Right. I’m specifically concerned if they reject the Baptism reference?
Hi rcwitness,
In the case of infant baptism, which sins are the being forgiven? Is it the original sin that mankind inherited from Adam and Eve? If so, I can understand, appreciate, and agree with it. My understanding is that all mankind suffers from a “bent to sin” or as I’ve heard it said on Catholic radio, “concupiscence”, if I understood the term correctly.
Otherwise, would the infant need forgiveness for crying too loudly and waking up mom and dad in the middle of the night too many times? I didn’t think that infants were held accountable for their behavior until they grew up to the point where they could discern right from wrong.
In the case of an adult or child (usually in elementary school or later) in the evangelical church that I was once part of, the person desiring baptism would need to acknowledge they are a sinner in need of a Savior, that they sincerely repent of their sins with the intention of not repeating them, and commit to following Christ as their Lord and Savior from that point on. Then they get baptized by a pastor, but the other stuff is a prerequisite, kind of modeled after a Billy Graham crusade, sort of.
They just don’t arrive at church one day and say, “I want to get baptized for the forgiveness of sins so let’s get on with it, even though I have no intention of ever changing my sinful ways”. That would be akin to going into the Catholic confessional and wanting to be absolved for sins you weren’t sorry of and don’t intend to stop. I doubt a priest would absolve such a person.
The baptism usually takes place in front of the congregation as a formal acknowledgment of a change that has already taken place inside their heart and to be “raised to walk in newness of life” through baptism like is stated in Romans 6:4.
That is how I understood the process in most evangelical churches I knew, anyway.