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Why Baptist?

The Real Story…

Baptists, unlike many other Christian groups or movements, do not trace their origins to an individual or event.  Through the centuries, several groups or movements became known for their strong stand on Bible doctrines such as salvation by grace through faith alone, the Trinity, the inerrancy of Scripture, the local church, and the ordinances of baptism and the Lord’s Table.

These groups of Bible-believers have borne many names throughout history. Some have been called by the names of their founders, such as the Hussites who followed John Huss. Others drew their names from geographic regions like the Lollards and Bogemiles. Sharing common convictions and doctrines, groups dating back to the first and second centuries passed their biblical heritage to those known as “Baptists” during the early seventeenth century in central and northern Europe. Baptist is a shortened version of “ana-pedo-baptist” meaning “against infant baptism” (“baptize” being a transliteration of the Greek word “to immerse”). These “Ana-Baptists” who refused to accept the baptism of infants received their name from their enemies. Those who later became known simply as “Baptists” came not only from the Ana-Baptists but from European groups including the Mennonites, Separatists and the free churches seen in Europe to this day.

Therefore, Baptists do not trace their heritage from the Protestant Reformation, but rather to separatist and free-church movements known for their uncompromising stand on pure Bible doctrine as free as possible from human tradition and ecclesiastical systems. While Protestant groups disassociated from Roman Catholicism, Baptist groups emerged principally from independent, separatist groups in existence since the first century, and therefore are not to be classified as “Protestants.” In fact, Ana-Baptists and Baptists were fiercely persecuted by Protestants and Catholics alike.