About (see also What Makes a Baptist more... Baptist History Time Line more )

Hope Baptist Plymouth
Hope is a member of the Baptist Union of Great Britain, attracting  local people and visitors from around the world who come to the historic City of Plymouth to live, for training, working with the sea, and holidays.

We are a church with a catchment area of some 15-20 thousand people. The church is actively involved in many aspects of every day life in the area. Most of the fellowship live within walking distance of the church and we try to serve the needs of the whole community.
Openly proclaiming the Christian way of life is always our ultimate aim and desire, and while the message never changes, the way it is presented changes rapidly in todays society. Hope is a family place where all are welcome to enjoy our activities and worship. Enjoy perusing this site and please visit us whenever you are in the English west country.
For more information on Hope visit our history page
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The Baptist Family

Individual Church Member
For Baptists, Christian faith begins with a personal commitment to the Lord Jesus Christ. This personal commitment, dramatised in a service of believer's baptism, works itself out in a life of service to God. Currently there are some 150,000 members of Baptist churches associated with the Baptist Union of Great Britain.

Local Baptist Churches
With their emphasis on the grass roots, local churches form the front-line of Baptist mission. Around 2,150 churches belong to the Baptist Union of Great Britain, each of them self-funding and the majority of them financially independent.

Regional Associations
Baptist churches have always linked together in regional associations to support one another in their task of reaching out with the Good News of Jesus. Associations today provide a vital link between the churches and the Baptist Union.

Fellowship of British Baptists
The Fellowship brings together all those Baptist churches in the British Isles, in membership with the Baptist Union of Scotland, the Baptist Union of Wales and the Baptist Union of Great Britain. The Fellowship also includes the BMS World Mission which relates to all three Unions.


The Worldwide Family
The Baptist vision of the church is not constrained by national borders. Baptists see themselves as part of the World Church with a mission, through the gospel, to bring people everywhere into God's family. Baptists live and work in every corner of the globe and various regional associations exist to help them in their mission. The Baptist Union of Great Britain is one of the founder members of the European Baptist Federation (1948) and the Baptist World Alliance (1905) which represents nearly 150,000 churches and more than 40 million members

The Baptist Church Worldwide
HOW BIG
5th largest Christian church in the world.
In almost every country in the world and have about 40 million members .
2,150 churches belong to the Baptist Union of Great Britain.
British Churches have around 150,000 members.
THE NAME BAPTIST
Comes from the Baptist practice of immersion in water. Originally used in the seventeenth century by opponents to the new movement but rejected by followers themselves until in the nineteenth century when Baptists accepted the use of the name to describe themselves.
HISTORY
The roots of the Baptist movement date back to the sixteenth century and the post-Reformation period
The first Baptist congregation appeared in 1609 in Holland. It was here that the Church of England minister, John Smyth, performed a radical and scandalous act of baptising himself by pouring water on his head. He than baptised his fellow reformer, Thomas Helwys and other members of the congregation. Smyth and Helwys had left England for Holland in 1607 after being persecuted for wanting to purify the Church of England of all traces of Roman Catholicism. Both Smyth and Helwys had joined a group of "Separatists" in Gainsborough in 1606.Eventually Smyth and Helwys parted company in Holland as Smyth questioned the authenticity of his self-administered baptism. In 1612 Helwys and others returned to England to establish the first Baptist Church on English soil.
BELIEFS
The Bible, not church tradition or religious creed, is the guide in all matters of faith and practice.
The church should be made up of believers only, not all people born in the local area.
The church should be governed by those believers, not by hierarchical figures.
General Baptists believed that when Christ died on the cross he died for everyone in general.
Particular Baptists followed the Calvinist tradition of believing that Christ died for a particular group or elect.
These came together in 1813 to form a "General Union" which we know today as The Baptist Union of Great Britain and Ireland in the late nineteenth century.
Throughout the seventeenth century Baptists were persecuted for their beliefs being known as "non-conformists" or Dissenters. They refused to become members of the Church of England, saying Christ and not the monarch was head of the Church.
The nineteenth century saw a period of significant growth for the Baptist movement. Great preachers such as Charles Haddon Spurgeon in London and Alexander Maclaren in Manchester drew crowds in their thousands.
The Baptist World Alliance which was founded in 1905. It provides an international forum for the exchange of Baptist thought paying special attention to matters concerning Christian education, religious freedom, human rights and missions.
In 2009, Baptists will celebrate the 400th anniversary of the birth of the Baptist Church.
The Structure
Equality

In the Baptist movement everyone is equal. There is no hierarchy of others exercising authority over members. Baptists reject the idea that authority flows down from previous church leaders which can be traced back to the apostles in apostolic succession.
Congregational
Baptists are congregational: each church is self-governing and self-supporting, made up of members, each with a role to play. That is, each church can govern itself with absolute autonomy.The churches encourage those attending to become church members through baptism. This entitles them to vote at the church meeting where all decisions are made. Final authority rests not with the minister or deacons but with church members at the meeting. It appoints ministers, elders, deacons and others who take a leadership role, agree financial policy and determine mission strategy.
Interdependent
Despite their autonomy, local Baptist churches have always come together in regional, national and international associations for support and fellowship. Baptists believe that churches should not live in isolation but be interdependent.
Technically there is no such thing as a Baptist denomination. The organisation has a "bottom up" rather than "top down" approach. However, in the UK most Baptist churches belong to the Baptist Union. This isn't a central authority but a central resource for assisting churches.
Distinguishing features
Baptists share the Trinitarian tradition of all the major Christian denominations. However, there are several features that mark them out from other traditions, although none of them are exclusive to Baptists alone:
Baptism of believers by full immersion
This is perhaps the most obvious difference between Baptists and other denominations. Baptists reject infant baptism, thinking instead that baptism is for believers only - those who can personally declare Jesus as Lord. Some churches will re-baptise those who were baptised as infants in another Christian tradition, others respect that various denominations do things differently.
The baptism is carried out by full immersion. Most Baptist Churches have a baptistery which is basically a pool (about 4m by 3m) in the church. During a baptismal service the minister and the person being baptised enter the water. The minister, holding the person, will lay them back in the water so they are totally immersed, and then bring them back up again. Baptists believe this practice is in line with the New Testament practice of baptism, as carried out by John the Baptist.
Priesthood of all
Baptists believe everyone, ordained or lay, is responsible before God for his/her own understanding of God's word and what it means to them. They believe God created every individual as competent, with the skills to be a priest for themselves and others. That means in Baptist churches which appoint a minister, he or she is an equal member in the church meeting but with special responsibilities as outlined by the congregation.
Separation of church and state
As each Baptist church is autonomous there can be no outside interference in decision making. This applies to any secular power, such as the state, being involved in church matters. Therefore Baptists reject the idea of an established or state church.
see also What Makes a Baptist more...