Title supplied by cataloger. The term "Missionary Baptist" originated in the early 1800s during the rise of the modern missions movement, which was a movement among Baptists (as well as other Christian denominations) to organize para-church institutions for the promotion and funding of evangelism, Bible and literature publication, schools, charitable and social work, and other religious causes. This movement created extensive controversy among Baptists, drawing harsh criticism from those who considered these new institutions subversive of traditional Baptist polity. Those who opposed the innovations became known as anti-missions, and those advocating them as missionary Baptists. Many of the "missionary Baptist" churches and associations eventually adopted the epithet "missionary" into their official names, and, what started as a descriptive term became a new religious denomination - Missionary Baptists. However, the name never became universally used among the advocates of the missionary institution. View of New Bethel Missionary Baptist Church, located on the corner of 7904 Hooper Avenue and Nadeau Street. It shows a cream-color building with a brown roof and several windows and doors; a wheelchair access ramp is visible along the side of the church. Above one of the entrances, large letters read: "New Bethel Missionary Baptist Church of Los Angeles - Rev. Frank J. Watson, Pastor". Photo dated: December 2005.
Type
image
Format
1 photographic print :color ;11 x 16 cm. Photographic prints
New Bethel Missionary Baptist Church (Los Angeles, Calif.) Baptist church buildings--California--Los Angeles Church buildings--California--Los Angeles Streets--California--Los Angeles Los Angeles Photographers Collection photographs Jeff Allen Houses of Worship Collection photographs
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