Baptist
baptism as a
confirmation of faith
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by Grant
Thorpe |
| Where do
children belong in the family of God? That is to say,
what is their actual status before God? The task of parents
is to represent that to their children and the task of
the church is to welcome them according to their actual
status before God. |
| Jesus modelled
that when children desired to be with him, or, when mothers
desired the blessing of Christ on their children. Jesus
welcomed them and said of such is the kingdom of
heaven. |
| If children
already belong to the family of God, and they are taught
as much in word and deed by parents and church, what then
of baptism in our Baptist Church? |
| Many denominations
bear witness concerning their children that they belong
to God by baptising them when they are infants. The infants
do not know about this at the time but their parents do,
and the church does, and in time, the children will see
other children being baptised and be taught that this
is what happened to them, and so, the witness will be
borne to them that they belong to God. This decision to
baptise infants is a pastoral decision taken by the ancient
church and carried on in many churches to the present
day. |
| But Baptist
churches, together with a number of other denominations,
have seen the connection between confession of faith and
baptism in the experience of the early church and preferred
to baptise only those able to make their own profession
of faith. Some have fought and died for this and, of course,
new denominations have been formed to practise it. (Other
things were in mind as well in forming these new denominations
but baptism was a significant part in the decisions made.) |
| The confusion
for Christian families in baptising confessors is that
the children may be left in some doubt as to where they
belong before God. Then, the children, in their eagerness
to have all that their parents enjoy (which extends to
a lot more things than their faith!) may be eager to be
baptised at an early age. Parents also, may see early
and delightful signs of faith in their children and be
eager for them to be baptised. |
| Bearing
witness to a child that they belong to God happens in
many more ways than in baptism of course. Parents have
not been told to baptise their children (or told not to),
but they have been told to bring them up in the discipline
and instruction of the Lord. This is where our emphasis
must lie. That means surrounding them with the words and
deeds of God himself as he cares for his creation. It
means living in the forgiveness and renewing power of
the gospel and conveying this to the children as they
are able to receive it. It means telling the children
the family history as in Scripture so that they know the
whole story of which they are a part. They need to know
that they too are in Christ, that their sins are forgiven,
that God is their Father, that God hears their prayers,
that their angels behold the face of God, that they will
see God in the life to come, and that they are to join
with their parents in living gratefully before Godeager
to hear all that he has to say to them as they grow up.
In particular, because this is the only command ever addressed
directly to children, they are to honour or obey their
parentsas their parents are to teach them the way
of God. |
| But what,
then, of children wanting to be baptised, or parents wanting
their children to be baptised? What age is appropriate,
and, which children understand what they are about? When
are they mature enough, and will they remain committed
to what they have done? |
| It is interesting
that the churches who baptise children choose to have
a confirmation ceremony at a later age. This is usually
related to a course of instruction to ensure that children
understand what Christians believe, and perhaps, to ensure
that they do in fact believe it. |
| Looking
wider afield, Judaism, which circumcised its males in
infancy, had a time when a child was acknowledged as an
adult. What they meant by adult was that the child was
now regarded as being able to understand and keep the
whole law. This is now called their Bar Mitzvah, occurring
around 12 years of age. It is helpful to realise also
that many ancient cultures have initiation ceremonies
where the adulthood of young men and women is acknowledged,
or rather, given. |
| The significance
of a culture acknowledging the time of adulthood must
be clear. Children know they are growing up and love it.
They know they have responsibilities and can rise to them
in a remarkable way. But it is manifestly better to give
them their adulthoodalbeit in a graduated wayrather
than have them drag it from us by revolt. |
| If we understand
adulthood as starting at the beginning of the teen
years rather than at their end, and define it as being
able to understand and keep the whole revelation of Godrather
than being able to choose for themselveswe will
represent to them more accurately the way they are regarded
by God, the way things actually are. |
| I recommend
that we teach our children, as members of Gods family
and heirs of all his promises, that they confirm their
own faith in baptism at around this age. They must continue
to confirm their faith all their lives of course, but
it allows their becoming adult to be defined by God rather
than by the world or by their restlessness. |
| There is
another advantage in this practice. Baptism is an act
of the church before it is an act of the confessor. Jesus
told his church to make learners of all nations and to
baptise them. He would be with them as they did this.
In other words, the chief actor at a baptism is Christ,
through his obedient church. If a person has heard and
believed the word of God, they are commanded to be baptisedmeaning,
they must confess their faith; but the church has a solemn
duty to receive this believer and baptise them into the
name of Father, Son and Holy Spirit, so, bringing them
into Gods name in their fleshly existence. Who can
forbid water to one whom the Spirit has already acknowledged?
Commending baptism to children at a certain age rather
than waiting for them to volunteer may assist
in preserving the givenness of their faith and of the
baptism which Christ wants them to have. It may remove
a fear of being unbaptised that they may have. |
| I commend
these thoughts to our parents and to us all, as a basis
for further consideration. I do not think it is helpful
to be dogmaticnow, or in the future. My concern
is to have a pastoral practice which assists parents in
teaching their children, and, if possible, some commonality
in procedure which will help the children as they grow
up together in our congregation. |
©
Grant Thorpe |