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A GENERAL HISTORY OF THE BAPTIST DENOMINATION
IN AMERICA, AND OTHER PARTS OF THE WORLD
By David Benedict
1813
London: Printed by Lincoln & Edmands,
No. 53, Cornhill, for the Author
A MINIATURE HISTORY OF BAPTISM
Baptism, as it was instituted by the great
Christian Lawgiver, was a plain and significant rite. And for a long time, after
corruptions in doctrine had crept into the church, baptism was maintained in its
original simplicity and purity, and was free from that pompous round of
ceremonies, with which it was afterwards encumbered.
Nothing is more evident, than that in the primitive ages of the church,
professed believers were the only subjects of this sacred rite, and immersion or
dipping was the only mode. But in process of time, baptism passed from visible
believers, to catechumen minors, and from them to unconscious babes. And from
immersion it was reduced to pouring, then to sprinkling, and now to any mode,
which the inventive fancies of capricious candidates may devise, provided
always, that some part of them be wet.
The limits of this review will not permit me to do anything more than merely to
glance at the most prominent parts of this extensive subject, and relate some of
the most remarkable circumstances which have attended the progress of baptism
from its introduction to the present time.
The New Testament account of baptism demands our first attention; and there we
find, that the first performer of this sacred rite, and who administered it to
the great Messiah and to multitudes of repenting Jews, was JOHN THE BAPTIST.
This singular person is supposed to have been born in Hebron; he began preaching
the doctrine of repentance in the wilderness of Judea, and soon multitudes, from
all the region round about, flocked to the harbinger of the Messiah, and
confessing their sins were baptized by him in Jordan and Enon.
But John?s ministry was of short duration. By some means he was introduced to
king Herod, whom he reproved for living in adultery with his brother Philip?s
wife. For this honest freedom John was cast into prison, where he was
assassinated by the means of the guilty and enraged Herodias. [The Catholics
have paid the most extravagant veneration to the memory of John the Baptist; and
the most ridiculous fables are told respecting him. John himself lies all over
the Catholic world. His head is in the city of Amiens, in France. That finger,
with which he pointed to Christ, when he said, "Behold the Lamb of
God," is at Florence: his others are at different places. The knights of
St. John have his right hand, with which he baptized Jesus, enclosed in one of
the richest and most elegant shrines; it is made of solid gold, and adorned with
a profusion of jewels. A piece of the stone, on which Jesus stood when he was
baptized, is at Chiusi, in Sienna. And there is another at the Lateran at Rome.
It is a fact, that of all the saints in paradise, St. John the Baptist bore the
bell in the middle ages of the Catholic church. When no new baptisteries were
wanted, old ones were enlarged with vestries, chapels, oratories, and adjoining
houses. Then they were adorned with inscriptions, pictures, mosaic work,
statues, bells, altars, plates, cups, vases, and all manner of utensils; John
being depicted on every one. Next they were endowed with houses, lands, farms,
and revenues of various kinds. Blessed John the Baptist was engraved on seals,
public and private, cut in precious stones of all descriptions for rings and
ornaments, exhibited on the crowns of princes, the altar cloths and other
ornaments of churches, and chosen by towns, cities, and whole kingdoms as their
patron. The multitude imbibed the delicious frenzy, and when the priest inquired
at baptism, What is his name? not Jove: but John was the popular cry, and the
baptismal hall resounded with John - John - John! To protestant gentlemen, who
have not turned their attention to the history of this old-fashioned saint, it
may, at first, appear improbable, but on examination it will be found very
credible, that if a thesaurus of what relates to the subject were collected and
published in one work, it would swell to the size of the Acta Sanctorum, which
amount to sixty or seventy volumes in folio. Robinson?s History of Baptism, p.
4, 93, 358, 359. It is presumed that no Baptist will be proud of the
superstitious honors, which have been paid to their ancient brother, since it is
evident, that all have overlooked that which made him the greatest born among
women.]
For the purpose of performing his great work, John selected a number of
baptismal stations. The first appears to have been at the river Jordan. Mr.
Robinson supposes it was on its eastern bank, about four or five miles from its
mouth, where it discharges itself into the lake Asphaltites, or the Dead Sea,
and near the place where it was miraculously parted for the Israelites to pass
over it, when they entered into the promised land. "About half a mile from
the river, the remains, of a convent, dedicated to John the Baptist, are yet to
be seen: for the Syrian monks availed themselves of the zeal of early pilgrims,
who aspired to the honor of being baptized, where they supposed John baptized
Jesus."
As much has been said to prove that John could no where in Judea find water of
sufficient depth for immersion, it may be proper to give a brief description of
the river Jordan, and also of Enon near to Salim.
Jordan is a considerable river in the ancient land of Israel, and ran from north
to south, through almost the whole of that once delightful country. It rises
from the lake Phiala, in the mountain called Anti-Libanus, and after running
fifteen miles under ground, breaks out at Peneum. A little below Dan, the stream
forms the lake Samachonites, anciently called Menon, which is about four miles
over and seven miles long. Two miles after its leaving the lake, is a stone
bridge of three arches, called "Jacob?s Bridge," supposed to have
been built before the days of Jacob. After leaving the lake Samachonites, it
runs fifteen miles further, and forms the lake, or as it is sometimes called,
the sea, of Tiberias, which is, in its broadest part, five miles in width, and
in length eighteen; thence at its opposite end, it proceeds forward again, and
after a course of sixty-five miles, some part of the way through a vast and
horrid desert, the rest through a fertile region, it falls into the lake
Asphaltites or the Dead Sea, where it is lost. [Morse?s and Parish?s
Gazetteer; Robinson?s History of Baptism.] Thus we see this little stream,
this trifling brook, rises out of one lake, forms or passes through two others,
and falls into a fourth. Morse and Parish say it is generally four or five rods
wide, and nine feet deep. Robinson says that this river, so far from wanting
water, was subject to two sorts of floods, one periodical at harvest time, in
which it resembled the Nile in Egypt, with which some suppose it had a
subterranean communication. When this flood came down, the river rose many feet,
and overflowed the lower banks, so that the lions, that lay in the thickets
there, were roused up and fled. To this Jeremiah alludes: Behold, the king of
Babylon shall come up like a lion from the swelling of Jordan. The other
swellings of Jordan were casual, and resembled those of all other rivers in
uneven countries. [Robinson?s History of Baptism, p. 11,12.]
On the banks of this noble river, John the Baptist fixed one of his baptismal
stations, not merely for the purpose of supplying the company, and the horses,
and camels, and mules, and asses, on which they rode, with drink, as is supposed
by a late Pedo-baptist writer [Dr. Reed], but for the conveniency of immersing
the repenting candidates.
Another of John?s baptismal stations was at Enon near to Salim. "This was
at least fifty miles north of the river Jordan, from the place where John had
begun to baptize. One of the apostles was said to be a native of Salim, and some
think this was the city of which Melchisedec was king." It is not so easy
to describe Enon as Jordan, for historians and geographers are not agreed
respecting it. Some suppose that Enon was a deep spring, called the dove-spring,
or, in the figurative language of the east, the dove?s-eye; others think it
signified the fountain of the sun; while others are of an opinion that it was
either a natural spring, an artificial reservoir, or a cavernous temple of the
sun, prepared by the Canaanites, the ancient idolatrous inhabitants of the land.
Such are the variety of opinions about the meaning of the word Enon. But
although some things are doubtful, yet one thing is certain, it was a place
where there was much water. This was sufficient for John the Baptist, and it was
immaterial to him, as it is to every other Baptist, whether water be found in an
artificial reservoir, or in a receptacle formed by nature, provided that it be
of sufficient depth for immersion, which, for most administrators, is about
three feet, and from six to nine inches. The Greek, for much water, is polla
udata; and these two little words have furnished matter for much learned
criticism and many future quibbles. "Since sprinkling came in
fashion," says Mr. Robinson, "criticism, unheard of in all former
ages, hath endeavored to derive evidence for scarcity of water, from the Greek
text of the Evangelist John, and to render polla udata not much water, but many
waters, and then by an ingenious supposition, to infer that many waters signify
not many waters collected into one, but waters parted into many little rills,
which might all serve for sprinkling, but could not, anyone of them, be used for
dipping: as if one man could possibly want many brooks for the purpose of
sprinkling one person at a time. It is observable, that the rivers Euphrates at
Babylon, Tiber at Rome, and Jordan in Palestine, are all described by polla
udata. The thunder which agitates clouds, charged with floods, is called the
voice of the Lord upon many waters; and the attachment, that no mortifications
can annihilate, is a love, which many waters cannot quench, neither can the
floods drown. How it comes to pass that a mode of speaking, which on every other
occasion signifies much, should in the case of baptism signify little, is a
question easy to answer" [Robinson?s History of Baptism, p. 14]. The
scripture account of the baptism, which John administered, must impress the mind
of every unprejudiced person, that professed believers were the subjects of his
baptism, and that immersion was the only mode adopted by this ancient Baptist.
But notwithstanding the scripture account of John and his ministry is so plain,
yet to serve the purposes of infant baptism, all has been thrown into confusion,
covered with mystery, and reduced to insignificance. Some have pretended to find
infants among John?s disciples; but this is an opinion so extravagant and
absurd, that but few Pedo-baptist writers have advanced it.
Dr. Guyse supposed that John administered baptism by sprinkling. This opinion he
expressed in the following manner: "It seems to me that the people stood in
ranks near to, or just within, the edge of the river; and John, passing along
before them, threw water upon their heads or faces, with his hands or with some
proper instrument."
The name of this divine ought always to be mentioned with respect; but this
exposition is truly ridiculous, and is sarcastically, but yet ingeniously,
paraphrased in a poem attributed to the late Benjamin Francis.
"The Jews in Jordan were baptized,
Therefore ingenious John devis?d
A scoop or squirt, or some such thing,
With which some water he might fling
Upon the long extended rank
Of candidates, that lin?d the bank.
Be careful, John, some drops may fall
From your rare instrument on all;
But point your engine, ne?ertheless,
To those who do their sins confess.
Let no revilers in the crowd,
The holy sprinkling be allow?d"
We have seen, not long since, that John the Baptist has been most extravagantly
extolled by the Roman Catholics; but it appears that many modern Pedo-baptists
very lightly esteem both John and his ministry. They would fain make us believe
that the baptism which he administered was not gospel baptism, but was merely a
continuation of Jewish ablutions, and that the gospel dispensation did not
commence until after his death. By this supposition, John is left in a forlorn
condition, for he is neither a Jew nor christian, he is neither an Old Testament
priest, nor a New Testament minister, but stands like the young ass-colt, where
two ways met and is not permitted to go in either.
