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Re-envisioning Baptist Identity: A Manifesto
for Baptist Communities in North America Dear
Baptist Sisters and Brothers,
We are writing to ask you to consider the following theological
proposal. Baptists in North America have long been fragmented, and
far too often the fragmentation has been for most unworthy reasons.
In the contemporary theological milieu, many Baptist theologians
have remained timid about stepping forward to make constructive
theological proposals. Even criticism of the status quo popular
theology is either excessively muted, or so heavily ideological
that it seldom gets to the heart of what the Baptist theological
heritage has stood for.
For too long Baptist theology has railed against Catholics,
Anglicans, Campbellites, and Methodists, not to mention liberals,
fundamentalists, pedobaptists, holy rollers, or whoever are
identified as the current “bad guys” in other churches or
theological camps. But Baptist theology ought not to be against the
church. Baptist theology needs to be for the church and the gospel
in a hostile world.
We believe that there are a growing number of Baptists who would
like to see a new theological direction. We think you may also be
among them. That is why we are asking you to examine the statement
Re-Envisioning Baptist Identity. Please read it carefully and give
it your consideration. It is not a perfect statement. It is a
beginning. We hope that it will begin a framework for dialogue
among Baptists of all sorts. We are inviting you to help us place
the issues raised in these affirmations before other Baptists. Let
us know by mail or email if you would like to be in conversation
with a growing number of people who want to pursue the task of
re-envisioning Baptist identity.
Hopefully,
Mikael Broadway
900 Demerius St.
Durham NC 27701
mbway@pop.mindspring.com
Curtis Freeman
7502 Fondren Road
Houston TX 77074-3298
cfreeman@hbu.edu
Barry Harvey
Baylor University
Waco TX 76798
barry_harvey@baylor.edu
James Wm. McClendon, Jr.
135 North Oakland Ave.
Pasadena CA 91182
Elizabeth Newman
52560 Brighton Park
South Bend IN 46637
bnewman@saintmarys.edu
Philip Thompson
PO Box 128
Pendleton NC 27862
thompp@micah.chowan.edu
To the people called Baptist in North America who in Jesus
Christ have “like living stones” been “built into a spiritual
house, to be a holy priesthood, to offer spiritual sacrifices
acceptable to God through Jesus Christ, may grace and peace be
yours in abundance” (1 Pet 2:4-5). From our beginnings, we Baptists
have celebrated the freedom graciously given by God in Jesus Christ
(Gal 5:1; Jn 8:31-32). Freedom in Christ is a gift, not a given.
This freedom does not subsist merely in self-determination. It is
not rooted in what the world calls natural rights or social
entitlements. It cannot be claimed, possessed, or granted by any
human institution, community, or individual. It belongs to Gods
gift of the new creation in which we share through our faithfulness
to Christ (2 Cor 5:17; Rom 5:15).
God’s freedom is the pattern for the gift of freedom in Jesus
Christ. This freedom which is ours in Christ therefore cannot be
understood apart from the fellowship of the Holy Spirit (2 Cor
13:13; 3:17) who convicts us of sin (Jn 16:8-11), leads us to
repentance (Rom 2:4; Acts 5:31), converts us to faith (Rom 8:9; 1
Cor 12:3), renews us through regeneration (Jn 3:5-6; Tit 3:4-5),
sanctifies us to holiness (Rom 15:16; Gal 5:16; 1 Pet 1:2), assures
us of salvation (Rom 8:15; Gal 4:6; Eph 1:13-14), incorporates us
into the church (1 Cor 12:13), guides us in discernment (Jn 14:26,
20:22-23; 1 Cor 2:14-16, 12:10), and readies us for ministry (1 Cor
12:11). Human freedom exists only in relationship with the triune
God who lovingly creates, wisely governs, mercifully redeems, and
justly judges the world. It is into this relationship of freedom
that God calls a people from every tribe and language, nation and
race . . . to be a royal house of priests, to serve our God and to
rule upon the earth (Rev 5:9-10).
