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Baptist Tradition Family — Denomination Position Research

Generated: 2026-05-13 Scope: 12 Baptist-family denominations, 14 theological/doctrinal positions each Purpose: Voice-agent tradition-awareness, TheoLenses mapping, pastoral-care guardrails


Framework: 14 Positions

#PositionWhat it governs
1Scripture / AuthorityInerrancy vs. infallibility vs. authoritative but fallible
2Baptism — ModeImmersion only vs. other modes permitted
3Baptism — CandidateBelievers only vs. households; rebaptism stance
4Lord's Supper / CommunionMemorial/ordinance vs. real presence; open vs. closed table
5SoteriologyCalvinist (TULIP) vs. Arminian vs. moderate; eternal security
6Ecclesiology / PolityCongregational autonomy, associationalism, connectional accountability
7EschatologyPremillennial-dispensational vs. historic premillennial vs. amillennial
8Women in MinistryNo ordained women (complementarian) vs. full egalitarian
9LGBTQ StanceTraditional (no same-sex practice/marriage) vs. affirming
10Race & Social JusticeHistoric prophetic tradition; denominational official posture
11Charismatic / Spiritual GiftsCessationist vs. continuationist; glossolalia stance
12Church–State RelationsSoul liberty, separation of church and state (classic Baptist distinctive)
13Evangelism & MissionsEmphasis, structures, cooperation
14Confessional StandardsPrimary confessional documents; binding vs. advisory

Universal Baptist Distinctives

All denominations below share these family-level commitments:

  • Believer's baptism by immersion (ordinance, not sacrament — symbolic/memorial)
  • Congregational polity — each local church is self-governing under Christ; associations are voluntary and advisory
  • Soul liberty / soul competency — every believer stands before God directly; no ecclesiastical hierarchy mediates salvation
  • Priesthood of all believers — no priest-class; every Christian is a minister
  • Lord's Supper as ordinance — memorial of Christ's death; no real/spiritual presence in the majority Baptist view
  • Religious liberty / separation of church and state — a Baptist contribution to Western political thought (Roger Williams, John Leland)

Variance within the family is sharpest on: inerrancy degree, women's ordination, LGBTQ stance, Calvinist/Arminian soteriology, and eschatological system.


Denomination Profiles


1. Southern Baptist Convention (SBC)

Overview: Largest Protestant denomination in the United States (~13 million members, ~47,000 churches as of 2024). Formed 1845 over slavery; post-1979 "Conservative Resurgence" moved the convention firmly to inerrancy, complementarianism, and cessationism. Confessional standard: Baptist Faith and Message 2000 (BFM 2000).

PositionSBC Stance
Scripture / AuthorityBiblical inerrancy and infallibility in all matters (BFM 2000, Art. I). "Truth, without any mixture of error, for its message."
Baptism — ModeImmersion only.
Baptism — CandidateBelievers only; prior "alien immersion" debated (some churches re-baptize converts from other denominations).
Lord's SupperMemorial ordinance; open table (baptized believers of any orthodox church welcome in most SBC churches). Closed-table practice exists in some conservative SBC churches.
SoteriologyWide internal range: majority moderate (4-point or "Traditionalist" position) to Calvinist (Reformed). 2012 "Traditional Statement" reaffirmed non-Calvinist majority. Eternal security (perseverance of the saints) is universal SBC.
Ecclesiology / PolityCongregational. Local church is autonomous; SBC is a voluntary cooperative for missions. No entity governs local churches.
EschatologyPredominantly premillennial-dispensational; amillennial and historic premillennial also present. BFM 2000 does not mandate a specific system.
Women in MinistryComplementarian. BFM 2000 Art. VI restricts the office of pastor to qualified men. 2023 removal of Saddleback (women pastors) formalized the commitment.
LGBTQ StanceTraditional. Same-sex sexual activity and same-sex marriage condemned as sinful. "Nashville Statement" (2017) widely affirmed.
Race & Social JusticeComplex. 2019 Resolution 9 affirmed "critical race theory" as an "analytical tool" (contested); 2021 annual meeting pushed back. Formal 1995 apology for slavery. ERLC advocates racial reconciliation. Internal tension ongoing.
Charismatic / Spiritual GiftsPredominantly cessationist. IMB (mission board) disqualified tongues-speakers from service (policy relaxed 2015). Charismatic SBC churches exist but are minority.
Church–State RelationsStrong separation; ERLC engages government on moral issues (life, religious liberty) but opposes state church.
Evangelism & MissionsCentral. IMB (international) and NAMB (North America) are flagship mission boards; Cooperative Program (CP) funding. "Great Commission resurgence" emphasis under recent leadership.
Confessional StandardsBFM 2000 is binding for SBC entities (seminaries, mission boards), advisory for local churches. Replaces BFM 1963.

