INFANT BAPTISM
DISCOURSE I.
by Samuel Miller, D.D.
Professor of Ecclesiastical History and Church Government in the Theological
Seminary at Princeton, NJ
[From a Semon Originally Preached in September, 1834 and Published by the
Presbyterian Board of Publication]
And when she was baptized, and her household,
she besought us saying, if ye have judged me to be faithful to the
Lord, come into mine house and abide there.
- Acts xvi. 15.
As man has a body as well as a soul, it has pleased infinite wisdom
to appoint something in religion adapted to both parts of our nature. Something
to strike the senses, as well as to impress the conscience and the heart;
or rather, something which might through the medium of the senses, reach
and benefit the spiritual part of our constitution. For, as our bodies
in this world of sin and death, often become sources of moral mischief
and pain, so, by the grace of God, they are made inlets to the most refined
moral pleasures, and means of advancement in the divine life.
But while the outward senses are to be consulted in religion,
they are not to be invested with unlimited dominion. Accordingly the external
rites and ceremonies of Christianity are few and simple, but exceedingly
appropriate and significant. We have but two sacraments, the one emblematical
of that spiritual cleansing, and the other of that spiritual nourishment,
which we need both for enjoyment and for duty. To one of these sacramental
ordinances there is a pointed reference in the original commission given
by their Master to the apostles "Go ye into all the world, and preach the
Gospel to every creature, - baptizing them. in the name of the Father,
and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost; teaching them to observe all things
whatsoever I have commanded you, and lo, I am with you always, even unto
the end of the world." (Matt. xxviii. 19, 20.) And, accordingly, wherever
the Gospel was received, we find holy baptism reverently administered as
a sign and seal of membership in the family of Christ. Thus on the occasion
to which our text refers, "a certain woman," we are told, "named Lydia,
a seller of purple, of the city of Thyatira, heard Paul and Silas preach
in the city of Philippi; and the Lord opened her heart, so that she attended
unto the things which were spoken of Paul. And when she was baptized, and
her household, she besought us, saying, If ye have judged me to he faithful
to the Lord, come into mine house and abide there."
I propose, my friends, from these words, to address you on the
subject of Christian Baptism. You are sensible that this is a subject
on which much controversy has existed, in modern times, among professing
Christians. It shall be my endeavour, by the grace of God, with all candour
and impartiality, to inquire what the Scriptures teach concerning this
ordinance, and what appears to have been the practice in regard to it in
the purest and best ages of the Christian church, as well as in later times.
May I be enabled to speak, and you to hear as becomes those who expect
in a little while, to stand before the judgment seat of Christ.
There are two questions concerning baptism to which I request
your special attention at this time, viz: Who are the proper subjects
of this ordinance? And in what manner ought it to be administered?
To the first of these questions our attention will be directed in the present,
and the ensuing discourse.
I. Who are to be considered as the proper subjects of Christian
Baptism?
That baptism ought to be administered to all adult persons, who
profess faith in Christ, and obedience to him, and who have not been baptized
in their infancy, is not doubted by any. In this all who consider baptism
as an ordinance at present obligatory are agreed. But it is well known
that there is a large and respectable body of professing Christians among
us who believe, and confidently assert, that baptism ought to be confined
to adults; who insist, that when professing Christians bring their infant
offspring, and dedicate them to God, and receive for them the washing of
sacramental water in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the
Holy Ghost, they entirely pervert and misapply an important Christian ordinance.
We highly respect the sincerity and piety of many who entertain these opinions;
but we are perfectly persuaded that they are in error, nay in great and
mischievous error; in error which cannot fail of exerting a most unhappy
influence on the best interests of the Church of God. We have no doubt
that the visible church is made up, not only of those who personally profess
the true religion, but also of their children; and that we are bound not
only to confess Christ before men for ourselves, but also to bring our
infant seed in the arms of faith and love, and present them before the
Lord, in that ordinance which is at once a seal of God's covenant with
his people, and an emblem of those spiritual blessings which, as sinners,
we and our children equally and indispensably need.
Our reasons for entertaining this opinion, with entire confidence
are the following:
1. Because in all Jehovah's covenants with his professing people,
from the earliest ages, and in all states of society, their infant
seed have been included. That this was the case with regard to the
first covenant made with Adam in paradise, is granted by all; certainly
by all with whom we have any controversy concerning infant baptism. And
indeed the consequences of the violation of that covenant to all his posterity,
furnish a standing and a mournful testimony that it embraced them all.
The covenant made with Noah, after the deluge, was, as to this point, of
the same character. Its language was, " Behold, I establish my covenant
with thee and with thy seed." The covenant with Abraham was equally
comprehensive. "Behold," says Jehovah, "my covenant is with thee. Behold,
I establish my covenant with thee, and with thy seed, after thee."
The Covenants of Sinai and of Moab, it is evident, also comprehended the
children of the immediate actors in the passing scenes, and attached to
them, as well as to their fathers, an interest in the blessings or the
curses, the promises or the threatenings which those covenants respectively
included. Accordingly when Moses was about to take leave of the people,
he addressed them as "standing before the Lord their God, with their little
ones, and their wives, to enter into covenant with the Lord their God."
(Deut. xxix. 10-12.) And when we come to the New Testament economy, still
we find the same interesting feature not only retained, but more strikingly
and strongly displayed. Sill the promise, it is declared, is "to us and
our children, even as many as the Lord our God shall call."
Now, has this been a feature in all Jehovah's covenants with his
people in every age? And shall we admit the idea of its failing in that
New Testament or Christian covenant, which, though the same in substance
with those which preceded it, excels them all in the extent of its privileges,
and in the glory of its promises? It cannot he. The thought is inadmissible.
But farther,
2. The close and endearing connection between parents and children
affords a strong argument in favour of the church-membership of the
infant seed of believers. The voice of nature is lifted up, and pleads
most powerfully in behalf of our cause. The thought of severing parents
from their offspring, in regard to the most interesting relations in which
it has pleased God in his adorable providence to place them, is equally
repugnant to Christian feeling, and to natural law. Can it be, my friends,
that when the stem is in the church, the branch is out of it? Can it be
that when the parent is within the visible kingdom of the Redeemer, his
offspring, bone of his bone, and flesh of his flesh, have no connection
with it? It is not so in any other society that the great moral Governor
of the world ever formed. It is not so in civil society. Children are born
citizens of the State in which their parents resided at the time of their
birth. In virtue of their birth they are plenary citizens, bound by all
the duties, and entitled to all the privileges of that relation, whenever
they become capable of exercising them. From these duties they cannot be
liberated. Of these privileges they cannot be deprived, but by the commission
of crime. But why should this great principle he set aside in the church
of God? Surely it is not less obvious or less powerful in grace than in
nature. The analogies which pervade all the works and dispensations of
God are too uniform and striking to be disregarded in an inquiry like the
present. But we hasten to facts and considerations still more explicitly
laid down in Holy Scripture.
3. The actual and acknowledged church-membership of infants
under the Old Testament economy is a decisive index of the divine will
in regard to this matter.
