BAPTISM is, we doubt not, immersion. This is taught by all Greek
usage of the terms chosen by the spirit of inspiration to
designate this action. It is admitted by almost every learned
Paedobaptist that until the time of Christ the word baptizo had
no other meaning. It required that "the element encompass its
object."
Nor does the use of this word by heathen or Christian Greeks, in
the ages immediately succeeding apostolic times, encourage the
idea of a changed import adopted by inspired penmen, which some
vainly imagine. Any one maintaining this change of import in
inspired writ, is bound to prove that, in one or more instances,
the word is divinely used in another sense, the previous import
(immersion) being certainly inadmissible. There is not such an
occurrence.
On Paedobaptist testimony, the immersion of "pots, cups, brasen
vessels," yea, of beds, was a Jewish custom, in order to
cleanliness, or purification from ceremonial defilement. So also
immersion on returning from the market, or from a crowd, and
often by many before eating. Facts, on Paedobaptist testimony,
prove that the rich Pharisee, who expected our Saviour to
baptize himself before eating, might have ample provision for
immersion, and that the climate, clothing, and habits of Syrian
Jews, made them ever ready for the practice of immersion without
indelicacy or injury. Consequently the record of great numbers
baptized by John, or by the disciples of Jesus, and the
non-record as to whether or how they changed their garments,
proves nothing against immersion. Bathings in the Jordan, now
annually and more frequently taking place, testify its present
suitability for immersion; nor can the idea that a river,
flowing hundreds of miles, was either too deep or too shallow
for immersion, be rationally entertained. The sufficiency of
water and baths in Jerusalem, Samaria, and Damascus, for the
immersion of those whose baptism in the oracles of God is
recorded, has abundant Paedobaptist and every other
acknowledgment.
The baptism of Israel in the cloud and in the sea, and the
baptism of the Spirit by Christ, are not literal baptisms in
water. By the sea and the cloud unitedly the children of Israel
were covered. That the disciples as to their bodies, on the day
of Pentecost, were not encompassed with the emblematic fire, is
incapable of proof, whilst all admit that their souls were, as
it were, immersed in the divine Spirit. The fulfillment of a
predicted and abundant pouring might therefore constitute an
immersion as to body and soul, or that which by no other word
can be more properly designated. A prediction of the sprinkling
of water, or pouring out of the Spirit by the divine Being on
men, is no proof that the word which in the New Testament
describes the divinely enjoined action of man towards man, is
either sprinkling, or pouring, or immersion. The expression of
Peter, "Can any man forbid water?" cannot be proved to mean more
than, "Can any man forbid baptism?" nor dare any who are
regardful of truth affirm that the jail at Philippi was not,
like other Eastern jails, supplied with a bath.
The fact that the Greek words baptizo, baptisma, and baptismos,
underwent no change of import when used by the inspired writers,
is evident from such expressions as, that John baptized "in
Jordan," and "in Aenon, near to Salim, because there was much
water there;" that Philip and the eunuch "went down both into
the water;" that after Philip had baptized the eunuch, they came
up "out of the water;" that we are buried with Christ "by
baptism," and "in baptism," in which also we "are risen with
him." If the words buried and risen are here used figuratively,
there is an allusion to the literal immersion and emersion which
had taken place. The calling of the overwhelming sufferings of
Christ and his apostles, a baptism, is consistent only with its
being immersion. The common and necessary use of a word meaning
to immerse, and the marked distinction of this from sprinkling
or pouring, would necessarily prevent its change from one to the
others, or to meaning the use of a liquid, as some have
maintained, "in any way."
If inspired writers had used the Greek word in another sense,
surely the practice among Christians of immediately subsequent
times would have corroborated this. But neither the Greeks, who
are supposed best to understand their own language, nor the
Latins, nor any barbarians, afford the slightest support to a
supposed alteration by divine or any other warrant of the import
of baptizo and the words derived from it. Nor does Jewish
proselyte baptism, whether it originated before, or, as many
eminent Paedobaptists believe, after apostolic times, give the
least countenance to anything short of immersion as baptism.
The first recorded departure from immersion for baptism is an
acknowledged deviation--an acknowledged imperfection--which, it
was believed, required God's mercy and special necessity for its
adoption. This took place at about the middle of the third
century. Baptism was then believed requisite in order to have
the certainty of salvation. A dying man might be incapable of
being baptized. A substitute for baptism in such circumstances
was admitted, with allowed disadvantages if life should be
spared. This at length has been palmed off as baptism, as the
very thing that God requires, or all that from any he demands!
