Every fellowship of ministers is distinct because of a
common heritage, spiritual belief system or focus. Even
as the Children of Israel in biblical times were all one
people of God and yet had distinct tribes, so it is with
the Body of Christ today. From God's perspective, there
is only one Church. It includes all believers living and
dead all over the world who have distinguished themselves
by their separation unto the covenants of God through faith.
However, within the family of God there are smaller groupings
of people and leaders that God has brought together based
on a common vision and understanding of God's Eternal Purpose.
This is similar to the tribes within the nation of Israel.
Each tribe has its own distinct characteristic based on
a common heritage and root system.
In biological terms, the human race includes everyone.
However, within this race of mankind there are families
of people who have a common genetic history and thus a certain
biological compatibility. They share a common thread (DNA)
in their biological makeup that has a great deal to do with
how they will actually express themselves. Every family
has a "family resemblance".
MFI has certain things in its spiritual "DNA" that make
it distinct. Much of this is integrally related to the history
of MFI and the belief system of those who founded the Fellowship.
When someone joins MFI, they join a spiritual family with
a DNA code that is vital to its ability to fulfill the express
purposes of the Fellowship.
Davidic Praise and
Worship.
We believe that the pattern for New Testament worship
is to be found in the Davidic order of worship described
in the Psalms and birthed in the Tabernacle of David in
the Old Testament. Within this belief is the concept that
we as believers are to be spiritual priests who offer
up spiritual sacrifices to God. One of the primary sacrifices
is the "fruit of our lips" or our audible worship given
to God (Hebrews 13:15). Davidic worship is demonstrative
worship that is characterized by the biblical expressions
of clapping, shouting, singing, dancing, lifting hands,
bowing and kneeling.
Prophecy and the Laying
on of Hands.
We believe that prophecy and the ministry of the prophet
are to be fully operational in the Church today. If the
church is going to be filled with vision and under the
full direction of Jesus, the prophetic voice must be heard.
We do not accept that this and other ministries were to
be confined to an "apostolic age" but they are to be fully
activated until the physical return of Christ.
Prayer and Intercession.
We believe that both personal and corporate prayer are
absolutely essential if the Church is to succeed. The
New Testament Church was birthed in prayer, it continued
steadfast in prayer and bathed all of its activities and
ministries in prayer. In fact, when the Bible labels the
Church or the House of God, the label it gives it is "a
house of prayer for all nations" (Isaiah 56:7). If that
is the name that God has chosen for His house, prayer
should be a major focus of every church. Prayer is a pipeline
through which the Spirit to moves.
Local Church.
We believe that the local church is the aspect of the
church that God is focusing on building in these days.
While we all recognize and understand that the larger
Body of Christ encompasses all believers, it is on the
local scene that all of the plans and purposes of God
are going to be demonstrated and fulfilled. Every believer
must find himself or herself in right relationship to
God and to a specific local church in order to find a
place of ministry and fruitfulness. It is essential that
rather than criticizing the Church, we do everything we
can to make the Church of Jesus Christ glorious. The Church
is God's instrument to extend His purposes in the earth
today. It is the instrument of the Kingdom.
Eldership Church Government.
We believe that God has a plan and pattern for government
in the local church. It is the same form of government
that God has used in every institution that He has established.
We refer to this as team ministry or an "eldership" form
of government with a senior pastor or chief elder. This
is a form of government that involves equality and headship
which is modeled in the Godhead, established in the natural
family, set up by God in Israel, used in the synagogue
and ordained for the Church in the New Testament (Hebrews
13:17; Acts 14:23; Titus 1:5). The elders are to the Church
what parents are to a family. They are the spiritual parents
of the local assembly and are responsible before God to
raise up and equip the members of the church to be able
to function in their God ordained callings.
Restoration of the
Church.
We believe that the Church which began with great power
and anointing fully functioning as God's instrument in
the earth went through a period of serious spiritual and
doctrinal decline through the Middle Ages. Since Martin
Luther, God has been in the process of restoring the Church
to her former glory and power. As we get nearer to Christ's
return we can expect this process of restoration to become
complete and we can expect the Church to rise up and be
what God has designed for her to be (Isaiah 60:1-5). The
Church is the final instrument in the hands of the Lord
to extend His kingdom in the earth. Some other program
or institution will not replace the Church, but the Church
will finish the commission laid upon it by Jesus Himself.
