Landmark Baptist: Difference between revisions

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1. The [[church]] and the [[kingdom of Christ]] is a divine institution;
1. The [[church]] and the [[kingdom of God]] is a divine institution;


2. The [[church]] is a <strong>visible institution</strong>;
2. The [[church]] is a <strong>visible institution</strong>;
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6. The [[church]]'s baptism is the profession, on the part of he subject, of the faith of the Gospel by which he is saved;
6. The [[church]]'s baptism is the profession, on the part of he subject, of the faith of the Gospel by which he is saved;


7. The [[Lord's Supper]] is a <strong>local [[church ordinance]]</strong>.
7. The [[Lord's Supper]] is a <strong>local church ordinance</strong>.




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which are being supplanted by religious [[progressivism]] and [[ecumenism]].
which are being supplanted by religious [[progressivism]] and [[ecumenism]].


A "Landmark Baptist [[church]]" is one


A "Landmark Baptist church" is one that holds the idea of Landmarkism or Landmark [[ecclesiology]];
that holds the idea of Landmarkism or Landmark [[ecclesiology]];


Many Independent Baptist churches and most Old Time Missionary Baptist churches
Many Independent Baptist [[church]]es


(many of which pre-date the Southern Baptist Convention and never affiliated with it) also hold this [[ecclesiology]].
and most Old Time Missionary Baptist [[church]]es


Baptist churches predate those of Roman Catholicism or Eastern Orthodoxy.
(many of which pre-date the Southern Baptist Convention


Landmark Baptists refuse to refer to ourselves as [[Protestant]]s as we did not protest out of the Catholic church,
and never affiliated with it) also hold this [[ecclesiology]].


but rather predate it; a continuation of the church that Jesus Christ began in Jerusalem.
Baptist [[church]]es predate those of Roman Catholicism or Eastern Orthodoxy.


Landmark Baptists refuse to refer to ourselves as Protestants


“ During the first three centuries, Christian congregations, all over the East, subsisted in separate independent bodies,
as we did not protest out of the Catholic [[church]],


unsupported by government, and consequently without any secular power over one another. All this time they were Baptist churches… „
but rather predate it;
 
a continuation of the [[church]] that Jesus Christ began in Jerusalem.
 
 
“ During the first three centuries, Christian congregations,
 
all over the East, subsisted in separate independent bodies,
 
unsupported by government,  
 
and consequently without any secular power over one another.  
 
All this time they were Baptist churches… „


—G. H. Orchard
—G. H. Orchard




Being independent, each individual church follows the Scriptural logic of the [[church]] of Jesus Christ which the Bible states will continue.
Being independent, each individual church follows the Scriptural logic  
 
of the [[church]] of Jesus Christ which the Bible states will continue.
 
There is no board to answer to, no council to sign on with,
 
and no head other than Jesus as the Bible clearly teaches.
 


There is no board to answer to, no council to sign on with, and no head other than Jesus as the Bible clearly teaches.
Baptists debated as early as the eighteenth century


about whether [[church]]es should allow Christians


Baptists debated as early as the eighteenth century about whether [[church]]es
to participate in the [[Lord's Supper]] before receiving valid baptism.


should allow Christians to participate in the [[Lord's Supper]] before receiving valid [[baptism]].
In the final decades of the nineteenth century,


In the final decades of the nineteenth century, Landmark Baptists began to assert that Baptist [[church]]es
Landmark Baptists began to assert that Baptist [[church]]es


should not allow even Baptists from other congregations to participate in the [[Lord's Supper]] away from their home congregation.
should not allow even Baptists from other congregations  


Some Baptists in the Southern Baptist Convention objected to the practice of apportioning messengers (delegates) to the various congregations
to participate in the [[Lord's Supper]] away from their home congregation.
 
Some Baptists in the Southern Baptist Convention  
 
objected to the practice of apportioning messengers (delegates)  
 
to the various congregations


according to their respective numbers of members or dollars contributed.
according to their respective numbers of members or dollars contributed.


These Baptists insisted that each local congregation have equal representation in convention bodies.
These Baptists insisted that each local congregation  
 
have equal representation in convention bodies.
 
This issue was prominent in controversies


This issue was prominent in controversies provoked by Samuel Augustus Hayden and Benjamin M. Bogard.
provoked by Samuel Augustus Hayden and Benjamin M. Bogard.