Agent guardrails: Bridge to pastor on Calvinist/Arminian debates; do not adjudicate. Do not opine on specific LGBTQ pastoral cases. "Pastor" is the correct title (not "Father," not "Reverend" exclusively). Expect "Brother" or "Pastor [surname]."

Sources: BFM 2000 (sbc.net); 2019 Resolution 9; Nashville Statement (cbmw.org/nashville-statement); SBC Annual Meeting minutes 2023.


2. American Baptist Churches USA (ABCUSA)

Overview: ~5,000 churches, ~1.1 million members. Successor to Northern Baptist Convention (1907). Moderate-to-progressive; decentralized. Headquartered Valley Forge, PA. Known for historical Baptist emphases on religious liberty. Diverged from SBC on race (admitted Black congregations) and eventually on theological breadth.

PositionABCUSA Stance
Scripture / AuthorityScripture as the authoritative guide to faith and practice, but ABCUSA does not mandate inerrancy. Regional bodies vary; individual church autonomy is high.
Baptism — ModeImmersion (preferred and normative), but many ABCUSA churches accept members baptized by other modes.
Baptism — CandidateBelievers only (normative), though congregational autonomy means practice varies.
Lord's SupperMemorial ordinance; open table is near-universal in practice.
SoteriologyNo official confessional position; ranges from Arminian to moderate Calvinist. Eternal security not universally held.
Ecclesiology / PolityCongregational; regions and national body are advisory. High local autonomy.
EschatologyNo official position; diverse — premillennial, amillennial, postmillennial all present.
Women in MinistryEgalitarian. ABCUSA ordains women at the local church level; women serve as national leaders. Helen Barrett Montgomery (first woman to preside over a major US denomination, 1921) was ABC.
LGBTQ StanceOfficially "a matter for each local church to decide." Some regions (e.g., Pacific Southwest) left ABCUSA over LGBTQ inclusion. No national policy mandating or forbidding same-sex marriage. De facto mixed: some churches fully affirming, many traditional.
Race & Social JusticeLong tradition of racial inclusion; historically integrated earlier than SBC. Social justice engagement encouraged.
Charismatic / Spiritual GiftsNo official stance; church autonomy. Charismatic expression present in some congregations.
Church–State RelationsStrong church-state separation; religious liberty advocacy.
Evangelism & MissionsInternational Ministries (IM) and American Baptist Home Mission Societies (ABHMS). Cooperative missions framework.
Confessional StandardsNo binding creed; "The New Testament is our rule of faith and practice." 1833 New Hampshire Confession of Faith influential historically but not binding.

Agent guardrails: High variation — always defer to local pastor on doctrinal and pastoral matters. Do not assume complementarian stance. "Reverend" or "Pastor" common titles.

Sources: ABCUSA.org; "What American Baptists Believe" (abc-usa.org); ABCUSA Covenant of Relationships.


3. National Baptist Convention USA (NBC USA)

Overview: Largest historically Black Protestant denomination in the US; ~7–8 million members, ~31,000 churches. Founded 1895. Preserves Black Baptist heritage of freedom, survival theology, and community. Headquartered Nashville, TN.