Whatever else may be doubtful, it is certain that infants were,
in fact, members of the church under the former dispensation; and as such,
were the regular subjects of a covenant seal. When God called Abraham,
and established his covenant with him, he not only embraced his infant
seed, in the most express terms, in that covenant, but he also appointed
an ordinance by which this relation of his children to the visible church
was publicly ratified and sealed, and that when they were only eight days
old. If Jewish adults were members of the church of God, under that economy,
then, assuredly, their infant seed were equally members, for they were
brought into the same covenant relation, and had the same covenant seal
impressed upon their flesh as their adult parents. This covenant, moreover,
had a respect to spiritual as well as temporal blessings. Circumcision
is expressly declared, by the inspired apostle, to have been "a seal of
the righteousness of faith." (Rom. iv. 11.) So far was it from being a
mere pledge of the possession of Canaan, and the enjoyment of temporal
prosperity there, that it ratified and sealed a covenant in which "all
the families of the earth were to be blessed." And yet this covenant seal
was solemnly appointed by God to be administered, and was actually administered,
for nearly two thousand years, to infants of the tenderest age, in token
of their relation to God's covenanted family, and of their right to the
privileges of that covenant. Here then, is a fact, a fact incapable
of being disguised or denied, - nay, a fact acknowledged by all - on which
the advocates of infant baptism may stand as upon an immoveable rock. For
if infinite wisdom once saw that it was right and fit that infants should
be made the subjects of "a seal of the righteousness of faith," before
they were capable of exercising faith, surely a transaction the same in
substance may be right and fit now. Baptism, which is, in like manner,
a seal of the righteousness of faith, may, without impropriety, be applied
equally early. What once, undoubtedly, existed in the church, and that
by divine appointment, may exist still, without any impeachment of either
the wisdom or benevolence of Him who appointed it. But,
4. As the infant seed of the people of God are acknowledged on
all hands to have been members of the church, equally with their parents
under the Old Testament dispensation, so it is equally certain that
the church of God is the same in substance now that it was then; and,
of course, it is just as reasonable and proper, on principle, that the
infant offspring of professed believers should be members of the church
now, as it was that they should be members of the ancient church. I am
aware that our Baptist brethren warmly object to this statement, and assert
that the church of God under the Old Testament economy and the New, is
not the same, but so essentially different, that the same principles can
by no means apply to each. They contend that the Old Testament dispensation
was a kind of political economy, rather national than spiritual in its
character; and, of course, that when the Jews ceased to be a people, the
covenant under which they had been placed, was altogether laid aside, and
a covenant of an entirely new character introduced. But nothing can be
more evident than that this view of the subject is entirely erroneous.
The perpetuity of the Abrahamic covenant, and, of consequence the identity
of the church under both dispensations, is so plainly taught in Scripture,
and follows so unavoidably from the radical scriptural principles concerning
the church of God, that it is indeed wonderful how any believer in the
Bible can call in question the fact. Every thing essential to ecclesiastical
identity is evidently found here. The same Divine Head; the same precious
covenant; the same great spiritual design; the same atoning blood; the
same sanctifying Spirit, in which we rejoice, as the life and the glory
of the New Testament church, we know, from the testimony of Scripture,
were also the life and the glory of the church before the coming of the
Messiah. It is not more certain that a man, arrived at mature age, is the
same individual that he was when an infant on his mother's lap, than it
is that the church, in the plenitude of her light and privileges, after
the coming of Christ, is the same church which, many centuries before,
though with a much smaller amount of light and privilege, yet, as we are
expressly told in the New Testament, (Acts vii. 88,) enjoyed the presence
and guidance of her Divine Head "in the wilderness." The truth is, the
inspired apostle, in writing to the Galatians, (iv. 1-6,) formally compares
the covenanted people of God, under the Old Testament economy, to an heir
under age. "Now I say, that the heir, as long as be is a child, differeth
nothing from a servant, though he be lord of all; but is under tutors and
governors, until the time appointed of the father. Even so we, when we
were children, were in bondage under the elements of the world. But when
the fullness of the time was come, God sent forth his Son, made of a woman,
made under the law, to redeem them that were under the law, that we might
receive the adoption of sons."
Hence, the inspired apostle, in writing to the Hebrews, (iv. 2,)
referring to the children of Israel, says - "Unto us was the Gospel preached,
as well as unto them." Again in writing unto the Corinthians, (x. 1-4,)
be declares, "They did all eat the same spiritual meat, and did all drink
the same spiritual drink; for they drank it of that spiritual rock which
followed them, and that rock was Christ." "Abraham," we are told, (John
viii. 56,) "rejoiced to see Christ's day he saw it, and was glad." And,
of the patriarchs generally, we are assured that they saw Gospel promises
afar off, and embraced them. The church under the old economy, then, was
not only a church - a true church - a divinely constituted church - but
it was a Gospel church, a church of Christ - a church built upon the "same
foundation as that of the apostles."
But what places the identity of the church, under both dispensations,
in the clearest and strongest light, is that memorable and decisive passage,
in the 11th chapter of the Epistle to the Romans, in which the church of
God is held forth to us under the emblem of an olive tree. Under the same
figure had the Lord designated the church by the pen of Jeremiah the prophet,
in the 11th chapter of his prophecy. The prophet speaking of God's covenanted
people under that economy, says - " The Lord called thy name a green olive
tree, fair and of goodly fruit." But concerning this olive tree, on account
of the sin of the people in forsaking the Lord, the prophet declares: "With
the noise of a great tumult he hath kindled a fire upon it, and the branches
of it are broken." Let me request you to compare with this, the language
of the apostle in the 11th chapter of the Epistle to the Romans: "For if
the casting away of them be the reconciling of the world, what shall the
receiving of them be but life from the dead? For if the first fruit be
holy, the lump is also holy; and if the root be holy, so are the branches.
And if some of the branches be broken off, and thou, being a wild olive
tree, wert grafted in among them, and with them partakest of the root and
fatness of the olive tree; boast not against the branches; but if thou
boast, thou bearest not the root, but the root thee. Thou wilt say, then,
the branches were broken off, that I might be grafted in. Well, because
of unbelief they were broken off, and thou standest by faith. Be not high-minded,
but fear. For if God spared not the natural branches, take heed lest he
also spare not thee. Behold, therefore, the goodness and severity of God!
on them which fell severity; but toward thee goodness, if thou continue
in his goodness. Otherwise thou also shalt be broken off. And they also,
if they abide not still in unbelief, shall be grafted in, for God is able
to graft them in again. For if thou wert cut out of the olive tree,
which is wild by nature, and wert grafted, contrary to nature, into a good
olive tree, how much more shall these, which be the natural branches, be
grafted into their own olive tree ?"