The majority of scholarly analysts have tied this dispute to Landmarkism,
The majority of scholarly analysts have tied this dispute to Landmarkism,




In 1851, [[J R Graves]] called a meeting of like-minded Baptists at the Cotton Grove Baptist Church near Jackson, Tennessee to address five questions:
In 1851, J.R. Graves called a meeting of like-minded Baptists  


1. Can Baptists with their principles on the Scriptures, consistently recognize those societies not organized according to the Jerusalem [[church]],
at the Cotton Grove Baptist Church near Jackson, Tennessee


but possessing different government, different officers, a different class of members, different ordinances, doctrines and practices as [[church]]es of Christ?
to address five questions:


2. Ought they to be called gospel churches or [[church]]es in a religious sense?
1. Can Baptists with their principles on the Scriptures,


3. Can we consistently recognize the ministers of such irregular and unscriptural bodies as gospel ministers?
consistently recognize those societies


4. Is it not virtually recognizing them as official ministers to invite them into our pulpits or by any other act
not organized according to the Jerusalem [[church]],
 
but possessing different government, different officers,
 
a different class of members, different ordinances,
 
doctrines and practices as [[church]]es of Christ?
 
 
2. Ought they to be called gospel [[church]]es
 
or [[church]]es in a religious sense?
 
 
3. Can we consistently recognize the ministers
 
of such irregular and unscriptural bodies as gospel ministers?
 
 
4. Is it not virtually recognizing them as official ministers  
 
to invite them into our pulpits or by any other act


that would or could be construed as such recognition?
that would or could be construed as such recognition?


5. Can we consistently address as brethren those professing Christianity who not only have not the doctrine of Christ


and walk not according to his commandments but are arrayed in direct and bitter opposition to them?
5. Can we consistently address as brethren


The majority of the gathered Baptists resolved these questions by non-recognition of non-Baptist congregations,
those professing Christianity
 
who not only have not the doctrine of Christ
 
and walk not according to his commandments
 
but are arrayed in direct and bitter opposition to them?
 
The majority of the gathered Baptists  
 
resolved these questions by non-recognition of non-Baptist congregations,
 
and then published their findings as the "Cotton Grove Resolutions".


and then published their findings as the "[[Cotton Grove Resolutions]]".


"Old Landmark"
"Old Landmark"


1. As Baptists, we are to stand for the supreme authority of the New Testament as our only and sufficient rule of faith and practice.
1. As Baptists, we are to stand for the supreme authority  
 
of the New Testament  
 
as our only and sufficient rule of faith and practice.
 
 
The New Testament, and that alone,
 
as opposed to all human tradition in matters, both of faith and practice,
 
we must claim as containing the distinguishing doctrine
 
of our denomination
 
a doctrine for which we are called earnestly to contend.
 
 
2. As Baptists, we are to stand for the ordinances of Christ
 
as he enjoined them upon his followers,
 
the same in number, in mode, in order, and in symbolic meaning,
 
unchanged and unchangeable till he come.
 
 
3. As Baptists, we are to stand for a spiritual and regenerated [[church]],
 
and that none shall be received into Christ's [[church]],
 
or be welcomed to its ordinances,
 
without confessing a personal faith in Christ,
 
and giving credible evidence of piety.
 
 
: The motto on our banner is:
 
: Christ Before the [[Church]], Blood Before Water
 
 
4. To protest, and to use all our influence against the recognition,
 
on the part of Baptists, of human societies as scriptural churches,
 
by affiliation, ministerial or ecclesiastical,
 
or any alliance or co-operation
 
that is susceptible of being apparently or logically construed
 
by our members, or theirs, or the world,
 
into a recognition of their ecclesiastical or ministerial equality
 
with Baptist [[church]]es.
 
 
5. To preserve and perpetuate the doctrine of the divine origin
 
and sanctity of the [[church]]es of Christ,
 
and the unbroken continuity of Christ's kingdom,
 
"from the days of John the Baptist until now,"
 
according to the express words of Christ.
 
 
6. To preserve and perpetuate the divine, inalienable,
 
and sole prerogatives of a Christian [[church]],
 
: 1, To preach the gospel of the Son of God;
 
: 2, To select and ordain her own officers;
 
: 3, To control absolutely her own ordinances.
 


The New Testament, and that alone, as opposed to all human tradition in matters, both of faith and practice,
7. To preserve and perpetuate the design of baptism,  


we must claim as containing the distinguishing doctrine of our denomination a doctrine for which we are called earnestly to contend.
and its validity and recognition


2. As Baptists, we are to stand for the ordinances of Christ as he enjoined them upon his followers,
only when scripturally administered by a gospel [[church]].


the same in number, in mode, in order, and in symbolic meaning, unchanged and unchangeable till he come.


