Translate

Showing posts with label Baptist taxonomy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Baptist taxonomy. Show all posts

Friday, November 14, 2025

Baptists Around The World

Eldon G. Ernst, reviewing Baptists Around the World: A Comprehensive Handbook, edited by Albert W. Wardin, Jr., writes:

The format of the work…makes it a reference work as opposed to a global history of Baptists…Quite simply, Wardin has compiled a remarkably comprehensive collection of information on Baptists worldwide. Baptists Around The World is an indispensable resource for church historians in general and historians of the Baptists in particular.

“Book Reviews,” Journal of the Evangelical Theological Society, Vol. 41, No. 4, December 1998, Evangelical Theological Society, pp. 783-784

Albert William Wardin Jr. died three years ago. It has now been thirty years since his Baptists Around The World was published by Broadman & Holman (now called B & H Publishing Group, I believe). It is still a must have for the Baptist researcher. As with Goliath’s sword, “There is none like that; give it me.”

Unfortunately, it appears that because of the nature of the book, B & H has not kept it in print. You can find used copies at places like Amazon, AbeBooks, and eBay. On the other hand Baptists Around The World is available to be borrowed at Archive.Org. You just need to create an account.

Tuesday, September 02, 2025

Baptists in Australia

As best I can tell, I have posted only once about the Baptists in Australia (See “Baptists in Britain, Australia, and Canada). That has been almost 20 years ago now! My knowledge of Baptists in Australia is limited, but I offer the following updated research. I would appreciate more information about Baptists in Australia, from any of you readers who are “in the know.”

Baptists got a very late start in Australia – compared to 1638 in the United States and 1763 in Canada, the first Baptist work in Australia began with Baptist preaching in 1831 (in Sydney), with the first Baptist church organized in 1835 (in Hobart Town). This was 43 years after the British penal colony was established in 1788.

The oldest continuing Baptist church in Australia is the Collins Street Baptist Church in Melbourne, Victoria, constituted in 1843. The congregation originally met in a tent, with the first meeting house erected at the present Collins Street location in 1845.

The first state body of Baptists was formed in Victoria in 1862. In August of 1926 existing state unions joined together in Sydney to create the Baptist Union of Australia. Their current headquarters is in Belmont. The body has six state organizations, and is also affiliated with the Baptist World Alliance. The Baptist Union of Australia is the legal name, but in 2009 this body launched a new operating name and logo.

I did not research and confirm the number of churches in various organizations as to whether they were accurate and up-to-date. I have simply repeated what I saw on websites, or in other sources. The numbers are provided to allow the reader to get some sense of how many Baptists churches exist in Australia, and how many are affiliated with which bodies. I did not find recent information on the Australian Baptist Independent Fellowship or the Faith Baptist Churches Fellowship. They may have ceased to exist, changed their names, or simply do not have a World Wide Web presence. I have left them on the list for now, and will leave them unless I confirm their non-existence.

A list of Baptist associations and groups in Australia.

There are independent or unaffiliated churches that exist apart from these groups, including some created by American missionary work.[iv] However, it seems that the vast majority of Baptists in Australia participate in the Baptist Union.

Baptists in Australia for 2013 claimed, “There are four groups of Baptist churches in Australia that are not associated with the state Baptist Unions.” They listed: (1) Independent Baptists, 196; (2) Baptist Reformed Churches, 12; (3) Strict and Particular Baptist Churches, 4; and (4) Seventh Day Baptists, 4.[v] It would seem Hughes and Cronshaw had to include some different groups as “independent Baptists” in order to reduce the number of different types to four.

Baptist Mission Australia is a foreign missions organization headquartered in Hawthorn, Victoria. It was formed in 1912 as the Australian Baptist Foreign Mission (it has also been known as the Australian Baptist Missionary Society and Global Interaction). It appears they may partner in mission with different Baptist groups.

The 2021 Australian census data, the 2022 Report on International Religious Freedom, and the Cultural Atlas consistently agree that Baptists make up 1.4% of the population of Australia. According to the Cultural Atlas, Baptists are the 6th-largest Christian denomination in Australia, after Roman Catholic, Anglican, Uniting Church, Eastern Orthodox, and Presbyterian & Reformed. 43.9% of the total population identify as Christians.

Sources: Web sites; Baptists Around the World: A Comprehensive Handbook, Albert William Wardin Jr. (Broadman & Holman, 1995); Baptists in Australia: A church with a heritage and a future, Philip J. Hughes and Darren Cronshaw. Nunawading, VIC: Christian Research Association, 2013; The Baptist Encyclopedia [Volume I], William Cathcart, editor. 1881, p. 50; The Particular Baptists in Australia,” by Brett Lee-Price.

[i] Declare is a missions organization that seems to also have some relationship to the Association of Baptists for World Evangelism.
[ii] These churches have a relationship with the Gospel Standard Baptists in England.
[iii] Open Baptists Ltd was created in response to a controversy in the New South Wales and Australian Capital Territory, which body in 2022 voted to require churches and ministers to affirm an exclusively heterosexual view of marriage. This led those who support and advocate for homosexual marriage to form a new association. It is open to churches in Australia or New Zealand that “support the objects and declaration of principles” of the constitution of Open Baptists Ltd. It is not exclusively distinct from the Baptist Union of Australia, in that some churches “continue to support their state associations” (i.e., those who remain in state associations that are not restrictive on the homosexual marriage issue). The group seems to be operating both inside and outside the state associations. See also Baptists will remove churches that fail to accept marriage statement.
[iv] “In 2013 there were 196 Independent Baptist Churches throughout the nation. Most of them were quite small, having congregations of less than fifty people and a total attendance of about 8000 people. The major growth of these churches has been in New South Wales and Queensland.” Baptists in Australia: A church with a heritage and a future, Philip J. Hughes and Darren Cronshaw. Nunawading, VIC: Christian Research Association, 2013, p. 54.
[v] Baptists in Australia, pp. 54-55.

