MAJOR DIVISIONS WITHIN THE BAPTIST DENOMINATION.
AMERICAN BAPTIST ASSOCIATION
American Baptists can be found in the towns and cities of all 50 states and Puerto Rico. About 1.5 million worship and find inspiration in 5,800 congregations throughout the country. Some grew up as American Baptists; some have left other religious traditions to join. Still others come without any previous connection to a church, acting simply on an invitation or desire to follow Christ and become part of a community of faith.
In today's complex world, the American Baptist family draws its strength from members and churches convinced their God wants nothing more than to redeem that world. It is through a vast variety of ministries that we seek to serve our God here and now.
-Believe there is no universal church.
-Organized in 1905 as Baptist General Association
-Changed its name
in 1924
-Fundamentalist in doctrine.
-Pre-millennial
-Congregational form of government.
-Highly missions oriented.
-Often very social conscious
-Open communion
-Male/Female clergy
-Interpretation of the Bible is thru the
HS but in the community of the church. Therefore, they are tolerant
of diverse
interpretations even within the
denomination.
-Some/many hold that not all Scripture
is historically true but it is the idea or moral that is
inspired and true.
-Ecumenical in nature
-Member of the National Council of Churches and World Council of Churches
BAPTIST BIBLE FELLOWSHIP
-Evangelical independent
-Fastest growing of all Baptist bodies.
-Ultra-conservative and ultimate
fundamentalists.
-Closed communion
-Legalists
-No Women pastors
-They teach that Jesus was a Baptist in
his thinking and work.
-History:
As theological liberalism, also called modernism, made inroads in the Baptist conventions, concerned fundamentalists stood against the compromise. In 1921 they organized the Baptist Bible Union. In 1928 the World Fundamental Baptist Missionary Fellowship, (later the name was shortened to World Baptist Fellowship) was established under the leadership of Norris as a reaction against modernist inroads in the Southern Baptist Convention. A training center, the Bible Baptist Seminary, a missionary organization and a publication, The Fundamentalist, were established.
BAPTIST GENERAL CONFERENCE
Role of women in the church
In this church
the spiritual gifts of women and men are to be recognized, developed, and
used in serving and teaching ministries at all levels of involvement: as
small group leaders, counselors, administrators, ushers, commission members,
communion servers, elder board members, and in pastoral care, teaching,
preaching, and in worship.
Eternal Security
We believe
that such only are real believers as endure unto the end; that their persevering
attachment to Christ is the grand mark which distinguishes them from superficial
professors; that a special providence watches over their welfare, and they
are kept by the power of God through faith unto salvation.
CONSERVATIVE BAPTIST ASSOCIATION
-It was officially formed in 1947 in Atlantic
City, NJ.
-Conservative and fundamental in doctrine
and practice.
-Sacraments are Baptism and Lord Supper
-Split from the American Baptists over
their growing acceptance of liberal churches and pastors in the
association.
-No women pastors.
-Pre-Millenial
FREE WILL BAPTISTS
-Arminian in doctrine
-Christ died for all not just
the elect.
-God calls all to repentance
and we have the free will to refuse.
-Free will of man is important.
-Practice open communion
-Mostly located in the South.
-Practices foot washing
-Government is congregational
FULL GOSPEL BAPTIST CHURCH
Excerpts from their doctrinal statement
We believe in the authority of the believer over the enemy, Satan and the
victory to be gained by the exercise of that authority in the areas of
deliverance, healing and holiness. Ephesisans 1:20-23, 6:10-17.
We believe in the personality and reality of Satan as the enemy of the Kingdom of God and the Saints of the Lord; and in his ultimate defeat by the Lord Jesus Christ and potential defeat in the lives of Spirit-filled believers clothed in the armor of God. Revelation 12:9-10; Matthew 4:2-11; Isaiah 14:12-17; John 8.
We do not feel that others in the Baptist Church are not preaching the full gospel. But, ... As Full Gospel Baptists, we do not believe that we have fully utilized the power Jesus left when He returned to Glory. He left His power when He left the keys with us. The Bible says that, "Whatsoever ye shall bind on earth shall be bound in heaven: and whatsoever ye shall loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven." (Matthew l8:l8) We have dealt with salvation at Calvary but have left out the experience at Pentecost. The Full Gospel Baptists are using those keys to take full authority over the devil. The word of God states that we can legally use our gifts in the name of Jesus! It does not matter how strange it may look to the natural man or to our denomination.