The freedom of God’s people is freedom from the domination of
sinful and selfish human impulses (Rom 7:24-25; Eph 2:1-10). We are
free for serving Christ and one another (Gal 5:1, 13), free to be
sisters and brothers of the firstborn Jesus (Rom 8:14-17, 29; Col
1:15, 18; Jn 1:12-13), and free in our participation in the new
humanity that God is calling out from among the nations (Eph 2:15;
2 Cor 5:17; James 1:18; Rev 14:4). Because freedom comes to us as
gift, it is not something that we possess for ourselves to use for
our own ends. It is something we encounter through the divine
community of the triune God and with the Christian fellowship that
shares in this holy communion (1 Jn 1:3). Human freedom in the new
creation is the image of the Creators freedom who does not will to
be free in solitude but for creation (Gen 1:26Ð30).
Baptists at the outset faithfully bore witness to this freedom
in their common life. For these early Baptists, liberty of
conscience was not a libertarian notion. It was a conviction that
faith must not, indeed cannot, be coerced by any power or
authority. This understanding of freedom is very different from the
modern account in which the mere expression of the will is the
greatest good. We concede nevertheless that the conception of
freedom we oppose became deeply entrenched in the North American
Baptist tradition by the mid-eighteenth century. Baptist heritage,
however, predates the formation of modern democratic societies in
North America. We have, therefore, drawn from earlier sources of
the Baptist heritage and from other examples in the believers
church (or baptist) tradition that have resisted modern notions of
freedom and have practiced a more communal discipleship. We thus
seek an understanding of freedom that is true to the biblical
witness and the earliest insights of the Baptist heritage.
Two mistaken paths imperil this precious freedom in contemporary
Baptist life. Down one path go those who would shackle God’s
freedom to a narrow biblical interpretation and a coercive
hierarchy of authority. Down the other path walk those who would
sever freedom from our membership in the body of Christ and the
community’s legitimate authority, confusing the gift of God with
notions of autonomy or libertarian theories. We contend that these
two conceptions of freedom, while seemingly different, both define
freedom as a property of human nature apart from the freedom of God
in Jesus Christ and the Holy Spirit. We reject both of them as
false and prefer neither, for false freedom will only lead Baptists
to exchange the glory of God for the shame of idols (Rom 1:21-23).
Only the freedom of the gospel liberates us from the worship of
idols, including the idolatry of the self, so that we might serve
the living and true God and await the Son from heaven whom God
raised from the dead (1Thess 1:9-10; Tit 2:11-14; Acts 1:11). We
invite Baptists in the fellowship of kindred minds to join us in
resisting all destructive ideologies that subvert the gospel. To
that end we offer the following affirmations as a description of
freedom, faithfulness, and community.
1. We affirm Bible Study in reading communities rather than
relying on private interpretation or supposed ’scientific’
objectivity. We believe that we are engrafted anew into God’s
freedom whenever we gather around the open Bible, because it is the
truth of God’s Word that sets us free (Rom 11:17; Jn 8:31-32). Such
freedom is a consequence, not a condition, of reading the
Scriptures. God therefore calls us to freedom through the faithful
and communal study of the Scriptures (Jn 5:39; Acts 17:11). Because
all Christians are graciously gifted everyone has something to
bring to the conversation, but because some members are
specifically called “to equip the saints” everyone has something to
learn from those with equipping gifts (Eph 4:7-16). We thus affirm
an open and orderly process whereby faithful communities deliberate
together over the Scriptures with sisters and brothers of the
faith, excluding no light from any source. When all exercise their
gifts and callings, when every voice is heard and weighed, when no
one is silenced or privileged, the Spirit leads communities to read
wisely and to practice faithfully the direction of the gospel (1
Cor 14:26-29).
We reject all forms of authoritarian interpretation, whether
they come from the ranks of the academy or the clergy.
Consequently, we deny that the Bible can be read as Scripture by
any so-called scientific or objective interpretive method (e.g.,
literal-grammatical, historical-critical, etc.) apart from the
gospel and the community in which the gospel is proclaimed.