Restoration of the
Family.
We believe that at the same time God is restoring His
Church, He is also restoring the natural family to its
proper place and function (Jeremiah 31:1). One of the
things that God is doing is turning the hearts of the
fathers to the children and the hearts of the children
to the fathers (Malachi 4:6). God is in the process of
healing marriages, strengthening parents and teaching
men and women more about their God given roles. He is
doing this because He wants to use a godly seed in this
generation to rise up and destroy the works of the wicked
one. Such a progeny will need to be parented by those
who understand God's purpose and have kingdom priorities
established in their life.
House to House Ministry.
We believe that the early church focused on two equally
important expressions of its assembly life. There was
the corporate gathering that was vital for the equipping
of the saints and corporate expressions of prayer and
worship. In addition, there was ministry from house to
house for the sake of fellowship, relationship, nurture
and evangelism (Acts 5:42). If the church today is going
to be successful in its ministry to the world and to itself,
both expressions must be cultivated to the fullest extent.
The Kingdom and the
Church.
We believe that the extension of the Kingdom of God is
the function and ministry of the Church. The Church, which
is composed of both Jew and Gentile, is God's instrument
in the earth to establish God's rule and His reign. The
Church is the instrument; the Kingdom is the message.
If the Church is going to fulfill its God given calling,
it must reclaim its primary function of bringing the lost
to Christ and extending the borders of God's kingdom until
the glory of the Lord covers the earth as the waters cover
the sea.
The Five Fold Ministry.
We believe that the ministries listed in Ephesians 4:11
are to be fully functioning right up to the return of
Christ. This includes Apostles and Prophets, not just
Pastors, Teachers and Evangelists. All of these ministries
are needed if the Body of Christ is going to be properly
equipped and the Church is going to be properly built
up.
The Gifts of the Spirit.
We believe that the gifts of the Spirit enumerated in
I Corinthians 12:7-11 are not only for today, but should
be desired, sought after and evidenced in every church.
If there was ever a time that these gifts were needed,
it is today. We do not believe that these gifts were only
for the embryonic church of the first 100 years. They
are to be a part of the Church right up to the return
of Christ for His perfected Bride.
Unity and Diversity.
We believe that every local church should be inclusive
and actively seek to include all peoples of all races,
ethnic origins and social and economic standings. The
Church of Jesus Christ is a multi-ethnic group that has
within it the seeds for demolishing the scourge of racial
prejudice. God's purpose is to make all people into one
for the glory of God.
Church Planting and
World Missions.
We believe that the Church has been given the commission
by Christ to go into the entire world with the message
of the Kingdom in an attempt to bring all men to a saving
knowledge of Jesus Christ. We also believe that the result
of this mission should be the establishing of local churches
in every community in every country of the world.
Raising Up and Releasing
Lay Leaders.
We believe that five fold ministers are to be servant leaders
that serve the other ministries of the Body of Christ by
equipping and releasing them to function in their God ordained
ministries.
Ministers Fellowship International has a strong conviction
regarding the autonomy of the Local Church. This foundational
conviction effects everything that MFI does and it serves
as a guide to every policy that MFI establishes. MFI constantly
seeks to balance a loving and caring responsibility that
we have to all believers in Christ with a recognition of
the special place that God has set everyone in their own
local churches. MFI's belief can be seen in three ways.
Philosophy of MFI
Ministers Touching Ministers
MFI is not a fellowship of churches, it is a fellowship
of ministers. This means that ministers of like vision and
doctrine voluntarily associate themselves with other ministries
for the purpose of fellowship, encouragement, vision expansion,
equipping and strength.
This also means that the members of the fellowship themselves
need to be aware that when they become a part of MFI, they
are not only asking for resources and strength, but they
are also indicating that they desire to be that for others
within the fellowship.
MFI provides a structure and a context where these meaningful
relationships can be cultivated, but it is up to each member
along with the MFI leadership to sense a personal responsibility
for one another as "our brother's keeper".
Autonomy with Accountability
One of the strong doctrinal foundations of MFI is its conviction
that every local church is an autonomous organization. That
means that each local church is to be self-governing, self-supporting
and self-propagating. It is because of this teaching that
even forming such a fellowship was a sensitive task.
