Fundamentalists often criticize the Catholic Church’s
practice of baptizing infants. According to them, baptism is for
adults and older children, because it is to be administered only
after one has undergone a "born again" experience—that
is, after one has "accepted Jesus Christ as his personal Lord
and Savior." At the instant of acceptance, when he is "born
again," the adult becomes a Christian, one of the elect, and his
salvation is assured forever. Baptism follows, though it has no
actual salvific value. In fact, one who dies before being baptized,
but after "being saved," goes to heaven anyway.
As
Fundamentalists see it, baptism is not a sacrament (in the true sense
of the word), but an ordinance. It does not in any way convey the
grace it symbolizes; rather, it is merely a public manifestation of
the person’s conversion. Since only an adult or older child can
be converted, baptism is inappropriate for infants or for children
who have not yet reached the age of reason (generally considered to
be age seven). Most Fundamentalists say that during the years before
they reach the age of reason infants and young children are
automatically saved. Only once a person reaches the age of reason
does he need to "accept Jesus" in order to reach heaven.
Since the New Testament era, the Catholic Church has always
understood baptism differently, teaching that it is a sacrament which
accomplishes several things, the first of which is the remission of
sin, both original sin and actual sin—only original sin in the
case of infants and young children, since they are incapable of
actual sin; and both original and actual sin in the case of older
persons.
Peter explained what happens at baptism when he
said, "Repent, and be baptized every one of you in the name of
Jesus Christ for the forgiveness of your sins; and you shall receive
the gift of the Holy Spirit" (Acts 2:38). But he did not
restrict this teaching to adults. He added, "For the promise is
to you and to your children and to all that are far off, every
one whom the Lord our God calls to him" (2:39). We also read:
"Rise and be baptized, and wash away your sins, calling on his
name" (Acts 22:16). These commands are universal, not restricted
to adults. Further, these commands make clear the necessary
connection between baptism and salvation, a
connection explicitly
stated in 1 Peter 3:21: "Baptism . . . now saves you, not as a
removal of dirt from the body but as an appeal to God for a clear
conscience, through the resurrection of Jesus Christ."
Christ Calls All to Baptism
Although
Fundamentalists are the most recent critics of infant baptism,
opposition to infant baptism is not a new phenomenon. In the Middle
Ages, some groups developed that rejected infant baptism, e.g., the
Waldenses and Catharists. Later, the Anabaptists ("re-baptizers")
echoed them, claiming that infants are incapable of being baptized
validly. But the historic Christian Church has always held that
Christ’s law applies to infants as well as adults, for Jesus
said that no one can enter heaven unless he has been born again of
water and the Holy Spirit (John 3:5). His words can be taken to apply
to anyone capable of having a right to his kingdom. He asserted such
a right even for children: "Let the children come to me, and do
not hinder them; for to such belongs the kingdom of heaven"
(Matt. 19:14).
More detail is given in Luke’s account
of this event, which reads: "Now they were bringing even infants
to him that he might touch them; and when the disciples saw it, they
rebuked them. But Jesus called them to him, saying, ‘Let the
children come to me, and do not hinder them; for to such belongs the
kingdom of God’" (Luke 18:15–16).
Now
Fundamentalists say this event does not apply to young children or
infants since it implies the children to which Christ was referring
were able to approach him on their own. (Older translations have,
"Suffer the little children to come unto me," which seems
to suggest they could do so under their own power.) Fundamentalists
conclude the passage refers only to children old enough to walk, and,
presumably, capable of sinning. But the text in Luke 18:15 says, "Now
they were bringing even infants to him" (Greek,
Proseferon de auto kai ta brephe). The Greek word brephe
means "infants"—children who are quite unable to
approach Christ on their own and who could not possibly make a
conscious
decision to "accept Jesus as their personal Lord
and Savior." And that is precisely the problem. Fundamentalists
refuse to permit the baptism of infants and young children, because
they are not yet capable of making such a conscious act. But notice
what Jesus said: "to such as these [referring to the infants and
children who had been brought to him by their mothers] belongs the
kingdom of heaven." The Lord did not require them to make a
conscious decision. He says that they are precisely the kind of
people who can come to him and receive the kingdom. So on what
basis, Fundamentalists should be asked, can infants and young
children be excluded from the sacrament of baptism? If Jesus said
"let them come unto me," who are we to say "no,"
and withhold baptism from them?
In Place of Circumcision
Furthermore,
Paul notes that baptism has replaced circumcision (Col. 2:11–12).
In that passage, he refers to baptism as "the circumcision of
Christ" and "the circumcision made without hands." Of
course, usually only infants were circumcised under the Old Law;
circumcision of adults was rare, since there were few converts to
Judaism. If Paul meant to exclude infants, he would not have chosen
circumcision as a parallel for baptism.
This comparison
between who could receive baptism and circumcision is an appropriate
one. In the Old Testament, if a man wanted to become a Jew, he had to
believe in the God of Israel and be circumcised. In the New
Testament, if one wants to become a Christian, one must believe in
God and Jesus and be baptized. In the Old Testament, those born into
Jewish households could be circumcised in anticipation of the Jewish
faith in which they would be raised. Thus in the New Testament, those
born in Christian households can be baptized in anticipation of the
Christian faith in which they will be raised. The pattern is the
same: If one is an adult, one must have faith before receiving the
rite of membership; if one is a child too young to have faith, one
may be given the rite of membership in the knowledge that one will be
raised in the faith. This is the basis of Paul’s reference to
baptism as "the circumcision of Christ"—that is, the
Christian equivalent of circumcision.
