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What
is an Independent Fundamental Baptist Church?
by Cooper P. Abrams,
III
The name Independent Fundamental Baptist Church is used traditionally by
churches which pattern themselves strictly after the example of the early church
as found in the New Testament. The words "Independent" and "Fundamental" have
been added by Baptist churches after the use of the name Baptist failed to fully
identify what they believed. The name Baptist is used by many churches who are
not fundamental in their beliefs. Some "Baptist" churches were in the past
founded on the doctrinal teachings of the New Testament, however, many of them
have drifted away from many of the teachings of the Scriptures. Some of these
churches have gone so far as to deny the fundamental teachings of the Bible,
such as the deity of Christ, the virgin birth and salvation by the Grace of God,
through faith. These churches still call themselves "Baptist, " but in fact they
do not believe or practice what true Baptists have historically believed. The
true Independent Fundamental Baptists have no association or fellowship with
these churches because they teach or practice thing contrary to the New
Testament.
The name Fundamental Independent Baptist is of recent origin
and came into being as a result of many modern day Baptist
churches compromising the Word of God and teaching and
practicing false doctrines. There were however, many Baptists
who loved the Word of God and held true to it, refused to
abandon the teaching of the New Testament. In order to
distinguish between the doctrinally unsound Baptist churches and
those that believed the Bible many Baptist churches changed
their name. These true Baptists added the adjectives Fundamental
and Independent to their name in order that they not be
identified with the false practices and teaching of doctrinally
unsound some Baptist churches.
The word "Independent" means that the church is not a member
of any council, convention or is a part of any hierarchy outside
the local congregation. An Independent Baptist Church would not
be a part of a national Baptist organization such as the
Southern Baptist Convention, the American Baptist, or any other
Baptist organization that would exercise authority over the
local church. Thus, the name "independent" means that the church
patterns itself after the New Testament example and stands alone
under the authority of the Bible. Independent churches have no
organized organization over them in authority. They direct their
own affairs under the authority of the New Testament Scriptures,
free from the outside interference. The New Testament teaches
that Christ is the head of the church, (Eph. 5:23) and that the
local pastor is the under-shepherd Heb. 13:17, Acts 20:28, Eph.
4:11) or leader of the congregation. The Independent Baptist
church has a congregational form of government with each member
having the right of the vote and all the affairs of the churches
are conducted by the local congregation.
Independent Fundamental Baptist churches have fellowship one
with the other and many times cooperate in such things as
evangelism. They, however, will only fellowship or cooperate in
joint meetings with churches of like belief. They will not
participate on a church basis in any outside function with
churches which do not also strictly base their faith and
practice on the New Testament. They will not participate in
joint meetings, or evangelistic endeavors, which Protestants,
Catholics, or other doctrinally unsound church groups who do not
hold to the fundamental teachings of the New Testament.
(Example: Billy Graham) Fundamental Independent Baptists church
will remain separate from these churches as well as other
Baptists groups who participate with the unscriptural churches.
They practice the Biblical teachings of separation as stated in
Ephesians 5:11, which says, "Have no fellowship with the
unfruitful works of darkness, but rather reprove them." The
Independent Baptist believes that to join with churches who
teach and practice false doctrine is condone and even show
approval of Biblical error.
The officers of the local church are pastors and deacons. (I
Tim. 3:1-16) The pastor of the church is called by majority vote
of the congregation. Men meeting the Biblical qualification of
deacons (I Tim. 3:8-13) are appointed from the local
congregation and approved by the majority vote. Many Baptist
churches have Trustees, but their office was established in
order to have legal "signatories" to sign legal documents of the
church. Neither Deacons or Trustees are a governing body, but
places of service and are subject the will of the congregation.
The word "Fundamental" means that the Baptist church uses the
New Testament strictly as its authority for faith (doctrine) and
practices. In recent years the news media has called doctrinally
unsound church such as the Charismatic and Pentecostals as being
fundamentalists. Even some TV evangelists have referred to
themselves as being "fundamentalist." But they should not be
confused with Fundamental Baptists. They are in fact worlds
apart. Many of the TV evangelists and all of the Charismatic and
Pentecostal churches promote teachings which are not Biblical.