That the apostle is here speaking of the Old Testament church,
under the figure of a good olive tree, cannot be doubted, and is, indeed,
acknowledged by all; by our Baptist brethren as well as others. Now the
inspired apostle says concerning this olive tree, that the natural branches,
that is the Jews, were broken off because of unbelief. But what was the
consequence of this excision? Was the tree destroyed? By no means. The
apostle teaches directly the contrary. It is evident, from his language,
that the root and trunk, in all their "fatness," remained; and Gentiles,
branches of an olive tree "wild by nature," were "grafted into the good
olive tree;" - the same tree from which the natural branches had
been broken off. Can any thing be more pointedly descriptive of
identity than this is? But this is not all The apostle apprizes
us that the Jews are to be brought back front their rebellion and wanderings
and to be incorporated with the Christian church. And how is this restoration
described? It is called "grafting them in again into their own olive
tree." In other words, the "tree" into which the Gentile Christians
at the coming of Christ were "grafted," was the "old olive tree," of which
the ancient covenant people of God were the "natural branches;" and, of
course, when the Jews shall be brought in, with the fullness of the Gentiles,
into the Christian church, the apostle expressly tells us they shall be
"grafted again into their own olive tree." Surely, if the church
of God before the coming of Christ, and the church of God after the advent,
were altogether distinct and separate bodies, and not the same in their
essential characters, it would be an abuse of terms to represent the Jews,
when converted to Christianity, as grafted again into their own olive
tree.
5. Having seen that the infant seed of the professing people of
God were members of the church under the Old Testament economy;
and having seen also that the church under that dispensation and the present
is the same; we are evidently prepared to take another step, and
to infer, that if infants were once members, and if the church
remains the same, they undoubtedly are still members, unless some positive
divine enactment excluding them, can be found. As it was a positive
divine enactment which brought them in' and gave them a place in the church,
so it is evident that a divine enactment as direct and positive, repealing
their old privilege, and excluding them from the covenanted family, must
be found, or they are still in the church. But can such an act of repeal
and exclusion, I ask, be produced ? It cannot. It never has been, and it
never can be. The introduction of infants into the church by divine appointment,
is undoubted. The identity of the church, under both dispensations, is
undoubted. The perpetuity of the Abrahamic covenant, in which not merely
the lineal descendants of Abraham, hut "all the nations of the earth
were to be blessed," is undoubted. And we find no hint in the New Testament
of the high privileges granted to the infant seed of believers being withdrawn.
Only concede that it has not been formally withdrawn, and it remains of
course. The advocates of infant baptism are not bound to produce from the
New Testament an express warrant for the membership of the children of
believers. The warrant was given most expressly and formally, two thousand
years before the New Testament was written; and having never been revoked,
remains firmly and indisputably in force.
It is deeply to be lamented that our Baptist brethren cannot be
prevailed upon to recognize the length and breadth, and bearing of this
great ecclesiastical fact. Here were little children eight days old, acknowledged
as members of a covenanted society - a society consecrated to God for spiritual
as well as temporal benefits - and stamped with a covenant seal, by which
they were formally bound, as the seed of believers, to be entirely and
forever the Lord's. Can infant membership be ridiculed, as it often is,
without lifting the puny arm against Him who was with "his church in the
wilderness, and whose ways are all wise and righteous?"
6. Our next step is to show that baptism has come in the room
of circumcision, and therefore, that the former is rightfully and properly
applied to the same subjects as the latter. When we say this, we mean,
not merely that circumcision is laid aside in the church of Christ, and
that baptism has been brought in, but that baptism occupies the same place,
as the appointed initiatory ordinance in the church, and that, as a moral
emblem, it means the same thing. The meaning and design of circumcision
was chiefly spiritual. It was a seal of a covenant which had not solely,
or even mainly, a respect to the possession of Canaan, and to the temporal
promises which were connected with a residence in that land; but which
chiefly regarded higher and more important blessings, even those which
are conveyed through the Messiah, in whom "all the families of the earth"
are to he blessed. So it is with baptism. While it marks an external relation,
and seals outward privileges, it is, as circumcision was, a "seal of the
righteousness of faith," and has a primary reference to the benefits of
the Messiah's mission and reign. Circumcision was a token of visible membership
in the family of God, and of covenant obligation to him. So is baptism.
Circumcision was the ordinance which marked, or publicly ratified, entrance
into that visible family. So does baptism. Circumcision was an emblem of
moral cleansing and purity. So is baptism. It refers to the remission of
sins by the blood of Christ, and regeneration by his Spirit; and teaches
us that we are by nature guilty and depraved, and stand in need of the
pardoning and sanctifying grace of God by a crucified Redeemer. Surely,
then, there is the best foundation for asserting that baptism has come
in the place of circumcision. The latter, as all grant, has been discontinued;
and now baptism occupies the same place, means the same thing, seals the
same covenant, and is a pledge of the same spiritual blessings. Who can
doubt, then, that there is the utmost propriety, upon principle, in applying
it to the same infant subjects?
Yet, though baptism manifestly comes in the place of circumcision,
there are points in regard to which the former differs materially from
the latter. And it differs precisely as to those points in regard to which
the New Testament economy differs from the Old, in being more enlarged,
and less ceremonial. Baptism is not ceremonially restricted to the eighth
day, but may he administered at any time and place. It is not confined
to one sex; but, like the glorious dispensation of which it is a seal,
it marks an enlarged privilege, and is administered in a way which reminds
us that "there is neither Greek nor Jew, neither bond nor free, neither
male nor female, in the Christian economy; but that we are all one in Christ
Jesus."
7. Again; it is a strong argument in favour of infant baptism,
that we find the principle of family baptism again and again adopted
in the apostolic age. We are told, by men learned in Jewish antiquities,
that, under the Old Testament economy, it was customary, when proselytes
to Judaism were gained from the surrounding nations, that all the children
of a family were invariably admitted to membership in the church with their
parents; and on the faith of their parents; that all the males, children
and adults, were circumcised, and the whole family, male and female, baptized,
and incorporated with the community of God's covenanted people.1
Accordingly, when we examine the New Testament history, we find that under
the ministry of the apostles, who were all native Jews, and had, of course,
been long accustomed to this practice, the same principle of receiving
and baptizing families on the faith of the parents, was most evidently
adopted and acted upon in a very striking manner. When "the heart of Lydia
was opened, so that she attended to the things which were spoken by Paul,"
we are told that "she was baptized and her household." When the jailor
at Philippi believed, "he was baptized, he and all his, straight-way."
Thus also we read of "the household of Stephanas" being baptized. Now,
though we are not certain that there were young children in any of these
families, it is highly probable there were. At any rate, the great principle
of family baptism, of receiving all the younger members of households
on the faith of their domestic head, seems to be plainly and decisively
established. This furnishes ground on which the advocate of infant baptism
may stand with unwavering confidence.
And here let me ask, was it ever known that a case of family baptism
occurred under the direction of a Baptist minister? Was it ever known to
be recorded, or to have happened, that when, under the influence of Baptist
ministrations, the parents of large families were hopefully converted,
they were baptized, they and all their's straightway? There is no risk
in asserting that such a case was never heard of. And why? Evidently, because
our Baptist brethren do not act in this matter upon the principles laid
down in the New Testament, and which regulated the primitive Christians.