Were Only Adults Baptized?
Fundamentalists
are reluctant to admit that the Bible nowhere says baptism is to be
restricted to adults, but when pressed, they will. They just conclude
that is what it should be taken as meaning, even if the text does not
explicitly support such a view. Naturally enough, the people whose
baptisms we read about in Scripture (and few are individually
identified) are adults, because they were converted as adults. This
makes sense, because Christianity was just beginning—there were
no "cradle Christians," people brought up from childhood in
Christian homes.
Even in the books of the New Testament that
were written later in the first century, during the time when
children were raised in the first Christian homes, we never—not
even once—find an example of a child raised in a Christian home
who is baptized only upon making a "decision for Christ."
Rather, it is always assumed that the children of Christian homes are
already Christians, that they have already been "baptized into
Christ" (Rom. 6:3). If infant baptism were not the rule, then we
should have references to the children of Christian parents joining
the Church only after they had come to the age of reason, and there
are no such records in the Bible.
Specific Biblical References?
But,
one might ask, does the Bible ever say that infants or young children
can be baptized? The indications are clear. In the New Testament we
read that Lydia was converted by Paul’s preaching and that "She
was baptized, with her household" (Acts 16:15). The Philippian
jailer whom Paul and Silas had converted to the faith was baptized
that night along with his household. We are told that "the same
hour of the night . . . he was baptized, with all his family"
(Acts 16:33). And in his greetings to the Corinthians, Paul recalled
that, "I did baptize also the household of Stephanas" (1
Cor. 1:16).
In all these cases, whole households or families
were baptized. This means more than just the spouse; the children too
were included. If the text of Acts referred simply to the Philippian
jailer and his wife, then we would read that "he and his wife
were baptized," but we do not. Thus his children must have been
baptized as well. The same applies to the other cases of household
baptism in Scripture.
Granted, we do not know the exact age
of the children; they may have been past the age of reason, rather
than infants. Then again, they could have been babes in arms. More
probably, there were both younger and older children. Certainly there
were children younger than the age of reason in some of the
households that were baptized, especially if one considers that
society at this time had no reliable form of birth control.
Furthermore, given the New Testament pattern of household baptism, if
there were to be exceptions to this rule (such as infants), they
would be explicit.
Catholics From the First
The
present Catholic attitude accords perfectly with early Christian
practices. Origen, for instance, wrote in the third century that
"according to the usage of the Church, baptism is given even to
infants" (Holilies on Leviticus, 8:3:11 [A.D. 244]). The
Council of Carthage, in 253, condemned the opinion that baptism
should be withheld from infants until the eighth day after birth.
Later, Augustine taught, "The custom of Mother Church in
baptizing infants is certainly not to be scorned . . . nor is it to
be believed that its tradition is anything except apostolic"
(Literal Interpretation of Genesis 10:23:39 [A.D. 408]).
No Cry of "Invention!"
None
of the Fathers or councils of the Church was claiming that the
practice was contrary to Scripture or tradition. They agreed that the
practice of baptizing infants was the customary and appropriate
practice since the days of the early Church; the only uncertainty
seemed to be when—exactly—an infant should be baptized.
Further evidence that infant baptism was the accepted practice in the
early Church is the fact that if infant baptism had been opposed to
the religious practices of the first believers, why do we have no
record of early Christian writers condemning it?
But
Fundamentalists try to ignore the historical writings from the early
Church which clearly indicate the legitimacy of infant baptism. They
attempt to sidestep appeals to history by saying baptism requires
faith and, since children are incapable of having faith, they cannot
be baptized. It is true that Christ prescribed instruction and actual
faith for adult converts (Matt. 28:19–20), but his general law
on the necessity of baptism (John 3:5) puts no restriction on the
subjects of baptism. Although infants are included in the law he
establishes, requirements of that law that are impossible to meet
because of their age are not applicable to them. They cannot be
expected to be instructed and have faith when they are incapable of
receiving instruction or manifesting faith. The same was true of
circumcision; faith in the Lord was necessary for an adult convert to
receive it, but it was not necessary for the children of believers.
Furthermore, the Bible never says, "Faith in Christ is
necessary for salvation except for infants"; it simply says,
"Faith in Christ is necessary for salvation." Yet
Fundamentalists must admit there is an exception for infants unless
they wish to condemn instantaneously all infants to hell. Therefore,
the Fundamentalist himself makes an exception for infants regarding
the necessity of faith for salvation. He can thus scarcely criticize
the Catholic for making the exact same exception for baptism,
especially if, as Catholics believe, baptism is an instrument of
salvation.
It becomes apparent, then, that the Fundamentalist
position on infant baptism is not really a consequence of the Bible’s
strictures, but of the demands of Fundamentalism’s idea of
salvation. In reality, the Bible indicates that infants are to be
baptized, that they too are meant to inherit the kingdom of heaven.
Further, the witness of the earliest Christian practices and writings
must once and for all silence those who criticize the Catholic
Church’s teaching on infant baptism. The Catholic Church is
merely continuing the tradition established by the first Christians,
who heeded the words of Christ: "Let the children come to me,
and do not hinder them; for to such belongs the kingdom of God"
(Luke 18:16).