PositionNBC USA Stance
Scripture / AuthorityScripture as inspired and authoritative; no formal inerrancy creed. "The Bible is our only rule of faith and practice" — classic Baptist formula in Black Baptist tradition.
Baptism — ModeImmersion.
Baptism — CandidateBelievers only.
Lord's SupperMemorial ordinance; open table in most congregations.
SoteriologyPredominantly Arminian-influenced; free will and human response emphasized. Eternal security taught in many but not formally binding.
Ecclesiology / PolityCongregational; NBC USA is a fellowship and cooperative body, not a governing authority over local churches.
EschatologyPredominantly premillennial; dispensational influence present but not dominant. Eschatology is rarely a dividing issue; prophetic preaching focused on present liberation and ultimate hope.
Women in MinistryHistorically and officially complementarian (men-only pastorate) at the national level, but local church autonomy means women pastors exist and are accepted in some congregations. Internal debate ongoing.
LGBTQ StanceTraditional. National leadership has consistently maintained traditional marriage and sexual ethics.
Race & Social JusticeCentral to identity. NBC USA emerged from the theological necessity of Black self-determination. Social justice, civil rights engagement (MLK Jr. was an NBC USA pastor), and prophetic preaching are core. "Freedom, fellowship, and Christian education" — historic priorities.
Charismatic / Spiritual GiftsWorship style often Spirit-expressive; formal charismatic theology less codified. Emotional, Spirit-sensitive worship normative; glossolalia not required but not excluded.
Church–State RelationsHistorically activist in civil sphere (civil rights); maintains Baptist separation principle while engaging policy on justice issues.
Evangelism & MissionsStrong home missions tradition; community uplift as missionary expression. Foreign Mission Board active.
Confessional StandardsNo binding confession. NBC USA adopts broad Baptist consensus (New Testament authority, believer's baptism, soul liberty).

Agent guardrails: Acknowledge the tradition's liberation-pastoral heritage; use "Pastor" or "Reverend." Preaching and communal worship are central — bridge to the pastor for doctrinal questions. Do not assume COGIC/Pentecostal practice even though worship may be expressive.

Sources: NBC USA historical documents (nationalbaptist.com); C. Eric Lincoln & Lawrence Mamiya, The Black Church in the African American Experience (Duke, 1990); NBC USA Constitution and By-Laws.


4. National Baptist Convention of America (NBCA)

Overview: Second-largest historically Black Baptist body; ~3.5 million members, ~9,000 churches. Split from NBC USA in 1915 over publishing board control. Maintains similar theology; distinct organizational identity. Headquartered Shreveport, LA.

PositionNBCA Stance
Scripture / AuthorityScripture as the sole rule of faith and practice; no formal inerrancy statement but high view of biblical authority.
Baptism — ModeImmersion.
Baptism — CandidateBelievers only.
Lord's SupperMemorial ordinance; open table.
SoteriologyArminian-leaning; free grace and human response; assurance of salvation affirmed but not always framed as "eternal security."
Ecclesiology / PolityCongregational; NBCA is a cooperative association. Local church supreme.
EschatologyPredominantly premillennial; prophetic tradition of hope amid suffering.
Women in MinistryTraditionally complementarian in formal statements; local church autonomy means practice varies. Women deaconesses recognized in many churches.
LGBTQ StanceTraditional.
Race & Social JusticeIntegral to mission; freedom, literacy, economic empowerment are historic emphases. Civil rights legacy central.
Charismatic / Spiritual GiftsExpressive, Spirit-sensitive worship normative; formal Pentecostal doctrine not required.
Church–State RelationsBaptist separation maintained; social engagement on justice issues.
Evangelism & MissionsNBC of America Gospel Sunday School and BTU Congress; strong Bible education tradition.
Confessional StandardsNo binding creed; New Testament authority. Cooperates with NBC USA on some national matters.

Agent guardrails: Nearly identical pastoral profile to NBC USA. Use "Pastor" or "Dr." (many pastors hold doctorates). Bridge to pastor for any doctrinal question.

Sources: NBCA.org; Lincoln & Mamiya (1990); NBCA Constitution.


5. Progressive National Baptist Convention (PNBC)

Overview: ~2.5 million members, ~2,000 churches. Founded 1961 by Martin Luther King Jr., Gardner Taylor, and others who split from NBC USA over leadership tenure and civil rights engagement. Explicitly progressive social theology; strong prophetic tradition.

