“…every tongue should confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father.” Philippians 2:11 he word “lord” has a variety of meanings and a number of definitions. However, as Christians we confess that Jesus Christ is Lord because we owe him our total allegiance, loving service, and faithful obedience because of who he is and what he has done. All Christian groups hold to the truth that Jesus is Lord, but Baptists have a special emphasis that they give to this truth. Baptists believe that Jesus is the exclusive Lord of life. They accept no person or institution as lord of individual Christians or of churches. For this belief Baptists through the years have suffered persecution by both government and religious authorities. The Bible Teaches the Lordship of Christ The Bible gives a number of reasons why Jesus is Lord of all: He is divine, one of the three persons of the Trinity. Jesus declared, “I and my Father are one” (John 10:30). Concerning Jesus, the Bible states that in him “all the fullness of the Deity lives in bodily form” (Colossians 2:9 NIV). Jesus died on the cross for the sins of the world and as such is worthy of all praise and honor as Lord: “Worthy is the Lamb that was slain to receive power, and riches, and wisdom, and strength, and honor, and glory, and blessing” (Revelation 5:12). Jesus rose from the dead, indicating his power over death itself. When we meet the resurrected Christ, we exclaim as did the disciple Thomas, “My Lord and my God!” (John 20:28). Jesus ascended into heaven, sits at the right hand of the Father making intercession for us, and is coming again to bring a new heaven and a new earth. Before such a One we stand in awe declaring, “Come, Lord Jesus” (Revelation 22:20). T The Importance of the Baptist Commitment to the Lordship of Christ Why have Baptists held so strongly to the exclusive Lordship of Christ? We have taken our stand on several basic convictions, including the following: (1) The Bible teaches the Lordship of Christ, and Baptists look to the Bible as their sole written authority for faith and practice. (2) The biblical teaching about soul competency demands that each individual Christian bow to no ultimate authority other than God—Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. (3) The biblical emphasis on soul competency flows from the Lordship of Christ. (4) The New Testament model for a church is founded upon the Lordship of Christ; he alone is the head of the church. Baptist Identity Leaflet No. 3
The Extent of the Lordship of Christ The Bible sets forth the extent of Christ’s Lordship in several ways. The Bible states that Jesus is theLord of all creation: “That at the name of Jesus every knee should bow, of things in heaven, and things in earth, and things under the earth; and that every tongue should confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father” (Philippians 2:10-11). The Bible teaches that Jesus is Lord of every person. Many deny or fail to recognize that Lordship, but for Christians the Lordship of Christ is central. In fact, the Christian life begins with the acknowledgment that Jesus is Lord: “That if you confess with your mouth, ‘Jesus is Lord,’ and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved” (Romans 10:9 NIV). The Bible emphasizes that Jesus is Lord of churches. Jesus declared, “I will build my church; and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it” (Matthew 16:18). And Paul wrote concerning Jesus, “And God placed all things under his feet and appointed him to be head over everything for the church, which is his body…“ (Ephesians 1:22-23 NIV). The Lordship of Christ and Soul Competency The Bible teaches that Christ’s Lordship is direct. No person or institution is to attempt to usurp the authority of Jesus over a Christian. Of course, persons can gain insight and understanding from others, but only Jesus has ultimate authority over a Christian. The call to be a disciple of Jesus assumes the ability to know and follow the will of Jesus Christ as Lord. The Bible’s teaching on soul competency indicates that persons have the Godgiven ability to know and to do God’s will. Persons are not puppets. Their Creator has given them freedom and responsibility of choice. Baptists have resisted efforts by individuals, government officials, and religious organizations to dictate what the will of Jesus is for his followers. Baptists insist that each person has the competence and the responsibility to find and follow the will of Jesus as Lord. As the early disciples declared, “We ought to obey God rather than men” (Acts 5:29). The Lordship of Christ Mandates Religious Freedom The Lordship of Christ means that persons and churches ought to be free from coercion by government or religious organizations in spiritual and religious matters. Baptists have always denounced such coercive efforts, declaring that only Jesus is Lord. For this resistance Baptists have often paid a high price. For example, in the early 1600s King James I of England claimed to be the head “Christ only is the king, and lawgiver of the church and conscience.” John Smyth (c. 1570 - d. 1612) An Englishman, he was the founding pastor of the first English Baptist church in Amsterdam in 1609. The quote is from a confessional statement that he played a major role in drafting.