Fundamental Baptist use the name in its strictest sense as
meaning holding to the fundamentals of the New Testament
teachings without error. True Independent Fundamental Baptist
Churches uphold the purest teachings of the early church as
revealed in the New Testament.
WHAT BAPTISTS ARE NOT
Baptist are not Protestants! The name Protestant was
given to those churches which came out of Roman Catholicism
during the Reformation which began in the 1500's. It originally
applied through the 1700's to Lutherans, and Anglicans. Later
Presbyterians, Episcopalians and Methodist were added to the
lists of Protestants denominations. Though many people including
Webster's Dictionary refers Baptists as being Protestant it is
not correct to refer to them as such or to lump all non-Catholic
denominations in one group and label them Protestant.
Historically, Baptists were never a part of the Roman Catholic
Church or the Protestant Reformation and therefore can not be
correctly called "protesters" or Protestants.
Its is true that many Baptists left the ranks Protestants
churches which doctrinal unsound and apostate. They left these
churches because of their strong conviction that the Word of God
should not be compromised. Some formed new churches and called
themselves Baptists to make clear their that they believed and
followed the New Testament and others joined Baptist churches
already established. But it is not historically correct to
identify Baptists as Catholic "protestors" who left the Roman
church. In the many books on church history which make up the
bibliography for this paper, there is not one recorded incident
of Baptist church beginning founded out of Roman Catholic one.
Protestants for centuries saw the Baptists as their "enemies"
and murdered them by the thousands in the name of Protestantism.
It is surely an affront to call a Baptist by the name of a group
that has so hated and persecuted them down throughout history.
There have always existed, from the time of Christ, New
Testament churches which were not a part of the Roman Church. In
fact the Roman Church can only trace its history back to 313 AD
when the Roman Emperor Constantine made Christianity a legal
religion. In 395 AD, Emperor Contantius made the worship of
idols punishable by death and by 400 AD the Emperor Theodosius
had declared Christianity the only state religion of the Roman
Empire.
Down through history there were groups of Christians who were
never a part of the "Christianization" of the Roman Empire. When
the Roman Emperor declared Christianity the religion of Rome, he
in mass "converted" hordes of pagans which made up the Empire.
Rome, in many cases, simply converted unregenerate pagan priests
and temples to "Christian" ones. This is why Roman Catholicism
came to have so many false and pagan beliefs.
The over the years the growth of so many false and idolatrous
practices caused some within the Catholic church such as Martin
Luther to rebel, and thus began the "reforming" of the Catholic
church. This was the birth of Protestant churches. Although,
many Protestants returned in part to a belief in the Bible as
their authority for their faith and practice, not one of them
EVER completely left all the doctrinal errors and false
teachings of the apostate Roman Catholic church.
Protestants have never accepted the principle of separation
of church and State. In Europe, Protestant churches are "state"
churches and supported to some degree by government imposed
taxes. In Germany, the state church is Lutheran and in England,
the Anglican church, and etc.
The idea that the bread and wine (grape juice) in the Lord's
Supper actually becoming the physical body of Christ when taken
is a Roman Catholic teaching that Protestants only modified
slightly. Still today, many Protestants see the Lord's Supper as
a sacrament, having to some degree saving properties or
imparting some spiritual benefit. True New Testament Christians
have always rejected such false ideas.
Protestants still practice infant baptism which absolutely is
not taught in the Word of God. Many Protestant denominations
still hold to the writings of their church fathers as a source
of church doctrine and have never accepted the Bible as their
sole source of teachings for their faith and practice. They all
hold on to a system of hierarchy in church government and do not
accept the autonomy the local church. Autonomy means each local
church governs itself free from outside authority and control.
Baptists, basing their beliefs solely on the Bible, have
never held to these teachings and see them as heresy. Thus,
history and the doctrines of Protestantism clearly show that
Baptists are not Protestants.
WHO WERE THE FIRST BAPTISTS?
In determining who were the first Baptists, you must first
identify who you are referring to. You could mean those persons
or churches which held to the Baptists beliefs although they may
not have called themselves Baptists. Or second, you could be
referring to those who held to Baptist beliefs and were called
by the name Baptist.
