I would like to say in
the beginning that I have no animosity whatsoever against Baptists.
Personally, I have no reason for leaving the Baptist church, but quite to
the contrary, if personal reasons counted, I would never have left the
Baptist Church, because personality is in their favor. Especially is this
true of the congregation of which I was a member in Phillips, Texas. I
believe that the Baptists are, for the most part, splendid people. I believe
that most of them are honest and sincere. I believe that, if there are
Baptists here tonight, most of them want the truth, and will consider the
things that are said honestly and open-minded. However, some times, out of a
sense of loyalty to that which we have become members of, we are prone to
cast aside lightly any charges that might be made against us. I sincerely
hope that that will not be the way you will do tonight. I beg you to hear
what I have to say, study it carefully with an open Bible in hand, then, out
of honesty to your own soul and to God Almighty, to embrace all that you
find to be in harmony with the Bible. Believe it, not because I said it, but
because you found it in the word of God. That is the only thing any of us
would have you believe--the Bible, the word of God. In spite of all the
accusations made to the contrary, we still preach only the Bible. Such
expressions are idle, I suppose, in view of the fact that all "churches"
claim the same thing. We know that all
of them do not preach "only the Bible" for they are
many and the Bible is
one. The Bible does not teach
contradictory doctrines. The Baptists hold the Bible up and say, "We preach
the Bible". That is what we do.
So, what have I gained
by telling you that we take the Bible and nothing but the Bible? Nothing, I
suppose. I will just have to prove to you that we do actually stand on the
Bible and nothing else, and that the Baptists do not. If they did, I never
would have left them. I want you to consider the things that are said as
honestly as you know how, tonight.
When I came into this
world, I found it divided religiously. When I was old enough to notice
things, I found a church on every hand. Here was one and there was another,
all claiming to preach the Bible, yet wearing different names and teaching
different doctrines. This sentiment prevailed, "It doesn't make any
difference what church you are a member of, or what you believe, just so
long as you are honest and sincere about it." Having grown up in an
atmosphere like that, most of us just seem to accept it as the truth--as
axiomatic, but it isn't. The Bible doesn't teach that. If so, where?
Nevertheless, that is what we heard every day. Another thought akin to this
is that everyone ought to go to church; everyone ought to be a member of
some church. These things are preached by all denominational preachers.
Hence, the general conception in religious circles, and the basis for all
resentment toward the church of Christ, because we deny it.
Baptist Preach Some Truth
I do not believe that
everything they say is a falsehood or a lie. I believe that they preach a
lot of truth. The part that they preach that is true, I am glad to accept,
but the things they preach which are not the truth made me leave them. Let
me illustrate my point. You will recall that in the Garden of Eden the devil
preached truth along with a lie. He said, "Thou shalt not surely die." That
is false doctrine. He also said, "For God doth know that in the day that ye
eat thereof your eyes shall be opened and ye shall be as gods, knowing good
and evil." That is the truth. This made the lie more deceptive. Did Adam and
Eve sin when they believed and obeyed that? Why, certainly they did. It was
half a truth and half a lie. If you say, "Well, I only stand for the things
that are the truth", then I will reply, "Maybe that was what Adam and Eve
thought too." "We'll just stand for half of it, and we'll tell the Lord that
we did not believe the other half." But it led them into error and
condemnation just the same. Hence, what truth the
Baptist
Church
preaches is perverted by the false. Then, too, they many times preach more
against sin, moral sin or immorality, than gospel preachers do. I do not
mean to say that we do not preach against immorality, but that they preach
on it almost altogether, and we spend some time preaching doctrine and
pointing out false doctrines. And we need to do that.
Upon attending the
Baptist Church, one hears the Baptist preach against sin, and recognizes the
fact that he is a sinner-- that he is lost. Then being convicted of sin, and
desiring to be saved and do what is right, we join the Baptist Church, or
some other church. A person convicted of sin is ready to do anything he is
commanded. For example, when I first became a member of the church of
Christ, I wished that the Lord had left baptism out of the Bible. I said to
myself, "Everything that the church of Christ teaches is fine, and I believe
that most of the people in the denominations believe exactly what the church
teaches, but when they come to baptism, they just seem to resent that. If
the Lord had just left baptism out, then everything would be all right." I
have learned since that that wasn't the trouble. People do not mind being
baptized when they are convicted of sin. People wanting to obey God do not
mind being baptized. They do not mind doing anything that God commands them
to do. It is a matter of surrendering whole-heartedly
one's own will to God's will. When that's done his attitude is simply,
"Lord, whatever you want me to do, I'm willing to do it." Many, not
realizing this, go on in rebellion against God, believing all the while that
they are pleasing to Him. Hence, we join some church because we are
convicted of sin, realize that we are lost, and because we believe that it
is the right thing to do. That is the reason I joined the
Baptist Church.
Early Experience
I attended Sunday School
at the Baptist
Church
in Caddo, Oklahoma, when I was a little fellow. After we moved to
Texas,
I didn't go much, if at all. By and by my mother started attending the
church
of Christ at
Banger, Texas, so I began attending Bible study there. I attended there
several months and was impressed with the way they studied the Bible. Then I
took pneumonia and was out for about six weeks, so I lost interest and did
not go back. After some time, I was encouraged to go to Sunday School at the
Baptist
Church
by some of my friends. I became regular in attendance and made 100 in Sunday
School right along. Our class was good to win the Banner. Those of you who
know the Baptist grading system know that I had to stay for church to make
100. It wasn't long until I began to realize that I was lost and in sin, and
needed to be saved. I wanted to be saved, so one Sunday night when the
preacher was making propositions with folks, he invited any who knew that
they were lost and "desired the prayers of the church" to hold up their
hand. I knew that I was lost, so at this suggestion I raised my hand. It was
difficult at first. It took all the strength I had to make that arm move,
but after I got it started it wasn't so hard. As I held my hand up my face
burned and my heart came up to my throat. When the preacher said, "God bless
you, son," my face burned more and I was very self-conscious.
Afterwards, several came to me and told me how proud they were of me and
encouraged me. Then I felt more confident and was proud of myself. Of
course, my Sunday School teacher and a few others encouraged me to join the
church. I talked to my mother about it and was persuaded to wait awhile. She
felt that I was being persuaded and didn't realize what I was doing. After
some time I began to visit the Methodist Sunday School and church
occasionally with a friend who was a Methodist. Finally I quit attending at
all.
A little over a year
later I made a speech at the Annual Boy Scout Father and Son Banquet. After
the Banquet the Methodist preacher came by and asked me if I went to Sunday
School or church anywhere. I told him that I didn't, so he urged me to come
to the Methodist Church. Later the Baptist preacher approached me and was
equally as urgent in his invitation as the Methodist preacher. (They had
changed preachers at both places since the incident mentioned before). After
some delay I began attending the Baptist Church. It wasn't long until I was
under conviction again I remembered the time before, so the Sunday morning I
went up during the invitation and asked the preacher to pray for me. I felt
just as I had before. I spent the afternoon trying to decide what to do.
Late in the afternoon, some time before B. T. U. was to begin, I gathered up
a change of clothes and went to the church building to see the preacher. He
was in the auditorium talking with one of the men. I asked him if he would
baptize me that night. He asked me, "Are you saved, Grover?" I said, "Well,
I don't know; I guess I am." He took me into his office where we talked
quite a while. When he heard of my former experience, he told me that I had
been saved back then. I accepted that for I remembered how I had felt after
they had prayed for me. That night I confessed that "God for Christ's sake
has saved me from my sins, and I want to join the
Baptist
Church."
