The
DIVINE RIGHT OF INFANT
BAPTISM,
Examined And Disproved;
Being an Answer to a Pamphlet, Entitled,
A brief Illustration and Confirmation of the
Divine Right of Infant-Baptism.
PRINTED AT BOSTON IN NEW-ENGLAND,
1746.
by
John Gill
1697-1771
CHAPTER 1.
The Introduction, observing the Author, Title, method and occasion
of writing the Pamphlet under consideration.
Many being converted under the ministry of the word in New-England, and enlightened into
the ordinance of believers baptism, whereby the churches of the Baptist persuasion at Boston and
in that country have been much increased, has alarmed the paedobaptist ministers of that colony;
who have applied to one Mr. Dickenson, a country minister, who, as my correspondent informs
me, has wrote with some success against the Arminians, to write in favor of infant sprinkling;
which application he thought fit to attend unto, and accordingly wrote a pamphlet on that subject;
which has been printed in several places, and several thousands have been published, and great
pains have been taken to spread them about, in order to hinder the growth of the Baptist interest.
This performance has been transmitted to me, with a request to take some notice of it by way of
reply, which I have undertook to do.
The running title of the pamphlet, is The Divine Right of Infant-Baptism; but if it is of divine
right, it is of God; and if it is of God, if it is according to his mind, and is instituted and appointed
by him, it must be notified somewhere or other in his word; wherefore the scriptures must be
searched into, to see whether it is so, or no: and upon the most diligent search that can be made, it
will be found that there is not the least mention of it in them; that there is no precept enjoining
it, or directing to the observation of it; nor any instance, example, or precedent encouraging such
a practice; nor any thing there laid or done, that gives any reason to believe it is the will of God
that such a rite should be observed; wherefore it will appear to be entirely an human invention,
and as such to be rejected. The title-page of this work promises an Illustration and
Confirmation of the said divine right; but if there is no such thing, as it is
certain there is not, the author must have a very difficult task to illustrate
and confirm it; how far he has succeeded in this undertaking, will be the
subject of our following inquiry. The writer of the pamphlet under consideration
has chose to put his thoughts together on this subject, in the form of a
dialogue between a minister and one of his parishioners, or neighbors. Every
man, that engages in a controversy, may write in what form and method he will;
but a by-stander will be ready to conclude, that such a way of writing is chose,
that he may have the opportunity of making his antagonist speak what he pleases;
and indeed he would have acted a very unwise part, had he put arguments and
objections into his mouth, which he thought he could not give any tolerable
answer to; but, inasmuch as he allows the person the conference is held with, to
be not only a man of piety and ingenuity, but of considerable reading, he ought
to have represented him throughout as answering to such a character; whereas,
whatever piety is shewn in this debate, there is very little ingenuity
discovered; since, for the most part, he is introduced as admitting the weak
reasonings of the minister, at once, without any further controversy; or if he
is allowed to attempt a defense of the cause and principles he was going over
to, he is made to do it in a very mean and trifling manner; and, generally
speaking, what he offers is only to lead on to the next thing that presents
itself in this dispute: Had he been a man of considerable reading, or had he
read Mr. Stennett, and some others of the Antipaedobaptist authors, as is said
he had, which had occasioned his doubt about his baptism, he would have known
what answers and objections to have made to the minister s reasonings, and
what arguments to have used in favor of adult-baptism, and against
infant-sprinkling. What I complain of is, that he has not made his friend to act
in character, or to answer the account he is pleased to give of him: However he
has a double end in all this management; on the one hand, by representing his
antagonist as a man of ingenuity and considerable reading, he would bethought to
have done a very great exploit in convincing and silencing such a man, and
reducing him to the acknowledgment of the truth; and, on the other hand, by
making him talk so weakly, and so easily yielding to his. arguments, he has
acted a wise part, and taken care not to suffer him to say such things, as he
was not able to answer; and which, as before observed, seems to be the view of
writing in this dialogue-way.
CHAPTER 2
Of the Consequences of renouncing Infant
baptism.
The minister, in order to frighten his parishioner out of his principle of adult-baptism, he was
inclined to, suggests terrible consequences that would follow upon it; as his renouncing
his baptism in his infancy; vacating the covenant between God and him, he was
brought into thereby; renouncing all other ordinances of the gospel, as the
ministry of the Word, and the sacrament of the Lord s-Supper; that upon this
principle, Christ, for many ages, must have forsaken his church, and not made
good his promise of his presence in this ordinance; and that there could be no
such thing as baptism in the world now, neither among Paedobaptists, nor
Antipaedobaptists.
1st, The first dreadful consequence following upon a man s espousing the principle
of believers baptism, is a renunciation of his baptism; not of the ordinance of baptism, that
he cannot be laid to reject and renounce; for when he embraces the principle of
adult-baptism, and acts up to it, he receives the true baptism, which the word
of God warrants and directs unto, as will be seen hereafter: But it seems it is
a renunciation of his baptism in his infancy; and what of that? it should be
proved first, that that is baptism, and that it is good and valid, before it can
be charged as an evil to renounce it; it is right to renounce that which has no
warrant or foundation in the word of God: But what aggravates this supposed evil
is, that in it a person in his early infancy is dedicated to God the Father,
Son, and holy Ghost; it may be asked, by whom is the person in his infancy
dedicated to God, when baptism is said to be administered to him? Not by
himself, for he is ignorant of the whole transaction; it must be either by the
minister, or his parents: The parents indeed desire the child may be baptized,
and the minister uses such a form of words, I baptize thee in the name of the
Father, of the Son, and of the holy Ghost; but what dedication is here made by
the one, or by the other? However, seeing there is no warrant from the word of
God, either for such baptism, or dedication; a renunciation of it need not give
any uneasiness to any person so baptized and dedicated.
2dly, To embrace adult-baptism, and to renounce infant-baptism, is to vacate the
covenant into which a person is brought by his baptism, [page 4] by which covenant the writer
of the dialogue means the covenant of grace, as appears from all his after-reasonings from thence
to the right of infants to baptism.
- He supposes that unbaptized persons are, as to their external and visible relation, strangers to
the covenants of promise; are not in covenant with God; not so much as visible
Christians; but in a state of heathenism; without hope of salvation, but from
the uncovenanted mercies of God, [pages 4, 5, 6]. The covenant of grace was made
from everlasting; and all interested in it were in covenant with God, as early,
and so previous to their baptism, as to their secret relation God-wards; but
this may be thought to be sufficiently guarded against by the restriction and
limitation, "as to external and visible relation:" But I ask, are not
all truly penitent persons, all true believers in Christ, though not as yet
baptized, in covenant with God, even as to their external and visible relation
to him, which faith makes manifest? Were not the three thousand in covenant with
God visibly, when they were pricked to the heart, and repented of their fins,
and gladly received the word of the gospel, promising the remission of them,
though not as yet baptized? Was not the Eunuch in covenant with God? or was he
in a state of heathenism, when he made that confession of his faith, I believe
that Jesus Christ is the Son of God, previous to his going down into the water,
and being baptized? Were the believers in Samaria, or those at Corinth, in an
uncovenanted state, before the one were baptized by Philip, or the other by the
apostle Paul? Was Lydia, whole heart the Lord opened, and who attended to the
things that were spoken; and the Jailer, that believed and rejoiced in God, with
all his house, in an uncovenanted state, before they submitted to the ordinance
of baptism? Are there not some persons, that have never been baptized, of whom
there is reason to believe they have an interest in the covenant of grace? Were
not the Old Testament saints in the covenant of grace, before this rite of
baptism took place? Should it be said, that circumcision did that then, which
baptism does now, enter persons into covenant, which equally wants proof, as
this; it may be replied, that only commenced at a certain period of time; was
not always in use, and belonged to a certain people only; whereas there were
many before that, who were in the covenant of grace, and many after, and even at
the same time it was enjoined, who yet were not circumcised; of which more
hereafter: From all which it appears, how false that assertion is.
- That a man is brought into covenant by baptism, as this writer affirms; seeing the covenant of
grace is from everlasting; and those that are put into it, were put into it so soon;
and that by God himself, whole sole prerogative it is. Parents cannot enter
their children into covenant, nor children themselves, nor ministers by
sprinkling water upon them; it is an act of the sovereign grace of God, who
says, I will be their God, and they shall be my people: The phrase of bringing
into the bond of the covenant, is but once used in scripture; and then it is
ascribed to God, and not to the creature; not to any act done by him, or done to
him (Ezek. 20:37), and much less,
- Can this covenant be vacated, or made null and void, by renouncing infant-baptism: The
covenant of grace is ordered in all things, and sure; its promises are Yea and Amen in
Christ; its blessings are the sure mercies of David; God will not break it, and
men cannot make it void; it is to everlasting, as well as from everlasting;
those that are once in it can never be put out of it; nor can it be vacated by
any thing done by them. This man must have a strange notion of the covenant of
grace, to write after this rate; he is said to have wrote against the Arminians
with some success; if he has, it must be in a different manner from this; for
upon this principle, that the covenant of grace may be made null and void by an
act of the creature, how will the election of God stand sure? or the promise of
the covenant be sure to all the seed? What will become of the doctrine of the
faints perseverance? or of the certainty of salvation to those that are chosen,
redeemed, and called?
3dly, Another consequence said to follow, on espousing the principle of adult-
baptism, and renouncing that of infants, is a renouncing all other ordinances of the gospel, as the
ministry of the word, and the sacrament of the Lord s supper, practically denying the
influences of the Spirit in them, and all usefulness, comfort and communion by
them. All which this author endeavors to make out, by observing, that if
infant-baptism is a nullity, then those, who have received no other, if
ministers, have no right to administer sacred ordinances, being unbaptized; and,
if private persons, they have no right to partake of the Lord s supper, for
the same reason; and so all public ordinances are just such a nullity as
infant-baptism; and all the influence: of the Spirit, in conversion, comfort,
and communion, by them, must be practically denied, [pages 5, 6]. To which may
be replied, that though upon the principle of adult-baptism, as necessary to the
communion of churches, it follows, that no unbaptized person is regularly called
to the preaching of the word, and administration ordinances, or can be a regular
communicant; yet it does not follow, that a man that renounces infant baptism,
and embraces believers baptism, must renounce all other ordinances, and look
upon them just such nullities as infant-baptism is, and deny all the comfort and
communion he has had in them; because the word may be truly preached, and the
ordinance of the Lord s supper be duly administered, by an irregular man, and
even by a wicked man; yea, may be made useful for conversion and comfort; for
the use and efficacy of the word and ordinances, do not depend upon the minister
or administrator; but upon God himself, who can, and does sometimes, make use of
his own word for conversion, though preached by an irregular, and even an
immoral man; and of his own ordinances, for comfort, by such an one, to his
people, though they may be irregular and deficient in some things, through
ignorance and inadvertency.
4thly, Another consequence
following upon this principle, as supposed, is, that if infant-baptism is no
institution of Christ, and to be rejected, then the promise of Christ, to be
with his ministers in the administration of the ordinance of baptism, to the end
of the world (Matthew 28:19, 20), is not made good; since for several ages, even
from the fourth to the sixteenth century, infant baptism universally obtained,
[pages 6-8]. To which the following answer may be returned; That the period of
time pitched upon for the prevalence of infant, baptism is very unhappy for the
credit of it, both as to the beginning and end; as to the beginning of it, in
the fourth century, a period in which corruption in doctrine and discipline
flowed into the church, and the man of sin was ripening apace, for his
appearance; and likewise as to the end, the time of the reformation, in which
such abuses began to be corrected: The whole is a period of time, in which the
true church of Christ began gradually to disappear, or to be hidden, and at last
fled into the wilderness; where she has not been forsaken of Christ, but is, and
will be, nourished, for a time, and limes, and half a time; this period includes
the gross darkness of popery, and all the depths of Satan; and which to suffer
was no ways contrary to the veracity of Christ, in his promise to be with his
true church and faithful ministers to the end of the world. Christ has no where
promised, that his doctrines and ordinances should not be perverted; but, on the
contrary, has given clear and strong intimations, that there should be a general
falling-away and departure from the truth and ordinances of the gospel, to make
way for the revelation of antichrist; and though it will be allowed, that during
this period infant-baptism prevailed, yet it did not universally obtain. There
were witnesses for adult-baptism in every age; and Christ had a church in the
wilderness, in obscurity, at this time; namely, in the valleys of Piedmont; who
were, from the beginning of the apostasy, and witnessed against it, and bore
their testimony against infant-baptism, as will be seen hereafter, and with
these his presence was; nor did he promise it to any, but in the faithful
ministration of his word and ordinances, which he has always made good; and it
will lie upon this writer and his friends, to prove the gracious presence of
Christ in the administration of infant-baptism.
5thly, It is said, that,
upon these principles, rejecting infant-baptism, and espousing
believers-baptism, it is not possible there should be any baptism at all in the
world, either among Paedobaptists or Antipaedobaptists; the reason of this
consequence is, because the madmen of Munster, from whom this writer dates the
first opposition to infant-baptism; and the first Antipaedobaptists in England,
had no other baptism than what they received in their infancy; that
adult-baptism must first be administered by unbaptized persons, if
infant-baptism is no ordinance of Christ, but a mere nullity; and so by such as
had no claim to the gospel ministry, nor right to administer ordinances; and
consequently the whole succession of the Antipaedobaptist churches must remain
unbaptized to this day; and so no more baptism among them, than among the
Paedobaptists, until there is a new commission from heaven, to renew and restore
this ordinance, which is, at present, lost out of the world, [pages 6, 8, 9]. As
for the madmen of Munster, as this writer calls them, and the rife of the
Antipaedobaptists from them, and what is said of them, I shall consider in the
next chapter.
The English
Antipaedobaptists, when they were first convinced of adult-baptism, and of the
mode of administering it by immersion, and of the necessity of letting a
reformation on foot in this matter, met together, and consulted about it: when
they had some difficulties thrown in their way, about a proper administrator to
begin this work; some were for fending messengers to foreign churches, who were
the successors, of the ancient Waldenses in France and Bohemia; and accordingly
did send over some, who being baptized, returned and baptized others. And this
is a sufficient answer to all that this writer has advanced. But others thought
that this was a needless scruple, and looked too much like the popish notion of
an uninterrupted succession, and a right conveyed through that to administer
ordinances; and therefore judged, in such a care as theirs, there being a
general corruption as to this ordinance, that an unbaptized person, who appeared
to be otherwise qualified to preach the word, and administer ordinances, should
begin it; and justified themselves upon the same principles that other reformers
did, who, without any regard to an uninterrupted succession, let up new
churches, ordained pastors, and administered ordinances: It must be owned, that
in ordinary cases, he ought to be baptized himself, that baptizes another, or
preaches the word, or administers other ordinances; but in an extraordinary
care, as this of beginning a reformation from a general corruption, where such
an administrator cannot be had, it may be done; nor is it essential to the
ordinance that there should be such an administrator, or otherwise it could
never have been introduced into the world at all at first; the first
administrator must be an unbaptized person, as John the Baptist was.
According to this man s
train of reasoning, there never was, nor could be any valid baptism in the
world; for John, the first administrator, being an unbaptized person, the whole
succession of churches from that time to this day must remain unbaptized. It
will be said, that he had a commission from heaven to begin this new ordinance;
and a like one should be shewn for the restoration of it. To which I answer,
that there being a plain direction for the administration of this ordinance, in
the Word, there was no need of a new commission to restore it from a general
corruption; it was enough for any person, sensible of the corruption, to attempt
a reformation, and to administer it in the right way, who was satisfied of his
call from God to preach the gospel, and administer ordinances, according to the
word. I shall close this chapter with the words of
Zanchy,[1]
a Protestant Divine, and a Paedobaptist, and a man of as great learning and
judgment, as any among the first reformers: "It is a fifth question, he
says, proposed by Augustin, [contra Parmen. 1.2. c. 13. col. 42] but not solved,
whether he that never was baptized may baptize another; and of this question he
says, that is, Austin, nothing is to be affirmed without the authority of a
council. Nevertheless, Thomas (Aquinas) takes upon him to determine it, from an
answer of Pope Nicholas, to the inquiries of the Dutch, [as it is had in Decr.
de Consec. dist. 4. can. 22] where we thus read; "You say, by a certain
Jew, whether a Christian or a heathen, you know not, (that is, whether baptized
or unbaptized) many were baptized in your country, and you desire to know what
is to be done in this care; truly if they are baptized in the name of the holy
Trinity, or only in the name of Christ, they ought not to be baptized
again."
And Thomas confirms the
same, by a laying of Isidore, which likewise is produced in the same
distinction, [can. 21] where he says, "that the Spirit of Christ ministers
the grace of baptism, though he be a heathen that baptizes. Wherefore, says
Thomas, if there should be two persons not yet baptized, who believe in Christ,
and. They have no lawful administrator by whom they may be baptized, one may,
without sin, be baptized by the other; the necessity of death obliging to it.
