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Books > Christianity > Protestantism & Protestant Churches > Baptist Churches
Southern Baptists are the nation's largest protestant denomination,
with over 43,000 churches and millions of members. Since its
inception, controversy has surrounded the Baptist Faith and Message
2000, Southern Baptists' most recent confession of faith. The
present volume consists of essays by Baptist scholars explaining
and defending that document. Each of the 18 articles of the
BF&M 2000 is addressed, with special attention to the most
critical issues and changes from the denomination's 1963
confession. Also included is an appendix comprising the full text
of all three Baptist Faith and Message statements from the 20th
century (1925, 1963, and 2000), in side-by-side columns for easy
reference and comparison. Contributors include Al Mohler, Paige
Patterson, Tom Nettles, Dorothy Patterson, E. David Cook, and C.
Ben Mitchell, with a foreword by Susie Hawkins. Brief yet
comprehensive, detailed yet accessible to the non-specialist, this
volume is a must read for Southern Baptist professors and students,
staff and church members, and anyone interested in one of the most
powerful religious forces in America.
The mid-seventeenth century saw both the expansion of the Baptist
sect and the rise and growth of Quakerism. At first, the Quaker
movement attracted some Baptist converts, but relations between the
two groups soon grew hostile. Public disputes broke out and each
group denounced the other in polemical tracts. Nevertheless in this
book, Underwood contends that Quakers and Baptists had much in
common with each other, as well as with the broader Puritan and
Nonconformist tradition. By examining the Quaker/Baptist
relationship in particular, Underwood seeks to understand where and
why Quaker views diverged from English Protestantism in general
and, in the process, to clarify early Quaker beliefs.
Democracy has not always fostered anti-authoritarian individualism.
No American denomination identified itself more closely with the
nation's democratic ideal than the Baptists. Most antebellum
southern Baptist churches allowed women and slaves to vote on
membership matters and preferred populist preachers who addressed
their appeals to the common person. Paradoxically, no denomination
wielded religious authority as zealously as the Baptists. Between
1785 and 1860 they ritually (and democratically) excommunicated
forty to fifty thousand church members in Georgia alone. Wills
demonstrates how a denomination of freedom-loving individualists
came to embrace an exclusivist spirituality - a spirituality that
continues to shape Southern Baptist churches in contemporary
conflicts between moderates who urge tolerance and conservatives
who require belief in scriptural inerrancy. Wills's analysis
advances our understanding of the interaction between democracy and
religious authority, and will appeal to scholars of American
religion, culture, and history, as well as to Baptist observers.
Traces the life of Harry Emerson Fosdick, discusses the development
of his religious beliefs, and examines his influence on
Protestantism in America.
In the English-speaking Western world alone, thousands of men and
women begin formal training for Christian ministry each year or
informally seek to equip themselves for pastoral ministry. Over the
past fifty years, the ancient world of virtue ethics has been
re-imagined as a means of forming people of character and morality
today. In Shaped for Service, this experience is used as the
framework to understand what we are doing as we form Christian
ministers now, and how we might strengthen that development by more
consciously linking the practices of ministry with the person,
spirituality, and wisdom of the practitioner. Writing from the
context of a lifetime of pastoral ministry and the oversight of
ministers in the Baptist Union of Great Britain, Goodliff explores
what pastors do and who they are called to be using a mixture of
theological and pastoral enquiry, reflections upon art and personal
story. This book will be of interest to those who are charged with
forming the next generation of ministers, but anyone beginning that
journey of formation for ministry themselves will also find this
vision of ministry challenging and inspiring.
The Dr G.R. Beasley-Murray Memorial Lectures were delivered
annually between 2002 and 2012 with the aim of extending the legacy
of this significant New Testament scholar and church leader into
the twenty-first century. Themes addressed include baptism,
ministry, preaching, mission, and theological faithfulness. Having
first been delivered at the annual Assembly of the Baptist Union of
Great Britain, the lectures in this volume are now made available
to a wider audience and will be of interest to church leaders
across the denominations and across the world, and not least to
those who stand in Beasley-Murray's own Baptist tradition. George
Beasley-Murray died in 2000. The lectures cover a wide range of
topics, from baptism to missions, from Evangelical identity to
preaching. The lecturers are: Paul Beasley-Murray, former Principal
of Spurgeon's College; David Coffey, former President of the
Baptist Union and of the Baptist World Alliance; John E. Colwell,
Pastor of Budleigh Salterton Baptist Church; Anthony R. Cross,
Emeritus Director of the Centre for Baptist History and Heritage,
Oxford; Ruth M.B. Gouldbourne, former Tutor in Church History at
Bristol Baptist College; Stephen R. Holmes, Senior Lecturer at the
University of St Andrews; Mark Hopkins, Associate Professor of
Church History, Theological College of Northern Nigeria; Bruce
Milne, formerly Minister of First Baptist Church, Toronto; Michael
Quicke, former Principal of Spurgeon's College, London; Brian
Stanley, Professor of World Christianity, University of Edinburgh.
