C
Chris-WA
Guest
If there is no specific prohibition against it in the bible than I fail to see how one could justify a certain age for baptism on a biblical basis.Where is the biblical support to baptize infants?
If there is no specific prohibition against it in the bible than I fail to see how one could justify a certain age for baptism on a biblical basis.Where is the biblical support to baptize infants?
I think that the concept of infant baptism is foreign to LDS members because they do not accept the doctrine of original sin. If there is no original sin, then baptism is only efficacious in removing one’s own sins, which, presumably cannot be made until one knows that one is doing wrong. The LDS church seems to arbitrarily pick 8 years as the turning point at which one becomes responsible for one’s acts and thereby in need of baptism. Although the age seems like an arbitrary cutoff point, the logic is consistent with a denial of original sin.Where do LDS get the idea that children under 8 years of age are not to be baptized? What is the biblical support for this?
I would agree this number seems totally arbitrary (though it is in their D&C and presumably a revelation from God). The thought that anyone below the age of 8 cannot consciously choose to do wrong is incorrect. I know 2, 3, 4, 5, 6…year olds who knowingly and willingly lie, sneak, etc. You can’t tell me that when a 5 year old sneaks some cookies, eventhough his mom told him not to, and then lies about eating them, that he doesn’t know what he’s doing is wrong.The LDS church seems to arbitrarily pick 8 years as the turning point at which one becomes responsible for one’s acts and thereby in need of baptism. Although the age seems like an arbitrary cutoff point, the logic is consistent with a denial of original sin.
It’s sort of the way some folks interpret the constitution: “Everything which is not commanded is forbidden”. As opposed to the idea that “Everything which is not forbidden is permitted”, more widely held among Roman Catholics, Anglicans, and Reformational denominations. If you want to argue for or against the ‘Biblical position’, the arguments get rather involved and probably would not fit well with the purpose of this specific sub-forum.So there is no biblical justification for waiting to 8 years old? Do LDS get this strictly from their own scriptures?
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If there is no specific prohibition against it in the bible than I fail to see how one could justify a certain age for baptism on a biblical basis.
If anything your story shows the temporality of your thinking at that age–you lacked the ability to foresee future consequences to any great degree. Just as a dog might steal a piece of dark chocolate, even though chocolate is toxic to dogs, so you were focused upon obtaining an obsidian rock without any thought to how your actions might cause harm to yourself or others… When things went afoul you became focused upon avoiding possible temporal consequences.At six years old my teacher brought out an obsidian rock to show the class. The black rock that looks like glass. She told us that it was formed by Volcanic action where sand got so hot that it melted into this rock form. I being six years old was fascinated; I had to have that rock. I asked the teacher, I told the teacher “I have to have that rock, I want that rock” She told me that it was hers. I thought about stealing it but I decided that I might get caught. So I began to plan another strategy. As we arrived at the cabin it came to me, a voice told me that all I would have to do is find some charcoal, some matches, something that will burn like wood, and then get the charcoal as hot as a volcano could get it. There was plenty of sand around to heat up but charcoal seemed to be the better choice because it was already in the shape of a rock and it was black . . . . .
So after everyone settled in for the weekend I began my mission. I was obsessed with Obsidian. I found some matches in a drawer and some charcoal in a bag. . . . . Then I lit the needles and placed the charcoal in the middle. I waited, but then something started to go wrong. The fire started coming out from around the rocks and it began to get bigger and bigger . . . As we were eating my brother pointed to the back window and started yelling “Fire! Fire!” Then on cue I started to yell “fire!fire!” as well. I thought I could just blend in! . . . . . .
If anything is to be learned from this is that if you are LDS maybe you should suggest changing the age. I would suggest 2 or three, but to be safe make it happen as soon as they are born. Or right before they learn how to light a match.
God Bless
So my question to someone of this belief would be, “What makes you think an 8 year old understands this?” I don’t think someone at that age can really understand that concept. I don’t think even some teenagers understand that concept. There’s probably adults who don’t get that.Those who would argue for the anabaptist position would say that until you could truly grasp that your actions were not really ‘wrong’ but ‘sinful’–i.e. that wrong behavior had long-term eternal consequences–baptism would in no way have benefitted you. Better to have used the water on the fire than on the boy who built the fire.