8. Another consideration possesses much weight here. We cannot
imagine that the privileges and the sign of infant membership, to which
all the first Christians had been so long accustomed, could have been abruptly
withdrawn, without wounding the hearts of parents, and producing in
them feelings of revolt and complaint against the new economy. Yet
we find no hint of this recorded in the history of the apostolic age. Upon
our principles, this entire silence presents no difficulty. The old principle
and practice of infant membership, so long consecrated by time, and so
dear to all the feelings of parental affection, went on as before. The
identity of the church under the new dispensation with that of the old,
being well understood, the early Christians needed no new warrant for the
inclusion of their infant seed in the covenanted family. As the privilege
had not been revoked, it, of course, continued. A new and formal enactment
in favour of the privilege would have been altogether superfluous, not
to say out of place; especially as it was well understood, from the whole
aspect of the new economy, that, instead of withdrawing or narrowing the
privileges, its whole character was that it rather multiplied and extended
them.
But our Baptist brethren are under the necessity of supposing,
that such of the first Christians as had been Jews. and who had ever been
in the habit of considering their beloved offspring as included, with themselves,
in the privileges and promises of God's covenant, were given to understand,
when the New Testament church was set up, that these covenant privileges
and promises were no longer to be enjoyed by their children; that they
were, henceforth, to be no more connected with the church than the children
of the surrounding heathen; and this under an economy distinguished, in
every other respect, by greater light, and more enlarged privilege: - I
say, our Baptist brethren are under the necessity of supposing that the
first Christians were met on the organization of the New Testament church,
with an announcement of this kind, and that they acquiesced in it without
a feeling of surprise, or a word of murmur! Nay, that this whole retrograde
change passed with so little feeling of interest, that it was never so
much as mentioned or hinted at in any of the epistles to the churches.
But can this supposition be for a moment admitted? It is impossible. We
may conclude, then, that the acknowledged silence of the New Testament
as to any retraction of the old privileges, or any complaint of its recall,
is so far from warranting a conclusion unfavourable to the church membership
of infants, that it furnishes a weighty argument of an import directly
the reverse.
9. Although the New Testament does not contain any specific texts,
which, in so many words, declare that the infant seed of believers are
members of the church in virtue of their birth; yet it abounds in passages
which cannot reasonably be explained but in harmony with this doctrine.
The following are a specimen of the passages to which I refer.
The prophet Isaiah, though not a New Testament writer, speaks
much, and in the most interesting manner, of the New Testament times. Speaking
of the "latter day glory," of that day when "the wolf and the lamb shall
feed together, and the lion shall eat straw like the bullock, and when
there shall he nothing to hurt or destroy in all God's holy mountain;"
speaking of that day, the inspired prophet declares, "Behold, I create
new heavens, and a new earth, and the former shall not be remembered, nor
come into mind. as the days of a tree are the days of my people, and mine
elect shall long enjoy the work of their hands. They shall not labour in
vain, nor bring forth for trouble; for they are the seed of the blessed
of the Lord, and their offspring with them." Isaiah lxv. 17, 22,
23.
The language of our Lord concerning little children can be reconciled
with no other doctrine than that which I am now endeavouring to establish,
"Then were there brought unto him little children, that he should put his
hands on them and pray; and his disciples rebuked them. But Jesus said,
"Suffer little children to come unto me, and forbid them not, for of such
is the kingdom of heaven. And he laid his hands upon them, and departed
thence." Matt. xix. 13-15. On examining the language used by the several
Evangelists in regard to this occurrence, it is evident that the children
here spoken of were young children, infants, such as the Saviour could
"take in his arms." The language which our Lord himself employs concerning
them is remarkable. "Of such is the kingdom of heaven." That is, theirs
is the kingdom of heaven, or, to them belongs the kingdom of heaven. It
is precisely the same form of expression, in the original, which our Lord
uses in the commencement of his Sermon on the mount, when he says, "Blessed
are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven;" "Blessed
are they that are persecuted for righteousness sake, for theirs is the
kingdom of heaven." This form of expression, of course, precludes the construction
which some have been disposed to put on the passage, in order to evade
its force, viz. that it implies, that the kingdom of heaven is made up
of such as resemble little children in spirit. We might just as well say,
that the kingdom of heaven does not belong to those who are "poor in spirit,"
but only to those who resemble them; or, that it does not belong to those
who are "persecuted for righteousness sake," but only to those who manifest
a similar temper. Our Lord's language undoubtedly meant that the kingdom
of heaven was really theirs of whom he spake; that it belonged to them;
that they are the heirs of it, just as the "poor in spirit," and the "persecuted
for righteousness sake," are themselves connected in spirit and in promise
with that kingdom.
But what are we to understand by the phrase "the kingdom of heaven,"
as employed in this place? Most manifestly, we are to understand by it,
the visible church, or the visible kingdom of Christ, as distinguished
both from the world, and the old economy. Let any one impartially examine
the Evangelists throughout, and he will find this to be the general import
of the phrase in question. If this be the meaning, then our Saviour asserts,
in the most direct and pointed terms, the reality and the Divine warrant
of infant church membership. But even if the kingdom of glory he intended,
still our argument is not weakened, but rather fortified. For if the kingdom
of glory belong to the infant seed of believers, much more have they a
title to the privileges of the church on earth.
Another passage of Scripture strongly speaks the same language.
I refer to the declaration which we find in the sermon of the apostle Peter,
on the day of Pentecost.- When a large number of the hearers, on that solemn
day, were "pricked in their hearts, and said unto Peter, and to the rest
of the apostles, men and brethren what shall we do?" The reply of the inspired
minister of Christ was, "Repent, and be baptized, every one of you, in
the name of Jesus Christ, for the remission of sins, and ye shall receive
the gift of the Holy Ghost. For the promise is unto you, and to your
children, and to all that are afar off, even as many as the Lord our
God shall call." The apostle is here evidently speaking of the promise
of God to his covenant people; that promise in which he engages to be their
God, and to constitute them his covenanted family. Now this promise, he
declared to those whom he addressed, extended to their children as well
as to themselves, and, of course, gave those children a covenant right
to the privileges of the family. But if they have a covenant title to a
place in this family, we need no formal argument to show that they are
entitled to the outward token and seal of that family.
I shall adduce only one more passage of Scripture, at present,
in support of the doctrine for which I contend. I refer to that remarkable,
and, as it appears to me, conclusive declaration of the apostle Paul, concerning
children, which is found in the seventh chapter of the first Epistle to
the Corinthians, in reply to a query addressed to him by the members of
that church respecting the Christian law of marriage:
"The unbelieving husband is sanctified by the wife; and the unbelieving
wife is sanctified by the husband; else were your children unclean, but
now are they holy." The great question in relation to this passage is,
in what sense does a believing parent "sanctify" an unbelieving one, so
that their children are "holy?" It certainly cannot mean, that every pious
husband or wife that is allied to an unbelieving partner, is always instrumental
in conferring on that partner true spiritual purity, or, in other words,
regeneration and sanctification of heart; nor that every child born of
parents of whom one is a believer, is, of course the subject of gospel
holiness, or of internal sanctification. No one who intelligently reads
the Bible, or who has eyes to see what daily passes around him, can possibly
put such a construction on the passage. Neither can it be understood to
mean, as some have strangely imagined, that where one of the parents is
a believer, the children are legitimate that is, the offspring of parents,
one of whom is pious, are no longer bastards, but are to be considered
as begotten in lawful wedlock! The word "holy" is no where applied in Scripture
to legitimacy of birth. The advocates of this construction may be challenged
to produce a single example of such an application of the term. And as
to the suggestion of piety in one party being necessary to render a marriage
covenant valid, nothing can he more absurd. Were the marriages of the heathen
in the days of Paul all illicit connections? Are the matrimonial contracts
which take place every day, among us, where neither of the parties are
pious, all illegitimate and invalid? Surely it is not easy to conceive
of a subterfuge more completely preposterous, or more adapted to discredit
a cause which finds it necessary to resort to such aid.
