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Report of the Presidential Theological Study
Committee
Adopted by the Southern Baptist Convention - Meeting in Session
June, 1994
The Theological
Study Committee was appointed by SBC President H. Edwin Young in
1992 and submitted its report in the Spring of the following year.
The purpose of this study group was to examine those Biblical
truths which are most surely held among the people of God called
Southern Baptists and, on this basis, to reaffirm our common
commitment to Jesus Christ, the Holy Scriptures and the
evangelical heritage of the Christian church. In light of the
pressing need for a positive biblical witness on basic Christian
beliefs, this report is published, not as a new confession of
faith, but rather as a reaffirmation of major doctrinal concerns
set forth in the Baptist Faith and Message of 1963.
Part I
In
every generation, the people of God face the decision either to
reaffirm the faith which was once delivered unto the saints (Jude
3) or to lapse into theological unbelief. Precisely such a
challenge now confronts that people of God called Southern
Baptists. As we approach the 150th anniversary of the founding of
the Southern Baptist Convention, we are presented with
unprecedented opportunities for missionary outreach and
evangelistic witness at home and abroad.
We
must bear a faithful gospel witness to a culture in decline; we
must be the salt and light in a society which has lost its moral
compass. We must also pass on to the rising generation the
fundamentals of the Christian faith and a vital sense of our
Baptist heritage. To meet these goals, we seek to move beyond the
denominational conflict of recent years toward a new consensus
rooted in theological substance and doctrinal fidelity. We pray
that our effort will lead to healing and reconciliation throughout
the Southern Baptist Convention and, God willing, to a renewed
commitment to our founding purpose of eliciting, combining, and
directing the energies of the whole denomination in one sacred
effort, for the propagation of the gospel.
Baptists are a people of firm conviction and free confession.
Southern Baptists have expressed and affirmed these convictions
through The Baptist Faith and Message confessional statements of
1925 & 1963.
This
committee affirms and honors The Baptist Faith and Message, as
overwhelmingly adopted by the 1963 Convention, embraced by
millions of faithful Southern Baptists and their churches,
affirmed by successive convention sessions and adopted by SBC
agencies, as the normative expression of Southern Baptist belief.
Therefore, this committee declines to recommend any new confession
or revision of that statement.
However, each generation of Southern Baptists faces unique and
pressing challenges to faithfulness which demand attention and
test the integrity of our conviction. This report addresses
several issues of contemporary urgency in a spirit of pastoral
concern and a commitment to the unity of our Baptist fellowship as
well as the integrity of our doctrinal confession. These emphases
are intended to illuminate articles of The Baptist Faith and
Message, consistent with its intention and content, and are thus
commended to the Convention, its agencies, its churches, and the
millions of Bible believing, cooperating Southern Baptists who
freely join this Convention in its sacred work. We seek to clarify
our historic Baptist commitment to Holy Scripture, the doctrine of
God, the person and work of Jesus Christ, the nature and mission
of the church, and biblical teaching onlast things. We reaffirm
our commitment to these great theological tenets since they are
assailed, in various ways, by subtle compromise, blatant
concession, and malign negligence.
We
also affirm the historic Baptist conception of the nature and
function of confessional statements in our religious and
denominational life. Baptists approve and circulate confessions of
faith with the following understandings:
As
an expression of our religious liberty - Any group of Baptists,
large or small, has the inherent right to draw up for itself and
to publish to the world a confession of faith whenever it wishes.
As a corollary of this principle, we reject state imposed
religious creeds and attendant civil sanctions.
As
a statement of our religious convictions - We affirm the
priesthood of all believers and the autonomy of each local
congregation. However, doctrinal minimalism and theological
revision, left unchecked, compromises a commitment to the gospel
itself. Being Baptist means faith as well as freedom. Christian
liberty should not become a license for the masking of unbelief.
As
a witness to our confidence in divine revelation - The sole
authority for faith and practice among Baptists is the Bible,
God's Holy Word. It is the supreme standard by which all
creeds, conduct and religious opinions should be tried. As in the
past so in the future, Baptists should hold themselves free to
revise their statements of faith in the light of an unchanging
Holy Scripture. None of these principles, sacred to Baptists
through the ages, is violated by voluntary, conscientious
adherence to an explicit doctrinal standard. Holy living and sound
doctrine are indispensable elements of true revival and genuine
reconciliation among any body of Christian believers. Desiring
this end with all our hearts, we commend the following report to
the people of God called Southern Baptists. Part II
Article One - Holy Scripture
Southern Baptists have affirmed repeatedly and decisively an
unswerving commitment to the divine inspiration and truthfulness
of Holy Scripture, the Word of God revealed in written form. We
believe that what the Bible says, God says. What the Bible says
happened, really happened. Every miracle, every event, in every
one of the 66 books of the Old and New Testaments is true and
trustworthy. In 1900, James M. Frost, first president of the
Baptist Sunday School Board, declared: "We accept the Scriptures
as an all-sufficient and infallible rule of faith and practice,
and insist upon the absolute inerrancy and sole authority of the
Word of God. We recognize at this point no room for division,
either of practice or belief, or even sentiment. More and more we
must come to feel as the deepest and mightiest power of our
conviction that a 'thus saith the Lord' is the end of all
controversy."
