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Are you a Landmark Baptist

Are you a Landmark Baptist

  • Yes, I am totally Landmark

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Yes, for the most part

    Votes: 1 2.4%
  • I hold to some positions

    Votes: 6 14.6%
  • No, I am not landmark at all

    Votes: 31 75.6%
  • I'm not sure

    Votes: 2 4.9%
  • Other answer

    Votes: 1 2.4%

  • Total voters
    41

Tom Butler

New Member
I have what I call Landmark tendencies.

I'm not ready for the whole package, but I hold to a lot of the ecclesiology.
 

Dr. Bob

Administrator
Administrator
If there was one shred of evidence or even common sense, I might not think the whole teaching was man-made nonsense.

In other words, NO :tongue3:
 

Marcia

Active Member
I had to vote "unsure" since I don't know what Landmark is. I've heard it referred to here, but know nothing about it. Since I know nothing about it, I'm probably not one, but had to vote "unsure" since I don't know what it is!

Can someone give a brief overview?
 

annsni

Well-Known Member
Site Supporter
Marcia said:
I had to vote "unsure" since I don't know what Landmark is. I've heard it referred to here, but know nothing about it. Since I know nothing about it, I'm probably not one, but had to vote "unsure" since I don't know what it is!

Can someone give a brief overview?

OK I don't feel so dumb now! LOL I have no clue what it is either. I was thinking of posting....

HUH??

But knew I'd have to come up with some other text to get it to post. :D
 

Jim1999

<img src =/Jim1999.jpg>
In essence we trace our history back to the New Testament times........with some variations along the way,,not called baptists, per se..............then there are variations amongst those who claim landmarkism,,there is also a strict group of landmarkists......adhere to certain doctrines such as closed communion, baptism in that local church only etc.

Cheers,

Jim
 

Jarthur001

Active Member
In no way. Landmakism (the trail of blood) grow from a hate of the RCC. The hate is at such a high level that they are will to make up history points in order to rewrite history and fool a few people.

However, Landmark Baptist churches are often times good in their theology. Poor in history.
 

Tom Butler

New Member
Since this is mainly a poll thread to see how many Landmarkers are out there, I suggest we move any debate to a thread on the subject which is already underway in the General Baptist Discussions category.

Those of you who've never heard of it before are quite young, I'm sure. But a century ago, Landmarkism was the predominant ecclesiology among Baptists. It was not monolithic, but among Southern Baptists, at least, it was widespread and strongly held.

Southern Baptists have largely abandoned any semblance of Landmarkism. But they're still out there. There's even a Baptist denomination who are Landmarkist.

I find it curious that what was once considered normal ecclesiology is now considered heresy.

Go to the other thread for some robust discussion.
 

Allan

Active Member
Tom Butler said:
Those of you who've never heard of it before are quite young, I'm sure. But a century ago, Landmarkism was the predominant ecclesiology among Baptists. It was not monolithic, but among Southern Baptists, at least, it was widespread and strongly held.
Yep, even Spurgeon believed it.
 

saturneptune

New Member
If there was evidence that we did go back to the Apostles, then it would not be that hard to believe. In their own frame of reference, the Catholics claim a link back to the Apostles, since according to them, Peter was the first pope. That in itself makes me very leary of any such claim. There is a big gap between believing that Baptists did not come out of the Reformation to we go back to the Apostles.
 

Mexdeaf

New Member
Going by the Wiki definition (realizing that it is not by any means a scholarly one) and my personal studies, I hold to some tenets of Landmarkism.
 

Tom Butler

New Member
saturneptune said:
If there was evidence that we did go back to the Apostles, then it would not be that hard to believe. In their own frame of reference, the Catholics claim a link back to the Apostles, since according to them, Peter was the first pope. That in itself makes me very leary of any such claim. There is a big gap between believing that Baptists did not come out of the Reformation to we go back to the Apostles.

I've addressed this in a post in the General Baptist Discussion thread on Landmarkism. Go there for enlightenment and persuasion. Once you read my brilliant and incisive post, you'll be convinced.

(Folks, saturneptune and I are fellow servants in our church. Some of this is a little light-hearted banter with a little barb thrown in here and there. We don't agree on everything but have a mutual respect and brotherly love.)
 

Jim1999

<img src =/Jim1999.jpg>
I am a landmarkist. I don't proselytize. I don't demand that you be a landmarkist too. It is my personal study and beliefs on the history of the "baptistic" belief system.

The Catholic Church came later and was not in existence in New Testament times. Even the claim that Peter was the first pope came in later times.

If some want to claim the Methodist Smythe as the founder of he Baptist Church, they can do that.He wasn't even immersed and didn't practice believer's baptism by immersion.

Yes, some of the groups we claim even had heretical ideas, but there remains a trail of baptism and autonomy. Some New Testament people had to be straightened out. Ever read the New Testament letters of Paul and Peter? If people that close to Jesus' life on earth can be so off, so can people in 2nd century,,,,,and even the 21st century.

Cheers,

Jim
 

Jarthur001

Active Member
As Dr Bob has said.....

Dr. Bob said:
If there was one shred of evidence or even common sense, I might not think the whole teaching was man-made nonsense.

Its a good and neat idea, but there is no support. I often have had this debate and what I tell others is that if one wishes to believe this, that is fine. However, to give support based on the facts, you will not find them. There are to many gaps to fill.

Let me suggest a book.

James E. McGoldrick..."Baptist Successionism".

McGoldrick, a professor of history at Cedarville College.

a quote from a review on that site..

" His analysis is comprehensive, impressive, and irrefutable - there were no Baptists prior to the Protestant Reformation and efforts to project Baptist beliefs upon the groups commonly cited are based on wishful thinking.

Dissident group after dissident group are placed under the historical microscope: Montanists, Novations, Paulicans, Bogomils, Petrobrusians, Arnoldists, Henricians, Albigenses, and Waldenses. Each group is shown to have no basic affinity to standard Baptist doctrine"

"McGoldrick also includes a refutation of the claim that St. Patrick was a Baptist. This contention is ridiculous but it shows how revisionists argue from silence (St. Patrick wrote very little and so they argue since he never endorsed certain Catholic doctrines in writing, he must be a Baptist) to produce Baptists ex nihilo. He then considers the claim that the Anabaptists were in the Baptist succession. That one could make such claims for a movement known to have sprung from the radical end of the Protestant Reformation is a mystery to all but those with successionist blinders, but McGoldrick patiently examines the claim and easily refutes it. Endings with a careful review of the true history of the Baptist movement, he concludes the obvious - Baptists are Protestants. "
 

Jim1999

<img src =/Jim1999.jpg>
so, let's abandon all baptist churches as just another offspring of a Catholic's (remember, Luther remained a catholic until he was excommunicated) thinking. We have no reason for our existence. Drop the insistence on baptism before membership. That is just a silly hindrance to getting more people to join the club.

It is hard to believe that so soon after the New Testament formation of the churches of Christ that baptistic distinctives we claim so dear should just disappear until the reformation.

That is the nonsense! Pure and simple.
As a matter of fact, this whole book lends credibiity to the claim of the Church of England to succession of their bishops and we are the rebels.

Cheers,

Jim
 

Tom Butler

New Member
I composed a lengthy comment based on Jim1999's most recent post. But to post it here would be doing exactly what I discouraged others from doing--that is, arguing the merits or demerits of Landmarkism. So I'm going up to the Landmark thread in the General Baptist Discussion section to post it. See you there.
 
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