The terms "holy" and unclean," as is well known to all attentive
readers of Scripture, have not only a spiritual, hut also an ecclesiastical
sense in the word of God. While in some eases, they express that which
is internally and spiritually conformed to the divine image; in others,
they quite as plainly designate something set apart to a. holy or sacred
use; that is, separated from a common or profane, to a holy purpose. Thus,
under the Old Testament economy, the peculiar people of God, are said to
be a "holy people," and to be "severed from all other people, that they
might be the Lord's;" not because they were all, or even a majority of
them, really consecrated in heart to God; but because they were all his
professing people, - his covenanted people; they all belonged to that external
body which he had called out of the world, and established as the depository
of his truth, and the conservator of his glory. In these two senses, the
terms "holy" and "unclean" are used in both Testaments, times almost innumerable.
And what their meaning is, in any particular case, must be gathered from
the scope of the passage. In the case before us, the latter of these two
senses is evidently required by the whole spirit of the apostle's reasoning.
It appears that among the Corinthians, to whom the apostle wrote,
there were many cases of professing Christians being united by the marriage
tie with pagans; the former, perhaps, being converted after marriage; or
being so unwise, as, after conversion, deliberately to form this unequal
and unhappy connection. What was to be deemed of such marriages, seems to
have been the grave question submitted to this inspired teacher. He pronounces,
under the direction of the Holy Spirit, that, in all such eases, when the
unbeliever is willing to live with the believer, they ought to continue
to live together, that their connection is so sanctified by the character
of the believing companion, that their children are "holy," that is, in
covenant with God; members of that church with which the believing parent
is, in virtue of his profession, united: in one word, that the infidel
party is so far, and in such a sense, consecrated by the believing party,
that their children shall be reckoned to belong to the sacred family with
which the latter is connected, and shall be regarded and treated as members
of the Church of God.2
"The passage thus explained," says an able writer, "establishes
the church membership of infants in another form. For it assumes the principle,
that when both parents are reputed believers, their children belong to
the Church of God as a matter of course. The whole difficulty proposed
by the Corinthians to Paul, grows out of this principle. Had he taught,
or they understood, that no children, be their parents believers or unbelievers,
are to be accounted members of the church, the difficulty could not have
existed. For if the faith of both parents could not confer upon the child
the privilege of membership, the faith of only one of them certainly could
not. The point was decided. It would have been mere impertinence to tease
the apostle with queries which carried their own answers along with them.
But on the supposition that when both parents were members, their children
were also members; the difficulty is very natural and serious.
I see," would a Corinthian convert exclaim, "I see the children
of my Christian neighbours, owned as members of the Church of God; and
I see the children of others, who are unbelievers rejected with themselves.
I believe in Christ myself; but my husband, my wife, believes not. What
is to become of my children? Are they to be admitted with myself? Or are
they to be cast off with my partner?"
"Let not your heart be troubled," replies the apostle, "God reckons
them to the believing, not to the unbelieving parent. It is enough that
they are yours. The infidelity of your partner shall never frustrate their
interest in the covenant of your God. They are holy because you are
so."
"This decision put the subject at rest. And it lets us know that
one of the reasons, if not the chief reason of the doubt, whether a married
person should continue, after conversion, in the conjugal society of an
infidel partner, arose from a fear lest such continuance should exclude
the children from the church of God. Otherwise, it is hard to comprehend
why the apostle should dissuade them from separating by such an argument
as he has employed in the text. And it is utterly inconceivable how such
a doubt could have entered their minds, had not the membership of infants,
born of believing parents, been undisputed, and esteemed a high privilege,
so high a privilege, that the apprehension of losing it, made conscientious
parents at a stand whether they ought not rather to break the ties of wedlock,
by withdrawing from an unbelieving husband or wife. Thus the origin of
this difficulty, on the one hand, and the solution of it, on the other,
concur in establishing our doctrine, that by the appointment of God himself,
the infants of believing parents are born members of his church."3
10. Finally; the history of the Christian Church from the apostolic
age, furnishes an argument of irresistible force in favour of the divine
authority of infant baptism.
I can assure you, my friends, with the utmost candor and confidence,
after much careful inquiry on the subject, that, for more than fifteen
hundred years after the birth of Christ, there was not a single society
of professing Christians on earth, who opposed infant baptism on any thing
like the grounds which distinguish our modern Baptist brethren. It is an
undoubted fact, that the people known in ecclesiastical history
under the name of the Anabaptists, who arose in Germany, in the year 1522,
were the very first body of people, in the whole Christian world, who rejected
the baptism of infants, on the principles now adopted by the Antipaedobaptist
body. This, I am aware, will be regarded as an untenable position by some
of the ardent friends of the Baptist cause; but nothing can be more certain
than that it is even so. Of this a short induction of particulars will
afford conclusive evidence.
Tertullian, about two hundred years after the birth of Christ,
is the first man of whom we read in ecclesiastical history, as speaking
a word against infant baptism; and he, while he recognizes the existence
and prevalence of the practice, and expressly recommends that infants be
baptized, if they are not likely to survive the period of infancy; yet
advises that, where there is a prospect of their living, baptism be delayed
until a late period in life. But what was the reason of this advice? The
moment we look at the reason, we see that it avails nothing to the cause
in support of which it is sometimes produced. Tertullian adopted the superstitious
idea, that baptism was accompanied with the remission of all past sins;
and that sins committed after baptism were peculiarly dangerous. He, therefore,
advised, that not merely infants, but young men and young women; and even
young widows and widowers should postpone their baptism until the period
of youthful appetite and passion should have passed. In short, he advised
that, in all cases in which death was not likely to intervene, baptism
be postponed, until the subjects of it should have arrived at a period
of life, when they would be no longer in danger of being led astray by
youthful lusts. And thus, for more than a century after the age of Tertullian,
we find some of the most conspicuous converts to the Christian faith, postponing
baptism till the close of life. Constantine the Great, we are told, though
a professing Christian for many years before, was not baptized till after
the commencement of his last illness. The same fact is recorded of a number
of other distinguished converts to Christianity, about and after that time.
But, surely, advice and facts of this kind make nothing in favour of the
system of our Baptist brethren. Indeed, taken altogether, their historical
bearing is strongly in favour of our system.
