- Feb 5, 2002
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by Msgr. Charles Pope
Question: I don’t see Jesus baptizing anyone in the Bible. If Jesus did not baptize, why is that?
— Deacon Paul VanHoudt, Erie, Colorado
Answer: Actually there is a qualified description of Jesus baptizing in John’s Gospel: “After this, Jesus and his disciples went into the region of Judea, where he spent some time with them baptizing” (Jn 3:22). Later, this action is qualified as follows: “Now when Jesus learned that the Pharisees had heard that Jesus was making and baptizing more disciples than John (although Jesus himself was not baptizing, just his disciples), he left Judea and returned to Galilee” (Jn 4:1-3). So we do see the early apostolic band baptizing, and whether Jesus personally did this is not clear. This begs certain questions. Why is baptism, so central to faith, mentioned little in Jesus’ public ministry? Further, why does Jesus not seem to baptize directly but consign this task to his apostles?
As for the sparse references to this sacrament in written Scripture, there may be something of the “discipline of the secret” (disciplina arcanis) at work here. The early Christians did not usually supply vivid or lengthy descriptions of the early liturgies due to persecution and to a sense of reverence about these rites. The Sacraments of Baptism, Confirmation and Eucharist were, in addition to their sanctifying purpose, an initiation into the holy mysteries of the liturgy. Many are aware that catechumens were not permitted entrance into the second part of Mass, and prior to being accepted as catechumens, were not permitted into the liturgy at all. We live in a kind of information age and such secrecy may puzzle us, but this ancient instinct not to openly display sacred things to the uninitiated should not be wholly forgotten. Jesus warned us not to cast our pearls before swine or throw what is holy to dogs. These are colorful ways of setting forth the discretion that is sometimes lacking today where everything is photographed and livestreamed. Complete secrecy may not be possible any longer, but some discretion has its place. And this may be one reason that the sacraments were not routinely described in early Scriptures or documents of the apostolic age.
Continued below.
Question: I don’t see Jesus baptizing anyone in the Bible. If Jesus did not baptize, why is that?
— Deacon Paul VanHoudt, Erie, Colorado
Answer: Actually there is a qualified description of Jesus baptizing in John’s Gospel: “After this, Jesus and his disciples went into the region of Judea, where he spent some time with them baptizing” (Jn 3:22). Later, this action is qualified as follows: “Now when Jesus learned that the Pharisees had heard that Jesus was making and baptizing more disciples than John (although Jesus himself was not baptizing, just his disciples), he left Judea and returned to Galilee” (Jn 4:1-3). So we do see the early apostolic band baptizing, and whether Jesus personally did this is not clear. This begs certain questions. Why is baptism, so central to faith, mentioned little in Jesus’ public ministry? Further, why does Jesus not seem to baptize directly but consign this task to his apostles?
As for the sparse references to this sacrament in written Scripture, there may be something of the “discipline of the secret” (disciplina arcanis) at work here. The early Christians did not usually supply vivid or lengthy descriptions of the early liturgies due to persecution and to a sense of reverence about these rites. The Sacraments of Baptism, Confirmation and Eucharist were, in addition to their sanctifying purpose, an initiation into the holy mysteries of the liturgy. Many are aware that catechumens were not permitted entrance into the second part of Mass, and prior to being accepted as catechumens, were not permitted into the liturgy at all. We live in a kind of information age and such secrecy may puzzle us, but this ancient instinct not to openly display sacred things to the uninitiated should not be wholly forgotten. Jesus warned us not to cast our pearls before swine or throw what is holy to dogs. These are colorful ways of setting forth the discretion that is sometimes lacking today where everything is photographed and livestreamed. Complete secrecy may not be possible any longer, but some discretion has its place. And this may be one reason that the sacraments were not routinely described in early Scriptures or documents of the apostolic age.
Continued below.
Did Jesus baptize during his ministry?
The Scriptures don’t give a direct answer, but rather seem to emphasize that Jesus frequently consigned the sacrament to the apostles.
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