Stiver Abstract
Baptists were
born with modernity in the early seventeenth century and in many ways fit
almost hand-in-glove. Baptists have particularly flourished in the twentieth
century, with Southern Baptists becoming the largest Protestant denomination in
the United States and especially dominant in the Midwest and the South. The question before us
is, what might the breakdown of the modern paradigm
mean for Baptists who do not wish simply to hitch their theological wagon to
modernity? After setting out the contours of a constructive postmodernism, I
give an example, namely, the Baptist distinctive of freedom, of how Baptist
thought and practice can be reconfigured in such a way that its deepest values
are not lost but highlighted in new ways.