WACO, Texas (ABP) — Throughout their history, Baptists have uniformly revered the Bible but passionately disagreed about what it means, historian Bill Leonard told a Baylor University audience.
Leonard delivered the annual Parchman Lectures at the Texas Baptist school’s George W. Truett Theological Seminary Oct. 14-16. This year, the lectures supported the university’s focus on the Baptist movement’s 400th anniversary.
Baptists’ earliest statements of faith proclaimed their affirmation of Scripture, noted Leonard, dean of Wake Forest University Divinity School.
The London Confession, published in 1644, stated, “The rule of this knowledge, faith and obedience … is not man’s inventions, opinions, devices, laws, constitutions or traditions unwritten whatsoever, but only the word of God contained in canonical Scriptures.”
The Orthodox Creed, affirmed in 1679, declared biblical authority does not rely upon “authority of any man, but only upon the authority of God.”
“Early Baptists recognized the complexity of reading, using and understanding biblical content, while insisting even the ‘unlearned’ could comprehend the text’s most basic instruction,” Leonard said.
But Baptists “often painted themselves into assorted theological and cultural corners” when their avowed loyalty to biblical authority clashed with “piety and practice, culture and conflict,” he added.
“When such theological and cultural dilemmas inevitably occur, many Baptists adapt, even change, their theology while clinging to the rhetoric of an uncompromised biblicism,” Leonard said. “And, being Baptists, when such differences occur, they often split, creating new communities gathered around diverse interpretations of pivotal texts.”
That has been true from the beginning, he said. “Baptists are really the only post-Reformation Protestant community to begin with two contradictory theological perspectives, one Arminian, the other Calvinist,” he added.
Arminians championed human free will, while Calvinists emphasized God’s sovereignty. Since the 17th century, Baptists have been found at points all along that theological spectrum, Leonard said.
A century later, Baptist missions pioneers William Carey and Andrew Fuller “stretched popular theology to the breaking point” by promoting what Leonard called “evangelical inclusion.” The pair emphasized the biblical mandate to take the gospel to the “heathen” around the world, while other Baptists vehemently disagreed, believing God could save the “elect” without human involvement.
In time, advocates of missions carried the day for most Baptists, a victory that redefined their understanding of God’s plan for salvation.
A century after that, Baptists struggled with accommodating their theology to culture, Leonard added. The primary issue was slavery, and both sides claimed the Bible supported their position. This dispute further compounded when Baptist slaves cited numerous biblical references to support their cry for liberation.
In the 20th century, the question of accommodation to Scripture and/or culture focused on the role of women in Baptist churches, and particularly ordination, Leonard said. As with previous divisions, Baptists with polar-opposite positions each claimed to have the Bible on their side.
Even more recently, some groups of Baptists in the United States have debated the use of alcohol and the practice of personal piety, Leonard said. And as before, they all cited the Bible.
All these debates illustrate the fact that biblical interpretation and application “is neither a simple nor primarily an academic pursuit,” he stressed. “It is a dangerous necessity undertaken implicitly or explicitly by every Baptist congregation and individual. [It] sent Baptists to jail and to the mission field [and] to the slave auctions. Interpreting the text is terribly dangerous, then and now.”
Baptist debates over the centuries also show “no theory of biblical inspiration or analysis is adequate to make ‘all things in Scripture plain in themselves’ or ‘clear to all,’” he said. “Theories about the text cannot protect Baptists — or anyone else — from the power and unpredictability of the text itself.”
Based on Baptists’ 400-year track record, Leonard concluded with a question: “What issues are Baptists currently claiming with biblical … certainty that they will be compelled to apologize for in a century or two?” he asked.
“You see, the Bible may say it, and Baptists may believe it, but — historically speaking — that does not always settle it.”
-30-
Read more
Baptism remains Baptists’ symbol, but ‘problems’ must be answered (10/21)