And while there is such a cross in being once immersed for
Christ's sake, especially in these cold and northern regions,
the convenience and decency of sprinkling are lauded to the
skies. And by some who speak of immersion as if it could not be
performed without a breach of delicacy, it is maintained that
immersion is one of the actions embraced in the word divinely
chosen when "baptizing" is enjoined.
The idea of necessary indecency in the "one immersion," or of
danger unless in affliction, or special circumstances, the
practice of our own land and other countries is continually and
loudly condemning. Where danger or incapacity really prohibit we
believe God does not demand; but he authorizes no substitute in
these circumstances. Nor is a more paltry subterfuge conceivable
than that of pouring of a little water on the face is
substantially baptizing a person. However great or little the
importance we attach to baptism, we are bound, in observing it,
to practise what God enjoins. For the servant of an earthly
master to perform his own likings, instead of his master's
biddings, it would be an insult which none would brook. The
pretext for sprinkling and pouring that they are not forbidden,
is a scandalizing of what God has enjoined, by choosing a human
invention to the rejection of a divine appointment. If God is
infinite in wisdom and love, a stern adherence to his precepts
is our wisdom and profit. "This is the love of God, that we keep
his commandments; and his commandments are not grievous."
On the subjects of baptism greater length, and some reference to
our worthy author's erring assertions, are requisite. The
divinely approved subjects of Christian baptism can be
ascertained only from the New Testament. Christ's commission,
confirmed as to its import by previous and especially by
subsequent practice, and by every reference to this ordinance in
the oracles of God, is "the law," and "the testimony." An
attempt to prove the rightful subjects of Christian baptism from
God's word and Jewish proselyte baptism, is to imitate the
Popish appeal to Scripture and tradition. Besides, no man upon
earth knows that proselyte baptism had an existence in apostolic
times, whilst every one may know that its origin is "of men,"
not "from heaven;" and that the Bible alone is man's rule of
faith and practice. Every legitimate inference from every part
of Holy Writ we admit.
We maintain that the only proper subjects of Christian baptism
are believers in Christ, those proselyted to Christ, disciples
of Christ; or, since we have not, and are not required to have
access to the heart, those who make a credible profession of
faith in Christ. This we believe to be taught in the divine
precept, "Go ye therefore, and teach [make disciples of] all
nations, baptizing them in [into] the name of the Father, and of
the Son, and of the Holy Ghost: teaching them to observe all
things whatsoever I have commanded you;" and to be confirmed by
the record, "Go ye into all the world, and preach the gospel to
every creature. He that believeth and is baptized shall be
saved; but he that believeth not shall be damned."
We maintain the sufficiency of the first Scripture,
independently of the latter, on which we lay not stress in this
controversy, knowing that in some manuscripts it is wanting, yet
believing with almost all our opponents, that it belongs to the
word "by inspiration given." The first quoted passage, the
commission of Christ for the guidance of his disciples, "unto
the end of the world," does not say, first disciple, and then
baptize, and then teach to observe all things, etc.; but that
this is its import we maintain, from the construction of the
entire precept, from what the apostles had before witnessed and
practised, from their subsequent practice, and from every
reference to baptism in their writings.
In understanding this passage, if we follow order, where above
all places the most precise order might be expected, we must
understand Christ's will to be, that we first make disciples,
then baptize, etc. That order is not here to be regarded it
devolves on the opponents of order to prove. In making
disciples, the communication and the acceptance of truth, the
teaching and the receiving of the good news, are requisite.
After this and baptism, teaching is not to cease, "teaching them
to observe all things whatsoever I have commanded you." Nor is
there anything in the passage demanding another interpretation.
It has indeed been said, that "them" after "baptizing" has "all
nations" for its antecedent, that the discipling and baptizing
are of equal extent, embracing the same persons, even every
individual in all the nations; but that the discipling of all
nations means the discipling of infants is no more apparent than
that infants are included where we are taught that all nations
shall call our Redeemer blessed, or when he predicted, "Ye shall
be hated of all nations." Nor is the antecedent, as maintained,
although grammatically admissible, a grammatical requirement.
Also, "that the inspired writers, any more than other men, do
not use the pronouns with such scrupulous exactness, is
manifest" from an examination of the New Testament.
