The Free Will Baptist Association is a fellowship
of evangelical believers united in extending the witness of Christ and
the building of His Church throughout the world. The rise of Free Will
Baptists can be traced to the influence of Baptists of Arminian persuasion
who settled in the colonies from England.
The association sprang up on two fronts at almost the same time.
The southern line, or Palmer movement, traces its beginnings to the
year 1727 when one Paul Palmer organized a church at Chowan, North Carolina.
Palmer had previously ministered in New Jersey and Maryland, having
been baptized in a congregation which had moved from Wales to a trace
on the Delaware River in northern Pennsylvania.
The northern line, or Randall movement, had its beginnings with
a congregation organized by Benjamin Randall June 30, 1780, in New Durham,
New Hampshire. Both lines of Free Will Baptists taught the doctrines
of free grace, free salvation and free will, although from the first there
was no organizational connection between them.
The northern line expanded more rapidly in the beginning and
extended its outreach into the West and Southwest. In 1910-1911 this
body of Free Will Baptists merged with the Northern Baptist denomination,
taking along more than half its 1,100 churches and all denominational
property, including several major colleges. On December 28, 1916, at
Pattonsburg, Missouri, representatives of remnant churches in the Randall
movement reorganized into the Cooperative General Association of Free
Will Baptists.
Free Will Baptists in the southeastern United States, having
descended from the Palmer foundation, had often manifested fraternal
relationships with Free Will Baptists of the Randall movement in the
north and west; but the slavery question and the Civil War prevented
formal union between them. The churches in the southern line were organized
into various associations and conferences from the beginning and had
finally organized into a General Conference by 1921. These congregations
were not affected by the merger of the northern movement with the Northern
Baptists.
Now that the remnants of the Randall movement had reorganized
into the Cooperative General Association and the Palmer movement had
organized into the General Conference, it was inevitable that fusion
between these two groups of Free Will Baptists would finally come. In
Nashville, Tennessee, on November 5, 1935, representatives of these two
groups met and organized the National Association of Free Will Baptists.
This body adopted a Treatise which set forth the basic doctrines
and described the faith and practice that had characterized Free Will
Baptists through the years. Having been revised on several occasions,
it serves as a guideline for a associational fellowship which comprises
more than 2,400 churches in 42 states and 14 foreign countries.
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