Monday, October 06, 2014

EARLY HISTORY OF NORWICH CENTRAL BAPTIST CHURCH


In 1669 the State Church and the recently restored Stuart monarchy did not tolerate the congregation of religious dissenters; these congregations were declared illegal and referred to as “conventicles”. In order to keep an eye on the situation in Norwich the Bishop of Norwich, Edward Reynolds, was commissioned with the task of compiling a “database” of illegal fellowships. This database was returned in 1669 and a reproduction of it can be seen above. It tabulates the type, size and leadership of non-conformist fellowships in the City. If you look closely you will see one group called “Anabaptists”  who are numbered at around 30 and headed up by Daniel Bradford and Henry Austin. It was this group from which Norwich Central Baptist Church has a long descent. It is this database that has given NCBC its “birth” date of 1669, although in actual fact the Baptist fellowship that was to become NCBC would have existed some years prior to that date. As the database suggests the sectarian situation was complex and not a simple case of State Church vs. Non-Conformists. The table itemizes under the heading of “Sects” a variety fellowships; Viz: “Independents”*1, “Presbyterians”, “Quakers” as well as the so-called “Anabaptists” all of whom were vying for affiliates. Although these groups faced a common persecutor the disagreements between some of them were sharp and irreconcilable. Protestantism has always had a streak of headstrong factiousness about it.

***

My grasp of Norwich Central Baptist Church history owes much to Charles Boardman Jewson (1909-1981) one time member of NCBC (or St Mary’s Baptist Church as it was then called). Jewson wrote a history of the Baptists who have been worshiping at the current site on St Mary’s plane since 1744. This history, which was published in the Baptist Quarterly in 1941, could not have been compiled without a search of original (and often difficult to read) hand written documents and Jewson must have spent many painstaking hours doing this research. However, in spite of that, history always comes with an implicit caveat: Even though Jewson looks as though he did a very thorough job one must exercise reserve in the light of the possibility that a reappraisal of the known documents and/or the appearance of new evidence could conceivably lead to different conclusions. So, it is with this reservation in mind I express below my reading of Jewson’s early history of Norwich’s Baptists up until 1689, a date when non conformists were granted freedom of congregation and fellowship.
Jewson's Memorial on the Wall of NCBC. Notice the Jewson coat of arms. The picture was taken whilst the details of  Joyce Jewson were being carved - hence the mason's temporary red paint.

Firstly a note about Jewson himself. On the first page of his history he remarks on the main Christian fault line which existed in England at the start of the 17th century. This fault line was, of course, the division between the High Church of the State establishment and the dissenting Puritans. Quoting Jewson:

Neither the High Church party who wished to retain much of the medieval ceremony and teaching, nor the Puritans were content. Each side desired to force its faith upon the other. (p3)*4

That kind of observation is evidence of the partisan business that Christianity has always been! (See also 1 Corinthians 3). In making this observation without any appearance of partisan prejudice Jewson displays an intellectual detachment from the squabbles of the time even though he himself was a very committed Baptist. This ability to detach may have something to do with the fact that at the time of writing Jewson and his Norwich Baptist brethren were successful people; amongst them were civic leaders and respected business men with little left to prove and no axe to grind; they had, in fact, started to identify with establishment as evidenced by the kind of church architecture they had begun to prefer. As a rich and respected church community they contrasted with that frequent phenomenon one sees of the small elitist spiritual sect who respond to their well-earned marginalization and alienation by consolidating their identity as fanatical, noisy confrontational fundamentalists. The well-to-do background of the Baptist fellowship of that time perhaps puts a little perspective on Jewson’s calm and collected approach in his writings. It may also explain why a conciliatory man such as Jewson sometimes seems a little embarrassed about early Baptist sectarianism and does what he can to put it in the best possible light (p23).

At the start of the seventeenth century dissenters from the established church moved their pastorates to Rotterdam where interference by the English State was much less likely.  It is interesting to note however that many of these dissenters were actually clergy from the State Church who took up chaplaincy roles in Rotterdam. In fact according to Jewson the concept of a church separated from the state was not initially part of their mindset:

Revolutionary spirits began to separate from the established church, but few had yet conceived the idea of a church free from state control and patronage (p3)

Perhaps this is not too surprising: Western Christians had lived for more than a millennium in societies where state and church were inextricably bound together. Moreover, the early reform movements which revolved round Luther, Zwingli and Calvin made no clear annunciation of the political separation of church and state.

