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The Wapping Baptists

Nathan Sherman John Coffey

$71.95   $60.93

Paperback

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English
Pickwick Publications
23 April 2026
Church history often focuses on significant events or individuals, while neglecting the everyday lives of ordinary church members. The Wapping Baptists explores the culture and convictions of a congregation. While the church has attracted some attention from historians--primarily, because of the published works of one of its pastors, Hercules Collins--this book explores the interplay between doctrine and devotion. That is, beyond its pastors, who were the people? What did they value? How did they apply these values? And then, how did they document their decisions and actions? This examination reveals a congregation who recorded itself in its minute book as a people committed to baptistic convictions such as believer's baptism, church membership, congregationalist polity, the discipline of unrepentant sin, and the autonomy and internal authority of their church. However, they were also embedded within their community as people with jobs, houses, families, and lives beyond the walls of the meetinghouse. The Wapping church, then, becomes an ideal test case for understanding Baptists, Dissent, and social life in the East End of early modern London.
By:  
Foreword by:  
Imprint:   Pickwick Publications
Country of Publication:   United States
Volume:   38
Dimensions:   Height: 229mm,  Width: 152mm,  Spine: 19mm
Weight:   476g
ISBN:   9798385268146
Series:   Monographs in Baptist History
Pages:   354
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Nathan Sherman is a Baptist pastor in Albuquerque, New Mexico. He has a MDiv from the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, and his PhD (University of Leicester) focuses on the theological convictions and social realities of the early modern Wapping Baptist church.

Reviews for The Wapping Baptists

""Nathan Sherman has written a microhistory of the Baptist church at Wapping, a growing suburb of London on the River Thames, during the later seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries. Thorough examination of the church book together with careful research in many other sources has enabled him to identify no fewer than eighty-two certain and one hundred and sixty further probable members. Consequently, he can illuminate the interactions of the members with each other and with their pastor, the distinguished author Hercules Collins. The result is a vivid picture of how ordinary Baptists embodied their faith in a time of active persecution and insecure toleration."" --David Bebbington, Emeritus Professor of History, University of Stirling ""Nathan Sherman has produced a fascinating account of the Baptist congregation in Wapping in the late seventeenth and early eighteenth centuries, based on a detailed examination of their church book. The conclusions that he is able to draw about the day-to-day running of the church, the social and economic state of its members, and its relations with its pastors provide valuable insights into the dissenting and Baptist experience of those turbulent years and make a significant contribution to a better understanding of early particular Baptist church life."" --Robert Strivens, Pastor, Bradford Upon Avon Baptist Church ""Nathan Sherman's The Wapping Baptists examines one of London's most important Baptist congregations between the Restoration and the Glorious Revolution, situating the ministers and the people in a theological, ecclesiastical, and social context that illuminates early Baptist life in London with extraordinary detail. Sherman recreates a church whose dynamic ministers, such as Hercules Collins, shepherded a flock of Londoners from various walks of life, all of whom are brought to life through Sherman's expansive and in-depth research in ways not previously attempted or achieved in a church history. The Wapping Baptists establishes a standard that will enhance the study of church minute books for years to come."" --Timothy Whelan, Emeritus Professor of English, Georgia Southern University ""Historical works tend to focus on leaders, sometimes overlooking the lives of ordinary people. Nathan Sherman's deep dive into the Wapping Church Book recognizes the significant role Hercules Collins played among early Particular Baptists. But it reminds us that Baptist churches are first and foremost congregational. In addition to providing historical and sociological insights into one of the earliest Baptist congregations, Sherman's work will also encourage readers who share the same ecclesiological commitments as these early Baptists."" --Geoffrey Chang, Associate Professor of Church History and Historical Theology, Midwestern Baptist Theological Seminary ""In The Wapping Baptists, Nathan Sherman brings to life the hidden world of an ordinary London congregation. Through meticulous archival research, he illuminates the textures of seventeenth- and eighteenth-century church life--membership, discipline, preaching, and pastoral care--with clarity and warmth. This book reminds us that church history is ultimately the story of unknown men and women who 'though dead, yet speaketh' (Heb. 11:4), thanks to Sherman's careful recovery."" --Caleb Morell, Assistant Pastor, Capitol Hill Baptist Church


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