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NotWorthy
Guest
I must say, G S, you have a rather harmonious relationship with Catholic Theology when you talk like this! Good job!!!I think one problem that may keep you from hearing all I am saying is that I do not believe that once someone is saved that they cannot backslide. Thus a person who as an adult commits his life to Christ and comes to me seeking to be baptized is not by virtue of that profession of faith and baptism thereby guarnateed to be saved. What we in the church do is proclaim that God is active in his life and that if he himself remains faithful (matures as a faithful disciple) that he can be assured that God is faithful and will take him/her to God’s self.
Thus, if a child is baptized, once again the church proclaims that God is faithful and has already acted to save this child (at Calvary). The child need only to continue in the faith into which he/she is baptized, i.e. in the teaching Christ commanded us to perform. The child who does this (matures as a faithful disciple) can rest assured that God will take him/her to God’s self.
Now, what if the adult backslides or the child never matures in his/her faith? Well, God’s promises are nonetheless true, but we most continue to grow in them. Hearing the 4 spiritual laws, reciting the sinners, and prayer, and getting baptized does not a disciple make. It is part of the process of identifying one’s self with the discipleship community. When does one become a baseball player, when you first join little lieague but have never picked up a bat before? Or when one has learned to play the game and loves to do so? When does one become a disciple? When one enters the ranks of those who are seeking to grow in their level of discipleship, or when one shows the behaviors of discipleship? I think the answer is both, but they two different understandings of what it means to be a disciple, and most certainly two different levels of discipleship. But if one is doing all one can to faithfully live as a disciple whether infant, child or adult, then that ultimately is what it really means to be a disciple.
You said, And I remember that Jesus recommended that we have childlike faith. So, I think that this undeveloped faith so characteristic of childlike trusting may be all that is needed, and I believe even an infant possesses that. It then is our responsibility, the church community, to be faithful in helping him/her mature as a disciple.