Western Australian Consolidated Acts[s. 5]
[Heading amended by No. 19 of 2010 s. 4.]
1. The Congregational
Union of Australia, the Methodist Church of Australasia and the Presbyterian
Church of Australia, in fellowship with the whole Church Catholic, and seeking
to bear witness to that unity which is both Christ’s gift and his will
for the Church, hereby enter into union under the name of the Uniting Church
in Australia. They pray that this act may be to the glory of God the Father,
the Son and the Holy Spirit. They praise God for his gifts of grace to each of
them in years past; they acknowledge that none of them has responded to
God’s love with a full obedience; they look for a continuing renewal in
which God will use their common worship, witness and service to set forth the
word of salvation for all mankind. To this end they declare their readiness to
go forward together in sole loyalty to Christ the living Head of the Church;
they remain open to constant reform under his Word; and they seek a wider
unity in the power of the Holy Spirit. In this union these Churches commit
their members to acknowledge one another in love and joy as believers in our
Lord Jesus Christ, to hear anew the commission of the Risen Lord to make
disciples of all nations, and daily to seek to obey his will. In entering into
this union the Churches concerned are mindful that the Church of God is
committed to serve the world for which Christ died, and that she awaits with
hope the day of the Lord Jesus Christ on which it will be clear that the
kingdom of this world has become the kingdom of our Lord and of his Christ,
and he shall reign for ever and ever.
2. The Uniting Church
lives and works within the faith and unity of the One Holy Catholic and
Apostolic Church. She recognises that she is related to other Churches in ways
which give expression, however partially, to that unity in faith and mission.
Recalling the Ecumenical Councils of the early centuries, she looks forward to
a time when the faith will be further elucidated, and the Church’s unity
expressed, in similar Councils. She thankfully acknowledges that the uniting
Churches were members of the World Council of Churches and other ecumenical
bodies, and she will seek to maintain such membership. She remembers the
special relationship which obtained between the several uniting Churches and
other Churches of similar traditions, and will continue to learn from their
witness and be strengthened by their fellowship. She is encouraged by the
existence of United Churches in which these and other traditions have been
incorporated, and wishes to learn from their experience. She believes that
Christians in Australia are called to bear witness to a unity of faith and
life in Christ which transcends cultural and economic, national and racial
boundaries, and to this end she commits herself to seek special relationships
with Churches in Asia and the Pacific. She declares her desire to enter more
deeply into the faith and mission of the Church in Australia, by working
together and seeking union with other Churches.
3. The Uniting Church
acknowledges that the faith and unity of the Holy Catholic and Apostolic
Church are built upon the one Lord Jesus Christ. The Church preaches Christ
the risen crucified One and confesses him as Lord to the glory of God the
Father. In Jesus Christ God was reconciling the world to himself. In love for
the world, God gave his Son to take away the world’s sin.
Jesus of Nazareth
announced the sovereign grace of God whereby the poor in spirit could receive
the Father’s love. He himself, in his life and death, made the response
of humility, obedience and trust which God had long sought in vain. In raising
him to live and reign, God confirmed and completed the witness which Jesus
bore to him on earth, he reasserted his claim over the whole of his creation,
he pardoned sinners, and made in Jesus a representative beginning of a new
order of righteousness and love. To God in Christ men are called to respond in
faith. To this end God has sent forth his Spirit that men may trust him as
their Father, and acknowledge Jesus as Lord. The whole work of man’s
salvation is effected by the sovereign grace of God alone.
The Church as the
fellowship of the Holy Spirit confesses Jesus as Lord over her own life, she
also confesses that he is Head over all things, the beginning of a new
creation, of a new mankind. God in Christ has given to men in the Church the
Holy Spirit as a pledge and foretaste of that coming reconciliation and
renewal which is the end in view for the whole creation. The Church’s
call is to serve that end: to be a fellowship of reconciliation, a body within
which the diverse gifts of its members are used for the building up of the
whole, an instrument through which Christ may work and bear witness to
himself. The Church lives between the time of Christ’s death and
resurrection and the final consummation of all things which he will bring; she
is a pilgrim people, always on the way towards a promised goal; here she does
not have a continuing city but seeks one to come. On the way Christ feeds her
with Word and Sacraments, and she has the gift of the Spirit in order that she
may not lose the way.
4. The Uniting Church
acknowledges that the Church is able to live and endure through the changes of
history only because her Lord comes, addresses, and deals with men in and
through the news of his completed work. Christ who is present when he is
preached among men is the Word of the God who acquits the guilty, who gives
life to the dead and who brings into being what otherwise could not exist.
Through human witness in word and action, and in the power of the Holy Spirit,
Christ reaches out to command men’s attention and awaken their faith; he
calls them into the fellowship of his sufferings, to be the disciples of a
crucified Lord; in his own strange way he constitutes, rules and renews them
as his Church.
