The Baptist Faith and Practice for a Believers’ Church answers this question by introducing readers to the distinctive theology and practice of Baptists and by putting forward a biblical, charitable, and winsome presentation of the Baptist vision.
Authors Matthew Y. Emerson and R. Lucas Stamps begin by examining the theological foundations of the Baptist catholic, reformational, evangelical, and covenantal. They then demonstrate how these foundations issue forth Baptist distinctives (believers’ baptism, congregationalism, religious liberty, and more) and Baptist practices (worship, holiness, and missions). Not simply descriptive, The Baptist Vision will also suggest a particular vision for the Baptist future, one that is more explicitly and intentionally positioned as a renewal movement within the one, holy, catholic, and apostolic church.
This book will appeal to Baptist and non-Baptist readers alike as Emerson and Stamps delve into themes that resonate with the broader body of Christ while simultaneously highlighting the rich beauty of the Baptist faith.
Matthew Y. Emerson (PhD, Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary) is associate professor of religion at Oklahoma Baptist University. He is the author of The Story of Scripture: An Introduction to Biblical Theology, Between the Cross and the Throne: The Book of Revelation, and Christ and the New Creation: A Canonical Approach to the Theology of the New Testament.
This is a great quick read on what it means to be Baptist. Emerson and Stamps do a great job placing the Baptist tradition within the fuller Christian and Protestant tradition.
I’d highly recommend this is you’re at a Baptist (or non-denominational) church and want to understand your church better. I’d also recommend it if you grew up in a Baptist church and are questioning its historic place in Christianity (and are maybe being drawn to higher church traditions because of that).
This book offers a clear and compelling summary of the Baptist vision of the Church. Emerson and Stamps do a fantastic job of locating the Baptist tradition as a renewal movement *within* the great tradition of the church rather than a sectarian “counterinsurgency” (161). The authors situate the tradition as Christian (in alignment with classic creedal Christianity), reformational (e.g., shaped by the solas of the Reformation), evangelical (unswervingly committed to the gospel, relational spirituality, personal evangelism, etc.), and covenantal (i.e., recognizing both continuity and discontinuity between the old and new covenants and their signs). The book, like others in this series, is brief and intended for a broader audience. That said, the authors demonstrate a breadth and depth of engagement with relevant literature at strategic moments. This work will prove helpful to pastor-elders, deacons, church leaders, and other interested lay persons seeking to better understand the Baptist tradition and its relation to the great tradition of “the historic Christian church.” Warmly recommended.
A really wonderful book. Emerson and Stamps have succeeded in providing a clear and accessible primer to Baptist faith & practice. They persuasively show that the Baptist vision is not sectarian, but a renewal movement within one, holy, catholic, and apostolic church. They present Baptist distinctives with a unity and coherence that will help readers truly understand what it means to Baptist as opposed to simply being baptistic. Part three discusses the practices of holiness, worship, and mission. For my money, the chapter on worship is worth the price of the book.
In 1881 John Broadus argued in a short 35 page pamphlet that Baptists have a duty to teach Baptist distinctives. Emerson and Stamps have faithfully achieved this for a new generation of Baptists. It will serve as a valuable resource for pastors and is accessible to every member in the pew.
This book makes me thankful for both the Reformed resurgence and the retrieval of Classical Theology. A book like this couldn't have been written 20 years ago. Southern Baptists especially have come a long way from where it was in the early 2000s and previously.
At times, the authors present a consensus Baptist vision while at other times they present their own vision of Baptists (contrast the chapter on covenantal hermeneutics with the chapter on covenantal communion). The book would have been better if the authors chose one or the other.
I would read through with this with elders at any baptistic congregationalist church. In an era where most Christians are not aware of their history, anyone who is a baptistic congregationalist would benefit from this work. The authors make a theologically and logically consistent case for faith and practice for a believers' church on topics like Bible reading, the ordinances, holiness, and missions.
Thought this was a really nice, clear, concise offering explaining baptists distinctions. The book was both somewhat apologetic, yet also catholic, in nature. I would certainly start with “The Baptist Tradition” for a brief story of the baptists, but then go a little deeper into “Baptists and the Christian Tradition“, which is a little deeper dive.