One the one hand, there was a desire to be a catalyst to
bring pastors and church leaders together for the purpose
of fellowship, relationship and strength. But on the other
hand, there was an equally strong desire to not violate
the structural integrity and authority of the local assembly.
Many groups have begun as a fellowship, but soon became
a denomination where the central headquarters began to exert
a growing measure of control on the local scene. MFI has
taken strong measures to avoid this pitfall. By organizing
the Fellowship in such a way that the things that give denominations
control cannot become a part of the Fellowship without a
vote of the MFI membership, MFI has safeguarded itself.
The three things that MFI does not do are:
1. MFI does not credential ministries.
The local church is to be the place where ministries
are birthed, raised up, trained, equipped, licensed
and ordained. If an organization has the power to ordain
someone, it also has the power to decommission them
and thus control that ministry. MFI holds the view that
ordination is the specific function of the local church
and must be administered on that level.
2. MFI does not own local church properties.
Often local churches do not own their church properties,
but their properties are held by an outside organization.
This can easily become another issue of control. Even
though it has been the people's money that built and
established the church facility, an organization can
easily impose its will on a congregation because its
name is on the legal documents.
3. MFI does not control local church missions.
Again, the local church is to be the sending body for
missionaries. Certainly local churches may voluntarily
cooperate with each other on missionaries and missions
projects, but no outside organization should demand
that the mission money of a the local church be spent
in a prescribed way. This again takes away authority
and resources from the local church for the development
of their own central missions strategy.
In addition to these three restrictions on MFI as a
fellowship, there is another way to ensure that this
fellowship will not become a denomination in the traditional
sense.
4. MFI does not maintain a central Bible School.
While it is critical that each local church provides
a way to train future leaders for the work of the Kingdom,
it is not the function of a central school run by the
covering organization to train, ordain and sanction
all bona fide ministries. There are many ways that ministries
may be trained that do not necessarily require them
to leave their local churches to attend a central Bible
School. Should ministries choose to be trained in a
Bible School setting, it should be the choice of the
person involved in conjunction with the counsel of their
local church leadership.
In spite of the fact that MFI does not subscribe to organizational
control, it does recognize the need that pastors have for
a sense of spiritual family and identity. There is a need
to belong to something greater than oneself. There is a
need for committed relationships with like-minded ministries
who can be a source of strength and a resource to them in
time of need. There is a need for accountability to someone
you can trust.
MFI is just that for many pastors and leaders. When they
come into MFI, they find new friends. They find spiritual
brothers and sisters, and, at the same time, they find spiritual
fathers and mothers who can provide wisdom and counsel in
times of need. They enter into a relationship where they
can watch over one another in a loving and caring way.
Covering without Control
MFI is a covering body only in so far as it provides a
context for spiritual relationship and oversight in a balanced
fashion without having any official or legal control over
any pastor or church.
As a fellowship of ministers, MFI provides a context for
ministers to find strengthening and supportive relationships
with other "peer" and "fatherly" ministries. However, these
relationships are voluntary and unofficial and are not intended
to replace the legal and official authority of the local
church.
All ministries including the senior pastor should be under
the legal authority of and accountable to their own church
elder board. If a pastor has no elder board, then he should
be submitted to the accountability of another "mother" church
while that elder board is in the process of forming.
MFI does not seek to cover churches or their ministers
in any direct or legal sense. However, the members of MFI,
and the churches to which they minister, may provide this
more "official oversight" for each other. In doing so they
would not be acting as official representatives of MFI,
but they would be acting as representatives of their own
local churches.
In the event that a senior pastor member of MFI was to
be disqualified from ministry it would not be the place
of MFI to officially discipline him. It is the responsibility
of that local church and/or its covering "mother" church
to judge and administer discipline officially. However,
the local church may call upon MFI leaders or members to
assist in these matters. In doing so, MFI leaders would
not be acting on behalf of MFI as much as they would be
acting as individuals at the request of the local elder
board.
In the event that a church elder board was to call MFI
for help in any such matter, their participation would be
in a purely advisory role to the local elder board. MFI
would not be involved directly in any pastoral discipline
in the church setting, that is the function of the local
church itself. MFI's only official disciplinary action could
be the removal of a disqualified minister from membership
in MFI.