5. The Uniting Church
acknowledges that the Church has received the books of the Old and New
Testaments as unique prophetic and apostolic testimony, in which she hears the
Word of God and by which her faith and obedience are nourished and regulated.
When the Church preaches Jesus Christ, her message is controlled by the
Biblical witnesses. The Word of God on whom man’s salvation depends is
to be heard and known from Scripture appropriated in the worshipping and
witnessing life of the Church. The Uniting Church lays upon her members the
serious duty of reading the Scriptures, commits her ministers to preach from
these and to administer the sacraments of Baptism and the Lord’s Supper
as effective signs of the Gospel set forth in the Scriptures.
6. The Uniting Church
acknowledges that Christ has commanded his Church to proclaim the Gospel both
in words and in the two visible acts of Baptism and the Lord’s Supper.
He himself acts in and through everything that the Church does in obedience to
his commandment: it is he who by the gift of the Spirit confers upon men the
forgiveness, the fellowship, the new life and the freedom which the
proclamation and actions promise; and it is he who awakens, purifies and
advances in men the faith and hope in which alone such benefits can be
accepted.
7. The Uniting Church
acknowledges that Christ incorporates men into his body by Baptism. In this
way he enables them to participate in his own baptism, which was accomplished
once on behalf of all in his death and burial, and which was made available to
all when, risen and ascended, he poured out the Holy Spirit at Pentecost.
Baptism into Christ’s body initiates men into his life and mission in
the world, so that they are united in one fellowship of love, service,
suffering and joy, in one family of the Father of all in heaven and earth, and
in the power of the one Spirit. The Uniting Church will baptize those who
confess the Christian faith, and children who are presented for baptism and
for whose instruction and nourishment in the faith the Church takes
responsibility.
8. The Uniting Church
acknowledges that Christ signifies and seals his continuing presence with his
people in the Lord’s Supper or the Holy Communion, constantly repeated
in the life of the Church. In this sacrament of his broken body and outpoured
blood the risen Lord feeds his baptized people on their way to the final
inheritance of the Kingdom. Thus the people of God, through faith and the gift
and power of the Holy Spirit, have communion with their Saviour, make their
sacrifice of praise and thanksgiving, proclaim the Lord’s death, grow
together into Christ, are strengthened for their participation in the mission
of Christ in the world, and rejoice in the foretaste of the Kingdom which he
will bring to consummation.
9. The Uniting Church
enters into unity with the Church throughout the ages by her use of the
confessions known as the Apostles’ Creed and the Nicene Creed. She
receives these as authoritative statements of the Catholic Faith, framed in
the language of their day and used by Christians in many days, to declare and
to guard the right understanding of that faith. She commits her ministers and
instructors to careful study of these creeds and to the discipline of
interpreting their teaching in a later age. She commends to ministers and
congregations their use for instruction in the faith, and their use in worship
as acts of allegiance to the Holy Trinity.
10. The Uniting Church
continues to learn of the teaching of the Holy Scriptures in the obedience and
freedom of faith, and in the power of the promised gift of the Holy Spirit,
from the witness of reformation fathers as expressed in various ways in the
Scots Confession of Faith (1560), the Heidelberg Catechism (1563), the
Westminster Confession of Faith (1647), and the Savoy Declaration (1658). In
like manner she will listen to the preaching of John Wesley in his Forty-Four
Sermons (1793). She will commit her ministers and instructors to study these
statements, so that the congregation of Christ’s people may again and
again be reminded of the grace which justifies them through faith, of the
centrality of the person and work of Christ the justifier, and of the need for
a constant appeal to Holy Scripture.
11. The Uniting Church
acknowledges that God has never left his Church without faithful and scholarly
interpreters of Scripture, or without those who have reflected deeply upon,
and acted trustingly in obedience to, his living Word. In particular she
enters into the inheritance of literary, historical and scientific enquiry
which has characterised recent centuries, and thanks God for the knowledge of
his ways with men which are open to and informed faith. She lives within a
world-wide fellowship of Churches in which she will learn to sharpen her
understanding of the will and purpose of God by contact with contemporary
thought. Within that fellowship she also stands in relation to contemporary
societies in ways which will help her to understand her own nature and
mission. She thanks God for the continuing witness and service of evangelist,
of scholar, of prophet and of martyr. She prays that she may be ready when
occasion demands to confess her Lord in fresh words and deeds.
12. The Uniting Church
recognises and accepts as her members all who are recognised as members of the
uniting Churches at the time of union. Thereafter membership is open to all
who are baptized into the Holy Catholic Church in the name of the Father and
of the Son and of the Holy Spirit. The Uniting Church will seek ways in which
the baptized may have confirmed to them the promises of God, and be led to
deeper commitment to the faith and service into which they have been baptized.