Wednesday, April 02, 2025

Baptists in the British Isles, 2025 Update

A few years ago I posted a list of Baptist groups in the British Isles. I am updating it here. It mostly contains links to the groups’ web sites, but also includes a listing of regional associations that are affiliated with the Baptist Union of Great Britain. There is one new group added, and another noted as now dissolved. The Fellowship of Independent Evangelical Churches is made up of mostly baptistic churches, but is not included in the list since it also allows membership of pedobaptist churches.

Alphabetical listing of Baptists in the British Isles.

  I. Association of Baptist Churches in Ireland (formed in 1895, severing links with the Baptist Union of Great Britain)
 II. Association of Confessional Baptist Churches UK (an association of independent churches united by full subscription to the Second London Baptist Confession of Faith)
III. Baptists Together/Baptist Union of Great Britain (founded in 1813 in London; re-branded as “Baptists Together” in 2013, though its official and legal name is still the Baptist Union of Great Britain)
         1. Central Baptist Association
         2. East Midland Baptist Association
         3. Eastern Baptist Association
         4. Heart of England Baptist Association
         5. London Baptist Association
         6. North Western Baptist Association
         7. Northern Baptist Association
         8. South Eastern Baptist Association
         9. South West Baptist Association
       10. Southern Counties Baptist Association
       11. South Wales Baptist Association
       12. West of England Baptist Association
       13. Yorkshire Baptist Association
  IV. Baptist Union of Scotland (founded in Glasgow in 1869)
   V. Baptist Union of Wales/Undeb Bedyddwyr Cymru (established at Llanwenarth in 1866, the Baptist Union of Wales also cooperates with the Baptist Union of Great Britain)
   VI. Grace Baptist Assembly (established in 1980 through a merger of the Strict Baptist Assembly and the Assembly of Baptised Churches Holding the Doctrines of Grace)
  VII. Gospel Standard Strict Baptists (Gospel Standard magazine began in 1835, and the first Gospel Standard society was formed in 1872)
 VIII. Jesus Fellowship Church (began as a unique group upon disaffiliation by the Baptist Union of Great Britain circa 1986)
   IX. Old Baptist Union (founded in 1880 by Henry Augustus Squire and others)

Note: The Jesus Fellowship Church, aka Jesus’ Army, grew out of the Bugbrooke Baptist Church in Northamptonshire after division from the Baptist Union of Great Britain over differences in policy and in practice. It appears that this church has ceased to exist, possibly around 2023. See Jesus Fellowship Redress Scheme report.

Some of the Baptists in the United Kingdom participate in the Baptist World Alliance and the European Baptist Federation.

Tuesday, March 26, 2024

Baptists in Canada

In 1763 members of a Baptist Church in Swansea, Massachusetts (and some other nearby churches, consisting in a total of thirteen Baptists), constituted a Baptist church. They chose Nathan Mason as their pastor, and emigrated as a body to Sackville, Nova Scotia, Canada (which area is now in the province of New Brunswick). After about eight years, the original members returned to Massachusetts. Though the church had grown, this apparently caused the remaining church to become cut-off and scattered, and eventually to disband.

The oldest continuing Baptist church in Canada is the Wolfville Baptist Church (originally Horton Baptist Church) in Wolfville, Nova Scotia. It was constituted on October 29, 1778 with ten members. Nicholson Pearson was its first pastor.

Baptists got a late start in Canada – compare 1763 in Nova Scotia versus 1638 in Rhode Island. This is probably due to the strong French and Catholic influence to the north. The French made the first permanent European settlement in what would become Canada.

According to The Canadian Encyclopedia and other sources, in 2021 Baptists make up about 1.2 percent of the population of Canada. In contrast, 100 years earlier in 1921, 4.8 percent of the population of Canada was Baptist.

A list of some of the Baptist groups in Canada:

  • Association of Regular Baptist Churches of Canada
  • Canadian Baptist Ministries[i]

o   Baptist Convention of Ontario and Quebec

o   Baptist Union of Western Canada

o   Convention of Atlantic Baptist Churches

o   Union of French Baptist Churches (L’Union d’Églises Baptistes Françaises au Canada)

  • Covenanted Baptist Church of Canada (possibly extinct)
  • Fellowship of Evangelical Baptist Churches in Canada
  • Landmark Missionary Baptist Association of Quebec (L’Association des Églises Missionnaire Baptiste Landmark du Québec)
  • Primitive Baptist Conference of New Brunswick, Maine, and Nova Scotia[ii]
  • Sovereign Grace Fellowship of Canada
  • Ukrainian Evangelical Baptist Convention of Canada
  • Union of Slavic Churches of Evangelical Christians and Slavic Baptists of Canada
  • U. S. A.-based denominations (such as Southern Baptist Convention, American Baptist Association, Baptist Bible Fellowship, Converge, North American Baptist Conference, Seventh-day Baptists)

Sources: A Short History of the Baptists, by Henry Clay Vedder (ABPS, 1907, pp. 276ff.); Baptists Around the World: A Comprehensive Handbook, by Albert William Wardin Jr. (Broadman & Holman, 1995); Repent and Believe: the Baptist Experience in Maritime Canada, by Barry M. Moody, Editor (Lancelot Press, 1980); The Canadian Encyclopedia.


[i] Two gender equality Baptist groups, Gathering of Baptists (org. 1993) and Canadian Association for Baptist Freedoms (org. 1971), seem to operate inside existing bodies rather than as independent entities.
[ii] Free or General Baptists, not the same as the Primitive Baptists in the U.S.; some formed the Atlantic Canada Association of Free Will Baptists (and united with the U.S. National Association of Free Will Baptists) and some remain under the name Primitive Baptist.

