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Baptist ID: Dr. Paige Patterson on “What Contemporary Baptists Can Learn from Anabaptists”

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Written By Tim Brister

Tim has a missionary heart for his hometown to love those close to him yet far from God. He is husband to Dusti and father to Nolan, Aiden, and Adelyn - fellow pilgrims to our celestial city.

Dr. Paige Patterson is President of Southwestern Baptist Theological Seminary.  Dr. Patterson has served as president of the Southern Baptist Convention as well as president of Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary. 

Dr. Patterson is speaking directly from a manuscript which makes live-blogging difficult as well as taking photos (since he rarely looks up).  However, there is a basic outline which I have provided below. 

1.   A Redeemed Disciplined Church 

2.  The Concept of Baptism

3.  The Authority of the Bible

4.  The Church Looks Different than the World

5.  The Supper as a Fellowship Trust

6.  Courage of Conviction

[more photos to come . . .]

3 thoughts on “Baptist ID: Dr. Paige Patterson on “What Contemporary Baptists Can Learn from Anabaptists””

  1. The main problem in Dr. Patterson’s presentation was his failure to mention a significant weakness in the Anabaptist tradition–soteriology. 16th century Anabaptist soteriology was closer to Roman Catholicism than it was to Luther and Calvin. Many of their prominent theologians (Hubmaier, Hofmann) did not espouse justification by faith alone. In fact, they held to a synergistic view of salvation that emphasized God’s grace cooperating with human effort. Hubmaier was Erasmian on the human will, and believed that the human spirit was unaffected by the Fall, maintaining an “inherited righteousness.” Soteriological issues can be added to other eccentric views coming out of Anabaptism (“celestial flesh” Christology; soul sleep; even some unitarianism). The Anabaptists certainly had some strengths worth emulating, but their virtues were mingled with manifest weaknesses.

  2. Dr. Patterson,

    Thanks for your contribution to the subject matter. Unfortunately for me, my knowledge of the Anabaptist tradition is quite inadequate, only having studied it in a survey of latter church history.

    There recent push for the Anabaptist tradition in SBC life is interesting to me. I think the evidence is pretty clear that our baptist origins came from the English Separatist movement, but there is a strand of SBC thinkers who believe that the Anabaptist tradition has particular relevance today. Given the number of alarming things you shared in your comment, this gives me good reason to check it out. Thanks for sharing and stopping by. It was great meeting you last week!

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