The first group, those who held Baptist beliefs ( which means
the teachings of the New Testament), yet were not called
Baptist, are difficult to trace in history. Some Baptist
historians, have made attempts at doing this, but in many cases
those they refer to groups as early Baptists who did not in fact
hold to pure Baptist beliefs. They try to establish that
"according to history, Baptist have an unbroken line of churches
since Christ". (Quote from Dr. J.M. Carroll's booklet" The Trail
of Blood") These historians, in an attempt to show an unbroken
line of Baptists in history, have embraced groups which were
clearly not doctrinal sound. In the simplest of terms a true
Baptist is one which follows the New Testament as his sole
authority for his faith and practice.
J.M. Carrol, claims the Donatists of the Third Century were
in fact early Baptists. History, however, clearly shows the
Donatists actually came into being, over the controversy
concerning church members who gave up the Scriptures to be burnt
during the persecutions to save their lives. They denounced
their faith and left the church. When the persecutions ended
they returned to the church, but were not allowed to hold
leadership positions or baptize. Donatus, the leader of the
group, refused to let them back into full membership in the
church. The matter of dealing with the "recanters" was the main
reason for the Donatists movement. Donatus would not accept the
"recanters" baptisms as valid.
Donatus wrote letters to Emperor Constantine, begging state
money to support his church. It was only after Roman denied
Donatus's request that he began to denounce those who received
money from the government. No true doctrinally sound New
Testament church would do this. The Donatists practiced a church
government, with a hierarchy, the same as the Catholic churches
of his day. One of their gravest errors was they believed in
baptismal regeneration and the necessity of baptism for
salvation. Further, they stated that Christ Himself, had to be
baptized to cleanse His human nature. Another un-Biblical
practice was that of infant baptism.
Surely, no church that practices the doctrines of the
Donatists can in truth be called a Baptist church! Also, in
examining the other so-called early "Baptist" churches you find
much the same type of errors. It is my conviction that it is not
possible to "trace" an unbroken line of Baptist churches from
Christ until today. However, let me strongly say there has
always existed an unbroken line of churches who have not erred
from the faith, and been true to the Bible. In fact Jesus
emphatically stated in Matt. 16:18, concerning the church, that
even "the gates of hell shall not prevail against it." These
churches have always existed from the time of Christ and the
apostles until today. To call these people Baptists, in the
sense that the believed the Bible and followed it as their sole
authority for faith and practice, in the way some Baptist
churches do today, is acceptable, although it serves no purpose.
But to go so far as to say there is a unbroken line of Baptist
churches from the time of Christ until today cannot be shown
from history. The importance of these churches was not in their
name, but in what they believed and practiced. These churches
patterned themselves strictly after the New Testament example,
and this made them valid churches approved of God. This is the
true heritage that the Fundamental Baptists holds dear, that
there have always been churches which submitted themselves only
to the sole authority of the Word of God.
There were always groups and sects which held to the truth.
However, as earlier stated, these groups were rarely in the spot
light of history. For an example there is Patrick of Ireland.
Patrick was born in Scotland in 360 AD and sold into slavery at
age sixteen and carried to Ireland. Later, he escaped and became
a Christian missionary. Although the Roman Catholic Church
claims him as one of their "saints", there is no evidence he
even knew the Catholic church existed. In his writings he
appears totally ignorant of the practices of the Roman Church
and never refers to church councils, creeds, traditions or even
to the existence of a pope. There was no hierarchy in the
churches he founded, which were patterned after the simple New
Testament example. These churches were very missions minded and
formed schools to train missionaries. Later in history under
Roman Catholic influence these missionary centers digressed into
monasticism. However, history is clear that in the beginning and
also into the 9th Century these churches were sound in doctrine
and practicing the faith of the New Testament. These churches
are good examples of Bible believing churches that existed
independent of the Roman Catholic Church, and were for some time
not corrupted by its influences. They were in fact churches
founded on the same New Testament principles that modern day
Baptists traditionally founded their churches.
Some have pointed to the Ana-Baptists as the examples of
early Baptist churches. This again can not be proven from
history. The Ana-Baptists were mostly a God fearing group of
people. They loved the Lord and many of them gave their lives
and fortunes for the sake of Christ. However, history does not
record even one Ana-Baptist group or church become a Baptist
church. Most of the Ana-Baptists successors became the
Mennonites, Amish and Quakers. Not one Baptist church can show
in its history a direct succession from the Ana-Baptists. Many
Ana-Baptists churches were strong New Testament churches
believing the and following the Word of God. Some Ana-Baptists
groups were in gross error and corrupted. As with any true New
Testament church, its validity as a true church approved of God,
does not nor or ever did rest on it name or upon a succession of
churches, but on its adherence to the principles of God's Word.
