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Josiah said:Friend,
Frankly, I'm not SURE that - by verbatim words of Scripture alone - it can be dogmatically stated what God can do and/or does do in and through Baptism. In MY opinion, it often comes down to whether one proceeds from a monergistic or synergistic framework. For the monergist, who believes that Jesus does the saving, that God can use Baptism in his plan of salvation ... and that "Baptism now saves you" means that... seems very possible. And certainly that was the earliest understanding of Christians and the only one until the Anabaptists came around in the 16th Century. BUT the synergist, who believes that salvation is a cooperative, synergistic, process of Jesus doing His part and self doing our part.... who understand that people must be ABLE to jump through all the hoops they must jump through to be saved.... infant baptism makes no sense (after all, I wasn't even conscience.... and more than a few babies sleep through the whole thing, usually to the delight of the pastor and parents). Does one assume that God alone gives life (and thus God causes us to be born again) OR is God only the helper or enabler or possibility-maker and we must be ABLE to do our part? Is God impotent to save those under a certain age or IQ or other ability? Or is that irrelevant because it's Jesus who saves (Jesus being the Savior). For the synergist, infant baptism will be silly (what can babies DO to save themselves?), but to the monergist, God is no less able to save a baby than an adult - no less able to move John the Baptist still in the womb than to move some 45 year old dude with an IQ of 300, 6 Ph.D., and has been ordained in 5 denominations. All comes down to who does the saving: God or self? To monergism or synergism. But, yes, based on ONLY the verbatim words in the Bible, I don't think we can prove EITHER that Baptism is effective or not, whether God uses it or not (does seem strange it is seem as SO important if it's so ineffectual, however... why command something EQUALLY with teaching if it's pretty much a waste of time and water?).
But to ME, there are two separate issues here: Whether God can and/or does use Baptism and teaching? And whether God forbids any to be baptized and/or taught if they have not yet attained the age of X (whatever that age is; never can seem to get anyone to say). Those are NOT the same issue. True, the only verse found in the first is "Baptism now saves you." And for the second, "Go and baptize... teach.... all nations." But here's what I don't see: "God is impotent to save those under the age of X or under the IQ of X" and "You are forbidden to baptize any under the age of X."
Understand my perspective?
- Josiah
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Infant baptism unto salvation would be a synergistic concept, meaning, God plus. "To procure salvation for an infant one must baptize them" is an adding of human effort to God's gracious salvation.
1. That synergistic argument only works for Anabaptists, not for those who don't forbid children from recieving baptism and teaching. Your argument only works for those who believe that baptism is something a person must do to contribute their part and who deny that God simply blesses by grace.
2. Friend, baptism is PASSIVE - the one blessed doesn't do anything (heck, I wasn't even breathing) - the very point that bothers the "must be over X years old" crowd is that the receiver doesn't DO anything for God. Well.... you can't have it both ways, you can't claim that the little baby who is sleeping through the whole thing is contributing to their salvation AND is not able to contribute to their own salvation.
3. No one says that a person must RECEIVE baptism in order for God to save them.
4. True, the one administering the baptism is doing something. But then that's true for teaching, too. So are you forbidding any to teach those under the age of "X" because the teacher has to DO something in order to teach? Friend, synergism says the RECEIVER must do stuff to contribute to their own salvation, that salvation is not by grace but by their own works such as deciding or saying the "sinner's prayer" or responding to an altar call or loving or giving God the steering wheel of their life - friend THOSE are the folks who are going to reject infant baptism because, as they shout endlessly and constantly, "How can a baby DO _______?" The theology is the receiver has to DO something in order for God to save and bless them. It's called synergism in theology.
If you are going to follow a monergist view you should admit that God is more than capable of adopting infants and mentally disabled persons by His choice, apart from anything we do.
He is. As He did with John the Baptist still in the womb of Elizabeth. But God never commanded believers to just trust that He'd save folks without ministry, He commanded us to GO and BAPTIZE and TEACH.
If you believe that God can grant faith apart from baptizing and teaching, then why deny that He can grant faith via Baptism? It's seem illogical to argue God is all soverign and powerful but is rendered impotent by any under the age of "X".
Baptizing infants has no spiritual value.
Well, that's an opinion..... one in direct conflict with the faith of nearly every Christian for over 1500 years.
I just wonder why Baptism would be placed equally with teaching in the Great Commission, that two things were put into the Great Commission (BAPTISM and teaching), that Baptism was SO very, very important in the NT and until Anabaptist came along, if it's a waste of time and water, doing nothing, having no value (except getting someone a little bit wet). And that verse, "Baptism now saves you" being thus misleading. Odd, I think. Beyond curious. But textually POSSIBLE, I guess, it could be that Jesus and the everyone in the Bible put SO much emphasis on something of no value.
Pax Christi
- Josiah
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