assemblies.
Eschatology •
Dispensational • Pretribulational
rapture •
Premillennial return of Christ to the earth • Eternal kingdom bliss for the believer and eternal damnation for the unbeliever ==Assembly practices==