atpollard
Well-known member
- Joined
- Feb 6, 2017
- Messages
- 2,573
- Location
- Florida
- Gender
- Male
- Religious Affiliation
- Baptist
- Political Affiliation
- Conservative
- Marital Status
- Married
- Acceptance of the Trinity & Nicene Creed
- Yes
No, I still believe what the Bible says.Has anybody changed their mind about paedobaptism?
While the sort of talking past any scripture I post or points I make is unlikely to EVER convince me of anything, I would point out that an honest discussion on the actual merits of the scripture did convince me to abandon the Baptist teaching against household covenants and to embrace at least the probability that children are included in the 'visible church' as part of the covenant people. However, the substitution of water baptism for OT circumcision is based too strongly upon the interpretations of men reading into the actual scripture and goes against certain explicit commande, like those of Peter in Acts 2. I cannot reject the simple exegesis of what Peter actually said and do theological backflips to read a new covenant 'circumcision' into the verses. There really are no 'smoking gun' verses that prove that any baby was ever baptized in scripture. There are just a few general references to 'households' and at lest one of them clearly has no members too young to hear and understand and believe the Gospel. Proof from silence is not really proof about something as important as a new physical sign of a new covenant. God was VERY clear about circumcision. Why would infant baptism not even be mentioned once?
Would you abandon the sacrament of 'last rights' if someone told you that they had read between the lines and decided that 'last rights' should be given at birth and was not needed again at death? Neither will I abandon the command for each believer to choose for themselves to repent and be baptized (both actions required) in the name of Jesus for the forgiveness of sins and in order that they would recieve the Holy Spirit.