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Retracing Baptists in Rhode Island - Identity, Formation, and History (Paperback)
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Retracing Baptists in Rhode Island - Identity, Formation, and History (Paperback)
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Rhode Island can legitimately claim to be the home of Baptists in
America. The first three varieties of Baptists in the New World -
General Six Principle, Particular, and Seventh Day - made their
debut in this small colony. And it was in Rhode Island that the
General Six Principle Baptists formed the first Baptist
association; the Seventh Day Baptists organized the first national
denomination of Baptists; the Regular Baptists founded the first
Baptist college, Brown University; and the Warren Baptist
Association led the fight for religious liberty in New England. In
Retracing Baptists in Rhode Island, historian J. Stanley Lemons
follows the story of Baptists, from their founding in the colonial
period to the present. Lemons considers the impact of
industrialization, urbanization, and immigration upon Baptists as
they negotiated their identities in an ever-changing American
landscape. Rhode Island Baptists, regardless of variety, stood
united on the question of temperance, hesitated on the abolition of
slavery before the Civil War, and uniformly embraced revivalism,
but they remained vexed and divided over denominational
competition, the anti-Masonic movement, and the Dorr Rebellion.
Lemons also chronicles the relationship between Rhode Island
Baptists and the broader Baptist world. Modernism and historical
criticism finally brought the Baptist theological civil war to
Rhode Island. How to interpret the Bible became increasingly
pressing, even leading to the devolution of Brown's identity as a
Baptist institution. Since the 1940s, the number of Baptists in the
state has declined, despite the number of Baptist denominations
rising from four to twelve. At the same time, the number of
independent Baptist churches has greatly increased while other
churches have shed their Baptist identity completely to become
nondenominational. Lemons asserts that tectonic shifts in Baptist
identity will continue to create a new landscape out of the
heritage and traditions first established by the original Baptists
of Rhode Island.
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