Barry Harvey provides a doctrine of the church that combines
Baptist distinctives and origins with an unbending commitment to
the visible church as the social body of Christ. Speaking to the
broader Christian community, Harvey updates, streamlines, and
recontextualizes the arguments he made in an earlier edition of
this book (Can These Bones Live?). This new edition offers a style
of ecclesial witness that can help Christian churches engage
culture. The author suggests new ways Baptists can engage
ecumenically with Catholics and other Protestants, offers insights
for Christian worship and practice, and shows how the fragmented
body of Christ can be re-membered after Christendom.
A fresh examination of the Baptist movement, showing its growth and
development to be more complex than hitherto assumed. This book
challenges the orthodoxy that seventeenth-century Baptists were
divided from the first into two separate denominations,
'Particular' and 'General', defined by their differing attitudes to
predestination and the atonement, showing how the position was in
fact much more complicated. It describes how from the foundation of
the 'Generals' in 1609 there were always two tendencies, one
clericalist and pacifist, influenced by the Dutch Mennonites, and
one reflecting the English traditions of erastianism and local lay
predominance in religion. It re-analyses the confessional struggle
during and after the civil war, showing how Independent and
erastian sentiment in Parliament increasingly combined to baulk
Presbyterian ambition; during and partly because of this process
(which they also influenced), the Baptists evolved into three
recognisable tendencies. Amongst General Baptists there was a
politically radical current, but also a more passive tendency which
was starting to gain ground. In 1647-9 most but by no means all
Particular Baptist leaders were hostile to the Levellers. The book
looks at the nature of religious convictionin the New Model Army,
reassessing the role and influence of Baptists in it. In the late
40s, many Baptists, soldiers and civilians, rejected formal
ordinances altogether. STEPHEN WRIGHT received his Ph.D. from the
Universityof London. He has been visiting lecturer at the
University of Hertfordshire and the University of North London.
Text and Authority in the South African Nazaretha Church tells the
story of one of the largest African churches in South Africa,
Ibandla lamaNazaretha, or Church of the Nazaretha. Founded in 1910
by charismatic faith-healer Isaiah Shembe, the Nazaretha church,
with over four million members, has become an influential social
and political player in the region. Deeply influenced by a
transnational evangelical literary culture, Nazaretha believers
have patterned their lives upon the Christian Bible. They cast
themselves as actors who enact scriptural drama upon African soil.
But Nazaretha believers also believe the existing Christian Bible
to be in need of updating and revision. For this reason, they have
written further scriptures - a new 'Bible' - which testify to the
miraculous work of their founding prophet, Shembe. Joel Cabrita's
book charts the key role that these sacred texts play in making,
breaking and contesting social power and authority, both within the
church and more broadly in South African public life.
This book examines the evolution of post-colonial African Studies
through the eyes of Africanists from the Anabaptist (Mennonite and
Church of the Brethren) community. The book chronicles the lives of
twenty-two academics and practitioners whose work spans from the
immediate post-colonial period in the 1960s to the present day, a
period in which decolonization and development have dominated
scholarly and practitioner debate. Reflecting the values and
perspectives they shared with the Mennonite Central Committee and
other church-sponsored organizations, the authors consider their
own personal journeys and professional careers, the power of the
prevailing scholarly paradigms they encountered, and the realities
of post-colonial Africa. Coming initially from Anabaptist service
programs, the authors ultimately made wider contributions to
comparative religion, church leadership, literature, music,
political science, history, anthropology, economics and banking,
health and healing, public health, extension education, and
community development. The personal histories and reflections of
the authors provide an important glimpse into the intellectual and
cultural perspectives that shaped the work of Africanist scholars
and practitioners in the post-colonial period. The book reminds us
that the work of every Africanist is shaped by their own life
stories.
Text and Authority in the South African Nazaretha Church tells the
story of one of the largest African churches in South Africa,
Ibandla lamaNazaretha, or Church of the Nazaretha. Founded in 1910
by charismatic faith-healer Isaiah Shembe, the Nazaretha church,
with over four million members, has become an influential social
and political player in the region. Deeply influenced by a
transnational evangelical literary culture, Nazaretha believers
have patterned their lives upon the Christian Bible. They cast
themselves as actors who enact scriptural drama upon African soil.
But Nazaretha believers also believe the existing Christian Bible
to be in need of updating and revision. For this reason, they have
written further scriptures - a new 'Bible' - which testify to the
miraculous work of their founding prophet, Shembe. Joel Cabrita's
book charts the key role that these sacred texts play in making,
breaking and contesting social power and authority, both within the
church and more broadly in South African public life.
With 110 million members worldwide, Baptists are surpassed only by
Roman Catholic and Orthodox groups as the largest segment of
Christians. The term "Baptist" has its origins with the
Anabaptists, the denomination historically linked to the English
Separatist movement of the 16th century. Although Baptist churches
are located throughout the world, the largest group of Baptists
lives in the Southern United States, and the Baptist faith has
historically exerted a powerful influence in that region of the
country. The A to Z of the Baptists relates the history of the
Baptist Church through a chronology, an introductory essay, a
bibliography, and hundreds of cross-referenced dictionary entries
on important events, doctrines, and the church founders, leaders,
and other prominent figures who have made notable contributions.