of the Church of England as well as of the government of England. He demanded that all churches conform to his will. Thomas Helwys, a Baptist pastor, wrote a book entitledA Short Declaration of the Mystery of Iniquityin which he insisted that the king had no right to dictate to persons and churches what to believe. Helwys sent a copy of the book to King James with a personal inscription in which he declared, “The king is a mortal man and not God and therefore has no power over the immortal souls of his subjects, to make laws and ordinances for them and to set spiritual lords over them.”For his statement of this Bible truth, the king imprisoned the pastor, and he died in prison, refusing to recognize anyone other than Jesus as Lord of the churches. The wife of Helwys suffered imprisonment for her convictions about the Lordship of Christ and religious freedom. These two courageous Baptists were among the first of many in England, and later in America and many other places, who suffered for their uncompromising conviction that Jesus is Lord. Although they were ridiculed, arrested, fined, beaten, imprisoned, and even killed, they refused to abandon their belief in religious freedom for all persons under the Lordship of Christ. The Lordship of Christ and a New Testament Church Are Inseparable What does it mean for individual Christians and for the churches of which they are a part to be under the Lordship of Christ? For one thing, it means that they should acknowledge Christ as Lord. The church belongs to Christ, not to them. He is the head of the church; they arenot. They are not to rule the church; Christ is. Furthermore, each member of the church should recognize that he or she has opportunity and responsibility to make decisions regarding the church under the Lordship of Christ. This is the New Testament model of a church. Persons make decisions about the church of which they are part, such as who the deacons and pastor will be, how the tithes and offerings will be spent, and what sort of building they will occupy. Yet each of these decisions should be made in light of the fact that Jesus is Lord of the church. The Royal Collection © 2005, Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II King James I
ISBN 978-1-934741-03-0 Also, all of the members of the body of Christ are responsible for the decisions of a church. There is no hierarchy in a New Testament church. No pastor, deacon body, or any other individual or group is to lord it over the church (I Peter 5:3). Only Jesus is Lord of each person and of the church as a whole. Through prayer and respectful discussion as part of a loving fellowship, the members of the church are to seek to know the mind of Christ. Conclusion The Lordship of Christ is a basic Christian doctrine. For Baptists, it has special meaning and is related to other key Baptist beliefs, such as those about the authority of the Bible, soul competency, religious freedom, and the nature of what a church modeled after the New Testament churches is to be. For further information, see cbhh.dbu.edu The basic material in this leaflet originally appeared in a series of articles in theBaptist Standard in 2005. Wanting to share information about Baptist distinctives, Noble Hurley, shortly before his death in 2004, established the Jane and Noble Hurley Baptist Identity Fund to provide for publishing the series. He asked William M. Pinson, Jr. and Doris A. Tinker to prepare the articles. The financial assistance of The Prichard Family Foundation and Vester T. Hughes, Jr. enabled this series of nineteen leaflets to be produced based on the articles. Skyler G. Tinker designed and formatted the leaflets for publication. Each leaflet is for both individual and group study. The topics in this series: (1) Baptists: Who? Where? What? Why? (2) What Makes a Baptist a Baptist? (3) The Lordship of Christ; (4) The Bible as Authority for Faith and Practice; (5) Soul Competency; (6) Salvation Only by Grace Through Faith; (7) The Priesthood of All Believers; (8) Believer’s Baptism; (9) A Regenerate Church Membership; (10) Congregational Church Governance; (11) Church Autonomy; (12) Baptist Church Life: Organization, Worship, Officers, Ordinances; (13) Voluntary Cooperation; (14) Evangelism; (15) Missions; (16) Ministry; (17) Christian Education; (18) The Application of the Gospel; (19) Religious Freedom. © Copyright 2007. All rights reserved.
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