All this, adds Zanchy, proceeds from hence, that they thought water-baptism
absolutely necessary; but what cannot be determined by the word of God, we
should not dare to determine. But, says he, I will propose a question, which, I
think, may be easily answered; supposing a Turk in a country where he could not
easily come at Christian churches; he, by reading the New Testament, is favored
with the knowledge of Christ, and with faith; he teaches his family, and
converts that to Christ, and so others likewise; the question is, whether he may
baptize them whom he has converted to Christ, though he himself never was
baptized with water-baptism? I do not doubt but he may; and, on the other hand,
take care that he himself be baptized, by another of them that were converted by
him; the reason is, because he is a minister of the Word, extraordinarily raised
up by Christ; so that such a minister may, with them, by the consent of the
church, appoint a colleague, and take care that he be baptized by him." The
reason which Zanchy, gives, will, I think, hold good in the case of the first
Antipaedobaptists in England.
CHAPTER 3.
Of the Antiquity of Infant- baptism; when first debated; and
concerning the Waldenses.
The minister, in this dialogue, in order to stagger his neighbor about the principle of adult-
baptism, he had espoused, suggests to him, that infant-baptism did universally obtain in
the church, even from the apostles times; that undoubted evidence may be had
from the ancient fathers, that it constantly obtained in the truly primitive
church; and that it cannot be pretended that this practice was called in
question, or made matter of debate in the church, till the madmen of Munster set
themselves against it; and affirms, that the ancient Waldenses being in the
constant practice of adult-baptism, is a mere imagination, a chimerical one, and
to be rejected as a groundless figment, [pages 7, 9].
I. This writer intimates, that the practice of infant-baptism universally and constantly obtained
in the truly primitive church. The truly primitive church is the church in the times of
Christ and his apostles: The first Christian church was that at Jerusalem, which
consisted of such as were made the disciples of Christ, and baptized; first made
disciples by Christ, and then baptized by his apostles; for Jesus himself
baptized none, only they baptized by his order (John 4:1, 2; Acts 1:15). This
church afterwards greatly increased; three thousand persons, who were pricked to
the heart under Peter s ministry, repented of their sins, and joyfully
received the good news of pardon and salvation by Christ, were baptized, and
added to it; these were adult persons; nor do we read of any one infant being
baptized, while this truly primitive church subsisted. The next Christian church
was that at Samaria; for that there was a church there, is evident from Acts
9:31. This seems to have been founded by the ministry of Philip; the original
members of it were men and women baptized by Philip, upon a profession of their
faith in the things preached by him, concerning the kingdom of God, and the name
of Jesus Christ (Acts 8:12); nor is there the least intimation given that
infant-baptism at all obtained in this church. Another truly primitive Christian
church, was the church at Philippi; the foundation of which was said in the two
families of Lydia and the Jailer, and which furnish out no proof of
infant-baptism obtaining here, as we shall see hereafter; for Lydia s
household are called brethren, whom the apostles visited and comforted; and the
Jailer s household were such as were capable of hearing the word, and who
believed in Christ, and rejoiced in God as well as he (Acts 16:14, 15, 32-34,
40). So that it does not appear that infant-baptism obtained in this church. The
next Christian church we read of, and which was a truly primitive one, is the
church at Corinth, and consisted of persons who, hearing the apostle Paul preach
the gospel, believed in Christ, whom he preached, and were baptized (Acts 18:8):
but there is no mention made of any infant being baptized, either now or
hereafter, in this truly primitive church state. These are all the truly
primitive churches of whole baptism we have any account in the Acts of the
apostles, excepting Cornelius, and his family and friends, who very probably
founded a church at Caesarea; and the twelve disciples at Ephesus, who very
likely joined to the church there, and who are both instances of adult-baptism
(Acts 10:48; Acts 19:1-7). Let it be made appear, if it can, that any one infant
was ever baptized: in any of the above truly primitive churches, or in any
other, during the apostolic age, either at Antioch or Thessalonica, at some, or
at Colosse, or any other primitive church of those times. But though this cannot
be made out from the writings of the New Testament, we are told,
II. That undoubted evidence may be had from the ancient fathers, that infant-baptism constantly
obtained in the truly primitive church. Let us a little inquire into this matter:
- The Christian writers of the first century, besides the evangelists and apostles, are Barnabas,
Herman, Clemens Romanus, Ignatius and Polycarp. As to the two first of there, Barnabas and
Hermas, the learned Mr. Stennett[2] has
cited some passages out of them; and after him Mr. David
Rees;[3] for which reason, I forbear transcribing them;
which are manifest proofs of adult-baptism, and that as performed by immersion;
they represent the persons baptized, the one[4]
as hoping in the cross of Christ, the other[5]
as having heard the word, and being willing to be baptized in the name of the
Lord; and both as going down into the water, and coming up out of it. Clemens
Romanus wrote an epistle to the Corinthians, still extant; but there is not a
syllable in it about infant-baptism. Ignatius wrote epistles to several
churches, as well as to particular persons; but makes no mention of the practice
of infant-baptism in any of them: what he lays of baptism, favors adult-baptism;
since he speaks of it as attended with faith, love and patience: "Let your
baptism, says he[6] remain as armor; faith
as an helmet, love as a spear, and patience as whole armor." Polycarp wrote
an epistle to the Philippians, which is yet in being; but there is not one word
in it about infant-baptism. So that it is so far from being true, that there is
undoubted evidence from the ancient fathers, that this practice universally and
constantly obtained in the truly primitive church, that there is no evidence at
all that it did obtain, in any respect, in the first century, or apostolic age;
and which is the only period in which the truly primitive church of Christ can
be said to subsist. There is indeed a work called The constitutions of the
apostles, and sometimes the constitutions of Clemens, because he is laid to be
the compiler of them; and another book of Ecclesiastical Hierarchy, ascribed to
Dionysius the Areopagite, out of which, passages have been cited in favor of
infant-baptism; but there are manifestly of later date than they pretend to, and
were never written by the persons whose names they bear, and are condemned as
spurious by learned men, and are given up as such by Dr. Wall, in his History of
Infant Baptism.[7]
- The Christian writers of
the second century, which are extant, are Justin Martyr, Athenagoras, Theophilus
of Antioch, Tatian, Minutius Felix, Irenaeus, and Clemens of Alexandria; and of
all these writers, there is not one that lays any thing of infant-baptism; there
is but one pretended to, and that is Irenaeus, and but a single passage out of
him; and that depends upon a single word, the signification of which is doubtful
at best; and besides the passage is only a translation of Irenaeus, and not
expressed in his own original words; and the chapter, from whence it is taken,
is by some learned men judged to be spurious; since it advances a notion
inconsistent with that ancient writer, and notoriously contrary to the books of
the evangelists, making Christ to live to be fifty years old, yea, to live to a
senior age: The passage, produced in favor of infant-baptism, is this; speaking
of Christ, he says,[8] "Sanctifying
every age, by that likeness it had to him; for he came to save all by himself;
all, I say, qui per eum renascuntur in Deum, "who by him are born again
unto God;" infants, and little ones, and children, and young men, and old
men; therefore he went through every age, and became an infant, to infants
sanctifying infants; and to little ones a little one, sanctifying those: of that
age; and likewise became an example of piety, righteousness, and
subjection:" Now, the question is about the word renascuntur, whether it is
to be rendered born again, which is the literal sense of the word, or baptized;
the true sense of Irenaeus seems to be this, that Christ came to fare all that
are regenerated by his grace and spirit; and none but they, according to his own
words (John 3:3, 5), and that by assuming human nature, and parting through the
several stages of life, he has sanctified it, and let an example to men of every
age. And this now is all the evidence, the undoubted evidence of infant-baptism,
from the fathers of the first two centuries; it would be easy to produce
passages out of the above writers, in favor of believers-baptism; I shall only
cite one out of the first of them; the account, that Justin Martyr gave to the
emperor Antoninus Pius of the Christians of his day; though it has been cited by
Mr. Stennett and Mr. Rees, I shall choose to transcribe it; because, as Dr. Wall
says,[9] it is the most ancient account of
the way of baptizing next the scripture. "And now, says Justin,[10] we will declare after what manner, when we were
renewed by Christ, we devoted ourselves unto God; lest, omitting this, we should
seem to act a bad part in this declaration. As many, as are persuaded, and
believe the things, taught and said by us, to be true, and promise to live
according to them, are instructed to pray, and to ask, fasting, the forgiveness
of their past sins of God, we praying and fasting together with them. After
that, they are brought by us where water is, and they are regenerated in the
same way of regeneration, as we have been regenerated; for they are then washed
in water, in the name of the Father and Lord God of all, and of our Savior Jesus
Christ, and of the holy Spirit." There is a work, which bears the name of
Justin, called Answers to the orthodox, concerning some necessary questions; to
which we are sometimes referred for a proof of infant-baptism; but the book is
spurious, and none of Justin s, as many learned men have observed; and as Dr.
Wall allows; and is thought not to have been written before the fifth century.
So stands the evidence for infant-baptism, from the ancient fathers of the first
two centuries.
- As to the third century, it will be allowed, that it was spoken of in it; though as loon as it was
mentioned, it was opposed; and the very first man that mentions it, speaks against it; namely,
Tertullian. The truth of the matter is, that infant-baptism was moved for in the third century; got
footing and establishment in the fourth and fifth; and so prevailed until the time of the
reformation: Though, throughout these several centuries, there were testimonies bore to
adult-baptism; and at several times, certain persons rose up, and opposed infant-baptism; which
brings me,
III. To consider what our author affirms, that it cannot be pretended that this practice was called
in question, or made matter of debate in the church, until the madmen of Munster
let themselves against it, [page 7]. Let us examine this matter, and,
- It should be observed,
that the disturbances in Germany, which our Paedobaptist writers so often refer
to in this controversy about baptism, and so frequently reproach us with, were
first begun in the wars of the boors, by such as were Paedobaptists, and them
only; first by the Papists, some few years before the reformation; and after
that, both by Lutherans and Papists, on account of civil liberties; among whom,
in process of time, some few of the people called Anabaptists mingled
themselves; a people that scarce in any thing agree with us, neither in their
civil, nor religious principles; nor even in baptism itself; for if we can
depend on those that wrote the history of them, and against them; they were for
repeating adult-baptism, not performed among them; yea, that which was
administered among themselves, when they removed their communion to another
society; nay, even in the same community, when an excommunicated person was
received again;[11] besides, if what is
reported of them is true, as it may be, their baptism was performed by
sprinkling, which we cannot allow to be true baptism; it is laid, that when a
community of them was satisfied with the person s faith and conversation, who
proposed for baptism, the payor took water into his hand, and sprinkled it on
the head of him that was to be baptized, using there words, I baptize thee in
the name of the Father, of the Son, and of the holy Ghost:[12] And even the disturbances in Munster, a famous
city in Westphalia, were first begun by Bernard Rotman, a Paedobaptism minister
of the Lutheran persuasion, assisted by other ministers of the reformation, in
opposition to the Papists in the year 1532; and it was not till the year 1533,
that John Matthias of Harlem, and John Bocoldus of Leyden came to this place;[13] who, with Knipperdolling and others, are, I
suppose, the madmen of Munster this writer means; and he may call them madmen,
if he pleases; I shall not contend with him about it; they were mad notions
which they held, and mad actions they performed; and both dip avowed by the
people who are now called Anabaptists; though it is not reasonable to suppose,
that there were the only men concerned in that affair, or that the number of
their followers should increase to such a degree in so small a time, as to make
such a revolution in so large a city: However, certain it is, that it was not
their principle about baptism, that led them into such extravagant notion, and
actions: But what I take notice of all this for, is chiefly to observe the date
of the confusions and distractions, in which there madmen were concerned; which
were from the year 1533 to 1536: And our next inquiry therefore is, whether
there was any debate about the practice of infant-baptism before this time. And,
- It will appear, that it
was frequently debated, before these men set themselves against it, or acted the
mad part they did: In the years 1532 and 1528, there were public disputations at
Berne in Switzerland, between the ministers of the church there and some
Anabaptist teacher;[14] in the years 1529,
1527 and 1525, Oecolampadius had various disputes with people of this name at
Basil in the same country;[15] in the year
1525, there was a dispute at Zurich in the same country about Paedobaptism,
between Zwinglius, one of the first reformers, and Balthasar Hubmeierus,[16] who afterwards was burnt, and his wife drowned
at Vima, in the year 1528; of whom Meshovius,[17]
though a Papist, give, this character; that he was from his childhood brought up
in learning; and for his singular erudition was honored with a degree in
divinity; was a very eloquent man, and read in the scriptures, and fathers of
the church. Hoornbeck[18] calls him a
famous and eloquent preacher, and lays he was the first of the reformed
preachers at Waldshut: There were several disputations with other, in the same
year at this place; upon which an edict was made by the senate at Zurich,
forbidding rebaptization, under the penalty of being fined a silver mark, and of
being imprisoned, and even drowned, according to the nature of the offense. And
in the year 1526, or 1527, according to Hoornbeck, Felix Mans, or Mentz, was
drowned at Zurich; this man, Meshovius says,[19]
whom he calls Felix Mantscher, was of a noble family; and both he, and Conrad
Grebel, whom he calls Cunrad Grebbe, who are said to give the first rise to
Anabaptism at Zurich, were very learned men, and well skilled in the Latin,
Greek, and Hebrew languages. And the same writer affirms, that Anabaptism was
set on foot at Wittenberg, in the year 1522, by Nicholas Pelargus, or Stork, who
had companions with him of very great learning, as Carolostadius, Philip
Melancthon, and others; this, he says, was done, whilst Luther was lurking as an
exile in the cable of Wartpurg in Thuringia; and that when he returned from
thence to Wittenberg he banished Carolostadius, Pelargus, More, Didymus, and
others,[20] and only received Melancthon
again. This carries the opposition to Paedobaptism within five years of the
reformation, begun by Luther; and certain it is, there were many and great
debates about infant-baptism at the first of the reformation, years before the
affair of Munster: And evident it is, that some of the first reformers were
inclined to have attempted a reformation in this ordinance, though they, for
reasons best known to themselves, dropped it; and even Zwinglius himself, who
was a bitter persecutor of the people called Anabaptists afterwards, was once of
the same mind himself, and against Paedobaptism. But,
- It will appear, that this was a matter of debate, and was opposed before the time of the
reformation. There was a set of people in Bohemia, near a hundred years before that, who
appear to be of the same persuasion with the people, called Anabaptists; for in a letter, written by
Costelecius out of Bohemia to Erasmus, dated October 10,
1519,[21] among other things said of them,
which agree with the said people, this is one; "such as come over to their sect, must every
one be baptized anew in meer water;" the writer of the letter calls them Pyghards; so
named, he says, from a certain refugee, that came thither ninety-seven years before the date of the
letter. Pope Innocent the third, under whom was the Lateran council, A.D. 1215, has, in the
decretals, a letter, in answer to a letter from the bishop of Arles in Provence, which had
represented to him,[22] that "some Heretics
there had taught, that it was to no purpose to baptize children, since they could have no
forgiveness of sins thereby, as having no faith, charity, etc." So that it is a clear point, that
there were some that let themselves against infant-baptism in the thirteenth century, three hundred
years before the reformation; yea, in the twelfth century there were some that opposed
Paedobaptism. Mr. Fax, the martyrologist, relates from the history of Robert
Guisburne,[23] that two men, Gerhardus and
Dulcinus, in the reign of Henry the second, about the year of our Lord 1158; who, he supposes,
had received some light of knowledge of the Waldenses, brought thirty with them into England;
who, by the king and the prelates, were all burnt in the forehead, and so driven out of the realm;
and after were slain by the Pope. Rapin[24] calls them
German Heretics, and places their coming into England at the year 1166: But William of
Newbury[25] calls them Publicans, and only mentions
Gerhardus, as at the head of them; and whom he allows to be somewhat learned, but all the rest
very illiterate, and says they came from Gascoigne; and being convened before a council, held at
Oxford for that purpose, and interrogated concerning articles of faith, said perverse things
concerning the divine sacraments, detesting holy baptism, the Eucharist and marriage: And his
annotator, out of a manuscript of Radulph Picardus, the monk, shews, that the Heretics, called
Publicans, affirm, that we must not pray for the dead; that the suffrages of the saints were not to
be asked; that they believe not purgatory; with many other things; and particularly, afferunt isti
parvulos non baptisandos donec ad intelligibilem perveniant etatem; "they assert that infants
are not to be baptized, till they come to the age of
understanding."[26]
In the year 1147, St. Bernard wrote a letter to the earl of St Gyles, complaining of his
harboring Henry, an Heretic; and among other things he is charged with by him, are there;
"the infants of Christians are hindered from the life of Christ, the grace of baptism being
denied them; nor are they suffered to come to their salvation, though our Savior compassionately
cries out in their behalf, Suffer little children to come unto me, etc." and, about the same
time, writing upon the Canticles, in his 65th and 66th sermons, he takes notice of a
sort of people, he calls Apostolici; and who, perhaps, were the followers of Henry; who, says he,
laugh at us for baptizing infants;[27] and among the
tenets which he ascribes to them, and attempts to confute, this is the first, "Infants are not
to be baptized:" In opposition to which, he affirms, that infants are to be baptized in the
faith of the church; and endeavors, by instances, to show, that the faith of one is profitable to
others;[28] which he attempts from Matthew 9:2 and
Matthew 15:28; 1 Timothy 2:15.