Jewson says that the dissenters who eventually returned to England from Holland after the 1642 civil war probably brought back from the continent ideas of adult baptism after contact with Mennonites (p19). For a while the Congregationalist non-conformists who still baptized infants remained in fellowship with those who believed in “re-baptising”*2 adults. (p20).  But in time a more sectarian ethos started to emerge. Some of the Fifth Monarchists who were in effect the vehement “fundamentalists” of the day even regarded the puritanical Cromwellians as standing in the way of the imminent return of Christ. These Fifth Monarchists seemed to have the effect of helping to crystallize the concept of baptism amongst non-conformists and a polarization set in (p21). As this exclusive Baptist movement gained momentum the old Congregationalists who still practiced child baptism felt rejected. In 1657 they complained:

“Those who had not only forsaken the Churches for want of the Ordinance of Baptism as they say, but  also judged all the Churches no Churches that were not of their mind, or came not up to their practice” (p21)

Jewson goes on to say (p22) that sometime before 1667 the Norwich Baptists who ultimately were the forebears of NCBC had separated themselves from the Congregationalist communion.  Jewson points out the irony of this situation; this separation happened at a time when the whole non-conformist sub-culture was facing state sponsored persecution. (p23)

It may be true, however, that marginalization and opposition actually favours factiousness: Some Christian fellowships react to the existential crisis that may be induced by alienation with increasingly extreme posturing. The Quakers of the 1670s seem a case in point: They questioned the witness of Presbyterians and Independents (=Congregationalists?) and also suggested that the Baptist’s water baptism was neither that of  John the Baptist nor that of Christ’s Baptism of the Holy Spirit; in fact in the Quaker's opinion this Baptism was of little spiritual significance altogether! (p25). In their attempt to “return to a primitive Christianity without parish church, priest, sacrament or liturgy”*3 the early Quakers not only wrote-off Baptists and other non-conformists, they also became very confrontational, interrupting church services they didn't like and being disrespectful to magistrates (Ibid: See McCutcheon). It is no surprise therefore that they brought down on themselves opposition and persecution.  As Jewson said, Each side desired to force its faith upon the other and the early Quakers did what was within their power to impose their opinions on other Christians.

The State persecution ended with the “Glorious Revolution” of 1688 and the act of Toleration of 1689. Thence on the differing dissenting splinters could establish themselves as legal, moderate and in some cases successful facets of English society.  It is ironic that today the Quakers are probably among the most liberal and tolerant of those Christian fellowships!


Footnotes:
*1 Presumably, the “Independents” were Congregationalists.
*2 “Anabaptist” means “re-baptise”
*3 This quote comes from page 78 of “Norwich Through the Ages” by Elsie McCutcheon (Alastair Press). This harking back to  a fancied pure primitive Christianity is always the claim of Christian sect start-ups. See here: http://norwichcentralbaptistchurch.blogspot.co.uk/2012/05/sectarian-bondage.html
*4 Page numbers are from Jewson’s history.

Thursday, July 17, 2014

BAPTISTS, FASCISTS AND FUNDAMENTALISTS

(Click to enlarge)
I found the above picture in a cache of old documents at Norwich Central Baptist Church. Below I publish the text that was attached to it:

The 1934 Congress in Berlin. Enlargement of a postcard from St. Mary's member, Mary Fisher, to Charles Jewson. The three figures under the cross behind the huge choir are: J G Oncken, who 100 years earlier baptised seven people in Hamburg which was the beginning of the modern Baptist movement in Germany. In 1934 there were 30,000 German Baptists. C H Spurgeon, 1934 was the centenary of his birth. William Carey, who died in 1834. Dr. Gilbert Laws, minister of St. Mary's, [Now Norwich Central Baptist Church - ed] took part as president of the Baptist Union. He told the family on his return how alarmed he was that young German ministers did not seem to realise the danger of developments in Germany. As the Hallelujah Chorus was sung he introduced the English custom of standing and, making a nazi style salute, said he saluted King Jesus. He also moved a resolution on 'Church and State', emphasizing the Baptist attitude denying the right of the state to interfere in matters of religion. Another resolution on racialism was welcomed by Jews round the world. Eighteen months later these reports and pamphlets were suppressed in Germany.