It is however maintained, and by some who denounce immersion as
inconvenient and dangerous, that the commission teaches that we
are to make disciples by baptizing and teaching, these present
participles, following the command to disciple, certainly
including the accomplishment of the discipling, and necessarily
involving a contemporaneous act. The word "by" is however no
more in Christ's words than are firstly and secondly. The word
"by," though frequently admissible in such sentences without
obscuring or altering the sense, is also frequently
inadmissible, as involving the most obvious perversion of a
writer's meaning. No one will doubt on reading, "He spake,
saying," etc., or, "They cried, saying," etc., that the speaking
or crying is accomplished by saying; but when we read, "The men
marvelled, saying" (Matt. viii. 27), does any one doubt that the
marvelling preceded and caused the saying, and that the
marvelling was not accomplished by the saying? When our Saviour
said, "Lend, hoping for nothing again" (Luke vi. 35), did he
mean that the lending would be accomplished by hoping for
nothing again? When we read, "Then came to him a man, kneeling
down to him" (Matt. xvii. 14), do we understand that the coming
to Christ was accomplished by kneeling, or that the kneeling was
contemporaneous with the coming? No rule demands this absurdity.
A thousand instances of such a construction in our own and the
Greek language could be adduced as disproving the necessity of
so understanding Christ's words.
Moreover, were "by" admissible before the participles
"baptizing" and "teaching," infants would be excluded as
incapable of being taught; or if admitted because in them it is
the first part of discipling, it must be continued, if baptizing
and teaching are contemporaneous with discipling and the
fulfilling of it, until the baptizing and teaching have unitedly
accomplished the discipling. If the baptizing commenced as soon
as convenient after birth, its continuance would be, as we
maintain, until Christ should be in them "the hope of glory,"
until they became believers in Christ, or made a credible
profession of this faith. Any rule that would unite the
participle "baptizing" to the verb disciple, and make it the
accomplishment of discipling and a contemporaneous act, would
also unite the participle "teaching."
Nor is there a noted Paedobaptist commentator, or
controversialist, whom we remember, who does not interpret
baptism into the name of Father, Son, and Spirit, baptism into
Christ, or into Moses, as involving a profession and
consecration; which interpretation necessarily excludes infants.
Dr. Martensen says that "baptism, as a human ceremony, is an act
of confession, by which a person is admitted into Christ's
church;" that "the sacraments, as acts of the church, are
chiefly to be viewed as acts of profession (notoe professionis),
visible, sensible acts, by participating in which, each person
indeed confesses his Lord and the church." Mr. Watson says:
"That Christ is formed in us (Gal. iv. 19); that our nature is
changed; that we are made holy and heavenly; this is to be
baptized into Jesus. Rom. vi. 3." He further speaks of an "oath
of allegiance" which we make to God in baptism. Yet it is also
said by him on Christ's commission, "The Greek is, 'Make
disciples of all nations.' If it be asked, how should we make
them disciples? it follows, 'Baptizing them and teaching them.'
In a heathen nation, first teach, and then baptize them; but in
a Christian church, first baptize, and then teach them" (p.
380). Not only has Christ given no intimation of two ways of
discipling, not only do the inspired writings contain no record
of apostolic discipling in two ways, but the very records of
discipling and baptizing the heathen, as at Philippi and
Corinth, are the records from which our opponents advocate their
first baptizing and then teaching.
We admit that in accordance with human phraseology, the word
"disciples" is used in Scripture in application not only to
those who were really, but also to those who were professedly
disciples. Yet assuredly the Saviour did not wish his apostles,
nor does he wish us, to make hypocrites; although not having
access to the heart, we may sometimes baptize the unworthy, as
Philip baptized Simon. This inevitable fallibility we deem no
more condemnable in ourselves than in the evangelist. From this
necessary weakness of humanity, we may not only sometimes
receive the unworthy to baptism and the Lord's Supper, but may
also induct such into the highest office in the church of
Christ. We are not justified for this reason in altering the
import of a disciple of Christ, solemnly and explicitly given by
the Saviour himself.