The Jews sent priests and Levites to ask of him, Who art thou? And at another
time they acknowledged they knew not whether his baptism was from heaven or of
men. But notwithstanding all this the Pedo-baptists of the present day turn him
over to the Jewish side. Such attempts are worthy the cause which requires their
aid. Mark calls John?s ministry, The beginning of the gospel of Jesus Christ,
the Son of God. The Pedo-baptists are at liberty to make their own expositions;
but the Baptists are willing to believe that Mark?s statement is correct. This
novel notion of placing John under the law, leads to another absurdity
respecting the baptism of the Savior. A few years since a pamphlet was published
with this very singular title, "The Baptism of Jesus Christ not to be
imitated by Christians!" The title of this piece is shocking to an obedient
mind, and its contents are altogether frivolous and absurd. They go to make John
a Jewish priest, and that when he baptized the Savior, he did it with a view to
introduce him into his priestly office. This singular work was published by two
Pedo-baptist ministers, whose names were Fish and Crane. I know not why two
learned divines should unite to publish a pamphlet, unless it were that its
contents were so novel and strange, that neither was willing to take the
responsibility of it alone. But they had no occasion for fear; anything that can
afford the least relief to the tottering cause of infant baptism, will be sure
to gain credit with its fearful advocates. The baptism of Jesus Christ not to be
imitated by christians, and John consecrating Christ into the priestly office,
were great discoveries; they were handed from one to another, and have gone an
extensive round of Essayists and Pamphleteers.
These groundless propositions have been amply refuted by many Baptist writers,
and particularly by Dr. Baldwin, in his late work on baptism. The substance of
his arguments is as follows: Had Christ been about to be consecrated into the
priestly office, John, with his garment of camel?s hair, and a girdle of skin
about his loins, was not the person to officiate on such an occasion; but it
belonged to the sons of Aaron, with their priestly vestments―And again, the
consecration was to be at the door of the tabernacle, and not on the banks of
Jordan―And again, none but the tribe of Levi and the house of Aaron could be
admitted to the Jewish priesthood. But it is evident our Lord sprang out of
Judah, of which tribe Moses spake nothing concerning priesthood (Hebrews 7:14)―And, finally, Christ was a priest after the order of Melchisedec, and not
after the order of Aaron. [Baldwin on Baptism, p. 300-303.]
These passages need no comment; they carry with them their own invincible
testimony, that our Savior was not consecrated a Jewish priest, and that his
baptism was not a Jewish ceremony, but a christian rite. The Baptists have
derived peculiar consolation from being buried with their Lord in obedience to
his command, and in imitation of his example. And they have never felt conscious
of any great impiety or presumption in so doing, all that Messrs. Fish, and
Crane, and Worcester, and others, have said notwithstanding. [Dr. Worcester, of
Salem, in a late piece upon baptism, has the following interrogation: "Does
not the idea, then, of following Christ into the water, which has unhappily so
powerful an effect upon many minds, partake very much of the nature of delusion
and superstition?" "Christ?s baptism," saith he, was designed
regularly to introduce him into his priestly office, according to the law of
Moses, under which he commenced his ministry, and which it behooved him to
fulfill." "There is no evidence that Christ was buried in the water;
and even if he were, his baptism was of an import very different from that of
the baptism, which he afterwards instituted for his followers. Are we to go into
the water under the idea of following Christ into his priestly office? Ought we
to call this delusion and superstition; or ought we to call it the height of
impiety?"]
I have been longer on the history of John?s baptism, than I should have been,
were it not that so many are attempting to reason out of countenance this
ancient and eminent character, and set at nought, or at least Judaize all his
important ministrations. Had his name been John the Pedo-baptist, and had it
been said that he sprinkled men, women, and children, in the synagogue and in
the temple, from a bowl or bason, it is highly probable that thousands who are
now seeking to invalidate his important offices, would have found him a place in
the gospel dispensation, and considered him a very important character.
The whole account of baptism in the New Testament is plain and intelligible, and
the state of this ordinance, during the lives of the apostles, is to be gathered
mostly from the book of Acts, written by Luke, the first ecclesiastical
historian. It extends from the ascension of Christ to the residence of Paul at
Rome, a space of more than thirty years. "In this book there are frequent
narrations of the baptism of believers, as of Cornelius, the Ethiopian eunuch,
and others, but not one infant appears in the whole history; yet, no doubt, some
christians had married, and had young families within the thirty years between
the ascension of Jesus and the settlement of Paul at Rome. There is no mention
of any of the ceremonies, which modern christians have affixed to baptism: no
consecration of water, no sprinkling, no use of oils and unguents, no sponsors,
no kneeling in the water, no catechumen-state, no giving a name, no renunciation
of any demon, none of the innumerable additional, which, under pretense of
adorning, have obscured the glory of this heavenly institute. It belongs to
those who practice such additions, to say how they came by them, and under what
master they serve."
From writers of unquestionable authority, it is evident, that the primitive
christians continued to baptize in rivers, pools, and baths, until about the
middle of the 3rd century. Justin Martyr says, that they went with the
catechumens to a place where there was water, and Tertullian adds, that the
candidates for baptism made a profession of faith twice, once in the church, and
then again when they came to the water, and it was quite indifferent whether it
were the sea, or a pool, a lake, or a river, or a bath. Such are the accounts
given by Justin Martyr in his Apology, and by Tertullian on baptism as quoted by
Robinson.
The sacrament of baptism, says Mosheim, was administered in the first century,
without the public assemblies, in places appointed and prepared for that
purpose, and was performed by immersion of the whole body in the baptismal
fount. [Ecclesiastical History, Philadelphia edition, vol. 1. p. 126.]
Had the professed disciples of Jesus Christ always maintained this plain and
significant rite, according to its primitive form, the history of baptism would
have been short, and an account of persons baptized, and the reasons and
circumstances of their baptism would have composed it. But now the case is far
different. The fancies, the passions, and interests of mankind, have so
perverted this heavenly institute, that its history has become difficult and
voluminous; and so greatly has it been varied, abused, and prostituted, that in
different parts of its progress, you see no resemblance of its original form,
except that some portion of the element of water is applied to animal beings in
human shape. And since so large a portion of the christian world has received by
inheritance a counterfeit baptism, which they will not give up, he, who would
plead for that, which is apostolical and pure, must work his way against ten
thousand opponents, all armed with different weapons of defense, some forcible
and some futile, but none of them capable of producing the least conviction upon
an enlightened and conscientious mind.
We must now leave the apostolical and primitive ages, for a wide wilderness of
obscurity and error; and in going over it, we shall but just glance at the most
remarkable occurrences, which present themselves to our view.
The history of baptism naturally divides itself into two branches; the one
regards the subjects, and the other the mode. These two branches, we shall, for
the most part, treat separately; but, in some cases, it will be proper to speak
of them in connection.
The limits of this sketch are so short, and the incidents to be thrown together
so numerous and varied, that the transitions must of necessity be frequent, and
they may not always be the most easy; but I trust, that in the end, every
unprejudiced reader will be convinced, that believers? baptism is an
institution of Jesus Christ, and that infant sprinkling is an invention of men.
The subjects of baptism deserve first to be considered. We have already seen
that believing men and women were the only persons baptized by John and the
apostles of our Lord. From the Acts of the Apostles, from the Epistles, and from
the book of Revelation, it appears that upwards of sixty churches were gathered
by the apostles and primitive preachers. These churches were constituted of
Jews, Proselytes, and Pagans; we have an account of many of their names,
characters, and baptisms, but no mention is made of the baptism of infants, and
on no occasion do infants appear.
A Roman Catholic does not hesitate to acknowledge, that infant baptism is a
human tradition; but he can prove that it has been established by law that is
sufficient for his purpose, and there is an end of the business with him. But
most protestants are unwilling to make this honest confession. They persist that
it is found in the Bible, and their attempts to prove it have cost them an
almost infinite deal of labor, which, after all, is to no purpose.
Irenaeus is represented as saying, The church received a tradition from the
apostles to administer baptism to little children or infants. Irenaeus lived in
the second century; he is said to have been a disciple of Polycarp, and Polycarp
was a disciple of John the Evangelist. This would seem to be getting within
between one and two hundred years of the point. But Dr. John Gill challenged the
whole literary world to produce such a passage from the writings of Irenaeus. It
was afterwards acknowledged that Origen, of the third century, and not Irenaeus
of the second, was the writer intended. [Backus? History, vol. 2. p, 238]
But it is generally supposed that Tertullian of Africa, in the third century, is
the first writer who makes any mention of infant baptism, and he, (says Dr.
Gill) opposed it. But his opposition is considered by Pedo-baptists as evidence
in the case. If, say they, infant baptism was not then practiced, why did this
father oppose it? But others make very different reflections on the subject. The
catechumen state had arisen to some degree of maturity in the third century.
Catechumens were those who were put into a class to be catechized and instructed
into the first rudiments of christianity, and when they had acquired a certain
degree of knowledge, or had been in a catechumen state a certain time, they were
baptized. This method of making christians is supposed to have originated at
Alexandria in Egypt, and from thence in process of time, spread over the
christian world. Nothing of this catechumen state is found in the New Testament,
and at what time it commenced, I have not been able to learn; but it was
probably towards the close of the second, or in the beginning of the third
century. It gained maturity in its progress, and continued a popular and
prevalent establishment, so long as it was needful. Catechumens were generally
persons in a state of minority; sometimes, however, those of mature age were
enrolled among the children, and when christianity became a political engine,
princes were added to the lists, and were catechized awhile before they were
baptized. The catechumen state continued as long as minors were the subjects of
baptism, but when it was found out by the skillful priests, that infants came
into the world crying for baptism, and that they would be doomed to eternal
perdition if they should die without it, the business of catechizing became not
only useless, but impracticable; godfathers and godmothers stood forward to
answer all the questions which children used to answer for themselves; they took
the whole responsibility of their faithfulness upon themselves, and promised
what was never or seldom performed, either by the children or sponsors. The
catechumen state being thus superseded by a more expeditious method of making
christians, it dwindled away and fell into disuse.
It is easy to conceive, that among catechized children, some would be more
forward than the rest, and of course would be prepared for baptism at an earlier
age. A French Catholic writer observes, that he saw a little child in the
country, who, at seven years of age, would promiscuously open the Greek
Testament, and read and explain it with facility. "I heard," says he,
"of two other infants, brother and sister, the one nine years of age, the
other eleven or twelve, speak Greek and Latin perfectly well." A little
superstition, of which there are numberless curious instances, added to such
cases, handed baptism downwards from minors to babes. A monumental inscription
in Italy informs the reader, that Joanna Baptista de Peruschis, daughter of
Alexander de Peruschis, and Beatfix Gorzei, when she was only six months old,
mostly, sweetly, and freely pronounced the name of Jesus every day before she
sucked the breast, and mostly, devoutly adored the images of the saints.
[Robinson?s Hist. Baptism, p. 157, 158.]
It seems pretty clear, that forward children laid the foundation for infant
baptism, but other and more powerful motives hastened its progress, as we shall
presently show.
But to return: In Tertullian?s time some had begun, or were about beginning to
baptize infants, that is, minors, who could ask for baptism. When Tertullian was
informed of this business, he wrote a book to oppose it, in which we find the
following passage. "The condescension of God may confer his favors as he
pleases; but our wishes may mislead ourselves and others. It is, therefore, most
expedient to defer baptism, and to regulate the administration of it, according
to the condition, the disposition, and the age of the person to be baptized; and
especially in the case of little ones. [The word, here translated little ones,
is, in the original parvulos, which we shall show presently, was used then for
minors, who might be of every age under twenty-one.] What necessity is there to
expose sponsors to danger? Death may incapacitate them for fulfilling their
engagements; or bad dispositions may defeat all their endeavors. Indeed, the
Lord saith, forbid them not to come unto me; and let them come while they are
growing up, let them come and learn, and let them be instructed when they come,
and when they understand christianity, let them profess themselves christians."