Is it my imagination or is the huge choir a sign of the collective spirit of discipline and identification of purpose that was abroad in Germany at that time? I’m not sure Gilbert Laws did the right thing in attempting to reload the Nazi salute with Christian significance – at best it would have had an ambiguous meaning especially as, Laws says, the German (Baptist?) ministers seemed oblivious to the dangers of Nazism. If there is a picture of this Baptist congress giving the Nazi salute with a Swastika in the background it would be very difficult to find a convincing excuse! * Rev. Gilbert Laws was a minister at Norwich Central Baptist Church before and during the War and more about him can be found here.
Not long after I happened upon the above material an interesting album of photos was passed on to me. This album was apparently compiled by a Miss M. Kirby, a Baptist from Norwich, The Album is a record of a tour of Belgium and Germany by British Baptists in 1936, two years after the Berlin Baptist congress. In the album Miss Kirby records her thoughts and observations besides the photos. The contents of this album can be browsed here.
Below I have transcribed some of the comments of Miss Kirby which reveal how the German ruling Nazi regime impacted her observations.
***
On Tuesday morning we adjourned to the garden after early morning prayers & breakfast to hear something of the German Baptists problems. Dr Slavensky told how Hitler tried to unite all Germans through the common love of the Vaterland and how the question of race was important to Germans. He spoke of Hitler’s strength in quieting all the numerous small political parties. The German Baptists in the main appear to be fundamentalists. They traced back the race problem to Adam and pointed out the Bible teaching regarding intermarriage of nations. Said Jewish persecution not supported by Christians.

My Comment: Here we see evidence of Hitler’s suppression of all opposition and his ability to use an innate human propensity for tribalism to rally people to what was basically a call to arms against the fancied conspiracies of other tribes. Miss Kirby puts it a little euphemistically "Hitler’s strength in quieting......"! Interesting is the reference to the German Baptists being fundamentalists and their attempt to justify apartheid from the Bible**. The term "fundamentalist" no doubt had different connotations from today, but if fundamentalism is in general characterised by its epistemic arrogance then the term is wholly appropriate for the German context at that time. I can almost see Miss Kirby muttering the clipped and abbreviated sentence “Jewish persecution not supported by Christians” quietly into her sleeve. Typically timidly British, not wanting to upset the apple-cart – I  know the feeling, particularly when one’s hosts are polite and friendly as were these German Baptists.

Tuesday evening we had an informal discussion of the mornings lecture. Interesting points mentioned were:- English Christians believe “Thy Kingdom come on Earth”, German Christians believe that Christians can only be leaven in the world & help to save souls.

My Comment: Oh dear, that does look a lot like the fundamentalism we see today, viz: everyone’s going to hell except us and therefore it’s our business to make sure they join our tribe!

On Friday Dr. Slavensky gave a very long lecture on the New Heathen Groups in Germany & their adoption of the Edda……In the afternoon we visited the huge lunatic asylum at Mulhausen (On of the biggest in Germany) It is almost self-supporting with big dairies, kitchen farm etc.

My Comment: Was this a show asylum? I've heard other stories about the asylums in Germany at that time!

Sunday was a very hot day. We went to the Baptist church at 9.30 & had a very pleasant service. Although the German Baptists are so strict in many ways, the ladies are allowed to take off their hats. The church was quite full and reminded me of one of our Norfolk village churches. We were told that the German service is a lengthy affair but it was specially shortened for our benefit

My Comment: We see an example here of the Germans being better than the British at collective acts of discipline. The British, who do like law and order, usually admire this trait of the Germans. In fact at that time some Britons even went as far as admiring Hitler. But when the chips are down the British don’t want it for themselves. Moreover, we now know that the crowd discipline and group think which went with it had a terrible downside!
The reference to “Norfolk village churches” is evidence that the author of this album is from Norfolk. At the end of the album there is a list of the tour party. This list includes the name of a Miss M. Kirby from Norwich. As Miss Kirby is the only person listed from Norfolk I conclude that it was her who created the album.

It was in the Baptist printing house we heard the first suspicions of criticism against Hitler. Apparently a certain amount of restraint is put upon the Baptist Press. Everywhere else we heard nothing but praise of Hitler.

My Comment: In the final analysis Baptists are all about devolved government so it should be no surprise that Hitler’s policies rankled with them just a bit; but according to Gilbert Laws they didn't rankle enough!

