A
alwayswill
Guest
There is conversion and there are conversions. There is born again and rebirths. There is a justification and times of justifications. There is the gift of salvation, but there are times of repentance.
ok so the conversion that happens at during infant baptism may never manifest itself in any observable way:Baptism constitutes a true regeneration of the person such that they arise as a new creation. That is not a metaphor, and it is of the whole person. There is no such rebirth in the person coming back to Christ. Not in the way of Baptism.
A Jewish man who abandons Judaism doesn’t get (nor can he be) recircumcized should he return. He is already marked. He is reintegrated into the community.
Anyway, I referred to it as a resuscitation. Like when a person stops breathing, maybe even the heart stops, and they can be resuscitated by new breath being given to them (via CPR). But they are not remade, they’re restored. These are my own word choices.
so by following around a group of preschoolers or high school seniors it would not be obvious to us which were baptized as an infant and which were not (yes: God would know) unlike the conversion of prodigal son which is obvious…
In other words the conversion that happens at infant baptism is an invisible remaking of a new creature with no outward visible signs, possibly for their entire life: correct?