Scripture wisely forbids and we reject every form of private
interpretation that makes Bible reading a practice which can be
carried out according to the dictates of individual conscience (2
Pet 1:20-21). We therefore cannot commend Bible study that is
insulated from the community of believers or that guarantees
individual readers an unchecked privilege of interpretation. We
call others to the freedom of faithful and communal reading of
Scripture.
2. We affirm following Jesus as a call to shared discipleship
rather than invoking a theory of soul competency. We believe that
by following the call to discipleship we discover true freedom (Mt
4:19; 8:22; 9:9; 10:38; etc.). Just as the pattern of God’s freedom
became flesh in Jesus of Nazareth, we who are his followers partake
of the gift of freedom as we offer our bodies to God as living
sacrifices, thus exalting Christ in our living and in our dying (Jn
1:14; Rom 12:1; Phil 1:20). God therefore calls us to the freedom
of faithful discipleship by participating in the way of Jesus,
which begins with our confession of faith (Mt 16:15; Rom 10:9-13)
and is lived out under the shadow of the cross which is ours to
bear (Lk 9:23). Such discipleship requires a shared life of mutual
accountability in the church. Disciples may not remain aloof from
the church and its life, its proclamation, its fellowship, its
ministry, its suffering, its peace (Lk 4:16; Acts 2:42; 1 Cor
12:12-26; Heb 10:25). Only as we stand together under the Lordship
of Christ can we discern by the Spirit that from which we are
liberated and that to which we are obligated (Mt 18:15-20; Jn
20:22-23). In this life together, God has chosen us to serve as
priests, not for our ownselves, but to one another. Through our
mutually reciprocal priestly actions, confessions of faith and of
fault are heard by the church to the end that together we might
proclaim the mighty acts of God’s mercy (Isa 61:6; 1 Pet 2:9-10;
James 5:16; Rev 1:6; 5:10; 20:6).
We reject all accounts of following Jesus that construe faith as
a private matter between God and the individual or as an activity
of competent souls who inherently enjoy unmediated, unassailable,
and disembodied experience with God. We further reject all
identifications of the priesthood of believers with autonomous
individualism that says we may do and believe what we want
regardless of the counsel and confession of the church. We finally
reject the false teaching that redefines gospel freedom as the
pursuit of self-realization apart from the model of Jesus Christ
(Phil 2:5-11). We call others to the freedom of faithful and
communal discipleship.
3. We affirm a free common life in Christ in gathered, reforming
communities rather than withdrawn, self-chosen, or authoritarian
ones. We believe that, along with other Christians, the Holy Spirit
gathers us from the nations (Isa 56:7; Mk 11:17; Rev 5:9-10) and
empowers us to share in the gift of God’s freedom so that in our
bodies the Lord’s mission of reconciling the world might continue
(1 Cor 6:19-20; 2 Cor 5:18). We further believe that Baptists have
an important contribution to make in God’s mission of freedom. The
practices of believers baptism and called-out church membership
display a distinctive vision of the church as a community of shared
response to God’s mission, message, and renewal (Mt 28:19-20; Acts
2:38; 22:16). As we strive to embody this vision, our life together
suggests an alternative to the undisciplined practice of baptism.
We find it alarming that for many Christians the fact of their
baptism into the death, burial, and resurrection of Christ is of
little or no consequence to them. Our call for a believers church,
however, is not a condescension to other traditions. It is first a
summons to close off nominal Christianity in our own ranks. It is
only second a gesture toward other traditions and communities to
the end that they might make disciples of those whom they baptize.
Insofar as we are faithful in our common witness to a believers
church, we embody afresh the church to which God’s call to mission
is given (Mt 28:19-20; Mk 16:15; Lk 24:46-48; Jn 20:21; Acts 1:8).