Upon hearing that confession, they voted to receive me, and I was baptized
into the Baptist Church that night. It was April 24, 1938.
Zeal in the
Baptist Church
I took a personal
interest in the work. I worked diligently. I was instrumental in leading
several people to what I honestly thought was Christ, and they joined the
Baptist Church. I was given a Sunday School class, made the assistant
director of the B. T. U., and was licensed to preach. I preached once a
month for a little congregation in Sanford. Texas, about twenty miles out,
and filled in for our local preacher when he was away.
I had been preaching and
working for some time, and nothing had challenged my attention pertaining to
Baptist Doctrine. Then, one day my mother and oldest brother, who had been
attending the church of
Christ, told me how the
church of Christ preached the Bible. They urged me to attend a meeting
starting in a few days. What I had heard about the church of Christ was told
with contempt, so I had learned to feel that way toward them--at least, a
little. However, I made up my mind that I would attend the meeting, listen
to what was said and accept all that I could. I was determined to "give the
devil his due." I wanted to learn what was taught whether I believed it or
not.
A. G. Hobbs, Jr., was
doing the preaching. Brother Hobbs is a very plain preacher. He is very
kind, but he never leaves a doubt as to what he is talking about. I went
home and looked up some of the scriptures and found them right there. On
many points I would say, "You know, I believe he is right about that," but
on others, "Now, he just missed it there. If I could show him a few things
in that connection, he'd see differently." I know that many of you will feel
that way toward me before this lesson is over. You will think, "I wish I
could tell him something." I wish you could, too, because I would like to
remove every objection so that you could see your way to obey the truth. I
learned that when I offered my objections to his position, that it was even
more evident that he was right. That's the reason that the denominational
preachers "don't believe in arguing." They do believe in arguing their side
of it, but they don't believe in allowing a gospel preacher to examine their
side. Suffice it to say that if I cannot sustain every point in this or any
other lesson, I will apologize for it and retract it. Isn't that fair? I
wish I knew everything that will come into your mind tonight, and I had the
time to reply to it. I will do the best that I can out of a consciousness of
what turned over in my mind as I listened to these things being presented.
Maybe I can deal with the most of your objections.
My Attention Challenged
The first thing that
challenged my attention as I listened to Brother Hobbs was that there was
just one church. I suppose there is nothing in the Bible more plainly
taught, yet more disavowed. The Bible says that the church is the body of
Christ (Eph
1:22, 23).
It says, "There is one body" (Eph. 4:4). The church is the body;
there is one body; therefore, there is one church. Along with other proofs,
I saw that there was just one church. Which one? So I began to study.
Other things challenged
my attention as I studied. I wondered about God calling all preachers to
preach. Does God call all preachers, then cause them to preach conflicting
doctrines? Does God call Baptist preachers to preach, and then cause them to
preach that immersion is the only kind of baptism, that only ordained
Baptist preachers have the authority to baptize, the impossibility of
apostasy, the miraculous operation of the Holy Spirit, and numerous other
things? Then does God call a Methodist preacher to preach that sprinkling is
baptism, and that you can fall from grace? Does God call both of them to
preach these contradictory doctrines? John 17:20-23
and I Cor. 1:10-13
teach that he does not.
Why belong to a church?
I told you that people, when convicted of sin will join one church or
another, even though they do not know what it teaches or stands for. It is a
church, they tell the story of
Christ,
and they were convicted of sin there, so they become members of it without
questioning, or even knowing anything about its doctrines. When somebody
criticizes it, the members of it resent it. Why? Because the criticism was
true or not true? NO, we just don't like for people to criticize the church
we are members of. Because of a sense of loyalty we resent it. That is human
nature. We must overcome feelings like that and be ready to face facts.
Why become a member of a
church? Because of parents, friends, relatives? Because of a nice building?
Because it is conveniently located? Because they do a lot of good works?
Because they teach some truth? Are these reasons we become members? For the
most part, yes. The large majority of the people in the denominations join
them without knowing what they teach, or stand for, hence they could not
have joined because of their doctrine. I would say that 85 per cent or 90
per cent of the people in the
Baptist
Church
do not know what the Baptist Church teaches. Some people say, "I know that
they teach such and such a thing, but I don't believe it." Now look, first,
you are a member of something that you do not even know what it teaches, and
second, you are supporting a doctrine that you do not believe. If I were
supporting a doctrine that I didn't believe, you'd call me a hypocrite.
The Sixty-Four
Dollar Question
Now here is the
sixty-four dollar question. On the preceding basis, I want to know why you
do not join all the churches in town? You have heard that question before,
but I want you to consider it again. Why not joint the Methodist, the
Baptist, the Presbyterian and the Adventist? I have friends in all of them.
They all teach some truth. They all do many good works, they raise the
fallen and they do benevolence. There are good people in all. They stand for
morality. The reasons we give for belonging to one church could be given as
reasons for belonging to all; so, why not join all of them? I'll tell you
why. It would make me a hypocrite to be a member of more than one church. If
you are a member of the Baptist Church, and you go next Sunday and join the
Methodist Church, and then the following Sunday join the Presbyterian, folks
will begin to say that you are not sincere, or that you are "not all there."
At a place where I was preaching once there was a family that joined every
church in town during the big meetings. The town and the churches were
considerate--they
just overlooked it. Their name is a synonym for being "a little off." Hence,
joining all churches will give you a reputation for being a hypocrite or
insane.
If it will make you a
hypocrite for belonging to the Methodist Church and the Baptist Church at
the same time-- then why? Is it because of the good people in it? No. Is it
because of the truth or the good they teach? No. Is it because they do a lot
of good works? No. What is it then? The conflicting doctrines! The
Baptist
Church
stands for immersion only, impossibility of apostasy and close communion.
The Methodist Church stands for open communion, sprinkling for baptism and
the possibility of apostasy--just the opposite. We are told that it is all
right for one person to stand for Baptist doctrine and another person to
stand for Methodist doctrine; but it is not all right for one to stand for
both the Methodist and Baptist Doctrines at the same time. To do so will
bring the charge of hypocrisy or insanity upon you. If it will make me a
hypocrite to belong to more than one because of the contradictory doctrines,
then answer this question: Is Jesus
Christ a member of all churches? Is
he? Is Jesus Christ a
member of the Baptist Church? If so, is he a member of the Methodist Church,
too? Is he a member of both of them tonight--now? Is the Son of God standing
for Baptist Doctrine of the impossibility of apostasy now, and at the same
time over in the Methodist Church, is he standing for the possibility of
apostasy? Is he doing that tonight? And if it will make me a hypocrite to do
it, WHAT DOES; IT MAKE THE
SON
OF GOD? IS HE A HYPOCRITE? Does he endorse any conflicting doctrines? Is
Jesus Christ
a member of the Baptist Church, the Methodist, the Presbyterian, the Episcopal, the
Adventists, the Mormons, and all of the different churches? Is he a member
of all of them?
There is a good question
in the Bible along this line, I Cor. 1:13. "Is
Christ
divided?" Just three words, "Is
Christ divided?" The
apostle Paul asked the question in condemning division. What is the answer
to it? Will you answer it? Is Christ divided? The answer is in the question.
It is a rhetorical question. "Is Christ divided? Was Paul crucified for you?