The tendency of paedobaptism, as we could clearly show, is to
pervert the import of a disciple of Christ, by teaching that an
unconscious babe, that a child who can answer certain questions,
yea, that a man or woman known to be ungodly, may, by baptism,
become a disciple of Christ! Thus while certain conformists,
maintaining justification by faith, are inconsistently teaching
that baptism regenerates and converts into a child of God,
certain nonconformists, maintaining the divine truth of
salvation by grace through faith, teach that baptism disciples
to Christ! A correct interpretation of discipling excludes
infants from the commission.
According to this natural import of Christ's words, namely, that
we are to disciple to him, to baptize into the name of Father,
Son, and Holy Spirit, and to teach obedience in all things to
Christ's commands, we further conceive the apostles must have
understood Christ, on account of the baptism they had already
witnessed and practised. They knew not, so far as we are aware,
any other baptism than John's, and that of Jesus through
themselves. Were we to bind with the Bible all the Rabbinical
lumber and all the condemned (or approved) Jewish traditions
that the world contains, we should, while dishonouring the
sufficiency of inspired writ, be in the same destitution of
evidence that the apostles knew of any other baptisms than those
recorded in the oracles of God. John "baptized with the baptism
of repentance, saying unto the people, that they should believe
on him who should come after him, that is, on Christ Jesus,
(Acts xix. 4.) They "were baptized of him in Jordan, confessing
their sins." (Mark i. 5.) It was a baptism "into repentance," as
this was the state professed by them while confessing their sins
and being baptized.
Until our Lord's commission, the Scriptures speak of no baptism
from heaven in addition to John's, except that of Christ by
means of his disciples. Concerning this the inspired record is,
first, that "He baptized" (John iii. 22), and secondly, that "He
made and baptized more disciples than John, though Jesus himself
baptized not, but his disciples." (John iv. 1, 2.) He baptized
disciples. He made AND baptized them. The instruction from this
baptism can only be in favour of first making disciples, and
then baptizing them. The whole of divine revelation respecting
every baptism from heaven which the apostles had previously
witnessed or practised, confirms our belief that they would
certainly understand Christ's words according to their natural
import already indicated.
We finally maintain that our view of the commission is correct,
because the apostles so understood it, as their subsequent
conduct and writings abundantly evidence. Peter on the day of
Pentecost first preached the gospel of Christ, and then taught
the anxiously enquiring to repent and be baptized in the name of
Jesus Christ. They must change their minds, having been
unbelieving in regard to Jesus as the Messiah and Saviour, and
on this faith in Christ, to which God's Spirit was drawing and
helping them, be baptized, thus in obedience to Christ, avowing
their belief in him as the Messiah and their Saviour. And after
further exhortation and instruction from Peter, "Then they that
gladly received his word were baptized: and the same day there
were added unto them about three thousand souls. And they
continued steadfastly in the apostle's doctrine and fellowship,
and in breaking of bread, and in prayers."
The next record of baptism thus reads: "But when they believed
Philip preaching the things concerning the kingdom of God and
the name of Jesus Christ, they were baptized, both men and
women. Then Simon himself believed also: and when he was
baptized, he continued with Philip, and wondered, beholding the
miracles and signs which were done."
The next recorded baptism is that of the praying "brother Saul,"
whom the Lord had met on his way to Damascus. The next recorded
baptism is that of Cornelius and "his kinsmen and near friends,"
of whose baptism Peter judged all would approve, since while
hearing Peter's words of divine instruction the Lord had
baptized them with the Holy Ghost, and they were heard to "speak
with tongues, and magnify God."
The next baptisms on record are those at Philippi and Corinth,
adduced by Mr. Watson as proving that the apostles, in baptizing
"whole families," baptized "little children" and "servants" (p.
381). We admit that, in Lydia's case, we have the record that
"she was baptized, and her household," and the previous record
respecting her, "whose heart the Lord opened, that she attended
unto the things which were spoken of Paul," while nothing is
said respecting the character of "her household." This proves
not that Lydia had either husband or child. The household of
this "seller of purple, of the city of Thyatira," might consist
wholly of servants. Silence here neither proves nor confirms
anything in favour of paedobaptism. Having no record respecting
the character of this household, we are bound to believe that
apostolic practice here accorded with previous and subsequent
apostolic practice.
