DaveXR650
Well-Known Member
No. What I'm saying is what your Wikipedia quote is saying. That the origin of all Baptists came out of the Puritans, specifically Congregationalists and Separatists, and thus all the Baptists can trace our origins to the Reformation and to the Puritans, the vast majority of whom were Calvinists. If you like Wikipedia then look up the entry on John Smyth. It goes into more detail on what I was talking about with his later connection with Mennonite and AnaBaptists and the problems it caused.I think you have switched from claiming Reformed Baptists adhere to traditional baptist distinctives, to claiming "reformed baptists" established the Baptist tradition. So we go from scripture based doctrines, to discussion of history.
So, relating this to your earlier statement:
That is true of all Baptists and while I don't deny that in any given church you could move from non-Calvinist to Calvinist or vice versa, in general, you don't want to give the impression that a Calvinistic Baptist church is a relatively new thing when it fact it was there from the beginning of what we call "Baptists". The fact is Reformed Baptists did establish the Baptist distinctives, at least those explained in the Wikipedia article. We have the names of people and we have their writings, as the Wikipedia article cited so this is not arguable. If anyone has some different information please let me know as I don't claim to be an expert on this and haven't looked at it in a while anyway.Bottom line, Reformed Baptists are really just a subset of Reformed churches.