A
Baptist Page Article
Infant-Baptism: A Part And Pillar Of Popery
by John Gill
Being
called upon,
in a public manner, to give proof of what I have said concerning infant-baptism,
in a preface to my reply to Mr. Clarke's Defense, etc. A Defense of
the Divine Right of Infant Baptism, etc., Peter Clark, Boston, 1752]
or to expunge it, I readily agree to the former, and shall endeavor to
explain myself, and defend what I have written; but it will be proper
first to recite the whole paragraph, which stands thus: "The Paedobaptists
are ever restless and uneasy, endeavoring to maintain and support, if
possible, their unscriptural practice of infant-baptism; though it is
no other than a pillar of popery; that by which Antichrist has spread
his baneful influence over many nations; is the basis of national churches
and worldly establishments; that which unites the church and world, and
keeps them together; nor can there be a full separation of the one from
the other, nor a thorough reformation in religion; until it is wholly
removed: and though it has so long and largely obtained, and still does
obtain; I believe with a firm and unshaken faith, that the time is hastening
on, when infant-baptism will be no more practiced in the world; when churches
will be formed on the same plan they were in the times of the apostles;
when gospel-doctrine and discipline will be restored to their primitive
lustre and purity; when the ordinances of baptism and the Lord's Supper
will be administered as they were first delivered, clear of all present
corruption and superstition; all which will be accomplished, when "The
Lord shall be king over all the earth, and there shall be one Lord and
his name one." Now the whole of this consists of several articles
or propositions, which I shall re-consider in their order.
I. That
infant baptism is a part and pillar of popery; that by which Antichrist
has spread his baneful influence over many nations: I use the phrase infant-baptism
here and throughout, because of the common use of it; otherwise the practice
which now obtains, may with greater propriety be called infant-sprinkling.
That, unwritten traditions with the Papists are equally the rule of faith
and practice, as the holy Scriptures, will not be doubted of by any conversant
with their writings. The Council of Trent asserts that "Traditions
respecting both faith and manners orally delivered and preserved successfully
in the Catholic church, are to be received with equal affection of piety
and reverence as the books of the Old and New Testaments." (Sess.
4, Decret. de Canon. Script.); yea the Popish writers prefer traditions
to the Scriptures. Bellarmine says, "Scriptures without tradition,
are neither simply necessary, nor sufficient, but unwritten traditions
are necessary. Tradition alone is sufficient, but the Scriptures are not
sufficient." De Verbo Dei., c. 4, sect. I, 6. Another of their
writers asserts, that "The authority of ecclesiastic traditions is
more fit than the scriptures to ascertain anything doubtful, even that
which may be made out from scripture, since the common opinion of the
church and ecclesiastical tradition are clearer, and more open and truly
inflexible; when, on the contrary, the scriptures have frequently much
obscurity in them, and may be drawn here and there like a nose of wax;
and, as a leaden rule, may be applied to every impious opinion."
Pighius apud Rivet. Cathol. Orthodox., Tract 1, p. 99. Bailey the
Jesuit, thus expresses himself, "I will go further and say, we have
as much need of tradition as of scripture, yea more; because the scripture
ministers to us only the dead and mute letter, but tradition, by means
of the ministry of the church, gives us the true sense, which is not had
distinctly in the scripture; wherein, notwithstanding, rather consists
the word of God than in the alone written letter; it is sufficient for
a good Catholic, if he understands it is tradition, nor need he to inquire
after anything else." Apud ib., p. 142.; and by tradition,
they mean not tradition delivered in the Scripture, but distinct from
it and out of it; unwritten tradition, apostolical tradition, as they
frequently call it, not delivered by the apostles in the sacred Scriptures,
but by word of mouth to their successors, or to the churches; that we
may not mistake them. Andradius tells us, "That of necessity those
traditions also must be believed, which can be proved by no testimony
of scripture:" and Petrus a Soto still more plainly and openly affirms:
"It is," says he, "a rule infallible and catholic, that
whatsoever things the church of Rome believeth, holdeth and keepeth, and
are not delivered in the scriptures, the same came by tradition from the
apostles; also all such observations and ceremonies, whose beginning,
author, and original are not known, or cannot be found, out of all doubt
they were delivered by the apostles." (See the Abstracts of the
History of Popery, Part 2, pp. 252,253.) This is what is meant by
apostolic tradition.
Now
the essentials of popery, or the peculiarities of it, are all founded
upon this, even upon apostolic and ecclesiastic tradition; this is the
Pandora from whence they all spring; this is the rule to which all are
brought, and by which they are confirmed; and what is it, be it ever so
foolish, impious and absurd, but what may be proved hereby, if this is
admitted of as a rule and test? It is upon this foot the Papists assert
and maintain the observation of Easter, on the Lord's Day following the
14th of March, the fast of Quadragesima or Lent, the adoration of images
and relics, the invocation of saints, the worship of the sign of the cross,
the sacrifices of the mass, transubstantiation, the abrogation of the
use of the cup in the Lord's Supper, holy water, extreme unction or the
chrism, prayers for the dead, auricular confession, sale of pardons, purgatory,
pilgrimages, monastic vows, etc.
Among
apostolical traditions infant-baptism is to be reckoned, and it is upon
this account it is pleaded for. The first person that asserted infant-baptism
and approved it, represents it as a tradition from the apostles, whether
he be Origen, or his translator and interpolator, Ruffinus; his words
are, "For this (i.e., for original sin) the church has received a
tradition from the apostles, even to give baptism unto infants."
Origin. Comment. in Epist. and Roman., Bk.5, fol. 178. I. Austin,
who was a warm advocate for infant-baptism, puts it upon this footing,
as a custom of the church, not to be despised, and as an apostolic tradition
generally received by the church (De Genef., Bk.l0, c.21, et De
Baptismo Contr. Donat., Bk. 4, c. 23,24); he lived in the fourth century,
the same Ruffinus did; and probably it was from his Latin translation
of Origen, Austin took the hint of infant-baptism being an apostolic tradition,
since no other ecclesiastical writer speaks of it before as such; so that,
as Bishop Taylor observes, "This apostolical tradition is but a testimony
of one person, and he condemned of many errors; so that, as he says, to
derive this from the apostles on no greater authority, is a great argument
that he is credulous and weak, that shall be determined by so weak a probation,
in a matter of so great concernment." (Liberty of Prophesying,
p. 320); and yet it is by this that many are determined in this affair:
and not only Popish writers, as Bellarmine and others make it to be an
apostolical tradition unwritten; but some Protestant-Paedobaptists show
a good will to place infant-baptism among the unwritten sayings and traditions
of Christ or His apostles, and satisfy themselves therewith. Mr. Fuller
says, "We do freely confess that there is neither express precept
nor precedent in the New Testament for the baptizing of infants;"
yet observes that St. John saith, ch. 21:25, "And there are also
many other things, which Jesus did, which are not written; among, which
for ought appears to the contrary, the baptizing of these infants (those
whom Christ took in his arms and blessed) might be one of them."