The next baptism, that of the jailor "and all his," is one from
which infants are clearly excluded. Paul and Silas "spake unto
him the word of the Lord, and to all that were in his house;"
and after baptism, "he set meat before them and rejoiced,
believing (having believed) in God with all his house." The next
record is equally explicit, and opposed to the baptism of
infants or unbelievers. "And Crispus, the chief ruler of the
synagogue, believed on the Lord, with all his house; and many of
the Corinthians hearing, believed, and were baptized." The
baptism of "certain disciples" at Ephesus, of whom we read, "And
all the men were about twelve," equally refuses its aid to the
baptism of infants; while "the household of Stephanas," of whom
Paul says, "They have addicted themselves to the ministry of the
saints," cannot be brought to the rescue of our opponents.
Arguments from references to baptism in God's word are as futile
as those from precepts and examples in favour of baptizing
infants. The apostle of the Gentiles appeals to all the "saints"
in "Rome," that as "dead to sin," they had been "baptized into
Jesus Christ," "baptized into his death," and "buried with him
by baptism into death." Their having been baptized demanded that
they "should walk in newness of life." Is this applicable to
infants? To the churches of Galatia he wrote, "For as many of
you as have been baptized into Christ, have put on Christ." Of
the Colossians he writes, "Buried with him in baptism, wherein
also ye are risen with him through the faith of the operation of
God, who hath raised him from the dead." The last mention of
baptism is by Peter, who speaks of baptism as "the answer of a
good conscience toward God." Thus condemnatory of paedobaptism
is the entire New Testament.
But to another refuge the advocates of paedobaptism usually
resort. Hence, in answer to the question,
"How does it appear that children have a right to baptism?" we
read, "Children are parties to the covenant of grace. The
covenant was made with them. 'I will establish my covenant
between me and thee, and thy seed after thee, for an everlasting
covenant, to be a God unto thee, and to thy seed after thee.'
Gen. xvii. 7. 'The promise is to you and to your children.' The
covenant of grace may be considered either, 1. More strictly, as
an absolute promise to give saving grace; and so none but the
elect are in covenant with God. Or (2.) More largely, as a
covenant containing in it many outward glorious privileges, in
which respects the children of believers do belong to the
covenant of grace," and "cannot justly be denied baptism, which
is its seal. It is certain the children of believers were once
visibly in covenant with God, and received the seal of their
admission into the church. Where now do we find this covenant
interest, or church membership of infants, repealed or made
void? Certainly Jesus Christ did not come to put believers in a
worse condition than they were in before. If the children of
believers should not be baptized, they are in worse condition
now than they were in before Christ's coming" (p. 380).
In this extract from Watson, God's gracious covenant with
Abraham, or one of God's covenants with him, is styled "the
covenant of grace." But the covenant of grace commenced with
Adam, whether we restrict it to "the elect," those chosen to
salvation, or regard it "more largely" as referring to "outward
glorious privileges." Again, God's covenant with Abraham was not
a covenant with the elect of mankind, nor with the whole race,
nor with Abraham and the elect descending from him, nor with
Abraham and exclusively the children of believers, nor with any
children for the sake of their parents, excepting Abraham's own
children.
Nor can the Pentecostal promise of Peter be proved to have any
connection with, or reference to, the Abrahamic covenant,
admitting that, as some promises resemble others, this and the
immediately following may remind us of the predictions that in
Abraham and his seed all the nations and all the families of the
earth shall be blessed. That all Abraham's descendents were
elected to salvation no one believes; nor is it less apparent
that the children of wicked parents received the token of the
covenant, as well as the children of believing parents; and in
every instance beyond that of Abraham's children, not from
filial relationship, but from relationship to Abraham.
"The sons of David," as says Dr. Halley, "were circumcised
according to the same law, and therefore, for the same reason as
the sons of that worshipper of Baal, Ahab, and of that wicked
woman, Jezebel." Nor was the covenant of God with Abraham and
his seed a covenant with his seed as infants, but with his
descendants. If the token of the covenant had been disobediently
neglected, it might at any age, and irrespective of character in
its recipient or the parent, be performed from relationship to
Abraham. Not one of Abraham's natural seed is another Abraham,
nor is one believer. But all believers may be spoken of as the
(believing) children of faithful Abraham. That God graciously
entered into covenant with all Abraham's descendants for his
sake, and instituted a sign to be fixed on every male, is no
evidence that God has entered into covenant with the natural
children of every believer, and with each child for the parent's
sake, and that the baptism of male and female infants of
believers is the appointed sign of this covenant. Where is such
a law but in the writings of Paedobaptists?