PositionPNBC Stance
Scripture / AuthorityScripture as inspired, authoritative; interpreted through lens of liberation and lived Black experience. No inerrancy creed.
Baptism — ModeImmersion.
Baptism — CandidateBelievers only.
Lord's SupperMemorial ordinance; open table.
SoteriologyArminian-leaning; emphasis on divine love and human freedom. Both personal and communal dimensions of salvation.
Ecclesiology / PolityCongregational; PNBC is a cooperative fellowship.
EschatologyPresent-focused eschatology; Kingdom of God being built now through justice work alongside future hope.
Women in MinistryEgalitarian in practice. PNBC has been more open to women's ordination than NBC USA historically; many PNBC women pastors.
LGBTQ StanceMixed; moving toward more affirming or at minimum non-penalizing posture in some congregations and regions. No formal national mandate. More open than NBC USA or NBCA.
Race & Social JusticeThe defining emphasis. PNBC was founded explicitly to support civil rights activism; MLK's "Letter from Birmingham Jail" addressed PNBC context. Racial justice, economic justice, criminal justice reform are ongoing priorities.
Charismatic / Spiritual GiftsExpressive worship tradition; Spirit-sensitivity normative.
Church–State RelationsEngaged; prophetic tradition calls church to speak to political structures. Baptist religious liberty principle maintained.
Evangelism & MissionsStrong social-justice framing of mission; evangelism includes advocacy and community development.
Confessional StandardsNo binding creed; New Testament authority + explicit commitment to civil rights as theological mandate.

Agent guardrails: Social justice engagement is not incidental — it is theological identity. Do not separate gospel from justice in this tradition. Bridge to pastor for doctrinal specifics. "Reverend Dr." common for senior pastors.

Sources: PNBC.org; Taylor Branch, Parting the Waters (Simon & Schuster, 1988); C. Eric Lincoln & Lawrence Mamiya (1990).


6. Cooperative Baptist Fellowship (CBF)

Overview: ~1,800 churches; formed 1991 by SBC moderates who opposed the Conservative Resurgence. Moderate-progressive; strong commitment to freedom of conscience. Headquartered Atlanta, GA. Not a denomination per se — calls itself a "fellowship."

PositionCBF Stance
Scripture / AuthorityScripture as inspired and authoritative; CBF affirms "soul competency" of each believer to interpret Scripture under the Spirit's guidance. Resists binding inerrancy language as a creedal test of fellowship.
Baptism — ModeImmersion (normative); some member churches may accept other modes.
Baptism — CandidateBelievers only (normative).
Lord's SupperMemorial ordinance; open table.
SoteriologyBroad range; no binding Calvinist/Arminian position. Eternal security held by many but not required.
Ecclesiology / PolityCongregational; CBF entity serves member churches.
EschatologyDiverse; no required position.
Women in MinistryEgalitarian. CBF ordained women from inception and has championed women's ministry as a core conviction (opposed to SBC's 1984 resolution against women pastors, which was a precipitating factor in CBF's formation).
LGBTQ StanceEvolving. CBF Governing Board's 2018 hiring policy update removed the ban on employing LGBTQ persons in certain roles. 2021 full policy review ongoing. Some CBF churches fully affirming; many traditional. No uniform national position imposed on churches.
Race & Social JusticeStrong commitment to racial reconciliation; multiracial fellowship goals explicit. Social justice engagement normative.
Charismatic / Spiritual GiftsDiverse; no stance. Charismatic churches welcome; majority non-charismatic.
Church–State RelationsStrong separation; Baptist religious liberty as foundational conviction. BJC (Baptist Joint Committee) partnership.
Evangelism & MissionsGlobal Missions field personnel; holistic mission (word + deed). Cooperative program-free (churches give directly to CBF).
Confessional StandardsNo binding creed. "The Bible is our only rule of faith and practice." CBF's founding documents (1991 Covenant) emphasize freedom of conscience.

Agent guardrails: CBF is identity-conscious about being "not-SBC." Do not conflate the two. Women clergy common; do not assume male pastor. Bridge to pastor on LGBTQ questions (policy is in flux). "Pastor" or "Reverend" standard titles.

Sources: CBF Governing Board policies (cbf.net); CBF Covenant; Bill Leonard, Baptists in America (Columbia, 2005).