In the year 1146, Peter
Bruis, and Henry his follower, set themselves against infant-baptism. Petrus
Cluniacensis, or Peter the Abbot of Clugny, wrote against them; and among other
errors he imputes to them, are there: "That infants are not baptized, or
saved by the faith of another, but ought to be baptized and saved by their own
faith; or, that baptism without their own faith does not save; and that those,
that are baptized in infancy, when grown up, should be baptized again; nor are
they then rebaptized, but rather rightly
baptized:"[29]
And that there men did deny infant-baptism, and pleaded for adult-baptism, Mr.
Stennett[30] has proved from Cassander and
Prateolus, both Paedobaptists: And Dr. Wall[31]
allows these two men to be Antipaedobaptists; and says, they were "the
first Antipaedobaptist preachers that ever let up a church, or society of men,
holding that opinion against infant-baptism, and rebaptizing such as had been
baptized in infancy;" and who also
observes,[32]
that the Lateran[33] council, under
Innocent the II, 1139, did condemn Peter Bruis, and Arnold of Brescia, who seems
to have been a follower of Bruis, for rejecting infant-baptism: Moreover, in the
year 1140, or a little before it, Evervinus, of the diocese of Cologn, wrote a
letter to St Bernard; in which he gives him an account of some heretics, lately
discovered in that country; of whom he says, "they condemn the sacraments,
except baptism only; and this only in those who are come to age; who, they say,
are baptized by Christ himself whoever be the minister of the sacraments; they
do not believe infant-baptism; alleging that place of the gospel, he that
believeth, and is baptized, shall be saved."[34]
There seem also to be the
disciples of Peter Bruit, who began to preach about the year 1126; so that it is
out of all doubt, that this was a matter of debate, four hundred years before
the madmen of Munster let themselves against it: And a hundred years before
there, there were two men, Bruno, bishop of Angiers, and Berengarius, archdeacon
of the same church, who began to spread their particular notions about the year
1035; which chiefly respected the sacraments of baptism and the Lord s-Supper.
What they said about the former, may be learned from the letter sent by
Deodwinus, bishop of Liege, to Henry I. King of France; in which are the
following words:[35] "There is a
report come out of France, and which goes through all Germany, that there two
(Bruno and Berengarius) do maintain, that the Lord s body (the Host) is not
the body, but a shadow and figure of the Lord s body; and that they do
disannul lawful marriages; and, as far as in them lies, overthrow the baptism of
infants:" And from Guimundus, bishop of Aversa, who wrote against
Berengarius, who says, "that he did not teach rightly concerning the
baptism of infants, and concerning
marriage."[36]
Mr. Stennett[37] relates from Dr. Allix, a
passage concerning one Gundulphus and his followers, in Italy; divers of whom,
Gerard, bishop of Cambray and Arras, interrogated upon several heads in the year
1025. And, among other things, that bishop mentions the following reason, which
they gave against infant-baptism; "because to an infant, that neither
wills, nor runs, that knows nothing of faith, is ignorant of its own salvation
and welfare; in whom there can be no desire of regeneration, or confession; the
will, faith and confession of another seem not in the least to appertain."
Dr. Wall, indeed, represents these men, the disciples of Gundulphus, as Quakers and
Manichees in the point of baptism; holding that water-baptism is of no use to any: But it
must be affirmed, whatever their principles were, that their argument against
infant-baptism was very strong. So then we have testimonies, that Paedobaptism
was opposed five hundred years before the affair of Munster. And if the
Pelagians, Donatists, and Luciferians, so called from Lucifer Calaritanus, a
very orthodox man, and a great opposer of the Arians, were against
infant-baptism, as several Paedobaptist writers affirm; this carries the
opposition to it still higher; and indeed it may seem strange, that since it had
not its establishment till the times of Austin, that there should be none to let
themselves against it: And if there were none, how comes it to pass that such a
canon should be made in the Milevitan council, under pope Innocent the first,
according to Carranza;[38] and in the year
402, as say the Magdeburgensian centuriators;[39]
or be it in the council at Carthage, in the year 418, as says Dr. Wall[40] which runs thus, "Also, it is our pleasure,
that whoever denies that new-born infants are to be baptized; or says, they are
indeed to be baptized for the remission of sins; and yet they derive no original
sin from Adam to be expiated by the washing of regeneration; (from whence it
follows, that the form of baptism for the forgiveness of sins in them, cannot be
understood to be true, but false) let him be anathema:"
But if there were none,
that opposed the baptism of new-born infants, why should the first part of this
canon be made, and an anathema annexed to it? To say, that it respected a notion
of a single person in Cyprian s time, 150 years before this, that infants were
not to be baptized, until eight days old; and that it seems there were some
people still of this opinion, wants proof. But however certain it is, that
Tertullian[41] in the beginning of the
third century, opposed the baptism of infants, and dissuaded from it, who is the
first writer that makes mention of it: So it appears, that as soon as ever it
was set on foot, it became matter of debate; and sooner than this, it could not
be: And this was thirteen hundred years before the madmen of Munster appeared in
the world. But,
IV. Let us next consider the practice of the ancient Waldenses, with respect to adult-baptism,
which this author affirms to be a chimerical imagination, and groundless figment. It should
be observed, that the people called Waldenses, or the Vaudois, inhabiting the
valleys of Piedmont, have gone under different names, taken from their principal
leaders and teachers; and so this of the Waldenses, from Peter Waldo, one of
their barbs, or pastors; though some think, this name is only a corruption of
Vallenses, the inhabitants of the valleys: And certain it is, there was a people
there before the times of Waldo, and even from the apostles time, that held the
pure evangelic truths, and bore a testimony to them in all ages,[42] and throughout the dark times of popery, as many
learned men have observed; and the sense of there people concerning baptism may
be best understood,
- By what their ancient
barbs or pastors taught concerning it. Peter Bruis, and Henry his successor,
were both, as Morland affirms,[43] their
ancient barbs and pastors; and from them there people were called Petrobrussians
and Henricians; and we have seen already, that there two men were
Antipaedobaptists, denied infant-baptism, and pleaded for adult-baptism.
Arnoldus of Brixia, or Brescia, was another of their barbs, and is the first
mentioned by Morland, from whom there people were called Arnoldists. Of this man
Dr. Allix says,[44] that besides being
charged with some ill opinions, it was said of him, that he was not found in his
sentiments concerning the sacraments of the altar and the baptism of infants;
and Dr. Wall allows,[45] that the Lateran
council, under Innocent the second, in 1139, did condemn Peter Bruis, and Arnold
of Brescia, who seems to have been a follower of Bruis, for rejecting
infant-baptism, Lollardo was another of their barbs, who, as Morland says, was
in great reputation with them, for having conveyed the knowledge of their
doctrine into England, where his disciples were known by the name of Lollards;
who were charged with holding, that the sacrament of baptism used in the church
by water, is but a light matter, and of small effect; that Christian people be
sufficiently baptized in the blood of Christ, and need no water; and that
infants be sufficiently baptized, if their parents be baptized before them:[46] All which seem to arise from their denying of
infant baptism, and the efficacy of it to take away sin.
- By their ancient confessions of faith, and other writings which have been published. In one of
there, bearing date A.D. 1120, the 12th and 13th articles run thus:[47] "We do believe that the sacraments are
signs of the holy thing, or visible forms of the invisible grace; accounting it
good that the faithful sometimes use the said signs, or visible forms, if it may
be done. However we believe and hold, that the above said faithful may be saved
without receiving the signs aforesaid, in case they have no place, nor any means
to use them. We acknowledge no other sacrament but baptism and the Lord s-Supper."
And in another ancient confession, without a date, the 7th article is:[48] "We believe that in the sacrament of
baptism, water is the visible and external sign, which represents unto us that
which (by the invisible virtue of God operating) is within us; namely, the
renovation of the Spirit, and the mortification of our members in Jesus Christ;
by which also we are received into the holy congregation of the people of God,
there protesting and declaring openly our faith and amendment of life." In
a tract,[49] written in the language of
the ancient inhabitants of the valleys, in the year 1100, called The Noble
Lesson, are there words; speaking of the apostles, it is observed of them,
"they spoke without fear of the doctrine of Christ; they preached to Jews
and Greeks, working many miracles, and those that believed they baptized in the
name of Jesus Christ." And in a treatise concerning Antichrist, which
contains many sermons of the barbs, collected in the year 1120, and so speaks
the sense of their ancient pastors before this time, stands the, following
passage:[50] "The third work of
antichrist consists in this, that he attributes the regeneration of the holy
Spirit, unto the dead outward work (or faith) baptizing children in that faith,
and teaching, that thereby baptism and regeneration must be had, and therein he
confers and bellows orders and other sacraments, and groundeth therein all his
Christianity, which is against the Holy Spirit."
There are indeed two
confessions of theirs, which are said to speak of infant-baptism; but there are
of a late date, both of them in the sixteenth century; and the earliest: is not
a confession of the Waldenses or Vaudois in the valleys of Piedmont, but of the
Bohemians, said to be presented to Ladislaus king of Bohemia, A.D. 1508, and
afterwards amplified and explained, and presented to Ferdinand king of Bohemia,
A.D. 1535; and it should be observed, that those people say, that they were
fairly called Waldenses;[51] whereas it is
certain there were a people in Bohemia that came out of the valleys, and sprung
from the old Waldenses, and were truly so, who denied infant-baptism, as that
sort of them called Pyghards, or Picards; who, near a hundred years before the
reformation, as we have seen by the letter sent to Erasmus out of Bohemia,
rebaptized persons that joined in communion with them; and Scultetus,[52] in his annals on the year 1528, says, that the
united brethren in Bohemia, and other godly persons of that time, were
rebaptized; not that they patronized the errors of the Anabaptist s, (meaning
such that they were charged with which had no relation to baptism) but because
they could not see how they could otherwise separate themselves from an unclean
world. The other confession is indeed made by the ministers and heads of the
churches in the valleys, assembled in Angrogne, September 12, 1532.[53] Now it should be known, that this was made after
that "Peter Masson and George Morell were sent into Germany in the year
1530, as Morland[54] says, to treat with
the chief ministers of Germany, namely, Oecolampadius, Bucer, and others,
touching the reformation of their churches; but Peter Masson was taken prisoner
at Dijon."
However, as Fox says[55] "Morell escaped,
and returned alone to Merindol, with the books and letters he brought with him from the churches
of Germany; and declared to his brethren all the points of his commission; and
opened unto them how many and great errors they were in; into the which their
old ministers, whom they called Barbs, that is to say Uncles, had brought them,
leading them from the right way of true religion." After which, this
confession was drawn up, signed, and swore to: From hence we learn, where they
might get this notion, which was now become matter of great debate in
Switzerland and Germany; and yet, after all this, I am inclined to think, that
the words of the article in the said confession, are to be so understood, as not
to relate to infant-baptism: They are these;[56]
"We have but two sacramental signs left us by Jesus Christ; the one is
baptism; the other is the Eucharist, which we receive, to shew that our
perseverance in the faith, is such, as we promised, when we were baptized, being
little children." This phrase, being little children, as I think, means,
their being little children in knowledge and experience, when they were
baptized; since they speak of their receiving the Eucharist, to shew their
perseverance in the faith, they then had promised to persevere in: Besides, if
this is to be understood of them, as infants in a literal sense; what promise
were they capable of making, when such? Should it be said, that "they
promised by "their sureties;" it should be observed, that the
Waldenses did not admit of godfathers and godmothers in baptism; this is one of
the abuses their ancient Barbs complained of in baptism, as administered by the
Papists.[57]
Besides, in a brief
confession of faith, published by the reformed churches of Piedmont, so late as
A.D. 1655, they have there words in favor of
adult-baptism;[58] "that God does not only
instruct and teach us by his word, but has also ordained certain sacraments to be joined with it,
as a means to unite us unto Christ, and to make us partakers of his benefits.
And there are only two of them belonging in common to all the members of the
church under the New Testament; to wit, baptism and the Lord s-Supper; that
God has ordained the sacrament of baptism to be a testimony of our adoption, and
of our being cleansed from our sins by the blood of Jesus Christ, and renewed in
holiness of life:" Nor is there one word in it of infant-baptism.
Upon the whole, it will be easily seen, what little reason the writer of the dialogue under
consideration had to say, that the ancient Waldenses, being in the constant practice of
adult-baptism, is a chimerical imagination, and a groundless fiction; since
there is nothing appears to the contrary, but that they were in the practice of
it until the sixteenth century; for what is urged against it, is since that
time: And even at that time, there were some, that continued in the practice of
it; for Ludovicus Vives, who wrote in the said century, having observed, that
"formerly no person was brought to the holy baptistery, till he was of
adult age, and when he both understood what that mythical water meant, and
desired to be washed in it, yea, desired it more than once," adds the
following words; "I hear, in some cities of Italy, the old custom is still
in a great measure preferred."[59]
Now, what people should he
mean by some cities of Italy, unless the remainders of the Petrobrussians, or
Waldenses, as Dr. Wall observes,[60] who
continued that practice in the valleys of Piedmont: And it should be observed,
that there were different sects, that went by the name of Waldenses, and some of
them of very bad principles; some of them were Manichees, and held other errors:
And indeed, it was usual for the Papists in former times, to call all by this
name, that dissented from them; so that it need not be wondered at, if some,
bearing this name, were for infant-baptism, and others not. The Vaudois in the
valleys, are the people chiefly to be regarded; and it will not be denied, that
of late years infant-baptism has obtained among them: But that the ancient
Waldenses practiced it, wants proof.
CHAPTER 4.
The Argument for Infant-baptism, taken from the Covenant made
with Abraham, and from Circumcision, the Sign of it, considered.
The minister in this
debate, in answer to his neighbor s requiring a plain scripture institution of
infant-baptism, tells him; if he would "consider the covenant of grace,
which was made with Abraham, and with all his seed, both after the flesh, and
after the Spirit, and by God s express command to be sealed to infants, he
would there find a sufficient scripture instance for infant-baptism:" And
for this covenant he directs him to Genesis 17:2, 4, 7, 10, 12. He argues, that
this covenant was a covenant of grace; that it was made with all Abraham s
seed, natural and spiritual, Jews and Gentiles; that circumcision was the seal
of it; and that the same institution, which requires circumcision to be
administered to infants, requires baptism to be also administered to them, that
succeeding circumcision, [page 10-18]. Wherefore,
First, The leading inquiry is, whether the covenant made with Abraham (Gen. 17), was
the covenant of grace; that is, the pure covenant of grace, in distinction from the covenant of
works;
which is the sense in which it is commonly understood, and in which this writer
seems to understand this covenant with Abraham; for of it, he says [p. 13],
"it was the covenant of grace, that covenant by which alone we can have any
grounded hope of salvation:" But that it was the covenant of grace, or a
pure covenant of grace, must be denied: For,
- It is never called the
covenant of grace, nor by any name which shews it to be so; it is called the
covenant of circumcision, which God is said to give to Abraham (Acts 7:8) but
not a covenant of grace; circumcision and grace are opposed to one another;
circumcision is a work of the law, which they that sought to be justified by,
fell from grace (Gal. 5:2-4).
- It seems rather to be a
covenant of works, than of grace; for this was a covenant to be kept by men.
Abraham was to keep it, and his seed after him were to keep it; something was to
be done by them; they were to circumcise their flesh; and not only he and his
seed were to be circumcised, but all that were born in his house, or bought with
his money; and a severe penalty was annexed to it: In care of neglect, or
disobedience, such a soul was to "be cut off from his people" (Gen.
17:9-14). All which favor nothing of a covenant of grace, a covenant by which we
can have a grounded hope of salvation, but the contrary.
- This was a covenant that might be broken, and in some instances was (Gen. 17:14); but the
covenant of grace cannot be broken; God will not break it (Ps. 89:34), nor man cannot: It is
a covenant ordered in all things, and sure; it cannot be moved; it stands firmer
than hills, or mountains.
- It must be owned, that
there were temporal things promised in this covenant, such as a multiplication
of Abraham s natural seed; a race of kings from him, with many nations, and a
possession of the land of Canaan (Gen. 17:6, 8). Things which can have nothing
to do with the pure covenant of grace, any more than the change of his name from
Abram to Abraham [v. 5].
- There were some persons,
included in this covenant made with Abraham, of whom it cannot be thought they
were in the covenant of grace, as Ishmael, Esau, and others; and on the other
hand, there were some, and even living at the time when this covenant was made,
and yet were not in it; who, nevertheless, were in the covenant of grace, as
Arphaxad, Melchizedek, Lot, and others; wherefore this can never be reckoned the
pure covenant of grace.
