C
Crux_Sacra
Guest
Technically speaking, one definition of the word baptism does mean to be immersed. However, there is not plentiful enough water everywhere in the world for such, and not everyone is rich enough to be able to afford artificial large bodies of water. Limiting access to Baptism to only those who have access to large bodies of water because of their geographical location or wealth defies the command of Christ to “make disciples of all nations, baptizing them…” and rejects when Jesus said “Blessed are ye poor, for yours is the Kingdom of God” and also when he said, “when thou makest a feast, call the poor, the maimed, the lame, and the blind.” The Latin Church allows triple immersion, which according to the Catechism is the most expressive way, or triple pouring.Let me give you an example. When John the Baptist was preparing the way for the Lord, the taught repentance and baptism by immersion. When Christ came to John to be baptized, John said he needed it from him. Christ said that he was to fulfill a righteousness. Baptism means to be buried under the water or immersed.
There are denominations that believe that it is sufficant enough to sprinkle someone over their head. No where in the bible does it teach sprinkling. In this one aspect of the gospel they are in apostacy. They still believe in Christ, and his teachings, but interpret one aspect of it wrong.
And you forget that in Acts 9:18 Saul was baptized inside the house of the man named Judas, and 16:33 Paul baptized his and Silas’ jailer and the jailer’s entire family inside the jailer’s house. There is little likelihood of large bodies of water inside someone’s house, so these people were baptized by triple pouring. And remember that one of these men is St. Paul the Apostle, who was both baptized indoors and proceeded to baptize indoors.
In addition, there is this snippet from New Advent, “Besides these actual specimens, the font is also depicted in the remains of early Christian art. In nearly every instance it is a shallow pool or basin in which the neophyte stands with feet immersed, while water is poured on him from an overhead stream or from a vase held by the person baptizing. That this was the ordinary mode of baptizing during the early centuries, is a view the acceptance of which is compelled by all recent study in the archaeology of baptismal fonts (de Rossi, Bullettino di Archeol., 1876, 8-15; Duchesne, Les Eglises séparées, Paris, 1905, 89-96).”
You can read the entire thing here: newadvent.org/cathen/02274a.htm
Porknpie’s post above details much more than I knew about. So one cannot say that only baptism by immersion is biblical, nor can one say that only baptism by immersion is historical.
Cat Herder,
Love that Ezekiel verse!
God Bless!