3. As Baptists, we are to stand for a spiritual and regenerated church,
8. To preserve and perpetuate


and that none shall be received into Christ's [[church]], or be welcomed to its ordinances, without confessing a personal faith in Christ, and giving credible evidence of piety.
the true design and symbolism of the [[Lord's Supper]],  


. The motto on our banner is:
as a local church ordinance,


. Christ Before the Church, Blood Before Water
and for but one purpose,  


4. To protest, and to use all our influence against the recognition, on the part of Baptists, of human societies as scriptural churches,
the commemoration of the sacrificial death of Christ


by affiliation, ministerial or [[ecclesiastical]], or any alliance or co-operation
and not as a denominational ordinance,


that is susceptible of being apparently or logically construed by our members, or theirs, or the world,
or as an act expressive of our Christian or personal fellowship,  


into a recognition of their [[ecclesiastical]] or ministerial equality with Baptist churches.
and much less of courtesy toward others.


5. To preserve and perpetuate the doctrine of the divine origin and sanctity of the churches of Christ, and the unbroken continuity of Christ's kingdom,


"from the days of John the Baptist until now," according to the express words of Christ.
9. To preserve and perpetuate the doctrine of a divinely called


6. To preserve and perpetuate the divine, inalienable, and sole prerogatives of a Christian church,
and scripturally qualified and ordained ministry,


. 1, To preach the gospel of the Son of God;
to pro-claim the gospel, and to administer the ordinances,


. 2, To select and ordain her own officers;
not upon their own responsibility,  


. 3, To control absolutely her own ordinances.
but for, and under the direction of, local churches alone.


7. To preserve and perpetuate the design of baptism, and its validity and recognition only when scripturally administered by a gospel church.


8. To preserve and perpetuate the true design and symbolism of the [[Lord's Supper]], as a [[local church ordinance]],
10. To preserve and perpetuate  


and for but one purpose, the commemoration of the sacrificial death of Christ and not as a denominational ordinance,
that primitive fealty and faithfulness to the truth,  


or as an act expressive of our Christian or personal fellowship, and much less of courtesy toward others.
that shunned not to declare the whole counsel of God,


9. To preserve and perpetuate the doctrine of a divinely called and scripturally qualified and ordained ministry,
and to teach men to observe all things whatsoever Christ commanded


to pro-claim the gospel, and to administer the ordinances, not upon their own responsibility, but for, and under the direction of, local churches alone.
to be believed and obeyed.


10. To preserve and perpetuate that primitive fealty and faithfulness to the truth, that shunned not to declare the whole counsel of God,
Not the belief and advocacy of one or two of these principles,  


and to teach men to observe all things whatsoever Christ commanded to be believed and obeyed.
as the marks of the divinely patterned [[church]],


Not the belief and advocacy of one or two of these principles, as the marks of the divinely patterned church,
but the cordial reception and advocacy of all of them,  


but the cordial reception and advocacy of all of them, constitute a full "Old Landmark Baptist."
constitute a full "Old Landmark Baptist."




[[--]]
[[--]]

Latest revision as of 22:32, 1 June 2024

Landmarkism is return to what Baptists have previously believed.]

File:Landmark.jpg

-- Christ died for all --

Old Landmarkism - - J R Graves


1. The church and the kingdom of God is a divine institution;

2. The church is a visible institution;

3. The locality of the church is upon this earth;

4. The church is a local organization, a single congregation;

5. The church is composed of a regenerate membership;

6. The church's baptism is the profession, on the part of he subject, of the faith of the Gospel by which he is saved;

7. The Lord's Supper is a local church ordinance.


The principles of Landmarkism pre-date the Landmark Baptist movement.

The Landmark Baptist movement is an attempt to restore and perpetuate Biblical principles

which are being supplanted by religious progressivism and ecumenism.

A "Landmark Baptist church" is one

that holds the idea of Landmarkism or Landmark ecclesiology;

Many Independent Baptist churches

and most Old Time Missionary Baptist churches

(many of which pre-date the Southern Baptist Convention

and never affiliated with it) also hold this ecclesiology.

Baptist churches predate those of Roman Catholicism or Eastern Orthodoxy.

Landmark Baptists refuse to refer to ourselves as Protestants

as we did not protest out of the Catholic church,

but rather predate it;

a continuation of the church that Jesus Christ began in Jerusalem.


“ During the first three centuries, Christian congregations,

all over the East, subsisted in separate independent bodies,

unsupported by government,

and consequently without any secular power over one another.

