Generally I have a problem with giving someone a title that they disagree with.
I don't...not with respect to the "Baptist" title...truth is, there is much Ecclesiological unbderstanding, and in my opinion, much mis-understanding entailed in the title "Baptist". We have too much disagreement now-a-days with what the term "Church" even means......Baptists have NOT historically believed in this "Universal Church" thingy that too many on here seem passionate about. I am truly saddened about this. There is an open thread right now, where a bunch of Cals and Arms are yacking about "WHO" Christ "DIED" for....and they are completely talking past one another because there is one set who defines the "Church" as this random amalgam of all for whom Christ died.... and there is another which sees the "Church" as existing only in the institutional New Testament sense of an "assembly of called-out ones". The dissconnect is atrocious.
But quickly, let me make it a little more personal... Let's say that you were someone who rightfully and benevolently influences your church's policy
.
Regrettably, I am, in fact, such a being...I posses more influence than I should on my beloved Local body.
With your understanding of what IS a Baptist, would your influence reflect this belief when considering a prospective member for membership when they go to a church that is unafiliated and does not self identify as a baptist but identifies as 'a local congregation in the Townville area', providing that the church adheres to the distinctives that we so far have all seemed to agree with on this thread?
"Affiliation" (as it respects Baptists) is not so critical as one might think. Generally speaking, a church which does NOT consider itself "Baptist" will not wish to affiliate with us. If they did, then it would be an issue of grilling them to the "nth" degree about their Theology, and then (provided they are in one accord)....I would not refuse affiliation. It is something of an interesting factoid that the average SBC Church must anually re-affirm their committment to the "Baptist Faith and Message" in order to appropriately affiliate (even though "enforcement" is lax). I no longer can personally subscribe to the BFM because of its allusion to the "Universal Church"....it is sad IMO. They didn't glean that from Scripture, and it was not their historical position...but they were stong-armed into accepting certain ecumenical ideals and they sold-out to make a regrettable liner-note "shout-out" to this "U-church ism" which is NOT a genuine and genetic facet of Baptist thought...Other than that particular notion...I would agree with them 100%.