WHO WERE THE FIRST RECORDED BAPTISTS
The line of churches, which called themselves Baptist, began
in 1610 in Holland. It began with a man named John Smyth who was
a bishop in the Church of England. In 1606, after nine months of
soul searching and study of the New Testament he was convinced
that the doctrines and practices of the Church of England were
not Biblical, and thus he resigned his position as priest and
left the church.
Because of persecution by the Anglican church of all who
disagreed with it and refused to submit to its authority, John
Smyth had to flee England. In Amsterdam, he along with Thomas
Helwys and thirty six others formed the first Baptist church of
Englishmen known to have stood for baptism of believers only.
Smyth, believed that the only real apostolic succession is a
succession of Biblical New Testament truth, and not of outward
ordinances and visible organization such as the Church of
England or the Roman Church. He believed apostolic succession
had been lost and the only way to recover was to start again. He
baptized himself and then the others of his congregation. In
only a few years however, the church had lost all but ten
members to the Mennonites and other groups in Holland. Smyth
died in 1612, and the church ended in Holland shortly thereafter
with Helwy, Thomas and John Murton returning to England as
persecutions there had lessened.
Back in England they formed the first Baptist church on
English soil. By 1626, the church grown from one, to five
churches and by 1644 there were forty congregations. Through the
preaching of the New Testament the Gospel went forth in power
and the Baptist movement grew rapidly.
These first Baptist churches formed in England were Armenian
in theology, which taught that all men could be saved. The
Calvinistic or Particular Baptists were a different group and
believed in limited atonement in which only the elect could be
saved. Particular Baptist had their beginnings around 1616, when
some "dissenters" left the Church of England and were lead by
the Rev. Henry Jacob. By 1644, these congregations grew to seven
churches.
About this time the Puritans were also becoming strong in
England. The Puritans were dissenters from the Church of
England. They wanted to bring reform to the Church of England.
Although they were a great deal more piteous than the Church of
England they still practiced most of its beliefs including
infant baptism. Anyone who differed from the practices of the
State church were subject to great persecution. Puritans and
Baptists alike in order to escape persecution migrated to the
New World.
One man Hanserd Knolleys, is an example of dissenter of the
Church of England who had to flee to America. He was a presbyter
and former deacon in the State church. Under deep conviction of
the need to preach the New Testament and follow its example as
one's rule of faith, he refused to wear the robes of his church
office, and refused to let unsaved persons take the Lord's
Supper. Further, he ignored the reading of the "order of
service" and simply preached the Scriptures. The preaching of
the Bible without the rituals of the Church of England was
against the law. In 1638, he landed in Boston and settled for a
short time in Piscataway (now Dover) in New Hampshire. There he
became the pastor of the Puritan church there. The Puritans were
in control of the colonies and in fact had set up a theocracy in
which the Puritan church governed both secular and religious
affairs. Because Knolleys refused to baptize infants and
preached against it he was banned from the colony by the famous
Puritan governor Cotton Mather. Knolleys after two years
returned to England at the request of his father. He became an
out spoken Separatist" or dissenter of the State church. In
1645, he formed a Baptist church in London. Shortly thereafter
the Church of England fell from grace when the English monarch
was overthrow and the Presbyterians became the favored church of
the state. The Presbyterians took over the job of persecution
and forbade Knolleys from preaching in parish churches. He,
however, continued to preach by holding services in his own
home. One of the last acts of the Presbyterians, before the Long
Parliament fell, was to past a law enacting the death penalty on
anyone who was caught holding to what they called "Eight Errors
in Doctrine." These "doctrines" included infant baptism.
Knolleys was imprisoned many times and suffered greatly at
the hands of the "State Church". He is only one of many such
godly men who would not compromise the truth. The "crime" of
these men was that they believed the Bible was God's Truth, and
not the dictates of men.
THE BEGINNINGS OF THE BAPTISTS IN AMERICA.
It is well to note that the Pilgrims were Puritans, and
Puritans were Protestants who had left the Church of England.