In the year 1700, Dr. Mather, one of the Massachusetts divines, complained that
there were reports, that some of the Congregational churches received members on
the strength of written relations of their religious experience, which had been
dictated by their ministers. This was a strange thing in his day, and it would
doubtless have shocked and grieved this good old man, if he could have foreseen
that the churches of his order, would, in a short time after, get to receiving
members, without any relations either written or verbal, and that some would
hold that a minister who knew himself destitute of saving grace, might preach
the gospel and administer its ordinances. [Backus? History, vol. 2. p. 26-33.]
So Tertullian had but just heard the report of the innovations which were about
to be introduced in the Church of Christ. He had but some faint intimations of
that flood of error, in regard to baptism, which, in a few succeeding centuries,
deluged the christian world.
But before we proceed, it may be proper to subjoin the testimony of two
following Pedo-baptist writers. The first is a learned divine of Geneva, who
succeeded the famous Episcopius in the professorship at Amsterdam, in the
seventeenth century. This learned writer thus frankly acknowledges: "Pedo-baptism
was unknown in the two first ages after Christ; in the third and fourth it was
approved by a few; at length, in the fifth and following it began to obtain in
divers places; and therefore this rite is indeed observed by us as an ancient
custom, but not as an apostolic tradition." The other is Bishop Taylor, who
calls infant baptism "a pretended apostolical tradition;" but further
says, "that the tradition cannot be proved to be apostolical, we have very
good evidence from antiquity" [Baldwin?s Letters to Worcester, p. 167,
168]. These are honest and fair concessions, and if all Pedo-baptists would make
the same, their cause would stand on as good a foundation as it now does, and
they would save themselves much labor and care.
The account of Tertullian?s opposing the baptism of little ones, who were
capable of asking for it, but who, in his opinion, were not sufficiently
enlightened to be admitted to the sacred rite, was in the beginning of the third
century. About the middle of this century, that is, about forty years after the
account of Tertullian, the people in Africa had got baptism down from catechized
minors to new-born babes, and Fidus, a country bishop, wrote to Cyprian of
Carthage, to know whether children might be baptized before they were eight days
old, for by his Bible he could not tell; nor could Cyprian tell, without first
consulting a council or association of bishops, which was about to be assembled.
When the council met, which consisted of between sixty or seventy bishops, after
some other business had been transacted, Fidus? question was brought before
them. Fidus thought that infants ought to be baptized at eight days old, because
the law of circumcision prescribed this time. "No," replied the
council, "God denies grace to none; Jesus came not to destroy men?s
lives, but to save them, and we ought to do all we can to save our fellow
creatures. Besides," added they, "God would be a respecter of persons
if he denied to infants what he grants to adults. Did not the prophet Elisha lay
upon a child, and put his mouth upon his mouth, and his eyes upon his eyes, and
his hands upon his hands? Now the spiritual sense of this is, that infants are
equal to men; but if you refuse to baptize them, you destroy this equality, and
are partial" [Robinson?s History of Baptism, p. 197].
Some other questions were agitated respecting newborn infants, which might do
well enough for African bishops to discuss, but which might be somewhat
offensive to a modern ear.
The reader may here see, what kind of arguments were used at first to support
infant baptism, and it must be acknowledged that they are about as good as ever
have been discovered since.
We hear but little more about infant baptism, until the fifth century, that is,
until the year 416, when it was decreed in the COUNCIL OF MELA, of which St.
Austin [Augustine] was the principal director, "That whosoever denieth that
infants newly born of their mothers are to be baptized, let him be
accursed." ["An honest indication," says Robinson, "rises at
the sound of this tyranny, and if a man were driven to the necessity of choosing
one saint out of two candidates, it would not be Saint Austin, it would be Saint
Balaam, the son of Bosor, who, indeed, loved the wages of unrighteousness, as
many other saints have done, but with all his madness, had respect enough for
the Deity to say, How shall I curse whom God hath not cursed?"]
This council is generally supposed to have been held at Mela, in Numidia, now in
the kingdom of Algiers. According to others it was held in the island of Malta.
Thirteen years after this council, this part of Africa was overrun by the
Vandals, and the Catholics here were dispersed, and some of them fled into
Europe, and carried with them infant-baptism, superstition, and intolerance.
As Africa has been frequently mentioned in the preceding narrative, it may be
proper to observe what part of that dark quarter of the globe is intended. A
person, acquainted with ecclesiastical history, will need no explanation, but
others, into whose hands this work may fall, may desire one.
Africa, which is now generally in a deplorable state of ignorance, once
contained a number of civilized kingdoms, famous for commerce and the liberal
arts. Among these Carthage was probably the most distinguished. It was situated
on the north of Africa, along the southern shore of the Mediterranean sea, where
are now the Barbary States of Tunis, Algiers, and so on. Carthage once vied with
Rome in power; but it was finally subdued by her, and reduced to a province. It
was overrun by the Vandals in the fifth century, and by the Saracens in the
seventh; and from that period, Mahometanism has been the established religion of
the country. In this part of Africa, christianity was planted in early times,
and here too it was early corrupted. Here, and not in Judea, infant baptism
originated, as is evident to every candid investigator of historical facts. The
limits of this sketch will not permit us to give a circumstantial account of the
progress of the baptism of babes; but it is sufficient to observe, that it
gained ground, at first, by slow degrees, so strongly did scripture and reason
operate against it; but having enlisted on its side, the interested views of
priests and princes, and the tender feelings of anxious mothers, who were taught
to believe, that their babes would be doomed to the gulf of ruin, if they died
without this renovating rite, then called the laver of regeneration; under these
circumstances, infant-baptism began most rapidly to prevail, and in a few
centuries overrun the whole catholic church.
We have seen that infant baptism arose in Africa, that the baptism of minors
began to be practiced in the beginning of the third century, and that the
baptism of newborn babes was determined under awful anathemas, by Saint
Austin?s council at Mela, in the fifth century. But its entrance into Europe
is of a later date. The first ecclesiastical canon in Europe, for infant
baptism, was framed at Girona in Spain in the sixth century, and the first
imperial law to establish the practice, was made in the eighth century, by the
Emperor Charlemagne. The council at Girona consisted of only seven obscure
bishops, who met without authority, but who legislated with some effect, for
people began to be concerned about the salvation of their children. This council
framed ten rules of discipline. One was, "that catechumens should be
baptized only at Easter and Pentecost, except in case of sickness; and another
was, that in case infants were ill and would not suck their mother?s milk, if
they were offered, to baptize them, even though it were the day they were
born." Charlemagne?s law to establish infant baptism was almost three
hundred years after this council. The practice was then generally prevalent, and
this Emperor, for political purposes, obliged the Saxons, on pain of death, to
be baptized themselves, and laid heavy fines on those who should neglect to have
their children baptized within the year of their birth. [Robinson?s History of
Baptism, p. 269--282.]
Now priests had no further trouble to vindicate the cause of infant baptism,
popes and princes had undertaken to manage the cause; it was established by laws
civil and ecclesiastical, and if any dared to oppose it, fire and sword ended
the dispute.
CAUSES FOR THE ACCEPTANCE OF INFANT BAPTISM
It is now proper that we should go back to the time when infant baptism began to
gain some ground, and consider the causes which hastened its progress.
About the time that catechumen minors began to be baptized, the words of Christ,
"Except a man be born of water and of the Spirit, he cannot enter the
kingdom of God," were misapplied to baptism. This erroneous exposition led
to an undue reliance on this sacred rite, and many began to extol its efficacy,
in the most absurd and extravagant manner; and represented it as a sure and
sovereign antidote to all the moral maladies of depraved nature. It could wash
away original sin, and place in a state of certain and everlasting salvation,
all to whom it was applied; and more than all this, all who died without it,
whether infants or adults, were sure of eternal misery. These errors were not
all introduced at once; it took some time to bring them to perfection. But while
they were gaining ground, there was another error considerably prevalent, which
produced an inconvenient collision with the former. Some held to a doctrine
similar to the Arminian notion of falling from grace, and many were afraid that
they should relapse into sin after their baptism, and thereby lose all its
salutary benefits. This led Constantine and many others to defer their baptism
till near the close of life. And this again led into the practice of pouring and
sprinkling in baptism, instead of immersion, the then universally prevalent
mode. These people who had deferred their baptism, were often suddenly alarmed
with the prospect of death. Sickness disabled them from ?going to the
baptismal font, and misery was their portion if they died unbaptized, and in
this painful dilemma, they made the best shift they could, and were sprinkled if
they could not be immersed. But this inconvenience was of no long duration, for
as soon as parents were made to believe that baptism was the laver of
regeneration, they were careful that all their children should be washed in it,
as soon as they were born, and their relapsing or rather continuing in sin was
another affair.
We have now arrived at the period in which baptism was exalted to a most
astonishing preeminence. Its efficacy was the constant theme of pulpit
declaimers, and its praises were chanted by all who could sing. Laws were
enacted, canons were made, and the most vigilant precautions were taken by popes
and princes, and every order of ecclesiastics, by nurses and midwives, and every
benevolent creature in christendom, that no human being, whether adult or
infant, whether born or unborn, should depart to the world of spirits without
this heavenly passport. Baptism, indeed, suffered violence, and the violent took
it by force.
As this may seem a mere fanciful reverie, to those who have not studied this
subject, I shall here quote verbatim, Mr. Robinson?s account of the matter.
The passage may be found in his History of Baptism, under the article
"Aspersion," where the authorities are quoted.
"The absolute necessity of dipping in order to a valid baptism; and the
indispensable necessity of baptism, in order to salvation, were two doctrines
which clashed, and the collision kindled up a sort of war, between the warm
bosoms of parents who had children, and the cold reasonings of monks, who had
few sympathies. The doctrine was cruel, and the feelings of humanity revolted
against it. Power may give law; but it is more than power can do to make
unnatural laws sit easy in the minds of men.
"The clergy felt the inconvenience of this state of things, for they were
obliged to attend any woman in labour at a moment?s warning, night or day, in
any season, at the most remote parts of their parishes, without the power of
demanding any fee, whenever a case of necessity required, and if they neglected
their duty, they were severely punished.
"A great number of expedients were tried to remedy this evil; but for a
long season nothing succeeded. There was a regular train of trials. At first,
infants were baptized along with catechumens in public, by trine immersion, at
two times in the year; when it was observed, that some died before the season
for baptizing came, priests were empowered to baptize at any time, and in any
place in case of sickness. When it was remarked that a priest was not always at
hand, new canons empowered him to depute others to perform the ceremony, and
midwives were licensed. It happened sometimes, while the midwife was baptizing a
child not like to live many minutes, the mother was neglected and died. To
prevent such accidents in future, it was decreed, that any body, licensed or
unlicensed, a Jew or a degraded priest, a scullion or felon, might baptize. It
fell out, sometimes, that a vessel large enough, or a quantity of water
sufficient to dip an infant, could not be procured on a sudden; and while in the
dead of the night, and perhaps in a severe frost, the assistants were running to
borrow utensils, or to procure water, the ill-fated infant expired. In vain were
laws made expressly to require pregnant women, to have every thing ready
prepared, the laws of nature defied human control, the evil was incurable, and
the anguish intolerable. Some infants died the moment they were born, others
before, both unbaptized, and all for the comfort of the miserable mother, doomed
like fiends to descend instantly to a place of torment."
