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Correct, but the one's we do know about are all baptism after faith is expressed.
SOME of the baptisms that happen to be recorded (and it ain't many) do indicate that. But not all.
But ALL of the baptisms that happen to be recorded in the Bible indicate that they were done in the Middle East or very southeastern Europe... all were done by Hebrew males. So if the rubric is we must do as illustrated in the Bible, then we can't baptize in North America, can't baptize Black or Oriental persons, and no Gentles or females may perform such. You get my point.
What is so wrong with Baptizing new converts and teaching our children the Gospel and praying for our Children that God will give them the gift of faith and bring them to a Spiritual birth?
Nothing! I'm not on the side that is dogmatically mandating any limitations or mandates not mentioned in the Bible (or Tradition or for 1500 years).
But where is the mandate, "Thou canst NOT baptize any until he hath celebrated his we-can't-tell-you-which birthday?" Where is the mandate, "Thou canst not baptize any until he hath convincably recited the Sinner's Prayer and given adequate public proof of his faith?" That's what I'm missing. And what about the Great Commandment to love? Is that limited to examples found in the Bible so that it doesn't apply to Blacks or Orientals or Native Americans because none of those are illustrated as being loved? Where is such a limitation and prohibition mentioned? You get my point.
And if people in earliest Christianity understood this prohibition (it just didn't get into the Bible) then why was St Ignatius (a disciple of St. John) baptized as a baby - and he affirms this act?
Gender, race, age are not the determining factor. Belief/faith/conversion is the determining factor.
1. There goes the Anabaptist dogma of Anti-Paedobaptism......
2 Well, how can it be determined with certainty that one does not have faith? Can little ones believe in Jesus? Jesus himself says so. And of course John the Baptist believed even before he was born. Why forbid a gift when we cannot be know if faith is present?
3;. Where does Scripture say "But thou canst NOT baptize any unless and until they hath recited the sinner's prayer and given adequate proof of their faith in Christ?" In exactly the same place where it says "Thou canst not baptize any until they hath celebrated their we-won't-tell-you-which birthday" and "Thou cans't not baptize any Blacks or Orientals because there are no examples of either recorded in the Bible." Nowhere.
And where do we find this mandate/prohibition in the early church (or for 1500 years, for that matter)? Can we find Church Fathers who stated, "It is forbidden to baptize any before they hath recited the sinner's prayer, responded tp an altar call and adequately proven their faith in Christ?"
I personally believe that all the members of the households mentioned in the New Testament were old enough to believe and be baptized.
Of course, as you have noted, we cannot know this;.
I personally believe all the members of those households were Caucasians. Does that mean only Caucasians can be baptized?
Can infants become believers?
Jesus says so. John the Baptist was.
At what age does it cease to be impossible for God to give the "free gift of faith?" At what age can a person start to trust and rely?
Maybe their was a 10 year old boy and an 8 year old girl in the household and they came to believe and were baptized. That is certainly possible. We don't know their ages, but we do know they had the capacity to believe.
How do you know that? Quote the verse.
NO ONE - at any age - has the capacity to believe. NO ONE can even say Jesus is Lord UNLESS the Holy Spirit so empowers. NO ONE. That's what the Bible says. NOT "everyone over the age of we-won't-tell-you and over the IQ of we-won't-tell-you can believe."
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