HOUSEHOLD BAPTISM. A REVIEW OF OBJECTIONS.
" LET the prophets speak, two or three, and let the rest
judge," contains a principle of great value for us all. Judgment must be
exercised as to whatever is put forth for truth; and for this the means of
judgment must be in our hands. Scripture, of course, is the one only standard of
appeal, the measure of all truth such as we have now before us; but we cannot
afford to be independent of one another's help in searching it, and especially
to enable us to get rid of those merely personal influences which operate so
powerfully often against the truth, even when they are engaged upon the side of
truth. Error that we have received upon the authority of those who have rightful
claim to our affection and respect finds thus, as we all know, its strongest
support; but truth also needs often to be shaken free of just such human
support, that it may stand in its own divine power. For this God would use the
differences that arise among us, and which in themselves are evidence of
insubjection to His word and Spirit, to teach us more subjection.
Controversy is only to be dreaded just so far as the personal element in the
same sense enters into it, and perverts in the interests of a party quarrel the
witnesses in the cause of God and truth.
Seeking, then, to avoid all mere personalities, and to bring everything to the
test of the word of God alone, I shall take up briefly the arguments which have
been brought forward against a former tract of mine on the doctrine of baptism,
not unwilling to be given opportunity to explain further some things which may
be left obscure in the former one, and to show more fully what I conceive to be
the error of the views advocated on the other side. For my own, I trust I may be
permitted to refer to what I have already written, and thus to avoid what for
those who have read this would be mere tedious repetition. We must still
consider, in the first place, however, what is alleged as to THE KINGDOM OF
HEAVEN before we shall be prepared to take up the questions as to baptism and
the relation to it of the households of believers. Here, in fact, is the main
difficulty, as I believe, in regard to the reception of this, that the confusion
which exists between the church and the kingdom, and the general ignorance as to
the latter, obscure what would otherwise be simple. "Of such is the kingdom
of heaven" would be a text at least very easily made plain were it seen
that the kingdom is the sphere of discipleship, and that baptism is "discipling."
it is not the fact that this discussion is irrelevant therefore, least of all
where not household baptism only, but baptism as a whole is the subject of
inquiry. On the contrary, it may be affirmed that the only hope of contention
for our brethren lies just here. These points must therefore be looked at in the
first place, if we would be clear.
But I shall be told," says one of our brethren (J.J.), "that I do not
'see' the kingdom. I quite grant that to 'see' it, one must be born again ; nay,
I maintain that is the only way to see it, or to enter into it. And I further
maintain, on the authority of Scripture, that baptism is no more introduction
into the kingdom than the Lord's Supper is introduction into the Church.
Introduction into the kingdom is by new birth; into the Church by the sealing of
the Holy Spirit."
The last sentence is the strangest, perhaps, here, where much is strange. Had
our brother been asked, in time past, " How are we introduced into the
Church ?" I think there is little doubt he would have replied, in the very
words of Scripture, that "by one Spirit are we all baptized into one
body."( i Cor. xii 3.) Somehow this seems now to have slipped out of his
mind: he speaks now as if we were "sealed" into it I suppose he would
admit the incongruity in the term, at least ; but how could he forget that the
Scripture mode of expressing introduction into the body of Christ is by this
term "baptism"? Is it not plain, at least, that here Scripture uses
"baptism'' as implying introduction into that which is of Christ?- and that
if the kingdom were a circle of profession larger than and external to the body
of Christ, then one could easily understand the analogy between the outward
material and the spiritual baptism? How else can we, in fact, understand it?
Perhaps our brother would be ready to agree to this: that baptism is the
introduction into the profession of Christianity? But this is, in fact, the
kingdom, the sphere of discipleship, where Christ is Master and Lord.
But he answers " No! introduction here is by new birth : to see this, or to
enter into it, one must be born again."