In the year 1751, a humane doctor of laws of Palermo, published at Milan, in the
Italian tongue, a book of three hundred and twenty pages in quarto, dedicated to
all the guardian angels, to direct priests and physicians how to secure the
eternal salvation of infants by baptizing them when they could not be born. The
surgical instrument and the process cannot be mentioned here, and the reader is
come to a point in infant sprinkling, where English modesty compels him to
retreat and retire, so that it is impossible to say anything more on lustrating
infants by way of baptizing them. [Robinson?s History of Baptism, p. 433]
The baptism of abortives was a very common practice, but this also is a subject
too indelicate to be discussed.
It may be well for Dr. Osgood to read these accounts of infant baptism, before
he again declaims against our "indecorous" mode of baptizing. We have
now traced the baptism of babes to its highest pitch of frenzy, and also to its
lowest point of corruption and debasement. In most protestant churches, and in
many parts of the catholic church, it has been practiced in a more rational and
becoming manner. But in every form it is all absurd and useless thing, and at
its best estate it is altogether vanity. The baptism of a believer is an
interesting thing, but the sprinkling of a new-born child, is an unanimated,
insignificant affair.
It was customary in the early ages, as it is now with the Baptists, for
ministers, previous to baptism, to preach on the subject, and address the
candidates on the important business, in which they were about to engage; but
where infant baptism prevails, this custom, for good reasons, is generally laid
aside, for they who are the most interested in the matter, are, from their
incapacity, precluded from participating in the transaction. It would be a
curious sight for a Reverend Divine, to address infants in their mothers? or
nurses? arms, on the subject of baptism; but such a thing, ludicrous as it
might seem, would be just as rational, and scriptural, and useful, as it is to
baptize them.
THE MODE OF BAPTISM
Baptism, as to the manner of its administration, has been subject to a great
variety of changes, of which we shall now give a brief account. Baptism, beyond
all doubt, was administered, in the apostolic age, by immersion. A cloud of
witnesses bear testimony to this point, and place it beyond a doubt in the mind
of every candid and unprejudiced man.
Ordinary baptism was universally performed by single or trine immersion for
thirteen hundred years; from thence till after the reformation, it was generally
performed by trine immersion.
Baptism was administered by pouring or sprinkling in cases of necessity all
along from the third century to Calvin?s time.
The first appearance of sprinkling for baptism was in the third century, in
Africa, in favor of clinics or bedridden people. Baptism was now considered
essential to salvation; the poor sick people, who could not go to the
baptistery, but were in danger of destruction if they died unbaptized, made the
best shift they could, and were sprinkled as they lay upon their beds. But the
African Catholics reputed this no baptism, or at least a very imperfect one.
The first appearance of baptizing by pouring, was in the eighth century, when
Pope Stephen III allowed the validity of such a baptism of infants in danger of
death. His Infallible Holiness had been driven from Rome by Astulphus, king of
the Lombards; he fled to France to implore the assistance of Pepin, who had
lately been proclaimed king. During his residence in the monastery of St. Denis,
some monks consulted his opinion on nineteen questions; one of which was:
whether in case of necessity, occasioned by the illness of an infant, it were
lawful to baptize by pouring water out of the hand or a cup on the infant.
Stephen answered, if such a baptism were performed in such a case of necessity,
in the name of the holy Trinity, it should be held valid. The learned James
Basanage makes several very proper remarks on this canon: as that "although
it is accounted the first law for sprinkling, yet it doth not forbid dipping;
that it allows sprinkling only in case of imminent danger: that the authenticity
of it is denied by some Catholics: that many laws were made after this time in
Germany, France, and England, to compel dipping, and without any provision for
cases of necessity: therefore that this law did not alter the mode of dipping in
public baptisms: and that it was not till five hundred and fifty years after,
that the Legislature, in a council at Ravenna, in the year thirteen hundred and
eleven, declared dipping or sprinkling indifferent." The answer of Stephen
is the true origin of private baptism and of sprinkling. [Robinson, p. 429,
430.]
Modern Pedo-baptist writers have picked up historical scraps of these clinical
and necessitous baptisms, and have endeavored to derive evidence from them of
the universality of infant sprinkling. I say modern Pedo-baptists, for Dr. Wall,
who was a strenuous advocate for infant baptism, also warmly contended for
immersion. He published his elaborate History of Infant Baptism in 1705. This
work was answered by Dr. John Gale, a famous General Baptist, in a very learned
work, entitled, Reflections, etc. Dr. Wall published a Defence of his History in
1720. He appears to have been half right and half wrong, and he was as strenuous
for the wrong half as for the right. He warmly contends that infant baptism is
of divine appointment, and he as warmly contends that infant sprinkling is a
"scandalous thing." "Calvin, (saith he) was I think the first in
the world, that drew up a liturgy that prescribed pouring water on the infant,
absolutely, without saying any thing of dipping. It was (as Mr. Walker has
shown) his admirers in England, who, in queen Elizabeth?s time, brought
pouring into ordinary use, which before was used only to weak children. But the
succeeding Presbyterians in England, about 1644, when their reign began, went
farther yet from the ancient way; and instead of pouring, brought into use, in
many places, sprinkling; declaring, at the same time, against all use of fonts,
baptisteries," etc.
"There has (saith he again) no novelty or alteration, that I know of, in
the point of baptism, been brought into the church, but in the way and manner of
administering it. The way that is now ordinarily used we cannot deny to have
been a novelty, brought into this church (of England) by those that had learned
it in Germany, or at Geneva. And they were not contented with following the
example of pouring a quantity of water, which had there been introduced instead
of immersion, but improved it, (if I may so abuse that word) from pouring to
sprinkling, that it might have as little resemblance of the ancient way of
baptizing as possible."
I cannot leave this ingenious author, before I select another passage.
"Another struggle [says he, whether the child shall be dipped or sprinkled]
will be with the midwives and nurses, etc. These will use all the interest they
have with the mothers, which is very great, to dissuade them from agreeing to
the dipping of the child. I know no particular reason, unless it be this: A
thing, which they value themselves and their skill much upon, is, the neat
dressing of the child on the christening-day; the setting all the trimming, the
pins, and the laces, in their right order. And if the child be brought in loose
clothes, which may presently be taken off for the baptism, and put on again,
this pride is lost: And this makes a reason. So little is the solemnity of the
sacrament regarded by many, who mind nothing but the dress, and the eating and
drinking" [Dr. Wall?s Defence, p. 146, 147, 403].
Christians at first baptized in rivers and fords, and wherever water of
sufficient depth could be found. About the middle of the third century
baptisteries began to be built. They at first, like the manners and conditions
of the people, were very simple, and were merely for use; but in the end they
arose to as high degree of elegant superstition, as enthusiasm could invent.
By a baptistery, which must not be confounded with a modern font, is to be
understood an octagon building, with a cupola roof, resembling a dome of a
cathedral; adjacent to a church, but no part of it. All the middle part of this
building was one large hall, capable of containing a great multitude of people,
the sides were parted off, and divided into rooms, and, in some, rooms were
added without-side, in the fashion of cloisters. In the middle of the great hall
was an octagon bath, which, strictly speaking, was the baptistery, and from
which the whole building was denominated. This was called the pool, the pond,
the place to swim in, besides a great number of other names of a figurative
nature, taken from the religious benefits, which were supposed to be connected
with baptism; such as the laver of regeneration, the luminary, and many more of
the same parentage. Some had been natural rivulets before the buildings were
erected over them, and the pool was contrived to retain water, sufficient for
dipping, and to discharge the rest. Others were supplied by pipes, and the water
was conveyed into one or more of the side rooms. Some of the surrounding rooms
were vestries, others school rooms, both for the instruction of youth, and for
transacting the affairs of the church; and councils have been held in the great
halls of these buildings. It was necessary they should be capacious; for as
baptism was administered only twice a year, the candidates were numerous, and
the spectators more numerous than they. [Robinson?s Hist. of Baptism, p. 59.]
It may be proper here to give a brief description of a few of those splendid
buildings which were erected for the purpose of performing baptism by immersion.
We will begin with the one attached to the splendid church of St. Sophia, of
Constantinople, which church is now converted into a Mahometan mosque. The
church of St. Sophia was built by Constantine, the first christian emperor.
Succeeding emperors amplified and adorned it. Justinian at an immense cost
rebuilt it, and his artists, with elegance and magnificence, distributed
variegated marbles of exquisite beauty, gold, silver, ivory, mosaic work, and
endless ornaments, so as to produce the most agreeable and lasting effects on
all beholders.
The baptistery was one of the appendages of this spacious palace, something in
the style of a convocation room in a cathedral, it was very large, and councils
have been held in it, and it was called the great Illuminatory. In the middle
was the bath, in which baptism was administered; it was supplied by pipes, and
there were outer rooms for all concerned in the baptism of immersion, the only
baptism of the place. Everything in the church of St. Sophia goes to prove, that
baptism was administered by trine immersion, and only to instructed persons; the
canon laws, the officers, the established rituals, the Lent sermons of the
prelates, and the baptism of the archbishops themselves. [Robinson, p. 63.] To
the account of this baptistery, I will subjoin the following extracts from the
discourses of Basil, archbishop of Caesarea, which may serve to show both how
and for what purpose they baptized in the Greek established church, in the
fourth century.
"It is necessary for the perfection of a christian life, that we should
imitate Christ; not only such holy actions and dispositions, as lenity, modesty,
and patience, which he exemplified in his life, but also his death, as Paul
saith, I am a follower of Christ, I am conformable to his death, if by any means
I might attain unto the resurrection of the dead. How can we be placed in a
condition of likeness to his death? By being buried with him in baptism. What is
the form of this burial, and what benefits flow from an imitation of it? First,
the course of former life is stopped. No man can do this, unless he be born
again, as the Lord hath said. Regeneration, as the word itself imports, is the
beginning of a new life; therefore, he that begins a new life must put an end to
his former life. Such a person resembles a man got to the end of a race, who,
before he sets off again, turns about, pauses, and rests a little; so in a
change of life it seems necessary, that a sort of death should intervene,
putting a period to the past, and giving a beginning to the future. How are we
to go down with him into the grave? By imitating the burial of Christ in
baptism; for the bodies of the saints are, in a sense, buried in water. For this
reason the Apostle speaks figuratively of baptism, as a laying aside the works
of the flesh; ye are circumcised with the circumcision made without hands, in
putting off the body of the sins of the flesh by the circumcision of Christ,
buried with him in baptism.―Two things are proposed in baptism; to put an end
to a life of sin, lest it should issue in eternal death; and to animate the soul
to a life of future sanctification. The water exhibits an image of death,
receiving the body as into a sepulcher; the spirit renews the soul, and we rise
from a death of sin into a newness of life. This is to be born from above of
water and the Spirit; as if by the water we were put to death, and by the
operation of the Spirit brought to life.―If there be any benefit in the
water, it is not from the water, but from the presence of the Spirit; for
baptism doth not save us by putting away the filth of the flesh, but by the
answer of a good conscience toward God" [Basil, Robinson?s Hist. Baptism,
p. 65, 66, 67].
