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Jon, has your church officially adopted the BF&M too?
Is this something that is common in the denomination? Is it encouraged?
has your church officially adopted the BF&M?
We have accepted the BF&M. . . .Normally I just see on some site that a particular chruch accepts the BF&M - but it is not necessarily their "statement of faith."
Huh? What is the difference between 'accepting' the BF&M and and adopting it as a statement of faith?
Have I got this straight?
Tom, did your church have its own statement of faith before there was a BF&M, then replaced it with the BF&M?
It sounds like Jon's church still has its own statement of faith as well as the BF&M being 'accepted'/'affirmed'?
Have I got this straight?
Well, for starters, the BFM2000 holds to the "baptism of believers" rather than the "baptism of THE believer."
Our church adopted the Baptist Faith and Message as its doctrinal statement. It leaves plenty of room for varying views on eschatology and ecclesiology.
Swearing allegiance to the BF&M is not a condition of membership in our church. It says to all who come our way, "this is what we believe. If you want to join us here, you need to know this."
It is what will be preached from the pulpit. It is what will be taught by our teachers. You may disagree with part of it, but you may not teach contrary to the BF & M.
One may say our church is imposing a creed. You bet your life. A creed is nothing more than a statement of what we believe. Those who have positions of leadership and responsibility must speak from the same script on those essential issues.
So you don't agree with some things? You don't want to subscribe to them? Fine, you don't have to. You can still fellowship with us, but you can't preach, teach, be a deacon or worship leader.
Were you sprinkled in another denomination? Fine. But if you want to join our church, we'll have to dunk you.
I am a trustee at Mid-Continent University in nearby Mayfield, Kentucky. Our by-laws cite the BF&M as the doctrinal guide for this Baptist school. Our trustees must agree to it; our theology professors must agree to it; our administrators must agree to it.
We do have a non-Baptist or two in our College of Arts and Sciences. But they are evangelical, and must agree not to teach contrary to the BF&M. So far, no problems.
Call it doctrinal statement, call it a confessional statement, call it a creed, call it what you want to.
I don't know about all SBC seminaries, but Southern Seminary requires its folks to sign a doctrinal statement called the Abstract of Principals. You Southern grads can talk more about that. Don't wanna sign it? No problem. No job.
Back before the Conservative Resurgence, everybody signed the A of P, but not all agreed with it. I think some called it a "mental reservation." I call it lying.
Sounds to me like your church does not affirm soul liberty, a key baptist principle. E.Y. Mullins probably couldn't be a member of your church, were he alive today.
Does anyone have a good historical definition, and/or examples of "soul liberty" that E.Y. Mullins is supposed to have adheared to. Here's why I ask.
If, according to Tom's descriptions, his church does NOT affirm soul liberty, than there are ZERO real christian churches that affirm soul liberty. All Baptist churches AT LEAST say you need to be baptized. Even the most "soul-liberarian" Baptist church is not going to hire a Roman Catholic Pastor.
I Just don't see how the supposed idea of "soul liberty" could really work.
-andy
Sounds to me like your church does not affirm soul liberty, a key baptist principle. E.Y. Mullins probably couldn't be a member of your church, were he alive today.
I challenge that soul liberty is a historical baptist distinctive.
When I first became a Southern Baptist, soul competency was THE key Baptist teaching.
Briefly, it is the idea each person is able to come to faith in Christ for salvation without a human mediator, and is able under the guidance of the Holy Spirit to read and understand the Scripture.
You don't go to church to be told what to believe. You find a church that teaches what you see in the Bible.
Or so we believed.
These days the SBC leadership seems to want us to come to church so they can tell us what to believe.
It is totally not an issue of whether or not we agree with what they teach.
It is totally an issue of whether or not we must have a human mediator to stand between us and God.
Shurden's book is excellent. So is "The Axioms of Religion" by E. Y. Mullins if you want to understand what has changed.
When I first became a Southern Baptist, soul competency was THE key Baptist teaching.
Briefly, it is the idea each person is able to come to faith in Christ for salvation without a human mediator, and is able under the guidance of the Holy Spirit to read and understand the Scripture.
You don't go to church to be told what to believe. You find a church that teaches what you see in the Bible.
Or so we believed.
These days the SBC leadership seems to want us to come to church so they can tell us what to believe.
It is totally not an issue of whether or not we agree with what they teach.
It is totally an issue of whether or not we must have a human mediator to stand between us and God.
Shurden's book is excellent. So is "The Axioms of Religion" by E. Y. Mullins if you want to understand what has changed.
the leadership in SBC also trying to steer back towards more "reformed" salvation thinking, Eh?
Today's SBC has become increasingly authoritarian, creedal, exclusivist, an in denial of historic Baptist distinctives.