In humility, we recognize the failures of the believers church
to be a faithful witness to its own ecclesial vision, and we look
to the church catholic as it appears throughout the world and
through history for other examples of faithful communities. Because
we affirm that there is much the believers church can and must
learn from other Christian traditions, we reject as false all
ecclesiologies which claim either that the aggregate of Baptist (or
Evangelical) congregations is the whole of God’s people (1 Cor
3:16-17; 12:12) or that any one congregation (or association of
congregations) exists autonomously without connection to the whole
people of God (Jn 17:21; 1 Cor 12:12-26; Eph 4:4-6; 1 Pet 2:4-5).
We call others to the freedom of a faithful and communal embodiment
of a believers church.
4. We affirm baptism, preaching, and the Lord’s table as
powerful signs that seal God’s faithfulness in Christ and express
our response of awed gratitude rather than as mechanical rituals or
mere symbols. We do not deny that God may strengthen the faith of
believers in new forms and in providential ways. Nevertheless
baptism, proclamation, and the Lord’s table, which were ordained by
the Lord to be observed faithfully until the end of the age (Mt
28:19-20; Mk 16:15; 1 Cor 11:23-26; Mt 26:26-29; Mk 14:22-25), have
sustained and nourished the people of God through the ages as we
make our way through this world. In and through these remembering
practices, God’s grace and Christian obedience converge in a
visible sign of the new creation. By repeating these signs we learn
to see the world as created and redeemed by God. The Spirit who
proceeds from the Father through the Son makes the performance of
these practices effectual so as to seal and nourish the faith and
freedom of believers.
Baptism is a sign of our fellowship with the crucified and risen
Lord. We are buried with Christ in a watery grave (Rom 6:3; Col
2:12), and we are raised by the Spirit to walk in the resurrection
life of the new creation (Rom 6:4-5; 2 Cor 5:17; Gal 3:27-28; 6:15;
Col 3:1). Our rebirth through the Holy Spirit (Jn 3:3, 6; 1:12-13;
Tit 3:5; 1 Pet 1:3, 23) is sealed in baptism until the Lord comes
to consummate our salvation (Acts 2:38; 10:47-48; 19:5-6; 1 Pet
3:21-22; 1 Cor 12:13; 2 Cor 1:21-22; 5:5; Eph 1:13-14; Rom 8:23).
Because we have been claimed in the waters of baptism, we are
reminded that our lives are not our own but have been bought with a
price (Col 2:20; 3:3; 1 Cor 6:19-20). Thus by baptism we enter into
a covenant of mutual accountability and discipleship with the
community of the faithful (Mt 18:15-20).
Preaching becomes a sign when those who preach and listen
witness the judging and reconciling grace of God’s Word (Eph
1:13-14; 1 Cor 14:24-25; Tit 3:9; Heb 4:12). Gospel proclamation is
more than the utterance of human words. Preaching is the Word of
God only when by the power of the Holy Spirit it becomes God’s own
speech that brings the new creation within sight. Whether it is in
hot gospel preaching, elegantly intoned sermons, or plain and
simple messages, God graciously declares the liberating Word which
seals salvation through our proclamation of the gospel (Acts 10:44;
Rom 10:13-17; 1 Pet 1:23). Gospel proclamation may be performed by
all who are gifted by the Spirit and called by the church (Acts
11:19-21; 1 Pet 4:10-11).
The bread is a sign of Christ’s body, and the cup is a sign of
the new covenant in his blood (Lk 22:19-20; 1 Cor 11:23-26). As we
remember Jesus in communion through the bread of fellowship and the
cup of life (1 Cor 11:24-25), the Lord himself is with us (Mt
26:26; Mk 14:22; Lk 22:19; 1 Cor 11:24, 27-29) declaring that we
who are many are one body (1 Cor 10:17; Eph 4:4-6). In the Lord’s
Supper the Spirit thus signifies and seals the covenant that makes
us one with Christ and one in Christ with one another. Yet we must
continually strive to learn in the company of our sisters and
brothers what it means to be a people that are reconciled and
reconciling, forgiven and forgiving (1 Cor 11:17-22; 2 Cor
5:17-21). Thus each time we remember Jesus in communion we renew
our pledge of faith and are renewed by the grace of God as we
envision the coming fullness of the new creation (Mt 14:25; 26:29;
Lk 14:15; 22:18, 30; Rev 19:9).