The "covenant interest" of "the children of believers" as such,
or of " infants" of believers, or the "church membership of
infants," and "the seal of their admission into the church,"
giving to the word "church" any idea re sembling its New
Testament use in application to the church, or a church of
Christ, needed not to be "repealed or made void," because they
had never existed. If God's covenanting with Abraham and his
seed, and instituting the sign of circumcision in males, proves
the church membership of the seed of Abraham, it proves an
Ishmaelitish as well as an Israelitish church of God, and a
church to which ungodly adults, equally with the infants of
believers, belonged. If circumcision is the seal of admission
into the church, there has been not only a Jewish church, but an
Edomite, a Moabite, an Ammonite church. Did Episcopalians and
all others who believe a church of Christ to be "a congregation
of faithful men," always speak consistently with this, we should
hear less of any nation at any period, or of any building in any
place, as a church. Why should we not, except where the idea of
assembly exists, after the manner of inspired writers, speak of
those who anciently enjoyed the divine favour, as saints, as the
people of God, as those that feared the Lord, as the righteous,
etc., instead of confoundingly speaking of the church before the
flood, the patriarchal, the Abrahamic, the Mosaic, the Jewish
(etc.) church?
The children of believers, if not baptized, are not in "a worse
condition" than were the circumcised children of believers
before the Christian dispensation. Grace is not, and never was,
hereditary. The "sons of God" have ever been those "born, not of
blood, nor of the will of the flesh, nor of the will of man, but
of God." In every age have men become "the children of God by
faith." This faith has been stronger, and has shone more
conspicuously and gloriously, in some than in others; but
"without faith it is impossible to please" God, and it ever has
been (Heb. xi., 6, etc.). The application of this to those only
who are capable of believing, none can doubt. It is equally
clear that the faith of some must have had reference to a
Messiah to come, and of others to a Messiah who had appeared. We
doubt not that the children of believers, they and their parents
being spared, have had, and to the end of prevailing and
parental ungodliness will have, advantages not possessed by the
children of unbelievers. Parental piety superadded to parental
affection necessitates this. Nor can there be hindrance--we
shall not now speak of the encouragement and help--from him who
has left it on record, "Train up a child in the way he should
go: and when he is old, he will not depart from it."
There is not however the slightest intimation in God's word that
"the children of believers," or "the infant seed of believers,"
in distinction from the children or infant seed of unbelievers,
constitute or belong to "the election of grace." The attempt to
found such an hypothesis on the covenant with Abraham and his
seed, requires the belief that grace is hereditary; that all
Abraham's posterity were in infancy the children of God and
heirs of heaven through their relationship to Abraham, whatever
their subsequent piety or ungodliness, salvation or damnation;
that divine grace through Abraham naturally and efficaciously
descended through all his seed, or, if it is preferred, through
all his seed in the line of Isaac and Jacob, until the coming of
Christ, when the infant seed of believers have the same "claim
to the covenant of grace as their parents; and having a right to
the covenant, they cannot justly be denied baptism." What
inference is possible from this reasoning, but that the infant
seed of all from Abraham to Christ, who descended not from
Abraham, were heirs of hell? and that it is now, and from the
time of Christ has been, the condition of all infants having
unbelieving parents? Besides, unless circumcision introduced
into the covenant of grace, or confirmed spiritual blessings, or
promoted spiritual along with its temporal good, and unless the
baptism of infants secures temporal or spiritual good to the
same extent, which also the lack of baptism by infants prevents,
the implied retaining of the same blessings since by baptism,
and the inferred diminution of blessings by the omitted infant
baptism, fall to the ground. We might also inquire of some, Can
the blessings of the covenant, to those born in the covenant,
and who have its blessings signed and sealed to them, slip out
of their hands?
It has probably been reserved to Dr. Bushnell, while saying many
good things on parental influence and obligations, in advocating
the baptism of infants, to carry filial relationship and its
effects to their most absurd and monstrous extent. He teaches,
in his Christian Nurture, that "until the child comes to his
will, we must regard him still as held within the matrix of the
parental life" (p. 97); that the covenant with Abraham "was a
family covenant, in which God engaged to be the God of the seed
as of the father. And the seal of the covenant was a seal of
faith, applied to the whole house, as if the continuity of faith
were somehow to be, or somehow might be, maintained in a line
that is parallel with the continuity of sin in the family" (p.
