This morning I posted on my blog Baptist moving: considering two theological shifts.
One of the shifts I considered is what specifically was at work on the majority of U. S. Baptists, the Regular Baptists, to move away from the doctrines of predestination toward libertarian free will? I suggested these possibilities:
One of the shifts I considered is what specifically was at work on the majority of U. S. Baptists, the Regular Baptists, to move away from the doctrines of predestination toward libertarian free will? I suggested these possibilities:
- The possibility that some of these Regular Baptists nominally held the doctrines of grace, but were not consistent, clear and firm in their teaching of them.
- The anti-creedalism of the Separate Baptists, who merged with these Regular Baptists toward the end of the 18th and beginning of the 19th centuries. Though they were generally predestinarians like the Regular Baptists, they would not commit to “man-made” confessions like the Second London or Philadelphia Confessions.
- The influence of the evangelism of revivalists like Finney and Moody on these Regular Baptists. Probably the Frontier Revivalism of the early 1800s should also be included. Those who came into Baptist churches from these revivals might be predisposed to favor such methods and find them more compatible with a “free will” theology.
- The removal from these Regular Baptists of an aggregation of doctrinally strong predestinarian churches in the so-called missions/anti-missions schism.
- The “Spirit” of the American experiment, emphasizing freedom and individualism, seemed to fit better into a system of free will than unconditional election – influencing some of these Regular Baptists either directly (causing change) or indirectly (causing re-evaluation).