Simple question as I am considering both congregations.
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As a teenager was confirmed United Methodist then was baptized as an adult in a conservative Baptist Church. You will get grounded in the Word and encouraged to witness to others (and share your own testimony) more likely among conservative Baptist fellowship.Simple question as I am considering both congregations.
I have only attended the Baptist church here in Michigan once, but I am attending a conservative Baptist college online (Liberty University out of Lynchburg, Virginia).
Bryan if you like Liberty I'm kind of surprised you also feel comfortable with the UMC. The differences are pretty wide.
The part that is most difficult or even offensive for persons entering the Baptist church is that many of those churches will require you to be rebaptized if you weren't baptized by immersion or, in some cases, if you weren't baptized in their denomination or even their local church.
Methodist, Presbyterians, and many others who see baptism as an unrepeatable sacrament find this practice disturbing.
Like I said, they've never told me that my theology is wrong and I've never been forced to write anything from the perspective that theirs is right. So, we get along well.
On the other hand, going to a secular state college would require that I accept their progressive dogma in every way. I tried that route before I went to Liberty. In the first semester, I was forced to write papers based on assumptions that I do not accept. It was infuriating.
I'm glad it works for you. But really, have you attended a secular state college? My daughter is a senior at a well known state university and I can't say that she's ever been pressured to subscribe any particular "progressive" beliefs or any beliefs in particular for that matter. Honestly I'm not sure what you mean by that. What progressive beliefs are you worried you might be pressured to support?
At the same time United Methodist doctrinal standards are primarily about faith basics. The UMC doesn't try to tell you what to believe in areas that I would call minutia.
That is one of the best things about being Methodist. I wish we did a better job of communicating those faith basics, but the lack of control over minor details is refreshing compared to what I see in other churches.
I agree. When I was a Baptist there was always someone trying to tell me what I had to believe all based on their own interpretation of the "essential" doctrines. Yet nothing was written down that said those views were essential.
I hear that a lot from my Baptist and non-denom friends. They find a verse and declare that to be the last word on something, even if you can show them that they are taking it out of context. Then, they demand that you show them a verse that opposes their prooftext if you continue to say that they are misunderstanding it. Finally, they declare that you are "making up scripture" and "doing what is right your own eyes" if you try to use reason.
Its good to be Wesleyan because we can relax in the scriptures and use our God-given intellect to understand them.