Wednesday, February 16, 2022

Notes on Various and Sundry Baptist Groups

Man’s work is from sun to sun, but the Baptist researcher’s work is never done. I posted the lists of Baptist Groups in the USA and Holiness and Pentecostal Baptists in the USA on Tuesday. I have already found new information, information that I missed. Here are more comments, information, and links.

“Bad” Baptists. Some groups that show up intermittently in Baptist lists are actually “bad” Baptists – not in the sense of Baptist doctrine (well, maybe that too), but in the sense of not being what they claim to be. More particularly, some kind of swindle. Those of us who are actively trying to discover all the Baptist groups in the United States are susceptible to being fooled by groups that are organized for nefarious purposes rather than being legitimate Baptists. Hopefully, with all the information now available on the internet, we are less likely to be fooled or at least have more weapons at our disposal to ferret out the scammers. (Or, if not, maybe someone who was not fooled will report it to those of us who have been.) Here are two, below, of which to be aware.

The Colorado Reform Baptist Church, Inc. and the associated Reform Baptist Theological Seminary made it into the prestigious Encyclopedia of American Religions by J. Gordon Melton, as well as other lists. Our best information now indicates the church and seminary were “non-existent” tax evasion frauds. One web page reveals, “The ‘school’ was never accredited and never had any academic standing. He had it set up as a money-making venture and operated for about a decade, in the 1980s. It had no campus, no faculty, no library, just an address.” Another indicates “that Mr. Conklin [the organizer] ‘is an active participant in a widespread abuse of the revenue laws through the promotion of mail-order ‘churches’ based on findings of fact showing his connection to the Universal Life Church in Denver and various other ‘churches’.”

The Independent Baptist Churches of America is another possible sham church. I cannot assuredly say but the very basic website, beyond its doctrinal statement, mainly asks for membership fees – for a supposed school and, apparently, the church. Baptist churches normally do not charge membership fees. This body seems to have latched on to the name of a defunct Baptist denomination, the Independent Baptist Church of America.

If I remember correctly, I have never included the two above in my lists of Baptist bodies. Over the years, I have been a bit leery of the new General Association of Six-Principle Baptist Churches, Inc. (2.5b in the Baptist outline) – for the above reason, that they adopted the name of a Baptist body to which they were not related (either doctrinally or historically). Nevertheless, I have listed and continue to list this group, since they otherwise seem legitimate.

Extinct Baptists. According to Albert Wardin in The Twelve Tribes of Baptists in the USA: a Historical and Statistical Analysis, the Continental Baptist Churches association (4.2 in the Baptist outline) “ceased as an association in 2003.” Likely, many of the churches are still functioning, but the denominational body is defunct. This is a distinct group from Continental Baptist Missions, which was organized in 1942 as Hiawatha Land Independent Baptist Missions and is still in operation.

No Longer “Baptists”. One group, listed in the Holiness and Pentecostal Baptists in the USA outline, no longer uses “Baptist” in their name. The Evangelical Free Baptist Church (No. 1.4 in the Holiness outline) is now called the Evangelical Free Bible Convention. According to their website, “Evangelical Free Bible Convention was incorporated by the state of Illinois in Du Page County in 1978. The group was formed by churches that withdrew from the Southern Baptist Convention, following a doctrinal dispute in 1952. It presently has 22 churches and about 2600 members in the USA.” Their belief in “the ongoing operation of the gifts of the Holy Spirit” may suggest the doctrinal dispute with Southern Baptists. The convention headquarters is currently in Aurora, Illinois.

Left out BaptistsIt might be worth mentioning a few bodies that I left out of my list, since some folks may wonder why they are not there.

Organizations like Baptist International Missions, Inc. (BIMI), Baptist Mid-Missions, Lott Carey Baptist Mission Society, and others seem to be independent mission boards, not exactly structured as an association, conference, convention, or fellowship in the way of most of the groups on my list. National Baptist Evangelical Life and Soul Saving Assembly of the U.S.A. also seems to be a missionary organization, with most of the churches affiliated with other National Baptist Conventions. However, some bodies included in my list may not be much different from these organization. With some Baptist organizations, it can be hard to tell just where they fit in the grand scheme of things.

Additionally, I removed Liberty Baptist Fellowship, which was No. 23 in a previous outline. It appeared probably to be only a fellowship of Liberty University alumni. I decided both that it probably did not belong in the list in the first place, and that it might be defunct in the second place. Oddly enough, when regrouping to edit finish this post, I found that they have a website (which I somehow had missed before), and they are still in operation! The operate together as Liberty Church Network, whose website states, “The Liberty Church Network (LCN), formerly known as the Liberty Baptist Fellowship and the Liberty Church Planting Network, was formed in 1981 under the direction of our founder, the late Dr. Jerry Falwell. The purpose of our organization was to train new pastors and plant new churches in the United States. In the first three decades our organization planted 5,000+ US-based churches. This makes LCN one of the largest and oldest church planting networks in the country.” Should they go back on the list?

Man’s work is from sun to sun, but the Baptist researcher’s work is never done!

Tuesday, February 15, 2022

Baptist Groups in the USA, Framework, Explanations

Explanations and Information regarding Baptist Groups in the USA, February 2022 update

Introduction.

The broad divisions used in this outline descend from those created by Albert W. Wardin, Jr., and explained in his book Baptist Atlas.[i] He developed classifications specifically to make sense of Baptists in America – a difficult project to say the least! The categories take into account Baptist divisions based on theology, history, culture, ethnicity, and means – including developmental differences in the Northern and Southern United States, ethnic differences, the Calvinist/Arminian theological divide, and ideas concerning centralization, including the anti-missions controversy of the 19th century. A working knowledge of the history of Baptists in the United States will illuminate and simplify the way forward, helping the reader understand the classification of Baptist bodies in the United States.

Who are Baptists?

