A Jolly Folly?. Allan J. Macdonald
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Keach’s religious position, strongly Protestant and unashamedly anti–Roman Catholic is clear. His pro-Reformation writing may not differ much from other separatists and nonconformists of the time but he was clearly operating from the mentality of the Reformation as the most important guiding force in recent history.59
The Breach Repaired, Keach’s exposition to prove congregational singing, serves as another example of how he intertwined the Reformation with his aim of purifying the church. When Keach wrote The Breach Repaired in 1691, twenty-seven years after his initial primer appeared, he explicitly affirmed the vitality and relevance of the Reformation to his cause. He depicted the church as still in the process of Reformation, newly come out of “the Wilderness, or Popish Darkness and not so fully neither, as to be clear as the Sun, as in due time she shall.” Reformation, he argues, is and ever was a hard and difficult work, it being no easy thing to restore lost ordinances.
How then did Keach and other seventeenth century Baptists, such as Hercules Collins and John Spilsbury, treat Christmas in their worship? This is not easy to answer as there are virtually no extant writings on this subject by any seventeenth century Baptist. There are several passing references to events which took place on December 25, where the term “Christmas Day” is used, but as this was the social norm among the majority of the populace, it tells us little. Clearly, the scarcity of any written treatment of the subject tells us that it simply was not an issue in their church life. Arguments from silence must always be handled with caution, but what does this written silence imply? Was it the case that Christmas services formed an integral part of worship throughout their congregations and therefore was not an issue for discussion, or was it the case that Christmas services formed no part of worship throughout their congregations and so there existed unanimity on the issue? It is extremely likely to have been the latter. Baptists had consistently received a very bad press from paedo-baptists, whether Anglicans, Presbyterians, or Independents. It was commonplace for them to be portrayed as a threat and likened to the radical Zwickau Prophets and Thomas Müntzer, from the era of Luther and who appeared to have influenced the emerging Anabaptist movement. Throughout the seventeenth century, Baptists, especially Calvinistic Baptists, sought to demonstrate their orthodoxy to their paedo-baptist counterparts and this was one of the main reasons lying behind The First London Baptist Confession of Faith, published in 1644 prior to the Westminster Confession of Faith. There is no known dissent from Baptists to the Puritan outlawing of Christmas in Parliament. There is much in Baptist writings, such as Keach’s just referred to, which show their aversion to all things Roman Catholic.
The General Baptist, Thomas Grantham (1633–92), spoke of the suspicious nature of “festival days” including Easter:
And indeed the variety of the usages of Ancient Christians touching the Lent Fast, shews it to be an Innovation, and not of Divine Authority: No, the Observation of Easter itself is acknowledged by Socrates Scholasticus to have crept into the churches.60
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