The line of churches, which called themselves
Baptist, began in 1610 in Holland. It began with a man named John
Smyth who was a bishop in the Church of England. In 1606, after nine months
of soul searching and study of the New Testament he was convinced that the
doctrines and practices of the Church of England were not Biblical, and thus
he resigned his position as priest and left the church. Because of
persecution by the Anglican church of all who disagreed with it and who
refused to submit to its authority, John Smyth had to flee England. In
Amsterdam, he along with Thomas Helwys and thirty six others formed the
first Baptist church of Englishmen known to have stood for baptism of
believers only.
Smyth, believed that the only real apostolic
succession is a succession of Biblical New Testament truth, and not of
outward ordinances and visible organization such as the Church of England or
the Roman Church. He believed apostolic succession had been lost and the
only way to recover was to start again. He baptized himself and then the
others of his congregation. In only a few years however, the church had lost
all but ten members to the Mennonites and other groups in Holland. Smyth
died in 1612, and the church ended in Holland shortly thereafter with Helwy,
Thomas and John Murton returning to England as persecutions there had
lessened. History records that the members of this Baptist church went back
to England or remained in Holland and joined Mennoites. It did not produce a
succession of other churches, but those who founded it went on to establish
other Baptist churches in England.
Roger Williams is credited with founding the
first Baptist church on American soil. Williams graduated from Cambridge
University in 1627, and was apparently ordained in the Church of England. He
soon embraced "Separatists" ideas and decided to leave England. In 1631, he
arrived in Boston. In 1638, Williams made his way to what is now Providence,
Rhode Island, and there purchased some land from the Indians. Some of his
former congregation in Salem joined him and they established a colony. He
continued to read the New Testament, and became fully aware that infant
baptism, sprinkling for baptism, and allowing unsaved persons to be members
of the church was not Scriptural. Thus, resolving to follow the Lord's
commands in Truth, in March, 1639 he formed the first Baptist church on
American soil. He began by baptizing himself and then baptizing ten other
members. (From A Brief Survey Of Independent Fundamental Baptist Churches by
Cooper P. Abrams, III.)