The Baptist Atonement Model: The Doctrine of Christ’s Finished Work According to John T. Christian’s History of the Baptists — A TMQ Evaluation - Softcover

Carter, Timothy Evans; Johnson, A. Edmond

 
9798244762679: The Baptist Atonement Model: The Doctrine of Christ’s Finished Work According to John T. Christian’s History of the Baptists — A TMQ Evaluation

Synopsis

What doctrine preserved Baptist identity when persecution, politics, and pressure tried to erase it?

Across centuries of imprisonment, exile, and marginalization, Baptists remained doctrinally distinct when many movements dissolved or assimilated. This book demonstrates why.

Drawing directly from John T. Christian’s History of the Baptists and applying a rigorous TMQ (Target–Meet–Qualify) analytical framework, The Baptist Atonement Model proves that Christ’s atonement — finished, substitutionary, and sufficient — functioned as the governing center of Baptist identity.

This is not speculative theology.
It is measured historical doctrine.

Inside this volume, you will discover:

  • How early Baptists separated from sacramental systems because Christ’s atonement was complete

  • Why believer’s baptism, liberty of conscience, and congregational purity all flowed from finished redemption

  • How persecution refined, rather than diluted, Baptist atonement convictions

  • Why Baptist preaching consistently centered on Christ crucified

  • How Baptists preserved a balanced doctrine of universal sufficiency with faith-conditioned application

  • Why atonement doctrine governed Baptist worship, missions, church membership, and separation from state churches

Rather than imposing modern theological models onto history, this book allows historical witness itself to reveal doctrinal continuity. Across centuries, cultures, and controversies, one conclusion remains unavoidable:

Remove the atonement, and Baptist identity dissolves.
Preserve the atonement, and Baptist identity endures.

This volume is essential reading for anyone who wants to understand why Baptists believed what they believed — and why they refused to surrender it, even at great personal cost.

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