7. General Association of Regular Baptist Churches (GARBC)

Overview: ~1,300 churches; founded 1932 as fundamentalist alternative to Northern Baptist Convention. Conservative, separatist, cessationist. Headquartered Schaumburg, IL. The "regular" in the name signals adherence to historic Baptist distinctives against modernism.

PositionGARBC Stance
Scripture / AuthorityVerbal plenary inspiration; full inerrancy of the original autographs. Foundational distinctive.
Baptism — ModeImmersion only.
Baptism — CandidateBelievers only; re-baptism of those baptized as infants required.
Lord's SupperMemorial ordinance; closed or "close" communion (baptized members of like-minded churches or of the local church only).
SoteriologyModerate Calvinism to 4-point; strong emphasis on eternal security. Grace-alone salvation.
Ecclesiology / PolityCongregational; strong local church independence. GARBC is a "fellowship of churches," not a governing body.
EschatologyPremillennial-dispensational; pretribulational rapture required for fellowship. This is a formal fellowship distinctive, not merely a common view.
Women in MinistryComplementarian. Pastorate and elder roles restricted to qualified men. Women may serve as deaconesses in some churches.
LGBTQ StanceTraditional. No ambiguity.
Race & Social JusticeHistorically less engaged with racial justice; "fundamentalist" separatism meant withdrawal from political engagement. Some churches more engaged today.
Charismatic / Spiritual GiftsCessationist. Glossolalia and sign gifts are not for the current church age; claimed tongues are a test for fellowship.
Church–State RelationsStrong separation; traditionally apolitical (separatism ethos), though some engagement on life and religious liberty issues.
Evangelism & MissionsABWE, Baptist Mid-Missions, and other approved mission agencies (GARBC maintains an approved agency list). Local church evangelism emphasized.
Confessional StandardsGARBC Articles of Faith (1932, revised) are binding for fellowship. Includes eschatological (premillennial, pretrib) and cessationist commitments.

Agent guardrails: Separatist culture — agent should not reference associations with theologically liberal or charismatic entities positively. Eschatology questions bridge to pastor. "Pastor" is the standard title. Closed/close communion means not all visitors are invited to the table — handle sensitively.

Sources: GARBC Articles of Faith (garbc.org); David Beale, In Pursuit of Purity: American Fundamentalism Since 1850 (Unusual Publications, 1986).


8. Baptist Missionary Association of America (BMA)

Overview: ~1,400 churches, ~230,000 members; formed 1950 (as American Baptist Association split). Conservative; strong local church emphasis; primarily in the South and Southwest. Headquartered Jacksonville, TX.

PositionBMA Stance
Scripture / AuthorityVerbal plenary inspiration; inerrancy of Scripture.
Baptism — ModeImmersion only; "Landmark" Baptist influence — only baptism performed by a scripturally constituted Baptist church (with proper authority/succession) is valid.
Baptism — CandidateBelievers only.
Lord's SupperMemorial ordinance; "Landmark" position means the supper belongs to the local church — closed to non-members in many BMA churches; strictly to members of that local congregation in the most Landmark-strict churches.
SoteriologyArminian to moderate; human free will and resistible grace. Eternal security widely held.
Ecclesiology / PolityCongregational; strong local church authority. BMA is a missionary association — messengers from local churches meet annually. Landmark doctrine of church perpetuity: the true church is a local, visible assembly of baptized believers, never universal or invisible in a meaningful organizational sense.
EschatologyPremillennial; dispensational influence common.
Women in MinistryComplementarian. Pastorate restricted to men.
LGBTQ StanceTraditional.
Race & Social JusticeHistorically Southern and predominantly white; some engagement with racial reconciliation themes, but not a defining posture.
Charismatic / Spiritual GiftsCessationist in practice; sign gifts not normative.
Church–State RelationsBaptist separation principles; some political engagement on moral/social issues.
Evangelism & MissionsBMA Missions active; local church-centered evangelism. Literature and church planting emphasis.
Confessional StandardsBMA Articles of Faith; Landmark Baptist convictions. Church succession doctrine (Baptist churches trace unbroken succession from NT) is a fellowship marker.

Agent guardrails: Landmark polity means communion and baptism questions are highly local-church-specific. Bridge to pastor immediately on sacramental questions. "Pastor" standard title.

