Mark Isham
Statement of Faith
St. Andrew’s Presbyterian Church
Pleasant Hill, California
February 2008
On God
I believe in God, creator of everything that was, is, and is to come. To me, that which I can experience with my five senses, both directly and indirectly, is evidence of God’s work and presence in this world and beyond.
I believe in God’s love and care for me as an individual. My
own life history and its events, circumstances, and characters are evidence of
God’s ever-present involvement with and concern for my life.
I believe in God’s love and care for others. The
convictions and stirrings within my heart are evidence to me that God works
within me to express love and care toward others, and I see events and
circumstances in the lives of others that convince me of God’s love and concern
for them.
On Jesus
I believe that Jesus is an actual historic figure, present
on this earth some two thousand years ago in Judea,
and that the reality of his existence is verified by Biblical accounts and other
historic documents.
I believe that Jesus was the embodiment of the spirit of
God to the world at that time, God’s representative to the world and known as
God’s Son. I base this belief on the words of Jesus himself as we understand
them through modern interpretations of the New Testament.
I believe that Jesus came to show us a better way to
relate to God, a way through the acceptance of God’s love and grace toward us,
and not through mere laws and rituals, and that this message of Jesus resulted
in his crucifixion [at the hands of
religious authorities who felt their power and control were threatened by Jesus’
message of love, grace, and inclusion]. I believe that Jesus died for all
our sins, and that all sin is rooted in either fear, selfish ambition, or the
desire to attain God’s grace by our own works. This belief is based on
Scripture, church tradition and teachings, and my own meditations.
I believe Jesus did, indeed, rise from the dead on the
third day after his crucifixion, and that this miracle is a sign of the promise
I have of eternal existence in fellowship with God and all others to whom God
has extended the privilege of fellowship. [I
believe that God has already extended the privilege to all persons in all times--past,
present, and future--as a gift of grace, which is the Good News of the Gospel,
and that many who claim to be followers of Christ would limit that gift only to
those who adopt their own brand of Christianity. In my viewpoint, this is
heresy.]
I believe that the world as we know it will, indeed, end
someday by God’s decree, although I do not claim to know when or how it will
occur [nor does any other human being
know this now or ever].
On the Holy Spirit
I believe that the Holy Spirit is God’s continued presence
in the world, and that the Holy Spirit’s primary vessels for the expression of
God’s love and care to the world are the church, being the individuals who
comprise the universal fellowship of believers in Jesus as Christ.
However, I
believe the Holy Spirit works in the hearts and minds of various individuals in
different ways with different manifestations, even in the hearts and minds of
those who do not adhere to the Christian tradition.
I believe that the Holy Spirit is the guide on an
individual’s journey of faith toward God, and that I may serve only as a
companion-advisor in another person’s journey. I believe that individuals might be guided by the Holy Spirit even
though those individuals are not aware that they are being guided by God’s
Spirit.
On the Church
As Christ was the embodiment of God’s spirit in his time,
so I believe the church is the embodiment of Christ in our time [as well as others whom God chooses to call
and who choose Christ-like attitudes and actions]. As John said about
Christ, “For God did not send his Son into the world to condemn the world, but
to save the world through Him,” so I believe that the church’s charge is not to
condemn the world, but to continue the saving work of God begun by Jesus by
expressing God’s love and care to others without condition, following Jesus’
example and extending grace to all, thereby building God’s kingdom on earth.
On my individual
relationship with God through faith in Jesus
My own faith journey started from the beginning of my
life. I was raised by Christian parents who were involved in the life of their
church. I attended services and Sunday school all through my childhood and
adolescence. Indeed, I have never stopped attending church throughout my life. I
have been involved in various roles in churches of several different
denominations, but primarily Baptist, Methodist, or Presbyterian. I even earned
my undergraduate degree at a Christian university.
But as regularly flying in an airplane does not make one
an airline pilot, neither does regular attendance and involvement in church
mean one has a close relationship with God. I would say that the most
meaningful moments I have spent with God were not in church, but rather in the
quietness of my home or room, or in a beautiful natural setting such as a
mountaintop or a forest glade or along a coastline or while watching a gorgeous
sunrise or sunset. Those are the times when I have truly felt God’s presence
both within me and outside of me.
The biggest challenge I have faced in my faith development
is my personal identity and how others perceive me. Growing up gay in a small,
conservative town in Texas in the 1970’s and 80’s was not easy, and for the
longest time I believed that there was something in me that needed fixing, that
I needed to first change myself in order to be worthy of God’s grace. To make a
very long story as short as possible, I prayed and prayed for that change, and
nothing happened. Then I prayed for God to help me accept myself with conditions,
and nothing happened. Then I finally prayed for God to help me accept myself as
I am, and the burden was finally lifted. I believe that was the first time in
my life that I experienced God’s love and grace toward me in a very real and
personal way. I respect the journeys that other Christian people have experienced
and what they have come to understand about God through their journeys [as long as those understandings do not
cause harm to others], and I expect them to respect my journey as evidence
of God’s love and grace in my life.
On my role as a
member at St. Andrew’s Presbyterian Church
As a member of St. Andrew’s Presbyterian Church, I will
contribute of my time, talents, and finances as I am able. I will do my best to
treat other members of the congregation with love and respect, and I expect the
same of them in return. I will support the pastors, elders, deacons, and staff
with my prayers and words of encouragement. I will seek to use my natural and
spiritual gifts to contribute to the life of the church. I will prayerfully
consider requests that are made of me, and either accommodate those requests,
or respectfully decline them, as I am led by the Spirit. [NOTE: I will soon complete my first year as a deacon at St. Andrew’s.
I have learned much about serving others…but especially about how to make
coffee for large numbers of people. LOL].