- The covenant of grace
was only made with Christ, as the federal head of it; and who is the only head
of the covenant, and of the covenant-ones; wherefore, if the covenant of grace
was made with Abraham, as the federal head of his natural and spiritual seed, of
Jews and Gentiles; then there must be two heads of the covenant of grace,
contrary to the nature of such a covenant, and the whole current of scripture:
Yea, this covenant of Abraham s, so far as it respected his spiritual seed, or
spiritual blessings for them, it and the promises were made to Christ (Gal.
3:16). No mere man is capable of covenanting with God, of stipulation and
restipulation; for what has man to restipulate with God? The covenant of grace
is not made with any single man; and much less with him on the behalf of others:
When, therefore, at any time we read of the covenant of grace, being made with a
particular person, or with particular persons, it must always be understood of
making it manifest to them; of a revelation of the covenant, and of an
application of covenant-blessings to them; and not of any original contract with
them; for that is only made with them in Christ. To which may he added,
- That the covenant of grace was made with Christ, and with his people, as considered in him,
from everlasting; for so early was Christ set up as the mediator of it; the promise of eternal life in
it was before the world was; and those interested in it, were blessed with all spiritual blessings and
grace before the foundation of it; now could there be a mediator so early, a promise of eternal life
so soon, and blessings of grace provided, and no covenant subsisting? wherefore the covenant
made with Abraham in time, could not, strictly and properly speaking, be the covenant of grace.
But,
- To shorten this debate,
it will be allowed, that the covenant made with Abraham was a peculiar covenant,
such as was never made with any before, or since; that it was of a mixed kind;
that it had in it promises and mercies of a temporal nature, which belonged to
his natural seed; and others of a spiritual sort, which belonged to his
spiritual seed: The former are more numerous, clear, and distinct; the latter
are comprised chiefly in Abraham s being the father of many nations, or of
all, that believe, and in God being a God to him and them (Rom. 4:11, 12, 16,
17). Which observation makes way for the next inquiry,
Secondly, With whom this
covenant was made, so far as it respected spiritual things, or was a revelation
of the covenant of grace; as for the temporal things of this covenant, it does
not concern the argument. It is allowed on all hands, that they belonged to
Abraham, and his natural seed: But the question is, whether this covenant, so
far as it may be reckoned a covenant of grace, or a revelation of it, or
respected spiritual things, was made with all Abraham s seed after the flesh,
and with all the natural seed of believing Gentiles? This question consists of
two parts,
- 1st, Whether the covenant made with Abraham, so far as it was a covenant of
grace, was made with all Abraham s seed, according to the flesh? Which must be answered in the
negative. For,
- If it was made with all the natural seed of Abraham, as such, it must be with his more
immediate offspring; and so must be equally made with a mocking and persecuting Ishmael,
born after the flesh, the son of the bond-woman, as with Isaac, born after the Spirit, and the son
of the free woman; and yet we find, that Ishmael was excluded from having a share in spiritual
blessings, only temporal ones were promised him; and, in distinction and opposition to him, the
covenant was established with Isaac (Gen. 17:19, 20, 21). Again, if this was the case, it
must be equally made with a profane Esau, as with plain-hearted Jacob; and yet it is said, Jacob
have I loved, and Esau have I hated (Mal. 1:1, 2).
- If it was made with all Abraham s seed according to the flesh, it must be made with all his
remote posterity, and if and good to them in their most corrupt state; it must be made
with them who believed not, and whole carcasses fell in the wilderness, and
entered not into rest; it must be made with the ten tribes, that revolted from
the pure service of God, and who worshipped the calves at Dan and Bethel; it
must be made with the people of the Jews in Isaiah s time, when they were a
sinful nation, a people laden with iniquity, a seed of evil-doers, children that
were corrupters; whole rulers are called the rulers of Sodom, and the people the
people of Gomorrah (Isa. 1:4, 6, 10), it must be made with the Scribes and
Pharisees, and that wicked, adulterous, and hypocritical generation of men in
the time of our Lord, who were his implacable enemies, and were concerned in his
death; who killed him, persecuted his apostles, pleased not God, and were
contrary to all men. What man, that seriously considers there things, can think
that the covenant of grace belonged to these men, at least to all; and
especially when he observes, what the apostle says, they are not all Israel,
which are of Israel; neither because they are the seed of Abraham, are they all
children? (Rom. 9:6, 7). Yea,
- If it was made with all that are the seed of Abraham according to the flesh then it must be
made with Ishmaelites and Edomites, as well as with Israelites; with his posterity by
Keturah, as well as by Sarah; with the Midianites and Arabians; with the Turks,
as well as with the Jews, since they descended and claim their descent from
Abraham, as well as these. But,
- To shut up this argument; this covenant made with Abraham, be it a covenant of grace, seeing
it could be no more, at most, than a revelation, manifestation, copy, or transcript
of it, call it which you will; it can never be thought to comprehend more in it
than the original contract, than the eternal covenant between the Father and the
Son. Now the only persons interested in the everlasting covenant of grace, are
the chosen of God and precious; whom he has loved with an everlasting love; gave
to his Son to be redeemed by his blood; for whom provision is made in the same
covenant for the sanctification of their nature, for the justification of their
persons, for the pardon of their sins, for their perseverance in grace, and for
their eternal glory and happiness: So that all that are in that covenant are
chosen to grace here, and glory hereafter, and shall certainly enjoy both: they
are all secured in the hands of Christ, and are redeemed from sin, law, hell,
and death, by his precious blood; and shall be saved in him with an everlasting
salvation; they have all of them the laws of God put into their minds, and
written on their hearts; they have new hearts and new spirits given them, and
the stony heart taken away from them; they have the righteousness of Christ
imputed to them; they have their sins forgiven them for his sake, and which will
be remembered no more; they have the fear of God put into their hearts, and
shall never finally and totally depart from him; but, being called and
justified, shall be glorified (Jer. 31:33, 34; 32:40; Ezek. 36:25-27; Rom.
8:30).
Now if this covenant was
made with all Abraham s natural seed, and comprehends all of them, then they
must be all chosen of God; whereas there was only a remnant among them,
according to the election of grace (Rom. 11:5): they must be all given to
Christ, and secured in his hands; whereas there were some of them, that were not
of his sheep, given him by his Father, and so did not believe in him (John
10:26); they must be all redeemed by his blood; whereas he laid down his life
for his sheep, his friends, his church, which all of Abraham s seed could
never be said to be: In a word, they must be all regenerated and sanctified,
justified and pardoned; must all have the grace of God, and persevere in it to
the end, and be all eternally saved; and the same must be said of all the
natural seed of believing Gentiles, if they also are all of them in the covenant
of grace. But what man, in his senses, will affirm there things? And, upon such
a principle, how will the doctrines of personal election, particular redemption,
regeneration by efficacious grace, not by blood or the will of man, and the
saints final perseverance, be established? This Gentleman, whole pamphlet is
before me, is said to have written with some success against the Arminians; but
sure I am, that no man can write with success against them, and without
contradiction to himself, that has imbibed such a notion of the covenant of
grace, as this I am militating against.
- 2dly, The other part of the question is, whether the covenant made with Abraham,
so far as it was a covenant of grace, was made with all the natural seed of believing Gentiles?
which also must be answered in the negative: For,
- It will be allowed, that
this covenant respects Abraham s spiritual seed among the Gentiles; even all
true believers, all such that walk in the steps of his faith; for he is the
Father of all them that believe, whether circumcised or uncircumcised, Jews or
Gentiles (Rom. 4:11, 12, 15); but not the natural seed of believing Gentiles.
They, indeed, that are of the faith of Abraham, are his children in a spiritual
sense, and they are blessed with him with spiritual blessings, and are such, as
Christ has redeemed by his blood; and they believe in him, and the blessing of
Abraham comes upon them: But then this spiritual seed of Abraham is the same
with the spiritual seed of Christ, with whom the covenant was made from
everlasting, and to them only does it belong; and to none can spiritual
blessings belong, but to a spiritual seed, not a natural one. Let it be proved,
if it can, that all the natural seed of believing Gentiles, are the spiritual
seed of Abraham, and then they will be admitted to have a claim to this
covenant. But, though it appears, that believing Gentiles are in this covenant,
what clause is there in it, that respects their natural seed, as such? Let it be
shown, if it can; by what right and authority, can any believing Gentile pretend
to put his natural seed into Abraham s covenant? The covenant made with him,
as to the temporal part of it, belonged to him, and his natural seed; and with
respect to its spiritual part, only to his spiritual seed, whether Jews or
Gentiles and not to the natural seed of either of them, as such.
- The covenant made with
Abraham, and his spiritual seed, takes in many of the seed of unbelieving
Gentiles; who being called by grace, and openly believing Christ, are Abraham s
spiritual seed, with whom the covenant was made: That there are many among the
Gentiles born of unbelieving parents, who become true believers in Christ, and
so appear to be in the covenant of grace, must be allowed; since many are
received as such into the communion of the Paedobaptists, as well as others;
and, on the other hand, there are many born of believing Gentiles, who do not
believe in Christ, are not partakers of his grace, on whom the spiritual
blessings of Abraham do not come; and so not in his covenant. Wherefore, by what
authority do men put in the infant seed of believing Gentiles, as such, into the
covenant, and restrain it to them, and leave out the seed of unbelieving
Gentiles; when, on the contrary, God oftentimes takes the one, and leaves the
other?
- That all the natural seed of believing Gentiles cannot be included in the covenant of grace, is
manifest, from the reason above given, against all the natural seed of Abraham being in it;
shewing, that all that are in it are the elect of God, the redeemed of Christ, are effectually called
by grace, persevere to the end, and are eternally saved; all which cannot be said of all the natural
seed of believing Gentiles: And if all the natural seed of Abraham are not in this covenant made
with him, as it was a covenant of grace, it can hardly be thought that all the natural seed of
believing Gentiles should.
- Seeing it is so clear a
case, that some of the seed of unbelieving Gentiles are in this covenant, and
some of the seed of believing Gentiles are not in it, and that it cannot be
known who are, until they believe in Christ, and so appear to be Abraham s
spiritual seed; it must be right to put off their claim to any privilege
supposed to arise from covenant interest, until it appear that they have one.
- After all, covenant
interest gives no right to any ordinance, without a positive order and direction
from God. So, for instance, with respect to circumcision; on the one hand, there
were some persons living at the time that ordinance was instituted, who
undoubtedly had an interest in the covenant of grace, as Shem, Atrphaxad, Lot,
and others, on whom that was not enjoined, and who had no right to use it; and,
on the other hand, there have been many that were not in the covenant of grace,
who were obliged to it: And so with respect to baptism, it is not covenant
interest that gives a right to it; if it could be proved, as it cannot, that all
the infant seed of believers, as such, are in the covenant of grace, it would
give them no right to baptism, without a positive command for it; the reason is,
because a person may be in covenant, and as yet not have the prerequisite to an
ordinance, even faith in Christ, and a profession of it; which are necessary to
baptism and the Lord s Supper. This leads me on,
Thirdly, To another inquiry, whether circumcision was a real of the covenant of
grace to Abraham's natural seed; the writer, whole performance I am considering, affirms, that it
was by God s express command to be sealed to infants; and that circumcision is the real of it [p.
10, 36]. But this must be denied: circumcision was no seal of the covenant of grace; for,
- If it was, the covenant
of grace, before that took place, must be without a real; the covenant subsisted
from everlasting, and the revelation of it was quickly made after the fall of
Adam; and there were manifestations of it to particular persons, as Noah, and
others, before this to Abraham, and no circumcision enjoined: Wherefore, from
Adam to Abraham, according to this notion, the covenant must be without a real;
nay, there were some persons living at the time it was instituted, who were in
the covenant, yet this was not enjoined them; as it would, if this had been
designed as a seal of it.
- Circumcision, in the
institution of it, is called a sign, but not a seal; it is said to be תוא Oth, a Token, or
Sign (Gen. 17:11); but not םתוח
Chothem, a Seal; it was a sign or mark in the flesh, which Abraham s natural
seed were to bear, until the promises made in this covenant were accomplished;
it was a typical sign of the pollution of human nature, propagated by natural
generation, and of cleansing from it by the blood of Christ, and of the inward
circumcision of the heart; but did not seal or confirm any spiritual blessing of
the covenant, to those on whom this mark or sign was let; it is never called a
seal throughout the whole Old Testament; and so far is there from being any
express command, that the covenant of grace should be sealed to infants by it,
that there is not the least hint of it given.
- It is indeed in the New
Testament called a seal of the righteousness of faith (Rom. 4:11); but it is not
said to be a real of the covenant of grace, nor a seal to infants: it was not a
seal to Abraham s natural seed; it was only so to himself. The plain meaning
of the apostle is, that circumcision was a seal to Abraham, and assured him of,
or confirmed his faith in this, that he should be the father of many nations, in
a spiritual sense; and that the righteousness of faith which he had, when he was
an uncircumcised person, should also come upon, and be imputed unto the
uncircumcised Gentiles: and accordingly, this mark and sign continued until the
gospel, declaring justification by the righteousness of Christ, was preached, or
ordered to be preached to the Gentiles; and could it be thought that
circumcision was a real to others besides him, it could at most be only a seal
to them that had both faith and righteousness, and not to them that had neither.
- If it was a seal of the covenant of grace to Abraham s natural seed, it must be either to some
or all; if only to some, it should be pointed out who they are; and if to all, then it must be sealed,
that is, confirmed, and an interest in it assured of, to a mocking Ishmael; to a profane Esau; to
Korah, Datban, and Abiram, and their accomplices, whom the earth swallowed up alive; to
Achitophel, that hanged himself; to Judas, that betrayed our Lord; and to all the Jews concerned
in his crucifixion and death; since there is reason to believe they were all circumcised. But,
- The covenant made with
Abraham, so far as it was a covenant of grace, was not made, as we have seen,
with all Abraham s natural seed; and therefore circumcision could not be a
seal of it to them. I pass on,
Fourthly, To another inquiry, whether baptism succeeded circumcision, and so
became a real of the covenant: of grace to believers, and their natural seed? This must be
answered in the negative; for,
- There is no agreement
between them, in the subjects to whom they are administered; circumcision was
administered to Jews only, or such as became proselytes; baptism both to Jews
and Gentiles, without any distinction, that believe in Christ; circumcision was
administered to infants, baptism only to adult persons; circumcision belonged
only to the males, baptism to male and female: Seeing then the subjects of the
one and the other are so different, the one cannot be thought to succeed the
other.
- The use of the one and
the other is not the same; the use of circumcision was to distinguish the
natural seed of Abraham from others, until Christ was come in the flesh; the use
of baptism is to be a distinguishing badge of the spiritual seed of Christ, such
as have believed in him, and put him on; the use of circumcision was to signify
the corruption of human nature, the necessity of regeneration, of the
circumcision without hands, and of cleansing by the blood of Christ; the use of
baptism is to answer a good conscience towards God to represent the sufferings,
burial, and resurrection of Christ, and prerequires repentance and faith.
- The manner of administering the one and the other is very different; the one is by blood, the
other by water; the one by an incision made in one part of the body, the other
by an immersion of the whole body in water; the one was done in a private house,
and by a private hand; the other, for the most part, publicly, in open places,
in rivers, and before multitudes of people, and by a person in public office, a
public minister of the word. Now, ordinances so much differing in their
subjects, use, and manner of administration, the one can never be thought to
come in the room and place of the other. But,
- What puts it out of all doubt, that baptism can never be said to succeed circumcision is, that
baptism was in force and use before circumcision was abolished, and its practice
discontinued, or ought to be discontinued. Circumcision was not abolished till
the death of Christ when, with other ceremonies of the law, it was made null and
void; but, unto that time, it was the duty of Jewish parents to circumcise their
infants; whereas some years before this, John came preaching the doctrine of
baptism, and administered it to multitudes; our Lord himself was baptized, three
or four years, according to the common computation, before his death; now that
which is in force before another is out of date, can never, with any propriety,
be said to succeed or come in the room of that other.
