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Within traditional Christian practice, circumcision was replaced by baptism; and the 40th day presentation was replaced by the rite of the "churching of women" (perhaps @Paidiske can comment on whether Anglicans still have a liturgy for that).
she was the only toddler at baby dedication which occurred a mos after our child came home from another country
why wouldn't we do the dedication?
And their households
Baptism does not give assurance of eternal life.
Why i the world are you withholding baptism from her?????sorry if this is a repeat; unable to do searches for some reason today
baby dedication at age 2 when we adopted her
she is now 10 and have been thinking about baptism lately
husband and I were both baptised as infants
should we should wait until our child expresses interest in being baptised with other adults?
or look into having her baptised with infants now?
Why in the world are you withholding baptism from her?sorry if this is a repeat; unable to do searches for some reason today
baby dedication at age 2 when we adopted her
she is now 10 and have been thinking about baptism lately
husband and I were both baptised as infants
should we should wait until our child expresses interest in being baptised with other adults?
or look into having her baptised with infants now?
Why i the world are you withholding baptism from her?????
The one thing I still resent about my parents is that they withheld baptism from me.
Why in the world are you withholding baptism from her?
The one thing I still resent about my parents is that they withheld baptism from me.
First, they withheld baptism from me when I was born, despite the fact that the Methodist church does baptize infants. I was to be raised in the church, raised in Christ, and by those who would certain be sure to make sure I would know him. I would grow up being a part of the church, so why withhold me entrance into the Church? It makes no sense.Withheld? So you mean that you said you wanted to be baptized, and they refused?
I can't imagine any reason a christian parent would do this.
Yes I know. And I do. But then out of the blue, the subject comes up and those old feelings come up again, and then I have to forgive them once more.You do realize that as a Christian, you are required to forgive, and that includes your parents for withholding baptism.
First, they withheld baptism from me when I was born, despite the fact that the Methodist church does baptize infants. I was to be raised in the church, raised in Christ, and by those who would certain be sure to make sure I would know him. I would grow up being a part of the church, so why withhold me entrance into the Church? It makes no sense.
When I was old enough that I consciously made a decision for Christ (I won't say received Christ, because I had always known the Lord), my parents should have at that time sat down with me and instructed me that this decision was to be accompanied by baptism. But AGAIN they failed me.
And then yet again, when I was eleven, and figured things out for myself, and asked to be baptized, they did not consider it of great concern (they are of the opinion that it doesn't matter if you get baptized or not) and suddenly began attending a Friends (Quaker) Church which taught that baptism was a wrong idea.
Thus commenced the years of my brainwashing that really messed me up, until I could discuss baptism and not even remember that I was unbaptized or that it was an issue. It took until I was 22 for all the brainwashing to finally dissolve. That's 22 years of being a Christian without being baptized. And that's scandalous.
Yes I know. And I do. But then out of the blue, the subject comes up and those old feelings come up again, and then I have to forgive them once more.
I don't see any place anywhere in the Bible, where infants are baptized.
Baptism is for people wanting to make their faith in Jesus Christ, public.
So by definition, the individual in question has to make the choice THEMSELVES, that they want to be a Christian.
Splashing water on someone, doesn't make them Christian, anymore than sitting in a garage makes you a BMW, or sitting in a barn makes you a cow.
Baptism should only be done when the person in question understands what being Christian is. That they are sinners. That they are flawed human beings. That they need a savor to save them from their own sins and flaws. And that they want Jesus as their Lord, and King of their life.
And when they reach that point, then they want to show this publicly in baptism.
Lastly, I would rather this child wait until they are 30 if that is what they want, rather than to fake it, pretend to be Christian, just so they can make their parents happy they got dunked in water.
It is better to have real honest people, than people who fake and pretend because their parents want them baptized. The goal you need to be seeking, is heart change. You want their Heart to be turned to the good, and away from the evil. Not their skin getting wet.
I'm saying this, because I had a lady friend that was baptized, but she was baptized because her parents demanded it from her. She end up screwing around, got into drugs, married a drug dealer, he started beating her, her life was a complete and total train wreck.
She became a real Christian in her 50s. She got baptized, this time for real, because her heart was real this time, in her late 50s.
The first time she got "baptized" meant nothing more than water being splashed on her.
However, because she did this fake thing, she thought she was good, and didn't change her life. That's why she had to get in her 50s, and into drugs and being beaten, before she figured out she need real change.
Don't push your child to do something that isn't real. Real heart change is the goal. Not splashing water.
Baptism is something God does, not something you do.
Adult or child, God decides and acts, in both cases we only comply.
It can neither be partly done, done again, nor undone.
Really. That's funny given I've watched people get baptized more than once.
But the perspective of most Christians would be that only one was a valid baptism. Any re-baptisms after that would not add anything to the first one.
Well, many of us believe that God does something for us in baptism. But this is not a debate forum.
don't know if this blogger/Pastor explains it well or not but interesting that he states at end that he struggles with what he believes
Baptism: Sacrament or Ordinance? - Tim Challies
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