Were you baptized in the name of Paul?" It was after considering things like
these that I began to see that something was wrong--that the Baptist Church
is not altogether the New Testament Church. Then I would try to justify the
Baptist Church by looking to all the good they did, and the splendid people
I had learned to love. I couldn't stand the thought of facing my friends and
what they would have to say. It never occurred to me to rejoice in the truth
and tell others who did not know. I guess I realized that they would not be
glad to learn it.
I remember one day that
one of the Baptist Deacons came to me in the store. We went back to the
wareroom where we could be alone. He said "Grover, I heard that you are
about to join the 'Campbellites'." There was that tone of contempt in his
voice. He made it sound like that was the worst thing in the world. I
stammered a little and said, "No, I have been attending their meeting, but I
am not about to join." He said, "Well, I knew that you had better sense than
to be led off by that bunch." I told him that they really knew and preached
the Bible. He explained their ease in handling the Bible by telling me that
the "Campbellites" only have ten sermons that they memorize and preach
everywhere they go. He told me that the church was started by Alexander
Campbell, that it was the most narrow-minded and bigoted bunch of people in
the world, and they thought everybody was going to hell that didn't belong
to their church. When he finished he left such a stigma that I thought,
"Well, surely a fellow would be insane who would go with that group."
That helped for a while,
as it eased my conscience to disregard what I had learned. It, very likely,
was responsible for my not obeying the gospel before the meeting closed.
However, the day the meeting closed, Sunday, that afternoon Brother Hobbs
came to see me. He took my Bible, sat down beside me, and as I asked
questions, he turned in the Bible and had me read the answers. When I didn't
ask a question he had plenty of things to show me. We'll notice some of them
in just a moment. He offered to talk to me in the presence of the Baptist
preacher, or to talk to the Baptist preacher in my presence. He asked me to
invite the Baptist preacher to meet with him or Brother Thomas McDonald, the
local preacher for the church of Christ in my hometown. I didn't want to ask
him because I knew that he wouldn't. He took my Church Manual and showed me
where Baptist Doctrine contradicts the Bible. I saw the truth very plainly.
That night he insisted that I come and hear him. I made every excuse I could
but he wouldn't hear them. I told him that I had a part on the B. T. U.
program and couldn't get to
Borger
in time after that. We got out at
8:00 and his services
started at 8:00. I thought that would end it, but it didn't. The only reason
I could think of for not wanting to go is that I hated to face the Baptists
and explain my absence from church which they would surely notice. Brother
Hobbs said, "I'll be in front of the Baptist Church at 8:00 o'clock and take
you to town." He preached on church history that night. He explained the
origin of denominations and showed how the
church
of Christ stands
for New Testament Christianity free from all denominations. When the
invitation was extended I wanted to go. As I thought on what I should do,
and what my friends in the Baptist Church would say, my head just whirled. I
managed to stay in my seat, however.
The meeting ended and I
settled down to a long, hard study of things all by myself. I read the New
Testament through and underlined the passages on baptism, the Holy Spirit,
the plan of salvation, apostasy, etc. I copied each verse into a notebook on
a sheet for each subject. When I had them all I studied them together. The
more I studied, the more I realized that the Baptists were wrong, and the
more it bothered me. I couldn't keep my mind on my work. I couldn't sleep.
Phillips is a big oil field, and there is a big torch that burns day and
night. I lay in bed and watched that torch and the lighted sky. The clouds
reflected the red from its flames. I would lie there, sometimes till
daylight, thinking, praying, studying, and wishing that something would
happen. I prayed for the Lord to guide me. I asked the Lord to show me his
will, the way He would have me go.
I struggled on until
time for the Southern Baptist Convention that met that year in Oklahoma
City; then, I decided to go to the convention and forget about the church of
Christ. Here I was successful in forgetting my troubles and getting better
established in the Baptist Church. I went with the local preacher and
registered as a delegate. I returned, feeling much better, but not for long.
Every time that I read my Bible I noticed those passages that I had marked.
I still had my notebook, too. It wasn't long until I found myself spending
sleepless nights again. I begged the Lord to show me what he would have me
do. I prayed, "Thy will be done." This continued for nearly three months.
Then one Sunday afternoon as I was studying and thinking, it suddenly dawned
on me that the Bible is God's way of revealing his will to us. I realized
that I had been praying, "Thy will be done," and as honestly and earnestly
as I knew how, but that subconsciously I had been holding out on the Lord in
my desire to remain a Baptist. MY WHOLE STRUGGLE WAS REBELLION TO WHAT GOD
WAS TELLING ME TO DO. The Lord was trying to guide me through the light of
His word, but it didn't shine in the direction I wanted it to. Most of our
struggles between right and wrong are not what is right and what is wrong,
but surrendering our desires for what we want, to what we know is right. The
Bible is God's way of telling us His will. He is doing everything He can to
guide us by the Bible. When we refuse that, we "have not God." (II John
9).
After considerable study
and prayer that afternoon, I gathered up my clothes and went to services at
the church of Christ. When they offered the invitation, I went forward,
confessed my faith in Jesus Christ and was baptized into him the same hour
of the night.
The truth is what made
me leave the Baptist
Church.
I now invite your attention to some of those truths. My first point is the
most fundamental, and is the ultimate conclusion of every point I shall
make.
The Baptist Church is not
the New Testament Church
The Baptist Church is
not the church you read about in the Bible. Baptist preachers, and all other
preachers, take the Bible and read the word "church," but they do not
comment on it. They leave the impression that it refers to "their" church.
The Baptist preacher will read a passage with the word "church" in it, and
apply it to the Baptist Church. The Methodist preacher will read the same
passage and apply it to the Methodist Church. The Presbyterian preacher will
read the same passage and apply it to the Presbyterian Church. It cannot
refer to all of them. If these passages refer to the Baptist Church, it
cannot refer to the Methodist, because they are two different institutions.
To which one does it refer then? I am affirming that out of the 112 times
that the word "church" is used in the New Testament, not one time does it
refer to the Baptist Church, or to any other denomination. It talks about
"the church," "the church of God," "the church of the first-born," "the
churches of Christ," etc., but most of the time it just says "the church."
Which church? Which one
is it? When the Bible uses the word "church" it just refers to one. Now
which one is it?
Church the “Called-Out”
First, the word "church"
means "called out." "Called out" of what? What does it mean? The Baptists
teach that you can be a Christian--you can be saved, and not be a member of
any church, including the Baptist. Let us see. The word "ecclesia"
translated "church" refers to the "called out" --to that body of people that
have been called out of the world, out of sin, into Christ. That is the
meaning and significance of the word "church" in the New Testament. It does
not mean denomination. It does not have reference to the Baptist Church, not
the Methodist, nor any of the rest of them. It simply means "the called
out." The point is this: if you can be saved without being a member of any
church, then it follows that you can be saved without being "called out" or
a member of the "called out." You have to be called out of the world into
Christ to be saved. The same thing that calls you out, that redeems you,
makes you a member of the church or "called out;" don't you see? The
Baptists do not use it that way. They talk about a. person being saved and
in Christ before he is a member of the church, and without being a member of
any church.
I want to illustrate
this point by substituting the terms "called out" and "redeemed" for church
in a passage of scripture or two. Acts
2:47
says "the Lord added to the church
daily such as should be saved." The Lord added to the
"called out" daily such as
should be saved. Now, see this body of people over here that are in sin and
in the world, and the Lord added to this other body over here, the "called
out," "such as should be saved." All of those who were saved were called out
of the world into Christ. The process of saving and
calling out are the same. "The
Lord added to the saved daily such as should be saved." The Lord added to the redeemed daily such as
should be saved.
