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BAPTIST DISTINCTIVES
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Historically,
Baptists find their origins in the Free (Anabaptist) Churches. These
churches existed from the time of the apostles. Even though the name
BAPTIST was not used until the 1600's, the Baptist Distinctives were
practiced by small, persecuted groups during the Dark Ages and the
Reformation. Biblical faith and practice forced these to separate from
two powerful traditional groups. The Roman Catholic Church - This
group eventually rejected all of the Baptist Distinctives. When their
persecution ended, they became the persecutors. The Protestant
Churches - During the Protestant Reformation, these formerly Catholic
churches tried to return to a more Biblical pattern. They still
rejected most of the Baptist Distinctives. To a lesser degree, they
also persecuted the Anabaptists. Thus, Bible-centered Baptist Churches
are not Protestant churches. They existed long before the Reformation.
THE HISTORIC BAPTIST DISTINCTIVES
Even though the name BAPTIST has been misused by many, we retain the
name because the historic Baptist position best describes our position
in matters of doctrine, faith, and practice. We share similar
positions with other groups who base their beliefs completely on Bible
teaching. Even though they may not choose our name, they are fellow
workers. For the sake of memory, we have arranged the major Baptist
Distinctives in an acrostic.
B
- The BIBLE is our final authority for what we believe and what we do.
No
insight, testimony, or decree of man, regardless of his piety or
position, can ever supersede the Bible (II Timothy 3:16,17). This
distinctive is the primary Baptist distinctive. All others spring from
this absolute trust in the scriptures.
A - The AUTONOMY of the
Local
Church.
The local church is an independent body accountable to no one but our
Lord. There is no person or organization on earth that can dictate
what a local church can or should do (Acts 15; Matthew 18:15-17). This
does not prevent voluntary cooperation with other churches as long as
such activity does not violate the church's independence or affiliate
the church with satanic apostasy.
P- The PRIESTHOOD of the Believer.
Every believer today is a priest and may enter the presence of God
directly through only one Mediator, our Great High Priest, Jesus
Christ. There is no other human mediator (Hebrews 4:14-16;
I Peter 2:5-10). Along with the privilege of priesthood, there is the
responsibility as priests to live a life separated from sin and unto
God.
T
- There are TWO Ordinances: Baptism and the Lord's Supper (Acts 2:41,42).
An
ordinance is . . .
1. A command of Christ
2. A picture of saving truth
3. Explained in the New Testament
4. Practiced by the New Testament churches
We
practice only believer's baptism by immersion. This contradicts two
practices common among Roman Catholic and Protestant churches: infant
baptism and sprinkling (pouring). Immersion is the only acceptable
mode for baptism because it alone preserves the picture of saving
truth. No other form pictures the death, burial, and resurrection of
Christ (Romans 6:1-5). We believe that communion (the Lord's Supper)
is a symbolic ordinance, picturing Christ's body broken for our sins
and His blood shed for our redemption. It is not a saving ordinance,
but helps us remember His death, and inspires us while looking forward
to His coming, 1 Corinthians 11:23-24. It is to be observed by
regenerate, obedient believers.
I
- The INDIVIDUAL'S Soul Liberty.
We
believe that every individual has the liberty to believe, right or
wrong, as his own conscience dictates. While we seek to persuade men
to choose the right, a person must not be forced to into compliance
(Romans 14:5-12).
S
- The membership is made exclusively of SAVED and baptized
individuals.
Membership
is strictly a matter of obedience; it bestows no grace (Acts 2:41-47).
T
- There are only TWO offices which guide the church: the Pastor and
the Deacons.
There
is no additional hierarchy of offices (I Timothy 3:1-13).
S
- The SEPARATION of Church and State.
The
church and state are two separate authorities ordained by God. One
should not attempt to control the other (Acts 4:29; Romans 12:18;13:1-5; I Timothy 2:1-4; I Corinthians
5:9-13)
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