They should not be confused true Bible believing churches,
because their beliefs and practices were much like the Church of
England. Although, they were not as corrupt as the Church of
England, they still practiced a strict ritual of church service
and among other things, infant baptism. They were intolerant to
anyone who did not submit to the Puritan church, which was
supported by a governmental church tax of all the people. You
may admire their piety, but a true believer in the New Testament
should have a great problem with many of their doctrines and
especially why they persecuted Baptists. Everyone in the colony
was automatically a member of the State church and were taxed to
support it. Failure to pay the tax brought the wrath of the
church leaders and people were publicly beaten, fined,
imprisoned, and banished from the colony by the civil
authorities under the direction of the Puritan church. Puritan
churches which were called Congregational churches and they
greatly persecuted the Baptists in America until the U.S.
Constitution was made the law of the land in 1787.
Roger Williams is credited with founding the first Baptist
church on American soil. Williams graduated from Cambridge
University in 1627, and was apparently ordained in the Church of
England. He soon embraced Separatists" ideas and decided to
leave England. In 1631, he arrived in Boston. He was much
displeased with the Puritan theocracy. He strongly believed in
separation of church and state and up held the principles of
soul liberty. Soul liberty" is a belief that every man is
responsible to God individually. It bases its belief in the New
Testament teaching that every believer is a priest unto himself,
having full excess to God without the need of a church, church
leader or priest. (Hebrews 4:15-16 and 10:19-22) In spite of his
views he was made the pastor of the church in Salem. Shortly
thereafter, he was forced to leave Salem and went for a short
time to Plymouth. He again returned to Salem where he was
summoned before the court in Boston because of his outspoken
beliefs and was banished from the colony. The charge recorded
against him was that "he broached and divulged new and dangerous
opinions against the authority of the magistrates". Clearly, he
was banished because he believed in religious freedom and
believed and taught that the New Testament was a believers
source for his faith and practice. The Puritans did not believe
in such things and they drove him from their colony.
In 1638, Williams made his way to what is now Providence,
Rhode Island, and there purchased some land from the Indians.
Some of his former congregation in Salem joined him and they
established a colony. Its beginning charter reads as follows:
"We whose names are hereunder written, being
desirous to inhabit ourselves in active and passive
obedience to all such orders or agencies as shall be made
for the public good of the body in an orderly way, by the
major consent of the present inhabitants, masters of
families, incorporated together into the same, only in civil
things."
In 1663, Charles II, gave the colony a royal charter and it
read:
"Our royal will and pleasure is, that no person
within the said colony, at any time hereafter, shall be in
any wise molested, punished disquieted, or called in
question, for any differences of opinion in matters of
religion, and do not actually disturb the civil peace of the
said colony"
This was the first time in the history of the world that a government
was established which granted religious freedom! This charter was the
very corner stone of American religious freedom! Up to this time
Williams was not a Baptist. He continued to read the New Testament, and
became fully aware that infant baptism, sprinkling for baptism, and
allowing unsaved persons to be members of the church was not Scriptural.
Thus, resolving to follow the Lord's commands in Truth, in March, 1639
he formed the first Baptist church on American soil. He began by
baptizing himself and then baptizing ten other members.
A few months later however, Williams withdrew from the church
and became what he called a "seeker." History does not record
why he would not identify himself as a Baptist. It should be
noted that this presented no problem for this first Baptist
church in America. This church was not founded on a man, but on
the Bible. It was not founded as a result of a line of Baptist
churches down through history. It was founded because some men
believed the Bible and wanted to follow the New Testament
example of what a true church should be. Even after Williams its
foundered left it continued following the New Testament and was
not adversely effect. It was not the man who founded that was
important, but the New Testament principles on which he founded
this church. The called themselves Baptists because that was the
best name they could choose to describe what they believed and
the name identified them a Bible believing people. This church
had no ties to anyone or any other church, yet this was a
Baptist church as much as any Baptist church ever was. They were
a New Testament church, not because of a succession of churches
or men, but because they formed their church on the principles
of the New Testament. That made them in the eyes of God a
legitimate a church as any Paul founded. The sole authority for
any true church is God's Word and not it founder, or its
heritage. Not once place in the New Testament do you find even a
hint that a church was legitimate because it was founded by Paul
or called itself by a particular name. However, let no one
think little of the name of Baptist for it is the name that most
has identified those individuals and churches who have
uncompromisingly stood on the Word of God. They are the
only group unto modern times whose churches were founded on the
Scriptures and not on the traditions or works of some man.
