Disclaimer: Clarifying the Use of the Term “Apostolic”

Restoring Apostolic Faith uses the term “Apostolic” in its historical and theological sense: referring to the faith, doctrine, and practices of the 1st-3rd/4th century Church, grounded in the teachings of Jesus Christ and His apostles, as witnessed in Scripture and the early patristic writings (e.g., Clement, Ignatius, Polycarp, and Irenaeus).

This project is not affiliated with, representative of, nor supportive of the doctrinal systems commonly referred to today as the Apostolic MovementOneness PentecostalismUPCIApostolic Holiness, or any other modern denominational structure using the same label.

We affirm the Trinity, the Incarnation, the crucifixion and bodily resurrection of Christ, repentance, faith, baptism, and obedient discipleship as the framework of Christian life, we do not teach:

• Modalism / Oneness theology

• The claim that speaking in tongues is either current nor required initial evidence of receiving the Holy Spirit

• Denominational boundary claims (e.g., “the only true church”)

• 20th-century doctrinal innovations presented as original Christianity

Our purpose is to recover, teach, and live the faith as it was understood before later doctrinal developments, councils, and denominational patterns—seeking continuity with the historic Church rather than modern reinterpretations of it.

If you came here seeking a contemporary Apostolic/Pentecostal framework, please note that this is something distinctly different—older, deeper, and rooted in the earliest witness of the Church.