Please understand that I am not actively LDS: I am Anglican. And Anglicans baptise infants. I was raised in the Independent Christian Churches, a sect which practices only ‘adult’ baptism, (meaning what Mormons call the ‘age of accountability’). I’m a one-time convert to Mormonism, but no longer a believer in the same. I think I therefore have some insight into the reasoning, though you are asking me to defend a position I don’t actually support. I am attempting to provide a bit more careful analysis of why some sects, including the LDS, baptise only those who are mature enough to have some sense of the signification of the act of baptism.So my question to someone of this belief would be, “What makes you think an 8 year old understands this?” I don’t think someone at that age can really understand that concept. I don’t think even some teenagers understand that concept. There’s probably adults who don’t get that.
To the best of my knowledge, the unbaptised mentally ill are left to the mercies of God even in Roman Catholic doctrine. Likewise the unbaptised brain-dead. More to the point–an unbaptised, severely retarded child who NEVER attains even the power of speech would–to the best of my understanding of RCC doctrine–be as fully assured of salvation as an unbaptised aborted fetus or an unbaptised infant. Whether this implies that all three would go to ‘limbo’ or to Heaven depends upon which Catholic, in which century, one happens to ask. For Protestants generally and for those of anabaptist persuasion in particular, the problem does not arise–where there is no ability to commit actual sin, God can be trusted to show mercy. The ‘sins of the fathers’ (presumed to include Original Sin) ‘will not be visited upon the heads of the children’.What about the severe mentally ill? Do you have to be smart to receive Baptism? Do you have to know what you are receiving in order to receive it? If some one is brain dead lying in the hospital should we visit them even though they do not know we are there? I for one am very glad that Gods ways are not our ways. This gives me great peace.
i think you need to know about our temples to understand the work we do there.Well I think that we get confused when we ignore the context of scripture. If you read those books in their entirety then I think the message becomes clear. I will risk your ignoring that advice though and list some specifics that I find to be informative on this subject. (I still would hope that you would read the whole books though before jumping to conclusions)
Acts 2:38,39
Acts 16:15,3
Acts 22:16
1Pet 3:21
John 3:5
Matt 19:14
Luke 18:15,16
Coll 2:11,12
Rom 6:3
1 Cor 1:16
Of course we Catholics also value sacred tradition on this from Origen(244 A.D.), Agustine (408 a.D.) and the council of Carthage (253 A.D.)
I don’t think that it’s changing the subject at all to ask about LDS baptizing deceased children vicariously since the topic of this thread is “Why not baptize children?” and this is an LDS sub-forum for comparing and contrasting beliefs.
So I ask again, Does the LDS church perform vicarious baptisms for the dead for people who died in childhood?
So a child under the age of 8 is incapable of doing something wrong?i think you need to know about our temples to understand the work we do there.
we do not baptise children who died before their 8th birthday. we seal them to their parents. the child does not need any other work because they are saved by the fact they are innocent of sin and they are living in the celestral kingdom.
Flame,Please understand that I am not actively LDS: I am Anglican. And Anglicans baptise infants.
I think I need to stress again that for the vast majority of Evangelicals, baptism DOES NOT CONTRIBUTE IN ANY WAY TO ONE’S SALVATION.
Where you are seriously misreading me is in assuming that I am suggesting that baptismal candidates need a Th.D. in order to be saved. I was very careful in how I worded my prior post: I stressed that the anabaptists believe children need “some” concept of sin, atonement, salvation, redemption, etcetera, NOT that they must be able to execute a dissertation on the topic and defend it before a panel of theologians.
My point is that anabaptists feel that a rudimentary understanding is needful in order to excercise saving faith.
you have to be accountable. somebody with a serious learning disorder that means that they can not judge what is right or wrongWhat about the severe mentally ill? Do you have to be smart to receive Baptism? Do you have to know what you are receiving in order to receive it? If some one is brain dead lying in the hospital should we visit them even though they do not know we are there? I for one am very glad that Gods ways are not our ways. This gives me great peace.
our children are only baptised when they are ready maybe your church could learn from us on this point. the age of 8 is the earlist a child can be baptised its up to the child,parents and bishop to judge when the right time is. But the child has to want it. now those little babies in your cdhurch i still wonder how they are chosing to follow chirst. What gives you the right to take away there choice.At six years old my teacher brought out an obsidian rock to show the class. The black rock that looks like glass. She told us that it was formed by Volcanic action where sand got so hot that it melted into this rock form. I being six years old was fascinated; I had to have that rock. I asked the teacher, I told the teacher “I have to have that rock, I want that rock” She told me that it was hers. I thought about stealing it but I decided that I might get caught. So I began to plan another strategy.
