“We as Baptists must continue to defend religious freedom for all peoples and all religions,” said Denton Lotz, the former general secretary of the Baptist World Alliance, at a special service held on July 30 in Amsterdam to mark the 400th anniversary of the Baptist movement.
The service was held in a Mennonite church in central Amsterdam, a short distance from the site of what is honored as the first Baptist congregation, founded in 1609 by exiles from Britain, who had fled religious persecution in England.
“If we fail to take seriously the 21st century and merely continue to defend religious freedom as though we were living under King James I, then we will have become irrelevant and our defense of freedom irrelevant,” said Lotz, who served as the BWA’s top executive for 19 years until his retirement in 2007.
That first Baptist church was established in an Amsterdam bakery under the leadership of Thomas Helwys and John Smyth, a former Church of England cleric, who sought a self-governing church, free from State control.
Smyth maintained that the Church should receive its members by baptism after they had consciously acknowledged their faith and, since he said a child is unable to do this, he opposed infant baptism.
Still, the threat today is not directed at religious practice, “but rather whether or not religion will be granted a fair hearing,” said Lotz. “Our public and state education has promoted secularism as its own religion and has indoctrinated the younger generation to believe that man can live without God and can explain the universe and history and community without faith.”
The service was the highlight of a series of international events held in the Netherlands from July 24 to August 1 by the BWA and the European Baptist Federation to celebrate the anniversary.
“Our goal must not be religious freedom to practice or religious freedom to express our faith,” said Lotz. “Our goal is to be on mission with Jesus Christ.”
That appeal was echoed in a letter of congratulations sent by U.S. evangelist Billy Graham to celebrate the anniversary.
“For four centuries, Baptist men and women have preached the Gospel of Jesus Christ, ushering countless people into the family of God,” Graham wrote in his message that was read out by Lotz during the anniversary service. “I challenge all of you to reconfirm the mission and ministry mandated by our Savior.”
Graham had a long association with the BWA, having spoken at every Baptist World Congress between 1950 and 1985. The world congress is the largest international gathering of Baptists, held every five years, and is planned by the BWA.
The anniversary service was attended by the delegates of the BWA annual gathering and general council meeting held in Ede, a town about 80 kilometers (50 miles) from Amsterdam. More than 350 delegates from more than50 countries attended the six days of meetings.
The global meetings in Ede were preceded by a regional meeting in Amsterdam of the European Baptist Federation, one of the BWA’s six regional groups. More than 900 participants, mainly Baptists, from 60 countries were at the three-day gathering.
The BWA is a fellowship of 216 Baptist conventions and unions comprising a membership of more than 37 million baptized believers and a community of 105 million.
Several Baptist groups are not members of the alliance, including the 16-million-member Southern Baptist Convention, the world’s largest Baptist denomination and the largest Protestant body in the United States. It withdrew from the BWA in 2004.