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A friend of mine had been baptized in a "Bible" church.
After arriving in Germany, he started to attend a
Landmark Baptist church.
They informed him that in order to join- he had to be re-baptized - he refused as
he believed that his baptism was valid.
So he packed - and went to the Southern Baptist church on the other side of town -
and of course with his wife and six kids!
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I don't blame him I would have gone else where as well, A second baptism makes a mockery of Baptism in my opinion.
MB
David Kent
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Squire Robertsson said:
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David, those would be in the minority. I speak as someone who has been a part of the IFB movement for over forty years and have a BA with a minor in Pastoral Theology from an "IFB" college.
For the vast majority of Baptist churches (IFB or not), membership is acquired in three ways: baptism, letter of transfer, and statement of faith/baptism. The first happens soon after salvation, the second upon moving to a new location, and the last in situations where a letter is impossible to acquire in a timely manner.
My home church has folks from all over the world settling in San Francisco. So, acquiring a letter from a church in the Philippines gets problematical.
The only time I know of a church not accepting a believer's immersion\baptism is the case of a classmate who came from a Primitive Methodist church and wanted to join an IFB
church. The rub being the Primitive Methodists also accepted pouring and anointing as valid modes of baptism.
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The forum was onlinebaptist, although I think those who promoted it have left the forum, as they thought there were too many heretics like me.
Most there believe that there is only a local church and not a universal church.
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Holding to a "local church only" interpretation of ekklesia is not uncommon. Mind you, most of these folks have no problems with cooperating with other like-minded congregations for ministry purposes.