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A Choosing People
A THUMBNAIL SKETCH
OF
SEVENTH DAY BAPTISTS
1650 - PRESENT
Seventh Day Baptists
are a covenant people based on the concept of regenerate
membership, believer's baptism, congregational polity,
and scriptural basis for belief and practice. Seventh
Day Baptists have presented the Sabbath as a sign of
obedience in a covenant relationship with God and not as
a condition of salvation. They have not condemned those
who do not accept the Sabbath but are curious at the
apparent inconsistency of those who claim to accept the
Bible as their source of faith and practice, yet have
followed traditions of the church instead.
Seventh Day Baptists date their origin with the mid-17th
century separatist movement in England. With the renewed
emphasis on the Scriptures for Free Church doctrine and
practice, men such as James Ockford, William Saller,
Peter Chamberlain, Francis Bampfield, Edward and Joseph
Stennett concluded that the keeping of the seventh day
Sabbath was an inescapable requirement of biblical
Christianity. Some maintained membership within the
Baptist fellowship and simply added the private Sabbath
observance to their other shared convictions. As the
power of the state was used to enforce conformity to a
common day of worship, separation became necessary. The
first separate church of record was the Mill Yard church
founded about 1650 in London.
The study of the Scriptures in America brought Samuel
and Tacy Hubbard to the Baptist principle of believer’s
baptism in 1647, and membership in the First Baptist
Church of Newport, Rhode Island. Beginning in 1665,
their family and several others became convinced of the
seventh day Sabbath and joined in fellowship with
Stephen Mumford and his wife who had held Sabbath
convictions while members of a Baptist church in
Tewksbury, England. When two couples gave up their
Sabbath convictions, the others found it difficult to
share communion with them within First Baptist. Thus
five members joined with the Mumfords in a covenant
relationship, establishing the first Seventh Day Baptist
Church in America in December, 1671. Even after this
seperation, close fellowship with other Baptists
remained.
A similar separation occurred in 1705 in Piscataway, New
Jersey, when a deacon of the Baptist Church, Edmund
Dunham, became convinced of the biblical basis for
Sabbath observance. Dunham and sixteen others withdrew
to form their own church. A third group of churches came
out of the Keithian split from Quakerism in the
Philadelphia area about 1700. A pietistic movement among
German immigrants was influenced by this third group.
This led to the formation of a sister conference known
as German Seventh Day Baptists which founded the
cloisters of Ephrata, Pennsylvania about 1728. From
these beginnings, Seventh Day Baptists followed the
westward migration, arriving on the Pacific Coast by
1900.
Seventh Day Baptists have been characterized by their
participation in missionary activity, educational
endeavors, ecumenicity and civic responsibility. The
missionary spirit led to the formation of a General
Conference in 1802. In preserving the autonomy of the
local church, the Conference has relied upon societies
for implementing a range of missions, publications, and
education. Beginning in 1821 the denomination has had an
almost continuous publication, with the current house
organ, The Sabbath Recorder,
unbroken since 1844.
Several early missionary societies encouraged pastors to
make extended journeys in the home field. The current
Missionary Society was formed in 1843 and four years
later missionaries began an effective mission in China,
embracing both medical and educational phases until the
Communist takeover in 1950. Most of the foreign missions
of the twentieth century have been of the "Macedonian
call" in response to Sabbathkeeping groups who have
cried out, "Come over and help us." This led to missions
in such places as Jamaica and Guyana in the Caribbean
region; Malawi and Ghana in Africa; India, Burma
(Myanmar) and the Philippines in Asia; Australia and New
Zealand in Oceania, and scattered responses in other
areas. In 1965 a World Federation of Seventh Day Baptist
Conferences was formed which has grown to nearly twenty
conferences.
Seventh Day Baptists’ insistence on an enlightened
conscience for beliefs and practice led to the formation
of an Education Society and the establishment of schools
or academies as they migrated into the frontiers. These
schools were never limited to members of the
denomination but served the areas where public education
had not become readily available. Three of these schools
later became colleges at Alfred, New York; Milton,
Wisconsin and Salem, West Virginia. The desire for an
educated clergy led to the establishment of a seminary
at Alfred University in 1871. These schools were among
the pioneers in women’s education at the college and
seminary level. What the academies and colleges did for
higher education was duplicated for both children and
adults in the local church through the Sabbath Schools
and material prepared for them.
The sense of ecumenicity present in the earliest
churches was continued as Seventh Day Baptists were
charter members of such organizations as the Federal,
the National and the World Councils of Churches. The
denomination withdrew from these ties in the 1970s when
the direction of these bodies appeared to violate the
autonomy of the local church and other principles of
Baptist thought and practice. The withdrawal
strengthened their relationship with other Baptists in
such organizations as the Baptist World Alliance, the
North American Baptist Fellowship, the Baptist Joint
Committee on Public Affairs and related kindred groups
involving women and societal interests.
Throughout their history, Seventh Day Baptists have had
a strong sense of civic responsibility. Several leaders
of the first churches in England held responsible
positions in the government. In America both Richard and
Samuel Ward were governors of Rhode Island in the
eighteenth century, the latter serving in the
Continental Congress in 1775-1776. Others served in
government at various levels, including Congress where
Senator Jennings Randolph of West Virginia represented
his state for forty years in either the House or the
Senate beginning in 1933. Many have served in the armed
forces, including chaplains in the Revolutionary War,
the Civil War and more recently in World War II. The
General Conference has taken strong stands on social
issues such as temperance and sexual immorality and has
urged its members to implement those principles and
practices which would make for a more Christian society.
Due to an emphasis on freedom of thought and conscience,
Seventh Day Baptists have represented a wide diversity
of theological thought. Their common bond of the Sabbath
enabled them to avoid a split during the
fundamentalist-modernist controversy of the 1920s. For
most of its history, the denomination has been
rural-oriented but has found in more recent years its
greatest growth in developing urban ministries.
The Seventh Day Baptist General Conference is organized
as a conference of churches. Voting on most issues
brought before the annual sessions is done by delegates
from members churches. A General Council is empowered to
act for the Conference between sessions and prepare
budget and program emphases. The Council is composed of
elected members at large and ex officio members
representing the Missionary Society, the Board of
Christian Education, the Tract and Communication
Council, the Council on Ministry, the Women's Society
and the Memorial Fund Trustees.
The General Conference offices are located at 3120
Kennedy Road in Janesville, WI. The Missionary Society
and the Board of Christian Education have offices in
Westerly, Rhode Island and Alfred Station, New York
respectively. Geographical associations help strengthen
local fellowship, youth activities and witness.
This sketch also appears in
Baptist Around the World
A Comprehensive Handbook
by Albert W.Wardin, Jr., ed.
Broadman & Holman Publishers
© 1995
Seventh Day Baptist
Historical Society
3120 Kennedy Road, Box 1678
Janesville, WI 53547
(608) 752-5055
sdbhist@inwave.com
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