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Autonomy of the Local Church

In this second installment of the Baptist Distinctives series, Don Arndt explains the autonomy of the local church—the principle that all human authority for doctrine and practice resides within the congregation itself, not in external hierarchies like bishops, popes, or presbyteries. Unlike Episcopal or Presbyterian systems, Baptist congregationalism places final decision-making authority in the membership of the local church under Christ's headship. The teaching covers biblical support for this distinctive, showing that the local church has authority to handle discipline (Matthew 18:15-17), appoint leadership (Acts 6:1-7), commission missionaries (Acts 13:1-3), and regulate membership (1 Corinthians 5). Practical applications include the church's freedom to determine its own doctrines, ministries, budget, associations, and standards—all constrained only by Scripture, Baptist principles, and ultimate accountability to Christ. This autonomy requires congregational government, where the pastor leads, deacons assist, and the congregation affirms, maintaining the local church as the final earthly authority under the Lordship of Jesus Christ.

9222510375401
37:15
Sunday - PM
1 Corinthians 5:1-5; Matthew 18:15-17
English
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