Mahoning Baptist AssociationThe Mahoning Baptist Association was an association of Baptist churches that was established in 1820 in Ohio's Mahoning Valley.[1] Two prominent early Restoration Movement leaders, Alexander Campbell and Walter Scott, were closely affiliated with the Mahoning Association.[1][2][3]: 675 The Association was dissolved in 1830.[1] HistoryThe Mahoning Baptist Association was established in 1820.[1] Even though the Philadelphia Confession of Faith was considered its "organic law," the Association was "filled with ideas of religious reformation" and both open discussion and doctrinal diversity were accepted.[1] A congregation in Wellsburg, West Virginia, which was formed by Alexander Campbell after he left the Brush Run Church and the Redstone Baptist Association, became a member of the Association in 1823.[2] Campbell's journal the Christian Baptist was well received in the Association, as were his debates.[1] As a result, "the association heartily adopted the very same ecumenical, reforming views" in 1824 that had led to Campell's break with the Redstone Association.[1] Another early Restoration Movement leader, Walter Scott, was hired by the Mahoning Association as an evangelist in 1827.[1][3]: 675 Within three years he brought more than 3,000 converts into the movement.[3]: 675 The Association disbanded in 1830, which Campbell believed to be premature.[1] Some historians consider the dissolution of the Mahoning Association to mark the beginning of the Disciples of Christ, because that is the point when they became truly independent.[1] References
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