This volume commemorates the 400th anniversary of the founding of
the Baptist movement in 1609.
Pascal Denault's careful labors over the theological texts of both
Baptist and Pedobaptists of the seventeenth century have yielded an
excellent study of the relation of baptism to a commonly shared
covenantalism. At the same time he has shown that a distinct
baptistic interpretation of the substance of the New Covenant, that
is, all its conditions having been met in the work of Christ its
Mediator resulting in an unconditional application of it to its
recipients, formed the most basic difference between the two
groups. His careful work on the seventeenth-century documents has
yielded a strong, Bible-centered, covenantal defense of believers'
baptism and is worthy of a dominant place in the contemporary
discussions of both covenantalism and baptism. -Thomas J. Nettles,
Ph.D.
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Baptist Identities
(Hardcover)
Ian M. Randall, Toivo Pilli, Anthony Cross
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Inward Baptism analyses the theological developments that led to
the great evangelical revivals of the mid-eighteenth century. Baird
Tipson here demonstrates how the rationale for the "new birth," the
characteristic and indispensable evangelical experience, developed
slowly but inevitably from Luther's critique of late medieval
Christianity. Addressing the great indulgence campaigns of the late
fifteenth and early sixteenth centuries, Luther's perspective on
sacramental baptism, as well as the confrontation between Lutheran
and Reformed theologians who fastened on to different aspects of
Luther's teaching, Tipson sheds light on how these disparate
historical moments collectively created space for evangelicalism.
This leads to an exploration of the theology of the leaders of the
Evangelical awakening in the British Isles, George Whitefield and
John Wesley, who insisted that by preaching the immediate
revelation of the Holy Spirit during the "new birth," they were
recovering an essential element of primitive Christianity that had
been forgotten over the centuries. Ultimately, Inward Baptism
examines how these shifts in religious thought made possible a
commitment to an inward baptism and consequently, the evangelical
experience.
Mechal Sobel's fascinating study of the religious history of
slaves and free blacks in antebellum America is presented here in a
compact volume without the appendixes. Sobel's central thesis is
that Africans brought their world views into North America where,
eventually, under the tremendous pressures and hardships of chattel
slavery, they created a coherent faith that preserved and
revitalized crucial African understandings and usages regarding
spirit and soul-travels, while melding them with Christian
understandings of Jesus and individual salvation.
In the seventeenth century, English Baptists existed on the fringe
of the nation's collective religious life. Today, Baptists have
developed into one of the world's largest Protestant denominations.
Despite this impressive transformation, those first English
Baptists remain chronically misunderstood. In Orthodox Radicals,
Matthew C. Bingham clarifies and analyzes the origins and identity
of Baptists during the English Revolution, arguing that
mid-seventeenth century Baptists did not, in fact, understand
themselves to be a part of a larger, all-encompassing Baptist
movement. Contrary to both the explicit statements of many
historians and the tacit suggestion embedded in the very use of
"Baptist" as an overarching historical category, the early modern
men and women who rejected infant baptism would not have initially
understood that single theological stance as being in itself
constitutive of a new collective identity. Rather, the rejection of
infant baptism was but one of a number of doctrinal revisions then
taking place among English puritans eager to further their on-going
project of godly reformation. Orthodox Radicals complicates our
understanding of Baptist identity, setting the early English
Baptists in the cultural, political, and theological context of the
wider puritan milieu out of which they arose. The book also speaks
to broader themes, including early modern debates on religious
toleration, the mechanisms by which early modern actors established
and defended their tenuous religious identities, and the perennial
problem of anachronism in historical writing. Bingham also
challenges the often too-hasty manner in which scholars have drawn
lines of theological demarcation between early modern religious
bodies, and reconsiders one of this period's most dynamic and
influential religious minorities from a fresh and perhaps
controversial perspective. By combining a provocative
reinterpretation of Baptist identity with close readings of key
theological and political texts, Orthodox Radicals offers the most
original and stimulating analysis of mid-seventeenth-century
Baptists in decades.
Like most Christians, Mary Blye Howe was uninformed about Jewish
ritual and tradition. To satisfy her curiosity she joined a Jewish
study group held in the home of a Hasidic rabbi. "A Baptist Among
the Jews" is Howe's first-person account of her eye-opening
experience of studying with that welcoming group and how this
experience led her to a deeper, richer relationship with her God.
While learning about the traditions of Judaism and studying the
Torah, Howe discovered a new world of worship and ritual that
expanded her experience to include several different Jewish groups,
among them Reform, Conservative, and Orthodox. She reveled in the
joys of arguing with God (even though God always wins),
synagogue-hopping on the Jewish holiday of Shavuot, and dancing
with a sefer torah through the streets of Dallas. Page after page,
we join Howe on her religious quest and discover how her
once-narrow concept of God has expanded with her ability to read
the scriptures and understand this new faith. Howe's profound and
transforming experiences helped her develop a new sense of
worship-- one that eschews spectatorship in favor of participation.
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