Mark G. McKim was educated at the University of New Brunswick, Acadia Divinity College of Acadia University, and Boston University. He has more than thirty-five years experience in pastoring Baptist churches across Canada. He has also taught in Canada, the United States, and Asia and published extensively in theology, church history, and apologetics with a particular focus on secularization and the church. Currently he is an adjunct professor of theology at McMaster Divinity College in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.
""Baptists hold that baptism is for believers only, but most of them downgrade it into being only a symbol. By careful scrutiny of past writings in England, America, and Canada, Mark McKim demonstrates that the early Particular Baptists, while rejecting any idea of baptismal regeneration, saw it as a distinct means of grace. Individual scripture passages and an overall biblical understanding, he concludes, vindicate their view of baptism as a place where God is powerfully at work."" --David Bebbington, emeritus professor of history, University of Stirling ""This extensive, and indeed well-nigh exhaustive, study of baptism--its meaning and practice--in Scripture and in the Anglo-American Baptist world is a superb study of this initiatory rite. It should be required reading, in my opinion, for all who give leadership in Baptist churches and centers of theological education."" --Michael A. G. Azad Haykin, professor of church history, The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary