Last week someone inquired via our church website if the church holds to the London Baptist Confession of 1689, and I realized that I had never actually read it. Despite 4 years of college, 5 years of seminary (to earn a 3-year degree), and 13 years as a pastor in Baptistic churches, I had never actually read one of the earliest systematic statements of Baptist distinctives. Of course, Baptists aren’t nearly as attached to historic creeds and confessions as some denominations, so it’s not nearly as shocking as say a Presbyterian clergyman who hasn’t read The Westminster Confession or a Lutheran one who hasn’t studied Luther’s Small Catechism. In fact, the original framers of the London Confession make it pretty clear that they composed it to help people understand their position, not to have it treated as some authoritative final word on what it means to be Baptist. Nevertheless, I decided it was about time to give it a read.
The London Confession is closely modeled on the Presbyterian/Reformed Westminster Confession and the Congregationalist Savoy Declaration with edits in the areas of secondary importance where Baptist beliefs diverge from theirs (e.g. baptism). Unsurprisingly, I found myself in agreement with the vast majority of it. I would quibble with a few points (like viewing Sunday as “the Christian Sabbath”), but found it to be overall a decent summary of what I believe the Bible teaches unencumbered by a lot of the cringey political and legalistic baggage that currently gets attached to the name Baptist. Overall, a nice quick read on the historical roots of the denomination in which I serve.