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Yes, and twice on Sunday.Any of you see yourselves as being reformed and also Baptist then?
If it is a distinctive of Baptists then it would seem that the same liberty would apply to a church that wanted to adhere to the London Baptist Confession of Faith or wanted to agree with Charles Spurgeon. Those both have credentials equaling a Baptist group which has come up with a list of distinctives along with a set definition of each of them, and sanctions against any who might disagree, or so I would think.Soul Liberty is a distinctive of Baptists. Baptists believe the lost have the actual opportunity to obtain salvation by grace through faith, whereas the Reformed believe the lost were saved or damned from before time began.
Thanks for posting this on topic viewpoint!If it is a distinctive of Baptists then it would seem that the same liberty would apply to a church that wanted to adhere to the London Baptist Confession of Faith or wanted to agree with Charles Spurgeon. Those both have credentials equaling a Baptist group which has come up with a list of distinctives along with a set definition of each of them, and sanctions against any who might disagree, or so I would think.
And a subset of Baptist Churches. Personally, I think that Credo-baptism vs Paedo-baptism (God covenanting with saved individuals vs entire households) is more fundamental than debates over Atonement.JBottom line, Reformed Baptists are really just a subset of Reformed churches.
Correct.Like Reformed, they deny the lost have the liberty to believe, being unable due to Total Spiritual Inability.
Yes, but “soul Liberty” is not a “total inability” issue, but a focus on men answering directly to God rather than any “creed” or Church Hierarchy.However, Soul Liberty is a distinctive of Baptists.
General Baptists believe in a General Atonement and an Armininian free will for men to choose. Particular Baptists believe in a Particular Atonement and a TULIP sovereignty that saves people.Baptists believe the lost have the actual opportunity to obtain salvation by grace through faith, whereas the Reformed believe the lost were saved or damned from before time began.