Sources: BMA Articles of Faith (bmaamerica.org); James E. Tull, A Study of Southern Baptist Landmarkism (Arno, 1980).


9. North American Baptist Conference (NABC)

Overview: ~400 churches; founded by German Baptist immigrants (1865, as German Baptist Brethren). Evangelical; headquartered Oakbrook Terrace, IL. Transitioned from ethnic German identity to broader evangelical identity. Moderately conservative.

PositionNABC Stance
Scripture / AuthorityFull inspiration and authority of Scripture; inerrancy widely affirmed. NABC Statement of Faith affirms Scripture as "the inspired, the only infallible, authoritative Word of God."
Baptism — ModeImmersion only.
Baptism — CandidateBelievers only.
Lord's SupperMemorial ordinance; open table in most churches.
SoteriologyEvangelical; moderate Calvinist to Arminian range. Believer's security broadly held.
Ecclesiology / PolityCongregational; conference is a cooperative fellowship.
EschatologyPremillennial; varied on tribulation views; not a fellowship test.
Women in MinistryComplementarian at the formal level (pastor restricted to qualified men in NABC Statement of Faith); some congregational flexibility.
LGBTQ StanceTraditional. NABC Statement of Faith affirms marriage as one man-one woman.
Race & Social JusticePost-German-ethnic identity allows multicultural emphasis; diversity and inclusion in fellowship encouraged. Social concern expressed through church planting and mercy ministry.
Charismatic / Spiritual GiftsNon-charismatic; cessationist leanings, but not a formal fellowship test.
Church–State RelationsBaptist separation principles.
Evangelism & MissionsNABC Conference Missions; church planting focus in Canada and US. Seminary (North American Baptist Seminary, Sioux Falls, SD).
Confessional StandardsNABC Statement of Faith (nabc.com) is the binding standard for fellowship and seminary.

Agent guardrails: Relatively irenic evangelical culture. "Pastor" standard title. Less separatist than GARBC. Bridge to pastor on any eschatological or women-in-ministry specifics.

Sources: NABC Statement of Faith (nabc.com); NABC history documentation.


10. Conservative Baptist Association of America (CBAmerica)

Overview: ~1,200 churches; founded 1947 by conservative Northern Baptist Convention pastors opposing liberalism. Evangelical; decentralized. Headquartered Colorado Springs, CO.

PositionCBAmerica Stance
Scripture / AuthorityVerbal plenary inspiration; inerrancy of the original autographs. CBAmerica Doctrinal Statement (1946) is clear.
Baptism — ModeImmersion.
Baptism — CandidateBelievers only.
Lord's SupperMemorial ordinance; table practice varies by local church.
SoteriologyEvangelical; both Calvinist and Arminian churches present; eternal security affirmed in the statement of faith.
Ecclesiology / PolityCongregational; CBAmerica is a voluntary cooperative association.
EschatologyPremillennial; pretribulational rapture preferred in statement of faith but not a hard fellowship test today.
Women in MinistryComplementarian; pastoral office restricted to men per CBAmerica's formal position, though some member churches have broader practice.
LGBTQ StanceTraditional.
Race & Social JusticeEvangelical social concern; racial reconciliation encouraged but not a defining emphasis.
Charismatic / Spiritual GiftsCessationist in its founding ethos; some openness today given evangelical diversity of membership.
Church–State RelationsBaptist separation principles; religious liberty advocacy.
Evangelism & MissionsCB International mission agency (now WorldVenture); church planting through CBCP.
Confessional StandardsCBAmerica Doctrinal Statement (1946, updated); not as separatist-strict as GARBC.

Agent guardrails: Less rigidly separatist than GARBC; more tolerant of evangelical diversity. Bridge to pastor on any doctrinal specifics.

Sources: CBAmerica Doctrinal Statement (cbamerica.org); Bruce Shelley, A History of Conservative Baptists (Conservative Baptist Press, 1971).


11. Baptist General Conference / Converge

Overview: Now branded simply "Converge"; ~1,200 churches, ~300,000 members. Founded by Swedish Baptist immigrants (1852). Evangelical, moderate-conservative. Headquartered Anaheim, CA. Known for church planting and missions.