The prayer of a young Baptist boy is that Hitler might become a Christian and use his fine organizing powers for Christianity. The Germans like a strong leader who they can follow and sacrifice themselves for.

My Comment: .....and sacrifice themselves they did - in their millions! Once again we see the German ability to get behind and identify with a single cause especially if espoused by a charismatic leader. The British admire the Germans for it but they both love it and hate it. The British need to declare a war before they get their act together and even then it can take a bit of time. Although the British think of themselves as a peaceful nation they are constantly picking fights with someone or another! It is ironic that it looks as though the British are always starting wars!

More Jews lived in Frankfurt than anywhere else in Germany. We passed some synagogues where a few windows were broken…We learnt that they still have services in the Synagogues.

My Comment: Here we have, I guess, hints of the persecution of the Jews. I have a feeling that Miss Kirby didn't want to believe it – in fact did anyone in Britain want to believe it except perhaps Churchill? Re Churchill: The British, like the Germans, shared the same human trait of needing a charismatic leader to galvanize and rally them into action. It probably helped that Churchill was also an aristocrat, perhaps even a kind of King Arthur figure  in Britain’s hour of need.

It was a most enjoyable tour. The people were all very nice some especially so and I benefited greatly from hearing of their experiences and sharing in the fellowship. There were fortunately some very humorous people and we had great fun. Everyday the Germans were very friendly & anxious to please.  Every young German has either been to the “camps” or was hoping to go. Instead of being places of torture that we are lead to believe they are apparently places of joy to the German youth. Almost every German idolizes Hitler & he has certainly done a lot for them. The children are all being brought up to do the same & they are all belong to some Hitler Youth Organisation or other.

My Comment: Like I said, I don’t think these British Baptists really wanted to believe Hitler was as bad as all that or that their German brothers and sisters were erring.  As a whole the British probably had a too cynical a view of leaders to idolise someone like Hilter.  Trouble was, it really was as bad as all that. I once heard a Dutchman say that the British tend do sweet Fanny Adams until the dead bodies start appearing. Perhaps this indecisive wait-and-see attitude maybe a good thing, but then again perhaps not! Let's wait and see! Empiricism as a philosophy tends to be favoured by the British!

Footnotes
* To be fair, Laws probably wouldn't have been able to anticipate what a Nazi salute would have looked like many years down the line!
** It's debatable whether or not the OT demarcates on the basis of religion rather than race.

24/07/15 Relevant links:
Below is a link to a web article which raises questions as to whether the German Christian response to Hilter was all that it should have been. But it's easy to criticize from a position that doesn't face the challenges and threats of Nazi Germany.

Wednesday, July 02, 2014

PERSONAL TESTIMONY and the FIVE Ps


The above picture is a group photo of the Vulnerable Mission conference held at Norwich Central Baptist Church in November 2013 (Not all delegates shown; five or six are missing). The paper I presented at this conference is now available here:
The content of the paper is very much bound up with my own personal Christian testimony; it combines theological view point with my delvings into the "Five Ps", namely  Physics, Programming, Philosophy,
Psychology and the Paranormal. But it's not the sort of thing that can be presented at the Sunday service "personal testimony" slot!  I'm just not that kind of deal! In fact, the ideas in the paper are likely to have ramifications that will not sit well with some of the  intuitions of folk evangelical Christianity.

Tuesday, May 06, 2014

NCBC LEAKS: No 1

Below are a couple of Norwich Churches related documents that have recently found their way into my possession. I'm not sure what to make of them. The first is a letter written by Pastor Tom Chapman of Surrey Chapel who signs himself as "Chair of the University of East Anglia Christian Union Board". He writes on behalf of various Norwich Christian ministers. The Rev Chapman's letter is a protest about what he refers to as the University authorities limiting religious activity on the Campus. It is addressed to Professor Neil Ward, Pro-Vice-Chancellor of Academic Affairs (Click document to enlarge):

Well, the good Professor replied and his reply can be seen below (Click document to enlarge):


Basically Ward says that he doesn't know what Chapman is talking about; there are no new regulations limiting religious expression. In fact Ward says "I am not quite sure how these anxieties have been fuelled or whether they originate on or off the campus".  You might expect both Ward and Chapman to be in a position where they're in the know; so how come this "serious misunderstanding" as Ward calls it?

