J
JohnWilliams
Guest
Not at all. I am the “godfather” of 2 Catholic kids (now adults) (done before I was saved), I was baptized as an infant in the Presbyterian Church, and my children were baptized, but as young people. Having been backslidden for years we began to attend Church and my kids were baptized at around 6 and 8 years old. I did appreciate that it was a conscious and they believed important decision on their part.So you don’t think it is wise to baptize children or infants?
While we find lots of examples of folks making decisions to be baptized in scipture, I believe there are precious few (if any?) indications of infant baptism. I was born again in the Spirit in the fall of 2003 and was later baptized in the Atlantic Ocean, as a conscious decision. I believe it was an important thing for me to do.From my understanding, baptism does not have an age limit.
**Has infant baptism obscured the possible importance of each of us making this decision when we are truly ready to follow the Lord? **
Do you believe baptism to be essential for infants? Do you believe your kids would have gone to perdition of they had died of SIDS at 1 year old? Or died in your car at 3?
AmenJesus said in Matthew 18:2-5, “Truly, Truly, I say to you, unless you turn and become like children, you will NEVER enter the kingdom of heaven.”
And amen again. And isn’t it fitting that McCollum vs Board of Education (end of religious instruction in schools) was decided in 1948, along with Jesus returning His people to our covenant land, to kick off this “time of the end” in which we likely find ourselves.or in Mark 10:14, “Let the children come to me, do NOT hinder them for to such belongs the kingdom of God. Truly, I say I say to you, whoever does not received the kingdom of God like a child shall not enter it.”
Amen again. Does this say that he who is not baptized will be condemned? No. Does it say that he who believes and is baptized will be saved? Yes. Does it say that he who believes and is not baptized is condemned? No (however I believe that every believer that has any doubts about their baptism had better get it done post haste as many verses would suggest). It says he who does not believe will be condemned.or in Mark 16:16: “He who believes and is baptized will be saved; but he who does not believe will be condemned.”
Are babies even capable of believing? No. Are those that have not been brought the gospel in the first place in a position to believe? No.
From this verse, if anthing I would be very concerned if I was a believer and had not been baptized as a conscious effort and personal decision.
I do not see this demonstration.But in reference to the same people, Jesus immediately follows with “He who does not believe will be condemned.” This demonstrates that one can be baptized and still not be a believer.
But it should be painfully obvious to everyone that every single infant that is baptized is not a believer.
But is there anything in Scripture about an infant being baptized?This disproves the Protestant argument that one must be a believer to be baptized. There is nothing in the Bible about a “believer’s baptism.”
Amen Bro. I know this first hand.Believing in the Lord Jesus Christ isn’t always necessary since the devil and his demons believed in God and boy do they tremble.
I believe this is a valid point and one that you have not refuted with your verse selections so far. You cite some of those who forged Protestantism, but in a fashion which is barely recognizable in Protestant eschatology today, but very present in Protestant core doctrine.Although Fundamentalists are the most recent critics of infant baptism, opposition to infant baptism is not a new phenomenon. In the Middle Ages, some groups developed that rejected infant baptism, e.g., the Waldenses and Catharists. Later, the Anabaptists (“re-baptizers”) echoed them, claiming that infants are incapable of being baptized validly.
Why let scripture get in the way of the “historic church”? Perhaps you could temper your view a little with other behaviour of the “historic Christian Church”.But the historic Christian Church has always held that Christ’s law applies to infants as well as adults,