Our purpose is to let Baptists know that we do have a Right to Choose. According to our faith, we can reach the level we desire in Him as we grow in the knowledge of our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ. Let it be known that we shall not condemn you if you do not speak in tongues, cast out demons or operate in the gifts of the Spirit. Fullness is simply giving God full control and no one knows that better than you. Our responsibility is not to judge and tell you what you don't have, but to enlighten you of what you can have according to God's Word.
We fulfill our purpose in the Baptist Church when our people are taught, enlightened and realize that they have a choice. In the Full Gospel Baptist Church, many speak in tongues and many do not, but no one feels uncomfortable because we have a CHOICE.
GENERAL ASSOCIATION OF REGULAR BAPTISTS CHURCHES
-Spit from American Baptist in 1932. Was
established under the leadership of Robert Ketcham as a reaction against
liberalism
in the Northern Baptist Convention.
-Disagreed with liberal teaching
and associations
-Disliked missions plan.
-Disliked whole association structure.
-Separationists
-They keep to themselves or other
churches in their association
-NOT ecumenical minded.
-Missions oriented.
-Fundamental and ultra conservative in
doctrine and practice.
-Pretrib...pre-Mil.
-Eternal salvation
-2 Sacraments: Baptism by immersion and
Lords Supper.
-Congregational government
-Closed communion
-Legalists
Excerpts from their doctrinal statement
To maintain
an association of sovereign Bible-believing, Christ-honoring Baptist churches;
to promote the spirit of evangelism; to spread the gospel; to advance Regular
Baptist educational and missionary enterprises at home and abroad; to raise
and maintain a testimony to the truth of the gospel and to the purity of
the Church; to raise a standard of Biblical separation from worldliness,
modernism and apostasy; to emphasize the Biblical teaching that a breakdown
of divinely established lines between Bible believers and apostates is
unscriptural and to be a voice repudiating cooperation with movements which
attempt to unite true Bible believers and apostates in evangelistic and
other cooperative spiritual efforts.
Separation
We believe in obedience to the Biblical commands to separate ourselves
unto God from worldliness and ecclesiastical apostasy.
Israel
We believe in the sovereign selection of Israel as God's eternal covenant
people, that she is now dispersed because of her disobedience and rejection
of Christ, and that she will be regathered in the Holy Land and, after
the completion of the Church, will be saved as a nation at the second advent
of Christ. Genesis 13:14-17; Romans 11:1-32; Ezekiel 37.
NORTH AMERICAN BAPTIST CONFERENCE
-Began as German Baptist churches
and first churches began in 1840. Fleishman an Pilgrim are
one of the first two in the
country.
-High missions minded
-Congregational form of government.
-Fundamental and conservative in
doctrine.
-Open communion
-2 Sacraments
PRIMITIVE BAPTISTS
The name Primitive Baptist became popular in the early 1800s when the term primitive conveyed the idea of originality rather than backwardness. Accordingly, Primitive Baptists claim to maintain the doctrines and practices of the original Baptists, who claim to be the New Testament church.
Primitive also conveys the idea of simplicity. This well describes the Primitive Baptists, whose church services consist of nothing more than preaching, praying, and singing.
1611 King James version is the superior English translation of the scriptures.
Excerpts from their doctrinal statement
Primitive
Baptists cannot consent with those who compromise scriptural commandments
in order to gain social acceptance. We deny the claim that terms of truth
and morality are to be guided by the ever changing winds of social values
Primitive Baptists not have schools for training ministers. Primitive Baptists elders are chosen by the individual congregations from among male members who have proven to be faithful to the church and its principles. These men are given the opportunity to speak over a trial period to determine if they have a gift to preach. This trial period typically lasts from one to five years. Those judged by the congregations to satisfy scriptural qualifications for the ministry are then ordained by a presbytery of elders.
All Primitive Baptist elders are expected to be self educated in the Word of God and are expected to seek the counsel of experienced ministers about questions of scriptural interpretation and other matters pertaining to the church. Both young and old elders are expected to seek the aid of the Holy Spirit in the furtherance of their wisdom and understanding.
This system of education is preferred above ministerial
training schools because:
-Elders in the New Testament
were primarily self-educated in the scriptures.