Infants Advocate, p. 71,150. In like manner, Mr. Walker argues,
"It doth not follow our Savior gave no precept for the baptizing
of infants, because no such precept is particularly expressed in the scripture;
for our Savior spoke many things to his disciples concerning the kingdom
of God, both before his passion, and also after his resurrection, which
are not written in the scriptures; and who can say, but that among those
many unwritten sayings of his, there might be an express precept for infant-baptism?"
Modest Plea, p. 268. And Mr. Leigh, one of the disputants in the
Portsmouth-Disputation, suggests, that though infant-baptism is not to
be found in the writings of the apostle Paul extant in the scriptures,
yet it might be in some writings of his which are lost, and not now extant
(Narrative of the Portsmouth Disputation, p. 16,17,18); all which
is plainly giving up infant-baptism as contained in the sacred writings,
and placing it upon unwritten, apostolical tradition, and that too, conjectural
and uncertain.
Now
infant-baptism, with all the ceremonies attending it, for which also apostolical
tradition is pleaded, makes a very considerable figure in the Popish pageantry;
which according to pretended apostolical tradition, is performed in a
very pompous manner, as by consecration of the water, using sponsors,
who answer to the interrogatories, and make the renunciation in the name
of the infant, exorcisms, exsufflations, crossings, the use of salt, spittle,
and oil. Before the party is baptized, the water is consecrated in a very
solemn manner; the priest makes an exorcism first; three times, he exsufflates
or breathes into the water, in the figure of a cross, saying, "I
adjure thee, O creature of water;" and here he divides the water
after the manner of a cross, and makes three or four crossings; he takes
a horn of oil, and pours it three times upon the water in the likeness
of a cross, and makes a prayer, that the font may be sanctified, and the
eternal trinity be present; saying, "Descend from heaven and sanctify
this water, and give grace and virtue, that he who is baptized according
to the command of thy Christ, may be crucified, and die, and be buried,
and rise again with him." The sponsors, or sureties, instead of the
child, and in its name, recite the creed and the Lord's prayer, make the
renunciation of the devil and all his works, and answer to questions put
in the name of the child: the form, according to the Roman order, is this:
"The name of the infant being called, the presbyter must say, Dost
thou renounce Satan? A. I do renounce; and all his works? A. I do renounce;
and all his pomps? A. I do renounce: three times these questions are put,
and three times the sureties answer." The interrogations are sometimes
said to be made by a priest, sometimes by a presbyter, and sometimes by
an exorcist, who was one or the other, and to which the following question
also was added: "Dost thou believe in God the Father Almighty, creator
of heaven and earth, etc.? A. I believe." Children to be baptized
are first exsufflated or breathed and blown upon and exorcised, that the
wicked spirit might be driven from them, that they might be delivered
from the power of darkness, and translated into the kingdom of Christ:
the Roman order is, "Let him (the minister, priest, deacon or exorcist)
blow into the face of the person to be baptized, three times, saying,
Go out thou unclean spirit, and give place to the Holy Ghost, the Comforter."
The form, according to St. Gregory, is, "I exorcise thee, 0 unclean
spirit, in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost,
that thou go out and depart from this servant of God." Salt also
is put into the mouth of the infant, after it is blessed and exorcised,
as a token of its being seasoned with the salt of wisdom; and that it
might be preserved from the corruption and ill savor of sin: the priest
first blesses the salt after this manner: "I exorcise thee, O creature
of salt; and then being blessed, it is put into the mouth of the infant
saying, Receive the salt of wisdom unto life everlasting." The nose
and ears of infants at their baptism are touched with spittle by the priest,
that they may receive the savor of the knowledge of God, and their ears
be opened to hear the commands of God; and formerly spittle was put upon
the eyes and upon the tongue, though it seems now disused as to those
parts; and yet no longer than the birth of King James the First, it seems
to have been in use; since at his baptism his mother sent word to the
archbishop to forbear the use of the spittle, saying, "She would
not have a pocky priest to spit in her child's mouth," (Abstract
of the History of Popery, Part 1, p. 114); for it seems the queen
knew that the archbishop, who was Hamilton, Archbishop of St. Andrews,
then had the venereal disease (Vid. Rivet. Animadv. in Grot. Annotat.
in Cassander. Consultat., p. 72). And so in the times of the martyrs
in Queen Mary's days; for Robert Smith, the martyr, being asked by Bonner,
in what point do we dissent from the word of God? meaning as to baptism;
he answered, "First, in hallowing your water in conjuring of the
same, in baptizing children with anointing and spitting their mouths,
mingled with salt, and ma other lewd ceremonies, of which not 0 point
is able to be proved in God's word." Fox's Acts and Monuments,
Vol. 3, p. 400) All which he calls a mingle mangle. Chrism, or anointing
both before and after baptism, is another ceremony used at it; the parts
anointed are the breast a shoulders; the breast, that no remains the latent
enemy may reside in the pan baptized; and the shoulders, that he may be
fortified and strengthened to do go( works to the glory of God: this anointing
is made in the form of a cross; the oil I put on the breast and beneath
the shoulders, making a cross with the thumb; on making the cross on the
shoulders, the priest says, "Flee, thou unclean spirit give honor
to the living and true God; and when he makes it on the breast, h says,
"Go out, thou unclean spirit, give place to the Holy Ghost:"
the form used in doing it is "I anoint thee with the oil of salvation,
that thou mayest have life everlasting." The next ceremony is that
of signing the infant with the sign of the cross: this is made in several
parts of the body, especially on the forehead, to signify that the party
baptized should not be ashamed of the cross of Christ, and not be afraid
of the enemy Satan, but manfully fight against him. After baptism, in
ancient times, honey and milk, or wine and milk, were given to the baptized,
though now disused; and infants were admitted to the Lord's Supper, which
continued some hundreds of years in the Latin church, and still does in
the Greek church. Now for the proof of the use of these various ceremonies,
the reader may consult Joseph Vicecomes, a learned Papist as Dr. Wall
calls him, in his Treatise de Antiguis Baptismi Ritibus ac Ceremoniis,
where and by whom they are largely treated of, and the proofs of them
given. All which are rehearsed and condemned by the ancient Waldenses
in a treatise of theirs, written in the year 1120 (See Morland's History
of the Churches of Piedmont, p. 173). It may be asked to what purpose
is this account given of the ceremonies used by Papists in the administration
of baptism to infants by them, since they are not used by protestant-paedobaptists?