It seems clear that the homilies of archbishop Basil were addressed, not to
pagans old or young, but to the children of christians, whom he calls the
church. That the Greek church of those times did not force a profession of
christianity upon their children, but conducted them to baptism by instruction
and argument―that baptism was administered by trine immersion―and that, as
the sermons of their bishops were intended to persuade, so the lessons for the
day, read openly in the church, were intended to explain and enforce the subject
of baptism. Nothing like this is to be found in the Lent sermons of modern
times; and a translation of the Lent homilies of the ancient Greek bishops could
not be read to any congregation of modern christians, without great absurdity,
except to Baptist assemblies, and there they would be heard in raptures, for
their singular propriety and beauty.
The baptistery pertaining to the church of St. John Lateran, at Rome, is thus
described by Mr. Robinson: "A traveler, entering Rome by the gate Del
Popolo, must go up the street Strada Felice, till he arrive at the church St.
John Lateran. Turning in and passing along through the church, he must go out at
the door behind the great choir, which lets him into a court surrounded with
walls and buildings. On the left hand is a porch supported by two marble
pillars, which leads into the octagon edifice, called the baptistery. On
entering, he will observe that eight large polygonal pillars of porphyry support
the roof, and there is a spacious walk all round between them and the wall. In
the center of the floor under the cupola, is the baptistery, properly so called,
lined with marble, with three steps down into it, and about five Roman palms,
that is thirty-seven inches and a half deep; for the Roman palm is seven inches
and a half English measure. Some antiquaries are of opinion that this baptistery
was deeper formerly. Perhaps it might be, before the baptism of youths was
practiced; but this, all things considered, is the most desirable of all depths
for baptizing persons of a middle size; and in a bath, kept full as this was, by
a constant supply of fresh water, the gauge was just, and any number might be
baptized with ease and speed." [Robinson, p. 72, 73.]
Mr. Robinson has given similar descriptions of the baptisteries of Revenna,
Venice, Florence, Novara, and Milan; but those which have been mentioned will
give the reader an idea of the form and design of these baptismal structures,
which were erected in the front of christian temples, to show that baptism was
the entrance into the church.
I shall here insert an account of a baptism performed by the pope in the
baptistery of St. John Lateran, about the eighth or ninth century.
"At nine in the morning the pontiff, attended by a great number of prelates
and clergy, went to the sacristy, and after they had put on the proper habits,
proceeded in silent order into the church. Then the lessons for the day were
read, and several benedictions performed. When this part was finished, his
holiness, with his attendants, proceeded to the baptistery, the choir singing
all the way the forty-second psalm: ?As the hart panteth after the
water-brooks, so panteth my soul after thee, O God,? and so on. This ended at
the porch of the first chapel, where his holiness sat down. Then the cardinals
presented themselves before him, and one, in the name of the rest, prayed for
his benediction, which was bestowed. This was repeated thrice, and immediately
after the last, the pontiff added, ?Go ye and baptize all nations in the name
of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost.? The cardinals having
received their mission, withdrew immediately, and, mounting their horses,
proceeded each to his own station to baptize. The pope went on to the baptismal
hall, and after various lessons and psalms consecrated the baptismal water. Then
while all were adjusting themselves in their proper places, his holiness retired
into the adjoining chapel of St. John the Evangelist, attended by some
acolothists, who took off his habits, put on him a pair of waxed drawers, and a
surplice, and then returned to the baptistery. There three children were
waiting, which was the number usually baptized by the pontiff. Silence was
ordered. When the first was presented, he asked, ?What is his name?? The
attendant answered ?John.? Then he proceeded thus: ?John, dost thou
believe in God the Father Almighty, the Creator of heaven and earth?? ?I do
believe.? ?Dost thou believe in Jesus Christ, his only Son our Lord, who was
born and suffered death?? ?I do believe.? ?Dost thou believe in the Holy
Ghost, the holy catholic church, the communion of saints, the remission of sins,
the resurrection of the body and life eternal?? ?I do believe.? ?John,
do you desire to be baptized?? ?I desire it.? ?I baptize thee in the
name of the Father,? dipping him once, ?and of the Son,? dipping him a
second time, ?and of the Holy Ghost,? dipping him a third time. The pontiff
added, ?May you obtain eternal life!? John answered, ?Amen.? The same
was then repeated to Peter and Mary, the other two. Attendants with napkins
received the children, and retired to dress them. The attendants of his holiness
threw a mantle over his surplice, and he retired. The rest of the catechumens
were baptized by deacons, who in clean habits, and without shoes, went down into
the water, and performed the ceremony as the pontiff had set them an example.
After all was over and the children dressed, they waited on the pope in an
adjacent room, where he confirmed them, and delivered to each crism and a white
garment."
The part, relative to the habits of the pope, is taken from the twelfth ordinal
in the collection of Father Mabillon, and it was written by a cardinal in the
latter end of the twelfth century.
"That these ordinals were originally composed for the baptism of those of
riper years, seems not to admit of a doubt, and that baptism was performed by
immersion cannot be questioned, nor can any one hesitate to determine, that the
candidates were the children of christians. The scrutiny; the service in part in
the night; the command of silence; the change of deacons? habits; the wax or
oil-skin drawers, breeches, or trousers for the pontiff; the interrogations and
answers; the kneeling and praying of the candidates; the proper lessons for the
days; the services for susceptors, parents, patrini, and matrini, who were
uncles, aunts, relations, or assistants, and not modern god-fathers performing
sponsors; the addresses to the young folks; the total omission of charges to
sponsors; all go to prove the point" [Robinson?s History of Baptism, p.
78, 79, 80].
When the baptism of infants became an established custom, it was unnecessary for
the administrators to go into the water, and they contrived cisterns which they
called fonts, in which they dipped children without going into the water
themselves. In the first baptisteries, both administrators and candidates, went
down steps into the bath. In after ages the administrators went up steps to a
platform, on which stood a small bath which they called a font, into which they
plunged children without going into the water themselves. In modern practice the
font remains, but a bason of water set into the font serves the purpose, because
it is not now supposed necessary either that the administrator should go into
the water, or that the candidate should be immersed.
Fonts were made of different materials, some of wood, some of stone, and at
Canterbury, in England, there was one of silver, in which many of the English
nobility were baptized. In these fonts infants were baptized naked, and
accidents frequently happened while they were in the font, which were painful to
the feelings of parents and spectators, and which a good Doctor of Massachusetts
would doubtless consider altogether "indecorous." But the poor babes
ought not to be blamed. [In consequence of an accident of this kind, the Emperor
Constantine, in the eighth century, received from his enemies the nick-name of
Copronimus, which signifies that he did that in the sacred font, which he ought
not to have done. Many others received nick-names on the same account. Mosheim;
Robinson.] But baptisteries and fonts are all become useless, since it has been
found out, that for a priest to moisten his hand in a bason, and lay it gently
on the child?s face, or to scatter a few drops from his flexible fingers, will
answer all the purposes of baptism.
To recapitulate what has been said on this subject, everything tends to prove,
that baptism means dipping or immersion, and that it has been so understood and
practiced in most ages of the christian church.
Baptisteries, baptismal fonts, going down into the baptistery, coming up out of it, dressing, undressing, napkins, vestments, and so on, all agree with this mode; and we may add collections of pictures,
inscriptions, medals, coins, festivals, and histories of all kinds of the middle ages, have some connection, near or remote, with baptism by immersion. [Thomas Armitage, in the first volume of his History of
the Baptists, has included graphics and descriptions of many ancient baptismal fonts.―D.W. Cloud] Even punsters and writers of jest-books,
have dipping in baptism for the object of their wit. In the history of the
Byzantine theater, it is said that in the year two hundred and ninety seven, the
players on a theater in a city in Asia, diverted the pagan spectators with a
mock baptism. For this purpose they provided a large bathing tub, filled it with
water, and plunged Gelasinus into it, to the no small diversion of the company.
The evidences in favor of immersion are so numerous that it is difficult, in
this short sketch, to ascertain which are the most proper to select. We will,
however, proceed next to the CONCESSIONS WHICH PEDO-BAPTISTS HAVE MADE ON THE
SUBJECT, and begin with the Roman Catholics.
Learned men of that community differ, as may naturally be supposed, concerning
the time when infant sprinkling was introduced; but none of their accurate
writers pretend to say, the first christians did not baptize by dipping. On the
contrary they laugh at such as affect either to render the word baptism
sprinkling, or to give a high antiquity to the practice. It would be easy to
adduce a great number of examples; but four shall suffice. The first is that
learned and elegant antiquary, Paul Maria Paciandi. This great man published by
authority at Rome, in the year 1755, dedicated to pope Benedict XIV a beautiful
volume of christian antiquities. His holiness, being fond of antiquities,
admitted him to his presence, and took pleasure in examining his compilations.
In the fourth chapter of the second dissertation, he speaks of the two
baptisteries at Ravenna, and finds fault with the artists for representing John
the Baptist pouring water on the head of Jesus. "Nothing (exclaims he) can
be more monstrous than these emblems! Was our Lord Christ baptized by aspersion?
This is so far from being true, that nothing can be more opposite to truth, and
it is to be attributed to the ignorance and rashness of workmen." The
officers of the apostolical palace, and the other examiners of this work speak
of it in terms of the highest approbation.
The second is that excellent judge, Dr. Joseph De Vicecomes, of Milan, whose
book on the mass was examined and approved by the head of the college of St.
Ambrose, by one officer of the inquisition, another of the Cardinal Archbishop,
and a third of the Senate of Milan. In the sixth chapter of the fourth book, on
the ceremonies of baptism, he says, "I will never cease to profess and
teach, that only immersion in water, except in cases of necessity, is lawful
baptism in the church. I will refute the false notion, that baptism was
administered in the primitive church by pouring or sprinkling." He proceeds
through the whole chapter to prove, and particularly refutes the objection,
taken from the baptism of three thousand in one day by the apostles, by
observing that it was a long summer day; that the words pronounced in baptism
were as long in the mode of sprinkling, as in that of dipping; that dipping
might be performed as quick as sprinkling; that many ceremonies now in use were
not practiced then; and that even since several ceremonies had been added, many
fathers at Easter and Whitsuntide had been known to baptize great numbers in a
day by dipping. He remarks in another place, that some men were highly fitted
for this service, as, for example, Ambrose, bishop of Milan, who, Paulinus
affirms, (and he knew him well) had such spirits and strength, that he baptized
as many persons in a day by immersion, as five ordinary men could do after his
decease. [A man always dreaming of sprinkling, concludes that the apostles could
nowhere in Jerusalem, find places for immersion. He can imagine there was an
abundance of pitchers and basins; but to think of dipping places in this great
city, is altogether improbable and absurd. But Dr. Gill has shown that Jerusalem
was not so destitute of this refreshing element as many Pedo-baptists suppose.