I have an interest in this matter because one of the signatories is the Rev Mark Tall who is presumably signing on behalf of the church I attend, Norwich Central Baptist Church.  I have no knowledge of this affair or what it is about, but that's no indicator as I'm not part of the social nexus or inner counsel circles where discussion of this matter would be current. Moreover, as I tend to live in a world of my own I can easily fail to pick up on such things even when they are announced.

However, I'm just a little concerned. Three of the signatories, Tom Chapman, Mark Tall and Alan Strange are known to me as moderate and intelligent evangelicals. But I have to say that I cannot vouch for some of the other signatories who, as far as I know. lean in a fundamentalist direction*. Given the clear link between fundamentalism and conspiracy-theory-thinking this gives me some cause for concern; religious paranoia polarises, and reads between the lines in a very imaginative and mythical way. And yet I respect the opinions of the three ministers whom I name. Set against that is the frank and open tone of Prof Ward's letter who is perceptive enough to use that very loaded word "anxieties". I'm not sure what to conclude!

Postscript
Islam's tradition of propagating it's faith by military conquest along with Koranic injunctions to wage holy war has given Islam a pathological weakness for belligerence. Similarly, Christianity's history of persecution along with Biblical verses raising an expectation of persecution has given Christianity a pathological weakness for a collective paranoia. Sometimes this paranoia becomes intense enough to fuel full-blown conspiracy theories. I have confess that these kinds of thought surfaced in my mind when the above first came to my attention.


Relevant links:
.http://quantumnonlinearity.blogspot.co.uk/2014/03/public-vs-private-polarisation.html


Footnote:
* There is a distinction between moderate evangelicals and fundamentalists - a subject on which I am currently compiling a post. 

Monday, February 24, 2014

SERMONS IN STONE

Dereham Road Baptist Church,
before the war
The date was 1995. The significance of that date was that it was one year after 1994. It is now fading into the mists of time, but 1994 was the year when the "Toronto Blessing" (I like to call it the "Carpet Blessing" for obvious reasons) appeared on the scene and was subsequently promoted by many Christians who regarded it as "God's New Thing". It took about a year before someone somewhere thought that our church was "up for it" (more like "in for it"). So, the spring of 1995 was the date when touts in favour of the "blessing" arrived at Dereham Road Baptist Church determined to revive us during a church weekend held on DRBC premises. Well, the weekend did inspire me, but not in the way that would register on the revivalist scales of these touts. It resulted in my writing an essay called "High pulpits, High Priests and The Bedford Blessing". This essay can be downloaded from here (See the "file" drop down). A spin-off from this essay was a photographically illustrated work on the meaning of the pseudo Gothic architecture of Dereham Road Baptist Church: This latter work was completed in 2007; the "blessing" was then well into the past, its historical memory  no longer relevant and so I extracted the bits from High pulpits, High Priests and The Bedford Blessing that focused on DRBC's buildings, added some more text and illustrated it with photographs. This work, called "Sermons in Stone", can be downloaded from here


Wednesday, January 15, 2014

NCBC HISTORY WALK


The East Granary; one of the first meeting places of NCBC

The notes for my history walk can be downloaded as a PDF from here ("File" drop down and then "Download") This walk starts and finishes at NCBC and draws attention to the historical connections the church has with it's locality. This walk was first used in "anger" at the November "Vulnerable Mission" conference. As tasters I quote below the introduction and finale of these notes:

The Introduction:

Norwich was for a long while the second city of the English Christian realm that through its 18th century industrial revolution became the mother of the modern world. This revolution brought with it all the issues of riches and wealth disparities that we see today. Above all this revolution helped usher in a secular world view along with its philosophical pathologies. Therefore it is perhaps not an exaggeration to claim that the history of Norwich is central to contemporary world history.


This tour looks at English history through its connections with Norwich Central Baptist Church. Studying Norwich history through its religious history may throw light not only on contemporary times but also the problems Christians face in coming to terms with secular society.  

The Finale:

The contemporary Christian response to civic marginalisation has often been a reactionary swing to overcompensating forms of charismatic Gnosticism, wooden Biblical literalism, sectarianism, mysticism or very woolly liberalism. Faced with issues of epistemic insecurity churches today are trying to find a path between overcompensating extremes.



Plaque memorialising NCBC's presence  over 320 years ago