In Acts 8:1 we
read, "And at that time there was a great persecution against the
church that was at Jerusalem."
Now watch it, "At that time there was a great persecution against the
called out which was at
Jerusalem," "a great persecution against the
redeemed which was at
Jerusalem," "against the saved
which was at Jerusalem." Do you see that? I do not see how you could
miss it.
Acts 20:28,
"Take heed therefore to yourselves and to all the flock over which the Holy
Ghost hath made you overseers, to feed the
church
of God, which he hath
purchased with his own blood." The
called out of God which he hath purchased with his own blood,"
"the saved of God, "the
redeemed of God. The church,
the redeemed, the saved, the called out. This is the significance of the
word "church," and is a far cry from the meaning Baptists give it. Remember
they claim that a person can be saved, redeemed, belong to God and not be a
member of the Baptist
Church.
The church is the Kingdom of God, the body of Christ, the family of God.
When viewing the church as to its relationship to the world, it is the
"called out"--called out of the world--the church. When viewing the church
as to its government, it is a kingdom, the Kingdom of God. As to its
organization it is the body of Christ. With reference to its relationship to
each other, it is the family of God. Don't you see that the church in the
New Testament is not and could not be the Baptist Church?
“Church” Never Refers to
the Baptist Church
If the word "church"
never refers to the Baptist Church, then the Baptist Church is eliminated
from the Bible. You know, of course, that the expressions "Baptist Church,"
"Baptist Churches," "Baptists," or "a Baptist" are not to be found in the
Bible. We have now shown that the word "church" never refers to the Baptist
Church In as much as the Baptists admit that you can be a member of the New
Testament Church, the kingdom of God, before and without being a member of
the Baptist Church, then it follows that
the Baptist Church and the New Testament
church are two different institutions, entered at two different times, by
two different processes. That is exactly it. This is according
to the Baptists, themselves. Therefore the
Baptist
Church
cannot be the New Testament Church.
Do I have to be a member
of the Baptist
Church
to be saved? The Baptists say "no." If they should say "yes," then all the
Methodists, Presbyterians, etc. would be going to hell because they are not
Baptists. They say that they would not be that "narrow-minded." On page 17
of this little book, Church Manual for
Baptist Churches by J. M. Pendleton, and published by the Sunday
School Board, Southern Baptist Convention, Nashville, Tennessee, we read,
"persons wishing to unite with a church give an account of the dealings of
God with their souls, and state the 'reason of the hope that is in them';
whereupon, if, in the judgment of the church they 'have passed from death
unto life', they are by vote of the church recognized as candidates for
baptism, with the understanding that when they are baptized they are
entitled to all the rights and privileges of membership." This simply says
that a person desiring to join the
Baptist
Church
must tell that he is saved. The Baptist Church then votes to determine
whether the church thinks he is saved or not. They, deciding that he is,
receive him into the church after baptism. Hence, he must confess that he is
saved, that he is a member of the
kingdom
of God
already, and then, he joins the Baptist Church. This being true, then it
follows that a person can be a member of the kingdom of God, or body of
Christ, or New Testament Church, before, and without belonging to the
Baptist Church.
Two Different Processes of
Salvation
You had to confess that
you were saved before you could join the Baptist Church. When I asked the
Baptist preacher if he would baptize me, he asked, "Are you saved, Grover?
We want saved people in our church." Then, at services that night I
confessed that "God, for
Christ's
sake, has saved me from my sins" and I went to join the
Baptist Church. I was
visiting a Baptist Church one time and saw them do it this way: The preacher
asked, "Do you believe that you were lost and that you are now saved for
Christ's
sake?" The reply was "yes." "Do you desire to join the
Baptist
Church?"
"Yes," again. "You have heard the statement, what is your pleasure?" Then
they took the vote. Once more I say that this proves, according to Baptists,
that a person can be a member of the kingdom of God (saved) before and
without being a member of the
Baptist
Church.
Hence, to be a
Christian,
to be saved, and a member
of
the
kingdom
of
God, or the church you
read about in the Bible is one thing, and to be a Baptist is another.
Friends, the
conclusion is inevitable. 'THE
BAPTIST
CHURCH
AND THE NEW TESTAMENT CHURCH ARE TWO DIFFERENT PROCESSES. This argument
alone should show every honest person why you can't afford to be a Baptist.
The “Visible and Invisible”
Churches
Baptists teach that the
church is used in two senses a visible sense and an invisible sense. They
claim that when you are saved, God adds you to His church, the New Testament
Church, which is the invisible church. If you are regenerated, you are
saved; God knows it, and you know it, but nobody else should pass judgment
on you--that is, nobody except the Baptists; they vote it, you know. That
makes you a member of the kingdom of God or the New Testament Church, which
is the invisible church--to
them. Then, you can go to the Baptist Church, relate your experience (tell
them you are saved), let them vote on it to decide if you really are, then
by baptism you become a member of the Baptist Church which is a
visible church. They claim that
all denominations are visible churches.
They look upon the church of Christ as being just another
"visible church" or denomination. That is the reason they think we are so
narrow, that is, because they look at us as a church v'. .'.
their denominational, NARROW
.., and erroneous conception of what the church is. They will say, "I think
there are saved people in the church of Christ. I think their doctrine is
wrong, but I think there are saved people in "their" church. Again, "I
disagree with the Methodists, but I think there are saved people in the
Methodist Church." This is because they think of a person being saved in the
"invisible church" and then joining a "visible" one. This would be all right
if the Bible taught it, but it doesn't.
Friends, the New
Testament Church was a visible church. The Jerusalem church was a visible
church. It met for worship every Lord's day, yet
was no denomination. The church
at Corinth met upon the first day of the week, sang, prayed, had preaching,
took the Lord's Supper, and contributed of their means, yet it was no
denomination. Paul called it, "the church of God" and "the body of Christ."
(1 Cor. 1:2; I Cor. 12:27).
What Makes a Denomination?
I want to use an old
illustration: Suppose that three denominations, the Baptists, Methodists and
the Presbyterians have a union meeting. In the course of the meeting 400
people are saved. Understand that I disagree with them on the way that they
think they are saved, but we are waiving that point just now, in order to
make another. These 400 persons, being saved, are members of the New
Testament church, the Kingdom of God. When the meeting closes, they are told
to "join the church of your choice." Suppose that 100 go into the Baptist
Church another hundred go into the Methodist, and a third hundred join the
Presbyterians. What made the first 100 Baptists? Now look, they were saved
to begin with, already Christians, members of the Lord's church, then they
joined the Baptist
Church
that made them Baptists. What was it that made them Baptists?! It was
the doctrines peculiar to the
Baptist
Church. The
doctrines that differentiate and distinguish the
Baptist
Church
from the Methodist and all others. These doctrines are given in this Church
Manual. If a Baptist Church didn't measure up
to this doctrine, then it would
not be a Baptist Church, but some other kind. Hence, Christians
plus the peculiarities of the
Baptist
Church make Baptists.
Christians (saved) plus
the Methodist Discipline, the doctrines peculiar to the Methodist Church,
make them Methodists. It is always Christian first, plus the creed
containing the doctrine peculiar to the particular denomination that makes
them members of the second church, the denomination. Two Churches? Why not?
You are members of the Lord's church when you are saved--church number one;
then you join some denomination--church
number two. Hence, to be a
Baptist is something in addition to being a Christian, and belonging to
something in addition to the New Testament church Where does the Bible teach
us to join some denomination, the second church? The Bible teaches, "The
Lord added to the church daily such as should be saved."