The question “who are Baptists” is broad and difficult. A cursory knowledge of the bodies listed in Baptist Groups in the United States will inform one of a wide range of disparate beliefs and practices. The thread that binds these groups together are a common heritage of history and theology, even where the fellowship of that heritage is now essentially broken. The purpose of this list is not to biblically define who the Baptists are, but rather to try to make sense of the loosely connected or disconnected groups of churches, associations, conferences, conventions, fellowships who define themselves as Baptists.

For this listing, the bodies included are historically connected Baptists who would likely espouse the following distinctives. [ii]

  • Believer’s baptism by immersion
  • Local church government, congregational and independent
  • Priesthood of believers
  • Religious Freedom
  • Soul Liberty
  • The Bible as the rule of faith and practice

Some groups with “Baptist” in their denominational designation are not included in Baptist Groups in the United States. Either (1) they are not historically connected to the main body of Baptists in the United States – for example, German Baptist Brethren – or (2) they have moved themselves outside the main body of Baptists, in doctrine, practice, and their own choices of fellowship. Some taxonomists include Baptist splinters – such as the Pentecostal Free Will Baptist Church, the Holiness Baptist Association, and General Conference of the Evangelical Baptist Church – as Baptists. However, in these cases, usually neither the Baptists, nor these groups themselves, recognize them as Baptists in the traditional sense. For example, the Pentecostal Free Will Baptist Church is “Free Will Baptist” in origin. However, they look to other Pentecostal groups for like-minded fellowship rather than towards the Baptists. For this reason, I have created a separate List of Holiness and Pentecostal Baptists.

Explanation of the Framework.

I. Black Baptists. The thread that binds this group together is their African-American heritage. They otherwise exhibit a wide range of belief. The largest number of Black Baptists are in the South. During the existence of slavery, they were members of the same churches as Southern whites. Gaining freedom after the War Between the States, they organized their own churches and associations. They have for the most part operated separately and distinctly from the predominantly white organizations. This justifies a distinct grouping for Black Baptists.[iii]

II. General Baptists. The thread that binds this group together is either a heritage related to the English General Baptists (some Free Will Baptists), or the adoption of beliefs that are like the English General Baptists, and eventual separation from the Regular Baptists on account of those beliefs (e.g., General Association of General Baptists). These groups teach free will and falling from grace, hold open communion, or, at the least, do not break fellowship over those issues.

III. Primitivist and Patternist Baptists. The thread that binds this group together is the rejection of most or all church auxiliaries (mission boards, seminaries, Sunday schools, women’s societies, etc.) and/or having Primitive Baptist historical roots.[iv] Some of the more “progressive” among them have adopted some of the church auxiliaries. Soteriologically and theologically, Primitivist Baptists run the gamut from absolute predestinarian to mildly Calvinistic (holding general atonement in combination with total depravity and eternal security). These churches usually unite in following older worship patterns, including a cappella singing, extemporaneous preaching, and the practice of feet washing.

IV. Reformed and Sovereign Grace Baptists. This grouping represents a move in the latter half of the 20th century returning to the Calvinistic heritage of their 17th and 18th century Particular and Regular Baptist ancestors. They tend to adopt the 1646 or 1689 London Baptist Confessions of Faith, reject modern evangelistic techniques, and some may even feel a stronger bond with other Reformed churches than to “non-Reformed” Baptists (especially those who are dispensational, revivalist, and anti-Calvinism).

V. Regular Baptists (Northern-oriented). The thread that binds this group together is historical and cultural. These churches are descendants of the Particular Baptists from England, becoming known in the U.S. primarily as “Regular” Baptists. Through years of mergers and changes, most became moderately Calvinistic (holding general atonement in combination with total depravity and eternal security). The Baptists in the North – due to various backgrounds in origin, in addition to separation from the Baptists in the South over slavery and other regional issues, developed along different lines from the brethren in the Southern United States.

VI. Regular Baptists (Southern-oriented). The thread that binds this group together is historical and cultural. These churches are descendants of the Particular Baptists from England, becoming known in the U.S. primarily as “Regular” Baptists. Through years of mergers and changes, most became moderately Calvinistic (holding general atonement in combination with total depravity and eternal security). The Baptists in the South – due to various backgrounds in origin, in addition to separation from the Baptists in the North over slavery and other regional issues, developed along different lines from the brethren in the Northern United States.

VII. Ethnic Baptist Bodies. The thread that binds this group together is separation from the larger bodies of Baptists (primarily of English language and heritage) due to cultural and, especially, language differences. These associations, conferences, and conventions exist either distinctly from or within general conventions. Nevertheless, these groups often relate in some way to larger national bodies. Therefore, some may not be distinct groups of Baptists in the same way as those in the first six groupings. It is not always clear whether some of the bodies are autonomous or semi-autonomous. They are here divided into three categories: (1) those that partner with or through the American Baptist Churches; (2) those that partner with or through the Southern Baptist Convention; and (3) those who are autonomous or whose status in this regard is unknown to the author. Notably, two of the Baptist bodies in Group V, Converge and North American Baptist Conference, began as ethnic Baptists (Swedish and German, respectively) though they are no longer considered so, having assimilated into the broader culture of American Baptists.

The ethnic Baptist bodies in Group VII exist (at least initially) because they speak a different language from the main body of Baptists. The Black Baptists, however, are and have always been English-speaking churches. I do not list the Black Baptists with these linguistically diverse ethnic bodies. They exist distinctly mostly because of historical social and racial separation. Their Baptist origins can be traced (usually, initially) to either the General or Particular Baptist churches that came from the United Kingdom (since they came out of the predominantly white organizations).

Various notes and explanations.

Apples and oranges. It is hard to produce a valid comparison of different types of Baptist bodies. It is possible to categorize them in various ways. One outline does not cover all the ground or answer all questions. Bodies that stand in the same place in the outline often differ vastly in makeup. The Southern Baptist Convention is a distinct body made up of churches that support some or all of its programs. In contrast, the Foundations Baptist Fellowship is a fellowship of individuals who agree to the Statement of Faith and purposes of the FBFI. Others, however, may operate more like an autonomous mission board. There is a new “networking” model that may not correspond well with previous understandings of Baptist operations. Placing Baptist bodies at an equal level does not consistently offer comparing apples to apples, but often apples to oranges instead. Such, however, is the “nature” of the “Baptist beast” – independent churches with no higher governing authority will organize as they wish!

