"there is nothing new under the sun"
Shropshire Baptist History
"Another Calvinistic Baptist movement began in Scotland. 'Scotch or Sandemanian Baptists', as they came to be called, were founded on the principle that both the doctrine and polity of a true church must be taken in literal detail from the New Testament. Each church should have at least two ruling elders, who were responsible for the government and teaching of the church, while deacons attended to financial matters. The elders were unpaid; Scotch Baptists often had contempt for an educated ministry and were antagonistic to what came to be called 'a one man ministry.'"
Vedder's Baptist History
Archibald McLean almost deserves to be called the founder of the Scotch Baptist churches. . . . His membership for a time in a Glasite or Sandemanian church had important consequences. It was the special endeavor of that peculiar sect to return as far as possible to apostolic simplicity, and to make the churches of to-day an exact reproduction of those of the New Testament. From many of his Sandemanian notions McLean never freed himself, and the Baptist churches of Scotland have perpetuated not a few of these notions, such as insisting on having a plurality of elders in every church, on the weekly celebration of the Lord’s Supper, and the like. Later investigations of the New Testament period have disclosed the fact, apparently not suspected by McLean and men of his time, that no single form of organization was common to all the churches of that period, and that it is unsafe to assert a practice found in a single church to be necessarily the norm for all other churches through all time."
"I remember that when Andrew Fuller had a very severe lecture from some Scotch Baptist brethren about the discipline of the church, he made the reply, "You say that your discipline is so much better than ours. Very well, but discipline is meant to make good soldiers. Now, my soldiers fight better than yours, and I think therefore that you ought not to say much about my discipline." So the real thing is not to be for ever calculating about modes of church government, and methods of management and plans to be adopted and rules to be laid down, which it shall be accounted a serious breach to violate. All well in their place, for order is good in its way. But come, now, let us go to work. Let us have something done." ---Spurgeon