by CBTS | Oct 23, 2023 | Announcements
NEWS RELEASE
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
October 23, 2023
Jon English Lee Appointed to ThM Program Director
Today Covenant Baptist Theological Seminary is pleased to announce the appointment of Dr. Jon English Lee to the position of ThM Program Director (part-time). Concerning Lee’s appointment, President Sam Waldron writes:
“Since coming on the board of CBTS a couple of years ago, Dr. Jon English Lee has shown himself to have both the heart to throw himself into the work of CBTS and the competence to do so with administrative skills. It is with great pleasure and gratitude that we announce that he is now being recognized for his selfless labors. With thankfulness to God, we announce his appointment as ThM Program Director.”
Dr. Sam Waldron
In addition to teaching the ThM Research & Methodology course, Dr. Lee will help place ThM students with a supervisor related to their area of study. Additionally, he will help bolster CBTSeminary’s library with academic titles that will solidify CBTS as an academic research center.
Jon English serves as Pastor of Discipleship for Morningview Baptist Church in Montgomery, Alabama, and will continue his shepherding responsibilities at Morningview while serving CBTSeminary part-time.
He has earned a Bachelor’s degree from Auburn University Montgomery, a Master of Divinity from The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, and a Ph.D. in Systematic and Historical Theology from SBTS. Jon English is a member of the Evangelical Theological Society and a professor at CBTSeminary. He teaches Decalogue & Sabbath in Redemptive History, ThM Research & Methodology, and Polemics.
Statement from Jon English Lee
“I am thrilled to join the team at CBTS. The mission of the seminary to join with local churches in the raising up of faithful men and women for ministry is dear to my heart. Having first joined the faculty in 2020, and then having served as a CBTS Board member for the last couple of years has only stirred my desire to see the next generation of ministers trained in Confessional Baptist Theology and Practice.
I’m especially excited to take the lead in overseeing the ThM program. Academic theology and advanced research are passions of mine. My own academic studies have shaped me into the Pastor and Theologian that I am today, and I look forward to passing on to the next generation of thinkers and teachers the same passion that God has placed within me.
With God’s help, I’m committed to seeing this program saturated with robust confessionalism, biblical fidelity, and pastoral sensitivity, to the end that God would be glorified by the raising up of faithful church leaders, both here and around the world. My prayer is that God’s name be praised and His church edified through our labors at the Seminary.”
The ThM Program at CBTS
Watch this brief video to learn more about the ThM Program at CBTS: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=e6_64_abnLA
To apply or get written information about our ThM, visit https://cbtseminary.org/thm/
About CBTSeminary
The vision of CBTSeminary is to see the church of the Lord Jesus Christ strengthened and expanded worldwide, to the end that Christ would be known, loved, and exalted. Its mission, therefore, is help the church to prepare men to undertake the full range of pastoral responsibilities they will face in serving Christ and His kingdom, and to equip Christians for effective service in the church. They do this work by providing rigorous academic training and by facilitating extensive pastoral mentoring.
To learn more about Covenant Baptist Theological Seminary, visit CBTSeminary.org.
by Austin McCormick | Oct 11, 2023 | Announcements
On October 5-6th, Covenant Baptist Theological Seminary had the privilege of hosting the annual Association of Reformed Theological Seminaries meeting in Owensboro. KY. ARTS is an accrediting organization and the mission of ARTS is to preserve and advance the academic quality, accountability, and improvement of institutions committed to educating students in the tenets of Reformed Theology.
Several representatives from CBTSeminary, along with representatives from the following ARTS member schools met in person to address relevant ARTS business: Birmingham Theological Seminary, Grace Bible Theological Seminary, Metro Atlanta Seminary, Metro Baltimore Seminary, Sangre de Cristo Seminary, and Western Reformed Seminary. Representatives from the following ARTS member schools were also able to join the meeting: Greenville Presbyterian Theological Seminary and Toronto Baptist Theological Seminary. In addition to these member schools, ARTS welcomed numerous affiliates to their annual meeting.
The administrative staff of Covenant Baptist Theological Seminary gives praise to the Lord for allowing CBTSeminary to host this event. Additionally, the CBTSeminary administrators are thankful to their host church, Grace Reformed Baptist Church (Owensboro, KY), for their continued prayers and support of the Seminary.














Austin McCormick is a Pastor of Covenant Baptist Church (Clarksville, TN). He holds a B.A. in Biblical Studies from Spurgeon College, a M.A. in Pastoral Studies and a M.Div from Covenant Baptist Theological Seminary. By God’s free and sovereign grace, Austin was saved early in his adulthood. He is married to Rachel, and together they have three children: Geneva, Benjamin, and Bristol.
by Michael Haykin | Oct 10, 2023 | Systematic Theology
Following the order of the Westminster Confession and the Savoy Declaration, the Second London Confession of Faith begins with a lengthy chapter on Scripture. In the words of the American Baptist authors L. Ross Bush and Tom J. Nettles, this chapter “contains the clearest confessional statement on Scripture in all of Christendom.”[1] Apart from an introductory sentence and a concluding phrase it virtually reproduces the parallel chapters of the Westminster Confession and the Savoy Declaration. The introductory sentence, though, is highly significant and a valuable gauge as to where the seventeenth-century Calvinistic Baptists stood with regard to the nature of Scripture.
“The Holy Scripture,” it states, “is the only sufficient, certain, and infallible rule of all saving Knowledge, Faith, and Obedience.”[2] This sentence describes the nature of Scripture by four carefully chosen terms. The first term, “only,” emphasizes that apart from the Scriptures there is no other source of ultimate religious authority. Further on in its statement on Scripture, the Second London Confession elaborates on this claim by stating that nothing is to be added to Scripture, “whether by new revelations of the Spirit, or traditions of men.”[3] In the historical context of the Confession, this statement would especially rule out the revelations of the Quakers, which their opponents felt were being elevated to authoritative status alongside Scripture.