Each “equivalent” listing generally recognizes the highest level at which participating churches affiliate. Churches in groups such as American Baptist, National Baptist, Southern Baptist, etc. usually participate in local, regional, and/or state associations or conventions in addition to the general organization. In contrast, independent Landmark Missionary Baptist churches, for example, have no formal affiliation beyond the local church level.

Overlapping membership. Each listing in Baptist Groups in the United States does not represent a “clean break” with no overlap. Some of the groups tend to be exclusive, that is, members affiliate only with one distinct body. However, others are not. Quite a few Black Baptist churches affiliate with more than one of the National Conventions, and some dually-align with the ABCUSA or the SBC. A number of churches that identify as “Reformed Baptist” also participate in the SBC. Within the fundamentalist fellowships – many of whose membership is by individuals rather than churches – there can be much overlap. Preachers who participate in the Southwide Baptist Fellowship might also participate in the BBFI and/or the WBF. The new networking model likely creates new areas of overlap.

Difficulties. How to “name” a particular group presents its own difficulties. Obviously, many are straightforward. The name of the entity will be the name in the list – American Baptist Association, National Primitive Baptist Convention, New England Baptist Fellowship, Western Presbytery of the Council of Evangelical Christian-Baptists. However, other categorizations present the need to create a distinguishing name under which to classify similar bodies.

I use “Birdwood College Related Churches” to distinguish a group of Progressive Primitive Baptists from another group of Primitives who are progressive – because they started Birdwood College in Thomasville, Georgia in 1950.[v] The wording is outdated though, because the college officially severed relations with the Progressive Primitive Baptists several years ago, and is now Thomas College. The other body is the Eastern District Association of Primitive Baptists. They no longer correspond with any other Primitive Baptist associations, no longer hold limited atonement, and have adopted other more progressive stances (such as Sunday school and other auxiliaries). However, they still identify themselves Primitive Baptists. They are progressive. Therefore, they are included as “Progressive Primitive Baptists.” “Progressive Old Line” is another problematic naming choice. It describes a certain faction of the Old Line Primitive Baptists who have adopted some form of mission work and have Bible study somewhat like Sunday school. They are not progressive to the degree of the “Progressive Primitive Baptists,” – and do not consider themselves progressive. However, other Old Line Primitive Baptists have disfellowshipped them because they consider them progressive.

Classifying the “United Baptists” exposes another difficulty. The name developed out of the union of Regular and Separate Baptist Associations in the late 18th and early 19th centuries. They adopted the name “United” to express their unity. Therefore, many Baptists who are now Missionary Baptists, Southern Baptists, and even Primitive Baptists may have once called themselves United Baptists. For this reason also, those churches and associations that still use the name “United Baptist” represent a wide variety of belief and practice. Because of the variety, I have placed them in three different categorizations, and created a “distinguishing” name for each – United Baptists, Landmarkist; National Association of United Baptists and Related Associations; and United Baptist, Regular. Landmarkist United Baptists are closely allied with the Old Time Missionary Baptists. The National Association of United Baptists and related associations is an assortment of similar associations. Some participate in the National Association and some do not. However, those who do not correspond with those who do. Open communion is practiced in these churches, and some teach falling from grace. Those who do not are willing to fellowship with those who do. Regular United Baptists maintain a primitivist approach, rejecting modern church auxiliary societies. These three sub-groups of United Baptists reflect differences in benevolences (e.g. Sunday school), historical affiliations (e.g. Landmark), and worship styles (e.g. a cappella vs. musical instruments).

Finally, “Regular Baptist,” though not fraught with as many problems, is nevertheless a name that may crop up over a wide range of Baptists that are quite different. In certain areas of the country, Primitive Baptist churches prefer the name Regular Baptist. The GARBC, very different from Primitive Baptists, also use the name. Many missionary Baptist associations in the South, though not prominently displayed on their church names or signs, often have the terminology in their Constitutions, such as “membership is composed of Regular Baptist Churches.”

Trends. A trend, perhaps found most among Conservative Evangelicals, is the move toward generic operational names that remove the word “Baptist.”  The Baptist General Conference is now Converge, American Baptists of the West becomes Growing Healthy Churches, American Baptist Churches of the Pacific Southwest is Transformation Ministries, and the Conservative Baptist Association (which had already removed Conservative and Baptist to become CB America) has become the Venture Church Network. Less pronounced, but moving in the same direction, in 2017 the board of the Fundamental Baptist Fellowship International voted to change their name to Foundations Baptist Fellowship International (removing Fundamental). While retaining their official and legal name, in 2012 messengers of the Southern Baptist Convention approved the use of “Great Commission Baptists” as an alternative name (stressing purpose over geography).[vi]

Words like “network” and “networking” are finding favor over words like association and convention – even though a network is an association of individuals or entities having a common interest, formed to provide mutual assistance, etc. In the trendy world of name changes, it is not always clear when “network” is simply a replacement name for association or convention, and when it is a new concept of operation. Perhaps when it most diverges from the old way of operation, networking may be seen as operating more horizontally that vertically.

Information on the web. In the online version of Baptist Groups in the United States, posted at Seeking the Old Paths, I am including links. Preferably, the link is to the official web site of the Baptist body listed. In lieu of that, I am posting links to other sites that give some kind of information about the groups. I have learned that many groups that do not have any official website (and even some who do) have some kind of presence on Facebook. When that is the only source available, I include that link. Unfortunately, many of the smaller bodies have no web presence. Books about the Baptist denomination overlook them. In addition, it is also frustrating that many of the websites created do not remain functional sources of information.