- It has been proved already, that circumcision was no seal of the covenant of grace to
Abraham's natural seed; and therefore, could it be proved, as it cannot, that baptism succeeds it, it
would not follow that baptism is a real of the covenant of grace; there are many persons who have
been baptized and yet not in the covenant of grace, and to whom it was never sealed, as Simon
Magus, and others; and, on the other hand, a person may be in the covenant of grace, and it may
be sealed to him, and he may be comfortably assured of his interests in it, though, as yet, not
baptized in water. The author of the dialogue before me says, [p. 16] that it is allowed on all
hands, that baptism is a token or real of the covenant of grace; but it is a popular clamor, a vulgar
mistake, that either that or the Lord's-Supper are seals of the covenant of grace. The blood of
Christ is the seal, and the only seal of it, by which its promises and blessings are ratified and
confirmed; and the holy Spirit is the only earnest pledge, seal, and sealer of the saints, until the
day of redemption.[61]
And so all that fine piece of wit of our author, about the red and white seal, is spoiled and
lost: [p. 17]. Upon the whole, we may see what sufficient scripture institution for
infant-baptism is to be found in the covenant made with Abraham; since the
spiritual part of that covenant did not concern his natural seed, as such, but
his spiritual seed, and so not infants, but adult persons, whether among Jews or
Gentiles, that walked in the steps of his faith; and seeing there is not one
word of baptism in it, and much less of infant-baptism; nor was circumcision a
seal of it, nor does baptism succeed that, or is a seal of the covenant of
grace: Hence also, it will appear, what little reason there is for that
clamorous outcry, so often made, and is by our author, of lessening and
abridging the privileges of infants under the gospel dispensation, and of
depriving them of what they formerly had; or for an harangue upon the valuable
blessing, and great and glorious privilege they had, of having the covenant of
grace sealed unto them by circumcision; or for that demand, how, why, and when,
children were cut off from this privilege? or for such a representation, this
being the care, that the gospel is a less glorious dispensation, with respect to
infants, than the former was, [pp. 19, 20, 22,30]. Seeing the covenant of grace
was never sealed to infants by circumcision; nor was that bloody and painful
rite accounted a rich and glorious privilege; far from it; especially as it
bound them over to keep the whole law, it was a yoke of bondage, an
insupportable one: and it is a rich mercy, and glorious privilege of the gospel,
that the Jews and their children are delivered from it; and that Gentiles and
their children are not obliged to it: And as for the demand, how, why, and when,
children were cut off from it, it is easily answered, that this was done by the
death of Christ, and at the time of it, when all ceremonies were abolished; and
that for this reason, because of the weakness, unprofitableness, and
burdensomeness of that, and them: And as for the gospel-dispensation, that is
the more glorious, for infants being left out of its church-state; that is to
say, for its being not national and carnal, as before, but congregational and
spiritual; for its consisting, not of infants without understanding, but of
rational and spiritual men, of believers in Christ, and prosessors of his name;
and these not in a single and small country, as Judea, but in all parts of the
world, as it has been, at one time or another, and it will be in the latter day:
And as for infants themselves, their care is as good, and their privileges as
many and better, than under the legal dispensation; their salvation is not at
all affected by the abrogation of circumcision, or through want of baptism to
succeed it. As the former did not real the covenant to them, and could not fare
them, so neither could the latter, were it administered to them: To which may be
added, that being born of Christian parents, and having a Christian education,
and the advantage of hearing the gospel, as they grow up, and this not in one
country, but many, must exceed all the privileges the Jewish children had under
the former dispensation.
CHAPTER 5
A consideration of the several texts of scripture produced in favor of
Infant-baptism.
The minister in the dialogue before me, being pressed by his neighbor to declare what were
the numerous texts of scripture he referred to, as proving the continuance of children s privileges
under the gospel-dispensation, meaning particularly baptism, mentions the following.
1st, The passage in Acts 2:39, 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. This scripture is often
made use of by our author, and seems to be his dernier resort on all occasions,
and the sheet-anchor of the cause he is pleading for. The promise spoken of, he
says, undoubtedly, was the covenant made with Abraham; and was urged as a reason
with the Jews, why they and their children ought to be baptized; and as a reason
with the Gentiles, why they and their children, when called into a church-state,
should be also baptized [p. 11, 12]. He makes use of it, to prove that this
promise gives a claim to baptism, and that an interest in it gives a right unto
it [p. 15, 16, 18, 29, 30].
- It is easy to observe the contradictions, that such are guilty of, that plead for infant-baptism,
from the covenant or promise made with Abraham, as this writer is. One while, he
tells us, that persons are by baptism brought into the covenant of grace; and what a dreadful thing
it is to renounce baptism in infancy; whereby the covenant is vacated, and the relation to the
glorious God disowned, they were brought into by baptism [p. 4]. And yet here we are told, that
interest in this promise gives a right and claim to baptism; but how can it give a previous right and
claim to baptism, when it is by baptism, according to this writer, that persons are brought into this
covenant?
- The promise here observed, be it what it will, is not taken notice of, as what gives a claim and
right to baptism, but as an encouraging motive to persons pricked in the heart, and in distress,
both to repent, and be baptized for the remission of sins, and as giving them hope of receiving the
holy Ghost, since such a promise was made; wherefore repentance and baptism were urged, in
order to the enjoyment of the promise; and, consequently, can be understood of no other than
adult persons, who were capable of repentance, and of a voluntary subjection to the ordinance
of baptism.
- The children, here spoken of, do not design infants, but the posterity of the Jews, and such,
who might be called children, though grown up: And nothing is more common in
scripture,[62] than the use of the phrase in this sense;
and, unless it be so understood in many places, strange interpretations must be given of them:
wherefore the argument, from hence, for Paedobaptism, is given up by some learned men, as Dr.
Hammond, and others, as inconclusive; but some men, wherever they meet with the word
children, it immediately runs in their heads, that infants must be meant.
- The promise, be it what it will, is restrained to as many as the Lord our God shall call,
whether they be Jews or Gentiles, as well as to repenting and baptizing persons; and
therefore can furnish out no argument for infant-baptism, but must be understood of adult
persons, capable of being called with an holy calling, of professing repentance, and of desiring
baptism upon it; and of doing this, that their faith might be led to the blood of Christ, for the
remission of sin,
- It seems clear from the context, that not the covenant made with Abraham, but either the
promise of the Messiah, and salvation by him, the great promise made in the Old Testament to
the Jews, and their posterity; or the particular promise of remission of sins, a branch of the new
covenant made with the house of Israel, and mentioned in the preceding verse, and which was
calculated for comfort, and pertinently taken notice of; or of the pouring out of the holy Ghost,
which is last mentioned: And indeed all may be included in this promise, and used as a means to
comfort them under their distress, and as an argument to encourage them to do the things they
are pressed to in the foregoing verse.
2dly, To the former is added another scripture in Matthew 19:14. Suffer little
children, and forbid them not to come unto me, for of such is the kingdom of heaven. Upon
which, it is asked, how, and which way, should we bring our little children to Christ, but in the
way of his ordinances? If they belong to the kingdom of heaven, they must have a right to the
privileges of that kingdom, p. 20. To which I answer,
- These little children do not appear to be new-born babes; the words used by the evangelists
do not always signify such, but are sometimes used of such as are capable of going alone, yea, of
receiving instructions, of understanding the scriptures, and of one of twelve years of age
(Matthew 18:2; 2 Tim. 3:15; Mark 5:39, 42). Nor is it probable that children just born, or within
the month, should be had abroad. Moreover, these were such as Christ called unto him (Luke
18:16), and were capable of coming to him of themselves, as these words suppose; nor does their
being brought unto him, or his taking them in his arms, contradict this; since the same things are
said of such as could walk of themselves (Matthew 12:22; 17:16; Mark 9:36).
- It is not known whose children these were, whether the children of those that brought them,
or of others; and whether their parents were believers in Christ, or not, or whether
their patents were baptized or unbaptized; and if they were unbelievers and unbaptized persons,
the Paedobaptists themselves will not allow that their children ought to be baptized.
- Certain it is, that they were not brought to Christ, to be baptized by him; for the ends for
which they were brought are mentioned; Matthew says, they brought them unto him, that he
should put his hands on them, and pray; that is, for them, and bless them; as was usual with the
Jews to do (Gen. 49:14-16); and it was common with them to bring their children to venerable
persons, men of note for religion and piety, to have their blessing and their prayers; and such an
one the persons that brought these children might take Christ to be, though they might not know
him to be the Messiah. Mark and Luke say, they were brought to him, that he would touch them
(Mark 10:13; Luke 18:15); as he sometimes used to do, when he healed persons of diseases; and
probably some of these children, if not all of them, were diseased, and were brought to be cured;
otherwise it is not easy to conceive what they should be touched by him for; however, they were
not brought to be baptized: If the persons that brought them had their baptism in view, they
would not have brought them to Christ, but to his disciples; seeing not he but they baptized the
persons fit for it; they might have seen the disciples administer that ordinance, but not Christ; and
from hence it is certain, that they were not baptized by Christ, since he never baptized any.
- This passage concludes against Paedobaptism, and not for it; for it seems, by this, that it had
never been the practice of the Jews, nor of John the Baptist, nor of Christ and his disciples, to
baptize infants; for had this been then in use, the apostles would scarcely have rebuked and forbid
those that brought these children, since they might have concluded they brought them to be
baptized; but knowing of no such usage, that ever obtained in that nation, neither among those
that did or did not believe in Christ, they forbad them; and Christ s entire silence about the
baptism of infants at this time, when he had such an opportunity of speaking of it to his disciples,
had it been his will, has no favorable aspect on such a practice.
- This writer's reasoning upon the passage, is betide the purpose for which he produces it; if
he brings it to prove any thing respecting baptism, it must be to prove that infants were brought to
Christ, in order to be baptized by him, and not to him in the way of his ordinance, or in the way of
baptism: the reason our Lord gives why they should be suffered to come to him, for of such is the
kingdom of heaven, is to be understood of such as were comparable to little children, for
modesty, meekness, and humility, and for freedom from rancor malice, ambition, and pride
(Matthew 18:2). And so the Syriac version is, who are as these; and the Parsic version, which is
rather a paraphrase, shewing the sense, who have been humble as these little children; and such
are the proper subjects of a gospel church-state, sometimes called the kingdom of heaven, and
shall inherit eternal happiness. If the words are to be literally understood of infants, and of their
belonging to the kingdom of heaven, interpreted of the kingdom of grace, or of the gospel
church-stare, according to this author s reasoning, they will prove too much, and more than he
cares for; namely, that belonging to that kingdom, they have a right to the privileges of it, even to
all of them, to the Lord s supper, as well as to baptism; but the kingdom of glory seems to be
designed: And we are not unwilling to admit the literal sense, for the eternal salvation and
happiness of infants dying in infancy, is not denied by us; and, according to this sense, our Lord's
reasoning is strong, that seeing he thought fit to save the souls of infants, and introduce them into
the kingdom of heaven, why should they be forbid being brought to him, to be touched by him,
and healed of their bodily diseases? The argument is from the greater to the lesser; but furnishes
out nothing in favor of Paedobaptism.
3dly, The next text
mentioned is Matthew 18:6. But whoso shall offend one of these little ones which
believe in me, it were better for him, that a mill stone were hanged about his
neck, and that he were drowned in the depth of the sea.
Upon which it is observed, that the little one referred to was in an infant state, as appears
from verse 21, and Mark 9:36 and that little children are reputed, by Christ, believers in him: And
so here is a full anticipation of the common objection against the baptism of infants, and a
justification of their claim to the seal of the righteousness of faith; as well as a strong declaration
of the awful danger of offending there little ones, by denying them the covenant privileges, to
which they have a righteous claim, [pages 20, 21, 23, 27]. But,
- Though the little child, in verse 2d, which our Lord let in the midst of his disciples, and took
an occasion from thence to rebuke and instruct them, was in an infant-state, yet those our Lord
here speaks of, were not little ones in age; for how capable soever they may be of having the
principle or habit of faith implanted in them, they cannot be capable of exercising it, or of acting
faith, which the phrase used expresses; for if they are not capable of exerting reason, though they
have the principle of it in them, they cannot be capable of exercising faith; nor indeed of being
offended in the sense the word is here used, and to such a degree, that the offenders of them had
better have died a violent death, than to be guilty of such offense. But,
- The disciples of Christ are meant, his apostles, who were contending among themselves who
should be greatest in the kingdom of heaven; which ambition our Lord rebukes, by placing a
little child in the midst of them, verses 1, 2, saying to them, Except ye be converted, and become
as little children, ye shall not enter into the kingdom of heaven; adding, that whoever humbled
himself as the child before him, should be the greatest in it; and that such who received such
humble disciples of his, received him; but those that offended them, would incur his resentment,
and the greatest danger expressed in the words under consideration (vv. 3-6). And there were
such, not only who by faith looked to Christ, and received him as their Savior, and made a
profession of him; but preached the doctrine of faith; who, having believed, therefore spoke; and
who may be said to be offended, when their persons were despised, their ministry rejected, and
they reproached and persecuted; and, when it would go ill with them that should treat them in this
manner. There were such, who were little ones, in their own esteem, and in the esteem of
others.
- Admitting that infants in age could be meant, and there to have the principle and habit of faith
in them, yet this would not justify their claim to baptism, which this writer means, by the real of
the righteousness of faith; though not baptism, but circumcision is designed by that phrase; since
actual faith, yea, a profession of it, is a necessary prerequisite to baptism; If thou believest with all
thine heart, thou mayest (Acts 8:37).
- This writer seems conscious to himself, that faith in Christ is necessary to baptism, and is that
which justifies a claim unto it; since he seems glad to lay hold on this text, and the sense he puts
upon it, in order to anticipate the objection to infant-baptism taken from faith in Christ, being a
pre-requisite to it; which he knows not how otherwise to get rid of, than to suppose that infants
have faith, and that this is a proof of it. But,
- Supposing this, either all infants have faith, or only some: If all; how comes it to pass, that
there are so many, when grown up, that are manifestly destitute of it: Can the grace be lost? Is it
not an abiding one? Is not He, who is the Author, the Finisher of it? If only some have it, how can
it be known, who have it, and who not? Wherefore, to baptize upon this supposed faith, is to
proceed on a very precarious foundation: It seems, therefore, much more eligible, to defer their
baptism, till it appears, that they do truly and actually believe in Christ.
4thly, The next passage of scripture, produced in favor of infant-baptism, is 1
Corinthians 7:14. For 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. Upon which,
our author thus reasons; "If either of the parents be a believer, the children are reputed holy;
that is, they have a covenant holiness, and have, therefore, a claim to covenant-privileges; they
are holy, by virtue of their covenant-relation to God, and must therefore, have a right to have that
covenant sealed to them in baptism" [p. 21]. But,
- It ought to be told, what there covenant-privileges are, that children have a claim unto, by
virtue of their covenant-relation, this writer so often speaks of. If baptism is one of them, as it
seems to be his intention, that must be denied to be a covenant-privilege, or a privilege of the
covenant of grace; for then all the covenant ones in all ages, ought to have enjoyed it; whereas
they have not: And we have seen already, that covenant interest gives no right to any positive
institution, or ordinance, without a divine direction; and that baptism is no real of the
covenant.
- It should be told, what this covenant is, whether it is a real or imaginary thing; it seems to be
the latter, by our author s way of expressing himself. He says, children are reputed holy; that is,
have a covenant-holiness: So that covenant-holiness is a reputed holiness; but such a holiness can
never qualify persons for a New Testament ordinance; nor has the covenant of grace any such
holiness belonging to it; that provides, by way of promise, for real holiness, signified, by putting
and writing the laws of God in the heart, by giving new hearts and new spirits, and taking away
the stony heart, and by cleansing from all impurity; this is real, inward holiness, and shews itself in
an outward holy conversation: Where this appears, such have an undoubted right to the ordinance
of baptism, since they must have received the holy spirit, as a spirit of sanctification
(Acts 10:47).
- A holiness, appertaining to the covenant of grace, can never be meant, since it is such a
holiness, as unbelievers, yea, as heathens are said to have; it is such a holiness, as
unbelieving husbands, and unbelieving wives are said to have, by virtue and in
consequence of their relation to believing wives and believing husbands; and
which they have prior to the holiness of their children; and on which their
children s holiness depends. Now, surely, unbelievers and heathens, will not
be allowed to be in covenant, or to be possessed of a covenant holiness, by
virtue of their yoke-fellows; and yet, theirs, and their children s holiness,
must be of the same kind and nature. Wherefore,
- If children, by virtue of this holiness, have a claim to covenant-privileges, and to have the
covenant sealed to them by baptism; then, much more, their unbelieving parents, because
they are sanctified before them, by their believing yoke-fellows, and they are
as near to them, as their children; and if the holiness of the one gives a right
to baptism, why not the holiness of the other? And yet, our Paedobaptists do not
pretend to baptize the unbelieving husband or wife, though sanctified, whole
holiness is the more near; but the children, that become holy through the
sanctification of both, whose holiness is the more remote. For, it should be
observed, that the holiness, spoken of in the text, be it what it will, is
derived, or denominated, from both parents, believing and unbelieving; yea, the
holiness of the children depends upon the sanctification of the unbelieving
parent; for if the unbeliever is not sanctified, the children are unclean, and
not holy. Besides, the words are not necessarily to be understood of infants, or
young children, but of the posterity of such persons, whether of 40, or 50 years
of age, or of what age soever; and must be unclean in the sense of the word,
here used, if their unbelieving parent is not sanctified by, or to the believing
one. But,
- These words are to be understood of a matrimonial holiness; not merely of the holiness of
marriage, as it is an institution of God, but of the very act of marriage, which, in the
language of the Jews, is frequently expressed, by being sanctified, innumerable
instances might be given of this; I have produced one in my exposition of this
place, in which the word, שרקמ
Kadash, "to sanctify," is used no less than ten times, to espouse.
