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GLOSSARY
Since both the faith and practice of the New Testament churches have
been laid aside by so many, the "old paths" of Biblical practice often
seem unusual and new despite their apostolic origin. The old apostolic
doctrines of grace are slandered as "Calvinism" and the old practices of
Baptists are smeared as "Landmarkism." We believe both "tulip-ism" and
strict Baptist polity are Scriptural although both have been largely abandoned.
Because of this present situation, you may be unacquainted with Baptist
terms. This glossary is provided to enable all to read with ease and understanding
the terms used..
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Anabaptist:
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literally a "re-baptizer" - a collective name given often in ancient
times to many groups who insisted on immersing all who joined them despite
previous "baptisms" at the hands of other societies. Among these groups
the Lord's truth-loving churches existed in former days. Baptists do not
believe it is possible to "re-baptize" anyone though we are charged with
doing so because we baptize aright those previously "baptized" by other
groups lacking New Testament authority. Our old writers vigorously denied
being "Anabaptists" because they knew it impossible to re-baptize anyone.
A believer, previously immersed unscripturally, can be re-immersed and
in actuality baptized for the first time upon this repeat immersion
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Apostate:
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one who has willfully left the doctrines and practices of the Bible.
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Church:
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a church of Christ is a congregation of Scripturally-baptized believers
organized in harmony with New Testament precept and procedure. This definition
is consistent with the New Testament Greek word "ecclesia" and its usage
both in sacred and secular writings.
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Council of Trent:
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(1545-63) convened to damn those who opposed "free will" and those who
resisted the Roman Catholic Church. It set forth dogmatically the doctrines
of Romanism. It "...among other things dogmatized the medieval theology
of the Scholastics. It made the Latin Vulgate, including 11 O.T. apocryphal
books, the authorized Bible, and declared Scripture AND tradition as ultimate
authority." [1] Further, this council
proclaimed "If any one affirms that the baptism of John had the same force
as the baptism of Christ, let him be anathema" - a blow directed at the
Anabaptists of the day as well as certain Protestants.
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Donatists, Novatians, Petrobrussians, Cathari, Arnoldists, Hussites,
Waldenses, Lollards:
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etc. are historic nicknames applied in various localities to those people
known collectively as Anabaptists. That there was a connection between
these groups is clear. [2] It is among
these groups that New Testament churches are to be found although obviously
not all within these groups were saved nor were all the congregations so
labelled necessarily sound. Among these are the spiritual forefathers of
modern New Testament Baptists.
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Hosius, Cardinal Stanislaus:
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Born May 5, 1504 in Krakow, Poland, Hosius died August 5, 1579, at Capranica,
the Papal Estates, Italy. Appointed Cardinal in 1561, Hosius was later
appointed presiding Papal legate to the Council of Trent. He is described
as "the most brilliant writer, the most eminent theologian, and the best
bishop of his time." [3] Because he carried
on such a relentless campaign against all dissenters from the Roman church,
he was dubbed "hammer of the heretics." [4]
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"Landmarkers" or "Landmark Baptists:
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" Baptists who maintain the historic Baptist (and we believe, Biblical)
position regarding the nature, origin and succession of true churches of
Christ are often called and sometimes call themselves "Landmarkers." The
nickname originated from an essay published in 1854 entitled "An Old Landmark
Reset" written by J.M. Pendleton, a Baptist minister in the United States.
The principles and practices of historic Landmarkism can be proved to be
as old as the New Testament. This is not to say that everything believed
by some who call themselves "Landmarkers" is Scriptural. Some "Landmarkers"
have gone off to extreme views, such as "new-lightism." Historic
Landmarkism is church practice consistent with Bible principles.
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Mosheim, Johann Laurenz von:
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(1694? - 1755). Known as the father of modern church history, this Lutheran
was no friend of Baptists, but gets high marks for his attempt at honest
reporting of the facts. He has been praised as follows: "...von Mosheim,
a German preacher, university professor at Goetingen, and noted scholar,
was the first to attempt to write Church history objectively. Instead of
publishing history to produce propaganda, von Mosheim tried to examine
the development of the Church without bias or party line."
[5]
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Munster:
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City in Westphalia (region of western Germany bordering on the Netherlands).
Scene of tumultuous riots during the Peasant Wars. The Anabaptists were
falsely blamed for the riots which were led by Thomas Munzer, radical reformer
and former comrade of Martin Luther. Some have tried to trace the Baptists
back to these fanatical "madmen of Munster." One of the ablest of historians
wrote:
"The most searching investigation has failed to prove that Munzer,
the leader of the riots in the Peasant Wars, was a Baptist, or that the
Baptists were in anyway responsible for the uprisings."
