Lanman87
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This was asked of me in the thread on Accretions in the church. Instead of getting that thread off topic I'll post my opinion here.
As someone who believes that credo-baptism is what the Bible both teaches and demonstrates then my answer would be yes, Infant Baptism was an accretion.
However, because we are save by Faith, through grace, by Christ then I do not see infant baptism or credo-baptism being a "hill to die on". There are plenty, maybe even most, people who were baptized as infants who came to a saving/living faith in Christ as a child, teenager, or adult. They are indwelled by the Holy Spirit and partakers of the Gifts of God, and are members of the universal/catholic church of all who are "in Christ".
I'm also sure that there are those who were baptized on a profession of faith, who didn't really have faith. Maybe they made a profession of faith in order to please a parent, sibling, girlfriend/boyfriend or spouse and went through the motions of baptism without having their hearts changed from a heart of stone to a heart of flesh.
Having said that, If you read church history, there were a lot of things about baptism that changed from the descriptions in the Bible to how baptism was practiced in the first several centuries.
We know from the Bible that the earliest Baptisms were held in rivers and bodies of water. This indicated either full immersion or that the person being baptized at least waded out into the water. Over the next several centuries Christians would be baptized, not only in rivers/lakes but also in bath houses and fountains of private homes. When the church started acquiring property then the early church buildings had baptistry pools and it seems that immersion was the normative form of baptism, with pouring being aloud when there was no access to a pool of large amount of water. At some point the normative way of baptizing someone became pouring/sprinkling of water with entering a pool/immersion being less universally practiced. This probably had more to do with trouble/expense of providing water than any great theological reason.
The second thing we notice that is different from the Biblical narrative is that in the Bible baptisms take place very quickly after someone makes some sort of profession/evidence of faith. In the 2nd Century the church started delaying baptism until a new convert went through a period of Catechesis, or religious instruction, which could last up to three years. So baptism went from being something that is a part of initial conversion to a confirmation of conversion and admittance into the full fellowship of the church. It was only after baptism that someone could take the Eucharist and being fulling involved in the administration/ministry of the church.
The third change we find is the Baptism of Infants who are "to young to speak for themselves." From what I can tell from the the little documentation available, this change seems to have started, in some places, in the 2nd half of the 2nd century. The first instruction I have found recorded is the Apostolic Tradition of Hippolytus of Rome, written around 215 or so.
21. ¹At cockcrow prayer shall be made over the water. ²The stream shall flow through the baptismal tank or pour into it from above when there is no scarcity of water; but if there is a scarcity, whether constant or sudden, then use whatever water you can find.
³They shall remove their clothing. ⁴And first baptize the little ones; if they can speak for themselves, they shall do so; if not, their parents or other relatives shall speak for them. ⁵Then baptize the men, and last of all the women; they must first loosen their hair and put aside any gold or silver ornaments that they were wearing: let no one take any alien thing down to the water with them.
It is also of note that one belief about baptism in the 2nd and 3rd centuries was that baptism washed away our sin but if you sinned after baptism then it could never be washed away. So we had many people delaying baptism until they got old or sick for fear that they would get baptized and then commit adultery or some other sin that would send them to hell.
So while infant baptism did happen by the beginning of the 3rd Century it didn't really become the norm until the 4th or 5th century. Many of the later great theologians (including Augustine) who had Christian parent/parents weren't baptized until they had a conversion experience. In Augustine's great book "Confessions" we read a story of one of Augustine's friends who had Christian parents. His friend became ill and was on his death bead and the friends parents were about to have him baptized, but the friend got better. Non of this makes much sense if infant baptism is the normative practice in the 4th century.
Historically, infant baptism didn't becomes the norm until after Augustine's great works on original sin became the dominate theology of the church. Since, according to Augustine, baptism washed away original and actual sin, it become the norm for parents to have their infant baptized so it would go to heaven if it died. In an era of very high infant mortality I can certainly understand that concern.
So we see a change from the Biblical testimony of converts being baptized quickly after or even as part of initial conversion in a river/lake or pool of water. To converts being baptized after a lengthy time of instruction. We also see some baptizing infants and some withholding baptism until old age/illness. And some being baptized at conversion. In the 2nd-4th centuries the practice of baptism was all over the place. Then, because of the influence of the doctrine of original sin, we see infant baptism become the norm in the 5th-6th centuries.
As a Baptist, after all of this study about the historical church and baptism, my question has always been, why didn't they just do what they did in the Book of Acts?
Just a side note, whenever this topic is brought up someone always says that the "Households" in Acts had to include infants or children to young to believe.
Please consider that all the accounts of "households" except Lydias, make it clear that the entire household believed.
34 And he brought them into his house and set food before them, and rejoiced greatly, having believed in God with his whole household. Acts 16:34 NASB
Crispus, the leader of the synagogue, believed in the Lord with all his household, and many of the Corinthians when they heard were believing and being baptized. Acts 18:8 NASB
So the jailers "whole household" believed and Crispus's "whole household" believed. Why would we think any different of Lydia's "whole household"?