How Not to be A Sectarian
But, what about the
other 100? Suppose they couldn't make up their mind which church to join. As
they study about it, it suddenly dawns on them, "we are saved aren't we? Our
sins have been forgiven, haven't they? We are members of the New Testament
church, are we not?" O, yes. "We are members of the Kingdom of God, aren't
we?" Yes. "Well, suppose that we select a place, meet there upon the first
day of the week according to the New Testament and worship God, and never
join a denomination." Can they do that? If not, why not? Would that make
them a denomination? If so, which one? They didn't join any denomination.
They said, "We just want to be
Christians,
and Christians
only."
This is exactly what the
church of Christ pleads for. We ask people to be just a member of the New
Testament church, and not of any denomination. I preach that a person must
belong to the New Testament church to be saved. So do the denominations. I
preach that a person does not have
to belong to any
denomination to be saved.
Every one of them teaches the same. When I teach the same thing
that they do, they do not like it. Of course, they teach that you do not
have to belong to any denomination to be saved, but that you ought to belong
to one; and I teach that you do not have to belong to any denomination to be
saved and that YOU OUGHT NOT
BELONG TO ANY because the Lord did
not build them.
Yes, we are pleading with people to be a member only of the Lord's
church, the New Testament church, the kingdom of God, and NOT
to be members of any denomination.
Be a Christian, and a Christian only.
Dividing the
Kingdom of God
Before I leave this
point, I want to examine their claims from another angle. Baptists claim to
be building up the
kingdom
of God
when they, through their preaching, lead people to be saved. (I do not agree
that they are saved, because, Baptists teach the wrong plan of salvation. We
will notice that in a moment, but we are speaking in Baptist terms in order
to make the point.) They claim that their greatest concern is simply to get
folks "saved," then invited them to join the
Baptist
Church
or some other denomination, for they
are DIVIDING THE KINGDOM OF GOD.
When they lead you to be saved, that makes
you a member of the
kingdom
of God.
Then, when they encourage or allow you to
join a denomination, that divides the
kingdom
of
God into various
denominations, draws
you off,
and fences you in. The very
name denomination means divided.
Denomination and denominator
came from the same root word which means
divide. Division is condemned.
(1 Cor. 1:10-13;
3:14).
Division is carnal, and to be carnal is sinful. Hence for a
Christian
to be a member of the
Baptist Church, or any
other denomination, is to divide the
kingdom
of God,
and therefore is a sin. Let me plead with you, friends, to leave the Baptist
Church as I have done, and be a member only of the Lord's Family, the New
Testament Church.
Who is that Narow?
Just here, I want to
call attention to this charge of being narrow.
Usually about all the enemies of the church of Christ
can say against us is "they are narrow minded."
Narrow means
limited, or
circumscribed. We just noticed
how the Baptists make Christians (?), members of the kingdom of God, then
teach and encourage them to separate themselves from others in the kingdom
of God by joining the Baptist Church, thus
limiting and
circumscribing themselves from
all others whom they claim are members of the kingdom of God, too. Who is it
that is narrow?!
Have you ever wondered
just why we are called
"narrow minded"? It is NOT because we
point out and condemn error, because all preachers do that. The
Baptists condemn the Methodists for sprinkling and infant membership, and
the Methodists do not get mad and call them narrow-minded. Then too, the
Methodists condemn the Baptist doctrine of the impossibility of apostasy, or
once saved always saved, and the Baptists do not get mad and accuse the
Methodists of being narrow-minded and bigoted. Yet, when I condemn the
Methodists for sprinkling, and the Baptists for "once saved always saved,"
no more than they do themselves, they both get together and charge me of
being narrow-minded.
Why? I think I know why. When the Baptist preacher finishes condemning
sprinkling, he tells them that it doesn't make any difference what you
believe anyhow, and the Methodist preacher does likewise. But, when I get
through pointing out that the Bible does not teach sprinkling for baptism,
infant membership in the church, "once saved always saved", etc., and
instead of telling the audience that it doesn't make any difference anyhow,
I plead with them to accept and obey the truth, the word of God and turn
from these false doctrines. This is why I am branded "narrow-minded",
and it amounts to this: A denominational preacher will preach for an hour and "wind up" by saying that
it doesn't matter whether you believe what he has been preaching or not.
This makes him BROAD-MINDED. But
after I have preached for an hour, I "wind
up" by pleading with you to accept it because it is the truth. This makes me
NARROW-MINDED.
Isn't that the reason others are considered broad-minded
and we are considered narrow-minded? I wonder what Jesus thinks, do you?
Let's see, Mark 16:15-16
says, "Go ye into all the world, and preach the gospel to every creature. He
that believeth and is baptized shall be saved; but HE THAT BELIEVETH NOT
SHALL BE DAMNED". This is a never failing test for gospel preaching. When a
preacher says that you do not have to believe what he preaches to be saved,
he is not preaching the gospel,
for Jesus said, "Go preach the gospel
he that believeth not shall be damned."
The Baptist Church is
Unscriptural in Name
We have already said
that the expression "Baptist
Church',
is not found in the Bible. John the Baptist, it is reasoned, baptized Christ
and others, and since he was sent from God, that made
Christ
and all others Baptists. Well, that made Baptists before they ever had a
Baptist
Church.
Did you ever hear of a Baptist that was not a member of the Baptist Church?
Yet, they admit themselves that the Baptist Church was not established until
the ordaining of the twelve. John was not called
Baptist in the same sense that
people are called Baptist today. The expression "Baptist" is found only 15 times in the Bible. Every
time it is "John the Baptist."
Mark
6:14
says, "John the Baptizer." The Greek is "John, he who baptizes " or "the man
who baptizes." There is the passage that tells why John was called "the
Baptist"--because
he baptized people. This distinguished him from all other Johns. Do you know
that in the book of John you cannot find the word "Baptist"? The Apostle
John never called John the Baptist, "the Baptist." It is only found 15 times
in the Bible, and every time "John THE Baptist."
The followers of Jesus
Christ were never
called Baptists. The followers of John were never called Baptists.
Is it not peculiar
that if John's baptizing folks made Baptists out of them that not one was
ever referred to as a Baptist then, or thereafter? Not one time is anyone
ever called Baptist in the Bible except John.
Human names are
condemned. (1 Cor. 1:12). "Now this I say, that every one of you
saith, I am of Paul; and I of Apollos; and I of Cephas; and I of
Christ.
Is Christ
divided? Was Paul crucified for you? Were ye baptized in the name of Paul?"
Again in Acts 4:12:"Neither is there salvation in any other: For there is none other name
under heaven given among men, whereby we must be saved." Look at it,
"There is none other name." Is
it all right to use other names? Listen again,
"There is none other name."
Among human names (those not found in the Bible) I can think of none greater
than that of Paul. Yet, if
I were to present a check for my soul's salvation in the name of Paul at the
judgment bar of God, he would have to say, "Not in the name of Paul, not in
the name of Apollos, not in the name of Cephas, nor in the name of John the
Baptist, for salvation is in none other
name than Jesus
Christ."
This is the only "name under heaven given among men whereby we must be
saved."
This
name exalts Christ. This is the name that we in the church of Christ are
pleading for. Other names or additional names are sinful. Wear the name of
Christ and none other. (Phil. 2:9-11).
The
Baptist Church is
Unscriptural in Worship
They call Sunday the
Sabbath day. Ex.
20:10
says, "Six days labor, but the seventh
call Sunday the Sabbath day. Ex.