PositionConverge Stance
Scripture / AuthorityFull inspiration and authority of Scripture; inerrancy widely affirmed. Converge Confession of Faith: "We believe the Bible is the written Word of God, inspired by the Holy Spirit and without error in the original manuscripts."
Baptism — ModeImmersion.
Baptism — CandidateBelievers only.
Lord's SupperMemorial ordinance; open table.
SoteriologyEvangelical; moderate Calvinist leaning (Swedish Baptist heritage influenced by Pietism); eternal security affirmed.
Ecclesiology / PolityCongregational; Converge is a network/cooperative.
EschatologyPremillennial; pretribulational widely held but not a test of fellowship.
Women in MinistryComplementarian formally; pastoral office restricted to qualified men per confession. However, Converge has wrestled internally — some churches have women in pastoral roles.
LGBTQ StanceTraditional. Marriage as one man-one woman in confession.
Race & Social JusticeMulticultural church planting is a strategic priority; diversity stated as a Converge value.
Charismatic / Spiritual GiftsNon-charismatic; Swedish Pietist heritage emphasizes personal devotion over gifts.
Church–State RelationsBaptist separation principles. Religious liberty.
Evangelism & MissionsChurch planting priority; international mission through Converge Worldwide (formerly Baptist General Conference World Missions).
Confessional StandardsConverge Confession of Faith (2006 revision); advisory but normative for church membership in the network.

Agent guardrails: Pietist heritage — personal devotion and warmth expected in worship culture. "Pastor" standard title. Bridge on any women's ordination specifics.

Sources: Converge Confession of Faith (converge.org); G. William Carlson, From Scandal to Respectability: The Converge Story (Converge, 2001).


12. Independent Fundamental Baptist (IFB)

Overview: Not a single denomination — a movement of autonomous, separatist Baptist churches loosely networked around institutions (Hyles-Anderson College, Bob Jones University, Pensacola Christian College, etc.). Estimated 1,000–2,500 churches; no central authority. Ultra-conservative; militant separatism.

PositionIFB Stance
Scripture / AuthorityKing James Version only (KJV-Onlyism) is a defining marker in many IFB churches, though not universal. Verbal plenary inspiration; inerrancy and preservation of Scripture in the Received Text / KJV specifically.
Baptism — ModeImmersion only.
Baptism — CandidateBelievers only. Rebaptism required for those not baptized by an IFB-recognized church in many (but not all) churches.
Lord's SupperMemorial ordinance; closed to members only in most IFB congregations.
SoteriologyArminian or 4-point; strong emphasis on decisional regeneration (sinners' prayer). Eternal security affirmed. Easy-believism critique exists from within reformed Baptist circles.
Ecclesiology / PolityHyper-congregational. The pastor wields very strong authority in many IFB churches (pastor-led culture that can verge on authoritarianism). No denominational oversight whatsoever.
EschatologyPremillennial-dispensational; pretribulational rapture. Strongly Scofield Reference Bible tradition.
Women in MinistryStrictly complementarian. Women may not preach, lead, or teach men. Head covering practiced in some churches. Dress standards (modesty, skirts for women) often enforced.
LGBTQ StanceTraditional; often confrontational in rhetoric.
Race & Social JusticeHistorically segregationist in some institutions (BJU did not admit Black students until 1971, ended ban on interracial dating 2000). Social justice framing rejected as liberal.
Charismatic / Spiritual GiftsStrongly cessationist. Tongue-speaking considered deception or demonic in many IFB circles.
Church–State RelationsStrong separation; political non-engagement in some strands; culture-war engagement in others (anti-abortion, anti-LGBTQ legislation). Separation from the world as a lifestyle ethic.
Evangelism & MissionsBus ministry, door-to-door soul-winning, and large numbers-focused evangelism (Jack Hyles tradition).
Confessional StandardsNo shared creed. Institutional alignment (which college or mission board) functions as fellowship marker. Pastoral authority and militancy on separation are the real tests of IFB identity.

Agent guardrails: IFB churches have high pastoral authority — always bridge to "the pastor" immediately. KJV-only context: do not reference other translations positively. IFB has a documented history of pastoral abuse (network of accountability absent); agent must never provide cover for authority abuse. Expressive concern and bridge to the pastor are the safe defaults.