I answer, it is to show what I proposed, namely, what a figure infant-baptism,
with these attending ceremonies, makes in popery, and may with propriety
be called a part of it; besides though all these ceremonies are not used,
yet some of them are used in some protestant-paedobaptist churches, as
sureties, the interrogations made to them, and their answers in the name
of infants; the renunciation of the devil and all his works, and signing
with the sign of the cross; and since these and the others, all of them
claim apostolic authority, and most, if not all of them, have as good
and as early a claim to it as infant-baptism itself; those who admit that
upon this foot, ought to admit these ceremonies also. See a treatise of
mine, called The Argument from Apostolic Tradition in Favor of Infant-baptism
Considered. Most of the above ceremonies are mentioned by Basil, who
lived in the 4th century, and as then in use, and which were had from
apostolic tradition as said, and not from the scriptures; and says he,
"Because this is first and most common, I will mention it in the
first place, as that we sign with the sign of the cross; - - - Who has
taught this in Scripture?- - - We consecrate the water of baptism and
the oil of unction as well as him who receives baptism; from what scriptures?
Is it not from private and secret tradition? Moreover the anointing with
oil, what passage in scripture teaches this? Now a man is thrice immersed,
from whence is it derived or delivered? Also the rest of what is done
in baptism, as to renounce Satan and his angels, from what scripture have
we it? Is not this from private and secret tradition?" De Spiritu
Sancto, c. 27. And so Austin speaks of exorcisms and exsufflations
used in baptism, as of ancient tradition, and of universal use in the
church (De Peccat. Orig., Bk. 2, c. 40; De Nupt. & Concup
, Bk. 1, c. 20 and Bk. 2. 18). Now whoever receives infant-baptism on
the foot of apostolic tradition, ought to receive those also, since they
stand upon as good a foundation a that does.
The
Papists attribute the rise of several of the above ceremonies to their
popes, as sponsors, chrisms, exorcisms etc., though perhaps they were
not quite so early as they imagine, yet very early they were; and infant-baptism
itself, though two or three doctors of the church had asserted and espoused
it, yet it was not determined in any council until the Milevitan Council
in 418, or thereabouts, a provincial of Africa, in which was a canon made
for Paedobaptism and never till then: So says Bishop Taylor (Liberty
Of Prophesying, p.320,321), with whom Grotius (Comment. on Matt.
xix.14) agrees, who calls it the Council of Carthage; and who says
in the councils no earlier mention is made of infant-baptism than in that
council; the canons of which were sent to Pope Innocent the First (Vid.
Centuriat. Magdeburg. cent. 5, c. 9, p. 468, 473; and Epist. August.
Ep., 92,93), and confirmed by him: And Austin, who must write his
book against the Donatists before this time, though he says the church
always held it (infant-baptism) and that it is most rightly believed to
be delivered by apostolic tradition (De Baptismo Contra Donatist.,
Bk. 4, c. 24); yet observes that it was not instituted, or determined
and settled in or by councils; that is, as yet it was not, though it afterwards
was in the above council confirmed by the said pope; in which council
Austin himself presided, and in which is this canon, "Also it is
our pleasure, that whoever denies that new-born infants are to be baptized,
let him be anathema," and which is the first council that established
infant-baptism, and anathematized those that denied it; so that it may
justly be called a part of popery: besides baptism by immersion, which
continued 1300 years in the Latin church, excepting in the case of the
Clinicks, and still does in the Greek church, was first changed into sprinkling
by the Papists; which is not an indifferent thing, whether performed with
much or a little water, as it is usually considered; but is of the very
essence of baptism, is that itself, and without which it is not baptism;
it being as Sir John Floyer says, no circumstance, but the very act of
baptizing (Essay to Restore Dipping, etc., p. 44); who observes
that aspersion, or sprinkling, was brought into the church by the Popish
schoolmen (Ibid., p. 58), and our dissenters, adds he, had it from them;
the schoolmen employed their thoughts how to find out reasons for the
alteration to sprinkling, brought it into use in the 12th century: and
it must be observed, to the honor of the Church of England, that they
have not established sprinkling in baptism to this day; only have permitted
pouring in case it is certified the child is weakly and not able to bear
dipping; otherwise, by the Rubric, the priest is ordered to dip the child
warily: sprinkling received only a Presbyterian sanction in times of the
civil war, by the Assembly of Divines; where it was carried for sprinkling
against dipping by one vote only, by 25 against 24, and then established
by an ordinance of Parliament, 1644 (Essay to Restore Dipping etc.,
p. 12, 32): and that this change has its rise from the authority of the
Pope, Dr. Wall (History of Infant-Baptism, Part 2., p. 477) himself
acknowledges, and that the sprinkling of infants is from popery "All
the nations of Christians," says he, "that do now, or formerly
did, submit to the authority of the Bishop of Rome do ordinarily baptize
their infants by pouring or sprinkling; and though the English received
not this custom till after the decay of Popery, yet they have since received
it from such neighbor-nations as had began it in the times of the pope's
power; but all other Christians in the world, who never owned the pope's
usurped power, do, and ever did, dip their infants in their ordinary use;"
so that infant-baptism, both with respect to subjects and mode, may with
great propriety be called a part and branch of popery.
But
it is not only a part of popery, and so serves to strengthen it, as a
part does the whole; but it is a pillar of it, what serves greatly to
support it; and which furnishes the Papists with one of the strongest
arguments against the Protestants in favor of their traditions, on which,
as we have seen, the essentials of popery are founded, and of the authority
of the church to alter the rites of divine worship: they sadly embarrass
Paedobaptist protestants with the affair of infant-baptism, and urge them
either to prove it by scripture, both with respect to mode and subjects,
or allow of unscriptural traditions and the authority of the church, or
give it up; and if they can allow of unwritten traditions, and the custom
and practice of the church, as of authority in one point, why not in others?