Baptist reflections on “the sacraments” have for too long been
fixed on late medieval and early modern theories. As modernity
draws to a close, it is a fitting time to revisit afresh these
practices and their significance for the people of God. We reject
all accounts of these practices that would limit the presence of
the risen Lord to the performance of the enacted signs as we also
reject all accounts that deny the reality of his presence in their
enactment. The Lord is present and active both in the performance
of these remembering signs and with the community that performs
them. Yet the greater threat in the believers church is not from
false understandings but from neglect of practice. Baptism has been
superseded by the evangelical invitation. Preaching is being
displaced by other media. The Supper is so infrequently observed
that Christians starve for lack of nourishment. We reject all
attempts to make the church and its practices incidental to our
relationship with Christ and one another. We call others to the
freedom of the faithful communal enactment of the Lord’s
remembering signs.
5. We affirm freedom and renounce coercion as a distinct people
under God rather than relying on political theories, powers, or
authorities. We believe that when God’s people live together as a
colony of heaven (Phil 1:27; 3:20; Col 3:1-4; Heb 11:8-10), the
gift of God’s freedom will keep them from the reach of all worldly
rulers, powers, and authorities. We therefore affirm the historic
free church conviction that the church is to be disestablished from
the control of the state (Mt 22:15-22; 1 Pet 2:11-17) and from the
use of coercive power to enforce and extend the gospel (Mt 5:21-26,
38-48; 26:52; Lk 9:51-56; Rom 12:14-21). We further believe that in
order for our free church witness to be faithful we must do more
than seek institutional independence of civil authorities. We must
also continue to press for the independence of the church from the
idols of nationalism, racism, ethnocentrism, economic systems,
gender domination, or any other power that resists the Lordship of
Jesus Christ (Gal 3:27-28; Acts 10:34), who disarmed and triumphed
over the rebellious powers in the cross (Col 2:15). We cannot
merely accept the disestablishment of the church through the
cultural forces of secularity, the political measures of
government, or the judicial interpretations of courts. The
disestablishment of the church is constitutive of its identity as
God’s called-out community which foreshadows the coming reign of
God as does no other community. Nor can we accept terms of
agreement with nation-states which sequester the authority of faith
to a private, internal, individual, and narrow sphere. The gospel
we proclaim is a public message for all people. It speaks to the
external lives of believers. It calls out a distinctive community
seeking to embody the reign of God. It makes all-encompassing
claims about the world. We affirm the disestablishment of the
church as the faithful form of the church’s social existence.
The disestablishment of the church is not just a curious
fragment of Baptist folklore, but if the designation “free church”
is to be more than an empty phrase it must refer to a distinctive
way of living in and engaging the world. We believe that in the
pluralistic society of North America, only a church that is
politically and culturally independent can convince its own and
others of gospel truth (Rom 1:16). The community of people that is
to be a “city built on a hill” (Mt 5:14) is not any worldly power
or authority. This exemplary community is the free and faithful
church of Jesus Christ. Gospel freedom misunderstood and misused
turns the church into a tool of the powers and authorities (Eph
1:21; 2:2; 3:10; 6:12; Col 1:16; 2:10, 15; Tit 3:1). The skills we
learn in the baptized and remembering community help us to resist
these powers that otherwise would determine our lives. Only such a
distinct people can make known to the powers and authorities of the
present age the plan of the mystery hidden for ages in God who
created all things (Eph 3:10). In a free and faithful church, the
community of the baptized together with the whole of creation can
know that there is a God who is the beginning and end of all things
and especially of our freedom (Rev 1:8).
We reject any attempt to establish a vision of the church,
whether Baptist or any other, by means of civil or political power.