As someone who believes that credo-baptism is what the Bible both teaches and demonstrates then my answer would be yes, Infant Baptism was an accretion.
However, because we are save by Faith, through grace, by Christ then I do not see infant baptism or credo-baptism being a "hill to die on". There are plenty, maybe even most, people who were baptized as infants who came to a saving/living faith in Christ as a child, teenager, or adult. They are indwelled by the Holy Spirit and partakers of the Gifts of God, and are members of the universal/catholic church of all who are "in Christ".
I'm also sure that there are those who were baptized on a profession of faith, who didn't really have faith. Maybe they made a profession of faith in order to please a parent, sibling, girlfriend/boyfriend or spouse and went through the motions of baptism without having their hearts changed from a heart of stone to a heart of flesh.
Having said that, If you read church history, there were a lot of things about baptism that changed from the descriptions in the Bible to how baptism was practiced in the first several centuries.
We know from the Bible that the earliest Baptisms were held in rivers and bodies of water. This indicated either full immersion or that the person being baptized at least waded out into the water. Over the next several centuries Christians would be baptized, not only in rivers/lakes but also in bath houses and fountains of private homes. When the church started acquiring property then the early church buildings had baptistry pools and it seems that immersion was the normative form of baptism, with pouring being aloud when there was no access to a pool of large amount of water. At some point the normative way of baptizing someone became pouring/sprinkling of water with entering a pool/immersion being less universally practiced. This probably had more to do with trouble/expense of providing water than any great theological reason.
The second thing we notice that is different from the Biblical narrative is that in the Bible baptisms take place very quickly after someone makes some sort of profession/evidence of faith. In the 2nd Century the church started delaying baptism until a new convert went through a period of Catechesis, or religious instruction, which could last up to three years. So baptism went from being something that is a part of initial conversion to a confirmation of conversion and admittance into the full fellowship of the church. It was only after baptism that someone could take the Eucharist and being fulling involved in the administration/ministry of the church.
The third change we find is the Baptism of Infants who are "to young to speak for themselves." From what I can tell from the the little documentation available, this change seems to have started, in some places, in the 2nd half of the 2nd century. The first instruction I have found recorded is the Apostolic Tradition of Hippolytus of Rome, written around 215 or so.
21. ¹At cockcrow prayer shall be made over the water. ²The stream shall flow through the baptismal tank or pour into it from above when there is no scarcity of water; but if there is a scarcity, whether constant or sudden, then use whatever water you can find.
³They shall remove their clothing. ⁴And first baptize the little ones; if they can speak for themselves, they shall do so; if not, their parents or other relatives shall speak for them. ⁵Then baptize the men, and last of all the women; they must first loosen their hair and put aside any gold or silver ornaments that they were wearing: let no one take any alien thing down to the water with them.
It is also of note that one belief about baptism in the 2nd and 3rd centuries was that baptism washed away our sin but if you sinned after baptism then it could never be washed away. So we had many people delaying baptism until they got old or sick for fear that they would get baptized and then commit adultery or some other sin that would send them to hell.
So while infant baptism did happen by the beginning of the 3rd Century it didn't really become the norm until the 4th or 5th century. Many of the later great theologians (including Augustine) who had Christian parent/parents weren't baptized until they had a conversion experience. In Augustine's great book "Confessions" we read a story of one of Augustine's friends who had Christian parents. His friend became ill and was on his death bead and the friends parents were about to have him baptized, but the friend got better. Non of this makes much sense if infant baptism is the normative practice in the 4th century.
Historically, infant baptism didn't becomes the norm until after Augustine's great works on original sin became the dominate theology of the church. Since, according to Augustine, baptism washed away original and actual sin, it become the norm for parents to have their infant baptized so it would go to heaven if it died. In an era of very high infant mortality I can certainly understand that concern.
So we see a change from the Biblical testimony of converts being baptized quickly after or even as part of initial conversion in a river/lake or pool of water. To converts being baptized after a lengthy time of instruction. We also see some baptizing infants and some withholding baptism until old age/illness. And some being baptized at conversion. In the 2nd-4th centuries the practice of baptism was all over the place. Then, because of the influence of the doctrine of original sin, we see infant baptism become the norm in the 5th-6th centuries.
As a Baptist, after all of this study about the historical church and baptism, my question has always been, why didn't they just do what they did in the Book of Acts?
Just a side note, whenever this topic is brought up someone always says that the "Households" in Acts had to include infants or children to young to believe.
Please consider that all the accounts of "households" except Lydias, make it clear that the entire household believed.
34 And he brought them into his house and set food before them, and rejoiced greatly, having believed in God with his whole household. Acts 16:34 NASB
Crispus, the leader of the synagogue, believed in the Lord with all his household, and many of the Corinthians when they heard were believing and being baptized. Acts 18:8 NASB
So the jailers "whole household" believed and Crispus's "whole household" believed. Why would we think any different of Lydia's "whole household"?