This way of arguing, as Mr. Stennet (Answers to Ruffen, p. 173,
etc.) observes, is used by Cardinal Du Perron, in his reply to the answer
of King James the First, and by Mr. John Ainsworth, against Mr. Henry
Ainsworth, in the dispute between them, and by Fisher the Jesuit, against
Archbishop Laud; a late instance of this kind, he adds, we have in the
controversy between Monsieur Bossuet, Bishop of Meaux, and a learned anonymous
writer, said to be Monsieur de la Roque, late pastor of the reformed church
at Roan in Normandy. The Bishop, in order to defend the withholding the
cup in the Lord's Supper from the laity, according to the authority of
the church, urged that infant-baptism, both as to mode and subject, was
unscriptural, and solely by the authority of tradition and custom, with
which the pretended Reformed complied, and therefore why not in the other
case; which produced this ingenuous confession from his antagonist, that
to baptize by sprinkling was certainly an abuse derived from the Romish
church, without due examination, as well as many other things, which he
and his brethren were resolved to correct, and thanked the bishop for
undeceiving them; and freely confessed, that as to the baptism of infants,
there is nothing formal or express in the gospel to justify the necessity
of it; and that the passages produced do at most only prove that it is
permitted, or rather, that it is not forbidden to baptize them. In the
times of King Charles the Second, lived Mr. Jeremiah Ives, a Baptist minister,
famous for his talent at disputation, of whom the king having heard, sent
for him to dispute with a Romish priest; the which he did before the king
and many others, in the habit of a clergyman: Mr. Ives pressed the priest
closely, showing the whatever antiquity they pretended to, their doctrine
and practices could by no means be proved apostolic; since they are not
to be found in any writings which remain of the apostolic age; the priest,
after much wrangling, in the end replied, that this argument of Mr. Ives
was as of much force against infant-baptism, as against the doctrines
and ceremonies of the church of Rome: to which Mr. Ives answered, that
he readily granted what he said to be true; the priest upon this broke
up the dispute, saying, he had been cheated, and that he would proceed
no further; for he came to dispute with a clergyman of the established
church, and it was now evident that this was an Anabaptist preacher. This
behavior of the priest afforded his majesty and all present not a little
diversion (Crosby's History of the Baptists, vol. 4, pp. 247,248):
and as Protestant Paedobaptists are urged by this argument to admit the
unwritten traditions of the Papists; so dissenters of the Paedobaptist
persuasion are pressed upon the same footing by those of the Church of
England to comply with the ceremonies of that church, retained from the
church of Rome, particularly by Dr. Whitby; who having pleaded for some
condescension to be made to dissenters, in order to reconcile them to
the church, adds: "and on the other hand, says he, if notwithstanding
the evidence produced, that baptism by immersion, is suitable both to
the institution of our Lord and his apostles; and was by them ordained
to represent our burial with Christ, and so our dying unto sin, and our
conformity to his resurrection by newness of life; as the apostle doth
clearly maintain the meaning of that rite: I say, if notwithstanding this,
all our dissenters (i.e., who are Paedobaptists, he must mean) do agree
to sprinkle the baptized infant; why may they not as well submit to the
significant ceremonies imposed by our church? for, since it is as lawful
to add unto Christ's institutions a significant ceremony, as to diminish
a significant ceremony, which he or his apostles instituted; and use another
in its stead, which they never did institute; what reason can they have
to do the latter, and yet refuse submission to the former? and why should
not the peace and union of the church be as prevailing with them, to perform
the one, as is their mercy to the infant's body to neglect the other?"
Protestant Reconciler, p. 289. Thus infant-baptism is used as the
grand plea for compliance with the ceremonies both of the church of Rome
and of the church of England.
I have
added in the preface referred to, where stands the above clause, that
infant-baptism is "that by which Antichrist has spread his baneful
influence over many nations;" which is abundantly evident, since
by the christening of children through baptism, introduced by him, he
has made whole countries and nations Christians, and has christened them
by the name of christendom; and thereby has enlarged his universal church,
over which he claims an absolute power and authority, as being Christ3s
vicar on earth; and by the same means he retains his influence over nations,
and keeps them in awe and in obedience to him; asserting that by their
baptism they are brought into the pale of the church, in which there is
salvation, and out of which there none; if therefore they renounce their
baptism, received in infancy, or apostatize from the church, their damnation
is inevitable; and thus by his menaces and anathemas, he holds the nations
in subjection to him: and when they at any time have courage to oppose
him, and act in disobedience to his supreme authority, he immediately
lays a whole nation under interdict; by which are prohibited, the administration
of the sacraments, all public prayers, burials, christenings, etc., church-doors
are locked up, the clergy dare not or will not administer any offices
of their function to any, but such as for large sums of money obtain special
privileges from Rome for that purpose (Abstract of the History of Popery,
Part 1, p. 463. See Fox's Acts and Monuments, Vol. 1, p. 326.):
now by means of these prohibitions, and particularly of christening or
baptizing children, nations are obliged to comply and yield obedience
to the bishop of Rome; for it appears most dreadful to parents, that their
children should be deprived of baptism, by which they are made Christians,
as they are taught to believe, and without which there is no hope of salvation;
and therefore are influenced to give-in to anything for the sake of what
is thought so very important. Once more, the baneful influence spread
by Antichrist over the nations by infant-baptism, is that poisonous notion
infused by him, that sacraments, particularly baptism, confer grace ex
opere operato, by the work done; that it takes away sin, regenerates men,
and saves their souls; this is charged upon him, and complained of by
the ancient Waldenses in a tract of theirs, written in the year 1120,
where speaking of the works of Antichrist, they say, "the third work
of Antichrist consists in this, that he attributes the regeneration of
the Holy Spirit unto the dead, outward work, baptizing children in that
faith, and teaching that thereby baptism and regeneration must be had;
and therein he confers and bestows orders and other sacraments, and groundeth
therein all his Christianity, which is against the Holy Spirit,"
(Apud Morland's History of the Churches of Piedmont, p. 148): and
which popish notion is argued against and exposed by Robert the martyr
(Fox's Acts and Monuments, v. 3, p. 400); on Bonner's saying "if
they (infants) die, before they are baptized, they be damned;" he
asked this question, "I pray you, my lord, shew me, are we saved
by water or by Christ?" to which Bonner replied, "by both;"
"then," said Smith, "the water died for our sins, and so
must ye say, that the water hath life, and it being our servant, and created
for us, is our Savior; this my lord is a good doctrine, is it not?"
and this pernicious notion still continues, this old leaven yet remains
even in some Protestant churches, who have retained it from Rome; hence
a child when baptized is declared to be regenerate; and it is taught,
when capable of being catechized to say, that in its baptism it was made
a child of God, a member of Christ, and an inheritor of the kingdom of
heaven, which has a tendency to take off all concern, in persons when
grown up, about an inward work of grace, in regeneration and sanctification,
as a meetness for heaven, and to encourage a presumption in them, notwithstanding
their apparent want of grace, that they are members of Christ, and shall
never perish; are children and heirs of God, and shall certainly inherit
eternal life. Wherefore Dr. [John] Owen rightly observes "That the
father of lies himself could not easily have devised a doctrine more pernicious,
or what proposes a more present and effectual poison to the minds of sinners
to be drank in by them." Theologoumena, Bk. 6, c. 3, p. 477.
II.
The second article or proposition in the preface is, as asserted by me,
that infant-baptism "is the basis of national churches and worldly
establishments; that which unites the church and world, and keeps them
together;" than which nothing is more evident: if a church is national,
it consists of all in the nation, men, women, and children; and children
are originally members of it, either so by birth, and as soon as born,
being born in the church, in a Christian land and nation, which is the
church, or rather by baptism, as it is generally put; so according to
the order of the Church of England, at the baptism of a child, the minister
says, "We receive this child into the congregation of Christ's flock."
