Helen/AITB... It is always polite to let a lady have the last word... I will not argue with you!... Brother Glen & Sister Charlotte

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Hi Matt, thanks for the compliment. You are absolute correct. I am of the Anabaptist kinship school so I did not mean to imply there were no direct connections but that Baptists did not come directly out of the Anabaptist movement. I do not agree with either the Landmark successionist view or the strict English successionist view that seems to regard the Anabaptists as irrelevant.Kiffin (what a great name if we're talking about Baptist history ), wasn't the Waterlander church in the Netherlands that Smith came into contact with during his exile Anabaptist/ Mennonite in origin and helped to convince him of the necessity of Believer's Baptism?
Yours in Christ
Matt
— H. Leon McBeth, Baptist Beginnings, Baptist History and Heritage Society.English Baptists recovered the practice of believer's baptism in two steps. By 1608/09 the General Baptists insisted that baptism was for believers only, and by 1638 the Particular Baptists reached the same conclusion. At first English Baptists baptized by sprinkling or pouring. Immersion came a few years later. Some of the General Baptists may have immersed as early as 1614, but if so it was not yet customary. Many historians do not recognize them as Baptists before immersion.
By 1640 there were at least two Particular Baptist churches, and both became convinced that baptism should be by immersion. Old church records state:
1640. 3rd Mo: The Church became two by mutuall consent just half being with Mr. P. Barebone, & ye other halfe with Mr. H. Jessey. Mr. Richd Blunt with him being convinced of Baptism yt also it ought to be by dipping in ye Body into Ye Water, resembling Burial and riseing again.
Apparently, members of the Barebone congregation reached this conclusion from a study of the New Testament. Immersion was a new practice, for their old records speak of "none having then so practiced it in England to professed Believers." These two congregations reinstituted immersion in different ways. One church sent Richard Blunt to Holland to confer with a group of Mennonites, who practiced immersion. Possibly, he received immersion from them and returned to immerse others of the congregation. The other church simply began to immerse without alluding to historical precedent. "Where there is a beginning," the pastor said, "some must be first."