All this time they were Baptist churches… „

—G. H. Orchard


Being independent, each individual church follows the Scriptural logic

of the church of Jesus Christ which the Bible states will continue.

There is no board to answer to, no council to sign on with,

and no head other than Jesus as the Bible clearly teaches.


Baptists debated as early as the eighteenth century

about whether churches should allow Christians

to participate in the Lord's Supper before receiving valid baptism.

In the final decades of the nineteenth century,

Landmark Baptists began to assert that Baptist churches

should not allow even Baptists from other congregations

to participate in the Lord's Supper away from their home congregation.

Some Baptists in the Southern Baptist Convention

objected to the practice of apportioning messengers (delegates)

to the various congregations

according to their respective numbers of members or dollars contributed.

These Baptists insisted that each local congregation

have equal representation in convention bodies.

This issue was prominent in controversies

provoked by Samuel Augustus Hayden and Benjamin M. Bogard.

The majority of scholarly analysts have tied this dispute to Landmarkism,


In 1851, J.R. Graves called a meeting of like-minded Baptists

at the Cotton Grove Baptist Church near Jackson, Tennessee

to address five questions:

1. Can Baptists with their principles on the Scriptures,

consistently recognize those societies

not organized according to the Jerusalem church,

but possessing different government, different officers,

a different class of members, different ordinances,

doctrines and practices as churches of Christ?


2. Ought they to be called gospel churches

or churches in a religious sense?


3. Can we consistently recognize the ministers

of such irregular and unscriptural bodies as gospel ministers?


4. Is it not virtually recognizing them as official ministers

to invite them into our pulpits or by any other act

that would or could be construed as such recognition?


5. Can we consistently address as brethren

those professing Christianity

who not only have not the doctrine of Christ

and walk not according to his commandments

but are arrayed in direct and bitter opposition to them?

The majority of the gathered Baptists

resolved these questions by non-recognition of non-Baptist congregations,

and then published their findings as the "Cotton Grove Resolutions".


"Old Landmark"

1. As Baptists, we are to stand for the supreme authority

of the New Testament

as our only and sufficient rule of faith and practice.


The New Testament, and that alone,

as opposed to all human tradition in matters, both of faith and practice,

we must claim as containing the distinguishing doctrine

of our denomination

a doctrine for which we are called earnestly to contend.


2. As Baptists, we are to stand for the ordinances of Christ

as he enjoined them upon his followers,

the same in number, in mode, in order, and in symbolic meaning,

unchanged and unchangeable till he come.


3. As Baptists, we are to stand for a spiritual and regenerated church,

and that none shall be received into Christ's church,

or be welcomed to its ordinances,

without confessing a personal faith in Christ,

and giving credible evidence of piety.


The motto on our banner is:
Christ Before the Church, Blood Before Water


4. To protest, and to use all our influence against the recognition,

on the part of Baptists, of human societies as scriptural churches,

by affiliation, ministerial or ecclesiastical,

or any alliance or co-operation

that is susceptible of being apparently or logically construed

by our members, or theirs, or the world,

into a recognition of their ecclesiastical or ministerial equality

with Baptist churches.


5. To preserve and perpetuate the doctrine of the divine origin

and sanctity of the churches of Christ,

and the unbroken continuity of Christ's kingdom,

"from the days of John the Baptist until now,"

according to the express words of Christ.


6. To preserve and perpetuate the divine, inalienable,

and sole prerogatives of a Christian church,

1, To preach the gospel of the Son of God;
2, To select and ordain her own officers;
3, To control absolutely her own ordinances.


7. To preserve and perpetuate the design of baptism,

and its validity and recognition

only when scripturally administered by a gospel church.


8. To preserve and perpetuate

the true design and symbolism of the Lord's Supper,

as a local church ordinance,

and for but one purpose,

the commemoration of the sacrificial death of Christ

and not as a denominational ordinance,

or as an act expressive of our Christian or personal fellowship,

and much less of courtesy toward others.


9. To preserve and perpetuate the doctrine of a divinely called

and scripturally qualified and ordained ministry,

to pro-claim the gospel, and to administer the ordinances,

not upon their own responsibility,

but for, and under the direction of, local churches alone.


10. To preserve and perpetuate

that primitive fealty and faithfulness to the truth,

that shunned not to declare the whole counsel of God,

and to teach men to observe all things whatsoever Christ commanded

to be believed and obeyed.

Not the belief and advocacy of one or two of these principles,

as the marks of the divinely patterned church,

but the cordial reception and advocacy of all of them,

constitute a full "Old Landmark Baptist."


--