I continue to think about Baptist identity. Not agonise. Not worry. But think, evaluate, indulge in self criticism without indulging in self-denigration. So below I offer the final few paragraphs of my recent paper on Baptist Identity. It isn't the last word on anything, but it is a first word that needs speaking, and hearing, and then more thinking. But at some time the thinking has to become the intellectual and spiritual energy source for theological reconstruction and renewed denominational confidence. And of course I don't mean resurgent and divisive denominationalism - I mean owning and generously sharing our own identity, while encountering and humbly receiving the gift, presence and fellowship of other Christians, all equally faithful to their denominational identities. In that encounter of diversity something of the richly co-ordinated grace of God waits for us to discover - and be discovered.
"Christian denominational identity of any kind, implies a particular theological style, a principled standpoint derived from past and present experience, and reflection on, and reinforcement of that theological style. The same is true of Baptist identity. Historic tradition judiciously re-appropriated, and contemporary practice of our living communities reconnected with core Baptist convictions, will only happen if, looking forward, we can answer the question – not who were we? - nor who are we? But who is God calling us now to be, in faithfulness to a Baptist understanding of the Gospel?
· requires a willingness to explore and live faithfully within those historic Baptist traditions of radical discipleship that shaped and formed us
· means being energised by Baptist convictions which will be inevitably but creatively disruptive of other evangelical ecclesiologies rooted in other than radical free church congregational principles
· implies ongoing affirmation of the sole and absolute authority of Christ the head of the Church, and of each local church, and that as a distinctive Baptist witness radically lived out in local ecclesial community
· is to hear and answer Christ's call to a discipleship of sacrifice, peace-making, reconciliation and imaginative following after Christ, by those whose baptism is their promise in response to God’s promise, and their dying with Christ a prerequisite of rising to newness of life.
· To answer that question then – who is God calling us to be in faithfulness to a Baptist understanding of the Gospel – to answer that question in these ways, is to have begun to repossess that without which we are existentially disadvantaged – our identity as Baptists.
Jim - I'd be interested in reading the full paper - is it available anywhere?
Posted by: Brodie | May 29, 2009 at 01:46 PM