Baptist Church of the Kingdom

Jump to navigation Jump to search
Baptist Church of the Kingdom
Baptista Regni Ecclesia (Latin)
Kanisa la Kibaptisti la Ufalme (Seran)
Salt Lake Temple, Utah - Sept 2004-2.jpg
ClassificationRestorationist
Scripture
  • Bible
  • Book of Malaika
  • Book of Mwili
TheologyNontrinitarianism
President... Al-Kito
Region
Language
  • Seran
  • Latin
FounderAmani Al-Kito
Origin1842; 182 years ago
Kito'Bahari, Unified Sera
Members302,395 (2022)
Church buildings36
Hospitals15
Nursing homes37
Primary schools54
Secondary schools30

The Baptist Church of the Kingdom, Baptista Regni Ecclesia in Latin and Kanisa la Kibaptisti la Ufalme in Seran; informally known as the Kingdom Baptists, is a restorationist, nontrinitarian Christian that is the 2nd-largest denomination in Wallenland. The church is headquartered in Wallenland in Mahali pa Nyota and has established congregations and built temples on all major islands of the Wallene archipelago.

The church was founded by Amani Al-Kito in the Seran capital, Kito'Bahari, in 1842. Under Al-Kito's leadership, the church's headquarters moved successively to Lobeke and Mbanda until Amani Al-Kito's death in 1880 and a resultant succession crisis, the majority of his followers sided with his son, Kwame Al-Kito, and in 1890 they had entirely migrated to Wallenland to escape persecution and use Wallenland as a platform for missions due to whaling in the Cantalle Ocean which interested various people of different backgrounds in preparation of the 'Days of the Kingdom'. Following the establishment of Mahali pa Nyota (Wallenland), Kwame Al-Kito and his descendants continued the church's growth with 32 settlements, 15 hospitals, 37 nursing homes, and 84 schools across Wallenland.

Church theology includes that Jesus Christ was not the son of God but merely a prophet and the denial of the Trinity. Faith is considered a personal affair between humans and God, so religious rites such as baptisms are solely decided by the person. The church has a open canon of three scriptures: the Bible, though in the church's Great Kingdom version; the Book of Malaika; and the Book of Mwili. Other than the Bible, the majority of the church canon consists of material the church's members believe to have been revealed by God to Amani Al-Kito including commentary and new commandments in mainly the Book of Mwili.

Members of church believe that the church president is a modern-day messenger of God and leads the church by the will and direction of God. The president is an inheritable position and heads a hierarchical structure from the church's Cabinet to regional districts, led by arch-bishops, and local wards, led by bishops. Male members may be ordained to the priesthood, chosen personally by their bishop, provided that they lived and would continue to live by the standards of the church. Female members cannot be ordained into priesthood but in recent times, they have taken leadership roles in the church's organisations.

Both men and women can become missionaries. Following the church's extensive missionary program, missionaries follow 5 years of training in the study of the scriptures, growth in their connection to God through prayer, linguistic and medical study, and better understanding of church doctrine. Missionaries are taught to sexually abstain and continue to observe church Sabbath and fasting. Charities, care homes, hospitals and infirmaries are personally connected to the missionary program.

The church has been criticised throughout its history. Modern criticism includes disputes over the church's historical claims, treatment of women, and finances. The church's practice of polygamy is still a contentious matter. Though polygamy has been forbidden since 1944, a male church member may have madames under a devoted union.

History

Beliefs and Practices

Organisation

Controversy

Kingdom Baptist settlements

A series of settlements have been established since the Kingdom Baptists emigrated to Wallenland with 32 settlements founded by the church. These towns and places have been named after places and people in the Bible, the Book of Malaika and the Book of Mwili, after church leaders and prominent clergy, or after elements of the church's history.

The first settlements of the church were in Unified Sera but the settlers were driven off by the locals. However, the church remained in Unified Sera as Amani Al-Kito believed that the persecution was a test by God for the coming days but after his death and a four year-long succession crisis, Kwame Al-Kito relocated to the outskirts of Fellhaven and began trading with the locals to fund the church's migration, though some resorted to scamming and burglary which resulted in several lynchings, yet funding was successful with the church departing from Fellhaven in December, 1889.