The
committee's report says in part:
"Baptists
cherish and defend religious liberty, and deny the right of any secular or
religious authority to impose a confession of faith upon a church or body of
churches. We honor the principles of soul competency and the priesthood of
believers, affirming together both our liberty in Christ and our
accountability to each other under the Word of God.
Baptist
churches, associations, and general bodies have adopted confessions of faith
as a witness to the world, and as instruments of doctrinal accountability. We
are not embarrassed to state before the world that these are doctrines we hold
precious and as essential to the Baptist tradition of faith and practice.
As a
committee, we have been charged to address the "certain needs" of our own
generation. In an age increasingly hostile to Christian truth, our challenge
is to express the truth as revealed in Scripture, and to bear witness to Jesus
Christ, who is "the Way, the Truth, and the Life."
The 1963
committee rightly sought to identify and affirm "certain definite doctrines
that Baptists believe, cherish, and with which they have been and are now
closely identified." Our living faith is established upon eternal truths.
"Thus this generation of Southern Baptists is in historic succession of intent
and purpose as it endeavors to state for its time and theological climate
those articles of the Christian faith which are most surely held among us."
It is the
purpose of this statement of faith and message to set forth certain teachings
which we believe.