KEPLER said:
1) Grammar please: verbs and their subjects must agree in number (even in parenthetical phrases). I can tolerate a spelling mistake now and then, but stupid grammar mistakes rankle me.
This has nothing to do with the debate at hand. You are simply trying to say something negative about my post.
2) Jesus taught by analogy. (Parables are, by their very nature,
analogical.) Thpppppp! (that's a raspberry, BTW)
And this is supposed to prove analogies are evidence? I'm sure any court of law would strongly disagree with you.
3) You haven't proven anything about the word "household". Please, Jig, go take a college level logic class (and a grammar class while you're at it).
In that case, you haven't been paying much attention. Also, nice unnessacary negative remark at the end there. How does insulting me prove anything about the topic we are discussing?
You sound like a Jehovah's Witness who once knocked on my door. He said, "There is not a single Scripture which explicitly says, 'Jesus is God.'" And, of course, he was 100% correct. But we may infer that Jesus is God from many other Scriptures (the ones where He goes around forgiving people being among the strongest).
Well, it does say..."and the Word (God) became flesh" That's pretty darn close, but that's not the point. There is strong evidence for the deity of Jesus, this is not so for infant baptism.
Old Covenant infants were circumcised; New Covenant infants are baptized. We are in the New Covenant ("This cup that is poured out for you is the new covenant in my blood.") Paul explicitly states that baptism is our circumcision.
It would be great if you could provide some verses/passages.
Yes, Jig, there are examples of adults who converted, all of whom were baptized after they believed. SO. WHAT??
Don't down play it, there are ONLY examples of such...that is a big deal.
Any proselytes who converted to Judaism were taught first, and then circumcised. But children born into the covenant were circumcised first, and then taught. Christians follow the exact same model.
Is there any verses that back this up as being the model after Jesus death?
Anyhow...
1. In every New Testament command and instance of baptism the requirement of faith precedes baptism. So infants incapable of faith are not to be baptized
2. There are no explicit instances of infant baptism in all the Bible. The three "household baptisms" mentioned (household of Lydia, Acts 16:15; household of the Philippian jailer, Acts 16:30-33; household of Stephanus, 1 Corinthians 1:16) no mention is made of infants, and in the case of the Philippian jailer, Luke says explicitly, "they spoke the word of the Lord to him together with all who were in his house" (Acts 16:32), implying that the household who were baptized could understand the word of the Lord.
3. Paul (in Colossians 2:12) explicitly defined baptism as an act done through faith: ". . . having been buried with Him in baptism, in which you were also raised up with Him through faith in the working of God." In baptism you were raised up with Christ through faith - your own faith, not your parents' faith. If it is not "through faith" - if it is not an outward expression of inward faith - it is not baptism.
4. The apostle Peter, in his first letter, defined baptism this way, ". . . not the removal of dirt from the flesh, but an appeal to God for a good conscience - through the resurrection of Jesus Christ" (1 Peter 3:21). Baptism is "an appeal to God for a good conscience." It is an outward act and expression of inner confession and prayer to God for cleansing, that the one being baptized does, not his parents.
5. When the New Testament church debated in Acts 15 whether circumcision should still be required of believers as part of becoming a Christian, it is astonishing that not once in that entire debate did anyone say anything about baptism standing in the place of circumcision. If baptism is the simple replacement of circumcision as a sign of the new covenant, and thus valid for children as well as for adults, as circumcision was, surely this would have been the time to develop the argument and so show that circumcision was no longer necessary. But it is not even mentioned.
6. In 1 Timothy 3:12 there is a clear seperation between young children and ones household.