20:10
says, "Six days labor, but the seventh
is the Sabbath." That would make Saturday the Sabbath day. In
Acts 20:7 we learn that the disciples came together to break bread upon
the first day of the week.
Baptists teach that people ought to keep THE Ten commandments. one of which
commands the keeping of the seventh day, Sabbath. Yet, they will meet on
Sunday, the
Lord's day (Rev.
1:10), and teach that Sunday is the Sabbath day. This confuses the
people. It confused me while I was a Baptist. The truth of the matter is,
Sunday is not the Sabbath, nor is it the
Christian Sabbath, but
the Lord's Day. The old Law, the Sabbath included, has been "fulfilled"
(Matt. 5:17-18),
"done away" (Ex. 34:27-33;
II Cor. 3:6-14; Rom. 7:1-7),
"nailed to the cross" (Col. 2:14-16).
Baptists use mechanical
instruments of music in their worship. I think a good bit has been said
about that in other lessons, so just suffice it to say that the New
Testament Church did not use mechanical instruments of music. David used
them, but neither Jesus nor his disciples ever did. That is as good an
argument as is needed. They had it to use, but did not use it. That is
reason enough for not using it.
Baptists set aside the
Lord's Supper and say that it makes it too common to take it every Lord's
Day. The same passage that says for us to come together says also for us to
partake of the Lord's Supper. (Acts 20:7). They come together every
first day of the week, they take a collection every first day of the week,
and they have preaching... but to take the Lord's Supper every first day of
the week makes it too common. Why is it not too common to
give every first day of the
week? ? Why is it not too common to come together
every first day of the week? Why is it not too
common to have preaching every first day of the week? They read in
I Cor. 11:25, where Christ
is quoted as having said, "this do, as oft as ye drink it, in remembrance of
me," and conclude that they are left at liberty to take it when they are
pleased to do so. The Bible plainly states, "upon the first day of the week
. . ." (Acts 20:7). Every week has a first day. When God told the
children of Israel "Remember the Sabbath day to keep it holy," they
understood that they were to keep every
Sabbath holy. Just so with us in regard to the Lord's Supper.
The Lord said `'Do this in memory of me," so we meet every first day of the
week to remember the Christ in that humble and simple way, by keeping the
Lord's Supper.
They have unscriptural
means of raising money. In the first place they teach tithing. The Jews gave
a tithe but we are taught to "lay by in store as we have been prospered
(1 Cor. 16:2), and as we "purposeth in our heart" (II Cor. 9:7),
which will "prove the sincerity of our love" (II Cor. 8:8). Baptists
will build an elaborate building, then go around begging the businessmen in
town to pay for it. They want the bank to discount the notes. Various
schemes and practices similar to these have given churches in general a
"black eye." One can hardly get a bank to loan a church any money at all,
because if they foreclose on a note it causes ill will toward the bank, and
if they don't, they must suffer the loss. They just do not want to fool with
it. Begging and hijacking businessmen and professional men to pay church
debts is certainly not following the scriptures. Then too, they will use
carnivals, suppers and other means of amusement to raise the money to
support their churches. Let "every one of you lay by him in store" to
support the cause of Christ and the work of the church.
The Baptist Church is Wrong
in their Plan of Salvation
They teach that a person
is saved by prayer. I could tell several incidents in which people were
saved by prayer according to the Baptists. One Sunday night three boys, who
were alien sinners, a preacher, and myself, all engaged in prayer until the
boys arose and confessed that they were saved.
An alien sinner is not
saved by prayer. John
9:31
says, "Now we know that God heareth not sinners, but if any man be a
worshipper of God and
doeth his will, him he
heareth." It is God's will that we "obey the gospel" (II Thess. 1:8).
The gospel commands us to be baptized into
Christ
"for the remission of sins." (Gal. 3:27; Acts 2:38). We have not done
God's will until we have been baptized into
Christ.
Hear Isaiah, "Your iniquities have separated between you and your God, and
your sins have hid His face from you, that He will not hear." (Isa.
59:2). We are to pray for the lost, that's true (Rom. 10:1), but
the gospel, not prayer, "is the power of God unto salvation." (Rom.
1:16).
Paul says in II Cor.
5:11, "Knowing therefore the terror of the Lord, we persuade men." Some
people try to persuade God to save the sinner, but Paul persuaded the sinner
to obey God. God is willing to save all who will obey. (II Peter 3:9;
Titus 2:11; I Tim. 2:4; Heb. 5:9). "God be thanked that ye were the
servants of sin, but ye have OBEYED from the heart that form of doctrine
which was delivered you, being THEN made free from sin, ye became the
servants of righteousness." (Romans 6:17-18).
Baptists think that the
"new birth" is a mysterious, mystical, operation performed by the Holy
Spirit that produces some indescribable sensation to the flesh. They do not
know how it happened, but they do know that a change has been made and their
heart tells them that the change is of such a nature as to have come from
God. Their pet passage is John 3:8, "The wind bloweth where it
listeth, and thou hearest the sound thereof, but canst not tell whence it
cometh, and whither it goeth: so is every one that is born of the Spirit."
In the first place this would be carnal--a sensation to the flesh. A
spiritual birth is of the spirit, not of the flesh. In the second place, the
passage doesn't teach any such idea. It says,
"so is everyone" not "so is the
new birth," but "so is everyone
that is born of the Spirit." MacKnight translates this passage, "The
Spirit breathes where he pleases, and you hear the report of him, but know
not whence he comes, or whither he goes; so is everyone who is born of the
Spirit." We must hear the "report or Voice" of the Spirit--the inspired word
of God. I John 5:1 says, "whosoever
believeth is born of God."
I
John 4:7 says, "every one that
loveth is born of God."
I John
2:29
says, "everyone that doeth righteousness is
born of him." We must take
all that the Bible says. John 3:5 is plain enough, "except a man be born of
water and of the
Spirit, he cannot enter into
the Kingdom
of God."
But if you have trouble with it and the others just mentioned, then the
thing to do is to find some examples of how people were "born again" in the
Bible. Nobody would question the fact that the people of Acts 2 were
born again. After hearing Peter's sermon, they were pricked in their hearts
(hence, believed, v. 37). Upon asking what to do, they were told to "repent
and be baptized everyone of you in the name of Jesus Christ for the
remission of sins, and ye shall receive the gift of the Holy Spirit."
(Verse 38). Then in verse 41. "Then they that gladly received his word
were baptized: and the same day there were added unto them about three
thousand souls." Again, (Gal.
3:26-27),
"For ye are all the children of God by faith in
Christ
Jesus. For as many of you as have been baptized into
Christ have put on
Christ." Notice that they were "children of God," therefore had been "born"
into the family of God, but they were children of God by faith--by faith
where--by faith in
Christ.
But, they were baptized
into Christ, and thus "put on Christ." Hence, they were "born again" (made
children of God) by faith and
baptism.
Baptists teach that
sinners are saved by faith only. They say, "All you have to do is believe,
and He will save you." Article 5 of their Declaration of Faith, page 48,
says that justification is "solely through faith." James says just the
opposite, "Ye see then how that by works a man is justified, and
not by faith only."
(James
2:24). Their
doctrine of faith only breaks down on the chief rulers of John 12:42-43.
"Nevertheless among the chief rulers also many believed on him; but because
of the Pharisees they did not confess him, lest they should be put out of
the synagogue: For they loved the praise of men more than the praise of
God." Were the chief rulers saved? If you say "yes," then you disagree with
the Apostle John for he says, "every spirit that
confesseth not that Jesus
Christ
is come in the flesh is not of God."