-Elders in the New Testament
learned under the direction of the Holy Spirit and other elders rather
than academicians.
-The system makes the scriptures
themselves to be the curriculum.
-The elder learns in the same
setting in which he is expected to teach. Congregations taught by these
elders will be expected
to have the discipline
to educate themselves in the Word of God. The elder should therefore prove
himself to have the same
discipline.
-The system is less vulnerable
to the widespread propagation of error so commonly found when numerous
ministers are
trained under
the same teachings of heretical academicians.
Primitive Baptists use real wine and real unleavened
bread in communion
-While scriptural
descriptions of the original communion use the terms bread, the cup, and
fruit of the vine, it may be
conclusively inferred that the bread was unleavened and that the drink
was fermented wine.
-The importance
of adhering to the scriptural example in this matter cannot be questioned
since God punished the
Corinthians
with illness and death for departing from it (I Cor 11:29-30).
-The usage
of a leavened substance, such as grape juice, to represent the Lord is,
in our opinion, a severe negligence,
and is at risk of being chargeable as failure to discern the body of the
Lord (I Cor 11:29).
Primitive Baptists wash feet during communion
-John explains
that, at the end of the Last Supper, the Lord began to wash the feet of
the disciples. After performing this
great
act of humility, the Lord said, If I then, your Lord and master, have washed
your feet; ye also ought to wash one
another's
feet. For I have given you an example, that ye should do as I
have done unto you (Jn 13:14-15).
-Primitive Baptists understand that this commandment is to be followed in literal detail as well as in spirit.
-Many will
dismiss these actions of Jesus as being no more than symbolic gestures;
however, these same persons
understand
the last supper to be a literal example. We fail to see the consistency
in this.
-Neither should baptized persons participate in the communion of churches espousing principles contrary their own.
-For this reason, Primitive Baptist communion services involve only baptized individuals of like faith and practice.
Primitive Baptists rebaptize persons joining them
from other orders
-The scriptural
precedent for rebaptism is taken from Acts 19:1-7. These verses teach that
persons formerly baptized
under improper principles should be baptized again, and that failure to
do so can prevent proper reception of the Holy
Spirit.
Primitive Baptists not use musical instruments
-We can
find no biblical precedent for the usage of musical instruments in New
Testament worship. The scriptures give
repeated instructions to sing in the church, but never to play (Rom 15:9,
I Cor 14:15, Eph 5:19, Col 3:16, Heb 2:12).
-It will
occasionally be objected that there are also many other things in all modern
churches which are without scriptural
precedent - things such as electric lights, air conditioners, etc; however,
these items affect only the setting of worship
and
are not integral to it.
-The scriptures
have clearly afforded much liberty in such matters (Lk 5:3, Jn 4:20-24,
Acts 20:7-8, Acts 21:5).
A distinction must also be made between an addition to the New Testament
pattern and an aid to this pattern.
Electric lights, song books, reference Bibles, etc. are aids to worship,
but musical instruments are additions to worship.
QUESTION: How are they different? Both are aids to worship. They help create an atmosphere of worship.
Primitive Baptists use scriptural precedent to
resolve questions of church practice
-Primitive
Baptists believe that issues of practice which are not explicitly addressed
by scriptural commandment should be
resolved, where possible, by scriptural precedent. Primitive Baptists are
very disinclined to treat scriptural practices as
mere cultural fashions of biblical times, and will do so only where
this is obviously the case (I Cor 9:19-23).
-Scriptures
themselves teach that adherence to scriptural example is not a matter of
indifference. Paul told the Corinthians,
Be ye followers of me, even as I also am a follower of Christ. Now I praise
you, brethren, that ye remember me in all
things, and keep the ordinances (traditions), as I delivered them to
you (I Cor 11:1-2).
-Accordingly, he
told the Thessalonians, Therefore, brethren, stand fast, and hold the traditions
which ye have been taught,
whether
by word or our epistle (II Thes 2:15).
-One chapter
later he wrote, Now we command you, brethren, in the name of our Lord Jesus
Christ, that you withdraw
yourselves from every brother that walketh disorderly, and not after the
tradition which he received of us (II Thes 3:6).
-Traditions
which have no biblical authority are nonobligatory, and to make them otherwise
can reduce worship to vanity
(Mk
7:5-13).