Changes. I have made some changes from previous iterations of Baptist Groups in the United States. Most are minor. Of course, Baptist bodies that are known to be extinct are removed. However, it is often uncertain whether a Baptist is, in fact, extinct. A prime example of the need for caution can be seen in The Encyclopedia of Southern Baptists, Volumes I-IV, from 1958-1982, listing a number of Baptist associations as extinct that still exist in 2022! New Baptist bodies are added. Some bodies have changed their names. I have changed the ordering of the main divisions to alphabetical – except for the “Ethnic Bodies.” The listing remains last because it is the least efficient. It is clearly incomplete and probably somewhat inaccurate by my not having sufficient information on and understanding of these bodies, and their relationships (or lack thereof) to conventions such as ABCUSA and SBC. I have changed the numbering system, partly for my own convenience – but hopefully helpful to others. Rather than sequential numbers from beginning to end (e.g. 1 through 75), each main division is renumbered. Division I (Black Baptists) is 1.1 through 1.15. Division II (General Baptists) is 2.1 through 2.8, and so on.

Conclusion.

Such lists are beneficial, yet soon outdated. It is challenging to keep up with the changes that take place among Baptists. Groups merge, split, and expire. They may change practice or theology and realign in a new direction. In 1963 Richard L. Greaves, addressing primarily a British readership, wrote, “The bewildering disarray which the flourishing Baptists of the United States manifest is as confusing to the average American as it is to the on-looking Englishman.” (“The Baptist Scene Today in the U.S.A.,” The Baptist Quarterly, Volume 20, No. 4, October 1963, pp. 170-175). It is no less bewildering nearly 60 years later, both to the outsider looking in and the insider looking around.

I highly recommend that anyone interested in this subject also read Albert W. Wardin’s books, Baptist Atlas, Baptists around the World, and The Twelve Tribes of Baptists in the USA: a Historical and Statistical Analysis. The details supplied there will exponentially increase one’s knowledge of the subject of Baptist taxonomy, or classification.

Endnotes.


[i] The earliest publication of Wardin’s work may be found in “A Baptist Geography of the United States,” Search Volume 7, No. 2 (Winter 1977), pp. 46-66; and “A Classification of Baptist Bodies in the United States,” Search Volume 7, No. 4 (Summer 1977), pp. 25-46. Over a period of some 30 years, Wardin refined his categorizations from four main groups and five sub-groupings, to twelve main “tribes” of Baptists in the USA.
[ii] In stating this, however, it is not clear that all continue to maintain even this limited list of distinctives.
[iii] However, another way of grouping the Black Baptists would order the National Baptist bodies with the Southern-oriented Conservative Evangelical (VI.A), the Black Free Will Baptists with the General Baptists (II.A), the Black Primitive Baptists with the Primitivist Baptists (III.A), and the Fundamental Baptist Fellowship with the Northern-oriented Separatist Fundamentalist (V.C).
[iv] Primitivism is broad descriptor that transcends different associations or fellowships. It is in that sense comparable to words like fundamentalism, landmarkism, etc. The “primitive” idea is in its meaning as “original,” the strain of Baptist that best represents what Baptists or biblical Christians originally were – the primitive or original Baptists. The desire of primitivism is to recreate and live New Testament Christianity, not just in theology but also in practice. Martin Marty calls it “the dream of restoration of a purer order” (though most primitivist Baptists likely believe they have it preserved without need of restoration). Patternism stresses following the patterns or practices observed in the early New Testament churches.
[v] In this context, the word “progressive” refers to things like using musical instruments, Bible studies, youth camps, and other auxiliary organizations that are rejected by other Primitive Baptists.
[vi] By a vote of 53 percent for to 46 percent against. Marshall Blalock, a Baptist pastor who served on the name change task force, wrote that they recommended and approved it “for the sake of mission, to break down barriers, and to describe our purpose.” The SBC’s North American Mission Board appears to operate under the name “Send Network.”

Baptist Groups in the USA, Outline, February 2022

Baptist Groups in the United States

(February 2022 Update)

I. BLACK BAPTISTS (Historically African-American Bodies) (16)

A. Free Will Baptists

1.1. National Convention of Free Will Baptists, U.S.A.

1.2. Unified Free Will Baptist Churches, Inc.

1.3. Unison Free Will Baptist Conference, Inc.

1.4. United American Free Will Baptist Conference, Inc.

1.5. United American Free Will Baptist General Conference

1.6. United American Free Will Baptist Denomination, Inc.

B. National Baptists

1.7. Institutional Missionary Baptist Conference of America

1.8. National Baptist Convention of America, Inc.

1.9. National Baptist Convention, U.S.A., Inc.

1.10. National Missionary Baptist Convention of America

1.11. Progressive National Baptist Convention, Inc.

C. Primitive Baptists

1.12. National Primitive Baptist Convention, Inc.

1.13. Primitive Baptist - independent Black local associations

a. Antioch (GA, FL)
b. Bethlehem
c. Beulah
d. Chestnut Knob (NC, VA)
e. Coopergrove (NC)
f. Corresponding (NC)
g. Cub Run (NC, VA)
h. Ephesus
i. Flint River (GA)
j. Friendship
k. Little Lott’s Creek (GA)
l. Mount Calvary (GA, NC)
m. Mount Calvary #2
n. Mount Olive (GA)
o. Mount Pleasant (GA)
p. Mount Pleasant #2
q. Mount Ramah (GA)
r. Northeastern (PA, DC, NY, CT)
s. Northwestern (PA, OH, MI, IL)
t. Ocmulgee District (GA, NC)
u. Old Original Mt. Pleasant
v. Old School Roanoke (VA)
w. Piedmont
x. Pine Light (AR, LA, MO)
y. Radicue (NC)
z. Salem (GA)
aa. Sandy Ridge (VA)
bb. Sipsey River (AL)
cc. Spring Hill Union (AL)
dd. Union (GA)
ee. Union Line (NC)

