All Scripture is breathed out by God and profitable for teaching,
 for reproof,  for correction, and for training in righteousness, that
the man of God may be competent, equipped for every good work. 
2 Timothy 3:16-17

OUR PURPOSE FOR MINISTRY 

This church exists to glorify God.  The congregation seeks to proclaim and apply the whole counsel of God in Jesus Christ to every area of life.  Therefore, our ministry aims to faithfully instruct people in the Scriptures, the only infallible rule for faith and living.  In this congregation you will experience your faith nurtured through expository preaching, meaningful fellowship, care and concern, and through an earnest and vital interest in reaching out to people in order to bring the good news of Jesus Christ to them where they are.  The congregation seeks to serve the greater Oklahoma City area by setting an example of Biblical Christianity and
by planting new churches in surrounding communities.

OUR NAME

"Knox" Orthodox Presbyterian Church is named after John Knox, a Scottish Protestant Reformer who lived from about 1514 to 1572.  Knox was heavily influenced by John Calvin and worked to establish a Reformed Church in Edinburgh.  In 1560, he coauthored the Scots Confession, the confessional statement of the Scottish church.  The Scots Confession eventually gave way to the Westminster Confession of Faith (1647), which is, with a few modifications, the confession of the Orthodox Presbyterian Church today. 

"Orthodox" simply refers to right teaching.  The OPC seeks to uphold right teaching according to the Bible.  The denomination emerged in 1936 out of the modernist controversy of the 1920's as it unfolded in the Presbyterian Church in the U.S.A.  At that time, there were those in the Presbyterian Church who believed it was possible to retain the name Christian while denying basic beliefs in the historical reality of the resurrection of Christ, the virgin birth, miracles, substitutionary atonement, and the inspiration of the Scriptures of the Old and New Testaments.  The men who were instrumental in founding the Orthodox Presbyterian Church believed these to be non-negotiable truths clearly taught in the Bible.  For J. Gresham Machen, one of those instrumental in founding the OPC, anyone who denied the historicity of these basic biblical doctrines cannot be considered a Christian.  In Christianity and Liberalism, Machen argues liberalism is not merely one strand of Christianity but another religion altogether.  How can someone be a Christian without believing, for example, Christ was raised from the dead?  Machen, and the apostle Paul for that matter, argue that is impossible (see 1 Cor 15).  The Orthodox Presbyterian Church seeks to promote "Orthodox" or right teaching as it has been revealed to us by God in the Bible.

"Presbyterian" refers to a form of church government, namely, rule by elders (often called the "session").  While many churches have a plurality of elders overseeing the local church, Knox is part of a denomination that believes accountability of elders at the local level must be maintained by a system of courts or ruling bodies extending beyond the local level.  This is done by establishing what are called presbyteries and a general assembly. All the ministers and certain ruling elders of a particular area form the presbytery, while the general assembly is the governing body of the whole church. The general assembly is made up of ministers and elders commissioned by their respective presbyteries.  All these ruling bodies (session, presbytery, and general assembly) have the same kinds of rights and powers.  These powers are to be used to maintain truth and righteousness and to oppose erroneous opinions and sinful practices that threaten the purity, peace, or progress of the church.