- Jul 2, 2005
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livin4christ9203 said:Only reason I don't agree with that.. is because baptising a baby.. does not give them salvation.. they have to find that on their own. Of course, as infants, before the age of accountability.. they are going to go to Heaven no matter what. But, as an adult, they have to figure it out and want it on their own! I think that's why we only do dedications now. Although I agree that it is a means of grace and I believe that is the main reason parents do it. To us, it is more of a promise to raise our children in the eyes of God and help them to know God and to find their way.. it's also a promise the church makes to help raise that child to know God.
OK...fair enough, but....I can see no part in scripture that says infants cannot be saved, because they have to make a decision for Christ, or that they are born sinless and do not need to. Obviously they need salvation. In fact, the Bible speaks of them having faith "the little ones who believe in me" etc. Obviously, faith can exist outside of rational thought. This appears to me to be the reason also why the Bible gives no age of accountability. Likewise, the Bible gives us no account of "infant dedication" for Christians. How do we know when the sins of children are accountable?
The Bible says that the covenant of baptism is for our children too (Acts 2:39), and this is why Christians have always baptised their children.
Here's the problem. If all are born in sin, then all need salvation. If salvation is just about rational thought and assent to the Gospel alone then there is no offer of salvation to the mentally infirm, the very young, or the demented. However, Christ's atonement is for all, and thus God's grace is given to all in some way or another (whether you call it prevenient grace or common grace or whatever), and because of that our children and the others mentioned do not die for sins they have not committed (if indeed this doctrine is correct). But, on the other hand, if we see that God's grace is already covering the sin nature of the infant, then surely that makes them worthy recipients of God's promise, which is given and seen in baptism. This then would make baptism a means of grace, which has always been the understanding of the church. Why then would we want to reject that promise in the way God has given us? It seems to me that the trend of rejecting baptism is because people are chasing after experiences, and this culture of ours has forgotten the communal nature of the church in favour of the individualistic ideal of the modern west. In other words, I think Wesley and all the other Methodist forefathers were right about this and I think the rejection of it comes from a different place.
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