Baptists have always been the champions of the Word of God and
preaching of the Gospel. History is quite clear that there is no
other denomination that has so loved and been faithful to God's
Word as has the Baptists.
After Roger Williams stepped down, Thomas Olney took over as
the pastor of the church in Rhode Island. Although, this was the
first Baptist church to be founded on American soil there is no
recorded offspring from this church and modern American Baptist
churches can not trace their history directly to it. Other
churches founded in New England and in the Middle colonies were
the actual mother churches of modern Baptist churches as these
churches were responsible for starting other churches.
On May 28, 1665, a Baptist church was founded in Boston, by
Thomas Gould, who refused to accept infant baptism. There were
nine original members of the church which included two women. A
storm of persecution broke out because these Baptist preached
what the Puritans called "damnable errors." Most of the members
of the church were fined or imprisoned or both, at one time or
another. Thomas Gould, died in 1675 an untimely death, partly
due to his having his health broken by several long
imprisonments.
In 1678, shortly after the church had constructed a new
building, the government nailed its doors shut and forbade
anyone under penalty of the law to enter or worship there. This
lasted only one Sunday however, and the following Sunday the
doors were opened and services held in defiance of the order.
The magistrates found their order was becoming unpopular and
impossible to enforce so the church in the future was
unmolested. In 1684, a Baptist church in Maine seeking greater
religious liberty was relocated to Charleston, South Carolina.
The Dutch colony of New York for a time persecuted Baptists
within its territories. The first Baptist church in New York was
started by William Wichendon, in 1656. He was heavily fined and
then imprisoned. To poor to pay the fines he was banished from
the colony. Later, the Dutch issued new orders and allowed
religious liberty.
In 1700, a Baptist minister, William Rhodes began to hold
meetings on Long Island and in 1724 organ ized the first Baptist
church there. The most important center of early Baptist
churches was in the area of Philadelphia, "the city of brotherly
love." In 1684, Thomas Dungan started a church at Cold Springs
which lasted until 1702. In 1688 a Baptist church was organized
at Pennepeck, Pa., with twelve members. It helped start the
first Baptist church in the city of Philadelphia the following
year. It became an independent church in 1746.
Offers of religious liberty drew many Baptists to settle in
New Jersey. The first church was in 1688, in Middletown and made
up of many who had fled persecution in the other colonies. Many
churches were organized in the following years.
In other areas Baptist churches were being formed about this
same time. In North Carolina the first Baptist church was
started at Perquimans, in Chowan County in 1727.
In Virginia, Baptist were not welcome. The Episcopal church
was the only lawful church. There was a fine of 2000 pounds of
tobacco for failure to have ones infant children baptized. One
church, however, did begin after 1714, in Surry Country, and
another at Burleigh, Virginia. Virginia was especially harsh in
religious persecutions. Anyone not holding Episcopal ordination
was forbade to hold services. Baptists were taxed to support the
Episcopal church. It is well to note however, that two champions
of religious liberty were the Virginians Thomas Jefferson and
Patrick Henry. Thomas Jefferson is believed to have been deeply
influenced to press for religious freedom in American, by the
plight of several Baptist preachers he knew. In Isle of Wight
county, for example, Baptist preachers were taken to Nansamond
River, nearly drowned by Episcopalians to show their contempt
for Baptist's beliefs in immersion and their rejection of infant
Baptism. They were then tarred and feathered and ran out of the
county.
The center of Baptist activity was in the Philadelphia area,
and Baptists held regular "general meetings" of the churches for
devotional and evangelistic purposes.
It can be historically determined that forty seven Baptist
churches were in existence before the Great Awakening. All but
seven were above the Mason-Dixon line. Baptist continued to grow
in numbers through the period of the Great Awakening and up to
the time of the Revolutionary War. Baptist as a whole were
patriots and many Baptist pastors served as chaplains in the
Revolutionary Army. The Great Awakening stirred religious
interests in the colonies and a reported great revival took
place. The Revolutionary War for some time slowed the growth of
Baptist churches, however, after independence was won and the
Constitutional written giving all Americans religious freedom,
the Baptist again began to grow until today they are the largest
denomination in the United States.
