I merely suggested doing it at hospitals as being the most logical location. It seems rather unproductive to have to sit in a church and wait for parents to bring their baby to you when the possibility is that the babies could be easily baptized after birth, much like many get circumcised. It is not a difficult or lengthy procedure and entails no physical threat to the life of a baby (unless the baby is held under water, which really never happens).
The Church values doing things right over doing them efficiently, and so healthy babies can wait until the priest or bishop can baptize them at the church in a formal ceremony.
And although circumcision is a custom that Christian cultures have adopted, it is not a Christian sacrament. The Church rejected the need for circumcision very early on (and replaced it with Baptism), as is recorded in the Bible, and so Christian clergy would not perform circumcision
as Christian clergy (though they might as, say, workers in the medical profession, if they have that as a side job).
When I say the convert is unsure, I'm not so much speaking of the doctrine believed in the previous denom. But whether it was done properly (ie; in the name of the Father, The Son and the Holy Spirit but not completely limited to that).If a convert feels it necessary, we honor that. Only one of the immersions will be valid and we don't determine which one. Beliefs don't enter in until after Baptism (for us) as we see water Baptism as being born again with old things being passed away. I would suspect the young woman made the decision as I think Rome accepts Anglican Baptism as valid. But when a young woman comes with a doubt or perhaps even a thought that it may not have been valid, her request should be honored. Conditional baptism is not a disparaging of the previous groups baptisms validity. It's a "just in case" thing. That's why it's spoken, " if thou are not already baptized". The church would not want to deny something already done of God.
Whenever it is reasonably certain that the person has received a proper Trinitarian baptism with proper intent to baptize
from anyone at all, nothing more than a conditional baptism could
possibly be justified. And I would argue that even a conditional baptism would not be justified in such cases.
It is a great wrong to re-baptize. The Lutheran Parish into which i was born, in the early 1800's released a Pastor from his call (fired him) for rebaptizing a child which had been baptized by it's father in the absence of a Pastor.
Good for them. Intentional re-baptism, with understanding of what Holy Baptism is and what it does, is downright
blasphemous and
evil any way you look at it.
Some Churches baptize only in the name of Jesus; since we believe Christ's words to baptize in the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit; and we believe that it is the water and the Word which makes a valid baptism; re-baptizing members of these Churches would not be "re-baptizing" as such, since we believe that the original baptism is invalid.
Those who don't know if they were baptized, where they were baptized, how they were baptized could be conditionally baptized; better to be safe than sorry.
For a Church to believe in the efficacy of baptism is not required for the validity of the baptism; since it's not a work done by mankind, but a work done by God through water and the Word.
Our confessions state the the sacraments remain efficacious even when administered by evil men.
It's all good!
I am aware that there are some jurisdictions in Orthodoxy that baptize everyone.
Correction: They
re-baptize Trinitarian Christians from other churches. Make no mistake, this is
exactly what they do, and there is no excuse for it.
[youtube]CBlMwJvB3ws[/youtube]
"Wherefore I give you to understand, that no man speaking by the Spirit of God calleth Jesus accursed: and that no man can say that Jesus is the Lord, but by the Holy Ghost." - 1 Corinthians 12:3
"We ordain that a bishop, or presbyter, who has admitted the baptism or sacrifice of heretics, be deposed. For what concord hath Christ with Belial, or what part hath a believer with an infidel?" - Orthodox Apostolic Canon XLVI
And the scribes who came down from Jerusalem said, 'He has Beelzebub,' and, 'By the ruler of the demons He casts out demons.' . . . 'Assuredly, I say to you, all sins will be forgiven the sons of men, and whatever blasphemies they may utter; but he who blasphemes against the Holy Spirit never has forgiveness, but is subject to eternal condemnation' because they said, 'He has an unclean spirit.' - Mark 3:22, 28-30
So then, is it by Belial that non-Orthodox who confess that Jesus is Lord are baptized? I'm not saying that this is the only possible way of looking at the matter, nor would I ever accuse anyone of the unpardonable sin, no matter how strongly I might suspect such a thing--but the very least I can say is that this does run just a bit too close for comfort...
This is why I react so strongly against the Orthodox practice of
re-baptizing Trinitarian Christians.