The next persons that we hear of as calling in question the propriety
of infant baptism, were the small body of people in France, about twelve
hundred years after Christ, who followed a certain Peter de Bruis, and
formed an inconsiderable section of the people known in ecclesiastical
history under the general name of the Waldenses. This body maintained
that infants ought not to be baptized, because they were incapable of salvation.
They taught that none could be saved but those who wrought out their salvation
by a long course of self-denial and labour. And as infants were incapable
of thus "working out their own salvation," they held that making them the
subjects of a sacramental seal, was an absurdity. But surely our Baptist
brethren cannot be willing to consider these people as their predecessors,
or to adopt their creed.
We hear no more of any society or organized body of Antipaedobaptists,
until the sixteenth century, when they arose, as before stated, in
Germany, and for the first time broached the doctrine of our modern Baptist
brethren. As far as I have been able to discover, they were absolutely
unknown in the whole Christian world, before that time.
But we have something more than mere negative testimony on this
subject. It is not only certain, that we hear of no society of Antipaedobaptists
resembling our present Baptist brethren, for more than fifteen hundred
years after Christ; but we have positive and direct proof that, during
the whole of that time, infant baptism was the general and unopposed practice
of the Christian Church.
To say nothing of earlier intimations, wholly irreconcilable
with any other practice than that of infant baptism, Origen, a Greek
father of the third century, and decidedly the most learned man of his
day, speaks in the most unequivocal terms of the baptism of infants, as
the general practice of the church in his time, and as having been received
front the Apostles. His testimony is as follows - " According to the usage
of the church, baptism is given even to infants; when if there were nothing
in infants which needed forgiveness and mercy, the grace of baptism would
seem to be superfluous." (Homil. VIII. in Levit. ch. 12.) Again; "Infants
are baptized for the forgiveness of sins. Of what sins? Or, when have they
sinned? Or, can there be any reason for the laver in their case, unless
it be according to the sense which we have mentioned above, viz: that no
one is free from pollution, though he has lived but one day upon earth?
And because by baptism native pollution is taken away, therefore infants
are baptized." (Homil. in Luc. 14.) Again: "For this cause it was that
the church received an order from the Apostles to give baptism even to
infants "4
The testimony of Cyprian, a Latin Father of the third century,
contemporary with Origen, is no less decisive. It is as follows:
In the year 253 after Christ, there was a Council of sixty-six
bishops or pastors held at Carthage, in which Cyprian presided. To this
Council, Fidus, a country pastor, presented the following question,
which he wished them, by their united wisdom, to solve - viz. Whether it
was necessary, in the administration of baptism, as of circumcision, to
wait until the eighth day; or whether a child might be baptized
at an earlier period after its birth? The question, it will be observed,
was not whether infants ought to be baptized? That was taken
for granted. But simply, whether it was necessary to wait until the eighth
day after their birth? The Council came unanimously to the following
decision, and transmitted it in a letter to the inquirer.
"Cyprian and the rest of the Bishops who were present in the Council,
sixty-six in number, to Fidus, our brother, greeting:
"As to the case of Infants, - whereas you judge that they must
not be baptized within two or three days after they are born, and that
the rule of circumcision is to be observed, that no one should be baptized
and sanctified before the eighth day after he is born; we were all in the
Council of a very different opinion. As for what you thought proper to
be done, no one was of your mind; but we all rather judged that the mercy
and grace of God is to be denied to no human being that is born. This,
therefore, dear brother, was our opinion in the Council; that we ought
not to hinder any person from baptism, and the grace of God, who is merciful
and kind to us all. And this rule, as it holds for all, we think more especially
to be observed in reference to infants, even to those newly born." (Cyprian,
Epist. 66.)
Surely no testimony can be more unexceptionable and decisive than
this. Lord Chancellor King, in his account of the primitive church, after
quoting what is given above, and much more, subjoins the following remark
- "Here, then is a synodical decree for the baptism of infants, as formal
as can possibly be expected; which being the judgment of a synod, is more
authentic and cogent than that of a private father; it being supposable
that a private father might write his own particular judgment and opinion
only; but the determination of a synod (and he might have added, the unanimous
determination of a synod of sixty-six members) denotes the common practice
and usage of the whole church."5
The Famous Chrysostom, a Greek father, who flourished towards
the close of the fourth century, having had occasion to speak of circumcision,
and of the inconvenience and pain which attended its dispensation, proceeds
to say - "But our circumcision, I mean the grace of baptism,
gives cure without pain, and procures to us a thousand benefits, and
fills us with the grace of the Spirit; and it has no determinate
time, as that had; but one that is in the very beginning of his
age, or one that is in the middle of it, or one that is in his old
age, may receive this circumcision made without hands; in which there is
no trouble to be undergone but to throw off the load of sins, and to receive
pardon for all past offences." (Homil. 40. in Genesin.)
Passing by the testimony of several other conspicuous Writers
of the third and fourth centuries, In support of the fact, that infant
baptism was generally practised when they wrote, I shall detain you with
only one testimony more in relation to the history of this ordinance. It
is that of Augustine, one of the most pious, learned and venerable
fathers of the Christian Church, who lived a little more than three
hundred years after the Apostles, - taken in connection with that of Pelagius,
the learned heretic, who lived at the same time. Augustine had been
pleading against Pelagius, in favour of the doctrine of original sin. In
the course of this plea, he asks - "Why are infants baptized for the remission
of sins, if they have no sin?" At the same time intimating to Pelagius,
that if he would be consistent with himself; his denial of original sin
must draw after it the denial of infant baptism. The reply of Pelagius
is striking and unequivocal. Baptism," says he, "ought to be administered
to infants, with the same sacramental words which are used in the case
of adult persons." - "Men slander me as if I denied the sacrament of baptism
to infants." - "I never heard of any, not even the most impious heretic,
who denied baptism to infants; for who can be so impious as to hinder
infants from being baptized, and born again in Christ, and so make them
miss of the kingdom of God?" Again: Augustine remarks, in reference to
the Pelagians - "Since they grant that infants must be baptized, as not
being able to resist the authority of the whole church, which was doubtless
delivered by our Lord and his Apostles; they must consequently grant
that they stand in need of the benefit of the Mediator; that being offered
by the sacrament, and by the charity of the faithful, and so being incorporated
into Christ's body, they may be reconciled to God," &c. Again, speaking
of certain heretics at Carthage, who, though they acknowledged infant baptism,
took wrong views of its meaning, Augustine remarks - They, minding the
scriptures, and the authority of the whole church, and the form of
the sacrament itself, see well that baptism in infants is for the remission
of sins." Further, in his work against the Donatists, the same
writer speaking of baptized infants obtaining salvation without the personal
exercise of faith, he says - "which the whole body of the church holds,
as delivered to them in the ease of little infants baptized; who certainly
cannot believe with the heart unto righteousness, or confess with the mouth
unto salvation, nay, by their crying and noise while the sacrament is administering,
they disturb the holy mysteries: and yet no Christian man will say
that they are baptized to no purpose." Again, he says - "The custom
of our mother the church in baptizing infants must not he disregarded,
nor he accounted needless, nor believed to be anything else than an
ordinance delivered to us from the Apostles." In short, those who will
be at the trouble to consult the large extracts from the writings of Augustine,
among other Christian fathers, in the learned Wall's history of
Infant Baptism, will find that venerable father declaring again and again
that be never met with any Christian, either of the general church, or
of any of the sects, nor with any writer, who owned the authority of Scripture,
who taught any other doctrine than that infants were to be baptized
for the remission of sin. Here, then, were two men, undoubtedly among the
most learned then in the world - Augustine and Pelagius; the former as
familiar probably with the writings of all the distinguished fathers who
bad gone before him, as any man of his time; the latter also a man of great
learning and talents, who had travelled over the greater part of the Christian
world; who both declare, about three hundred years after the apostolic
age, that they never saw or heard of any one who called himself a Christian,
not even the most impious heretic, no nor any writer who claimed to believe
in the Scriptures, who denied the baptism of infants. (See Wall's History,
Part I. Ch. 15-19.) Can the most incredulous reader, who is not fast bound
in the fetters of invincible prejudice, hesitate to admit, first, that
these men verily believed that infant baptism had been the universal practice
of the church from the days of the Apostles; and, secondly, that, situated
and informed as they were, it was impossible that they should be mistaken.