WHAT MAKES A TRUE BAPTIST?
Today there are at least a hundred different groups which all
themselves "Baptist." Many of these churches have conflicting
beliefs and practices. The natural question then to ask is,
"What makes a person a Baptist?" In examining the history of
Baptists and determining what constitutes a genuine and true
Baptist, five distinctive should be noted. These five
distinctive beliefs separate the true Baptists from other groups
who have mistakenly taken the name Baptist and all non New
Testament churches such as the Protestants. Examine any church
in light of these five distinctive it will be shown if they are
in fact true historical Baptist.
It is well also to note that these five distinctive are
traits also of the true New Testament church! These distinctive
are the distinctive taught in Bible which constitute a true New
Testament church. The one thing that makes one a Baptist is that
historically they have followed only the New Testament as its
rule for its faith and practice. They strongly insist that God's
Word is not up for arbitration or subject to individual's,
group's, denomination's or church's "private interpretation".
(II Peter 1:20) Baptist believe you do not have to be a Baptist
in order to be saved and have eternal life, but a person must
believe the Gospel as revealed in the New Testament. (I
Corinthians 15:1-4) They believe the Bible interprets itself,
and that Christ is the one and only head of the church.
Fundamental Baptist are strict in interpreting the Bible in a
"literal" sense. In other words, when the Bible speaks, the
words have a literal meaning and that is the meaning God
intended. They reject the efforts of the many who "spiritually"
interpret the Scriptures, placing hidden or specially revealed
meanings to the words of the Bible. Further, they reject
so-called "scriptures" of modern day so called prophets. They
believe that when the Book of Revelation was completed by the
Apostle John about 90-95 AD, the Word of God was complete. It is
believed that God meant what he said in Revelations 22:18, that
the Scriptures were not to added to or taken from. (See also
Gal. 1:6-10, 1 Tim. 6:30, Titus 1:9-11, II Tim. 4:1-5, I Cor.
13:8-10)
Ask these five questions of any church, and if they can
answer all five in truth with a yes, then you will have a true
Baptist church. All others miss-use the name.
FIVE BAPTIST DISTINCTIVE
1. WE ACCEPT ONLY THE NEW TESTAMENT AS OUR AUTHORITY IN
ALL MATTERS OF FAITH AND PRACTICE.
This means that we do not accept any authority except the New
Testament Scriptures. Christ is head of the Church, and it is
His bride. We believe the Word of God, the Bible is complete and
it solely, "...is given of by inspiration of God, and is
profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for
instruction in righteousness, that the man of God many be
perfect, thoroughly furnished (equipped) unto all good works."
(II Timothy 3:16-17)
We reject that God is giving supposed "new" revelations,
believing that God forbids any adding to or taking away of the
canon of Scriptures. (Rev. 22:18-19) We do not accept any
authority over the New Testament Church, but Christ Himself,
including any hierarchy to include popes, or councils of
churches.
2. WE BELIEVE THE CHURCH IS TO BE MADE UP OF SAVED
BAPTIZED BELIEVERS.
Baptist reject the baptism of infants flatly! The church is
made up of Baptized believers only. (Acts 2:41-42) An infant is
not capable of believing, and is protected by the Grace of God
until the age of accountability. Further, only those who have
made a profession of faith in Jesus Christ and trusted in Him as
their Savior is a member of the body of Christ, and thus can be
a member of the body of Christ on earth, the local New Testament
church.
3. WE BELIEVE IN STRICT SEPARATION OF CHURCH AND STATE.
Jesus said to ""render unto Caesar the things that are
Caesar's and unto God the things that are God's." Further the
Scripture says "what fellowship hath righteousness with
unrighteousness? And what communion that light with darkness?"
No power on earth is higher than God's Word, and the church
should not be in any way yoked with the state, or controlled by
it. We support the rightly appointed authority of government
over us and pray for them that we live our lives in peace.
4. WE BELIEVE IN THE PRIESTHOOD OF THE BELIEVER.
The Scripture teaches that every believer can without the aid
of priests or churchmen go, "boldly unto the throne of grace,
that we may obtain mercy, and find grace in the time of need".