106); that "the old rite of proselyte baptism, which made the
families receiving it Jewish citizens and children of Abraham,
was applied over directly to the Christian uses, and the rite
went by 'households'" (p. 107); that by "organic unity in
families," we have "the only true solution of the Christian
church and of baptism as related to membership" (p. 108); that
"baptism is applied to the child on the ground of its organic
unity with the parent, imparting and pledging a grace to
sanctify that unity, and make it good in the field of religion"
(p. 110); that the child "is taken to be regenerate, not
historically speaking, but presumptively, on the ground of his
known connection with the parent character, and the divine or
church life, which is the life of that character" (p. 110); and
"that the child is potentially regenerate, being regarded as
existing in connection with powers and causes that contain the
fact before time, and separate from time" (p. 110). Thus the
"seal of faith" has belonged to infants and unbelievers, and now
belongs, and is restricted to, believers and their children!
If Jewish "proselyte baptism" is made "over directly to the
Christian uses," this is, of course, taught in God's word, or we
are expressly or by implication taught, that the Jewish Talmud,
a Rabbinical composition of the third century of the Christian
era, belongs wholly, or in some specified part, to the oracles
of God! We deny not "an organic unity" in any man, or any
animal, having head, heart, lungs, liver, etc.; nor do we deny a
union between Christ and his people, so that he lives in them;
but we deny a union between children and parents, so that when
father or mother is converted, the child becomes a "new
creature," or becomes then, and not before, "potentially
regenerate." We maintain that man becomes potentially
regenerate, not through organic unity with any believing man,
but as belonging to those for whom God has instituted an economy
of grace, no man becoming potentially regenerate but through the
sacrifice of the Son of God, which atones for sin and secures
the bestowment of the divine Spirit. Well may Dr. B. piteously
exclaim on his "doctrine of organic unity," "as a ready solvent
for the rather perplexing difficulties of this difficult
subject," that "one difficulty remains, namely, that so few can
believe it" (p. 111). There is as much evidence that a child is
baptized in the baptism of the parent, as that it is regenerated
in the regeneration of the parent; yea, that the whole life and
character of the child, and its eternal salvation or damnation,
are that of the parent.
We believe that the circumcision, not only of male adults, but
of male infants, was divinely enjoined, and that the
unconsciousness of the latter constituted no hindrance to an
accomplishment of the design of this institution; and we doubt
not God's right, if he had seen it good, to institute a rite
under the Christian dispensation that should embrace the
unconscious, both males and females; but we deny the shadow of
evidence that he has so enacted. The existence of circumcision
from Abraham proves it not.
Nor are we taught that baptism is in the place of circumcision,
although in some things there is a resemblance in one to the
other. The antitype of circumcision, or spiritual, Christian
circumcision, is the renewal of the heart. Rom. ii. 28, 29; 1
Cor. vii. 19; Gal. vi. 15; Phil. iii. 3; Col. ii. 11. The
apostles and elders gathered together in Jerusalem, to consider
the necessity of circumcision, which some of the baptized Jewish
believers maintained, drop not a single hint to the erring, that
baptism is in place of circumcision. The apostle of the
Gentiles, warning the Colossian believers, and rebuking those in
the churches of Galatia who held the destructive error, instead
of teaching that baptism occupies the place of circumcision,
teaches that Christian circumcision, the circumcision of Christ,
is a circumcision "without hands, in putting off the body of the
sins of the flesh." Nor is there in the fact that all children,
or all the children of believers, are of "the kingdom of God," a
particle of evidence that God has commanded their baptism.
The Scriptures which speak of baptism, recording its
appointment, its practice, its nature, design, or benefit, are
those from which its divinely approved subjects can be learned.
These speak of confession of sin, repentance, faith in Christ,
discipleship, a good conscience, as characteristic of the
baptized. Not a word is recorded respecting parents or others as
proxies for "the child's personal engagement" (p. 381).
Ourselves, our children, and all we possess, are God's property;
and with all, as "his servants," God has a sovereign right to
deal. The duty of baptism is not learnt from this fact, but from
the revelation of God's will.
The apostle Paul, speaking of the marriage bond, when one
partner has become a Christian, and the other remains an
unbeliever, teaches a sacredness in the children and the
unbelieving partner that forbids a dissolution of the
connection; but, while attributing the same holiness to the
children and the unbelieving partner he says not a syllable
implying a "right and title to baptism" (p. 382). Everything
really included in parental dedication is as much the privilege
of the Baptist as Paedobaptist. It is a benefit to the child
when no deceptive substitute has been performed on him,
preventing, or helping to prevent, his personal, conscious,
voluntary, and acceptable obedience to God's command.