And by the Assembly of Divines, "Baptism is called a sacrament of
the New Testament, whereby the parties baptized are solemnly admitted
into the visible church." And to which there is a strange contradiction
in the following answer, where it is said, that "baptism is not to
be administered to any that are out of the visible church;" but if
by baptism the parties baptized are solemnly admitted into the visible
church, then before baptism by which they are admitted, they must be out
of it: one or other must be wrong; either persons are not admitted into
the visible church by baptism, or if they are, then before baptism they
are out of it, and have baptism administered to them in order to their
being admitted into it; and Calvin says, according to whose plan of church-government
at Geneva, that of the Scotch church is planned, that baptism is a solemn
introduction to the church of God (Epist. Calvin. Ep. ad. N.S.D., p. 441).
And Mr. Baxter argues, that "if there be neither precept nor example
of admitting church-members in all the New Testament but by baptism; then
all that are now admitted ought to come in by baptism; but there is neither
precept nor example in all the New Testament of admitting church members
but by baptism; therefore they ought to come in the same way now."
So then infants becoming members of a national church by baptism, they
are originally of it; are the materials of which it consists; and it is
by the baptism of infants it is supplied with members, and is supported
and maintained; so that it may be truly said, that infant-baptism is the
basis and foundation of a national church, and is indeed the sinews, strength,
and support of it: and infants being admitted members by baptism continue
such when grown up, even though of the most dissolute lives and conversations,
as multitudes of them are; and many, instead of being treated as church
members, deserve to be sent to the house of correction, as some are, and
others are guilty of such flagitious crimes that they die an infamous
death; yet even these die in the communion of the church; and thus the
church and the world are united and kept together till death doth them
part.
The
Independents would indeed separate the church and the world according
to their principles; but cannot do it, being fettered and hampered with
infant-church-membership and baptism, about which they are at a loss and
disagreed on what to place it; some place it on infants' interest in the
covenant of grace; and here they sadly contradict themselves or one another;
at one time they say it is interest in the covenant of grace gives infants
a right to baptism, and at another time, that it is by baptism they are
brought and entered into the covenant; and sometimes it is not in the
inward part of the covenant they are interested, only in the external
part of it, where hypocrites and graceless persons may be; but what that
external part is no mortal can tell: others not being satisfied that their
infant-seed as such are all interested in the covenant of grace, say,
it is not that, but the church-covenant that godly parents enter into,
which gives their children with them a right to church membership and
baptism: children in their minority, it is said, covenant with their parents,
and so become church members, and this entitles them to baptism (Disputation
Concerning Church-members and Their Children at Boston, p. 12,13;
Hooker's Survey of Church-discipline, part 3, p. 24,25); for according
to the old Independents of New England, none but members of a visible
church were to be baptized (Cotton's Way of the Churches in New England,
p 81; Boston-Disputation, p. 4; Defense of the Nine Propositions,
p. 115); though Dr. [Thomas] Goodwin is of a different mind (Government
of the Churches of Christ, p. 377): hence only such as were children
of members of churches, even of set members (Defense of the Nine Propositions,
p. 69), as they call them, were admitted, though of godly and approved
Christians; and though they may have been members, yet if excommunicated,
their children born in the time of their excommunication might not be
baptized (Cotton's Way, p. 85; BostonDisp., p. 25; Hooker's
Survey, part 3, p. 18); but those children that are admitted members
and baptized, though not confirmed members, as they style them, till they
profess faith and repentance (Cotton's Holiness of Church-members,
p. 19; Boston - Disp., p. 3); yet during their minority, which
reaches till they are more than thirteen years of age, according to the
example of Ishmael, and till about sixteen years of age, they are real
members to such intents and purposes, as, that if their parents are dismissed
to other churches, their children ought to be put into the letter of dismission
with them (Ibid., p. 15); and whilst their minority continues, are under
church-watch, and subject to the reprehensions, admonitions, and censures
thereof for their healing and amendment (Cambridge-Platform of Church-Government,
p. 18) as need shall require; though with respect to public rebuke, admonition,
and excommunication, children in their minority are not subject to church
discipline, only to such as is by way of spiritual watch and private rebuke
(Boston-Disp., p. 14). The original Independents, by the covenant-seed,
who have a right to church membership and baptism, thought only the seed
of immediate parents in church-covenant are meant, and not of progenitors
(Boston-Disp., p. 19). Mr. Cotton says (Cotton's Way of the
Churches, p. 81) infants cannot claim right unto baptism but in the
right of one of their parents or both; where neither of the parents can
claim right to the Lord's Supper, there their infants cannot claim right
to baptism;" though he afterwards says (Ibid., p. 115) it may be
considered, whether the children may not be baptized, where either the
grandfather or grandmother have made profession of their faith and repentance
before the church, and are still living to undertake for the Christian
education of the child (Of this see Epist. Calvin Ep. Farello,
p. 175 and Salden. Otia, Theolog. Exercitat. 7, sect. 21, p. 544);
or if these fail, what hinders but that if the parents will resign their
infant to be educated in the house of any godly member of the church,
the child may be lawfully baptized in the right of its household-governor.
But Mr. Hooker, as he asserts, that children as children have no right
to baptism, so it belongs not to any predecessors, either nearer or farther
off removed from the next parents to give right of this privilege to their
children; by which predecessors, he says, he includes and comprehends
all besides the next parent; grandfather, great grandfather, etc. (Survey
of Church-Discipline, part 3, p. 13). So the ministers and messengers
of the congregational churches that met at the Savoy declare "that
not only those that do actually profess faith in, and obedience unto Christ,
but also the infants of one or both believing parents are to be baptized,
and those only" (Declaration of the Faith and Order, etc.,
c. 29, p. 48): and the commissioners for the review of the Common Prayer,
in the beginning of the reign of King Charles the Second; those of the
Presbyterian persuasion moved on the behalf of others, that "there
being divers learned, pious, and peaceable ministers, who not only judge
it unlawful to baptize children whose parents both of them are Atheists,
Infidels, Heretics, or unbaptized; but also such whose parents are excommunicate
persons, fornicators, or otherwise notorious and scandalous sinners; we
desire, say they, they may not be enforced to baptize the children of
such, until they have made open profession of their repentance before
baptism." (Proceedings of the Commissioners of Both Persuasions,
etc., p. 22): but now I do not understand, that the present generation
of dissenters of this denomination, adhere to the principles and practices
of their predecessors, at least very few of them; but admit to baptism,
not only the children of members of their churches, but of those who are
not members, only hearers, or that apply to them for the baptism of their
infants, whether gracious or graceless persons: and were only the first
sort admitted, children of members, what are they? No better than others,
born in sin, born of the flesh, carnal and corrupt, are of the world,
notwithstanding their birth of religious persons, until they are called
out of it by the effectual grace of God; and as they grow up, appear to
be of the world as others, and have their conversation according to the
course of it; and many of them are dissolute in their lives, and scandalous
in their conversation; and yet I do not understand, that any notice is
taken of them in a church-way, as to be admonished, censured, and excommunicated;
but they retain their membership, into which they were taken in their
infancy, and continue in it to the day of their death: and if this is
not uniting and keeping the world and church together, I know not what
is.