The Baptist Faith and Message affirms this high view of Scripture
by declaring that the Bible "has God for its author, salvation for
its end, and truth without any mixture of error, for its matter."
The chairman of the committee who drafted this statement, Herschel
Hobbs, explained this phrase by reference to II Timothy 3:16 which
says, "all Scripture is given by inspiration of God." He
explained: "The Greek New Testament reads 'all' --without the
definite article and that means every single part of the whole is
God-breathed. And a God of truth does not breathe error."
Recent developments in Southern Baptist life have underscored the
importance of a renewed commitment to Biblical authority in every
area of our denominational life.
In 1986 the presidents of the six SBC seminaries issued the
Glorieta Statement which affirmed the "infallible power and
binding authority" of the Bible, declaring it to be "not errant in
any area of reality." The miracles of the Old and New Testaments
were described as "historical evidences of God's judgment, love
and redemption."
In 1987 the SBC Peace Committee called upon Southern Baptist
institutions to recruit faculty and staff who clearly reflect the
dominant convictions and beliefs of Southern Baptists concerning
the factual character and historicity of the Bible in such matters
as (1) the direct creation of humankind including Adam and Eve as
real persons; (2) the actual authorship of biblical writings as
attributed by Scripture itself; (3) the supernatural character of
the biblical miracles which occurred as factual events in space
and time; (4) the historical accuracy of biblical narratives which
occurred precisely as the text of Scripture indicates.
In 1991 the Baptist Sunday School Board published the first volume
of the New American Commentary, a projected 40-volume series of
theological exposition on every book of the Bible. The commentary
was intended to reflect a "commitment to the inerrancy of
Scripture" and "the classic Christian tradition." The Chicago
Statement on Biblical Inerrancy was adopted as a guideline more
fully expressing for writers the intent of Article I of The
Baptist Faith and Message.
In light of these historical commitments, we call upon all
Southern Baptists:
to foster a deep reverence and genuine love for the Word of God in
personal, congregational and denominational life;
to use the Scriptures in personal evangelistic witnessing, since
they are "able to make one wise unto salvation;"
to read the Bible faithfully and to study it systematically;
and-to encourage the translation and dissemination of the Bible
throughout the world.
We commend to all Baptist educational institutions and agencies
the Report of the Peace Committee (1987), the Chicago Statement on
Biblical Inerrancy (1978) and the Chicago Statement on Biblical
Hermeneutics (1982) as biblically grounded and sound guides worthy
of respect in setting forth a high view of Scripture. We encourage
them to cultivate a biblical world view in all disciplines of
learning and to pursue a reverent, believing approach to biblical
scholarship that is both exegetically honest and theologically
sound. There need be no contradiction between "firm faith and free
research" as long as both are exercised under the Lordship of
Jesus Christ and in full confidence of the truthfulness of His
Word.
Article Two - The Doctrine of God
The God revealed in Holy Scripture is the sovereign God who
created the worlds and all therein, the God who called Israel out
from the nations as a witness to His name, the God who spoke from
a burning bush, and the God who decisively and definitively
revealed Himself through His Son, Jesus Christ, through whom He
brought redemption and reconciliation.
Baptists, and all evangelical Christians, recognize the centrality
of biblical theism. We honor and worship the one true God and our
first act of worship is to acknowledge Him even as He has revealed
Himself.
This means that we affirm God's nature as revealed in Holy
Scripture. He alone has the right to define Himself, and He has
done so by revealing His power and His grace, seen in His absolute
holiness and love. The biblical doctrine of God has been
compromised in recent years as efforts to redefine God have
rejected clear biblical teachings in the face of modern
challenges. Southern Baptists cannot follow this course. As a
fellowship of evangelical Christians we must recommit ourselves to
the eternal truths concerning God, even as He has freely,
graciously, and definitively revealed Himself. As Norvell
Robertson, one of our earliest Southern Baptist theologians wrote:
"The Word of God is truth. What He says of Himself is true...He
alone knows Himself."
