Truth Warrior

Tuesday, April 25, 2006

The Results Are In!

I want to thank each one of you who has participated in these surveys. My personal analysis on the results also serves to answer the question why learn about Baptist history?

We know very little about Baptist history.

The importance of learning Baptist history is that when we see how God has worked in the past we gain courage for today and hope for tomorrow. Though we may uncover some failures and excesses along the way, my hope is that this survey of Baptist history will build the confidence of Baptists, and help others to see and understand our rich heritage as well. As we discover the development of Baptist beliefs and practices in church history, we also learn to value more highly the convictions for which faithful men and women have lived and died.

Organizationally those who have been called Baptists can not really be traced to a period before the sixteenth century. However, it is important to note that Bible believing Baptists do have the same spiritual truth that early New Testament churches had. We possess the completed revelation, which is the final authority from God to man, the Bible.

Baptist history differs greatly from the history of major Protestant denominations.

Historians generally agree that reliable Baptist history differs greatly from the history of major Protestant denominations. For example during the Reformation, many Protestant groups sought merely to reform the Roman Catholic (RC) religious machine, thus the name “Reformation.” The attempt to just reform this state-church was viewed by RC leaders as protesting, thus the name “Protestant.” These Reformed or Protestant denominations often have some form of the state-church model and/or denominational hierarchies and/or other RC traditions. This is true to this present hour. That is why this writer eschews the name “Reformed” and “Protestant” especially when applied to Baptists.

Perhaps from this post you have all ready learned something about Baptist history in the posts to follow I hope to present more information to substantiate my personal analysis in the hope that we continue to come along in a better understanding of the biblical distinctives of Baptists.

5 Comments:

  • I think it is arguable that most Baptist denomiantions can be traced back to the Puritans, who were not really part of the Anabaptist or Radical Reformation movement. I believe this is the case with the Southern Baptists.

    God Bless

    Matthew

    By Blogger Matthew Celestine, at 26/4/06 2:16 PM  

  • Hi Matthew,
    Save that argument brother, there is more to come.

    Thanks for considering that line of thought though.

    Every blessing...
    brother John

    By Blogger J. Wendell, at 26/4/06 3:00 PM  

  • Southern Baptists, as a "denomination" (the forming of which was not their objective), were formed to solve the issue of how to fund missionaries when most churches could not afford to support even one.

    We now, cooperatively, fund over 10,000 missionaries in the US, Canada and around the world.

    Another 5,000 volunteers serve with those missionaries.

    As a denomination, Southern Baptists cannot trace their "roots" any further back than that first "convention."

    As generic Baptists, of course, we trace our roots back to Jesus. (Chuckle, chuckle).

    By Blogger Joe, at 27/4/06 7:57 AM  

  • Hi Joe,
    Thanks for clearing that up, you just saved me tons of time.

    For the benefit of the other reader/s of this post, the Southern Baptists have had and continue to have dynamic impact on this country it is the largest denomination in the USA and possibly the largest "Protestant" denomination in the world.

    The Southern Baptist were among the first respondents to the Katrina catastrophe, and that, if memory serves, without the aid of government support.

    It's a blessing to know you Joe.

    brother John

    By Blogger J. Wendell, at 27/4/06 10:44 AM  

  • J., this looks like a good study. It would be interesting to see the history of Calvinism in Baptist history, IMO.
    :-)

    By Blogger Jonathan Moorhead, at 4/5/06 11:04 PM  

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