I don't see the restriction either, but be baptized is not something a baby can do
... and no baby does. Heck, I wasn't even breathing. No person baptizes themselves, it is always passive. The Great Commission is not given to mandate what self must do to self but what Christians are to do for others.
It's of more importance I think than that it gets credit for.
I believe that Jesus saves. The unsaved are DEAD (Ephesians 2:8-9 etc., etc.) and the DEAD can't decide, declare, testify, give permission or believe anything. Which is why they need to be SAVED (passive on their part, the "free gift" of God, God GIVES life).
I reject the idea that God cannot save or bless or grant life to one UNLESS they have first attained the magical age of X , unless they FIRST have said the sinner's prayer and given their life to Jesus, come to faith/life, and given Jesus permission to save them. I can't find any of those restrictions, prohibitions and limitations anywhere in the Bible. God GAVE faith/life to John the Baptist still in his mother's womb because God can - not because John the Baptist (at about 6 months gestation) had first come to faith, decided to follow Jesus, testified of his faith, and gave God permission to save him.
BECAUSE I believe that God saves (and not we ourselves), I have no problem with God saving a baby. The bible says that NO ONE can even say "Jesus is lord" UNLESS the Holy Spirit causes it. No one can enter a second time into their mother's womb. We can't save ourselves - in whole or in part - whether we are 5 minutes old or 50 years old, whether we have an IQ of 50 or 500, Black or white, male or female.... Which is why we need the SAVIOR. GOD SAVES, God forgives, God blesses, God regenerates. I don't think God is impotent when it comes to those under the age of X. I don't think we contribute ANYTHING to our being saved (thus I believe Jesus is the savior and not self). Since the unsaved don't save themselves, since the unsaved CAN'T save themselves, the baby is in no different situation than the 50 year old: if salvation comes, God must give it.
Now, I fully agree..... Teaching and Baptizing do NOT save in and of themselves, by the act being performed. I've known many who heard the Gospel and did NOT come to faith. Simply teaching someone - that act - doesn't bring out salvation, only God does that. Same with Baptism. But on the other hand, it is both biblical and evident that people rarely spring to faith in a complete vacuum and that it is unbiblical that we are to do nothing vis-a-vis the unsaved. We are specifically COMMANDED to do two things: Baptize and teach (that alone tells me these must not be a "waste of time" and "of no value" as has been claimed!). I think God can use those to bring about faith. The Bible does speak of the Word as salvic. And the Bible does speak of Baptism as salvic ("Baptism now saves you") but only because God typically works through means rather than just zapping them directly with no context.
The robber on the cross couldnt get baptized, yet was saved.
Exactly!
No one remotely teaches that God is impotent unless one is baptized. You give a good example. John the Baptist is an even better one. God ALSO has the means of grace of the Word (which we are commanded to teach). And of course, He is not REQUIRED by some Law to use any means (again, John the Baptist). I'm not the one restricting what God can do.... that's the other side of this "debate."
Here's the restriction:
Then Philip opened his mouth, and beginning at this Scripture, preached Jesus to him. 36 Now as they went down the road, they came to some water. And the eunuch said, “See, here is water. What hinders me from being baptized?”
37 Then Philip said, “If you believe with all your heart, you may.”
And he answered and said, “I believe that Jesus Christ is the Son of God.”
38 So he commanded the chariot to stand still. And both Philip and the eunuch went down into the water, and he baptized him.
No, it's not a restriction. It's an EXAMPLE. It's what was DONE in a single case of a single man. If this is a teaching, then, friend, the only valid baptism is one done by Philip (or at least a Hebrew Prophet) and only in whatever pool he was baptized in. It would be forbidden for anyone but eunuch men to be baptized.... it would be forbidden for any but Hebrew man prophets to do the baptizing.... it would be forbidden to do such anywhere but in that stream (or whatever it is). Friend, EXAMPLES are just examples - not "GO AND DO LIKEWISE." Otherwise, we'd all have the command to look at naked women bathing on rooftops, lol. You see my point.
The Great Commission to CHRISTIANS is: Go..... Baptize.... Teach.... Nothing there about "But only eunuchs" or "but only by Hebrew male prophets" "but only in a certain pond". Nothing about "but only if they are past the age of X." Nothing about "but only if they are Christians."
Again, I'm not the one slapping on invisible restrictions... I'm not the one limited what God can do....
More on this point of substituting examples for teaching (this from an earlier post to a different poster)
Josiah said:
1. I don't accept the rubric that the teaching of the Bible is irrelevant, only the traditions/examples found in the Bible. Thus, with all due respect, your question is irrelevant. You think so too, I strongly suspect. Can you find even one example in the Bible of posting at a website on the internet? Yet you are doing so. Can you find even one case of a church using electricity or powerpoint? Even one example of a youth group? Even one example of people passing around little cut up pieces of Weber's White Bread and little cups of Welch's Grape Juice? Friend, probably 99% of what your congregation does is not seen anywhere in the Bible. And can you find even one example in the Bible of an African-American or Hispanic or Korean being baptized? One example of a Gentile administering baptism? Did the congregation in Corinth have a website, a parking lot? Did they have a youth group and Sunday School? Did they use electricity? Did the preacher wear jeans and a Ahola shirt and use a mic? Did he hold a floppy, leather cover KJV Bible while he preached? Did it pass around grape juice and white bread for Communion? I'm being foolish but I'm SURE you see my point. With all due respect, I think you too reject your rubric; I don't think you believe your own premise.
2. We have a FEW examples of baptisms in the Bible. Probably fewer than 0.00000001% of the ones done in the First Century (a pretty small sample). And yes, it seems MOST of the very, very, very few examples of Baptism that happen to be recorded in the NT do seem to be of those past the never-disclosed age of "X." But not all of them. In some cases, it is IMPOSSIBLE to know the age of those being baptized. For example, we're told that "all in her household" were baptized - with no hint as to the respective ages of each and whether each had celebrated their "X" birthday. True, I can't point to an example that states, "And this person had not yet celebrated their X birthday." But then you can't find an example of a Korean or Native American or Italian or German being baptized but that doesn't stop you. And you can't show that even the tiny number of examples in the Bible were all over the age of X.
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I hope that helps....
Thank you!
- Josiah
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