We thus reject all such constantinian strategies. Although we
attempt to live at peace with all people (Rom 2:10; 14:19; 2 Tim
2:22; Heb 12:14) and to seek the peace of the earthly city (Jer
29:7), we do so with our eyes on the peace of the other city (1 Cor
7:15; Heb 11:10; Rev 21:1-2), whose citizenship we share (Eph
2:19-22), whose politics we practice (Phil 1:27; 3:20; 1 Pet
2:11-12), and whose Lord alone is our peace (Eph 2:14-15; Col
1:21-22; Heb 7:2, 15-17; Rev 1:4). Thus we heed the call to be salt
and light, engaging the world and challenging the powers with the
peace and freedom of the gospel (Mt 5:13-14). We therefore reject
any and all efforts to allow secular political versions of
church-state separation to define the boundaries or the nature of
our witness as the free and faithful people of God. We call others
to the freedom of faithful and communal witness in society.
Among Baptists today this witness is in danger of falling to
ideologies of the right and of the left that are foreign to the
content and direction of the gospel. To many observers the crisis
may appear to be merely a manifestation of the culture wars that
pit conservatives against liberals, people of color against ‘white
America’, women against men, interest group against interest group.
What these agendas call freedom is what the gospel calls bondage to
the false gods of nationalism, classism, or narcissism. The tragedy
for Christians is that the culture wars have overwhelmed and
co-opted the agenda of the church. The struggle for the soul of
Baptists in North America is a struggle against all these false
gods. It is, therefore, not a struggle between one such god and
another. Yet some Baptists believe that it is. We disagree.
Ideologies and theologies of the right and the left, as
different as they may appear, are really siblings under the skin by
virtue of their accommodation to modernity and its Enlightenment
assumptions. Some Baptists (in the tradition of E. Y. Mullins’
Axioms of Religion or D. C. Macintosh’s Personal Religion) embraced
modernity by defining freedom in terms of the Enlightenment notions
of autonomous moral agency and objective rationality. Others (in
the tradition of the Princeton Theology and The Fundamentals) have
reacted against modernity, but ironically they perpetuated the same
modern assumptions through the individualism of revivalistic
religious experience and through the self-evidence of truth
available by means of common sense reason. It is not a question of
whether these adversaries have adopted modernity. Both drank deeply
from the same waters even if they have done so at different wells.
We believe that this accommodation to the individualism and
rationalism of modernity weakens the church by transforming the
living and embodied Christian faith into an abstract and mythic
gnosis (1 Tim 1:3-7).
Since the patterns of certitude, privilege, and power that
modernity engendered are passing away (1 Cor 7:31), it is time to
admit that all theologies tied to the foundational assumptions of
the Enlightenment will share the same fate. We thus urge our fellow
Baptists to say farewell to modernity and its theological offspring
because there is no other foundation for our faith than Jesus
Christ (1 Cor 3:11). We further believe that the real struggle
facing Baptist Christians today is for the embodiment of free,
faithful, and communal discipleship that adheres to the gospel
rather than submitting to intellectual and social agendas that have
no stake in the gospel (Rom 1:16; Gal 1:6).
We embrace neither modern alternative. We call instead for a
reclaiming of the Baptist heritage as we re-envision the study of
Scripture, the life of discipleship, the embodiment of a faithful
church, the enactment of remembering signs, and the
disestablishment of the church from worldly powers. We believe
these affirmations to be true to the gospel and to the best of our
heritage as Baptists. We are convinced that by proclaiming this
vision of freedom, faithfulness, and community the church can be
renewed through the Holy Spirit. We invite those who disagree with
us or have questions to engage us in conversation. Through such
interaction we gain a clearer understanding of these issues which
are essential for the flourishing of the church of Jesus Christ. We
call upon all those who can join us in this declaration to do so,
and more importantly to display it in the worship, work, and
witness of the free and faithful people of God. |
Return to Baptist Confessions Archive
Sources: William
Lumpkin, Baptist Confessions of Faith (Judson Press); http://www.sbc.net
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