1 / 10

Baptist History Lesson 11

Baptist History Lesson 11. Decline and Dr. Gill. 1689 Glorious Revolution. Act of Toleration. Challenges to Religion Overall. A. Deism. Deism: The view that God created the universe but has not been involved with it after finishing creation. B. Latitudinarian Theology.

toya
Download Presentation

Baptist History Lesson 11

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Baptist HistoryLesson 11 Decline and Dr. Gill

  2. 1689 Glorious Revolution Act of Toleration Challenges to Religion Overall A. Deism Deism: The view that God created the universe but has not been involved with it after finishing creation B. Latitudinarian Theology Reason coupled with the Holy Spirit is sufficient for all religious activity

  3. Decline of General Baptists Unpaid and untrained ministry Introverted and petty concerns Socinianism Socinianism: The view of Faustus Socinus (1539-1604) that denied the divinity of Christ and the penal-substitution view of the atonement Socinianism/Unitarianism/Arianism Salters Hall Debate (1719) DISSENT WAS FACING A CRISES

  4. Decline of Particular Baptists “Had matters gone on but for a few more years, the Baptists would have become a perfect dunghill in society” Andrew Fuller 220 churches in 1700-1710 150 churches in 1750! Undue inward focus Churches excessively focused on the maintenance of their congregational life M A G Haykin “a garden enclosed” Song of Solomon 4:12 Controversies over more or less Minor Issues 1. Singing! 2. Closed verses open membership & communion “ We…are not in full accord among ourselves.” Negative attitudes toward the Evangelical Revival Opposition to ‘Enthusiasm’

  5. Three Prominent Particular Baptists of the 18th Century John Gill (1697-1771) Andrew Fuller (1754-1815) William Carey (1761-1834)

  6. b. Nov. 23,1697 Kettering/Midlands Converted age 12 Baptized Nov 1, 1716 1718 married Elizabeth Negus (d. 1764) 1719 Horselydowns, Southwark, London “My eminent predecessor, Dr. Gill, was told, by a certain member of his congregation who ought to have known better, that, if he published his book, The Cause of God and Truth, he would lose some of his best friends, and that his income would fall off. The doctor said, ‘I can afford to be poor, but I cannot afford to injure my conscience;’ and he has left his mantle as well as his chair in our vestry.” MANTLE Controversy

  7. The Cause of God and Truth (1735-38) Part One: answers to Whitby’s misuse of 60 scriptures Part Two: positive presentations of 62 scriptures affirming the doctrines of grace Part Three: Defense of doctrines in respect to Whitby’s arguments Part Four: review Patristic writers (pre-Augustinian) Wednesday evening lectures at Great Eastcheap Hall (1729-1756) A Treatise on the Doctrine of the Trinity (1731) Emphasis on confession CHAIR Wrote exposition of every verse in the bible! “He was always at work; it is difficult to know when he slept, for he wrote 10,000 folio pages of theology” CHS 1647 DD from University of Aberdeen

  8. PULPIT Gill was a Baptist but not a sectarian Contributions of Gill: Active confrontation of doctrinal infidelity Exposed anti-supernaturalism of the latitudinarian party Maintained issues of sin and its condemnation and corruption and the necessity and efficacy of grace in an age of relativism Was Gill a Hyper Calvinists?

  9. [Hyper-Calvinism] “is that school of supralapsarian 'five-point' Calvinism which so stresses the sovereignty of God by over-emphasizing the secret over the revealed will of God and eternity over time, that it minimizes the responsibility of sinners, notably with respect to the denial of the use of the word "offer" in relation to the preaching of the gospel; thus it undermines the universal duty of sinners to believe savingly in the Lord Jesus with the assurance that Christ actually died for them; and it encourages introspection in the search to know whether or not one is elect.” 1) Eternal justification – because God has already chosen who will be saved, then logically they are already justified from before the foundation of the world. 2) Rejection of moral responsibility – because sinners are totally depraved, they have no real moral freedom and are thus not responsible to repent and believe in the gospel. 3) Denial of the free offer of the gospel – because the non-elect cannot believe in Christ, there is no obligation to call upon all people to repent of their sins and trust Christ for their salvation 4) Requirement of a “warrant” – because only the elect will believe, they must have a “warrant” or conviction that they are indeed among the elect before they have a right to trust Christ. 5) Denial of the universal love of God – because God hates sin, and the non-elect are hopelessly and permanently lost in sin, God hates the non-elect and only shows love to his elect.

More Related