And, for the sake of those who have it not, I shall transcribe the passage: And
it is, as follows;[63] "a man ‡dqm
Mekaddesh, "sanctifies," or espouses a wife by himself, or by his
messenger; a woman, שרקתמ
Mithkaddesh, "is sanctified," or espoused by herself, or by her
messenger; a man, שרקמ
Mekaddesh, "sanctifies," or espouses his daughter, when she is a young
woman, by himself, or by his messenger: If any one says to a woman, ישרקתה
Hitbkaddeshi, "be thou sanctified," or espoused to me by this date
(the fruit of the palm tree) ישרקתה
Hithkaddeshi, "be thou sanctified," or espoused by this (or any other
thing:) If there is in any one of there things the value of a farthing, תשרוקמ
Mekuddesheth, "she is sanctified," or espoused; and if not, she is not
תשרוקמ
Mekuddesheth, "sanctified," or espoused: If he says, by this, and by
this, and by this; if there is the value of a farthing in them all, תשרוקמ
Mekuddesheth, "she is sanctified," or espoused; but if not, she is
not, תשרוקמ
Mekuddesheth, "sanctified," or espoused: If she eats one (date) after
another, she is not, תשרוקמ
Mekuddesheth, "sanctified," or espoused, unless one of them is the
value of a farthing."
In the Misnah, the oral law
of the Jews, there is a whole treatise of ךישוריק
Kiddushin, "sanctifications," or espousals; out of which the above
passage is taken: And in the Gemara is another, full of the disputes of the
doctors on this subject: And Maimonides has also written a treatise of women and
wives; out of which might be produced almost innumerable instances, in proof of
the observation; and such, as can read, and have leisure to read the said
tracts, may fully satisfy themselves in this matter. And in the same sense, the
apostle uses the word akazV , here: And the passage
should be rendered thus; the unbelieving husband is espoused, or married to the
wife, or rather has been espoused; for it relates to the act of marriage past,
as valid; and the unbelieving wife has been espoused to the husband. The
preposition en, translated by, should be rendered to,
as it is in the very next verse, God hath called us, en
oirhnh, "to peace." The passage is introduced, to support the
advice the apostle had given to believers married to unbelievers, not to depart
from them, but live with them, who had had some scruple upon their minds,
whether they ought to cohabit with them, being unbelievers; he advises them, by
all means, to dwell with them, unless the unbeliever departed, seeing they were
duly, rightly, and legally espoused to each other; and, therefore, ought not,
notwithstanding their different sentiments of religion, to separate from one
another; otherwise, if they were not truly married to one another, as such a
departure and separation would suggest, this consequence must necessarily
follow, that children, born in such a state of cohabitation, where the marriage
is not valid, must be spurious, and not legitimate: which is the sense of the
next clause, else were your children unclean, but now are they holy; that is,
they would have been accounted illegitimate, but now legitimate. And,
- This sense of the words
is not novel, nor singular: It is agreeable to the minds of several
interpreters, ancient and modern; as Jerom, Ambrose, Erasmus, Camerarius,
Musculus, and others: which last writer, and who was a zealous Paedobaptist,
makes this ingenuous confession; "formerly, says he, I have abused this
place against the Anabaptists, thinking the meaning was, that the children were
holy for the parents faith; which, though true, the present place makes nothing
for the purpose"
5thly, To all which, this writer adds the commission in Matthew 28:19. Go, teach all
nations, baptizing them, etc. Concerning which, he says, that as the commission to the sacred
ministry enjoined the baptizing of all nations, whereof infants are a very great part; it also enjoined
the baptizing infants, as a part of the nations they were to disciple and baptize, [p. 21]. And,
elsewhere, he says, the words ought to be read, Go, disciple all nations, baptizing them; and
should be understood, as requiring the ministers of the gospel to make all nations disciples by
baptizing them, whereby every one is constituted a learner of Christ: And to prove, that infants
are called disciples, he refers to Acts 15:10. Why tempt ye God to put a yoke on the neck of the
disciples, etc. and to all, such scriptures, that respect the education of children, [pp. 24, 25].
But,
- The commission does not enjoin the baptizing of all nations, but the baptizing of such as are
taught; for the antecedent to the relative them cannot be all nations, since
panto ta hqnh, the words for
"all nations," are of the neuter gender; whereas autouV
"them," is of the masculine; but maqeutaV ,
"disciples;" is supposed and contained in the word
maqhteusate,
"teach, or make disciples;" such as are first taught, or made
disciples by teaching under the ministry of the word, by the Spirit of God,
Christ s orders are to baptize them.
- If infants, as a part of all nations, were to be baptized, and because they are such; then the
infants of Heathens, Turks and Jews, ought to be baptized, for they are a part of all nations, as
well as the children of Christians, or believers.
- We are very willing, the words should be rendered disciple all nations, or make all nations
disciples; that is, disciples of Christ, which is the same, as believers in him; for they are the true
disciples of Christ, that have learned the way of life, and salvation by him; that deny themselves,
sinful, righteous, and civil self, for his sake; who forsake all, take up the cross, and follow him;
who bear, and bring forth much fruit, love one another, and continue in the doctrine of Christ
(Luke 14:27, 33; John 15:8; 13:35; 8:31). And such, and such only, are the proper subjects of
baptism: so, agreeable to this commission and the sense of it, Christ first made disciples, and then
baptized them, or ordered them to be baptized.
- These two acts, discipling and baptizing, are not to be confounded together; they are two
distinct acts, and the one is previous to the other, and absolutely (John 4:1, 2) necessary
thereunto. Men are not made disciples by baptizing them, as this writer suggests, but they must be
first disciples, and then baptized. So Jerom[64] long
ago understood the commission, who has there words upon it; "first, they teach all nations,
then dip those that are taught in water: For, it cannot be, that the body should receive the
sacrament of baptism, unless the soul has before received the truth of faith." To the same
purpose, Athanasius says,[65]
wherefore the Savior does not simply command to baptize, but first says, teach;
and then baptize thus, in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the
Holy Ghost; that faith might come of teaching, and baptism be perfected."
- Such a disciple, as this writer supposes to be constituted by baptism, namely, a learner of
Christ, cannot agree with an infant. What can a new-born babe learn of Christ? What can
it be taught of him, or receive by way of teaching, at the time of its baptism, or by being baptized?
If learners and disciples are synonymous terms, as this author says, they cannot be disciples before
they are learners; and they Cannot be learners of Christ, unless they have learned something of
him: And, according to this notion, they ought to learn something of him, before they are baptized
in his name. But what can an infant learn of Christ?
- 6. The text in Acts 15:10 is not to be understood of infants, but of adult persons; even
converted Gentiles, who believed in Christ, and were his disciples; and upon whom, the
false teachers would have imposed the yoke of the ceremonial law; and, particularly, circumcision:
Which, because it bound over to the whole law, the apostle represents as an insupportable one;
and calls this imposition of it on the believing Gentiles, a tempting of God: And as for any other
passages that enjoin the education of children, or speak of it, they are never from thence called the
disciples of Christ, nor any where else.
6thly, This writer asserts, that "it is plain that the apostles thus understood our
Savior s meaning, and accordingly baptized Lydia and her household, and the Jailer and all his
(Acts 16:15, 35); and the household of Stephanas" (1 Cor. 1:16); [p. 21]. But,
- Seeing the understanding of our Savior s meaning in the commission, depends upon those
instances of baptism, and so the warrant for the baptizing of infants, the Paedobaptists ought to be
sure that there were infants in there families, and that they were baptized, or otherwise they must
baptize them, at most, upon a very precarious foundation; for if the commission of itself is not
clear for it, and those instances in which the apostles acted according to the commission, are not
sufficient to vouch it, it must stand upon a very bad bottom, having neither precept nor precedent
for it; and they must know, that there are families that have no infants in them, and how can they
be sure there were any in these? And,
- It lies upon them to prove there were infants in these families, and that these infants were
baptized, or the allegation of those instances is to no purpose; how they can satisfy themselves
without it, they best know; they ought not to put it upon us to prove a negative, to prove that
there were none, this is unfair; and one would think, should not sit very easy upon their minds, to
rest their practice on so poor a shift, and so unreasonable a demand. But,
- We are able to make it appear, that there are many things in the account of the baptism of
there families, which are inconsistent with infants, and which make it at least probable, that there
were none in them; and certain, that those that were baptized were adult persons, and believers in
Christ. As for Lydia, it is not certain in what state of life she was, whether single or married,
whether maid, widow, or wife; whether she had any children, or ever had any; or if the had,
and them living, whether they were infants or adult; and if infants, it does not seem probable that
she should bring them along with her from her native place Thyatira to Philippi, where she seems
to have been upon business, and so had hired a house during her stay there; wherefore, her
household seems to have consisted of menial servants she brought along with her, to assist her in
her business; and certain it is, that those that the apostles found there, when they entered into it,
after they came out of prison, were such as are called brethren, and were capable of being
comforted by them (Acts 16:15, 40). And as for the Jailer s household, they were such as were
capable of having the word of God spoken to them, and of rejoicing at it, and in the conversation
of the apostles, at what was laid and done by them; and are even expressly said to believe in God,
as the Jailer did, and together with him; and as for the household of Stephanas, that is, by some,
thought to be the same with the Jailer's; but, if not, it is certain it consisted of adult persons,
believers in Christ, and very useful in the public service of religion; for they were the
first-fruits of Achaia, and addicted themselves to the ministry of the saints (1 Cor. 16:15). All
which, in each of the instances, can never be said of infants. But,
7thy, This writer adds one text more, which, he says, must be allowed to be decisive
in the present case, and that is Romans 11:17-25 from whence he thinks it is most evident, that
since the believing Gentiles are grafted into all the privileges and spiritual blessings of the Jewish
church, they cannot be cut off from that great blessing and privilege of having the covenant sealed
to their infant seed [p. 21]. To which I reply,
- It will readily be allowed, that believing Gentiles shared in all the spiritual blessings and
privileges of the Jewish church, or of believers under the former dispensation; the same blessings
of imputed righteousness and pardon of sin came upon the uncircumcision, as well as upon the
circumcision, who walk in the steps of the faith of Abraham (Rom.4:6-12), for such that are
Christ s, true believers in him, they are Abraham s seed, his spiritual seed, and heirs, according to
the promise, of all spiritual blessings and privileges (Gal. 3:29). But,
- The covenant of grace was never sealed to Abraham s natural seed; the covenant of grace
itself did not belong to them, as such; nor was circumcision a seal of it to them; nor is
baptism a seal of the covenant of grace to any; and therefore it is a great
impropriety and impertinence to talk of cutting off from, that which was never
had, and never was.
- Though believing Gentiles share in the spiritual blessings and privileges which the Jewish
church, or Jewish believers enjoyed, they never were grafted into that church; that church-state,
with all the peculiar ordinances of it, was utterly abolished by Christ, signified by the shaking of
the heavens and the earth, and removing of those things that are shaken, that those which cannot
be shaken may remain (Heb. 12:26, 27). The Jewish church is not the olive-tree, of whole root
and fatness the Gentiles partake; they are not grafted into the old Jewish stock; the ax has been
laid to the root of that tree; and it is entirely cut down, and no engraftment is made upon it.
But,
- The olive-tree, of whose root and fatness believing Gentiles partake, is the gospel
church-state, out of which the Jews that rejected Christ were left, and are the broken branches;
and those that believed in Christ were taken in, and laid the first foundation of it; there are the
first-fruits, and the root, which being holy, are a pledge of the future convection and holiness of
that people; they of them that received the first-fruits of the Spirit, were first incorporated into a
gospel church-state; and then the Gentiles which believed were received among them, and
were engrafted into them; and this engrafture or coalition was first at Antioch, where and when,
and hereafter, the Gentiles partook of the root and fatness of the olive-tree; enjoyed the same
privileges, communicated in the same ordinances, and were satisfied with the goodness and
fathers of the house of God; and of this engrafture, and of this only, does this text speak; so that it
is so far from being decisive in the present case, that there is not one word, one syllable about
baptism in it, and still less can any thing, in favor of infant-baptism, be inferred from it. I shall
conclude this chapter, and with it the affair of the divine right of infant-baptism, which, whether
illustrated and confirmed in the Dialogue, must be left to the judicious reader, by observing,
that the minister in it being required to give express New Testament proof for infant-baptism,
which he was conscious to himself he could not do, in answer to it, requires express New
Testament proof that women should partake of the Lord's Supper, and offers to prove
infant-baptism by the same arguments that this should be proved. But,
- We do not go about to prove women s right to partake of the Lord s Supper, by such
arguments as this writer forms for us; as, by their covenant-interest, by their claim to have
the covenant sealed to them, and by their being a part of all nations; and though we look upon
their being believers and disciples of Christ, proper qualifications for their admission to the Lord s
supper, when there can be made to appear to belong to infants, we shall readily admit them to
baptism. But,
- We prove their right to
the ordinance of the Lord s Supper, by their right to the ordinance of
baptism; for they that have a right to one ordinance, have to the other; that
women believing in Christ: have a right to baptism, is clear, from Acts 8:12.
Whey were baptized, both men and women, and therefore should partake of the Lord s
Supper. Let it be proved, that infants ought to be baptized, and it will be
allowed and insisted upon, that they partake of the Lord s Supper.
- We prove it by their
being church members; Mary the mother of Jesus, with other women, were of the
number of the disciples that formed the first gospel church at Jerusalem;
Sapphira, the wife of Ananias, was, with her husband, of the multitude that
believed, and were together, and had all things common; after whole awful death,
believers were the more added to the Lord, that is, to the church, both men and
women (Acts 1:14, 15; 4:32; 5:9, 14). There were women in the church at Corinth;
concerning whom the apostle gives rules respecting their conduct (1 Cor. 11:5,
6, 13; 14:34, 35). Now all those that are members of gospel churches, ought to
eat the bread and drink the cup, in remembrance of Christ (1 Cor. 11:26). Women
are members of gospel churches; and therefore ought to eat and drink in like
manner.
- We prove this by example: Mary, the mother of our Lord, and other women, being of the
number of the disciples, which constituted the gospel church state at Jerusalem, as they
continued with one accord in prayer and supplication, so likewise in breaking of
bread (Acts 1:14, 15; Acts 2:1, 44, 46).
- We prove this by a divine direction, exhortation, and command, Let a man examine himself,
and so let him eat (1 Cor. 11:29). The word used is anqrwpoV ,
a word of the common gender, and signifies both men and women; in which sense it
must be often understood, as in 1 Timothy 2:5 for is Christ a mediator only
between God and men, and not women? Under the gospel dispensation, in a gospel
church state, there is neither male nor female; they are all one in Christ, and
enjoy the same privileges and ordinances (Gal. 3:28). Let the same proof, or as
good, be given for infant-baptism, and we have done; let it be proved that
infants have a right to any other gospel ordinance as such; that they are or
ought to be members of gospel churches; that there is either precept or
precedent for the baptizing of them, and we shall readily admit them.
CHAPTER 6
Concerning the Mode of administering the Ordinance of Baptism,
whether by immersion or by sprinkling.
The author of the dialogue under consideration affirms, that there is not one single
Lexicographer, or critic upon the Greek Language, he has ever seen, but what agrees, that though
the word baptizo sometimes signifies to dip, yet: it also naturally signifies to
wash; and that washing, in any mode whatsoever, is the native signification of
the word baptismas [p. 31], that the words baptize and baptism, as used in the
New Testament, do not, from their signification, make dipping or plunging the
necessary mode of administering the ordinance [p. 33], and that one single
instance of that mode of administering the ordinance, is not to be found in all
the New Testament [p. 34], nor is it probable it should be the mode [p. 38], and
that the mode of administering it by sprinkling is a more lively emblem of what
is signified and represented by it, than dipping or plunging can be supposed,
and therefore the most proper one [p. 39].
First, As to the lexicographers, and critics on the Greek language, they agree that the
word baptizw, signifies, in its first and primary sense, "to
dip or plunge," and only in a secondary and consequential sense, to wash, but never to pour
or sprinkle; there being no proper washing, but what is by dipping; and for this we appeal to all
the writers of this kind, and even to those this author mentions. Scapula, the first of them, renders
baptizw, by merga, seu immergo, ut quae tingendi, aut, abluendi
gratia aquae immersimus, "to dip or plunge into, as what for the sake of dying or washing
we dip into water;" item mergo, submergo, abruo aqua, "also to plunge, plunge
under, overwhelm in water;" item abluo, lavo, "also to wash off, wash;" and
baptizwmaV , he renders, by mergor, submergor, "to be
plunged, plunged under;" and observes, that it is used metaphorically for obruer, to be
overwhelmed; and bapismoV , and
baptisma, he says, is, mersio, lotio, ablutio, ipse immergendi, item
lavandi, seu abluendi actus, "plunging, washing, ablution, the act itself of plunging, also of
washing or ablution." In all which he makes dipping, or plunging, to be the
first and preferable sense of the words.
Stephens gives the same sense of the words, and so Schrevelius, who renders baptizw, by baptizo, mergo, lavo, "baptize, plunge, wash."
