David Lamb
Well-Known Member
I don't really accept your line of reasoning. Yes, there are certainly many areas where Reformed Baptist theology is similar to or identical with that of Presbyterianism. That does not of necessity mean that it grew out of Presbyterianism, any more than the fact that other Baptists share many doctrines with non-baptistic Arminianism necessarily indicates their roots. Also, the First London Baptist Confession of Faith was originally written in 1644, 2 years before the Westminster Confession. (I understand that the reason it it sometimes called "The 1646 Baptist Confession" is only that a new edition came out that year.)Jerome said:According to Pastor Greg Nichols, Grand Rapids Reformed Baptist Church, Baptist churches should reject the error of congregational church government and adopt presbyterial local church government instead.
When Should a Christian Leave a Church?
By John G. Reisinger
"The following article is written primarily for Reformed Baptists only because that is the group with which I have been identified for over twenty years. . . .
"One of the greatest tragedies of our past efforts as Baptists was our use of nothing but Presbyterian literature. We set up the conferences, got those to attend whom we had taught the truth of grace, and then we stuffed Presbyterian books and speakers down their throat by the carload. It is time to set up a BAPTIST Banner of Truth. It is time to quit feeding the best of our young men to Presbyterian schools. It is time that sincere Baptist sheep stop leaving Reformed Baptist churches only to find a welcome nowhere but in a Presbyterian church.
Incidentally, I do not recognise the situation John G. Reisinger describes when he says that Baptists (I assume Reformed Baptists) use nothing but Presbyterian literature. Nor do Banner of Truth only publish Presbyterian authors. A quick look at their online catalogue showed titles by several baptist authors, including 15 by Spurgeon, and others by Bernard Honeysett, Alec Taylor, Al Martin, John Benton, Peter Jeffrey, Andrew Swanson, Robert Oliver, Geoff Thomas, Stuart Olyott, W. J. Seaton, and Walt Chantry, who is the current editor (and has been since 2002) of the Banner of Truth magazine. I should say that I have only listed those BoT authors who I know to be baptists - there are probably others.
Maybe where you are, baptist churches are "feeding the best of their young men to Presbyterian schools." I have not heard of that happenning here, though it may do - I don't claim omniscience. :laugh: There are seminaries and collegies that are Reformed in nature, but have not denominational leaning, for instance the Wales Evangelical School of Theology - see www.west.org.uk There are others which are both Reformed and baptistic, such as the London Reformed Baptist Seminary.