I was referring to Baptists in general, and specifically contrasting them to others. I have been a Baptist since I was a child. I remained a Baptist because at the time, Baptists, in general were interested in the truth. When I was a child, you could walk into a Baptist church, and you would stand about a 40% chance of hearing a good Kingdom message, about a 40% chance of hearing a salvation message being taught to saved people, and about 20% somewhere else, often involving Lordship Salvation.
Today, I find fewer and fewer Baptist churches that are willing to accept anything that contradicts their doctrinal statement. And, if the elders haven't read the doctrinal statement too closely, when you show them something in the doctrinal statement that goes against the popular teaching of the day, "Well, they just didn't know any better."
Does it mean that all Baptists are like that? No. I'm not even sure it would be most. But, it's sizable and growing.
My entire life, I've encountered the "I don't care what the Bible actually says, I believe..." attitude. But, I had an elder explicitly say, "I don't care what the Bible actually says, I just care what the Spirit teaches me". Well, it's not the Holy Spirit that leads you to understand something that is contrary to the actual words.
Now, that does not mean that we are all going to have the same understanding. But, our attitude should be, "let's see what the Scriptures say".
And one thing that I've learned about Baptists (in general) is that it does not matter what the Scriptures say when they contradict a doctrinal statement, a preconceived notion, or whatever, and the most common form of attack is, "You obviously don't care about the truth because you don't agree with me."
I know a KJVO type who is KJVO up until the KJV contradicts something that he already believes. In his opinion, the KJV is the literal and inspired word of God without error. But, when it contradicts his preformed theology, then "we just haven't opened our hearts and minds to the spirit."
Most of my dealings are withing the Baptist church, but outside the Baptist church, it is much the same, although I don't believe it always has been. I believe that at one point, most Baptists put Scriptures first. I now think that it's a minority position.
And this is coming from someone who has had to change many preconcieved ideas over the years.