Alabaster said:
At least two exceedingly compelling arguments have been made for infant baptism in this thread:
1. The precedent of entire households being baptized - it is quite unlikely that none of these households would be entirely devoid of infants, especially in that culture.
That isn't compelling. Households included servants--all adults were considered a household. It included those who MADE A PROFESSION OF FAITH ---which a baby can never do.
This is clearly a circular argument. Obviously, if I believed that a profession of faith is a necessary pre-condition for baptism, I would agree with you. But there is no scriptural case for that. A "household" is nowhere defined to mean "those members of the family who have made a profession of faith". When a statement is made that a household was baptized, the most reasonable conclusion is that all humans living in that family were baptized. And most households in that culture would have minor children and infants. When you argue that only those who profess faith are baptized, you are
adding to what is said.
Now if the Scriptures anywhere make the case that only professing believers can be baptized then, please, by all means point out the relevant texts.
Alabaster said:
Drew said:
2. An argument based on the sequence of Romans 5 to 8 has shown that Paul sees baptism as preceding life-changing repentence. This undermines the idea that it is only sensible to baptize those who understand and have undertaken repentence.
That is wrong. Baptism is only for believers who have repentance. Romans is written to believers! Methinks you are undermining, no one else.
No, I am right. It is interesting how these "debates" proceed. In this case, I have made an actual argument (a few pages back) about Romans 6. I did not merely state my position - I argued for it by showing how A leads to B and then to C. And so on.
The funny thing is that other posters seem to think that they are not obliged to engage actual argument and show where I am mistaken. No one in this thread has engaged by "Romans 5 to 8" argument. That argument shows that baptism preceded repentence, it does not follow it. If it did, then, of course, the baptism of infants would seem incorrect.
I made an
argument that baptism
precedes repentence. You are here making a
statement that it is the other way around. Now which is more convincing, an actual detailed argument, or a simple assertion?
I agree that Romans is written to believers. But in Romans 5 to 8, Paul is likening the experience of the Christian to the exodus. Consequently there are parts which describe the experience of the person while still in slavery to sin. In fact,
just as the Red Sea crossing preceded the giving of the Torah (at Sinai), so does baptism (Romans 6) precede the giving of the Spirit (Romans 8), the very thing that enables repentence.
It is clear that, in Paul's mind at least, that without the Spirit, the human person is still in slavery. As has been argued in this very thread, Paul clearly maps the "journey" of the Christian onto the exodus story, with baptism obviously mapping to "passing through the waters of Red Sea".
When does the Red Sea crossing occur in the exodus account?
Before getting the Torah at Sinai - the Law to lead the people in the right direction.
Where does baptism pop up in the Romans 5 to 8 narrative?"
Before getting the Spirit (Romans 8). And what does the Spirit enable us to do? Repent, of course:
The mind of sinful man[e] is death, but the mind controlled by the Spirit is life and peace; 7the sinful mind[f] is hostile to God. It does not submit to God's law, nor can it do so. 8Those controlled by the sinful nature cannot please God. 9You, however, are controlled not by the sinful nature but by the Spirit, if the Spirit of God lives in you. And if anyone does not have the Spirit of Christ, he does not belong to Christ. 10But if Christ is in you, your body is dead because of sin, yet your spirit is alive because of righteousness. 11And if the Spirit of him who raised Jesus from the dead is living in you, he who raised Christ from the dead will also give life to your mortal bodies through his Spirit, who lives in you
Paul is no dummy. The parallels between the narratives are too many to be coincidence. And Paul is careful about matters of timing. Since the Red Sea crossing
precedes the giving of Torah, we see that Paul sets baptism as
preceding the repentance enabled by the Spirit. Romans 5 to 8 is a
narrative - the person is moving from slavery to sin to freedom in the Spirit. So the fact that baptism appears in Romans 6, and repentence in Romans 8, tells us how Paul sees the temporal ordering of things: first, baptism, then repentence.
Paul, therefore, does not believe that baptism is something you do after repentence - it is something you do
before repentence.