Are Baptists truly Protestants-or something distinct?
In The Non-Protestant Baptists, Timothy Evans Carter challenges common assumptions about Baptist identity and reclaims a heritage rooted not in protest but in biblical authority and covenant faithfulness. Using the TMQ Method-Target, Meet, Qualify, Carter builds a clear and quantifiable framework for understanding Baptist distinctives apart from the Protestant Reformation narrative.
Through a systematic exploration of Scripture, church history, and theology, this book uncovers how Baptists have historically emphasized regenerate church membership, believer's baptism, local church autonomy, and biblical authority as defining marks-not protest against Rome.
You'll discover how to:
Differentiate between Protestant reform principles and Baptist covenant principles.
Trace the biblical and historical roots of Baptist distinctives.
Understand Baptist identity through quantifiable categories, not inherited labels.
Apply covenant-based thinking to Baptist doctrine and practice today.
Reframe the Baptist witness as proactive faithfulness, not reactive protest.
This book is a vital resource for pastors, students, church leaders, and anyone seeking clarity on what truly defines Baptist identity.