Hello. I don't know really what kind of Baptist I am. In my country, Finland, there are only two kinds of Baptists. The vast majority of those who call themselves Baptists are charismatic Baptists (about 6000 persons or a bit more, most are Finnish-speaking and the few remaining Swedish-speaking). Then there is one tiny local Baptist assembly in Tampere, the second largest city in Finland, which calls itself Traditional Baptist Assembly. I guess in English they would call themselves Regular Baptists. They are not charismatic, but oppose that movement. They are so called 4 point Calvinist. I have read from Torbet's history of Baptists that the Baptists came to my country in about 1870. I do not know what branch of Baptists they were, but in the 20th century it seems there has existed only arminian Baptists in Finland, except for this one Regular Baptist assembly which was started in 1996, by a missionary from USA with Finnish ancestry. As for me I belonged to a charismatic Baptist assembly about two years until I separated from it in june ´99. I requested to be rebaptized since I came out, but the Regular Baptist missionary-pastor refused to baptize me, because he regarded my immersion as valid, which I received from the charismatic Baptists. Since that I requested rebaptism from another branch of Baptists and a man came over from Germany to baptize me. But all since june ´99 I have been without local fellowship and very lonesome. The churches in my area are Lutheran, Methodist, Russian Orthodox, Charismatic Baptist, Pentecostal, Word of Faith, Salvation Army, Jehovah Witnesses, Mormon, SDA, Laestadian (a Lutheran sect), i.e. all are sacramentalists or arminian or pedobaptist or otherwise legalistic or heretical. I definitely disdain to be called charismatic Baptist, and thankfully no one ever calls me that because all know how much I oppose charismatism. Those I fellowship with by email are all from other countries than my home country and call themselves Baptists. My symphaties are with those who baptize by immersion and who believe, preach and contend for the Evangel of the Lord Jesus Christ, the Gospel of free and sovereign grace. Because of this I have received much scorn from those who profess to know God in my own town and country. But anyway, I don't know what to call myself, probably a separatist Particular Baptist, or a New Testament Baptist, or Biblicist Baptist. The designation is secondary to me (if I'm worthy of any), yet by the grace of God I am what I am.
Harald