"In the city of Jerusalem, (says he) in private houses, they had their
baths for purifications, by immersion, as in the case of menstruas, gonorrhoeas,
and other defilements, by touching unclean persons and things, which were very
frequent; so that a digger of cisterns, for such uses, and others, was a
business in Jerusalem. And in the temple there was an apartment, called the
dipping-place or room, where the high-priest dipped himself on the day of
atonement. And besides these were ten lavers of brass, made by Solomon; and
every laver held forty baths of water, and each was four cubits broad and long,
sufficient for immersion of the whole body of a man. Add to this that there was
the molten sea also for the priests to wash in, 2 Chronicles 4:6, which was done
by immersion; on which one of the Jewish commentators has these words: "The
sea was for the dipping of the priests; for in the midst of it they dipped
themselves from their uncleanness; but in the Jerusalem Talmud, there is an
objection, is it not a vessel? as if it was said how can they dip in it, for is
it not a vessel? and there is no dipping in vessels: R. Joshua ben Levi replied,
a pipe of water was laid to it from the fountain of Etam, and the feet of the
oxen, which were under the molten sea, were open at the pomegranates; so that it
was as if it was from under the earth, and the waters came to it, and entered
and ascended, by the way of the feet of the oxen, which were open beneath them
and bored." And it may be observed, that there was also in Jerusalem the
pool of Bethesda, into which persons went down at certain times, John 5:1, and
the pool of Siloam, where persons bathed and dipped themselves, on certain
occasions. So that there were conveniences enough for baptism by immersion in
this place.] [Thomas Armitage, in A History of the Baptists, Vol. 1,
"Pentecost and Saul," lists several other large pools in Jerusalem. --D.W.
Cloud]
The third is Father Mabillon. He says, that although there is mention made in
the life of S. Lindger of baptizing a little infant by pouring on holy water,
yet it was contrary to an express canon of the ninth century; contrary to the
canon given by Stephen, which allowed pouring only in cases of necessity;
contrary to the general practice in France, where trine immersion was used;
contrary to the practice of the Spaniards, who used single immersion; contrary
to the opinion of Alwin, who contended for trine immersion; and contrary to the
practice of many, who continued to dip till the fifteenth century. For all this
he quotes his authorities.
The fourth is the celebrated Lewis Anthony Muratori.―This perfect master of
the subject, in the fourth volume of his antiquities of the middle ages of
Italy, in the fifty-seventh dissertation, treats of the rites of the church of
Milan, called the Ambrosian, from St. Ambrose, the first compiler of the ritual
of that church. As usual, he confirms every word, by original, authentic papers.
Speaking of baptism by trine immersion, which was the Ambrosian method, he says:
"Observe the Ambrosian manner of baptizing. Now-a-days, the priests
preserve a shadow of the ancient Ambrosian form of baptizing, for they do not
baptize by pouring as the Romans do; but taking the infant in their arms, they
dip the hinder part of his head three times in the baptismal water, in the form
of a cross, which is a vestige yet remaining of the most ancient and universal
practice of immersion" [Robinson?s History of Baptism, p. 433, 434, 435].
A Catholic is not unwilling to acknowledge, that infant sprinkling is a human
tradition; "he is not shocked to find that a ceremony is neither scriptural
nor ancient, because an order of the council of Trent is as valid with him as an
apostolical command."
All the authors, just quoted, believed in infant sprinkling, not because it was
found in scripture, but because it had been established by law in the church of
Rome. And when Protestant Pedo-baptists rail against their superstitious rites,
they often retort upon them their own arguments, and expose the sandy foundation
of infant baptism. A curious anecdote of this kind is related of a Roman
Catholic priest, who was called by king Charles II to dispute with a Baptist
minister by the name of Jeremiah Ives, whom the Catholic supposed to have been a
church priest. The affair will be related at large in the History of the English
Baptists.
A short time since, a pamphlet was published in Baltimore by the Roman Catholic
College of St. Mary, against an attack from the Presbyterians on them, (for
their unwritten traditions) to which the Catholics reply: "Presbyterians
with Catholics admit the baptism of infants. Baptism by sprinkling, by effusion,
etc. Let them find for all this, and for many other practices, any foundation in
scripture." Again, "It is then an unquestionable fact, that even for
Presbyterians, tradition has preserved many unwritten dogmas and religious
institutions" [Massachusetts Baptist Missionary Magazine, vol. 3. p. 207].
A Catholic, by thus acknowledging that infant baptism is an unwritten tradition,
saves himself an infinite deal of labor; but a Protestant, who will not give to
such traditions, however solemnly established, the force of a scripture command,
finds himself in an awkward situation, and is obliged to go in search of proof,
which none ever did and never can find, until two or three more words are added
to the Bible.
While Catholics and Presbyterians are contending about unwritten traditions, the
Baptists look on as calm spectators, and rejoice, that for their practice, they
have a "thus saith the Lord."
We will not, however, confine our attention to the concessions of Catholics. A
HOST OF PROTESTANTS MIGHT BE PRODUCED, who have all conceded that the primary
meaning of baptize, is to dip, to immerse, and so on; and that in this manner
baptism was administered in the primitive church.
CALVIN, in his commentary on the passage in Acts 8:38, they went down into the
water, thus remarks: "Here we see the rite used among the men of old time
in baptism; for they put all the body into the water; now, the use is this, that
the minister doth only sprinkle the body or the head." After several
remarks upon the use of the ordinance, he adds, "It is certain that wee
want nothing which maketh to the substance of baptisme. Wherefore the church did
grant liberty to herself since the beginning, to change the rites somewhat
excepting this substance. Some dipped them thrice, same but once; wherefore
there is no cause why we should be so strait-laced in matters which are of no
such weight; so that that external pompe doe no whit pollute the simple
institution of Christ" [Baldwin?s Letters to Dr. Worcester, p. 201].
DR. CAMPBELL, a late learned Scotch writer, in his Preliminary Discourses to the
Translation of the Four Gospels, observes, that "in several modern
languages we have, in what regards Jewish and Christian rites, generally
followed the usage of the old Latin version, though the authors of that version
have not been entirely uniform in their method. Some words they have transferred
from the original into their language; others they have translated. But it would
not always be easy to find their reason for making this difference. Thus the
word peritome they have translated circumcisio, which exactly corresponds in
etymology; but the word baptisms they have retained, changing only the letters
from Greek to Roman. Yet the latter was just as susceptible into Latin as the
former. Immersio, tinctio, answers as exactly in the one case as circumcisio in
the other." He further adds, "We have deserted the Greek names where
the Latins have deserted them. Hence we say circumcision, and not peritomy, and
we do not say immersion, but baptism. Yet when the language furnishes us with
materials for a version so exact and analogical, such a version conveys the
sense more perspicuously than a foreign name. For this reason, I should think
the word immersion (which though of Latin origin, is an English noun, regularly
formed from the verb to immerse a better name than baptism, were we now at
liberty to make a choice." The same writer thus translates the passage in
Luke 12:50: "I have an IMMERSION to undergo, and how am I pained till it be
accomplished."
MR. BOOTH, in his Pedo-baptism examined, has quoted eighty Pedo-baptist writers,
who concede that the original meaning of the Greek verb baptizo, is to dip, to
immerse, and so on.
The Baptists do not rely on these concessions, to establish their opinion of
baptism; they have other reasons for believing that immersion is an apostolical
rite; but they are produced to show, that Pedo-baptists were more candid and
consistent in former times, than they are in general at the present day. One
would think that these concessions must have some effect upon the minds of
those, who, in any measure, lay themselves open to conviction. Sure I am, that
if one respectable Baptist writer should concede half so much in favor of
pouring or sprinkling, as Calvin has in favor of immersion, it would be
instantly taken for proof, and trumpeted from Dan to Beersheba against them.
But it is an indisputable fact that no Baptist writer, and their number is
considerably great, and some of them have been very learned, their enemies being
judges, has ever had the least misgiving on the subject, or in any way conceded,
that any thing short of a total dipping, plunging, or immersion of the body in
water, can be valid baptism.
But few of the Baptists pretend to understand Greek; some, however, do
undoubtedly understand it, as well as do their adversaries, and have gone
laboriously into the investigation of the meaning of the terms bapto, baptizo,
baptiama, and so on, not so much to establish their own opinions, as to refute
the skeptical evasions and unsound criticisms of their opponents. [That learned
Baptist, Dr. John Gale, has taken much pains in this matter. He hath traced the
original word in profane writers, and hath proved by a great variety of
examples, that with the Greeks, bapto signified to dip, baptai dyers, baphis a
dye house, bapsis dying by dipping, bammata dying drugs, baphi kee the art of
dying, dibaphos, double-dyed, baptisterion a dying-vat, etc. In these senses
were bapto and its derivatives understood before they were selected to describe
a christian institute. --Gale?s Reflections upon Wall?s History of Infant
Baptism, Letter III. Mohammed, in the Alcoran, calls baptism sebgatallah, that
is, divine dying, or the tinging of God, from sebgah dying and dallah God. A
celebrated orientalist says, Mohammed made use of this compound term for
baptism, because, in his time, christians administered baptism as dyers tinge,
by immersion, and not as now (in the west) by aspersion. Robinson?s Hist. of
Baptism, p. 7.]
"The meaning of doubtful words is best fixed by ascertaining the facts
which they are intended to represent; " and when we read that they were
baptized in Jordan, buried in baptism, went down into the water before baptism,
and came up out of it after; I say, when the Baptists read these and many
similar passages, no man, woman, or child, among them, has, or can have, any
doubt of the meaning of the word baptize. And if Pedo-baptists will still spend
their time in hammering Abraham?s covenant and the Greek prepositions, eis and
en, and ek, and apo, to prove that baptizo may mean to sprinkle or pour, they
are welcome to all the pleasure and fruits of their labor.
The Greeks have always understood baptism to mean immersion. The Greek
christians according to Dr. Wall, are more numerous than Roman Catholics, [Defence,
etc. p. 148.] which, if I mistake not, are estimated at a hundred millions or
more; The Greek religion, according to Robinson, is professed through a
considerable part of Greece, the Grecian isles, Wallachia, Moldavia, Egypt,
Nubia, Lybia, Arabia, Mesopotamia, Lyria, Cilicia, and Palestine, the Russian
empire in Europe, greater part of Siberia in Asia, Astracan, Casan, Georgia, and
White Russia in Poland. [Ecclesiastical Researches, p. 93.] Besides the
established Greek church, which is governed by the four patriarchs of
Constantinople, Alexandria, Antioch, and Jerusalem, there are many communities
of Greek christians, called oriental churches, which never were of any
hierarchy, but have always retained their original freedom. These churches are
dispersed all over Syria, Arabia, Egypt, Persia, Nubia, Ethiopia, India, Tartary,
and other eastern countries. The most considerable of them are the Nestorians,
the Armenians, the Georgians, and so on.
