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The Un-Denomination

With no creeds or hierarchy to bind them, it's not surprising that Baptists have a history of breaking apart.

Elesha Coffman

America's largest Protestant denomination, the Southern Baptist Convention, reeled this week after the Baptist General Convention of Texas voted to redirect $5 million in funding away from SBC operations. The Washington Post cited this reasoning: "As the protesters see it, the fundamentalists who have taken over leadership of the Southern Baptist Convention in the last 20 years have changed the very nature of this 150-year-old denomination, moving it away from one that values religious autonomy."

Not being a Southern Baptist, I have neither right nor reason to take a side on this issue. As a historical journalist, however, I wondered what the "very nature" of the Baptist church was 150 years ago and whether the current SBC leadership has indeed effected a significant change. I discovered that the Texans might have history on their side—but in a non-creedal, non-hierarchical denomination like the Baptists, history isn't necessarily much of an ally.

The history of the Baptist church (if such an entity can even be defined) is notoriously difficult to trace. Many people think Baptists sprang from Anabaptists, but they actually grew more directly out of pietistic, Dissenting traditions in seventeenth-century England (and, to a lesser extent, on the European Continent). Baptists name no founder other than Jesus Christ, and because they existed for many years on the persecuted fringe of society, recognize no founding institutions. Further, Baptists groups have always had a hard time gaining critical mass because they have constantly divided over issues like millennialism (pre- vs. post- vs. a-), the role of emotion and revivalism (Old Lights vs. New Lights), and slavery (Northern Baptists vs. Southern Baptists).

In Christian History issue 6 ("Baptists"), historian Edwin S. Gaustad wrote of his inability to find any record of Baptist leaders in colonial America or to identify dates worth commemorating: "Oh, we do have lots of dates: Smyth's self-baptism in 1609; Baptists in Rhode Island in 1638 or 39; the Philadelphia Association in 1707; the Triennial Convention in 1817; the Southern Baptist Convention in 1845; the National Baptist Convention in 1895 or earlier; and so on. The only problem is that to mention any one of these dates does not cause the heart to sing or the eyes to mist; it only causes the mind to wander. … One knows neither where nor when to go to escape the crisis of identity."

Instead of pointing to people, places, and dates—unifying forces in most denominations—Baptists rely on key distinctives, including the supreme authority of the Bible, believer's baptism, local church autonomy, preaching and evangelism, and the separation of church and state. This decentralized foundation allows remarkable flexibility but offers little in the way of an absolute standard against which matters of doctrine and church policies can be measured.

The inherent contradiction of a decentralized denomination has been with Baptists from the beginning, as seen in this 1746 quote from Benjamin Griffiths: "Each particular church has a complete power and authority from Jesus Christ to administer all gospel ordinances, provided they have sufficient, duly qualified officers … to receive in and cast out, and also to try and ordain their own officers, and to exercise every part of gospel discipline and church government, independent of any other church or assembly whatever. Several independent churches where Providence gives them a convenient situation, may and ought for their mutual strength, counsel, and other valuable advantages, by their voluntary and free consent, to enter into an agreement and confederation."

Not surprisingly, this confederation of completely independent churches has often spent more time dividing than agreeing. In describing twentieth-century quandaries—from drinking, dancing, and dominoes to who did what to whom in the Garden of Eden—Gaustad wrote, "It is a history that Thomas Helwys or John Clarke or Isaac Backus [Baptist leaders of the 1600s and 1700s] might have some trouble recognizing and even more difficulty identifying with." But those men are no longer around, nor did they leave behind comprehensive theses, institutes, or articles to speak for them. Contemporary Baptists are free to decide what these fathers would say—and whether or not those voices even matter.

* The 1925, 1963, 1998, and 2000 iterations of the Baptist Faith and Message can be found online at www.utm.edu/martinarea/fbc/bfm.

* Links to several news stories on the BCGT decision, including the Post's, are listed at ChristianityToday.com in the October 31 Weblog.

Elesha can be reached at cheditor@ChristianityToday.com.

The online issue archive for Christian History goes as far back as Issue 51 (Heresy in the Early Church). Prior issues are available for purchase in the Christian History Store.

Copyright © 2000 by the author or Christianity Today International/Christian History magazine.
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