A (very) Brief History of Baptists

Rev. David Holwick

Ledgewood Baptist Church

September 13, 1999


       A BRIEF HISTORY OF BAPTISTS IN AMERICA


  I. Origin of the Baptists


       a. "Trail of blood" theory.


     Extremely conservative Baptists believe there has been an unbroken

     chain of faithful Christians down through the ages who should be

     identified with Baptists.  (Therefore we are not Protestants because

     we were never part of the Roman Catholic church and did not have to

     break away from it.)  Most of these groups were small and persecuted

     severely, thus they can be identified by the "trail of blood" they

     left.  While most of these groups held to some of our beliefs (Bible

     as final authority, churches should be composed only of true

     believers) none of them held to all of our beliefs.


       b. Independent Puritans.


     The most likely view is that Baptists grew out of the Puritan

     movement in England.  The Puritans were conservatives in the Church

     of England who thought their church was too lax; they were persecuted

     for this and many came to America where they established the

     Congregational and Presbyterian churches.  A small number of the

     English Puritans thought the reforms did not go far enough especially

     when it came to establishing a pure church.  One of them was named

     John Smyth.


     John Smyth began in 1600 as a Church of England preacher in Lincoln

     where he was elected their pastor on a vote of 8 to 7.  They fired

     him because he preached against too many important people.  He

     became the preacher of a Separatist church in 1602; their sister

     church became the actual Pilgrim group that migrated to Plymouth.

     Because of persecution by the government both groups fled to

     Holland where Smyth set up an English church of eighty people.

     They did not yet reject infant baptism.  Smyth opposed using notes

     or even Scripture while preaching so he wouldn't hinder the Spirit.

     In 1609 Smyth became convinced infant baptism was wrong and

     baptized himself by affusion (pouring water on his head); about 40

     others in the church were then baptized by him.  A short time

     later, Smyth joined the Mennonites and most of his group followed

     them.


     The remaining group of 8 or 10, led by Thomas Helwys, returned to

     England in 1611, the same year the King James Bible was produced.

     They formed the General Baptists ("general" meaning they did not

     accept the Calvinist doctrine of limited atonement where Jesus dies

     only for the Elect).  Pastor Helwys wrote a pamphlet promoting

     religious freedom and liberty of conscience, and was promptly

     jailed in Newgate Prison; John Bunyan wrote "A Pilgrim's Progress"

     there.


     A second early group was called the Particular Baptists.  They were

     Calvinist and arose independently around 1638 in England.  Some of

     them were so committed to predestination they later became known as

     Anti-missionary Baptists.  Not surprisingly they have all but died

     out.



II. Beginning of Baptists in America


     In the 1630's some English Baptists moved to America at escape

     persecution but discovered the Massachusetts Colony could be just as

     intolertant.  Some were jailed for preaching without a license.

     In 1638 Puritan dissident Roger Williams was banished from Boston,

     wandered for 14 weeks in the wilderness and came to Providence, Rhode

     Island, where he established America's first Baptist church in 1639.

     (He became a Baptist at some point in this episode.)  Williams

     promoted religious liberty for all citizens - even for Jews and

     Catholics.  Williams remained a Baptist for a few months, then

     rejected all churches as being invalid, though he held Baptistic

     views throughout his life.  (He did not become a "Seeker" as is

     sometimes claimed.)


     John Clarke also established a church nearby and spread the faith in

     Rhode Island and Massachusetts.  In 1651 Obadiah Holmes visited

     Massachusetts to console an elderly Baptist and to speak of his

     faith, was arrested, tried in Boston, and whipped in public for

     promoting "Anabaptism."


     Baptists spread rapidly, especially in Pennsylvania and Appalachia.

     The first "Association" was in 1707 in Philadelphia.  Around 1739

     the tremendous revival called the Great Awakening split Baptists

     into two groups, Regular (Arminian) and Separate (Calvinist) but

     also resulted in huge gains.  Most of the growth was among the

     lower classes.  By 1800 Baptists were the largest denomination in

     America.


     In 1811 Adoniram Judson sailed for Burma as the first missionary

     from America.  He became a Baptist on the voyage and worked

     diligently among the Burmese although results were slow - his first

     convert took eight years.  The evangelization of tribal groups was

     far more successful.  Today Baptists support thousands of

     missionaries around the world.  American Baptists (ABC-USA) have

     more members in affiliated overseas churches than they do in

     America.



III. The Great Splits


     Baptists split into Northern and Southern denominations in the

     1840's over the issue of slavery.  The Southerners developed a

     centralized organization that proved very effective.  Following

     World War II the Southerners expanded into northern areas and built

     a large missionary outreach overseas.  In the 1980's the perception

     of theological drift led conservative Southern Baptists to take over

     the leadership of the convention and remold it, the first time this

     has happened in a major American Protestant denomination.  They now

     number 14 million, by far the largest Baptist group.


     Other splits were to follow.  Black Baptists at first attended white

     congregations but soon began leaving to form their own churches and

     associations.  They are one of the dominant influences in African-

     American culture.  At the turn of the century black Baptists formed

     their own denomination, the National Baptists.  In the 1960's Martin

     Luther King, Jr., and other activists formed the Progressive

     Baptists.  Many are also aligned with the American (Northern)

     Baptists.  The majority of black Christians are Baptist.


     In the 1920's and 1930's the debate over liberalism in Baptist

     seminaries led to the break-off of the General Association of

     Regular Baptists (G.A.R.B.) and others from the Northern

     convention.  Many of the most conservative churches became totally

     independent.


     In 1940 much turmoil in the Northern Baptists over the issue of

     liberalism in missions leads to the establishment of the

     Conservative Baptists.  The Association of Regular Baptists is

     another split, and other churches simply became independent.  The

     Northern Baptists became American Baptists after World War II and

     are the most racially and theologically diverse Baptist group and

     have one and a half million members.


     In the 1990's turmoil over homosexuality and diminished attention

     to the authority of the Bible led to the formation of a conservative

     renewal movement, the American Baptist Evangelicals, a renewal

     movement among American Baptists.  Theological turmoil continues to

     be a major factor in Baptist life.



IV. Baptists in other nations


     After their beginnings in England, Baptists have spread around the

     world.  The bulk of them are in the English-speaking countries but

     there are also large populations in Burma, India, Congo and Russia.

     The Baptist World Alliance is composed of most Baptist groups and

     offers inspiration, coordination and assistance for all Baptists,

     especially those in hostile countries.



Copyright © 2024 by Rev. David Holwick

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