Moreover
all the arguments that are made use of to prove the church of Christ under
the gospel-dispensation to be congregational, and against a national church,
are all destroyed by the baptism and membership of infants. It is said
in favor of the one, and against the other, that the members of a visible
church are saints by calling, such, as in charitable discretion may be
accounted so (Cotton's Way of the Churches, etc., p. 56); but are
infants who are admitted to membership and baptized, such? The holiness
pleaded for as belonging to them, is only a federal holiness, and that
is merely chimerical: are they called to be saints, or saints by effectual
calling? Can they in charitable discretion, or in rational charity be
thought to be truly and really holy, or saints, as the churches of the
New Testament are said to be? and if they cannot in a judgment of charity,
be accounted real saints, and yet are admitted members of churches, why
not others, of whom it cannot be charitably thought, that they are real
saints? Besides, it is said by the Independents, "that members of
gospel churches are saints by calling, visibly manifesting and evidencing
by their profession and walk their obedience to that call; who are further
known to each other by their confession of faith wrought in them by the
power of God; and do willingly consent to walk together according to the
appointment of Christ, giving up themselves to the Lord and to one another
by the will of God, in professed subjection to the ordinances of the gospel"
(Savoy Declaration, etc., p. 57): now are infants such? Do they
manifest and evidence by a profession and walk their obedience to a divine
call? And if they do not, and yet are admitted members, why not others,
who give no more evidence than they do? Do they make a confession of faith
wrought in them? Does it appear that they have such a faith? and in a
confession made, and so made as to be known by fellow-members? and if
not, and yet received and owned as members, why not others that make no
more confession of faith than they do? Do infants consent to walk with
the church of Christ, and give up themselves to the Lord and one another,
and profess to be subject to the ordinances of the gospel? and if they
do not, as most certainly they do not, and yet are members, why may not
others by also members on the same footing? It is objected to a national
church, that persons of the worst of characters are members of it; and
by this means the church is filled with men very disreputable and scandalous
in their lives? and is not this true of infant members admitted in their
infancy, who when grown up are very wicked and immoral, and yet their
membership continues? and why not then national churches be admitted of,
notwithstanding the above objection? So that upon whole, I think, I have
good reason to say, "that there cannot be a full separation of the
one from the other, that is, of the church from the world, nor a thorough
reformation in religion, until it (infant-baptism) is wholly removed."
III.
In the said preface, I express my firm belief of the entire cessation
of infant-baptism, in time to come: my words are, "though it (infant
baptist) has so long and largely obtained (as it has from the 4th century
till now, and over the greater part who have since borne the Christian
name) and still does obtain; I believe with a firm and unshaken faith,
that the time is hastening on, when infant-baptism will be no more practiced
in the world," I mean in the spiritual reign of Christ; for in His
personal reign there will be no ordinances, nor the administration of
them; and this is explained by what I farther say, "when churches
will be formed on the same plan they were in the times of the apostles;
when gospel-doctrine and discipline will be restored to their primitive
purity and lustre; when the ordinances of baptism and the Lord's Supper
will be administered as they were first delivered; all which will be accomplished,
when 'the Lord shall be king over all the earth, and there shall be one
Lord and his name one;'" that is, when there shall be one Lord, one
faith, and one baptism, acknowledged by all Christians; and they will
be all of one mind with respect to the doctrines and ordinances of the
gospel. And as it becomes every man to give a reason of the faith and
hope he has concerning divine things, with meekness and fear; the reasons
of my firm belief, that infant-baptism will be no more practiced in the
latter day and spiritual reign of Christ, are, some of them suggested
in the above paragraph, and others may be added, as
FIRST,
Because churches in the time referred to, will be formed on the plan churches
were in the time of the apostles; that this will be the case, see the
prophecies in Is. 1:25,26; Jer. 30:18,20; Rev. 11:19. Now the apostolic
churches consisted only of baptized believers, or of such who were baptized
upon profession of their faith; the members of the first Christian church,
which was at Jerusalem, were first baptized upon their conversion, and
then added to it; the next Christian church at Samaria, consisted of men
and women baptized on believing the gospel, preached by Philip; and the
church at Corinth, of such who hearing, believed and were baptized; and
on the same plan were formed the churches at Rome, Philippi, Colosse,
and others; nor is there one single instance of infant-baptism and of
infant-church-membership in them; wherefore if churches in the latter
day will be on the same plan, then infant-baptism will be no more practiced.
SECONDLY,
Because, then the ordinances of the gospel will be administered, as they
were first delivered, clear of all present corruption and superstition;
this is what is meant by the temple of God being opened in heaven, on
the sounding of the seventh trumpet (Rev. 11:19 and 15:5), which respects
the restoration of worship, discipline, doctrines and ordinances, to the
free use of them, and to their original purity; when, as the ordinance
of the Lord's Supper will be administered clear of all corruptions and
ceremonies introduced by Papists and retained by Protestants; so likewise
the ordinance of baptism both with respect to subject and mode, which
as it was first delivered was only administered to persons professing
faith and repentance, and that by immersion only; and if this will be
universally administered as in the latter day, as in first ages of Christianity,
infant sprinkling will be practiced no more.
THIRDLY,
Because Christ will then be king over all the earth in a spiritual sense;
one Lord, whose commands will be obeyed with great precision and exactness,
according to His will revealed in His Word; and as baptism is one of His
commands He has prescribed, as He is and will be acknowledged the one
Lord and head of the church, and not the pope, who will be no more submitted
to; so there will be one baptism, which will be administered to one sort
of subjects only, as He has directed, and in one manner only, by immersion,
of which His baptism is an example; and therefore, I believe that infant
sprinkling will be no more in use.
FOURTHLY,
At this same time the name of Christ will be one, that is, His religion;
which will be the same, it was at first instituted by Him. Now it is various,
as it is professed and practiced by different persons that bear His name;
but in the latter day, it will be one and the same, in all its branches,
as embraced, professed, and exercised by all that are called Christians;
and as baptism is one part of it, this will be practiced in a uniform
manner, or by all alike, that shall name the name of Christ; for since
Christ's name or the Christian religion in all its parts, will be the
same in all the professors of it; I therefore firmly believe, that baptism
will be practiced alike by all, according to the primitive institution,
and consequently, that infant baptism will be no more: for
FIFTHLY,
As at this time, the watchmen will see eye to eye (Is. 52:8), the ministers
of the gospel will be of one mind, both with respect to the doctrines
and duties of Christianity; will alike preach the one, and practice the
other; so the people under their ministrations will be all agreed, and
receive the truths of the gospel in the love of them, and submit to the
precepts and institutions of it, without any difference among themselves,
and without any variation from the word of God; and among the rest, the
ordinance of baptism, about which there will be no longer strife; but
all will agree, that the proper subjects of it are believers, and the
right mode of it immersion; and so infant-sprinkling will be no more contended
for; saints in this as in other things will serve the Lord with one consent
(Zeph. 3:9).
