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  2. Profession of faith - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Profession_of_faith

    In Baptist, Pentecostal and nondenominational Christianity, which adheres to the doctrine of the believers' Church, the profession of faith consists in witnessing to one's personal conversion and to one's faith in Jesus, before the believer's baptism. [13] [14] This rite is thus reserved for adolescents and adults. [15]

  3. Religious profession - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religious_profession

    Additional conditions for making perpetual profession are a minimum age of 21 years and the completion of at least three years of temporary profession. [6] Religious profession is often associated with the granting of a religious habit, which the newly professed receives from the superior of the institute or from the bishop. Acceptance of the ...

  4. Faith in Christianity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Faith_in_Christianity

    Faith (pistis) in Eastern Christianity is an activity of the nous or spirit. Faith being characteristic of the noesis or noetic experience of the spirit. Faith here being defined as intuitive truth meaning as a gift from God, faith is one of God's uncreated energies (Grace too is another of God's uncreated energies and gifts). [17]

  5. Confirmation (Lutheran Church) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Confirmation_(Lutheran_Church)

    Confirmation in the Lutheran Church is a public profession of faith prepared for by long and careful instruction. In English, it may also be referred to as "affirmation of baptism", and is a mature and public reaffirmation of the faith which "marks the completion of the congregation's program of confirmation ministry".

  6. Nicene Creed - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nicene_Creed

    Icon/Symbol of the Faith is the usual designation for the revised version of Constantinople 381 in the Orthodox churches, where this is the only creed used in the liturgy. [citation needed] Profession of Faith of the 318 Fathers refers specifically to the version of Nicaea 325 (traditionally, 318 bishops took part at the First Council of Nicaea).

  7. Baptists - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baptists

    Baptist churches generally subscribe to the doctrines of soul competency (the responsibility and accountability of every person before God), sola fide (salvation by faith alone), sola scriptura (the Bible is the sole infallible authority, as the rule of faith and practice) and congregationalist church government.

  8. Christianity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christianity

    From earlier than the times of the Nicene Creed (325) Christianity advocated [168] the triune mystery-nature of God as a normative profession of faith. According to Roger E. Olson and Christopher Hall, through prayer, meditation, study and practice, the Christian community concluded "that God must exist as both a unity and trinity", codifying ...

  9. Confirmation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Confirmation

    Among those Christians who practise confirmation during their teenage years, the practice may be perceived, secondarily, as a coming of age rite. [2] [3] In many Protestant denominations, such as the Lutheran, Anglican, Methodist and Reformed traditions, confirmation is a rite that often includes a profession of faith by an