S
susanlo
Guest
The churches I have been a part of over the years have not taught infant baptism for original sin because the Doctrine of Original Sin was not present in the early centuries. It developed in the early centuries with Origen and Ambrose who had unusual ideas. (Origen taught that Jesus was stained by Original Sin misquoting Zechariah and misunderstanding cleansing after childbirth, and Ambrose states that washing a man’s feet after baptism removes the venom from the snake). I believe I read in a book by J.N.D. Kelly that Irenaeus was the first to speak of this idea of inherited guilt. Anyway, the churches I go to strive to emulate 1st century Christianity and don’t accept the doctrines added later.This is Baptist teaching. Catholic, Orthodox, Anglican and I don’t know how many others teach that baptism washes away original sin. Luther, due to his iunique personality and psychological state, had a radically different view of justification, and those who follow him remain convinced of it. Did it not occur to anyone that both Catholic and Orthodox, which trace directly to Christ, both think alike in matter of justification? The Catholic is always questioned. The 95+% identical Orthodox? Never. What is up with that?
books.google.com/books?id=sUCQS0X1BLMC&printsec=frontcover&dq=origen+commentary+on+luke&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwi2hqX4_anNAhWHoD4KHSooAWsQ6AEIHjAA#v=onepage&q=origen%20commentary%20on%20luke&f=false - pg.57,58
newadvent.org/fathers/3405.htm Chapter 6 #32
archive.org/stream/stambroseonmyste00ambr#page/96/mode/2up
archive.org/stream/pdfy-CY7YNVnvFwggDjnT/103911481-J-N-D-Kelly-Early-Christian-Doctrines#page/n0/mode/2up pg. 170
Why would the church believe that an adult believer can not receive the Holy Spirit until baptism, but then make them wait for up to 1 year to be baptized? I understand that if someone met an untimely death in that year they could potentially be saved by “baptism of desire,” so they are technically “saved” upon the commitment to join the church. But why make them wait for the gift of the Holy Spirit? At my church we believe forgiveness and the Holy Spirit occur at the moment the individual makes a commitment, but we believe that baptism is of utmost importance and people can be baptized as soon as the same week after meeting with a pastor. In the book of Acts, nobody had to wait extended periods for baptism.While this did occur in Acts 10, the normal order of things was reversed, in part, so as to erase Peter’s (and the Apostle’s) doubts that the faith was also for gentiles - this was a huge change. It is clear that the early Church was shocked at the gentile converts - so shocked that Paul had Timothy circumcised!
The normative sequence is baptism to cleanse your soul, then and only then are you ready to be a temple of the Holy Spirit, by the “laying on of hands.” This is enumerated in Acts and in Paul’s writings.
Acts 8:17
Then they laid their hands on them and they received the Holy Spirit.
Acts 19:6
And when Paul had laid his hands upon them, the Holy Spirit came on them; and they spoke with tongues and prophesied.
1 Timothy 4:14
Do not neglect the gift you have, which was given you by prophetic utterance when the elders laid their hands upon you.
2 Timothy 1:6
Hence I remind you to rekindle the gift of God that is within you through the laying on of my hands;
The Holy Spirit is given by the laying on of hands, and then by the Apostles and elders.