SIXTHLY,
Another reason why I firmly believe, infant-baptism will hereafter be
no more practiced, is, because Antichrist will be entirely consumed with
the spirit or breath of Christ's mouth, and with the brightness of His
coming (2 Thess. 2:8), that is, with the pure and powerful preaching of
His word, at His coming to take to Himself His power, and reign spiritually
in the churches, in a more glorious manner; when all Antichristian doctrines
and practices will be entirely abolished and cease, even the whole body
of Antichristian worship; not a limb of Antichrist shall remain, but all
shall be consumed. Now as I believe, and it has been shown, that infant-baptism
is a part and pillar of popery, a limb of Antichrist, a branch of superstition
and willworship, introduced by the man of sin, when he shall be destroyed,
this shall be destroyed with him and be no more.
SEVENTHLY,
Though the notion of infant-baptism has been embraced and practiced by
many good and godly men in several ages; yet it is part of the wood, hay
and stubble, laid by them upon the foundation; is one of those works of
theirs, the bright day of the gospel shall declare to be a falsehood;
and which the fire of the word will try, burn up, and consume, though
they themselves shall be saved; and therefore being utterly consumed,
shall no more appear in the world: for
EIGHTHLY,
When the angel shall descend from heaven with great power, and the earth
be lightened with his glory, which will be at the fall of Babylon and
ruin of Antichrist (Rev. 18:1,2), such will be the blaze of light then
given, that all Antichristian darkness shall be removed, and all works
of darkness will be made manifest and cast off, among which infant-baptism
is one; and then the earth will be full of the knowledge of the Lord as
the waters cover the sea (Is. 11:9), even of the knowledge of the word,
ways, worship, truths, and ordinances of God, and all ignorance of them
vanish and disappear; and then the ordinance of baptism will appear in
its former lustre and purity, and be embraced and submitted to in it;
and every corruption of it be rejected, of which infant-baptism is one.
NINETHLY,
Whereas the ordinances of the gospel, baptism and the Lord's Supper, are
to continue until the second coming of Christ, or the end of the world
(Matt. 28:19,20; 1 Cor. 11:26), and whereas there have been corruptions
introduced into them, as they are generally administered, unless among
some few; it is not reasonable to think, that those corruptions will be
continued to the second coming of Christ, but that they will be removed
before, even at His spiritual coming, or in His spiritual reign: and as
with respect to baptism particularly, there must be a mistake on one side
or the other, both with respect to subject and mode; and as this mistake
I firmly believe is on the side of the Paedobaptists; so, I as firmly
believe for the reason given, that it will be removed, and infant-sprinkling
for the future no more used.
TENTHLY,
the Philadelphian church-state, which answers to and includes the spiritual
reign of Christ in His churches, is what I refer unto in the preface,
as the time when the practice of infant-baptism will cease; in which I
am confirmed, by the characters given of that church and the members of
it; as that it kept the word of Christ; that is, not only the doctrines
of the gospel, which will be then purely preached and openly professed,
but the ordinances of it, baptism and the Lord's Supper; which have been
(particularly baptism) sadly corrupted in almost all the periods of the
churches hitherto, excepting the apostolic one; but will in this period
be restored to their pristine purity and glory; hence it is promised to
this church, and that it represents, that because it kept the word of
Christ's patience, truly and faithfully, it should be kept from the hour
of temptation that should come on all the earth; and is exhorted to hold
fast what she had, both the doctrines and ordinances, as they were delivered
by Christ and His apostles, and as she now held them in the truth and
purity of them. These are the reasons why I believe with a firm and unshaken
faith, that the time is coming, and I hope will not be long, when infant-baptism
will be no more practiced in the world.
Since,
now at this time, we are greatly and justly alarmed with the increase
of popery; in order to put a stop to it, let us begin at home, and endeavor
to remove all remains of it among ourselves; so shall we with the better
grace, and it may be hoped, with greater success oppose and hinder the
spread of it.
POSTSCRIPT
The
writer who lately appeared in a newspaper, under the name of Candidus,
having been obliged to quit his mountebank-stage on which he held forth
to the public for a few days; has, in his great humility, condescended
to deal out his packets, in a less popular way; under the title of, The
True Scripture-Doctrine of the Mode and Subjects of Christian Baptism,
etc., in six letters. It is quite unreasonable that we should be put,
by every impertinent scribbler, to the drudgery of answering, what has
been answered over and over again in this controversy. However I shall
make short work of this writer, and therefore I have only put him to,
and shall only give him a little gentle correction at the cart's tail,
to use the phrase of a late, learned professor, in one of our universities,
with respect to the discipline of a certain Bishop.
The
first and second letters of Candidus, in the newspaper, are answered in
marginal notes on my sermon upon baptism, and published along with it.
His third letter is a mean piece of buffoonery and scurrility; it begins
with a trite, vulgar proverb, in low language, fit only for the mouth
of a hostler or a carman; and his friends seem to have spoiled one or
other of these, by making him a parson. He goes on throughout the whole
of the letter, as one that is in great haste, running after his wits,
to seek for them, having lost them, if ever he had any; and it concludes
with a poor, pitiful, foolish burlesque mixed with slander and falsehood,
on an innocent gentleman; quite a stranger to him, and could never have
offended him, but by a conscientious regard to what he believed was his
duty. However, by this base and inhumane treatment, it appears that his
moral character is unimpeachable, or otherwise it would have been nibbled
at. His fourth letter begins with representing the sermon published, as
so mangled, changed, altered and added to, that it has scarce any remains
of its original; in which he must be condemned by all that heard it: and
he has most unluckily charged one clause as an addition, which, there
cannot be one in ten but will remember it; it is this, "if any man
can find any others in his (the jailer's) house, besides all that were
in it, he must be reckoned a very sagacious person;" and he himself,
in his first letter published before the sermon was, has an oblique glance
at it; calling me, in a sneering way, "the sagacious doctor."