Thus, we must submit ourselves to the knowledge God has imparted
concerning Himself and His divine nature.
First, Baptists affirm that God is limitless in power, knowledge,
wisdom, love, and holiness. He suffers no limitations upon His
power or His personality. He is not constrained by any external
force or internal contradiction. We reject any effort to redefine
God as a limited deity.
Second, Baptists affirm that God, the Father of our Lord Jesus
Christ, is none other than the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob,
of Sarah, and Rachel, and Ruth. God's self-revelation in Scripture
is progressive, but fully consistent. He is the universal Creator
and thus deserves universal recognition and worship as the one
true God.
Third, Baptists affirm that God is one, and that he has revealed
Himself as a Trinity of three eternally co-existent persons,
Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. We acknowledge the Trinity as
essential and central to our Christian confession, and we reject
any attempt to minimize or compromise this aspect of God's
self-disclosure.
Fourth, Baptists affirm that God has revealed himself as the
Father of the redeemed. Jesus characteristically addressed God as
His Father, and instructed His disciples to do the same. We have
no right to reject God's own name for Himself, nor to employ
impersonal or feminine names in order to placate modern
sensitivities. We honor the integrity of God's name, and
acknowledge his sole right to name himself even as we affirm that
no human words can exhaust the divine majesty. But God has
accommodated Himself to us by naming Himself in human words.
Fifth, Baptists affirm that God is the sovereign Creator of the
universe, who called all things into being by the power of His
Word, and who created the worlds out of nothing. His creative acts
were free and unconstrained by any other creative force.
Sixth, Baptists affirm that God is sovereign over history, nature,
time, and space, and that His loving and gracious providence
sustains and orders the world.
These statements, based upon Scripture and undergirded by historic
Baptist confessions, force our attention to contemporary
compromises which threaten the fidelity and integrity of our
faith.
We call upon the Southern Baptist Convention, its churches and its
institutions, to beware lest revisionist views of God such as
those popularly modeled in process and feminist theologies, as
well as the esoteric doctrines of the New Age movement, compromise
our faithful commitment to biblical truth.
Article Three - The Person and Work of Christ
Jesus Christ is the center and circumference of the Christian
faith. The God of heaven and earth has revealed Himself supremely
and definitively in the Son, and the most fundamental truth of
Christianity is that "God was in Christ, reconciling the world
unto Himself" (II Cor. 5:19).
Jesus Christ is the sole and sufficient Savior of the redeemed
throughout the world and of all ages. He is the divine Word by
which the worlds were created; He is also the unique and solitary
Savior in whom alone there is redemption and forgiveness of sins.
From beginning to end the Bible proclaims salvation through Jesus
Christ and no other. The Church is commanded to teach and preach
no other gospel.
In His incarnation --an event in historical space and time --Jesus
Christ was the perfect union of the human and the divine. He was
truly God and truly man, born of a virgin and without sin,
remaining sinless throughout His earthly incarnation. He was
crucified, died, and was buried. On the third day, He rose from
the dead, the first fruits of the redeemed. He ascended to the
Father and now rules as King and Judge. He will consummate the age
by His physical return to earth as Lord and King.
Scripture bears faithful and truthful witness to Jesus Christ.
Thewords and deeds of Christ set forth in the New Testament are an
accurate record of what He said and did, even as the Old Testament
prophetically revealed His identity and His purpose of redemption.
The miracles of Jesus as revealed to us in Scripture were
historical events which demonstrated Christ's identity and His
power over sin, death and Satan.
All human beings, marked by original sin and their own individual
sins, are utterly helpless before God and without excuse,
deserving of eternal punishment and separation from God.
Nevertheless, in Jesus Christ and His cross, God revealed both the
extent of our lostness and the depth of His redemptive love. All
human beings-- in all places and of all ages-- are lost but for
salvation through Jesus Christ. He is the only hope of salvation
and the only Savior.
Christ's redemption was wrought by His atonement which was both
penal and substitutionary. Christ died in our place, bearing in
His body the penalty for our sin and purchasing our redemption by
His blood.
The cross of Christ is thus the apex of God's plan of redemption,
revealing God's absolute holiness and infinite love. The gospel of
that cross is the only message which can and does save.
The redeemed are justified before God by grace through faith in
Jesus Christ, trusting in Him alone for their salvation and
acknowledging Him as Savior and Lord.