The same Augustine, in his Epistle to Boniface, while he
expresses an opinion that the parents are the proper persons to offer up
their children to God in baptism, if they be good faithful Christians;
yet thinks proper to mention that others may, with propriety, in special
cases, perform the same kind office of Christian charity. " You see," says
he, "that a great many are offered, not by their parents, but by any other
persons, as infant slaves are sometimes offered by their masters. And sometimes
when the parents are dead, the infants are baptized, being offered by any
that can afford to show this compassion on them. And sometimes infants
whom their parents have cruelly exposed, may be taken up and offered in
baptism by those who have no children of their own, nor design to have
any." Again, in his book against the Donatists, speaking directly
of infant baptism, he says - "If any one ask for divine authority in this
matter, although that which the whole church practises, which was
not instituted by councils, but was ever in use, is very
reasonably believed to be no other than a thing delivered by the authority
of the Apostles; yet we may besides take a true estimate, how much the
sacrament of baptism does avail infants, by the circumcision which God's
ancient people received. For Abraham was justified before he received circumcision,
as Cornelius was endued with the Holy Spirit before he was baptized. And
yet the apostle says of Abraham, that he received the sign of circumcision,
'a seal of the righteousness of faith,' by which he had in heart believed,
and it had been counted to him for righteousness.' Why then was he commanded
to circumcise all his male infants on the eighth day, when they could not
yet believe with the heart, that it might be counted to them for righteousness;
but for this reason, because the sacrament is, in itself of great importance?
Therefore, as in Abraham, 'the righteousness of faith' went before, and
circumcision, 'the seal of the righteousness of faith came after;' so in
Cornelius, the spiritual sanctification by the gift of the Holy Spirit
went before, and the sacrament of regeneration, by the laver of baptism,
came after. And as in Isaac, who was circumcised the eighth day,
the seal of the righteousness of faith went before, and (as he was a follower
of his father's faith) the righteousness itself, the seal whereof had gone
before in his infancy, came after; so in infants baptized, the sacrament
of regeneration goes before, and (if they put in practice the Christian
religion) conversion of the heart, the mystery whereof went before
in their body, comes after. By all which it appears, that the
sacrament of baptism is one thing, and conversion of the
heart another."
So much for the testimony of the Fathers. To me, I acknowledge,
this testimony carries with it irresistible conviction. It is, no doubt,
conceivable, considered in itself, that in three centuries from the days
of the apostles, a very material change might have taken place in regard
to the subject of baptism. But that a change so serious and radical as
that of which our Baptist brethren speak, should have been introduced without
the knowledge of such men as have been just quoted, is not conceivable.
That the church should have passed from the practice of none but adult
baptism, to that of the constant and universal baptism of infants, while
such a change was utterly unknown, and never heard of, by the most
active, pious, and learned men that lived during that period, cannot, I
mast believe, be imagined by any impartial mind. Now when Origen, Cyprian,
and Chrysostom, declare, not only that the baptism of infants was the universal
and unopposed practice of the church in their respective times and places
of residence; and when men of so much acquaintance with all preceding writers,
and so much knowledge of all Christendom, as Augustine and Pelagius, declared
that they never heard of any one who claimed to be a Christian, either
orthodox or heretic, who did not maintain and practice infant baptism;
I say, to suppose, in the face of such testimony, that the practice
of infant baptism crept in, as an unwarranted innovation, between their
time and that of the apostles, without the smallest notice of the change
having ever reached their ears is, I must be allowed to say, of all incredible
suppositions, one of the most incredible. He who can believe this, must,
it appears to me, be prepared to make a sacrifice of all historical evidence
at the shrine of blind and deaf prejudice.
It is here also worthy of particular notice, that those pious
and far famed witnesses for the truth, commonly known by the name of the
Waldenses, did undoubtedly hold the doctrine of infant baptism,
and practise accordingly. In their Confessions of Faith and other writings,
drawn up between the twelfth and sixteenth centuries, and in which they
represent their creeds and usages as handed down, from father to son, for
several hundred years before the Reformation, they speak on the subject
before us so frequently and explicitly, as to preclude all doubt in regard
to the fact alleged. The following specimen of their language will satisfy
every reasonable inquirer.
"Baptism," say they, is administered in a full congregation of
the faithful, to the end that he that is received into the church may be
reputed and held of all as a Christian brother, and that all the congregation
may pray for him that he may be a Christian in heart, as he is outwardly
esteemed to be a Christian. And for this cause it is that we
present our children in baptism, which ought to be done by those to
whom the children are most nearly related, such as their parents, or those
to whom God has given this charity."
Again; referring to the superstitious additions to baptism which
the Papists had introduced, they say, in one of their ecclesiastical documents,
- "The things which are not necessary in baptism are, the exorcisms, the
breathings, the sign of the cross upon the head or forehead of the infant,
the salt put into the mouth, the spittle into the ears and nostrils,
the unction of the breast, &c. From these things many take an occasion
of error and superstition, rather than of edifying and salvation."
Understanding that their Popish neighbours charged them with denying
the baptism of infants, they acquit themselves of this imputation as follows:
"Neither is the time nor place appointed for those who are to
be baptized. But charity and the edification of the church and congregation
ought to be the rule in this matter.
"Yet, notwithstanding, we bring our children to be baptized;
which they ought to do to whom they are most nearly related;
such as their parents, or those whom God bath inspired with such a charity."