What he says in the following part of the letter, concerning the subjects
of baptism, and what he intended to say concerning the mode in another
letter, which was prevented, I suppose are contained in a set of letters
now published; and which are addressed, not to Mr. Printer, who cast him
off, but to a candid Antipaedobaptist, and indeed the epithet of candid
better agrees with that sort of people than with himself, of which he
seems conscious, if he has any conscience at all; for it looks as if he
had not, or he could never have set out with such a most notorious untruth,
and impudent falsehood; affirming that I said in my sermon, that "the
ten commandments, styled the moral law, were not binding on Christ's disciples:"
a greater untruth could not well have been told: my writings in general
testify the contrary, and particularly two sermons I have published, one
called "The Law Established by the Gospel," and the other, "The
Law in the Hand of Christ;" which are sufficient to justify me from
such a wicked calumny; and the paragraph with which my sermon begins,
attacked by him, and which I declare, are the words I delivered in the
pulpit, that "the ten commandments, are the commands of God, and
to be observed by Christians under the present dispensation;" for
which I quoted 1 Cor. 9:21, this I say, must stare him in the face, and
awaken his guilty conscience, if not seared as with a red hot iron; which
I fear is his case. As for his flings at eternal justification, which
he has lugged into this controversy, and his grand concluding and common
argument against it, that it is eternal nonsense, I despise; he has not
a head for that controversy: and I would only put him in mind of what
Dr. [John] Owen said to [Richard] Baxter, who' charged him with holding
it, "What would the man have me say? I have told him, I am not of
that opinion; would he have me sware to it, that I am not? but though
I am not, I know better and wiser men than myself that do
hold it."
Somebody
in the newspaper observing that this man was froward and perverse, and
fearing he should do hurt to religion in general, in order to divert him
from it, and guide him another way; complimented him with being a man
of wit, and of abilities; and the vain young man fancies he really is
one: and being a witty youth, and of abilities, he has been able to produce
an instance of infant-baptism about 1500 years before Christian baptism
was instituted; though he must not have the sole credit of it, because
it has been observed before him: the instance is of the passage of the
Israelites through the sea, at which time, he says, their children were
baptized, as well as they: come then, says he, in very polite language,
this is one scripture-instance; but if he had had his wits about him,
he might have improved this instance, and strengthened his argument a
little more; by observing that there was a mixed multitude, that came
with the Israelites out of Egypt, and with them passed through the sea,
with their children also. And since he makes mention of Nebuchadnezzar's
baptism, it is much he did not try to make it out that his children were
baptized also, then or at some other time. This is the true scripture
doctrine, of the subjects Christian baptism, according to his title.
That
the Jews received their proselytes by baptism, before the times of Christ,
he says, I know; but if I do, he does not. I observe, he is very ready
to ascribe great knowledge of things to me, which he himself is ignorant
of; I am much obliged to him: the great names he opposes to me, don't
frighten me; I have read their writings and testimonies, and know what
they were capable of producing, and to what little purpose; though I must
confess, it is amazing to me, that any men of learning should give into
such a notion, that Christian baptism is founded upon a tradition of the
baptism or dipping of proselytes with the Jews; of which tradition there
is not the least hint, neither in the Old nor in the New Testament; nor
in the Apocryphal writings between both; nor in Josephus; nor in Philo
the Jew; nor in the Jewish Misnah, or book of traditions; compiled in
the second century, or at the beginning of the third, whether of the Jerusalem
or Babylonian editions. I am content to risk that little reputation I
have for Jewish learning, on this single point; if any passage can be
produced in the Misnah, mentioning such a tradition of the Jews, admitting
proselytes by baptism or dipping, whether adult or children. I own it
is mentioned in the Gemara, both Jerusalem and Babylonian, a work of later
times, but not in the Misnah; though Dr. Gale has allowed it without examination.
The only passage in it which Dr. Wall refers to from Selden, though not
fully expressed, is this "a female stranger, a captive, a maiden,
which are redeemed and become proselytes, and are made free; being under
(the next paragraph is above) three years and one day old, are allowed
the matrimonial dowry" (Misnah, Cetubat, c. 1, f. 2-4); i.e., at
marriage: but not a tittle, is here or anywhere else in the Misnah, of
receiving either minors or adult as proselytes by baptism or dipping:
and supposing such a Jewish tradition, five hundred, or three hundred,
or two hundred years after Christ; or even so many years before Christ,
of what avail would it be? He must be strangely bigoted to an hypothesis,
to believe that our Lord, who so severely inveighed against the traditions
of the Jews, and particularly those concerning their baptisms or dippings;
should found His New Testament ordinance of baptism, on a tradition of
theirs, without excepting it from the other traditions, and without declaring
His will it should be continued, which He has not done; and yet this,
as Dr. Hammond suggests, in the basis of infant-baptism: to what wretched
shifts must the Paedobaptists be driven, for a foundation to place infant-baptism
on, as to place it on such a rotten one; a tradition of men, who at other
times, are reckoned by them, themselves, the most stupid, sottish, and
despicable of all men, upon the face of the earth? For the farther confutation
of this notion, see Sir Norton Knatchbull on 1 Pet. 3:20,21; Stennett
against Ruffen, p.61; Gale's Reflections on Wall's History of Baptism,
letters 9 and 10; Rees on Infant-Baptism, p. 17-29.
I shall
not pursue this writer any farther, by giving particular answers to his
arguments, objections, and queries, such as they are; but shall only refer
the reader to the answers that have been already given to them: as to
the threadbare argument, from Abraham's covenant, and from circumcision;
for Old Testament times and cases, are chiefly dealt in, to settle a New
Testament ordinance, see Ewer's Answer to Hitchin, Rees against Walker,
and my answers to Dickinson, Clarke, and Bostwick. Of the unreasonableness
of requiring instances of the adult baptism of children of Christian parents,
in the scriptures, see my Strictures on Bostwick's Fair and Rational
Vindication etc., p. 106. Of the testimonies of the ancient Christian
writers, in favor of infant-baptism, see Gale's Reflections etc.,
letters 11, 12, 13; Rees on Infant-baptism, p. 150 and etc.; some
treatises of mine, The Divine Right of Infant Baptism Examined, etc.,
p 20-25; The Argument from Apostolic Tradition, etc.; Antipaedobaptism;
Reply to Clarke, p. 18-23; Strictures on Bostwick, p. 100-103.
I called
upon this writer, in the notes on my sermon, to name any lexicographer
of note, that ever rendered the word baptizo by "perfundo" or
"aspergo," "pour" or "sprinkle;" and behold!
Leigh's Critica Sacra, is the only book quoted! and he the only
lexicographer mentioned, if he may be so called! a book which every one
of our illiterate lay-preachers, as they are called, are capable of quoting,
and of confronting this writer with it; by observing that Leigh says,
that "the native and proper signification of the word, is to dip
into water, or to plunge under water, Jn. 3:22,23; Matt. 3:16; Acts 8:38."
In proof of baptism by immersion, and of the true signification of the
word, see Gale's Reflections, etc., letters 3 and 4; Rees on Infant-baptism,
p. 121; and my treatises of The Ancient Mode of Baptizing and the Defense
Of It, with The Divine Right of Infant-baptism Examined, etc.,
p. 90, etc.
I bid
this writer adieu: God give him repentance for his sins, and the pardon
of them; and this I am sure he cannot charge, neither with uncharitableness,
nor with Antinomianism.
When
the Paedobaptists write again, it may be expected they will employ a better
hand; or should they choose to fix upon one of their younger sort again;
let them take care, first to wring the milk well out of his nose, before
they put a pen in his hand
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