That weekend my brother and my Father were going to my Aunt Evelans cabin at Lake Tahoe California. It was an hour and half drive so I had a lot of time to think about how I was going to get an obsidian rock. I asked my father if he would get me one, he said he would try. After I asked him 204 more times within about 30 minutes he got mad, he yelled at me “I will never get you that rock, he told me to shut up about the rock.” “Alright I will have to figure out another way to get it”
As we arrived at the cabin it came to me, a voice told me that all I would have to do is find some charcoal, some matches, something that will burn like wood, and then get the charcoal as hot as a volcano could get it. There was plenty of sand around to heat up but charcoal seemed to be the better choice because it was already in the shape of a rock and it was black.
So after everyone settled in for the weekend I began my mission. I was obsessed with Obsidian. I found some matches in a drawer and some charcoal in a bag. I did not want anyone to know what I was doing so I went to the back of the cabin and found a corner with two trees that blocked anyone from seeing me. Then the same voice I heard earlier told me exactly what to do, all I had to do was listen. It was like I had a best friend with me. It said “Make a little fire pit next to the cabin wall so the fire would be protected from the wind." Then it told me to gather a whole lot of old dry pine needles and put them into the fire pit. That was easy because there were so many pine needles on the ground that all I had to do was put some rocks on top and make a circle. The voice said “Good thinking” Then I lit the needles and placed the charcoal in the middle. I waited, but then something started to go wrong. The fire started coming out from around the rocks and it began to get bigger and bigger. Then my dad yelled from the front of the cabin that it was time for lunch. I knew I had a pretty big problem but the voice said “just go eat, it will be alright” I knew that was not right, but I had to have faith otherwise I would probably get caught. So I wiped my memory clean from this ordeal and went in to eat. As we were eating my brother pointed to the back window and started yelling “Fire! Fire!” Then on cue I started to yell “fire!fire!” as well. I thought I could just blend in!
Well my Aunt lost a quarter of her Cabin on that day and everyone was trying to blame it on me, a mere six year old. I did what I felt was the best thing to do given the situation. I looked them all in the eye, with tears and said. “I did not light that fire!” I remember when we returned home I ran to my mom telling her that everyone thinks I lit Aunt Evelans cabin on fire. She embraced me and told me that she would get to the bottom of this. Everything else is just a haze from that point on. I did eventually confess to the fire a few years later, 32 to be exact, I think it was after I was Baptized Catholic. But my dad just looked at me and laughed and said “I already knew” .I don’t know that if I was baptized as an infant if I would have been a bit smarter but I do know that at six I knew what I was doing. I knew it was wrong. But then again it was not me that told me to do it right? I just listened to the voice and did what I was told.
If anything is to be learned from this is that if you are LDS maybe you should suggest changing the age. I would suggest for your church it be 5, but to be safe make it happen as soon as they are born. Or right before they learn how to listen to voices or light a match.
God Bless
sorry but i find yours much harder to understand or justifyI’m very curious as to the nephite record specifying 8 as the age of baptism. Is the symbolic of 8 days for circumcision? If it’s a maturity issue I would think that would vary according to society. In some societies throughout history children were thought to be accountable for the actions at a younger age, in others it was older. Jewish custom usually indicates age 13. (bar/bat mitzvah) if this analagous to “confirmation”. (making an informed choice to be a member) if it’s the parents bringing up a child “in the covenant” then 8 day old circumcision seems the better example. I find this doctrine (LDS) hard to believe. A child is born into the world completely free of sin and their 8th birthday their suddenly headed for hell if they don’t get baptized. I just don’t see that as true.
This isn’t taking away their choice to follow Christ or not. That is a choice that everyone must make repeatedly every day. What it does do is wipe away the stain of original sin, allowing us to be more connected to God through our entrance into His covenant family relationship. It’s still a personal choice whether to accept it or not. And I can tell you that I know of kids in the LDS church don’t always want it. One mom even admitted to a Catholic friend of mine that her kids had no choice. They were being baptized when they turned 8, and the truth was that they didn’t understand it anyway.our children are only baptised when they are ready maybe your church could learn from us on this point. the age of 8 is the earlist a child can be baptised its up to the child,parents and bishop to judge when the right time is. But the child has to want it. now those little babies in your cdhurch i still wonder how they are chosing to follow chirst. What gives you the right to take away there choice.