Our Beliefs

The Reformed Presbyterian Church is a fellowship of Christians who humbly accept God’s gracious gift of eternal life through Jesus Christ, His Son.

  • We believe that the Bible is the inspired and inerrant Word of God. God is absolutely sovereign in His control of all things, and we depend on Him completely for everything that has to do with our lives and salvation.
  • We follow the system of church government called Presbyterian. We believe it to be based on Bible teaching.  We hold to the teachings of the Westminster Confession of Faith, and of its Shorter and Larger Catechisms.
  • We believe that in worship we are to use only those methods commanded in the Bible for New Testament believers. Therefore, we only sing the Psalms of the Bible, without any instrumental accompaniment, in our worship services.

Please review the RPCNA Constitution.

The bare knowledge of God’s will is inefficacious, it doth not better the heart. Knowledge alone is like a winter sun, which hath no heat or influence; it doth not warm the affections, or purify the conscience. Judas was a great luminary, he knew God’s will, but he was a traitor. — Thomas Watson

Recent Sermon
From the Pastor's Desk
  • American Protestantism and the Cold War

    The Cold War — a time when the threat of nuclear holocaust hung over the world. For more than four decades, Communism and freedom, embodied by the superpowers of the USSR and the USA, vied for the hearts of men — and sometimes fought it out, via client states, in faraway mountains and jungles.
    Behind [...]

  • What Real Saints Do on the Lord’s Day

    By now, the entire world, football fans and others, knows that the New Orleans Saints are the winners of the Super Bowl.
    However, am I the only one to notice the ironic nickname of the professional football team from the Crescent City?
    A “saint” in the Biblical sense is someone who is “holy”— that is, a person [...]

  • The Sacrament of Communion

    The Church universal recognizes two sacraments, viz., baptism and the Lord’s Supper.  The Lord’s Supper also is known as communion (since it symbolizes the communion we enjoy with God and with one another) and as the Eucharist (from a Greek word, meaning “thanksgiving”, since we should be overwhelmed with gratitude and thanks for the Lord’s [...]

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