The obtaining by infants, through baptism, of entrance into the
church, of "a right sealed to the ordinances," that is, to the
Lord's Supper, etc., and of "the tutelage of angels to be the
infant's lifeguard," may be in the imagination of Paedobaptists;
but these are not in the word of God, any more than that baptism
is to elected infants "a 'seal of the righteousness of faith,' a
layer of regeneration, and a badge of adoption" (p. 380). Not
only are the Scriptures silent respecting infant baptism, but
every record relating to baptism, forbids its existence in
apostolic times, and its right to a subsequent existence. Nor
does Irenaeus, or any of the earliest fathers, say one word
favouring the supposition of its existence, notwithstanding the
inference that is drawn by some of the Paedobaptists from one
passage in Irenaeus. What authority has a practice that can but
be proved as possibly beginning to exist at the close of the
second, or in the early part of the third century? For
Tertullian, dissuading from the baptism of children, may not
refer to infants. The existence of infant baptism in the third
century is certain. The existence in the third, and in the
preceding century, of sentiments on the efficacy of baptism, and
of various practices which have no foundation in Holy Writ, is
easily and abundantly proved. But neither infant baptism nor any
other practice could be sanctioned by evidence of existence in
the age immediately succeeding the apostolic period, or
existence in apostolic times, if destitute of apostolic
sanction; and especially if opposed to, and destructive of, what
is divinely enjoined. The fact that inspired writers, in
recording baptisms, except where the baptism of parents and
other members of the family take place at the same time, say
nothing as to parental piety, accords with and corroborates our
view of baptism as a personal and voluntary profession and
engagement. Every record of baptisms in Holy Writ, and every
reference to baptism, is a confirmation of believers' baptism as
the "one baptism" for parents and children, for every
generation, and for all alike, to the end of time.
Nor are we ashamed of the Baptist, as compared with the
Paedobaptist history, tracing it through every age, and in every
country, from apostolic to the present times, although we are
not disposed to boast of our own righteousness. We justify not
"the doings of the Anabaptists in Germany," though Paedobaptists
were united with them, and all were then but emerging from the
darkness and errors of Popery. We believe in what has just
fallen from the lips of the Rev. W. Walters respecting the
Baptists of this country. "'From the beginning,' says Locke,
'they were the friends and advocates of absolute liberty--just
and true liberty, equal and impartial liberty.' The claim which
we make to have been the first expositors and advocates in
modern times of religious liberty, is based on the surest
foundation, and is capable of the most satisfactory proof."
Instead of exalting believers' baptism above measure, we say in
the words of our honourable and Rev. brother Noel, "It is not
separation from the church of Rome, or from the church of
England, nor a scriptural organisation, nor evangelical doctrine
which can alone secure our Saviour's approbation." They who
speak of infant baptism as a putting of the child's name in a
will by the parent, need to be reminded of God's prerogative,
and of the character of his government as revealed in the words:
"All souls are mine; as the soul of the father, so also the soul
of the son is mine: the soul that sinneth, it shall die." Who,
believing this testimony, can also believe that unbaptized
infants are "sucking pagans," while those kindly baptized
through parental influence are sucking Christians?
The baptism of believers, we believe to be a reasonable,
scriptural, and profitable service, calculated to strengthen and
perpetuate every right feeling and conduct. But in whatever
esteem we hold the erring Paedobaptist, and however cordially we
say, and hope ever to say, "Grace be with all them that love our
Lord Jesus Christ in sincerity," we are obliged to think and
speak of infant baptism according to a writer before quoted. "In
it there is no conscience, no will, no reasonable service. It
allies persons without their consent, or even their
intelligence, to a religious creed; it forces upon them an
unreasoning and unwilling service; it imposes upon them an
unconscious profession; it anticipates the conduct of riper
years to a degree which both nature and Scripture condemn; and
is therefore a violation of their just rights."
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The above article was originally written as an appendix to Rev.
Thomas Watson's Body of Divinity Contained in Sermons Upon the
Assembly's Catechism, A New and Complete Edition, Revised and
Adapted to Modern Readers, by the Rev. George Rogers. Baker Book
House, Grand Rapids, Michigan.