Pasor only renders it baptizo, baptize, without determining its sense. And Leigh, in his Critica
Sacra, observes, that "the nature and proper signification of it, is to dip into water, or to
plunge under water;" and refers to John 3:22, 23; Matthew 3:16 and Acts 8:38. And cites
Casaubon, Bucanus, Bullinger, and Zanchy, as agreeing and testifying to this sense of it; and
baptisma, he says, is "dipping into water, or washing with water." And there are the
Lexicographers and Critics our author refers us to: To which I may add the Lexicon compiled by
Budaeus, Constantine, and others, who render the word baptizw,
by immergo, mergo, intingo, lavacro tingo, abluo, madesacio, law, mundo; "plunge, plunge
into, dip into, dip in a laver, wash off, make wet, wash, cleanse:" And
baptismoV , they say, is tingendi, hoc est mergendi actio, in quo
significatu sinctura dicitur; "the action of tingeing, that is, of plunging; in which signification
it is called a tincture, or dying;" and another by Hadrian Junius, who renders
baptizw, by immergo, "to plunge into;" and
baptismoV , by immersio, lotio, baptismus, "immersion,
washing, baptism." As for other critics on the Greek language, who assert, that the proper
signification of the word baptizo, is to dip, or plunge; they are so numerous, that it would be
tedious to reckon them up: I shall only mention a few of them, and their words.
Calvin[66] says, "Ipsum baptizandi verbum
mergere significat, & mergendi ritum veteri ecclesiae observatum fuisse constat;"
the word baptize, signifies to plunge; and, it is plain, that the rite of plunging was observed in the
ancient church." Beza, who must be allowed to be a learned critic in the Greek language,
lays, on Mark 7:4 ,"Neque vero to baptizein, significat
lavare nisi a consequenti, nam proprie dedarat tingendi causa immergere; " neither does the
word baptizo, signify to walk, unless consequentially; for it properly signifies, to plunge
into, for the sake of tinging, or dying;" and on Matthew 3:11 he says,
"significat autem to baptizein, tingere quum
para to baptein, dicatur, & quum tingenda mergantur;
"the word baptizo, signifies to dip (as Dyers in the vat) seeing it comes
from bapto, to dip, and seeing things, that are to be dyed, are dipped."
Casaubon, another great critic on the Greek language, has these words on Matthew 3:6,
"Hic enim fuit baptizandi ritus ut in aquas immergerentur, quod vel ipso vox
baptizein, declarat fatis unde intelligimus non esse ab
re, quod jam pridem non nulli disputarant de taro corpore immergendo in
ceremonia baptismi; vocem enim baptizein, urgebant;"
for this was the rite of baptizing, that persons should be plunged into water,
which the word baptizo, sufficiently declares. Hence, we understand, that it
was not foreign from the matter, which some time ago disputed, concerning
plunging the whole body in the ceremony of baptism; for they urged the
signification of the word baptizo. And, that this is the proper signification of
the word, he observes, in his notes on Acts 1:5 and Acts 2:4. To which, I shall
only add one more critic, and that is Grotius; who, on Matthew 3:6. thus writes;
"Mersatione autem nan persusione agi solitum hunc ritum indicat & vocis
proprietas, & loca ad eum ritum delecta (John 3:13; Acts 8:38), &
allusiones multae apostolorum quae ad aspersionem referri non possunt"
(Rom. 6:3; Col. 2:12), that this rite used to be performed by plunging, and not
by pouring, both the propriety of the word, and the places chosen for this rite,
shew (John 3:23; Acts 8:38), and the many allusions of the apostles, which
cannot be referred to sprinkling" (Rom. 6:3, 4; Col. 2:12). I might have
here subjoined, some instances of the use of the word in Greek authors, by which
it appears to have the sense of dipping and plunging, and not of pouring, or
sprinkling; but this has been largely done by Dr. Gale, and others. I shall,
therefore, proceed,
Secondly, To consider the
use of the words, baptize and baptism, in the New Testament; which our author
says, do not, from their signification, make dipping or plunging, the necessary
mode of administering the ordinance of baptism: And the places enumerated by
him, in which they are used, are as follow.
- The descent of the holy Ghost on the apostles, and on Cornelius, and his company, is called
baptizing (Acts 1:5; 11:16), where he observes, it cannot be pretended that there was the
least allusion to, or resemblance of dipping, or plunging, in this use of the
word. But the learned Casaubon, a very great critic in the Greek tongue,
before-mentioned and referred to, does pretend, that there is such an allusion
and resemblance, his words on Acts 1:5 are there, "et si non improbo, etc.
although I do not disapprove of the word baptized, being retained here, that the
antithesis may be full; yet, I am of opinion, that regard is had, in this place,
to its proper signification; for baptizein, is to
immerse, so as to tinge or dip: And, in this sense, the apostles are truly said
to be baptized; for the house, in which this was done, was filled with the holy
Ghost: So that the apostles seemed to be plunged into it, as into some
pool." And the extraordinary descent of the spirit in those instances, is
much more strongly expressed by a word, which signifies plunging, than if it had
been expressed by a word, that signifies bare perfusion, and still left by
sprinkling.
- "Christ's crucifixion is called a baptism (Mark 10:38), but, being buffeted, spit upon,
and lifted up upon the cross, says our author, bear no resemblance, nor can have
any allusion to dipping, or plunging. But, it is easy to observe, that the
sufferings of our Lord, which are compared to a baptism, in the place referred
to, and in Luke 12:50, because of the greatness and abundance of them, are,
sometimes, expressed by deep waters, and floods of waters; and he is represented
as plunged into them, and covered and overwhelmed with them;" For so he
says himself; The waters are come into my soul; I sink in deep mire, where is no
standing; I am come into deep waters, where the floods overflow me (Ps. 119:1,
2). And, therefore, a word signifying immersion, and a covering of the whole
body in water, is a very apt one to express the multitude of Christ s
sufferings, and the overwhelming nature of them; and must, more fitly, express
the same, than a word, which only signifies pouring, or sprinkling a few drops
of water.
- The text in Mark 7:4 is
next mentioned; which speaks of the Jews, when come from the market, not eating,
except they wash (baptizoontai); and of the washing (baptismous) of cups and
pots, brazen vessels, and of tables, or beds, as the word signifies. And this,
our author thinks, is an unexceptionable instance of these words signifying
washing, without dipping, or plunging; since it can hardly be supposed, that
they dipped themselves under water, every time they came from market, or, that
they dipped their beds, every time they sat, or lay upon them. But, in answer to
this, it should be observed, that our Lord is here speaking of the superstition
of the Pharisees, who, when they came from market, or any court of judicature,
if they touched any common persons, or their clothes, reckoned themselves
unclean; and, according to the traditions of the elders, were to immerse
themselves in water, and did: So that a most proper word is here made use of, to
express their superstition. And, as for cups, pots and brazen vessels, what
other way of washing them is there, than by dipping, or putting them into water?
And, in this way, unclean vessels were to be washed, according to the law (Lev.
11:32), as well as all that were reckoned so by the traditions of the elders;
and even beds, pillows and bolsters, when they were unclean in a ceremonial
sense, and not, as this author puts it, every time they lay, or sat upon them,
were to be washed by immersion, or dipping them in water; as I have proved from
the Jews oral law, which our Lord has respect to, in my Exposition of this
place; to which, I refer the reader. Wherefore, the words are here used in their
primary sense, as signifying dipping; and, if they did not so signify, they
would not truly represent the superstition, they are designed to do.
- The next passage
produced, is 1 Corinthians 10:1, 2 which speaks of the Jewish fathers, being
baptized unto Moses in the cloud, and in the sea. Upon which, this writer
observes, that he thinks, he need not seriously undertake to convince his
friend, he is debating with; "that the fathers were not dipped in the
cloud, but that the rain from the cloud bore a much greater resemblance to
sprinkling, or affusion, than to dipping." But let us a little examine this
matter, and see wherein the agreement lay, between baptism and the Israelites
passage under the cloud, and through the sea. Which may be considered, either
together, or separately: If together, the agreement between it and baptism, lay
in this; the Israelites, when they passed through the Red Sea, had the waters on
each side of them, which stood up, as a wall, higher than they, and the cloud
over them; so that they were, as persons immersed in, and covered with water;
and, in this view, it is easy to see, that the resemblance is much greater to
immersion, than to sprinkling, or affusion: or this may be considered
separately, as baptized in the cloud, and as baptized in the sea; in the cloud,
when, as Gataker,[67] a Paedobaptist
writer, thinks, it passed from before the face of the Israelites, and stood
behind them, and was between the two camps, to keep off the Egyptians; and
which, when it palled over them, let down a plentiful rain upon them, whereby
they were in such a condition, as if they had been dipped all over in water; or,
when under the cloud they were all over covered with it, as a person, when
baptized by immersion, is all over covered with water; and they might be said to
be baptized in the sea, when, as they passed through it, the waters standing up
above their heads, they seemed as if they were immersed. The resemblance to
plunging, therefore, considered in either way, must be nearer than to pouring,
or sprinkling a small quantity of water. To which may be added, that the descent
of the Israelites into the sea, when they seemed as though they were buried in
the waters of it; and their ascent out of it again on the shore, have a very
great agreement with baptism, as administered by immersion; in which, the person
baptized goes down into the water, is buried with Christ therein; and comes up
out of it, as out of a grave, or as the children of Israel out of the Red sea.
- The last text mentioned,
where the word baptism is used, is Hebrews 9:10 where our author observes,
"the apostle, speaking of the ceremonial dispensation, tells us, that it
stood only in meats, and drinks, and divers washings (baptismous) and carnal
ordinances; and the principal of these washings, he exemplifies to us, verse 13
to be the blood of bulls and goats, and the ashes of an heifer, sprinkling the
unclean: Here, therefore, the word cannot, with any appearance of modesty, be
explained in favor of immersion." To which, I reply, that the ashes of an
heifer, sprinkling the unclean, were so far from being the principal part of the
Jewish washings or baptisms, that it was no part at all; nor is this mentioned
by the apostle, as any exemplification of them, who understood there things
better. Sprinkling the ashes of the heifer, and the waffling, or bathing of the
person in water, which was by immersion, are spoken of, as distinct and separate
things, in the ceremony referred to, Numbers 19:19 and indeed, washing by
sprinkling, is not reconcilable to good sense, to the propriety of language, and
to the universal custom of nations. However, certain it is, that the priests,
Levites, Israelites, vessels, garments, etc. which were enjoined washing by the
ceremonial law, and which washings, or baptisms, are here referred to, were
done, by putting them into water, and not by pouring, or sprinkling water upon
them. It is a rule with the Jews,[68]
that, "wheresoever, in the law, washing of the flesh, or of the clothes is
mentioned, it means nothing else, than קגה
לכ תליבט Tebileth Col hagoph,
the dipping of the whole body in a laver for if any man dips himself all over,
except the tip of his little finger, he is still in his uncleanness." From
the whole, it appears, that the words, baptize and baptism, in all the places
mentioned, do, from their signification, make dipping, or plunging, the
necessary mode of administering the ordinance of baptism. I now go on,
Thirdly, To vindicate those texts of scripture, which afford instances of the mode of
administering baptism by immersion, from the exceptions of this writer, who confidently affirms,
"that none of those texts will necessarily prove that any one person was baptized by
dipping, by John Baptist, our blessed Savior, or his apostles." [p. 34]. And,
- The first text brought into the debate, and excepted to, is Matthew 3:6. And were baptized by
him in Jordan, confessing the sins. But we do not argue on this place, from those
persons being baptized, to their being dipped, as this writer makes his neighbor
to do, but from their being baptized in the river Jordan; for why should John
choose the river Jordan to baptize in, and baptize in that river, if he did not
administer the ordinance by immersion? Dr. Hammond, a Paedobaptist, thought that
these words afford an argument for dipping in baptism, though our author will
not allow it: His paraphrase of them is; "And he received them by baptism,
or immersion in the water of Jordan, promising them pardon upon the sincerity of
their conversion and amendment, or reformation of their lives." And in his
note on Matthew 3:1 having respect to this place, says, "John preaching
repentance to the Jews in the desert, received all that came unto him as new
proselytes, forsaking their old relations, that is, their sins, and in token of
their resolved change, put them into the water, dipped them all over, and so
took them out again; and upon the sincerity of their change, promised them the
remission of their sins, and told them of the Messiah which was suddenly to
appear among them, and warned them to believe on him." The instances of
washing in the pool of Siloam, in Solomon s ten lavers, or the hands in a
bason, mentioned by our author, are very impertinent; and besides, such washing
is not performed without dipping. Who ever washes his hands without dipping them
in the water he washes in?
- Another text mentioned,
is John 3:23. John was baptizing in Enon near to Salim, because there was much
water there. Upon which this writer observes, that "the words in the
original are many waters; which implies many springs or brooks of water; waters
suited to the necessity and convenience of the vast multitudes that resorted to
John, as a supply of drink for themselves, and for the horses and camels which
they rode upon, as well as for their baptism. Here is no appearance of dipping
in the case. Had John baptized all these multitudes by dipping, he must have
stood almost continually in water, up to his waist, and could not have survived
the employment but by miracle." To which I reply,
- (1.) Admitting that the
words in the original, many waters, imply many springs or brooks, this shews
there was a confluence of water there; and every body knows, that many springs
and brooks being together, could easily fill large pools, sufficient for
immersion; and even form and feed great rivers, which is often the case; and
besides, the use this author finds for there springs and brooks, requires a
considerable quantity of water, namely, for the vast multitudes of men, and for
their horses and camels; and surely, therefore, there must be a sufficient
quantity to cover a man s body in.
- (2.) The words polla udata, many waters, signify a large quantity, great
abundance, both in the literal and metaphorical sense of the phrase, as it is
used by the evangelist John elsewhere, see Revelation 1:15 and 17:1, 15 and by
the Septuagint interpreters, it is used even for the waters of the sea (Ps.
127:19; 107:23) and answers to םיבר
םימ, Mayim Rabbim,
in Song of Solomon 8:7 many waters cannot quench love; which surely must refer
not to a small, but a large quantity of water; and which phrase there, the
Septuagint render by much water, as we do the phrase here.
- (3.) There words are given
as a reason, not for the convenience of drink for men and their cattle, but for
the baptizing of men, and the convenience of that; that the men that came to
John s baptism came on horses and camels, we know not; however, the text
assigns no reason for the choice of the place upon the account of convenience
for them, but for baptism only; and therefore, we should not overlook the reason
in the text, that is certain, and receive one, which, at most, is very
precarious and uncertain; besides, John had not, at this time, such vast
multitudes that followed him; those followed Christ, and not him: he was
decreasing: Christ made and baptized more disciples than he. See verses 26, 30
and chapter 4:1.
- (4.) Supposing that vast
multitudes still followed him, and were baptized by him, this affords no
argument against dipping in baptism; and especially since this was performed in
a place where there was much water. Nor was the baptizing of such great
multitudes by immersion so great an undertaking, as that he could not survive it
without a miracle; admit the work to be hard and laborious, yet as his day was,
his strength was; according to the divine promise. We have had instances in our
own nation, in our climate, of persons that have baptized great multitudes in
rivers, and even in the winter time, and that for many days successively, if
credit is to be given to our own writers. Mr. Fox the martyrologist, relates,[69] from Fabian, that Austin, archbishop of
Canterbury, baptized ten thousand in one day, in the river Swale; and observes
upon it, that whereas he then baptized in rivers, it followeth, there were then
no use of fonts. And the same, Ranulph, the monk of Chester affirms, in his
history,[70] and says, it was on a day in
the middle of winter; and, according to Fox, it was on a Christmas-day. And our
historian Bede says,[71] that Paulinus,
for six and thirty days successively, did nothing else, than instruct the
people, which from all parts flocked unto him, and baptized them that were
instructed in the river Glen; and who also baptized in one day vast numbers in
the river Trent, King Edwin being present.
- (5.) Though, this writer
says, here is no appearance of dipping, in the case referred to in the text, yet
there are several Paedobaptists, who are of another opinion, and think there
was. Calvin, on the text, thus writes; "from these words, we may gather,
that baptism was performed by John and Christ, by a plunging of the whole body
under water." Piscator, on the place, has there words; "this is
mentioned, to signify the rite of baptism which John used; namely, plunging the
whole body of the man, standing in the river; hence, Christ, being baptized of
John in Jordan, is said to come up out of the water (Matthew 3:16). The same
mode Philip observed" (Acts 8:38). Aretius, on the passage, writes in the
following manner; "but, why did John stay here? He gives a reason, because
there was much water here; wherefore penitent persons might be commodiously
baptized; and, it seems to intimate, that a large quantity of water was
necessary in baptizing, that they might, perhaps, immerse the whole body."
To which, I shall only add the words of Grotius, on the clause, much water:
"Understand, says he, not many rivulets, but, simply, a plenty of water;
such, namely, in which a man s body could easily be immersed: In which manner
baptism was then performed."