(1
John 4:3). If you say they did not believe, then you
disagree with the Apostle John again, for he says they
"believed on Him."
Sometimes
Baptists try to dodge the force of this argument by saying they believed
on, not
in Him. The Greek is "eis,"
the strongest expression in this respect in
the Greek language.
Many times they refer to
Paul's statement to the Philippian jailer in Acts 16:31, "Believe on
the Lord Jesus and thou shalt be saved," and argue that in as much as Paul
did not mention baptism that it is not a part of the plan of salvation.
According to this logic, we could eliminate
repentance, love and
confession, because they
are not mentioned either. And did you notice that Paul said, "Believe
on the Lord Jesus." Besides
that, where do these go? "For by GRACE are ye saved through faith"
(Eph.
2:8). "For we are saved by HOPE" (Rom.
8:24).
"Moreover brethren, I declare unto you the GOSPEL which I preached unto you,
by which also ye are saved" (1 Cor.
15:12).
"Wherefore lay apart all filthiness and superfluity of naughtiness, and
receive with meekness the engrafted WORD, which is able to save your souls"
(James
1:21). "The
like figure whereunto even BAPTISM doth also now save us" (1 Peter
3:21).
So, we see that we are not saved by faith only
(James
2:24), but by
grace, hope, the gospel, the word, and baptism also. But these are all made
possible by Jesus (Matt.
1:21).
Paul told the Philippian Jailer "Believe on the Lord Jesus and thou shalt be
saved"--but do not stop here, let us read on--verse 32 reads'
"And they spake unto him the word of the
Lord, and to all that were in his house, and he took them the
same hour of the night, and washed their stripes; and was baptized, he and
all his straight-way." Since faith is the first step taken toward salvation,
Paul told the jailer to "believe on the Lord Jesus and thou shalt be saved,"
but when they "spake unto him the word of the Lord," he was baptized the
same hour of the night, since the word of the Lord says, "He that believeth
and is baptized shall be saved" (Mark 16:16). Therefore, we are not
saved by faith only, but by "faith which worketh by love" (Gal. 5:6).
Baptists make the wrong
confession. They say "confess your sins," but Christ says in Matt.
10:32,
"Whosoever therefore shall confess ME before men, him will I confess also
before my Father which is in heaven." The confession is not made in baptism.
Consider, (Rom. 10:9), "That if thou shalt confess
with thy MOUTH the LORD JESUS
and shalt believe in shine heart that God hath raised him from the dead,
thou shalt be saved." The eunuch did not confess his sins, but did confess
"that Jesus Christ
is the Son of God." Who ever heard a Baptist preacher ask anyone to confess
"that Jesus Christ is the Son of God?" Sometimes Baptists confess "that God, for
Christ's sake, has pardoned my sins." This is the confession that I made and
I have heard a number of others make the same confession.
This confession contradicts
every verse the Bible that speaks of
baptism and salvation. The Bible says we are made free AFTER we
have obeyed the gospel (Rom. 6:3-4,
17-18).
Baptist do not Administer
Bible Baptism
John's baptism is out of
date. In Acts 19:1-5
we find where Paul rebaptized twelve men who had received John's baptism.
Aquila and Priscilla took a preacher who knew "only the baptism of John" and
"expounded unto him the way of God more perfectly." (Acts 18:24-26).
Baptists baptize people
whom they claim already have received the remission of sins. "There is an
actual, a real remission of sins when we believe in Christ--there is a
declarative, formal, symbolic remission in baptism." (Baptist Church Manual,
p. 13).
The Bible plainly states
that baptism is FOR THE REMISSION OF SINS, (Acts
2:38),
or to wash away sins (Acts
22:16).
Baptists do not baptize
a person into Christ, but rather, into
the
Baptist Church.
They say any such
person is in Christ before baptism. Hear Paul, "For as many of you as have been BAPTIZED INTO CHRIST
have put on Christ."
(Gal. 3:27).
Baptist baptism must be
on a confession that one is already saved. Bible baptism puts a person into
Christ where salvation is. (1 Cor. 12:13; Col. 1:18; Eph. 1:3; II Cor.
5:17; Rom.
6:4; II Tim. 2:10).
Inasmuch as Christian
baptism is "for the remission of sins," or to "wash away sins," and to get
"into Christ," or "put on Christ," and Baptists do not administer Christian
baptism, as has just been pointed out, then it follows that those who obeyed
the Baptist plan of Salvation have missed the Lord's plan of Salvation, and
they are therefore not members of the
New Testament Church, the Body of
Christ, have not had
their sins remitted, and are not saved.
Many will say, "Oh but I
know I'm saved." "Well, how do you know it?" "Oh, I just know it. I feel
like I am." "What makes you feel like you are saved?" "Because I'm saved,"
they will say. Saved because they feel good, and feel good because they are
saved. Such people prefer their feelings to anything the Bible says. I am
not opposed to a person's feeling good about being a
Christian,
but I am opposed to a person claiming to be a
Christian just because
he feels good. Feelings are based on faith. Hence the Catholic
feels like the Priest forgave
his sins--he feels forgiven, but he isn't; but
he feels forgiven because he BELIEVES that
the Priest can forgive his
sins. I felt just as saved as you do, when I was in the Baptist
Church. I had just as much feelings as any of them, and can tell just as
good an "experience," but I finally learned that feelings were the result of
what I believed. If you believe
that something is going to go wrong, you will
feel nervous as long as you
believe that. When the children are out late, if you
believe that they are all
right, you will feel good;
but if you believe that
something is wrong, you will worry, fret, and maybe cry.
I feel saved because I believe that I am saved. You ask, "Why do
you believe that you are saved?" Because I John 2:3 says, "hereby we
do know that we know him, if we keep
his commandments." I know that I am saved, and I feel like I'm
saved because the Lord said that if I would obey his commands, then I would
be saved. I have done that; therefore I know that I have the promise of God.
Baptists would have this verse read, "hereby we do know that we know him,
if we feel like it."
If you
will study the scriptures with an open mind rather than through your
feelings, you will then begin to feel different. You will feel that you
should turn from the human organization, the Baptist Church and obey the
gospel of Christ because the Bible teaches you to do that.
Don't follow your
feelings. FOLLOW THE BIBLE.
FOLLOW CHRIST.
The Baptist Church is
Unscriptural in Organization
The Baptist Church has a
minister whom they call "Pastor," and deacons, but no elders. The truth of
the matter is this. Pastors, bishops, presbyters, and elders are all the
same and take the oversight of the flock. The deacons are servants of the
church. The preacher is a minister or evangelist, not "the pastor" of a
congregation.
Baptist preachers call
themselves and have themselves called, "Reverend." (There are a few
exceptions to this, but very few). This word is used
one time in the entire Bible
and then in connection with the name of God. (Psalm 111:9). When you
see the man you believe on a par with God, call him "reverend.'` This also
violates the principle laid down by our Savior in Matthew 23:5-12.
The Baptist Church is
Unscriptural in Doctrine
They are wrong first in
having a man-made doctrine at all. "This Declaration of Faith was framed
many years ago by J. Newton Brown, D. D." (Baptist Church Manual, foot note,
p. 43). Christ says in Matt. 15:9, "But in vain do they worship me, teaching
for doctrines the commandments of men."
The Baptist doctrine
contradicts the Bible in reason.
