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Very true, El_Guero. Kiffin did a splendid job.Originally posted by El_Guero:
ptl4evr
Kiffen's answer on page one was one of Kiffen's better answers ...
I've held out from posting on this thread. But here goes.Originally posted by Bro. James:
What does a "real" Baptist believe?
Some terms: 1. sola scriptura, 2. sovereign grace, 3. election, 4. predestination, 5. scriptural immersion, 6. closed communion, 7. assembly sovereignty. 8. priesthood of believers
There are many more. Terms 2,3,4,5 narrow the field to a remnant the number of which is in the millions over the last two thousand years.
Selah,
Bro. James
Then the answer is no.Yes, you can look it up in Dr. Smither's 10 volume History of the Baptists, complete with the corporate lineage of the First Baptist Church of Jerusalem.
Then the answer is a careful yes.Before the sixteenth century, traces of New Testament Churches and their members can be found throughout Europe, North Africa, the Middle East, and Asia Minor. Some of these traces are clearer than others. Regrettably, the religious (the RCC) and secular powers did a good job at wiping out any primary sources. So, the traces can only be found in what are at best secondary documents.
Thank you for finally giving a clear statement of what you believe to be the Baptist distinctives. Having said that, I think it to be a very strange list. You have put Calvinist doctrine (your 2, 3, 4) ahead of a regenerate church membership and separation of church and state!! I find that very strange, especially in light of the topic of this thread. Now don't get all huffy, I'm not attacking Calvinist doctrine.Originally posted by Bro. James:
What does a "real" Baptist believe?
Some terms: 1. sola scriptura, 2. sovereign grace, 3. election, 4. predestination, 5. scriptural immersion, 6. closed communion, 7. assembly sovereignty. 8. priesthood of believers
There are many more. Terms 2,3,4,5 narrow the field to a remnant the number of which is in the millions over the last two thousand years.
Selah,
Bro. James
James, you need to study that passage a little bit more. It does not say what you think it does. The passage teaches that when the church attacks the gates of Hell (gates are stationary), it will win. I see the gates of Hell all the time here on the mission field, and am not at all afraid, because I have this promise. What the passage does not say is that any particular local church will last forever.Originally posted by Bro. James:
The references on the post show that the "gates of hell" have not prevailed, the witnesses are still here. Satan could not kill them all. God has preserved a remnant through the fire, flood and sword. True Baptists have been in every generation since the first century A.D. The rest are called Protestant. True Baptists are not Protestant. This teaching will split many groups. Many modern baptist groups think Baptists are protestants. They are mistaken. Secular history verifies what scripture has promised--not that it needs to do so.
God is faithful--even when we are not.
Selah,
Bro. James