- Another text, produced in favor of dipping in baptism, is Matthew3:16. And Jesus, when he
was baptized, went up straightway out of the water. To which is objected, that "there is
no more in the original, than that our Savior went up straightway apo, from the water; which Greek preposition always
naturally signifies from, but never out of, and therefore, this instance can
stand in no stead." But if the preposition never signifies out of, it is
strange that our learned translators should so render it here, as also the
Vulgate Latin, Syriac, Persic, and Ethiopic versions; and so it is rendered in
the New Testament in several places, as in Mark 16:9; Luke 4:35, 41; Acts 2:9;
17:2 and 28:23, and in others. And, moreover, it should be observed, that this
preposition answers to the Hebrew ךם
Min, which signifies out of, as well as from; and which the Syriac version uses
here: And, as a proof of both, let Psalm 40:2 be consulted, and the Septuagint
version of it, where David says, the Lord brought him up out of an horrible pit,
ar apo phlou iluoV , and out of the miry clay. And, if our Lord came up
out of the water, it is a clear case, that he must halve been in it; that he
went down into it, in order to be baptized; and that he was baptized in it: And,
is it reasonable to think, he should be baptized in the river Jordan, in any
other way, than by immersion? See the note of Piscator, upon the preceding text.
- Acts 8:38, 39 goes in
company with the former; and they went down both into the water and when they
were come up out of the water. And the following remark is made; "there can
be no more proved from this text, than that Philip and the Eunuch went down to
the water, and came up from it. The preposition eiv,
rendered into, naturally signifies unto, and is commonly so used in the New
Testament and the preposition ek, rendered out of,
properly signifies from so that there is no evidence from this text, that the
Eunuch was baptized by dipping." Here our author seems to have in view, a
very false piece of criticism, frequently used upon this text; as if the going
down into the water signified no more, than going down to the bank of the water,
to the water-side: And, to support which, his sense of the preposition eiV , which he would have rendered unto, is calculated.
But, it should be observed, that the historian relates in verse 36 that, before
this, they were come to a certain water, to the water-side; and, therefore,
this, their going down, must be into it. Wherefore, as it cannot be denied, but
that this preposition frequently signifies into, it must have this signification
here; and this determines, and settles the sense of the other preposition, and
shews, that that must be rendered, as it is, out of; seeing, whereas they went
down into the water, when they came up, it must be out of it: All which gives
evidence, that the Eunuch was baptized by dipping. Calvin thought so, who, on
the text, has there words; "hic perspicimus, etc. Here we see, what was the
manner of baptizing with the ancients, for they plunged the whole body into
water."
- The last text, mentioned in the debate, is Romans 6:4. We are buried with him by baptism into
death. Where baptism is called a burial; a burial with Christ, a representation and resemblance of
his; which it cannot be, unless it is administered by dipping. But this writer observes, it is also
said, we are baptized into Christ's death; and asks, "What resemblance is there in baptism to
Christ's dying upon the cross, if we are baptized by dipping? Was there any thing like dipping in
our Savior s crucifixion? would you have such a manner of death resembled in baptism, by
drowning men when you baptize them? And affirms, that this text has no reference at all to the
imitation either of Christ's death or burial, or to any particular mode of administering that
ordinance; but the scope is to shew us our obligation, by baptism, unto a conformity to the death
and resurrection of Christ:, by dying unto sin, and rising again unto newness of life." But,
we have seen already, that there is a resemblance between the crucifixion and death of Christ and
baptism, as administered by dipping. The overwhelming sufferings of Christ are fitly signified, by a
person's being plunged into water; and a great likeness there is between the burial of Christ
and baptism, as performed by immersion: And, indeed, there is no other mode of administering
that ordinance, that can represent a burial, but immersion. And be it so, that the scope of the place
is to shew us our obligation, by baptism, unto a conformity to the death and resurrection of
Christ, by dying unto sin, and rising again to newness of life; then that ordinance ought to be so
administered, that it may represent unto us, the death and resurrection of Christ, and our dying
unto sin, and rising unto newness of life; which are done, in a most lively manner, by an immersion
into water, and an emersion out of it. And, that there is an allusion, in this passage, to the
primitive mode of baptizing by dipping, is acknowledged by many divines and annotators; too
many to recite: I will just mention two or three. The Assembly of divines, on this place, say,
"in this phrase, the apostle seemeth to allude to the ancient manner of baptism; which was
to dip the parties baptized, and, as it were, to bury them under the water, for a while; and then to
draw them out of it, and lift them up, to represent the burial of our old man, and our resurrection
to newness of life."
Dr. Hammond's paraphrase of the words, is this; "it is a thing, that every Christian
knows, that the immersion in baptism, refers to the death of Christ; the putting the person
baptized into the water, denotes and proclaims the death and burial of Christ; and signifies our
undertaking in baptism, that we will give over all the sins of our former lives (which is our being
buried together with Christ, or baptized into his death) that so we may live that regenerate new
life (answerable to Christ's resurrection) which consists in a course of all sanctity, a constant
Christian walk all our days." So Piscator, on the text, "videtur respicere ad veterem
ritum, etc. It seems to respect the ancient rite, when, in the whole body, they were plunged into
water, and so were, as if they had been buried; and immediately were drawn out again, as out of a
grave." But,
Fourthly, This writer
thinks, it is not probable, from the instances of administering this ordinance
in scripture, that it was performed by dipping. And,
- He observes, "that in Acts 2:41. there were three thousand baptized in Jerusalem, in one
day; most certainly, adds he, towards the close of the day; and asks, was there any
probability (I had almost said possibility) that they should all be baptized by
dipping, in so short a time? Or, is it probable that they could so suddenly find
water sufficient in that city, for the dipping of such a multitude; especially
while they were so firmly attached to the ceremonial institution, which made it
unlawful for two persons to be dipped in the same vessel of water." To
which I reply,
- (1.) That though three
thousand were added to the church on one and the same day, it does not
necessarily follow from the text, that they were all baptized in one day, the
words do not oblige to such a sense; I am indeed willing to allow it, and am of
opinion they were baptized in one day; though it does not appear that it was
most certainly at the close of the day, as this writer affirms; for it was but
the third hour, or nine o clock in the morning, when Peter began his sermon,
which does not seem to be a long one; and when that was ended, after some
discourse with the converted persons, and exhortations to them, this ordinance
was administered. And if Austin, as we have seen from our historians, could
baptize ten thousand in a short winter s day, it need not seem improbable, and
much less impossible, that three thousand should be baptized, even at the close
of a day; when it is considered that there were twelve apostles to administer
baptism to them, and it was but two hundred and fifty persons apiece; and
besides, there were the seventy disciples, who were administrators of this
ordinance; and supposing them all employed, they would have no more than six or
seven and thirty persons apiece to baptize; and as for the difference between
administering the ordinance by dipping, and by sprinkling, it is very
inconsiderable; for the same form of words must be pronounced in administering
it one way as another; and a person being ready, is very near as soon dipped
into water, as water can be taken and sprinkled or poured on his face. And,
- (2.) Whereas a difficulty
is made of finding suddenly water sufficient in the city of Jerusalem, for the
dipping of such a multitude; it should be observed, that besides baths in
private houses, for purification by immersion, in case of menstrua s,
gonorrhaea s, etc. there was in the temple an apartment called the
dipping-room, for the high-priest to dip himself in, on the day of atonement;
and there were ten layers of brass, each of which held forty baths of water,
sufficient for the immersion of the whole body of a man; and there was the
molten sea, for the priests to wash in, which was done by immersion; and there
were also several pools in the city, as the pools of Bethesda, Siloam, etc.
where persons bathed or dipped themselves, on certain occasions: So that there
were conveniences enough for baptism by immersion in this place. And,
- (3.) As for what this author says, that according to the ceremonial institution, it was
unlawful for two persons to be dipped in the same vessel of water: I must own my ignorance of
it, till some proof is given; the laver in the temple was in common for the priests.
- The narrative of Paul s
baptism, he says, makes it appear to be administered in his bed-room (Acts 9:9,
18), but that he was in his bed-room when Ananias came to him, is not so clear;
however, certain it is, that he arose, and was baptized. Whether he arose off of
his bed, or off of his chair, cannot be said; but be that as it will, had the
ordinance been to have been performed by sprinkling or pouring a little water on
him, he need not have rose up from either; but he arose, and went either to a
bath that might be in Judas s house, fit for such a purpose, or to some
certain place without doors, convenient for the administration of the ordinance.
- The words of the text, Acts 10:47, Can any man forbid water, that these should not be
baptized? he says, seem plainly to contradict the dipping of Cornelius and his household, But
why so? there is nothing in the text contradicts it; for the sense is, "Can
any man forbid the use of his river or bath, or what convenience he might have,
for the baptizing of those persons?" Which shews, that it required a place
of some quantity of water, sufficient for baptizing by immersion; otherwise it
would not have been in the power of any man to hinder them having a little
water, to be sprinkled or poured on the face. And what follows confirms it; And
he commanded them to be baptized in the name of the Lord; besides, the words of
the text may be rendered, Can any man forbid that these should be baptized with
water? See Erasmus on the place. Wherefore, what this writer says, that the
apostle did not speak of forbidding the water to run in the river, or to remain
in any other receptacle or reservoir of water, and therefore must speak of
bringing water for their baptism, is very impertinent and ridiculous.
- He observes, that "the Jailer and his household were baptized in the dead of the night, in
the same hour of his conversion by the earthquake; and therefore, there was no
probability (nor indeed possibility) of their going to any depth of water for
that purpose" (Acts 16:33). But where is the impossibility, or
improbability of it? Grotius thinks it probable, that there was a pool in the
prison, where he washed the stripes of the apostle and here the ordinance might
be administered; but, if nor, it is not unreasonable to suppose, that they went
out of the prison, to the river near the city, where the oratory, or place of
prayer was, verse 13 and there administered the ordinance, and then returned to
the prison again, before morning, unobserved by any: compare verses 30 and 34
together. And now let it be considered, whether there instances, as our author
says, are sufficient to convince an unprejudiced person, that the ordinance was
not administered by dipping, in the apostolic times.
- He concludes, that seeing sprinkling was the greatest purification among the Jews, and the
blood of Christ, and the influences of the holy Spirit, are frequently represented by
sprinkling, but never by dipping; therefore, it must be the most proper mode of
administration. But,
- It must be denied, that sprinkling was the greatest purification among the Jews; their principal
purifications, and which were most frequently used in cases of ceremonial
uncleanness, were performed by immersion, and therefore they are called
washings, or baptisms, in Hebrews 9:10 and even the purification by the ashes of
the red heifer, which this writer instances in, was not performed without
bathing the person all over in water (Num. 19:19), and which was the closing and
finishing part of it.
- It is not fact, that the
blood of Christ, and the influences of the Spirit, are never represented by
dipping. The bloody sufferings of Christ:, and the large abundance of his
blood-shed, are called a baptism, or dipping (Luke 12:50). And his blood is
represented, as a fountain opened to wash in, for sin, and for uncleanness
(Zech.13:1). And the donation of the Spirit, on the day of Pentecost, is also
called a baptism, or dipping (Acts 1:5). But, it is not on those allusive
expressions, that we lay the stress of the mode of the administering this
ordinance, though they are only such, this author attempts to mention, in favor
of sprinkling. Wherefore, upon the whole, let the reader judge, which is the
most proper and significant rite, used in the administration of the ordinance of
baptism; whether immersion, which is the proper and primary sense of the word
baptism, and is confirmed to be the rite used, by the places in which baptism
was administered; and by several scriptural instances and examples of it, as
well as by allusive expressions; and which fitly represents the death, burial
and resurrection of Christ; or, sprinkling, which the word baptism never
signifies; and is not confirmed by any of the said ways; nor does it represent
any thing for which baptism is administered. Let it be, therefore, seriously
considered, what a daring thing it is to introduce into this ordinance subjects
which Christ never appointed, and a mode of administering it never used by him
or his apostles. In matters of worship, God is a jealous God. The case of Nadab
and Abihu ought to be remembered by us, who offered strange fire, the Lord
commanded not. In things relating to religious worship, as this ordinance of
baptism is a part of a precedent: And we ought to keep to the rule, both as to
matter and manner, and not dare to innovate in either, left it should be said to
us, hath required this at your hands? worship, and with teaching for doctrines,
the commandments of men.
ENDNOTES:
[1] Quinta quaestio proponitur ab Auguistino, etc.
Explicat. Epist. ad Ephes. c. 5. p. 225.
[2] Answer to Rusen, p. 142, 143.
[3] Answer to Walker, p. 157, etc.>
[4] Barnabae Epist. c. 9. p. 235, 236. Ed. Voss.
[5] Hermae Pastor. I. 1. 7:3, f. 7. & li 3. f. 16.
[6] Ignatii Epist. ad Polycarp. p. 14. Ed. Voss.
[7] Part I. c.
23.
[8] Irenaeus adv. Haeres. 1. 2. c. 39. p. 191.
[9] History of Infant-Baptism. part I. c. 2.
[10] On tropon de aneqhkamen eautouV. etc. Justin. Apolog. II. p. 93, 94. Ed.
Paris.
[11] Cloppenburg. Gangraena, p. 366. Spanhem. Diatribe Hilt.
Sect. 27.
[12] Budneus apud Meshov. Hist. Anabapt. 1.4. P. 96.
[13] Sleidan. Comment. 1. to. p. 267, 269. Spanhem. Diatribe
Histor. De Origin Anabaptist Sec. 18.
[14]Spanhem. ibid Sect. 11. Meshovius Anabaptist. Histor. 1.
3. c. 16, 18.
[15] Spanhem. Sect. 13. Meshovius, ibid. c. 2.
[16] Spanhem. Sect. i 1. Meshovius 1. 2. c. 4.
[17] Ibid. c. 15.
[18] Summa Controvers. I. 5. p. 356.
[19] Meshovius 1. 2. e. 1.
[20] Meshovius, 1. I. c. 2, 3.
[21] Inter Colomes. Collect. apud Wall s History of
Infant-Baptism, part II. p. 200.
[22] Opera Innocent. tertii, tom. II. p. 776. apud Wall, ibid. p.
178.
[23] Acts and Monuments, vol. 1. p. 262.
[24] History of England, vol. 1. p. 233.
[25] Neubrigensu de Rebus Anglicanis, I. 2. c, 13. p. 155.
[26] Not. in ibid. p. 720-723.
[27] Wall, ibid. P. 175, 176.
[28] Hist. Eccl. Magdeburg. Cent. XII. c. 5. p. 338, 339.
[29] Ibid. p. 332.
[30] Answer to Russen. p. 83, 84.
[31] History of Infant-baptism, part II. p. 184.
[32] Ibid. p. 179.
[33] This is an extraneous footnote. (ED.)
[34] Wall, ibid. p. 172.
[35] Apud Wall, ibid. p. 159.
[36] Hist. Eccl. Magdeburg, Cent. XI. c. 5. P. 116.
[37] Answer to Ruffen, p. 84, 85.
[38] Summa Concil. p. 122, 123.
[39] Cent. V. c. 9. p. 468.
[40] History, etc. Part II. p. 275, 276.
[41] De Baptismo, c. 18.
[42] Dr. Allix's Remarks on the ancient churches of Piedmont,
p. 188, 207, 210, 286. Motland s History of the evangelical Churches of the valleys of Piedmont,
book I. c.3. p. 8, etc. Et Bezae Icones spud ibid. In reduction to the history, p. 7.
[43] History, book I. ch. 8. p. 184.
[44] Remarks. etc. p. 171, 172.
[45] Hist. of Infant-baptism, part II, p. 179.
[46] Fox's Acts, and Monuments, vol. I. p. 868.
[47] Morland's History, etc. book I. ch. 4. p. 34.
[48] Ibid. p. 38.
[49] Morland's History, etc. ch. 6. p. 99, 122.
[50] Ibid. ch. 7. p. 142, 148.
[51] Morland's History, ch. 4. p. 43.
[52] Apud Hoornbeck. Summa Controvers. I. 5. P. 387.
[53] Morland, ibid. ch. 4. p. 39.
[54] Ibid. ch. 8. p. 185.
[55] Acts & Monuments, vol. II. p. 186.
[56] Morland, ibid. c. 4, p. 41.
[57] Ibid. c. 4. p. 61, 67,
[58] Morland, ibid. c. 7. P. 173.
[59] Audio in quibusdam Italiae Urbibus morem veterem
magna ex parte adhuc conservari. Comment. in Aug. de Civ. Dei, Lib I. c. 27.
[60] History of Infant-baptism, Part II. c. 2. p. 12.
[61] Hebrews 13:20 compared with Daniel 9:17, Ephesians
1:13, 14 and Ephesians 4:30.
[62] See Exodus 1:8, 12, and Exodus 3:23 and Exodus 12:26,
27, 28, 35, 40, 50, and Exodus 14:8, 10, 22, 29; Jeremiah 1:4. and a multitude of other
places.
[63] Misn. Kiddashin, c. 2. . 1.
[64] Primum docent omnes Genres. deinde doctas intingunt
Aqua, etc. Hieran. In <402819> Matthew 28:19.
[65] Athanas. contr. Arianos. Orat. III. p. 209.
[66] Institut. L. IV. c. 15 19.
[67] Adversar. Miscellan. p. 30.
[68] Maimon, Hilchot. Mikvaot. c. 1. 2.
[69] Acts and Monuments, vol. 1 p. 154.
[70] Polychroncon, lib. V.c. 10.
[71] Ecclesiastes Hist. 1. II. c. 14. p. 77. & c. 16. p.
79.
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