I few years ago I became aware that Norwich Central Baptist Church had a name-sake in America; well, near enough – it’s actually called Central Baptist Church, Norwich and the “Norwich” here is the Norwich just off the West Coast, not far north of New York. CBCN is placed in that part of America populated by early English settlers; it is thick with place names taken from English towns and cities: Canterbury, Colchester, Marlborough, Glastonbury, Coventry, Exeter, Andover, Manchester, Portsmouth, and of course Norwich. (I guess they must have run out of English place names as they moved west!) Although I have known about CBCN for a while, it’s only very recently that I’d thought I’d have a snoop at their web site. (I have to admit it; looking at other people’s stuff on the web still feels like entering someone’s private home)
Externally the building CBCN use is a grander version of the traditional style that Dereham Road Baptist church left behind when they merged with St Mary’s Baptist church in 2003 to become the current “Norwich Central Baptist Church”. Like NCBC’s current building CBCN mixes classical and medieval styles. The interior of CBCN’s building is pleasingly immaculate and well cared for – they appear to love their building; definitely a point in their favour as far as I’m concerned.
Like NCBC, CBCN are traditional Baptists who embrace the local church concept and the separation of church and state. But therein is the paradox, the same paradox found at NCBC when it was St Mary’s Baptist church: Viz: Although emerging from a background of anti-establishment dissent the church gives outward signals of being well linked to the establishment. At CBCN established styles of architecture are supplemented with ministerial gowns suggesting a state sponsored separation of laity and clergy. In the case of our own St Mary’s Baptist church the establishment look grew over time as the church became better connected with civic life; increasing numbers of its members signed up as pillars of society; MPs, Sheriffs, Lord Mayors, councilman, committee members, business grandees etc.
Looking at CBCN’s photo gallery I would have said that many Christians today would regard them as unfashionably traditional and formal in the way they do their church. For example, unlike NCBC they have made no attempt to get rid of their wooden pews even though it is likely they are a wealthy church who would have no trouble financing new seats. If anything they seem to be proud of their very churchy building, traditions and formality. There is an irony here: What we over on this side of the Atlantic regard as a fashionable "swinging" style of church has probably been, in most cases, imported from America. Today’s fashionable quasi-charismatic Christians are more likely to prefer flat worship warehouses to spires, pinnacles and naves, exuberant emotional worship to formal liturgy, patriarchal and impassioned preachers to men in establishment ermine, and the inner light of faith to reason. I may caricature a little here, but the tendencies are there and NCBC has been influenced by them*: I well remember how many worshippers from Dereham Road Baptist Church instinctually reacted against the idea of moving to St Mary’s Baptist Church. I have always suspected that this was a reaction to the establishment and traditional ambiance that pervaded the church building before it was refurbished; like all things that are just out of vogue St Mary's Baptist seemed intolerably unfashionable and a newer and fresher version of Christianity was being sought for in an era of post-civic, post establishment Christianity. This was part of a swing away from the institutionally ecclesiastical in favour of the esoteric and experiential side of Christianity.
CBCN, in contrast, gives every appearance of being completely at ease with their identity and their unassuming spirituality. Signs that have reached my door suggest that in America there are still large swathes of very traditional looking church, of both fundamentalist and liberal persuasions, secure in their size and strength with no intention of following their brash and noisy fellow countryman who major in a charismatic in-yer-face spirituality.
By some standards CBCN may look unfashionable but they are go-ahead enough to have a female minister and I suspect they have a fairly modern interpretation of Christianity. Compare that with the worship warehouse movement which can sometimes be very patriarchal; I only need mention Terry Virgo in this country and Mark Driscoll in America - and there’s a lot, lot worse out there too: In the swing away from the ecclesiastical to the esoteric, the ecclesiastical may actually reassert itself in the new churches with the guise of a so-called "Restored Church" with its stress on the authority of leaders. Moreover, fundamentalist bigotry and backwardness are so often found in the worship warehouses; it is irony that it is amongst the traditionalist fellowships that Christian values of freedom of conscience and tolerance are being cherished and preserved for the future.
* I'm certainly not suggesting the influences are all bad
* I'm certainly not suggesting the influences are all bad
UPDATE Feb 2022
Central Baptist church closed at the end of May 2020 and the premises closed. According to their website:
Central Baptist Church will be
meeting with our brothers and sisters at First Congregational Church in
Norwich town beginning June 7, 2020 as we work towards a unified church
together.