[6]
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Ordinances:
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Baptists hold only two ordinances as Scriptural, namely water baptism of
believers and the Lord's supper, both of which they view as being church
ordinances as opposed to mere "Christian ordinances." By that it is meant
that Baptists view the ordinances as properly observed only by a (local)
New Testament kind of (Baptist) church. Ordinances differ from sacraments
in that an ordinance is merely a memorial, while it is claimed by ritualists
that a sacrament is a work which actually conveys grace to the recipient.
Those who hold the sacramental view believe grace is obtained by religious
works and ceremonies - a thing contrary to the very definition of grace
which is unearned favor or unmerited love.
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Pedobaptist:
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one who "baptizes" infants whether by sprinkling, pouring or immersion.
There is no mention of this practice in the New Testament; thus, Baptists
view it as an unscriptural and evil innovation. Its promoters practice
it because they believe the rite washes away the guilt of sin and makes
the unconscious babe a child of God.
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Perpetuity:
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the concept that churches of the New Testament sort have had continual
existence since the first one was established by Christ and that they shall
continually exist until He comes again. Closely related to "succession."
(see "Succession" below).
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Protestant:
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used of those individuals and religious societies which separated from
or arose in protest against the Roman Catholic Church during the period
of history known as the "Reformation." The term is also used of groups
later splitting off those earlier splits. Baptists, originating with Christ,
are not Protestants in this sense though they have consistently opposed
the errors of Romanism.
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Quasi-baptists:
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churches or individuals who are designated Baptist, but who only slightly
resemble historic Baptists in doctrine and practice. Used of liberal, loose,
irregular and apostate Baptists.
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Succession:
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the concept of churches being founded by the authority of previously existing
churches. J.R. Graves, erroneously called the father of Landmarkism, wrote:
"The sense in which any existing Baptist Church is the successor
of the First Church of Judea -the model and pattern of all -is the same
as that existing between any regular organization and the first such organization
that was ever instituted. Ten thousand local organizations of like nature
may have existed and passed away, but this fact in no wise affects the
continuity of the organization. From the day that organization was started,
it has stood; and though it may have decayed in some places, it has flourished
in others, and never had but one beginning..."
[7]
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Transubstantiation:
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the Catholic teaching that in the Mass the bread and wine actually become
the body and blood of Christ in a non-bloody sacrifice. Hear from one of
Rome's own authorized statements:
"This is the word the [Roman Catholic] Church has adopted as most
accurately expressing what happens at the Consecration at Mass. At this
moment, by divine power, what was bread and wine now becomes the Body and
Blood of Christ. The Catholic, therefore, subscribes to the traditional
doctrine of the [Roman Catholic] Church which, in the words of the Council
of Trent, speaks of 'the change of the whole substance of the bread into
the Body, of the whole substance of the wine into the Blood (of Christ),
only the appearances of bread and wine remaining; which change the Catholic
Church most fitly calls transubstantiation."
[8] [Brackets mine:C.A.P.]
[1] Merrill F. Unger, Th.D., Ph.D.,
UNGER'S BIBLE HANDBOOK, (Chicago, Moody Press, 1966), p. 913.
[2] Of the Cathari (one group of Anabaptists)
it is said, "They derived their teachings from Paulicians: their chief
ramifications were the Albigenses and the Bogomils." Clarke F. Ansley,
Ed., THE COLUMBIA ENCYCLOPEDIA IN ONE VOLUME, NY, Columbia University Press,
1945), p. 313.
The various groups evidently had not only a connection of principles
and doctrines, but as the waters of one stream flow into another, so these
succeeded and sometimes paralleled one another.
[3] Encyclopedia Britannica, 15th
Edition, Vol. 6, article "Hosius", p. 77
[4] Douglas, Elwell, and Toon, op
cit., p. 189.
[5] William P. Barker, WHO'S WHO IN
CHURCH HISTORY, (Grand Rapids, Baker, 1977), p. 198.
[6] Christian, op cit., p. 153.
[7] J.R. Graves, OLD LANDMARKISM (Texarkana,
Bogard Press reprint of the second edition, 1881), p. 84.
[8] Mabel Quin, Ed., THE CATHOLIC
PEOPLES ENCYCLOPEDIA, Vol. 3 (Chicago, The Catholic Press, Inc., 1966),
p. 1019.
This three volume set bears the Imprimatur of Cletus F. O'Donnell, J.C.D.
and this statement: "The Nihil obstat and Imprimatur are official declarations
that a book or pamphlet is free from doctrinal or moral error..."
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