l) proclaim Jesus Christ as our Gate to the realm of
God;
2) recognize the faithfulness of other people who have other names for
the gateway to God’s realm;
3) understand our sharing of bread and wine in Jesus’s name to be a
representation of God’s feast for all peoples;
4) invite all sorts and conditions of people to join in our worship
and in our common life as full partners, including (but not limited to)
believers and agnostics, conventional Christians and questioning skeptics,
homosexuals and heterosexuals, females and males, the despairing and the
hopeful, those of all races and cultures, and those of all classes and
abilities, without imposing on them the necessity of becoming like us;
5) think that the way we treat one another and other people is more
important than the way we express our beliefs;
6) find more grace in the search for meaning than in absolute certainty,
in the questions than in the answers;
7) see ourselves as a spiritual community in which we discover the resources
required for our work in the world: striving for justice and peace
among all people, bringing hope to those Jesus called the least of his
sisters and brothers.
8) recognize that our faith entails costly discipleship, renunciation
of privilege, and conscientious resistance to evil – as has always been
the tradition of the church.