D. Other Groups

1.14. Free for All Missionary Baptist Church, Inc. [i]

1.15. Full Gospel Baptist Church Fellowship International [ii]

1.16. Fundamental Baptist Fellowship Association

II. GENERAL BAPTISTS (8)

A. Free Will Baptists [iii]

2.1. Independent Free Will Baptist Associations

a. Eastern Stone
b. French Broad
c. Jack’s Creek
d. John-Thomas
e. Mt. Mitchell
f. Muscle Shoals
g. Original Grand River
h. Stone Association of Central Indiana
i. Tennessee River
j. Toe River
k. Western
l. Western Stone (aka Original Stone Association)

2.2. National Association of Free Will Baptists

2.3. Original Free Will Baptist Convention

B. General Baptists

2.4. General Association of General Baptists

2.5. General Six-Principle Baptist Church

a. Historic Six-Principle Baptists [iv]
b. General Association of Six-Principle Baptist Churches, Inc. [v]

C. Other General Atonement Baptists

2.6. Separate Baptists in Christ/General Association of Separate Baptists

a. Central Indiana
b. Christian Unity (VA)
c. Mt. Olive (TN)
d. Nolynn (KY)
e. Northeast Florida
f. South Kentucky
g. West Virginia

2.7. Separate Baptists in Christ/Unaffiliated Separate Baptists

a. Ambraw (Illinois)
b. Northern Indiana

2.8. National Association of United Baptists and Related Associations [vi]

a. Ancient Christian
b. Bethel
c. Bethlehem
d. Central Missouri
e. Centerpoint
f. Mount Carmel
g. Northern United
h. Ohio Valley
i. Tri-State
j. Union

III. PRIMITIVIST AND PATTERNIST BAPTISTS (10)

A. Primitive Baptists [vii]

3.1. Primitive Baptist - Absolute Predestinarian

3.2. Primitive Baptist - Limited Predestinarian

a. “Progressive” Old Line
b. “Regular” Old Line

3.3. Primitive Baptist – Progressive [viii]

a. Central Baptist Association [ix]
b. Eastern District Association
c. Progressive Primitive Baptist (Birdwood College Related Churches)

3.4. Primitive Baptist - Universalist [x]

3.5. Two-Seed-in-the-Spirit Predestinarian Baptists

a. Trinity River Association
b. 1 independent church

B. Regular Baptists

3.6. Old Regular Baptists

“New Salem” Old Regular Correspondence
a. Mud River
b. New Salem
c. Northern New Salem
d. Old Friendship
e. Old Indian Bottom
f. Philadelphia
g. Sardis
h. Union

Other Old Regular Baptist Associations
a. Bethel
b. Friendship
c. Indian Bottom
d. Little Dove
e. Mountain #1
f. Mountain #2
g. Original Mountain Liberty
h. Sovereign Grace
i. Thornton Union

3.7. Regular and Union Baptists

a. East Washington
b. Enterprise
c. Little River
d. Little Valley
e. Mountain Union
f. Original Mountain Union
g. Primitive
h. Union

C. Other Primitivist/Patternist Groups

3.8. General Association of Baptists [xi]

a. Duck River (Tennessee)
b. East Union (Tennessee)
c. Mt. Pleasant #1 (Alabama)
d. Mt. Pleasant #2 (Alabama)
e. Mt. Zion (Tennessee)
f. New Liberty (Tennessee)
g. Pleasant Hill Church (Kentucky)
h. Union (Tennessee)

3.9. Georgia Old Time Associations [xii]

a. Chestatee
b. Coosawattee
c. Ellijay
d. Jasper
e. New Hope
f. Pleasant Valley

3.10. United Baptist - Regular

a. Blaine Union (Kentucky)
b. Iron Hill (Kentucky)
c. Laurel River (Kentucky)
d. Little Friendship (Indiana)
e. Mt. Zion (Kentucky)
f. New Bethel (Ohio)
g. New Hope (Kentucky)
h. Paint Union (Kentucky)
i. Old Bethlehem (West Virginia)
j. Old Paint Union (Kentucky)
k. Red Bird River (Kentucky)
l. Town Creek (Alabama)
m. Tri-State Zion (Kentucky)
n. Union Bethlehem (West Virginia)
o. Wills Creek #1 (Alabama)
p. Wills Creek #2 (Alabama)
q. Zion (Kentucky)

IV. REFORMED AND SOVEREIGN GRACE BAPTISTS (7)

4.1. Association of Reformed Baptist Churches of America

4.2. Continental Baptist Churches [xiii]

4.3. Gospel Standard Strict Baptists [xiv]

4.4. G3 Church Network [xv]

4.5. Reformed Baptist Network

4.6. Sovereign Grace Baptist Association of Churches

4.7. Sovereign Grace Baptist Fellowship

V. REGULAR BAPTISTS (Northern-Oriented) (14)

A. Conservative Evangelical

5.1. Baptist World Mission [xvi]

5.2. Converge [xvii]

5.3. Growing Healthy Churches [xviii]

5.4. North American Baptist Conference

5.5. Seventh Day Baptist General Conference

5.6. Transformation Ministries [xix]

5.7. Venture Church Network [xx]

B. Ecumenical Mainline

5.8. American Baptist Churches in the USA

a. Association of Welcoming and Affirming Baptists [xxi]

