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"...The church of the living God, the pillar and ground of the truth."
I Timothy 3:15
Dr. J. M. Carroll
1931
SOME AFTER WORDS
1. During every period of the "Dark Ages" there were in existence many Christians and many separate and independent Churches, some of them dating back to the times of the Apostles, which were never in any way connected with the Catholic Church. They always wholly rejected and repudiated the Catholics and their doctrines. This is a fact clearly demonstrated by credible history.
2. These Christians were the perpetual objects of bitter and relentless persecution.
History shows that during the period of the "Dark Ages," about twelve centuries,
beginning with A.D. 426, there were about fifty millions of these Christians who
died martyr deaths. Very many thousands of others, both preceding and succeeding
the "Dark Ages," died under the same hard hand of persecution.
3. These Christians,
during these dark days of many centuries, were called by many different names, all
given to them by their enemies. These names were sometimes given because of some
specially prominent and heroic leader and sometimes from other causes; and sometimes,
yea, many times, the same people, holding the same views, were called by different
names in different localities.
But amid all the many changes of names, there was one special name or rather designation,
which clung to at least some of these Christians, throughout all the "Dark Ages,"
that designation being "Ana-Baptist." This compound word applied as a designation
of some certain Christians was first found in history during the third century; and
a suggestive fact soon after the origin of Infant Baptism, and a more suggestive
fact even prior to the use of the name Catholic. Thus the name "Ana-Baptists" is
the oldest denominational name in history.
4. A striking peculiarity of these Christians
was and continued to be in succeeding centuries: They rejected the man-made doctrine
of "Infant Baptism" and demanded rebaptism, even though done by, immersion for all
those who came to them, having been baptized in infancy. For this peculiarity they
were called "Ana-Baptists."
5. This, special designation was applied to many of these
Christians who bore other nicknames; especially is this true of the Donatists, Paulicians,
Albigenses and Ancient Waldenses and others. In later centuries this designation
came to be a regular name, applied to a distinct group. These were simply called
"Ana- Baptists" and gradually all other names were dropped. Very early in the sixteenth
century, even prior to the origin of the Lutheran Church, the first of all the Protestant
Churches, the word "ana" was beginning to be left off, and they were simply called
"Baptists."
6. Into the "dark ages" went a group of many churches which were never
in any way identified with the Catholics. Out of the "dark ages" came a group of
many churches, which had never been in any
way identified with the Catholics.
The following
are some of the fundamental doctrines to which they held when they went in: And the
same are, the fundamental doctrines to which they held when they came out: And the
same are the fundamental doctrines to which they now hold.
FUNDAMENTAL DOCTRINES
1.
A spiritual Church, Christ its founder, its only head and law giver.
2. Its ordinances,
only two, Baptism and the Lord's Supper. They are typical and memorial, not saving.
3.
Its officers, only two, bishops or pastors and deacons; they are servants of the
church.
4. Its Government, a pure Democracy, and that executive only, never legislative.
5.
Its laws and doctrines: The New Testament and that only.
6. Its members. Believers
only, they saved by grace, not works, through the regenerating power of the Holy
Spirit.
7. Its requirements. Believers on entering the church to be baptized, that
by immersion, then obedience and loyalty to all New Testament laws.
8. The various
churches -- separate and independent in their execution of laws and discipline and
in their responsibilities to God--but cooperative in work.
9. Complete separation
of Church and State.
10. Absolute Religious liberty for all.
REFERENCES
Partial list of books used in preparing lectures on The Trail of Blood: