Sola Fido, Sola Scriptura, Sola Gratia
The Basis of Reformed Theology
Reformed theology is rather different from many other doctrines. Although every type of theology, even relatively similar ones, have differences, Reformed theology has four which truly set it apart: the beliefs about baptism, theocentricity, faith and grace, and Scripture.
Baptism in a Reformed church is a ceremony that declares publicly that its recipient is given to Christ and made Christ's own. Although it's not necessary to be baptised to be a Christian, we believe, it is encouraged; however unlike the Lutheran denomination we do not believe that baptism alone means you are saved. We practice infant baptism because we hold the assumption that covenant children are Elect (though this is not always the case). Baptism of infants is not a guarantee of their salvation. It is a symbol of what parents hope for their covenant children. Baptism does not, in itself, mean the one baptised will go to Heaven.
Our denomination also holds a theocentric view-in other words, God is the center of everything, not us. This does not mean we are worth any less; merely that God has given us our extrinsic value. Without Him, we would be nothing, because he has created us and given us worth.
Thirdly, we believe we come to salvation by faith alone (sola fido) and grace alone (sola gratia), not by good works or any other way. Only 'by grace and through faith-not of ourselves, for it is the gift of God.' Through God's free willingness to give us the gift of grace, and through our belief in Him which He has graciously shown us to and allowed us to understand (faith) we can be saved.
Finally, we believe that God's Word is the only true authority; we believe that it is truly God's word, written by many diverse authors over many years; and yet, divinely inspired, they wrote a timeless Book which fits together perfectly in every way, with not even one contradiction. We believe that Scripture alone (sola scriptura) is the ever-true source of God's commands and that, since man is fallible, we should always refer to it.
And, oh, yeah-we sing Psalms.
* I hope to post less sporadically this school year and more reliably. I'm planning another article on why RPers sing Psalms, and I may start the researching on that while I'm on vacation these next few weeks. Maybe.*