(Hebrews 4:16) The Scripture states further in Hebrews 10:19,
"Having therefore, brethren, boldness to enter into the holiest
by the blood of Jesus." The believer does not needed a priest or
a church to intercede on their behalf to God. The believer can
boldly, by the fact of being washed in the blood of Christ,
instantly be in contact with God by simple prayer, and further
can bring his petitions or requests for forgiveness of sins
directly to God himself. (I John 1:19) No church has the
authority to forgive sins or grant intercession to God.
5. WE BELIEVE IN THE AUTONOMY OF THE LOCAL CHURCH.
Simply stated the Scriptures gives no higher authority than
the local congregation of born again, baptized believers. We
believe that the local church is to be governed by the Word of
God, and the local church does not need, or does the Scripture
teach that the local body rests under the authority of any
earthy group. It is a group unto itself, under the authority of
God, and solely responsible unto Him for its conduct, direction
and affairs. Jesus in Rev. 2:6,15, that he "hated" the doctrine
of the Nicolaitines. The group of heretics in the early church
along with other doctrinal errors promoted a clerical hierarchy
in the church.
A church which cannot
answer yes to all of these questions can not historically call itself a
Baptist church. These are the distinctive which separate Baptists from
Protestants, or any organized church or "Christian" cult.
The validity of a church as being a true Biblical New
Testament church does not rest in it ability to show an unbroken
line of succession from the time of Christ. In fact, no church
on earth can make that claim. Even the Roman Catholic Church
which boasts of his unbroken history cannot prove an unbroken
line of churches earlier than the Third Century, and what
Catholicism teaches today in no way resembles the early New
Testament church.
We must agree with John Smyth, that the true New Testament
church is founded on its belief and practice of the Scriptures,
and not on any outward succession of a visible or invisible
organization. In this sense, any church which founds itself
strictly on the New Testament teachings, is a true and Biblical
church, even if it existed in time, only yesterday. It is not
the name or the organization that makes a Biblical church, but
its practice of the faith as revealed in the New Testament.
If a Bible were to be dropped from a plane over a remote
area, and the natives were to take the Scriptures and believe
them, then they would be saved and made a part of the Body of
Christ. If they then took the New Testament as their guide, and
organized a local congregation of believers it would be a church
fully acceptable to God and as valid as church as even the early
church of Bible times!
It is the Word of God, the Bible, that constitutes what is
a real and true church! The Bible and only the Bible reveals
to men how to have their sins forgiven and have eternal life and
heaven. That is what truly saved believers have always believed,
because that is what the New Testament which is God's very Word
to man says.
The Baptist bases his authority solely on the Bible itself.
They do not accept that authority was given to any particular
man, group or church on earth to be the means of the salvation
of men. God has not entrusted that authority to impart salvation
to any man or church. God alone has that authority and He in the
person of the Holy Spirit brings conviction and salvation to
those who in simple faith believe.
A church that is a truly Biblical one, patterns its self
after the example in the New Testament. It is one made up of
baptized believers organized in a local congregation for
fellowship, teaching and evangelism. All systems of hierarchy
established by man over the authority of the local church has
lead to doctrinal errors and corruption without exception.
Bibliography
A History of the Baptists, John T. Christian, Sunday
School Board of the Southern Baptist Convention.
The Baptist Heritage, by J.M. Holliday, Bogard Press.
The Baptist March in History, by Robert A. Baker,
Convention Press
Christianity Through the Centuries, Earle E. Cairns,
Zondervan Press
Documents of the Christian Church, Henry Bettenson,
Oxford University Press
Foxe's Book of Martyrs, Marie Gentert King, Editor,
Spire Books
A Manual of Church History, by Albert Newman, Vol. I
and II., The American Baptist Publication Society.
Miller's Church History, by Andrew Miller, Zondervan
Publishing House
A Short History of the Baptists, by Henry Vedder,
Judson Press
A Short History of Western Civilization, by John B.
Harrison and Richard E. Sullivan, Michigan State University.
The Trail of Blood, J.M. Carroll, Ashland Avenue
Baptist Church
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED: May be copied and used
freely, but must not be sold in whole or in part. January, 1989/Revised
June, 1994/April, 1996 Cooper Abrams. |