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In 1644, seven Particular Baptist (Reformed Baptist or Calvinistic Baptist) churches met in London to write a confession of faith. [1] The document, called First London Baptist Confession , was published in 1644.
1644 First London Baptist Confession - revised in 1646; 1651 The Faith and Practice of Thirty Congregations; 1654 The True Gospel-Faith Declared According to the Scriptures; 1656 The Somerset Confession of Faith; 1655 Midland Confession of Faith; 1660 The Standard Confession; 1678 The Orthodox Creed
Baptist churches, like the congregationalists with whom they share views of polity, compose church covenants for the local congregation. [1] First London Baptist Confession (1644) [16] The Confession of Somerset (1656) [15] Second London Baptist Confession (1689) [17] Adopted in America as the Philadelphia Confession (1742) [15]
The Confession of Faith (1689), also known as the 1689 Baptist Confession of Faith, [1] [2] or the Second London Baptist Confession of Faith (to distinguish it from the 1644 London Baptist Confession of Faith), is a Particular Baptist confession of faith.
He signed the ‘Confession of Faith of those churches, which are commonly (though falsly) called anabaptists; London, printed in the yeare of our Lord, 1644.’ This was published mainly in answer to the ‘Dippers Dipt,’ &c., London, 1645, of Daniel Featley. The preface to the second edition (1646) also bears Patient's signature, but before ...
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An original printing of the London Confession of 1644, the first statement of Baptist principles; Manuscript letters written by missionary pioneers Adoniram Judson, Ann Judson, Sarah Judson, and Emily Judson as well as their children; African-American Baptist association minutes as early as 1829