Then this opening sentence of the Confession asserts that, while God does reveal himself in ways other than the Scriptures, for instance through the created realm, only Scripture is “sufficient” to “give that knowledge of God and his will which is necessary unto salvation.”[4] Or in the words of the Second London Confession 1.6: “The whole Counsel of God concerning all things necessary for his own Glory, Man’s Salvation, Faith, and Life, is either expressly set down or necessarily contained in the Holy Scripture.”[5] The written Scriptures are necessary for God to be properly glorified by men and women, as well as being vital for men and women to come to a saving knowledge of God, and then to develop a world-view (so Bush and Nettles interpret “faith”[6]) and lifestyle that is in accord with their salvation.
The next two terms of the opening sentence of this Article on Scripture are similar, but not identical, in their import. Scripture is “certain,” that is, it does not contain error. Bush and Nettles consider this term to be equivalent to the word “inerrant” as it is currently used in evangelical circles to mean that which is totally truthful. Scripture is also said to be “infallible,” a term that has a long history of usage in Christian theology, and which identifies Scripture as possessing the quality of being entirely trustworthy and reliable.[7]
Given the very real threat posed by the Quaker movement to Calvinistic Baptist churches, it seems most probable that the strengthening of this statement on Scripture is a definite response to this situation. In their emphasis on Scripture as the supreme arbiter for the Christian life, the Calvinistic Baptists were reflecting their Puritan heritage, for “Puritanism was first and foremost a movement centered in Scripture.”[8] Thus, from the Calvinistic Baptist point of view, the Quakers were guilty of making an unbiblical cleavage between the Spirit and the Word. As Benjamin Keach declared in 1681, in a direct allusion to the Quakers: “Many are confident they have the Spirit, Light, and Power when ’tis all meer Delusion. The Spirit always leads and directs according to the written Word: “He shall bring my Word,” saith Christ, “to your remembrance” [cf. John 14:26].”[9]
Lest it be thought that the seventeenth-century Calvinistic Baptists, in their desire to emphasize the authority of the Scriptures, went to the opposite extreme and depreciated the importance of the work of the Spirit in the Christian life, one needs to note the words of the Second London Confession 1.5, where it is stated that “our full persuasion and assurance of the infallible truth” of the Scriptures comes neither from “the testimony of the Church of God” nor from the “heavenliness of the matter” of the Scriptures, the “efficacy of [their] Doctrine,” and “the Majesty of [their] Stile.” Rather it is only “the inward work of the Holy Spirit, bearing witness by and with the Word in our Hearts” that convinces believers that God’s Word is indeed what it claims to be.[10]
[1] Baptists and the Bible. The Baptist doctrines of biblical inspiration and religious authority in historical perspective (Chicago: Moody Press, 1980), 62.
[2] Second London Confession 1.1 (Lumpkin, Baptist Confessions, 248). The following analysis of this sentence is indebted to Bush and Nettles, Baptists and the Bible, 65-72.
[3] Second London Confession 1.6 (Lumpkin, Baptist Confessions, 250).
[4] Second London Confession 1.1 (Lumpkin, Baptist Confessions, 248).
[5] Second London Confession 1.6 (Lumpkin, Baptist Confessions, 250).
[6] Baptists and the Bible, 68.
[7] Baptists and the Bible, 70. For this definition of the terms “inerrant” and “infallible”, see J. I. Packer, “Infallibility and Inerrancy of the Bible” in Sinclair B. Ferguson, David F. Wright, and J. I. Packer, eds., New Dictionary of Theology (Downers Grove, Illinois: InterVaristy Press, 1988), 337. See also idem, ‘Fundamentalism’ and the Word of God. Some Evangelical Principles (London: Inter-Varsity Fellowship, 1958), 94-96.
[8] Richard Dale Land, “Doctrinal Controversies of English Particular Baptists (1644-1691) as Illustrated by the Career and Writings of Thomas Collier” (Unpublished D. Phil. Thesis, Regent’s Park College, Oxford University, 1979), 205.
[9] Tropologia: A Key to Open Scripture-Metaphors (London: Enoch Prosser, 1681), II, 312.
[10] Second London Confession 1.5 (Lumpkin, Baptist Confessions, 250). For the importance of balance in this area, see the remarks of D. Martyn Lloyd-Jones, Authority (1958 ed.; repr. Edinburgh: The Banner of Truth Trust, 1984), 62-64.

Born in England of Irish and Kurdish parents, Michael A.G. Haykin serves as professor of church history & biblical spirituality. Haykin has a B.A. in Philosophy from the University of Toronto (1974), a Master of Religion from Wycliffe College, the University of Toronto (1977), and a Th.D. in Church History from Wycliffe College and the University of Toronto (1982). Haykin and his wife, Alison, have two grown children: Victoria and Nigel.
He is the author of a number of books, including The Spirit of God: The Exegesis of 1 and 2 Corinthians in the Pneumatomachian Controversy of the Fourth Century (E. J. Brill, 1994); One heart and one soul: John Sutcliff of Olney, his friends, and his times (Evangelical Press, 1994); Kiffin, Knollys and Keach: Rediscovering Our English Baptist Heritage (Reformation Today Trust, 1996); ‘At the Pure Fountain of Thy Word’: Andrew Fuller as an Apologist (Paternoster Press, 2004); Jonathan Edwards: The Holy Spirit in Revival (Evangelical Press, 2005); The God who draws near: An introduction to biblical spirituality (Evangelical Press, 2007).
Course taught for CBTS: Biblical Spirituality.