Ask a Baptist preacher,
"What is the Baptist Doctrine?" It is "what a church believes the Bible to
teach." (Baptist Church Manual, p. 41). I have pointed out that it is the
distinctive features of the
Baptist
Church
that make it Baptist instead of some other kind of Church Now ask, "Must I
believe the Bible to be saved?" Answer, "Yes." "Must I believe Baptist
Doctrine to be saved?" Answer, "No." Then, if I must believe the Bible to be
saved, and must not believe Baptist Doctrine to be saved, then it follows
that Baptist Doctrine is not Bible Doctrine. Jesus told the apostles to go
preach the gospel and said, "He that believeth not shall be damned." When
any preacher preaches things that you do not have to believe to be saved,
you may rest assured that he is not preaching "the gospel," because you do
have to believe "the gospel" to be saved. If a person can be saved without
belonging to the Baptist Church and without believing Baptist Doctrine (that
which is peculiar to Baptists), then why does the Baptist Church exist, and
by whose authority? Baptists say they exist to save people, but how can this
be, when a person can be saved and never hear of the Baptist Church?
Friends, think about that seriously.
Baptist Doctrine
contradicts the Bible in fact.
"We believe that the
salvation of sinners is WHOLLY of grace." (Baptist Church Manual, Article IV
of the Declaration of Faith, p. 47). We are saved by HOPE,
(Rom.
8:24),
and Peter said BAPTISM saves us, (1 Peter
3:21).
If this is true, then we are not saved WHOLLY or ENTIRELY by grace, but by
hope and baptism also. Then this article of faith is false.
In Article V on page 48,
the Declaration of Faith declares that "justification, the pardon of sin,
and the promise of eternal life . . . are SOLELY THROUGH FAITH." In the
first place, this article of faith contradicts Article IV. How can salvation
be WHOLLY of grace and at the same time SOLELY through faith? We have
pointed out that we are saved by grace, faith, hope, the gospel, the word,
repentance, confession, baptism, etc., but the expression "solely through
faith" excludes everything except faith. The Bible certainly does not teach
this. James
2:24 again,
"not by faith only,"
therefore, this article contradicts Article IV and also the Word of God.
Their doctrine of
apostasy is false.
"We believe that such
only are real believers as endure unto the end." (Article XI, p. 54). This
is the doctrine of "once saved, always saved" and if a person "falls from
grace," then they claim that he was not saved to start with. Consider
II
Peter 2:4, "For if God spared not the
angels that sinned, but cast
them down to hell, and delivered them into chains of darkness, to be
reserved unto judgment." Are these "real believers" more steadfast than
angels?
Is it possible that Paul
could be a castaway? Paul thinks so, hear him, "But I keep under my body,
and bring it into subjection: lest that by any means, when I have preached
to others, I myself should be a
castaway."
(1
Cor. 9:27). Was Paul a "real believer?" Paul said,
"Wherefore, let him that thinketh he standeth, take heed lest he fall."
Again, "Whosoever of you
are justified by the law, ye are fallen
from grace." (Gal. 5:4). We are saved by grace
(Eph. 2:8). Therefore, people can fall from that which saved them.
Many Baptists do not
believe this doctrine, but as long as they are Baptists they stand for it
just the same.
Baptist Support a
Democracy, not a Kingdom
The essentials of a
kingdom are a king, law, and subjects over which he rules. The king makes
the laws, enforces the laws, and passes judgment on violators of the law.
Officers are filled by appointment of the King. Since Christ has all
authority in heaven and in earth and has been crowned "King of kings," He
makes the laws; He will judge all violators of His laws in the day of
judgment.
A democracy is that form
of government that the subjects by vote
make the laws and elect their officers. I challenge you to
compare the Baptist Church with these two forms of government.
"The government of
a church (the
Baptist Church) is with its members.
The churches must say . . . whether music shall be led by
choirs, with the aid of instruments
or not, etc.,
etc." (Baptist Church Manual, p. 39). This very plainly shows that the
Baptist Church is democratic
in its nature, but Christ established a
kingdom.
In John
4:24
we learn that we must worship God "in spirit and in truth." In John
17:17
Jesus said, "thy
word is truth." In Rom.
10:17
we read that "faith comes by hearing the word of God." Our worship, then, to
be "in truth" must be as the truth
directs. In Leviticus 10:1-2
we have an example of two boys, Nadab and Abihu, worshiping God, but because
they did so in a "strange" way "which he commanded them
not," the Lord took their
lives. Again in I Chron.
15:13-15,
David says, in reference to the method of bearing the ark of the covenant,
". . . God made a breach upon us, for
that we sought him not after the due order." Jer. 10:23
tells us "that it is not in man that walketh to direct his steps," and in
Isa. 55:8-9,
the Lord says, "my ways are not your ways, for as the heavens are higher
than the earth, so are my ways higher than your ways." God
will not tolerate PRESUMPTION.
We, simply mortal men, cannot worship God any way WE see fit, but must "seek
Him after the due order." Remember, Jesus said. "In vain they do worship
me, teaching for doctrines the
commandments (that is, following the precepts) of men." (Matt. 15:9).
Which are you following, God or men?
Baptists take Christ's
place in adding to the church. The scriptures say "the LORD added to the
church daily such as should be saved." (Acts
2:47).
But Baptists VOTE to receive people into the church. There is not one place
in the Bible that teaches us to vote to receive people into the church, nor
to put them out, either.
Baptists talk about
"Opening the doors of the church." No man, whether he be the Pope of Rome,
or a Baptist preacher, can "open the doors"
of the Lord's Church. Those
doors were opened by the Apostle Peter in the long ago, and they stand ajar
to this good time, and shall ever be open until the trumpet shall sound and
the Lord shall announce that time is no more. This is just more evidence
that the Baptist Church is a human, man-made church. For if the, can "open
and close the doors" then it is of
men and not of God. They cannot open, nor close the doors of the
New Testament Church.
Baptists take the
authority to change the great commission. Christ said in Mark 16:15, 16,
"Go ye into all the world and preach the gospel to every creature.
He that believeth and is baptized shall be
saved; but he that believeth not shall be damned." Baptists
teach, "he that believeth and is NOT baptized is saved already because of
his faith." Thus, they promise the sinner salvation SHORT of the conditions
upon which God promises it.
Therefore, Baptists are standing on the promises and assurance of Baptist
preachers and NOT ON THE PROMISES OF GOD. Which do you prefer to believe,
Baptists, or Christ?
Indeed, this is the real
issue--who is king? Who is head? Who has all authority? In whom do you
believe? Let me illustrate. Many times the church of Christ is accused of
"believing in water." No, we do not believe in baptism as such, but in Jesus
Christ. We practice baptism for the remission of sins, because
Christ,
in whom we believe, and who is our King and God, commanded it. To refuse His
command, or the purpose for which He gave it is nothing short of rejecting
Jesus Christ--"we
will not that he should reign over us"--
at least in this respect. To simply follow Christ when you like it, is
not to follow Him at all. You
are your own King in such a case. That sets you above Jesus Christ, above
His word. You sit in judgment over His Word, accept what you like and reject
the rest if it is different from your feelings. Friends, such is not
Christianity, but religious anarchy. You do not have a right to "believe as
you please," to choose the way you like to serve Him, but simply to humbly
submit to Him who is King and Lord, and is the creator of heaven and earth,
and before whom we must all stand in a little while.
Let me plead with you to renounce all
denominational affiliations and humbly submit to Christ
as Lord of lords, and King of kings. While we sing, just step out from your
seat and come forward, confess your faith in Jesus as Lord, as you humbly
repent of every sin, and be baptized for the remission of sin.