Everything about Triennial Convention totally explained
The Triennial Baptist Convention, also simply known as the
Triennial Convention, the first national
Baptist denomination in the
United States of America, was established in
1814 (Wikipedia). The Convention was the merger of the
Philadelphia Baptist Association (organized 1707) and most other regional American Baptist denominations, both
General and
Particular,
Regular and
United, conservative
evangelical and
liberal, for American Baptist unity (Oxford 62-3, Wikipedia). The Convention was called "Triennial" because the national convention met every three years. Members of the denomination were called American Baptists. Opponents of the Convention and their
Board of Foreign Missions included
anti-missionary,
Free Will,
Separate, and independent Baptists (Wikipedia).
Like other Baptist churches, the Convention had no formal
creed, but believed in "the authority of the Bible, the Lordship of Jesus Christ, the independence of local congregations, the necessity of a conversion experience and a believer’s baptism by immersion, and evangelism and missionary outreach" (Oxford 62). The Convention accepted the
1833 New Hampshire Baptist Confession of Faith. The Confession was drafted by Rev.
John Newton Brown, D.D. (
June 29,
1803 –
May 14,
1868), of
New Hampshire and other American Baptist ministers, and adopted by the New Hampshire (American) Baptist Convention. The Confession was conservative, but less
Calvinistic than the
1742 Philadelphia Baptist Confession of Faith (Wikipedia).
The
Second Great Awakening (an American
Christian revival from 1800 to 1840) grew the Triennial Baptist Convention and made it more
Arminian and
evangelical (Wikipedia). Around 1840, the American Baptists became a major denomination in the United States. Baptists were in every State and territory by 1840. By that time, they'd established over twenty schools as well as missions in
Asia,
Africa, the
Caribbean, and
Europe (Oxford 62-3).
In 1838,
African,
Danish,
German,
Norwegian, and
Swedish Americans began organizing their own Baptist denominations because of
persecution by
English Americans and
nationalism by non-English Americans. The Convention remained predominately English American (Oxford 62-3).
In 1843, northern Baptists organized a separate mission society in opposition to
slavery (Oxford 62-3). Around 1845, northern anti-slavery Baptists recaptured the Triennial Baptist Convention and the Northern Baptists rejoined. In May 1845, in
Augusta, Georgia, most of the southern Baptists in the Convention, the
American Baptist Home Mission Society (org. 1832), and in the
American Baptist Publication Society (org. 1841) merged, in support of slavery and unity, to form the
Southern Baptist Convention (SBC). William Bullein Johnson (1782-1862), Triennial Baptist Convention President in 1841, was elected the first SBC president. The Triennial Baptist Convention became concentrated in the
North (Wikipedia).
American Baptists came to support the
antebellum reform movements of
Abolitionism,
Federalism,
Temperance, and
Women's Rights, and thus the
Whig (org. 1834) and
Republican (org. 1854) parties (Oxford 827, Wikipedia). In 1858, the American Baptists helped the Republicans win a majority in the
House of Representatives. In 1860, they helped Former
Congressman and conservative anti-slavery Baptist,
Abraham Lincoln (
February 12,
1809 –
April 15,
1865) of
Illinois win the Republican nomination for
President of the United States, the general election in the North and thus the nation (he didn't affiliate with, or join, an American Baptist church or any other church) (Wikipedia).
Around 1900,
Roman Catholics came to outnumber any one
Protestant denomination in the United States, especially in the Northeast, and the population began to shift more to the
South and
West, making American Baptists a clear minority. American Baptists supported
Fundamentalist Christianity against
Evolution and
Liberal Christianity (Wikipedia). American Baptists supported
Progressivism and the
Social Gospel (the Christian responsibility to help the poor), but not the more radical ideas of
Walter Rauschenbusch (1861-1918) and other
Christian Socialists (Oxford 652).
On
May 17,
1907 in
Washington, D.C., the Triennial Baptist Convention, the
American Baptist Education Society (org. 1888), the American Baptist Home Mission Society, and the American Baptist Publication Society merged, for unity, to form the
Northern Baptist Convention. The Northern Baptist Convention was renamed the
American Baptist Convention in 1950, and the
American Baptist Churches, USA in 1972 (Wikipedia).
Governor of New York,
Charles Evans Hughes (
April 11,
1862 –
August 27,
1948, served 1907-1910) was elected the first Northern Baptist Convention president, but he continued his job as Governor. He was also the Republican nominee for President of the United States in 1916. 29th President of the United States,
Warren Gamaliel Harding (November 2, 1865 - August 2, 1923, served March 4, 1921 - August 2, 1923) was an American Baptist and a
Freemason (Wikipedia).
After 1907, like other
mainline Protestant churches, American Baptists moved to the
Left, pushing away conservative churches, shrinking and changing the denomination. The
General Association of Regular Baptist Churches (org. 1932), the
Conservative Baptist Association of America (org. 1947), and the
Cornerstone Church Network (former American Baptist Evangelicals) (org. 2006) broke with the American Baptists in support of
evangelicalism (Wikipedia).
Famous Triennial Baptists
Further Information
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