Therefore, Baptists must reject any effort to deny the true nature
and identity of Jesus Christ or to minimize or to redefine His
redemptive work. Baptists must reject any and all forms of
universalism and bear faithful witness to salvation in Jesus
Christ, and in Him alone. Furthermore, Baptists must join with all
true Christians in affirming the substitutionary nature of
Christ's atonement and reject calls--ancient and modern-- for
redefining Christ's reconciling work as merely subjective and
illustrative.
Article Four - The Church
We acknowledge Jesus Christ not only as personal Savior and Lord,
but also as the Head, Foundation, Lawgiver, and Teacher of the
church which is His building, body, and bride. The person who
despises the church despises Christ, for "Christ...loved the
church, and gave himself for it" (Eph. 5:25).
In the New Testament the word "church" sometimes refers to all of
the redeemed of all ages but, more often, to a local assembly of
baptized believers. Until Jesus comes again the local church is a
"colony of heaven" (Phil. 3:20), a "sounding board" of the gospel
(I Thes. 1:8), and a fellowship through which God's people carry
out the Great Commission of their Lord. The central purpose of the
church is to honor and glorify God; the central task of the church
is to bear witness to the gospel of Jesus Christ through
evangelism and missions.
In light of this mandate, we call upon all Southern Baptists to
reaffirm our commitment to these distinctive principles of our
Baptist heritage:
The priesthood of all believers.- Every Christian has direct
access to God through Jesus Christ, our great High Priest, the
sole mediator between God and human beings. However, the
priesthood of all believers is exercised within a committed
community of fellow believers-priests who share a like precious
faith. The priesthood of all believers should not be reduced to
modern individualism nor used as a cover for theological
relativism. It is a spiritual standing which leads to ministry,
service, and a coherent witness in the world for which Christ
died.
The autonomy of the local church.- A New Testament church is a
gathered congregation of baptized believers who have entered into
covenant with Christ and with one another to fulfil, according to
the Scriptures, their mutual obligations. Under the Lordship of
Christ, such a body is free to order its own internal life without
interference from any external group. This same freedom applies to
all general Baptist bodies, such as associations and state and
national conventions. Historically, Baptist churches have freely
cooperated in matters of common interest without compromise of
beliefs. We affirm the wisdom of convictional cooperation in
carrying out our witness to the world and decry all efforts to
weaken our denomination and its cooperative ministries.
A free church in a free state.- Throughout our history Baptists
have not wavered in our belief that God intends for a free church
to function in a free state. Since God alone is Lord of the
conscience, the temporal realm has no authority to coerce
religious commitments. However, the doctrine of religious liberty,
far from implying doctrinal laxity or unconcern, guarantees the
ability of every congregation and general Baptist body to
determine (on the basis of the Word of God) its own doctrinal and
disciplinary parameters. We declare our fervent commitment to
these distinctive convictions of the Baptist tradition. We also
call for a renewed emphasis on the faithful proclamation of God's
Word, believers' baptism by immersion, and the celebration of the
Lord's Supper as central elements of corporate worship.
Article Five - Last Things
With all true Christians everywhere, Baptists confess that "Christ
has died, Christ is risen, Christ will come again." The God who
has acted in the past, and is acting even now, will continue to
act bringing to final consummation his eternal purpose in Jesus
Christ. Our faith rests in the confidence that the future is in his
hands.
While detailed interpretations of the end times should not be made
a test of fellowship among Southern Baptists, we affirm with
confidence the clear teaching of Holy Scripture on these essential
doctrinal truths:
The return of Jesus Christ in glory.- Christians await with
certainty and expectancy the "blessed hope" of the outward,
literal, visible and personal return of Jesus Christ to consummate
history in victory and judgment. As E. Y. Mullins put it, "He will
come again in person, the same Jesus who ascended from the Mount
of Olives."
The resurrection of the body.- In his glorious resurrection, Jesus
Christ broke the bonds of death, establishing his authority over
it, and one day he will assert that authority on our behalf and
raise us. The righteous dead will be raised unto life everlasting.
The unrighteous dead will be cast into hell which is the second
death (Rev. 20:14-15).
Eternal punishment and eternal bliss.- Following the resurrection
and judgment, the redeemed shall be forever with the Lord in
heaven, a place of light and glory beyond description, and the
lost shall be forever with the devil in hell, a place of utter
darkness and inexpressible anguish. Nowhere does the Bible teach
the annihilation of the soul or a temporary purgatory for those
who die without hope in Christ.
The second coming of Christ is the blessed, comforting, and
purifying hope of the church. We call upon all Southern Baptists
to claim this precious promise in every area of our life and
witness, and thus "to live holy and godly lives as we look forward
to the day of God and speed its coming" (II Peter 3:11).
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