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Salty

20,000 Posts Club
Administrator
This came from a FB page of "Baptist Articles of Faith"
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What a Baptist Is Not
Many people misunderstand what “Baptist” really means. To clear the confusion, here are some important truths about what a Baptist is not:
1. A Baptist is not a Religion
Being a Baptist is not about belonging to a man-made religion. It is about holding to the New Testament faith, doctrine, and practice established by the Lord Jesus Christ. Baptists simply follow the pattern of the churches Christ founded.
2. A Baptist is not a Denomination
Baptists were not formed by a denominational council or organization. True Baptist churches are independent, autonomous, and patterned after the first church Jesus established in His earthly ministry.
3. Baptists were not Founded by John Smyth
Some mistakenly teach that John Smyth started the Baptists in the 1600s. But history and the trail of biblical doctrine shows that groups holding Baptist beliefs existed long before Smyth, even throughout the Dark Ages.
Churches with Baptist doctrine have always existed outside the Roman system, even if they were called by different names (Waldenses, Anabaptists, etc.).
4. Baptists are not Protestants
Baptists did not come out of the Roman Catholic Church during the Reformation. They did not protest Catholicism because they were never part of it in the first place.
Baptist churches trace their lineage not to Rome, but to Christ Himself, who formed His first church during His earthly ministry.
 

JonC

Moderator
Moderator
I disagree with the last one (on a technicality). "Proteststant" does not mean "coming out of the Roman Catholic Church". It refers to congregations involved in the Protestant movement.

Anabaptists, for example, we're not a part of the RCC but they are Protestants (they were a significant part of the Protestant movement).

Also, Baptist churches do not trace a lineage through history (we do not look to such a succession). Instead we view each congregation as having Christ as its head.

So a group of people finding a Bible on the side of the road, reading it, God using it to save them, they becoming a Baptist congregation...they would be no less a Baptist church. The lineage thing is Roman Catholic thinking.
 

Salty

20,000 Posts Club
Administrator
Also, Baptist churches do not trace a lineage through history (we do not look to such a succession). Instead we view each congregation as having Christ as its head.
Except for Landmark Baptists: They believe in an unbroken line of churches since the time of Christ. In addition, they believe a Baptist church is not valid if was not started under the authority of another valid Baptist church.
 
Last edited:

Reynolds

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
This came from a FB page of "Baptist Articles of Faith"
View attachment 13073
What a Baptist Is Not
Many people misunderstand what “Baptist” really means. To clear the confusion, here are some important truths about what a Baptist is not:
1. A Baptist is not a Religion
Being a Baptist is not about belonging to a man-made religion. It is about holding to the New Testament faith, doctrine, and practice established by the Lord Jesus Christ. Baptists simply follow the pattern of the churches Christ founded.
2. A Baptist is not a Denomination
Baptists were not formed by a denominational council or organization. True Baptist churches are independent, autonomous, and patterned after the first church Jesus established in His earthly ministry.
3. Baptists were not Founded by John Smyth
Some mistakenly teach that John Smyth started the Baptists in the 1600s. But history and the trail of biblical doctrine shows that groups holding Baptist beliefs existed long before Smyth, even throughout the Dark Ages.
Churches with Baptist doctrine have always existed outside the Roman system, even if they were called by different names (Waldenses, Anabaptists, etc.).
4. Baptists are not Protestants
Baptists did not come out of the Roman Catholic Church during the Reformation. They did not protest Catholicism because they were never part of it in the first place.
Baptist churches trace their lineage not to Rome, but to Christ Himself, who formed His first church during His earthly ministry.
I see Baptists as Protestants.
 

JonC

Moderator
Moderator
I see Baptists as Protestants.
If Baptists are not Protestant then there is a real problem (either Baptists remained silent, did not exist, or opposed the movement).

And, most Baptist theology is a blend (it contains a lot of the theology of the Reforners, a little from the RCC, and some from the Anabaptists).

Theologically we are mutts. But typically mutts get the best qualities from their purebred parents.
 
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