"True it. is," adds the historian, "that being, for some hundreds
of years, constrained to suffer their children to be baptized by the Romish
priests, they deferred the performance of it as long as possible, because
they detested the human inventions annexed to the institution of that holy
sacrament, which they looked upon as so many pollutions of it. And by reason
of their pastors, whom they called Barbes, being often abroad travelling
in the service of the church, they could not have baptism administered
to their children by them. They, therefore, sometimes kept them long without
it. On account of which delay, the priests have charged them with that
reproach. To which charge not only their adversaries have given credit,
but also many of those who have approved of their lives and faith in
all other respects."6
It being so plainly a fact, established by their own unequivocal
and repeated testimony, that the great body of the Waldenses were Paedobaptists,
on what ground is it that our Baptist brethren assert, and that some have
been found to credit the assertion, that those venerable witnesses of the
truth rejected the baptism of infants? The answer is easy and ample. A
small section of the people bearing the general name of Waldenses, followers
of Peter de Bruis, who were mentioned in a preceding page while
they agreed with the mass of their denomination in most other matters,
differed from them in regard to the subject of infant baptism. They held,
as before stated, that infants were not capable of salvation; that Christian
salvation is of such a nature that none can partake of it but those who
undergo a course of rigorous self-denial and labour in its pursuit. Those
who die in infancy not being capable of this, the Petrobrussians held that
they were not capable of salvation; and, this being the case, that they
ought not to be baptized. This, however, is not the doctrine of our Baptist
brethren; and, of course, furnishes no support to their creed or practice.
But the decisive answer is, that the Petrobrussians were a very small fraction
of the great Waldensian body; probably not more than a thirtieth or fortieth
part of the whole. The great mass of the denomination, however, as such,
declare, in their Confessions of Faith, and in various public documents,
that they held, and that their fathers before them, for many generations,
always held, to infant baptism. The Petrobrussians, in this respect, forsook
the doctrine and practice of their fathers, and departed from the proper
and established Waldensian creed. If there be truth in the plainest records
of ecclesiastical history, this is an undoubted fact. In short the real
state of this case may be illustrated by the following representation.
Suppose it were alleged that the Baptists in the United States are in the
habit of keeping the seventh day of the week as their Sabbath? Would the
statement be true? By no means. There is, indeed, a small section of the
Antipaedobaptist body in the United States, usually styled "Seventh day
Baptists" - probably not a thirtieth part of the whole body - who observe
Saturday in each week as their Sabbath. But, notwithstanding this, the
proper representation, no doubt is, - (the only representation that a faithful
historian of facts would pronounce correct) - that the Baptists in this
country, as a general body, observe "the Lord's day" as their Sabbath.
You may rest assured, my friends, that this statement most exactly illustrates
the real fact with regard to the Waldenses as Paedobaptists. Twentynine
parts, at least, out of thirty, of the whole of that body of witnesses
for the truth, were undoubtedly Paedobaptists. The remaining thirtieth
part departed from the faith of their fathers in regard to baptism, but
departed on principles altogether unlike those of our modem Baptist brethren.
I have only one fact more to state in reference to the pious Waldenses,
and that is, that soon after the opening of the Reformation by Luther,
they sought intercourse with the Reformed churches of Geneva and France;
held communion with them; received ministers from them; and appeared eager
to testify their respect and affection for them as "brethren in the Lord."
Now it is well known that the churches of Geneva and France, at this time,
were in the habitual use of infant baptism. This single fact is
sufficient to prove that the Waldenses were Paedobaptists. If they had
adopted the doctrine of our Baptist brethren, and laid the same stress
on it with them, it is manifest that such intercourse would have been wholly
out of the question.
If these historical statements be correct, and that they are so,
is just as well attested as any facts whatever in the annals of the church,
the amount of the whole is conclusive, is demonstrative, that, for
fifteen hundred years after Christ, the practice of infant baptism was
universal; that to this general fact there was absolutely no exception,
in the whole Christian church, which, on principle, or even analogy, can
countenance in the least degree, modern Anti-paedobaptism; that from the
time of the Apostles to the time of Luther, the general, unopposed, established
practice of the church was to regard the infant seed of believers as members
of the church, and, as such, to baptize them.
But this is not alt. If the doctrine of our Baptist brethren be
correct; that is, if infant baptism be a corruption and a nullity; then
it follows, from the foregoing historical statements, most inevitably,
that the ordinance of baptism was lost for fifteen hundred years: yes,
entirely lost, from the apostolic age till the sixteenth century. For there
was manifestly, "no society, during that long period, of fifteen centuries,
but what was in the habit of baptizing infants." God had no church,
then, in the world for so long a period? Can this be admitted? Surely
not by any one who believes in the perpetuity and indestructibility of
the household of faith.
Nay, if the principle of our Baptist brethren be correct, the
ordinance of baptism is irrecoverably lost altogether; that is, irrecoverably
without a miracle. Because if, during the long tract of time that has been
mentioned, there was no true baptism in the church; and if none but baptized
persons were capable of administering true baptism to others? the consequence
is plain; there is no true baptism now in the world! But can this be believed?
Can we imagine that the great Head of the Church would permit one of his
own precious ordinances to be banished entirely from the church for many
centuries, much less to be totally lost? Surely the thought is abhorrent
to every Christian feeling.
Such is an epitome of the direct evidence in favour of infant
baptism. To me, I acknowledge, it appears nothing short of demonstration.
The invariable character of all Jehovah's dealings and covenants with
the children of men; his express appointment, acted upon for two
thousand years by the ancient church; the total silence of the New Testament
as to any retraction or repeal of this privilege; the evident and repeated
examples of family baptism in the apostolic age; the indubitable testimony
of the practice of the whole church on the Paedobaptist plan, from the
time of the apostles to the sixteenth century, including the most respectable
witnesses for the truth in the dark ages; all conspire to establish on
the firmest foundation, the membership, and the consequent right to baptism
of the infant seed of believers. If here he no divine warrant, we may despair
of finding it for any institution in the Church of God.
1 I consider the Jewish baptism of proselytes as a historical
fact well established, I am aware that some Paedobaptists, whose
judgment and learning I greatly respect, have expressed doubts in reference
to this matter. But when I find the Jews asking John the Baptist, "Why
baptizest thou, then, if thou be not the Christ?" &c., I can only account
for their language by supposing that they had been accustomed to that rite,
and expected the Messiah, when he came, to practice it. We have the best
evidence that they baptized their proselytes as early as the second century
and it is altogether incredible that they should copy it from the Christians.
And a great majority of the most competent judges in this case both Jewish
and Christian, from Selden and Lightfoot down to Dr. Adam Clarke, have
considered the testimony to the fact as abundant and conclusive.
2 It is worthy of notice that this interpretation of
the passage is adopted, and decisively maintained by Augustine, one of
the most pious and learned divines of the fourth century. De Sermone
Domini in Monte, ch. 27.
3 Essays on the Church of God, by Dr. J. M. Mason.
Christian's Magazine, ii. 49, 50.
4 Comment in Epist. ad Romanos. Lib.5.
5 Inquiry into the Constitution, &c. Part II. Chap
9.
6 See John Paul Perrin's account of the Doctrine and
Order of the Waldenses and Albigenses; Sir Samuel Morland's do.; and also
Leger's Histoire Generale des Eglises Vaudoises. Mr. William Jones, a Baptist,
in a work entitled, a History of the Waldenses, in two volumes octavo,
professes to give a full account of the Faith and Order of these pious
witnesses of the truth; but, so far as I have observed, carefully leaves
out of all their public formularies and other documents every thing which
would disclose their Paedobaptist principles and practise! On this artifice
comment is unnecessary.
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