Now it is an indisputable fact, acknowledged by all historians, that all these
millions of Greeks, ever have, and now do, administer baptism by immersion. They
generally baptize infants, but they do it by dipping not only in the warm climes
of Arabia and Lybia, but in the frozen regions of Russia and Siberia. [It is
said by an English historian, that St Petersburg, they sometimes baptize their
children in a river or canal, by cutting a hole through the ice, upon which he
observes, "I have heard that a priest, in immersing a child, (for baptism
is performed by the immersion of the whole body) let it slip, through
inattention, into the water. The child was drowned; but the holy man suffered no
consternation. "Give me another," said he, with the utmost composure,
"for the Lord hath taken that to himself." The Empress, however,
having other uses for her subjects, and not desiring that the Lord should have
any more in that way, at least, gave orders, that all children, to be baptized
in a hole in the river, should henceforth be let down in a basket."
Baldwin?s Baptism of Believers, 2d edit. p. 100.] This circumstance outweighs
ten thousand criticisms upon Abraham?s covenant, Greek prepositions, the
little sprinkling brooks of Palestine, and the baptism of the three thousand.
Mr. Robinson has made a very good use of this circumstance in his Ecclesiastical
Researches, under the head "Greek Church," pages 91 and 92, which I
will here transcribe in his own forcible words.
"The state of baptism in the Greek church is an article of more consequence
than it may at first appear. If pity for the wretched be a generous passion, who
can help indulging it when he sees an illiterate Baptist hang his head daunted
and dismayed by the unfair criticism of a learned teacher, who tells him the
word baptize is Greek, and signifies pouring as well as dipping? Great men love
sometimes to trifle. The inference which these translators draw from their own
version, is not exactly logical; for I prove, says a Vossius, going to baptize
an infant, that the word baptize signifies to pour as well as to dip. In virtue
of this, what does he? He takes the infant and neither pours nor dips, but
sprinkles, and then lifts up his voice and says to a congregation of English
peasants, the Greek will bear me out. Verily, this is not fair!
"Suppose an honest Baptist peasant should stand up and say to such a man,
?Sir, I have understood that Jesus lived and died in the east; that four of
his disciples wrote his history in the Greek language; that his apostles
preached in Greek to the inhabitants of Greece, and that the Greeks heard,
believed and were baptized; every nation understands its own language best, and
no doubt the Greeks understand Greek better than we do; now I have been
informed, set me right if I be wrong, that from the first preaching of the
apostles to this day, the Greeks have always understood, that to baptize was to
dip; and, so far are they from thinking that to baptize is to pour or to
sprinkle, I have been told they baptize by dipping three times. I do not
understand Greek, but I think the Greeks themselves do. If, therefore, I were
not to dip for other reasons; and if I were obliged to determine my practice, by
the sense of the single word baptism; and if I were driven to the necessity of
trusting somebody, my reason would command me to take that sense from the
natives of Greece, rather than from you a foreigner.? That this honest man
would suppose a true fact is beyond all contradiction.―In determining the
precise meaning of a Greek word, used to signify a Greek ceremony, what possible
chance hath a session of lexicographers against whole empires of native Greeks?
Let the illiterate then enjoy themselves, and recollect when they baptize by
dipping, they understand Greek exactly as the Greeks themselves understand it.
"Greatly as the Greeks were divided in speculative opinions, and numerous
as the congregations were, which dissented from the church, it is remarkable,
and may serve to confirm the meaning of the word baptize, that there is not the
shadow of a dispute, in all their history, in favor of sprinkling. Because they
were Greeks, they all thought that to baptize was to baptize, that is, to dip
was to dip. They all baptized, and rebaptized; the established church, as was
observed before, by order of council, for speculative reasons, and the
dissenters for moral reasons."
["Since my arrival in this country, I was once in the company of a
gentleman, whose vernacular tongue was the Greek. One of the company asked him
the meaning of the word baptizo, he said it meant baptizo, what else could it
mean? After asking more particularly, he signified, that it meant
immersion." Dr. Staughton?s account of the India Mission, p. 209.]
Nothing of the kind staggers the charity of the Baptists so much, as for a
learned man, with all these historical evidences before his eyes, to tell his
hearers, and publish to the world, that nothing definite can be determined
respecting the meaning of the Greek word baptizo. And many are tempted to think
that they do but half believe their own assertions, but that they make them
merely to gain time, or to bewilder the minds of inquirers. "If, (says
Robinson) there be a word in the New Testament, of a determinate meaning, it is
the word baptism. Yet by a course of sophistry, it shall be first made
synonymous with washing, and then washing shall be proved synonymous with
sprinkling, and then sprinkling shall be called baptism. Thus the book, intended
to instruct, shall be taught to perplex; the book in the world the most
determinate shall be rendered the most vague; the book, the credit of which is
absolutely ruined if it admit of double meanings, shall of all others be
rendered the most mysterious book in the world, saying every thing, and of
course narrating and proving nothing."
MISCELLANEOUS ARTICLES NEARLY OR REMOTELY CONNECTED WITH BAPTISM.
Baptism is one of the most curious and complicated subjects of ecclesiastical
history. Among men who stepped off the ground of scripture, and laid another
foundation, it was variable as the wind, and in every province practiced for a
different reason. At Alexandria, inserted into rules of academical education; at
Jerusalem, administered to promiscuous catechumens; in the deserts of Egypt,
united to monastical tuition; in Cappadocia, applied as an amulet to entitle the
dying to heaven; at Constantinople, accommodated to the intrigues of the court;
in all places, given to children extraordinarily inspired and in the end it was
employed by an African monk, to wash away original sin.
According to Cardinal Bellarmine, the Roman Catholics have no less than two and
twenty ceremonies at baptism. Twelve are preparatory to it, five are at the
administration of it, and the remaining are after it. Others, it is said, make
many more. These twenty-two are all stated in their order by Mr. Robinson, but
we have not room to do it here. The principal ones, however, are the Scrutiny,
Exsufflation, by which devils are expelled, Insufflation, by which the Spirit of
God is communicated, Consecration of the water, the Chrismal Unction, the
Lighted Taper, and the Milk and Honey. [Everything pertaining to baptism was
marked with pomp and extravagance, and the preparations for a christening day,
among the nobility, were as great as they are now for a public dinner in a
populous town. The following is a bill of fare of a dinner at Tynningham, the
house of the Right Hon. the Earl of Haddington, on Thursday the 21st of August
1679, when his Lordship?s son was baptized: Food Amount Fresh beef 6 pieces
Mutton 16 do. Veal 4 dozen Legs of Venison 3 Geese 6 Pigs 4 Old Turkeys 2 Young
do 8 Salmon 4 Tongues and Udders 12 Ducks 14 Roasted fowls 6 Boiled fowls 9
Chickens roasted 30 do. stewed 12 do. frickaseed 8 do. in pottage 10 Lamb 2
sides Wild Fowl 22 Pigeons baked, roasted, and stewed 182 Hares roasted 10 do.
frickaseed 6 Hams 3 A puncheon of Claret, etc. No one will think it strange,
after reading this account, that Dr. Wall accused many in this day, of regarding
nothing at a christening but the dress, and the eating and drinking. In Venice,
the meanest plebeian hath at least three god-fathers, the wealthy have twenty,
and sometimes a hundred.]
Many of these ceremonies, which now appear altogether absurd and unmeaning, may
be traced to a rational origin. We will mention only two, the lighted taper, and
the milk and honey. What use is a lighted taper to an infant eight days old? Yet
President Brisson hath proved by undeniable evidence, from ancient and allowed
authorities, that in the middle ages, when baptism was administered by dipping
only at Easter and Whitsuntide, the number of catechumens being very great, the
administrators began to baptize in the night, or at least long before break of
day, and so many flambeaus were lighted up for public convenience, that the
darkness was turned into day. Could any thing be more natural than for some of
the attendants to give a taper to a person coming up out of the water, or to
walk before him and light him? It served at once to distinguish him in the crowd
for freedom of passage, and to light him from the baptistery to the dressing
room.
After these baptized persons had retired from the baptistery to the dressing
room, it was very common to refresh themselves with milk and honey. Many other
of these ceremonies may be explained in a similar manner, but some originated in
the capricious fancies of superstitious people, and others go to show the
invisible and salutary benefits of the baptismal rite, which Catholics have
magnified to a most extravagant degree. What can be more shocking and
irrational, than to suppose that in a world inhabited by eight or nine hundred
millions of rational beings, the eternal destiny of any should depend on the
precarious application of a few drops of water to their faces, soon after they
were born? Yet thousands and millions have professed to believe this monstrous
doctrine, and if an ill-fated infant was likely to expire, before water could be
obtained, the priest or midwife would baptize it with wine. [Some in Upper
Saxony, a little before the Reformation, practiced baptism upon sickly new-born
infants With only using the baptismal form of words, without the application of
water in any form whatever. There is an account of a Jew, who suddenly turned
christian where there was no water, and at the point of death, was baptized with
sand. Some of the Irish, in the twelfth century, baptized their children by
plunging them into milk, and were superstitious enough to imagine, that every
part so plunged became invulnerable. Robinson; Baldwin. How long must the
Baptists be accused of holding, that baptism is a saving ordinance and essential
to salvation, when they expressly and uniformly declare, that none but
christians are entitled to it, and that it is not the putting away the filth of
the flesh, but is the answer of a good conscience towards God?]
We will not accuse the Protestants of holding an opinion so shockingly absurd,
but still, all Pedo-baptists, however evangelical, do attach to the baptism of a
child, certain invisible benefits, which, as may well be supposed, no person yet
could ever discover; and some, even of the Independents, have accused the
hard-hearted Baptists of holding "an infant damning doctrine―and of
maintaining with an audacious cruelty, a principle, which evidently excluded
dear infants from the kingdom of God―and would send them by swarms into hell―and strike darts of anguish into the hearts of both parents and
children." [Robinson?s History of Baptism, p. 476.]
The liturgy of the Church of England defines baptism to be regeneration, and the
funeral service is refused to such infants as die unbaptized. [The following
anecdote is related by Dr. Baldwin, in his Letters to Rev. Samuel Worcester, in
a note, p. 183: "A few years since, I was called to attend the funeral of
an infant in this town, in a family, which, I was informed, belonged to the
Episcopal church. I asked where the Rev. Dr. was? and was answered he was out of
town. Where is the Rev. Mr.? It was said, he was engaged. At length the
gentleman of the house told me plainly, "The child was not baptized !"
To this I replied, that I had the happiness to believe the child was gone
equally as safe, as though it had been baptized."] The meaning of the term
Infant has been a matter of much dispute, in baptismal controversies.
Pedo-baptist writers have generally gone upon the supposition, that it always
means a babe. But Mr. Robinson has produced numerous and undeniable proofs, that
in ancient ecclesiastical history, the words pais, brephos, brephullion, puer,
puerulus, infans, infantulus, and so on, were used indiscriminately for minors.
Out of the multitude of examples, which that ingenious author has produced, I
shall select the following:
"THE LAST WILL AND TESTAMENT OF ADALD, A LITTLE INFANT OF LUCCA.
"In the name of God―in the twenty-first year of the reign of our Lord
Charles, by the grace of God, king of the Franks and Lombards―I, Adald, the
little infant son of Waltper, being sick and in danger of death, considering in
myself the mercy of Almighty God, for the redemption of my soul, and according
to a statute of king Liutprand, of holy memory, offer to God, and to the church
of blessed St. Martin―my house―out housesgardens―lands―vineyards―olive yards―woodsunderwoods―meadows―pastures, cultivated and
uncultivated―and all my effects, moveable and immovable―and also my house
at and also all other rights, whatsoever and wheresoever―I offer as
aforesaid, and confirm by this deed, which Ghislebert wrote at my request. Done
at Lucca, in the year of Christ, seven hundred and ninety four."
