General Baptists
, which robustly defended universal religious liberty against coerced conformity.[3][4] Early General Baptists faced severe ecclesiastical and civil opposition, including imprisonment and charges of heresy, yet their insistence on soul competency—the individual accountability to God—and separation of church from state laid foundational principles for later Baptist expansions and broader religious toleration debates.[3] Over time, General Baptists influenced denominational developments, merging in 1891 with the New Connection of General Baptists to form the Baptist Union of Great Britain, while in America, related groups like Free Will Baptists perpetuated Arminian Baptist emphases amid the Second Great Awakening.[2] Their defining characteristics include a commitment to scriptural authority as the sole rule of faith, priesthood of all believers, and missions outreach, though internal theological drifts toward Unitarianism in the 18th century prompted orthodox revivals and distinctions from liberalizing factions.[1][2] Today, General Baptist convictions persist in associations like the General Association of General Baptists, prioritizing evangelism and personal conversion over rigid predestinarian frameworks.[2]