To this end she commits herself to undertake, with other Christians, to
explore and develop the relation of baptism to confirmation and to
participation in the Holy Communion.
13. The Uniting Church
affirms that every member of the Church is engaged to confess the faith of
Christ crucified and to be his faithful servant. She acknowledges with
thanksgiving that the one Spirit has endowed the members of his Church with a
diversity of gifts, and that there is no gift without its corresponding
service: all ministries have a part in the ministry of Christ. The Uniting
Church, at the time of union, will recognise and accept the ministries of
those who have been called to any task or responsibility in the uniting
Churches. The Uniting Church will thereafter provide for the exercise by men
and women of the gifts God bestows upon them, and will order her life in
response to his call to enter more fully into her mission.
14. The Uniting
Church, from inception, will seek the guidance of the Holy Spirit to recognise
among her members men and women called of God to preach the Gospel, to lead
the people in worship, to care for the flock, to share in government and to
serve those in need in the world.
To this end:
(a) The
Uniting Church recognises and accepts as ministers of the Word all who have
held such office in any of the uniting Churches, and who, being in good
standing in one of those Churches at the time of union, adhere to the Basis of
Union. This adherence and acceptance may take place at the time of union or at
a later date. Since the Church lives by the power of the Word, she is assured
that God, who has never left himself without witness to that Word, will,
through Christ and in the power of the Holy Spirit, call and set apart members
of the Church to be ministers of the Word. These will preach the Gospel,
administer the sacraments and exercise pastoral care so that all may be
equipped for their particular ministries, thus maintaining the apostolic
witness to Christ in the Church. Such members will be called Ministers and
their setting apart will be known as Ordination.
The Presbytery will
ordain by prayer and the laying on of hands in the presence of a worshipping
congregation. In this act of ordination the Church praises the ascended Christ
for conferring gifts upon men. She recognises his call of the individual to be
his minister; she prays for the enabling power of the Holy Spirit to equip him
for that service. By the participation in the act of ordination of those
already ordained, the Church bears witness to God’s faithfulness and
declares the hope by which she lives. In company with other Christians the
Uniting Church will seek for a renewed understanding of the way in which the
congregation participates in ordination and of the significance of ordination
in the life of the Church.
(b) The
Uniting Church recognises and accepts as elders or leaders those who at the
time of union hold the office of elder, deacon or leader appointed to exercise
spiritual oversight, and who, being in good standing in any of the uniting
Churches at the time of union, adhere to the Basis of Union. She will seek to
recognise in the congregation those endowed by the Spirit with gifts fitting
them for rule and oversight. Such members will be called Elders or Leaders.
(c) The
Uniting Church recognises and accepts as deaconesses those who at the time of
union are deaconesses in good standing in any of the uniting Churches and who
adhere to the Basis of Union. She believes that the Holy Spirit will continue
to call women to share in this way in the varied services and witness of the
Church, and she will make provision for this. Such members will be called
Deaconesses.
The Uniting Church
recognises that at the time of union many seek a renewal of the diaconate in
which men and women offer their time and talents, representatively and on
behalf of God’s people, in the service of mankind in the face of
changing needs. She will so order her life that she remains open to the
possibility that God may call men and women into such a renewed diaconate: in
these circumstances she may decide to call them Deacons and Deaconesses,
whether the service is within or beyond the life of the congregation.
(d) The
Uniting Church recognises and accepts as lay preachers those who at the time
of union are accredited lay preachers (local preachers) in any of the uniting
Churches and who adhere to the Basis of Union. She will seek to recognise
those endowed with the gift of the Spirit for this task, will provide for
their training, and will gladly wait upon that fuller understanding of the
obedience of the Christian man which should flow from their ministry. Such
members will be called Lay Preachers.
In the above
sub-paragraphs the phrase “adhere to the Basis of Union” is
understood as willingness to live and work within the faith and unity of the
One Holy Catholic and Apostolic Church as that way is described in this Basis.
Such adherence allows for difference of opinion in matters which do not enter
into the substance of the faith.
The Uniting Church
recognises that the type and duration of ministries to which men and women are
called vary from time to time and place to place, and that in particular she
comes into being in a period of reconsideration of traditional forms of the
ministry, and of renewed participation of all the people of God in the
preaching of the Word, the administration of the sacraments, the building up
of the fellowship in mutual love, in commitment to Christ’s mission, and
in service of the world for which he died.
15. The Uniting Church
recognises that responsibility for government in the Church belongs to the
people of God by virtue of the gifts and tasks which God has laid upon them.
The Uniting Church therefore so organises her life that locally, regionally
and nationally government will be entrusted to representative, men and women,
bearing the gifts and graces with which God has endowed them for the building
up of his Church. The Uniting Church is governed by a series of inter-related
councils, each of which has its tasks and responsibilities in relation both to
the Church and the world.
