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What Is a Baptist?


Transcript

(upbeat music) - Well, some of the best questions in our inbox are the ones that I least expect to read. I'm a Baptist, so are you Pastor John, you're a Baptist. We kind of take that for granted. It's in the background, rarely foregrounded here on the podcast. So what is a Baptist?

That's our question today. And here's the email. Hello, Pastor John, my name is Dennis and I live in the Philippines. I would like to know what is a Baptist? I know you are one, but I really don't know what that means. Can you explain to me what distinguishes you?

Pastor John, how would you approach this one? - The approach I want to take in trying to answer Dennis's question is to describe the kind of Baptist I am in the hope that I'm not at all quirky, but in fact would consider all the defining traits of a Baptist that I'm going to mention as typical of most Baptist churches in the 17th and 18th centuries.

And the reason I say 17th and 18th centuries is because Baptists, as I understand them, got their start in the early 17th century, that is the early 1600s. And because in the 19th and 20th centuries, the splintering effect of most churches, not just Baptists, has resulted in so many varieties of denominations that I couldn't claim in the modern day.

I don't think that I represent the majority, but I think I can claim that I do represent the majority of the Baptist churches in the early centuries of Baptist life. So I understand my roots and the roots of all Baptists in their earliest centuries to go back to the Reformation itself, namely the renewal and the reform of the church, the Roman Catholic church at the time, the reform, the renewal of the church under Martin Luther and John Calvin and Ulrich Zwingli in the 1500s in Europe.

So Baptists would hold in common the five great emphases of the Reformation, justification on the basis of the work of Christ alone, provided and imparted to human beings by God's grace alone, appropriated in a personal and effective way in each individual life through faith alone so that God's glory alone, not man's, is exalted, and all of that based on not tradition or ecclesiastical authority, but Scripture alone.

So those are the five great pillars of the Reformation that Baptists share in common with virtually all Reformation churches, originally Protestant churches, Christ alone, grace alone, faith alone, the glory of God alone, Scripture alone. That's the starting point for Baptist life as well as other Protestant branches of the church.

I love these Christ-exalting truths, and I feel knit together with other denominations besides Baptists who cherish these great pillars of the Reformation and biblical pillars. What distinguishes Baptists is that as we pondered the implications of Scripture alone as our authority rather than fallible human church authority, and as we pondered the implications of faith alone as what brings a person into a right relationship with God and makes them part of God's redeemed people, what we Baptists saw, and I'm speaking of people now in the early 1600s, what we saw was that in the Bible, the reform of the church hadn't gone far enough.

It seemed to those early Baptists, and it seems to me, that the doctrine of justification by faith alone and thus entrance into the new people of God, the church, by faith alone, implied that we should not think of entering into salvation and into the people of God through physical family connections.

In other words, we couldn't, we Baptists could not find in the New Testament, nor did it seem to be implied in the doctrine of justification by faith alone, that children of believers should be considered part of the justified people of God just because there was a physical connection between them and their believing parents.

Therefore, since baptism was the outward sign of such acceptance with God and participation in the redeemed people of God, baptism should not be given to persons just because they had a physical connection with saved people, namely their believing parents. This is why Baptists do not baptize babies. And this is the main reason why we're called Baptists.

We believe that there should be a credible profession of saving faith before a person receives the outward sign of that credible profession and that union with Christ. And that sign is baptism, a symbol of passing from death to life through faith in Jesus. Historically, Baptists have understood baptism to be by immersion.

That is, you take the whole person in a pool or in a river and you put the whole person under the water rather than sprinkling water on the head. And we believe that because one, that's what the word baptizo in Greek meant, dip or immerse, it didn't mean sprinkle.

And second, because immersion fits the symbolism in Romans 6 of being buried with Christ in baptism and being raised up out of the water, signifying resurrection life. And third, because it appears that in the early church, that's the way they did it. I mean, Philip, they went down into the water along the road and John the Baptist baptized in the Jordan River.

He needed a river, not a font, to put a hand in and sprinkle some water. So we baptize by immersion. So those are two baptism distinctives, only baptize believers and baptize them by immersion. Now, several other marks of a Baptist church follow from this position as an ongoing reformation of the Roman Catholic Church.

One is that the church is seen as an assembly of believers. That's implied in what we've already seen. We know that some of those believers may be hypocrites. We can't be perfect, but the aim is to have a church whose members are truly trusting Christ, a believer's church, not a church that you're part of just because your parents were part of it or you were born into it.

Another implication of the ongoing reformation among Baptists was that we have tried to take seriously the priesthood of all believers, that each of us has a direct, personal relationship with God through Christ. And it seemed to us that this church-wide priesthood is why in the New Testament, congregations themselves, the congregation, not just a group of elders or a group of bishops, were the last court of appeal in the way the church governed itself.

For example, when there was a matter of discipline, Jesus said in Matthew 18, as a final step before you have to put an unrepentant person out of your midst, he said, "Tell it to the church." And then the church makes that rendering, that judgment. So that's why Baptists are usually called congregationalists.

Another implication of the ongoing reformation among Baptists was a recovered belief in the freedom that Christians have from coercive dictates, not only from centralized ecclesiastical authorities, but also from civil authorities. Most of the non-Baptist Reformation churches in their early decades, and longer for some, failed to disentangle themselves from civil governments so that the people like Baptists were oppressed and persecuted even by their Protestant brothers and sisters who thought that state authority should be used by churches to coerce theological and ecclesiastical unity.

So perhaps I can sum up the distinctives like this. First, Baptists are Protestants who share the great pillars of the Reformation, justification on the basis of Christ alone, by grace alone, through faith alone, to the glory of God alone, on the basis of the authority of Scripture alone. Second, believers' baptism, so that the only people who receive the sign of new life in Christ are those who by faith have received new life in Christ.

Third, a believers' church in which the members consist only of those who give a credible profession of faith in Jesus. And then congregational governance, finally by the congregation and administered practically through elders and deacons. Most of the confessions, the early confessions, always referred to elders and deacons among Baptists.

And then finally, a commitment to freedom of religious expression without any external ecclesiastical or governmental control over the local congregation. For myself, Dennis, there are glorious things that I share in common with those of other denominations that enable me to have very sweet fellowship and camaraderie and mission with others.

And I don't think that the distinctives we Baptists believe in keep us from such fellowship or common mission, especially if we share those great Reformation commitments. - Amen, very helpful overview, Pastor John, thank you. And thank you for joining us today. You can ask a question of your own, even the simple and unexpected ones like Dennis did today.

You can do that and search our growing archive or subscribe to the podcast, all at desiringgod.org. Forward slash, ask Pastor John. Well, the book of Ecclesiastes is enigmatic. It's puzzling. It's puzzling because it tells us that much of life is vanity, a chasing after wind. It says this from the second verse in the book.

Meaningless, meaningless, says the teacher, utterly meaningless, everything is meaningless. But God's providence tells us a different story. Everything in life is meaningful. So what gives? Is life mostly meaningless or mostly meaningful? It's a great audience question. Up next, I'm you all sending in some really, really hard questions that I'm grateful to be on this side of the table, simply asking them to John Piper.

I am nothing but your host, Tony Reinke, and we will see you back here on Monday. Have a great weekend. (upbeat music) (upbeat music)