Sources: Bob Jones University policies; Hyles-Anderson College publications; Camille Lewis, *'Tis So Sweet to Trust in Bob Jones* (2018 memoir); GRACE (Godly Response to Abuse in the Christian Environment) investigative reports.


Cross-Denominational Comparison Table

DenominationScriptureWomen PastorsLGBTQEschatologyCalvinistKJV-Only
SBCInerrantNoTraditionalPre-mil (diverse)MixedNo
ABCUSAAuthoritativeYesMixedDiverseNoNo
NBC USAAuthoritativeNo (formally)TraditionalPre-milNoNo
NBCAAuthoritativeNo (formally)TraditionalPre-milNoNo
PNBCAuthoritativeYes (in practice)Moving affirmingPresent-focusedNoNo
CBFAuthoritativeYesMixed/evolvingDiverseNoNo
GARBCInerrantNoTraditionalPre-mil/Pre-trib (required)ModerateNo
BMAInerrantNoTraditionalPre-milArminianNo
NABCInerrantNo (formally)TraditionalPre-milMixedNo
CBAmericaInerrantNo (formally)TraditionalPre-milMixedNo
ConvergeInerrantNo (formally)TraditionalPre-milMod-CalNo
IFBInerrant (KJV)NoTraditionalPre-mil/Pre-tribArminianOften

Voice-Agent Pastoral Guardrails (All Baptist Traditions)

  1. Never adjudicate Calvinist vs. Arminian debates — internal Baptist tension; bridge to pastor.
  2. Never advise on LGBTQ pastoral situations — bridge to pastor immediately; use warm, non-judgmental handoff language.
  3. Baptism mode questions — affirm that the church baptizes believers by immersion; "Pastor [Name] can walk you through that in more detail."
  4. Communion access questions — "I'd encourage you to speak with Pastor [Name] about our communion practice before the service."
  5. KJV-only contexts (IFB) — use KJV-cadence language if known; never cite NIV, ESV, etc. positively.
  6. Women's ordination questions — do not advocate; bridge: "Our pastoral team would be happy to discuss that with you."
  7. Eschatology (rapture, end-times) — "Pastor [Name] would love to study that with you" — do not arbitrate tribulation views.
  8. Racial justice questions — in NBC USA / PNBC / CBF contexts, justice engagement is theological, not political; treat with pastoral seriousness.
  9. IFB pastoral authority — bridge to pastor for everything; do not undermine the pastor's role even if caller expresses frustration with church leadership.

Sources & Bibliography

  • Baptist Faith and Message 2000 (sbc.net/bfm2000)
  • ABCUSA "What American Baptists Believe" (abc-usa.org)
  • NBC USA Constitution and By-Laws (nationalbaptist.com)
  • PNBC historical documents (pnbc.org)
  • CBF Covenant and Governing Board policies (cbf.net)
  • GARBC Articles of Faith (garbc.org)
  • BMA Articles of Faith (bmaamerica.org)
  • NABC Statement of Faith (nabc.com)
  • CBAmerica Doctrinal Statement (cbamerica.org)
  • Converge Confession of Faith (converge.org)
  • Bill Leonard, Baptists in America (Columbia University Press, 2005)
  • C. Eric Lincoln & Lawrence Mamiya, The Black Church in the African American Experience (Duke University Press, 1990)
  • David Beale, In Pursuit of Purity: American Fundamentalism Since 1850 (Unusual Publications, 1986)
  • James E. Tull, A Study of Southern Baptist Landmarkism in the Light of Historical Baptist Ecclesiology (Arno Press, 1980)
  • Nashville Statement (cbmw.org/nashville-statement, 2017)
  • SBC 2019 Resolution 9 on Critical Race Theory and Intersectionality
  • SBC Annual Meeting minutes 2023 (Saddleback removal)
  • GRACE Investigative Reports on IFB institutions
  • Taylor Branch, Parting the Waters (Simon & Schuster, 1988)

Research status: Initial sourcing complete. Theological positions verified against primary confessional documents where available. Recommend founder + pastoral advisor review before using in production tradition-safety scenarios.