Adjectives are a good thing. But not when they're overused. If that happens, instead of clarifying they get in the way of clear meaning. Intended to qualify the meaning of a noun they are sometimes used to retread tired metaphors, or enhance meaning by piling up compliments or criticisms, or are added in to define more precisely what is already clear. But chosen and used with care, adjectives are important in conveying significant nuance, constructing and construing a more textured statement of what is meant.
The word Baptist can be noun or adjective. In the phrase "Baptist-shaped community" the word "Baptist" is an adjective, constructing and construing a more textured statement of what is meant when we use the word "community". The adjective qualifies the noun. Baptist qualifies the shape of what is envisaged as community in a Baptist church. So when we use the phrase "Baptist-shaped community" as a value woven through our approach to College life and to theological education as formation for ministry, that word "Baptist" is expected to carry considerable freight.
The reason for that is simple. The word community is in danger of becoming a lazy cliche, a marshmallow word that is soft, sweet and squeezeable into most any shape that suits us. Community in itself isn't necessarily good - communities can be oppressive, introverted, selfish, hierarchical, exclusive. So as Baptists we qualify what we mean by community, and indicate the shape it must take, by bringing it under the cosntraint of Baptist convictions. So what are these convictions, and how do they make a difference to a community so that it is a different kind of community best described as Baptist?
A fellowship of believers, a gathered community of people of faith in Jesus Christ, who have covenanted together to follow faithfully after Christ
That covenant is centred on the person of Jesus Christ, grounded in a relationship of trust and promise, and expressed in baptism as an act of confession, witness and proclamation
Baptist shaped community grows out of the simple but radical conviction that where two or three gather together in Christ's name, there is a true church of Christ and there the risen Christ is in their midst
The church meeting then becomes an encounter where the members meet under Christ to discern his mind, with open Bible, in prayer and conversation, under the superintendence of the Holy Spirit, listening to God, to each other and to God through each other
Such community tries to embody the priesthood of all believers, expresses trust in the Headship of Christ in His church, and in the celebration of the Lord's Supper takes again the bread and wine that proclaim the incarnation, death, resurrection and coming again of Christ
Baptist shaped community, with all its limitations, embarrassments and failed aspirations, nevertheless looks to the life of the Triune God of love, and the mutual self-giving and harmony of purpose that outflow in the mission of love that flows out to the creation in mercy, peace and reconciling grace.
Baptist shaped community, then, is both ideal and reality, the reality at times falling short of the ideal. The ideal being no less urgent and attractive for all that.In the life and teaching, the learning and sharing, the challenge and joys of our life together, in church and in College, such an ideal, and such a reality, make sense only because first and foremost we covenant together to live, by the grace of God, towards a Christ centred faithfulness. Those convictions are themselves embedded in a deep loyalty to the Bible and lived out in a spirituality that is unabashedly Evangelical.
Jim Gordon.
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