The Confessional Baptist Association, previously known as the Association of Reformed Baptist Churches in America, is an association of Reformed Baptist churches in the United States. The headquarters is in Mansfield, Texas.
History
On November 12–13, 1996, fifteen Reformed Baptist churches met at Heritage Church in Fayetteville, Georgia[1] to begin the planning of a national association of churches. Four months later on March 11, 1997, the Association of Reformed Baptist Churches of America was founded in Mesa, Arizona.[2] The union was founded in 1997 as the Association of Reformed Baptist Churches of America by 24 member churches from 14 states.[3][4][5][6][7]
In 2022, the organization moved to legally dissolve the current organization, and created a new organization headquartered in Mansfield, Texas named "Confessional Baptist Association" along with a new set of bylaws for the new association. In 2023, the association held its first general assembly at Oak Grove Baptist Church in Angier, North Carolina, which consisted of the 13 founding member churches of the new association.[citation needed]
Theology
The association's churches all subscribe to the 1689 Baptist Confession of Faith.[5][8] The association's General Assembly has noted that their adherence to this Confession means "the model for (association) churches is Puritan and not one of a number of competing contemporary ones."[9]
In 2000, ARBCA merged with the Reformed Baptist Mission Services (RBMS), a foreign missions organization.[1] RBMS, though founded 12 years before the ARBCA,[12] had acted as the foreign mission arm of the association, until the dissolution of ARBCA in 2022.[4]
The mission of CBA is to assist local churches in the planting of Reformed Baptist churches that subscribe to the 1689 Baptist Confession of Faith.[14]
In 2023, at the 1st General Assembly, the Confessional Baptist Association conditionally agreed to financially support Redeemer Reformed Baptist Church in Belton, Texas which is an existing church plant of Emmanuel Reformed Baptist Church in Georgetown, Texas. This funding was provided to temporarily assist the pastoral efforts of the Emmanuel Reformed Baptist Church's elders (in their search for a candidate for church planter), until the association's next opportunity to discuss a long-term funding plan for the church plant at the next annual general assembly.
^Although Presbyterianism itself originated in Scotland, those denominations stand out as having a more prominent Scottish heritage and/or connection with Scottish Presbyterian denominations.
^Those denominations allow member churches to be more diverse as regards the reformed tradition that they adhere to.