C. Separatist Fundamentalist

5.9. Foundations Baptist Fellowship International [xxii]

5.10. General Association of Regular Baptist Churches

5.11. Independent Baptist Fellowship of North America

5.12. New England Evangelical Baptist Fellowship [xxiii]

5.13. New England Baptist Fellowship [xxiv]

5.14. Related Northern Independent Fundamental Baptist Fellowships

a. New Testament Association of Independent Baptist Churches
b. Association of Fundamental Baptist Churches of Northern California
c. Association of Independent Baptist Churches of Illinois
d. Dakota Baptist Association
e. Grace Baptist Fellowship
f. Independent Fundamental Baptist Fellowship of Michigan [xxv]
g. Indiana Fundamental Baptist Fellowship of Churches [xxvi]
h. Intermountain Baptist Fellowship (Colorado, Montana, Wyoming)
i. Minnesota Baptist Association
j. Mountain States Baptist Fellowship (Colorado)
k. Wisconsin Fellowship of Baptist Churches
l. Wyoming Fellowship of Baptist Churches

VI. REGULAR BAPTISTS (Southern- Oriented) (16)

A. Conservative Evangelical

6.1. Southern Baptist Convention [xxvii]

Semi-autonomous state conventions[xxviii]

a. Baptist General Convention of Texas
b. Baptist General Association of Virginia
c. Churchnet—A Baptist Network Serving Churches [xxix]

B. Ecumenical Mainline

6.2. Alliance of Baptists

6.3. Cooperative Baptist Fellowship

C. Landmark Separatist

6.4. American Baptist Association

6.5. Baptist Missionary Association of America

6.6. Independent/Unaffiliated Landmark Associations and Churches

a. California Missionary Baptist Association
b. Central (Texas)
c. Mt. Pisgah (Mississippi)
d. Southern California
e. Independent Landmark Missionary Baptist churches

6.7. Interstate and Foreign Landmark Missionary Baptist Association of America [xxx]

6.8. Old Time Missionary Baptist Associations

“Middle Tennessee” Correspondence

a. Baptist Old Path (Missouri)
b. Bethel (Indiana)
c. Big Bear Creek (Alabama)
d. Cane Creek (Missouri)
e. Cedar County (Missouri)
f. County Line (Missouri)
g. Dallas County (Missouri)
h. Enon (Tennessee)
i. Old Time Camden County (Missouri)
j. Polk County (Missouri)
k. Siloam (Kentucky)
l. Southwestern District (Tennessee)
m. St. Clair County (Missouri)
n. Wiseman (Tennessee)

Other Old Time Associations

a. Barren River (Kentucky)
b. Edmonson (Kentucky)
c. Mt. Carmel (Alabama)
d. Mt. Pisgah (West Virginia)
e. Mulberry Gap (Tennessee) [xxxi]
f. Original Smyrna (Georgia)
g. Pine Mountain (Kentucky)
h. Pleasant Grove (Georgia)
i. Second North Concord (Kentucky)
j. Wayne Trail (Ohio)
k. Independent “Old Time” Missionary Baptist churches

6.9. United Baptists - Landmarkist

a. Green River (Kentucky)
b. South Concord (Kentucky)
c. South Fork (Kentucky) [xxxii]
d. Stockton Valley (Tennessee)
e. West Union (Tennessee)

D. Separatist Fundamentalist

6.10. Baptist Bible Fellowship International

6.11. Baptist Friends Network

6.12. Global Independent Baptist Fellowship

6.13. Independent Baptist Fellowship International

6.14. Southwide Independent Baptist Fellowship

6.15. Unregistered Baptist Fellowship [xxxiii]

6.16. World Baptist Fellowship

VII. ETHNIC BAPTIST BODIES (3)

7.1 American Baptist Churches related

a. Association of Evangelicals for Italian Missions [xxxiv]
b. Convención de Iglesias Bautistas Hispanas (Convention of Hispanic Baptist Churches)
c. Czechoslovak Baptist Convention of USA and Canada [xxxv]
d. Portuguese Baptist Convention of New England [xxxvi]
e. Romanian Baptist Association of the US and Canada [xxxvii]
f. Russian-Ukrainian Evangelical Baptist Union of USA
g. Union of Latvian Baptists in America [xxxviii]

            7.2 Southern Baptist Convention related

a. Convención Bautista Hispana de Texas (Hispanic Baptist Convention of Texas)
b. Hmong Baptist National Association
c. Japanese Southern Baptist Churches of America
d. Pacific Coast Slavic Baptist Association [xxxix]
e. Polish Baptist Association in the USA & Canada [xl]
f. Ukrainian Evangelical Baptist Convention in the USA [xli]
g. Vietnamese National Baptist Fellowship, North America

            7.3 Other/Unknown relationship

a. Association of Brazilian Baptist Churches in North America
b. Creek Independent Indian Baptist Churches (Oklahoma)
c. Hungarian Baptist Convention of North America, Inc.[xlii]
d. Miccosukee Independent Indian Church (Florida) [xliii]
e. Pacific Coast Slavic Baptist Association
f. Seminole Baptists of Oklahoma [xliv]
g. Seminole Independent Indian Church (Florida) [xlv]
h. Western Presbytery of the Council of Evangelical Christian-Baptists (CEC-BC)

FINAL NOTES

In addition to spending hours poring over minute books, searching textbooks, and surfing the web, I am deeply indebted to following individuals for the wealth of information they gathered, put in writing, and shared (including personal correspondence) concerning Baptists in the United States:

  • John Crowley
  • Howard Dorgan
  • Robert G. Gardner
  • Clifford A. Grammich, Jr.
  • Robert E. Picirilli
  • Chester Raymond Young
  • Albert W. Wardin, Jr.
  • Jeff Weaver
  • Robert Webb

Some Baptist churches affiliate with multi-denominational organizations, such as the Fellowship of Independent Reformed Evangelicals and the IFCA International (formerly Independent Fundamental Churches of America). Numerous Baptist churches exist across the country which neither affiliate with any kind of organization, nor have a distinguishing identity beyond the moniker “Baptist.” Some of them probably do not fit well into any of the categories above. Some have “Baptist” in their names – relating to their practice of adult immersion – but may not fit the understanding of what are primarily considered Baptist churches. Efforts to classify Baptists always have short-comings; hopefully this effort will prove useful.