In my town, there is a residential area that is pretty
bad, and one of the town's main streets runs
through it. One day, I counted the churches on
that street in the 15-block area. There were 14
churches; of the 14, 10 were Baptist. I mentioned
this to one of the students at the business school I
was attending then, herself a Baptist. She sneered
at my comment about so many Baptist churches,
saying something I no longer remember, but it was
a definite put-down, that there were so many
Baptist churches. Pardon my ignorance, but I
thought it was wonderful that they cared enough
to supply that area with places to go, especially
for those who may have to walk in order to attend.
Question: Why do you suppose she was upset
that there were so many? Is such a number of
Baptist churches in one area necessarily
indicative of church splits?
This same young lady was very loud about her
religion, and at the same time, she was very rude,
crude, and had an anger problem. She swore
unlike I normally hear from adults, she would get
angry and stomp and/or strike her desk, and there
were other problems. She was NOT at all repre-
sentative of the Baptists I have been around.
Although in her late twenties, she seemed do know
a normal amount of religious facts for one her age,
but seemed clueless regarding application.
Question: How would such a one be accepted
within Baptist circles: as a fellow-believer because
she said she was, as a hypocrite, as one not yet
spiritually mature enough to really know the Lord,
or as a hopeless cause for now?
Question: Approximately what percentage of
Baptist churches are Calvinistic as compared to
Arminian?
Question: Do all Baptists normally accept all
other Baptists as true believers? Which Baptist
groups are most likely not to accept all other
Baptist groups as true believers?
Question: Do most Baptists accept that there
are others who are also believers? Among
those who are not accepting of others, what is
their main separation issue?
bad, and one of the town's main streets runs
through it. One day, I counted the churches on
that street in the 15-block area. There were 14
churches; of the 14, 10 were Baptist. I mentioned
this to one of the students at the business school I
was attending then, herself a Baptist. She sneered
at my comment about so many Baptist churches,
saying something I no longer remember, but it was
a definite put-down, that there were so many
Baptist churches. Pardon my ignorance, but I
thought it was wonderful that they cared enough
to supply that area with places to go, especially
for those who may have to walk in order to attend.
Question: Why do you suppose she was upset
that there were so many? Is such a number of
Baptist churches in one area necessarily
indicative of church splits?
This same young lady was very loud about her
religion, and at the same time, she was very rude,
crude, and had an anger problem. She swore
unlike I normally hear from adults, she would get
angry and stomp and/or strike her desk, and there
were other problems. She was NOT at all repre-
sentative of the Baptists I have been around.
Although in her late twenties, she seemed do know
a normal amount of religious facts for one her age,
but seemed clueless regarding application.
Question: How would such a one be accepted
within Baptist circles: as a fellow-believer because
she said she was, as a hypocrite, as one not yet
spiritually mature enough to really know the Lord,
or as a hopeless cause for now?
Question: Approximately what percentage of
Baptist churches are Calvinistic as compared to
Arminian?
Question: Do all Baptists normally accept all
other Baptists as true believers? Which Baptist
groups are most likely not to accept all other
Baptist groups as true believers?
Question: Do most Baptists accept that there
are others who are also believers? Among
those who are not accepting of others, what is
their main separation issue?