Good News Club Doctrinal Compliance Agreement
No mental reservation allowed; Teachers must use CEF materials
CEF has a detailed and recognizably fundamentalist 15-point creed
(click link here), one evidently shaped more by the fundamentalist-
modernist doctrinal battles of the past 150 years than by any
balanced presentation of the Gospels. Key points include biblical
inerrancy, original sin, salvation by faith alone, penal substitutionary
atonement, separation from worldly practices, damnation of
unbelievers to the lake of fire, and the reality of Satan.
Article III of CEF’s By-Laws demand that all members and workers of CEF
“wholeheartedly and without mental reservation agree to the [15-point] Statement of
Faith and Doctrinal Protection Policy,” and to signify that agreement by annually signing a
“Worker’s Compliance Agreement” to that effect.
The Worker’s Compliance Agreement commits
workers and volunteers to restrict themselves to “the CEF Statement of Faith and the
approved CEF curriculum.... In teaching Bible lessons in core CEF programs I will
exclusively use the materials approved by CEF.”
CEF’s “Team Leader’s Handbook” reiterates that
each Good News Club meeting “must include a Bible
lesson using CEF visuals and text” and that “the
Gospel message must be presented each time.”
CEF describes Good News Club’s purpose as “to evangelize boys and girls with the
Gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ and establish (disciple) them in the Word of God and in a local church for Christian living.”
But CEF’s Policy Manual prohibits volunteers from encouraging attendance at any church that does not agree with CEF’s
Statement of Faith.
© Intrinsic Dignity
Disclaimers:
Good News Club® is a registered trademark of Child Evangelism Fellowship, Inc. (CEF), headquartered in
Warrenton, Missouri. This site is not affiliated or associated with CEF, which can reached at www.cefonline.com.
This site is also not affiliated or associated with the book “The Good News Club: the Christian Right’s Stealth
Assault on America’s Children” (2012), its author, Katherine Stewart, or its publisher (PublicAffairs).
The materials available at this web site are for informational purposes. While it includes some legal
commentary, these materials should not be regarded as legal advice.