This Will was witnessed by five infants, viz. Gumpert, Asprand, Pascal,
Ghisprand, Erminari, four of whom were then presbyters. [[It was very customary,
at this time, to introduce boys into holy orders for purpose of securing them a
future living, and of laying an early foundation for promotion.] The truth of
the case, says Mr. Robinson, is, circumstances must determine the ages of those,
who were anciently called infants. The various words, translated infant, taken
singly, crumble away in the hands of an investigator: they may signify a
new-born babe, or a little boy of seven, of a great boy of fourteen years, or a
young man turned of twenty; and in support of this proposition, he has produced
evidences in abundance from manuscripts, books, inscriptions, and laws.]
In the year three hundred and seventy-four, the church of Milan assembled to
elect a bishop instead of Auxentius, lately deceased. They were divided into two
violent parties, the one Arian, the other Trinitarian. Disputes ran so high that
the city was in an uproar, and Ambrose the Governor, who was only a catechumen,
and therefore had no vote, went thither to keep the peace. No sooner had he, by
a conciliatory address, quieted the tumult, than to his great surprise, the
whole assembly shouted, "Let Ambrose be bishop! Let Ambrose be
bishop!" and he soon found himself unanimously elected. And the first
person who exclaimed, "Let Ambrose be bishop!" was an infant, that is,
a church member who was under age.
Origen is quoted to prove infant baptism; but Origen?s infants were capable of
repentance and martyrdom; and infants are said to have nominated kings, erected
churches, composed hymns, and so on. [Robinson?s History of Baptism, p. 157.]
The passage in Acts, "the promise is unto you and your children," has
been much disputed. On this passage, many Pedo-baptists build half their
superstructure. But it is evident the term children there is applied to
posterity, without any regard to their age. We read of the children of Israel―the children of Benjamin―the children of promise―the children of God―the children of light―and so on. Infant baptism may as well be proved from
either of these passages, as from the one in Acts.
A zealous Pedo-baptist lately asserted, that he could prove infant baptism from
this passage, "Ephraim is a cake unturned." And cardinal Bellarmine
contended that he could prove the pope?s supremacy from the first chapter of
Genesis. And truly one may be done as easily as the other.
Dr. Wall observes that all national churches practice infant baptism. "Very
true, (says Mr. Robinson) infant baptism, as it was intended, created national
churches, and gives them continuance, as it gave them being. Let what will be
said in praise of such churches, it can never be affirmed that they were either
formed or continued by the free consent of their members. It was for this reason
the learned Dr. Gill called infant baptism the main ground and pillar of.
popery, and a great number of Baptists are of the same opinion. Time only can
discover what the fate of this singular ceremony will be. If a judgment of the
future may be formed by the past, infant baptism, like infant monachism, will
fall into total disuse, and for the same reasons. It was formerly a practice,
both in France and England, but most in England, to make monks and nuns of
infants of seven, five, two, and even one year old; but this is now every where
disused."
"Baptism (says this same writer--Dr. Robinson--in another place) arose pure
in the east: it rolled westward, diminished in luster, often beclouded with
mists, and sometimes under a total eclipse; at length it escaped the eye, and
was lost among attenuated particles, shades, non-entities, and monsters; then it
took a contrary direction, and probably in time it will emerge from every
depression, and shine in its original simplicity and excellence."
PROSELYTE BAPTISM demands a few words of attention. Many Pedo-baptist writers
have depended much upon it to help them to evidence, which the Bible does not
furnish; and Dr. Wall founds his main argument in favor of infant baptism on the
practice. But after all that has been said about proselyte baptism, it remains a
very doubtful affair, and Pedo-baptist writers are much divided among themselves
respecting it. Dr. John Owen calls the opinion, that christian baptism came from
the Jews, an opinion destitute of all probability.
That the Jews had frequent ablutions or washings, no one ever denied, but the
washing of proselytes, which is improperly called baptism, is not found in the
law of Moses, nor in the writings of Philo, or Josephus, but was evidently
introduced after the destruction of the temple at Jerusalem. "It is
remarkable (says Robinson) of this controversy, that they, who most earnestly
take the affirmative, are of all men the least interested; for could a christian
rite be taken off the ground of immediate divine appointment, and placed on that
of human traditions, christianity would lose much of its glory; least of all are
they interested in it, who intend to establish a law to sprinkle the infants of
christians, upon proving, that the Jews had a custom of dipping men and women
when they renounced Paganism. In this hopeless affair, could the fact be
demonstrated, no advance would be made in the argument; for it would be easy to
prove, that if it were by tradition, Jewish traditions neither have, nor ought
to have, any force with christians: and that if it were even an institute of
Moses, the ceremonies of Moses were abolished in form by an authority, which no
christian will oppose."
I have now gone through with narrating all the incidents, which the limits of
this sketch will permit me to insert, and shall recapitulate the whole in the
words of the author I have so often named. Protestants have discovered great
genius in inventing arguments for the support of infant baptism, and to some
Baptists they seem to reason in this manner: It is written, God made a covenant
with Abraham and his family: therefore, though it is not written, we ought to
believe he makes a covenant with every christian and his family. God settled on
Abraham and his family a large landed estate: therefore, he gives every
christian and his family the benefits of the christian religion. God commanded
Abraham and his family to circumcise their children: therefore, all professors
of christianity ought, without a command, not to circumcise but to baptize their
children. Jesus said, "suffer little children to come unto me:"
therefore, infants who cannot come ought to be carried, not to Jesus, but to a
minister, not to be healed, but to be baptized. Paul advised married believers
at Corinth not to divorce their unbelieving yoke-fellows, lest they should stain
the reputation of their children, with the scandal of illegitimacy: therefore,
children, legitimate and illegitimate, ought to be baptized. A man of thirty
years of age says he believes the gospel: therefore, his neighbor?s infant of
eight days ought to be baptized, as if he believed the gospel. And finally, the
scripture does not mention infant baptism; but it is, notwithstanding, full of
proof that infants were and ought to be baptized.
Really, the Baptists ought to be forgiven for not having a taste for this kind
of logic; yea, they ought to be applauded for preferring argument before
sophistry.
St. Austin and his company were the first who attacked believer?s baptism at
law; but Zuinglius and Calvin are said to be the first, who invented the method
of proving infant baptism from Abraham?s covenant. The dispute between
Baptists and Pedo-baptists has long been maintained, and still it remains
unsettled. Every thing which slander could utter has been cast upon the
Baptists, and every cruelty, which malicious ingenuity could devise, has been
practiced against them. Thousands of them have been slain, and thousands more
have been dispersed into obscure corners and caves of the earth. But still they
remain, and are rapidly advancing in numbers and strength. As a body, like
others, they have been much divided on many other points, but in the article of
baptism they have been uniform and unshakingly fixed. They have never
persecuted, although they have had it in their power to do so. BUT THEY HAVE
REASONED AND REMONSTRATED, AND AGAINST INFANT BAPTISM THEY HAVE URGED THE
FOLLOWING OBJECTIONS:
First. It is not in our Lord?s commission; and what is not in a commission,
must, of necessity, be out of it.
Second. It is no where found in the Bible; and, therefore, it cannot be a Bible
institution.
Third. They deny that infants derive any benefit from baptism, and thousands of
them have had the opportunity of knowing; but on the contrary affirm, that a
great injury is done them by it, because they grow up in a prejudice, that they
are christians, and, therefore, never examine what christianity is.
Fourth. Every person ought to be left free to choose his own religion; but
infant baptism imposes a religion upon its subjects, before they know it, and
they often have much trouble to get rid of it, when they become capable of
refusing the evil and choosing the good.
For these and many other reasons, the Baptists without the least misgiving,
reject infant baptism; and if saint Austin, and a thousand other saints beside,
have said that it was an apostolical tradition, it does not in the least affect
their belief, so long as they find that saint Luke, saint Paul, and saint Peter,
have no where mentioned it, but have laid down principles, which go entirely to
exclude it. They do not wonder that many saints have asserted what none ever
proved, but they wonder that some of them have not interpolated scripture to
serve their hypothesis.
The Baptists are accused by their opponents of having an assurance peculiar to
themselves. This accusation they are not unwilling to admit. Their peculiar
assurance arises from the clear and peculiar evidence with which their
sentiments are supported. This assurance has been called presumption, and those
who persisted in it, in former days, were denounced obstinate heretics, and
doomed to suffer fire and sword in this world, and eternal perdition in the
world to come. But a gracious Providence has now delivered us from the force of
these terrible arguments.
While Pedo-baptists send inquirers to their pamphlets and doctors, the Baptists
send them to the Bible, and they cannot but exult that their sentiments are
there so plainly expressed. And what emboldens them, and disgusts their
opponents is, that every man, woman, and child has the leading passages by
heart, on which their sentiments are founded, and can, at once, produce
arguments, which the greatest doctors cannot answer without much time, nor then
without much sophistry.
It is a very unlucky circumstance, that infant baptism is no where mentioned in
the Bible, and I pity the person, who, with a tender conscience, sets out, to
find it there; for, sure I am, he will have a hard and fruitless task, and if he
finally succeeds, it must be by subverting his own understanding.
The study of infant baptism is the most perplexing study in the world, as many,
who are now Baptists, know by experience. And the reason is, it perverts the
order of scripture. But in the study of believer?s baptism every thing is
plain and easy.
Infant baptism is supported by a long string of texts from the Old Testament and
New, none of which mention the thing, and none of which refer to such a
practice, any more than Hagar?s going out into the wilderness of Beersheba,
leading her sulky son Ishmael, and carrying with her a loaf of bread and a
bottle of water. In this passage we find a child and water, and these are not
found in many of the passages brought to support infant baptism.
As to all the shocking consequences which follow from Baptist principles, we
have only to say, they are drawn by Pedo-baptists, and not by us. And since
three-fourths of the terraqueous globe is covered with water, we never expect to
find any difficulty in procuring a full supply of this element.
The substance of this sketch has been selected from Robinson?s incomparable
history of baptism, to which I have often referred; and many sentiments and
sentences, for which no formal credit has been given, have been taken from that
laborious and invaluable work. There are but few copies of it in this country.
It is a quarto volume of between six and seven hundred pages, with very copious
Latin notes. This work will bear to be abridged; and by omitting the notes and
some other articles, it might be reduced to an octavo volume of four or five
hundred pages, without leaving out any of the important matter which relates to
baptism. In making out the above sketch, which has been selected from every part
of it, I have been obliged to study it with considerable attention, and have
conceived the design of undertaking to abridge it, after I have had a little
respite from my present labor. [Many articles which are largely and learnedly
discussed by Mr. Robinson, have not been referred to in the preceding sketch; as
baptism connected with Monachism - with social obligations - with Human Creeds -
with Judaism - with Chivalry - with Sacerdotal Habits - and with Witchcraft; The
baptism of Bells, Tropical Baptism, the Christening of Fleets, and so on.]
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