The Uniting Church
acknowledges that Christ alone is supreme in his Church, and that he may speak
to her through any of her councils. It is the task of every council to wait
upon God’s Word, and to obey his will in the matters allocated to its
oversight. Each council will recognise the limits of its own authority and
give heed to other councils of the Church, so that the whole body of believers
may be united by mutual submission in the service of the Gospel.
To this end the
Uniting Church makes provision in her constitution for the following:
(a) The
Congregation is the embodiment in one place of the One Holy Catholic and
Apostolic Church, worshipping, witnessing and serving as a fellowship of the
Spirit in Christ. Its members meet regularly to hear God’s Word, to
celebrate the sacraments, to build one another up in love, to share in the
wider responsibilities of the Church, and to serve the world. The congregation
will recognise the need for a diversity of agencies for the better ordering of
her life in such matters as education, administration and finance.
(b) The
Elders’ or Leaders’ Meeting (the council within a congregation or
group of congregations) consists of the minister and those who are called to
share with him in oversight. It is responsible for building up the
congregation in faith and love, sustaining its members in hope, and leading
them into a fuller participation in Christ’s mission in the world.
(c) The
Presbytery (the district council) consists of such ministers, elders/leaders
and other Church members as are appointed thereto, the majority of
elders/leaders and Church members being appointed by
Elders’/Leaders’ Meetings and/or congregations, on a basis
determined by the Synod. Its function is to perform all the acts of oversight
necessary to the life and mission of the Church in the area for which it is
responsible, except over those agencies which are directly responsible to the
Synod or Assembly. It will in particular exercise oversight over the
congregations within its bounds, encouraging them to strengthen one
another’s faith, to bear one another’s burdens, and exhorting them
to fulfil their high calling in Christ Jesus. It will promote those wider
aspects of the work of the Church committed to it by the Synod or Assembly.
(d) The
Synod (the regional council) consists of such ministers, elders/leaders and
other Church members as are appointed thereto, the majority being appointed by
Presbyteries, Elders’/Leaders’ Meetings or congregations, on a
basis determined by the Assembly. It has responsibility for the general
oversight, direction and administration of the Church’s worship, witness
and service in the region allotted to it, with such powers and authorities as
may from time to time be determined by the Assembly.
(e) The
Assembly (the national council) consists of such ministers, elders/leaders and
other Church members as are appointed thereto, the majority being appointed by
the Presbyteries and Synods. It has determining responsibility for matters of
doctrine, worship, government and discipline, including the promotion of the
Church’s mission, the establishment of standards of theological training
and reception of ministers from other communions, and the taking of further
measures towards the wider union of the Church. It makes the guiding decisions
on the tasks and authority to be exercised by other councils. It is obligatory
for it to seek the concurrence of other councils, and on occasion of the
congregations of the Church, on matters of vital importance to the life of the
Church.
The first Assembly,
however, will consist of members of the uniting Churches, appointed in equal
numbers by them in such manner as they may determine, and is vested with such
powers as may be necessary to establish the Uniting Church according to the
provisions of the Basis of Union.
Until such time as
councils other than the Assembly can be established, the Uniting Church
recognises and accepts the various agencies for the discharge of
responsibility which are in existence in the uniting Churches. She invites any
such continuing bodies immediately to enter into a period of self-examination
in which members are asked to consider afresh their common commitment to the
Church’s mission and their demonstration of her unity. She prays that
God will enable them to order their lives for these purposes.
16. The Uniting Church
recognises the responsibility and freedom which belong to councils to
acknowledge gifts among members for the fulfilment of particular functions.
She sees in pastoral care exercised personally on behalf of the Church an
expression of the fact that God always deals with men personally: he would
have his fatherly care known among men; he would have individual members take
upon themselves the form of a servant.
17. The Uniting Church
acknowledges that the demand of the Gospel, the response of the Church to the
Gospel, and the discipline which it requires are partly expressed in the
formulation by the Church of her law. The aim of such law is to confess
God’s will for the life of his Church; but since law is received by man
and framed by him, it is always subject to revision in order that it may
better serve the Gospel. The Uniting Church will keep her law under constant
review so that her life may increasingly be directed to the service of God and
man, and her worship to a true and faithful setting forth of, and response to,
the Gospel of Christ. The law of the Church will speak of the free obedience
of the children of God, and will look to the final reconciliation of mankind
under God’s sovereign grace.
18. The Uniting Church
affirms that she belongs to the people of God on the way to the promised end.
She prays God that, through the gift of the Spirit, he will constantly correct
that which is erroneous in her life, will bring her into deeper unity with
other Churches, and will use her worship, witness and service to his eternal
glory through Jesus Christ the Lord. Amen.