Yes, it is
bizarre if PBs refers to groups who taught various heresies such as works salvation, conditionalism, free-willism, universal atonement etc and then claims to be these people's spiritual descendants. It's false too. Who taught the same doctrine as the PBs do in church history? Is there any group before the 1700s? Did not the founders of the PB groups come from calvinist and general baptists circles? Or do you mean they came from amish groups (they are anabaptists)?
As I said, in order for the statement of literally being "the church that Christ set up" you would have to have a succession of known and named fathers who passed on the very same doctrine from the days of the apostle's until today. Otherwise it is just a fantastic claim with no bearing whatsoever in reality.
It is remarkable that you ask me to read a booklet when you have refused to even look at the link I provided you earlier about eternal justification. You do not want to read others material but you want that they read yours? You said
"I do not take John Calvin's thoughts or any othe man's thoughts as athority, only the inspired scriptures of the KJV and Greek transulaters". (as seen in this post:
http://christianchat.com/598729-post26.html <-link). So, why do you take a man's word, J.M. Carroll's words, as authority in church history matters?
I know about The Trail of Blood. As for its claims they are not undisputed, not even among likeminded baptist groups. From this booklet it is clear that the groups that these PBs want to call its "ancestors" did not have the same faith and doctrine as the PBs. Even the arminian methodists are named in the booklet in positive words, called "genuine... spiritual religion". Do the methodists have the same doctrine as the PBs? Bah! The case of "baptist sucession" simply cannot be made.