-On the other
hand, traditions which have biblical authority are clearly expected of
us, and are sufficiently important to be
criteria of fellowship.
-Since the
New Testament church was a highly multicultural institution, being found
in many nations of the world, practices
uniformly observed in them cannot be dismissed as cultural peculiarities.
They clearly expected these practices of
themselves as churches of Jesus Christ, and we should view these
practices the same way.
-No Sunday School, No Youth groups or other programs. Because they are not found in the Bible.
-No crucifixes
or pictures of Jesus in their churches and homes
REFORMED BAPTISTS
-Not all Reformed Baptists have either
reformed or Baptist in their names.
-They are strict 5 point Calvinists.
-Sovereign Grace is important
-Established in 1954.
-2 Sacraments
-Closed communion.
SOUTHERN BAPTIST
-Split from the Baptists over the slavery
issue as well as how to form an association issue.
-Calvinistic in doctrine.
-Congregational government.
-Fundamental, conservative in doctrine.
-Very big on missions.
-Big on Sunday School and have a major
publishing house for this.
-Fastest growing of the larger denominations
-Having problems between conservatives
and moderates in its organizational structure.
7TH DAY BAPTIST
Seventh Day Baptists are evangelical Baptists who hold to keeping the seventh day Sabbath of the Bible as sacred time. From their first church in Newport, Rhode Island in 1671, until today, Seventh day Baptists have been a Christ-centered, Bible believing people with traditional family values. We have over seventy churches in North America, and churches in over twenty countries.
-Women and Men pastors
The Sabbath Question
'Answers to common questions about keeping the Sabbath'
By: Kyle D. Pratt
1. What is the Seventh Day Baptists church?
While not the biggest
or most well known of the Sabbath keeping churches the Seventh Day
Baptist church is, perhaps, the oldest. The Seventh Day
Baptist church has over a 300 year history in North America
and even longer in England. While they are a Sabbath keeping church
they are first and foremost a Christian church with beliefs and practices
very similar to that of other Baptist believers.
2. Why do Seventh Day Baptists keep the
Sabbath?
Seventh Day Baptists
keep the Sabbath out of a conviction that the Ten Commandments remain valid
moral code for us today. The fourth commandment, the only one we
are told to remember, says, ' Remember the sabbath day, to
keep it holy. Six days shalt thou labour, and do all thy work:
But the seventh day is the sabbath of the LORD thy God: in it thou shalt
not do any work, thou, nor thy son, nor thy daughter, thy manservant,
nor thy maidservant, nor thy cattle, nor thy stranger that is within
thy gates: For in six days the LORD made heaven and earth,
the sea, and all that in them is, and rested the seventh day: wherefore
the LORD blessed the sabbath day, and hallowed it. ' (Exodus 20:8-11,
Deuteronomy 5:12-15)
Seventh Day Baptists believe the Sabbath is a sacred time, instituted at creation and affirmed throughout the Bible. Because we desire to follow God's commandments, Christ's example and the will of God we observe the Sabbath as a time of rest, worship and celebration.
The Sabbath was ordained by God at the creation of the Earth (Genesis 2:3) and given to Adam and Eve, not Moses, so it predates the Jews by millennia. Further, Christ affirms everyone of the Ten Commandments he mentions. Indeed he says in Matthew 5:17-20 that, "Whoever breaks one of the least of these commandments, and teaches men so, shall be called least in the kingdom of heaven; but whoever does and teaches them, he shall be called great in the kingdom of heaven."
3. But after Christ's death didn't the Apostles
meet on Sunday?
If Christ did not see
fit to change the Sabbath to Sunday what authority would the Apostle have
to change it? But the fact is they did not change it.
On the day of the resurrection, referred to in John 20:19 the disciples
are assembled together in fear of mobs of Jews, not for worship.
4. Are you saying the early church didn't meet
on Sunday?
No, not at all.
They held meetings on everyday of the week. Look at a modern
Sunday keeping church, they might have a men's prayer meeting on
Monday, a women's meeting on Tuesday, choir practice on Wednesday,
a Thursday night Bible study and a youth meeting on Friday, but Sunday
is their special day of worship. The early church didn't have
all those programs but would meet eat, sing and preach on a moments
notice. ( Acts 2:42-47 ) But the early church kept the Sabbath as
their special day of worship.
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