By " seeing'' it, he evidently understands such spiritual insight as could
only come from spiritual life; but this is not what the passage means. The
undoubted reference to Ezek. xxxvi. shows that it is not to a spiritual kingdom,
invisible except to faith, that the Lord points, but to a kingdom which, when
established, every eye will see. A Jewish teacher certainly could not be
expected to know of any other. Nor does the Lord at all say that men are born
again into it; but that they must be born again to have title to enter in,- a
very different thing. Israel, in fact, must be converted, in order to escape the
judgments which introduce the kingdom. (See, for example, Isa. iv. 2-4.) thus
there is NO Scripture for new birth being introduction to the kingdom, but the
two things are quite distinct ; nor is the kingdom one only to be seen by faith,
but the opposite. Our brother evidently confounds the two things, stating
sometimes that introduction is by new birth, sometimes that only the latter is
necessary as a condition for the former, as if these things were the same. Matt.
xviii, 3, speaks quite similarly, not of conversion as entering the kingdom, but
"except ye be converted, ye shall not enter it". Here, however, it
will be contended, all is admitted that is necessary to the argument new birth
is necessary to enter the kingdom; and if this be true when the kingdom is set
up in power, it is a "strong reason in itself, one would have thought, for
its present application. . . . The Lord Himself, however, in the immediate
context, makes it of the most important present application for our conduct in
the kingdom now; and it is only by applying the passage to the present that the
prevailing confusion is removed, and the whole subject of the Kingdom of Heaven
becomes simple." Now no one, surely, doubts that there is to be a present
application of such truths. The question is, how are they to be applied? If the
long-suffering goodness of God ordain a door to be kept open now, which it is
plainly warned will, bye and bye, be shut, are we to apply the future to the
present by shutting the door beforehand?
However, the statement is definitely made that- "The kingdom of God covers
all dispensations. In all ages God has reigned; and the Lord, in John iii, gives
the moral truth concerning the kingdom: "Except a man be born again he
cannot see the kingdom of God." New birth into the kingdom, in all ages, is
the plain teaching of the Lord. Before the cross God was dealing with man as
under trial, and therefore a nation was taken up, but in the midst of this
nation only those born again were really in the kingdom of God."
These words are by another writer (J. J. S.), but they only express more boldly
tile same thought - God had a kingdom in all ages. "Dealing with man as
under trial," He takes up a nation. How? As His people, or not as belonging
to His kingdom, or not? "Only those born again were really in the kingdom
of God." In what way "really"? When Solomon "sat on the
throne of the Lord," "on the throne of the kingdom of the Lord over
Israel" (i Chr. xxviii, 5; xxix, 23), did he "really" reign only
over the "born-again souls" there? And did he "really" reign
over all truly converted persons elsewhere? And when the Lord pronounced the
sentence Lo-ammi, "not my people," upon Israel, did this mean that He
was casting off the "born-again ones," who were those over whom alone
He had ever reigned ?- or what else?
"Really"! Why, who doubts that it is, and also was, only the converted
people in whose hearts God reigned? But was that what He meant when He took up a
nation? Was it not of necessity a very different thing? Was this only the
kingdom "as men saw it," or the kingdom also as God, who knoweth the
hearts, proclaimed it? How could men "see" what we are told cannot be
seen by any but those born again?
God did not, then, make the truths of eternity - or of the kingdom set up in
power - truths for His people to act upon, then,- that is clear. And our
brother's "really" is something foreign to the matter in hand, or else
something absolutely untrue, and plainly so. We cannot so ignore the
dispensations. Thus the kingdom of God in Israel is against this view
decisively. Of course it must be different now; and the same writer, speaking of
the mysteries of the kingdom, bids us - "Note in this parable, the seed are
the people, and the Lord only sowed good seed; that is, 'born-again' souls. But
now, as men see it, there are tares; that is, unconverted professors. Who sowed
them? The devil. And so we must never forget the two stand-points from which the
kingdom is seen. From God's standpoint, as He sees it in His counsels, the
kingdom is composed of born-again ones only. But from man's standpoint, and as
we see it, there is a mixture."
So when the angels "gather out of His kingdom all things that offend, and
them that do iniquity," they simply gather out those whom men take to be in
His kingdom, but who are not there. Is that just fair interpretation,-
commending itself as honest and true? For this is the Lord's own account of the
matter, at the end, to His disciples; and why should He say "out of"
His kingdom, when we are bidden to believe that none but those born again are,
or ever were, or could be, in the kingdom ? Was it not easily possible to avoid
words so ambiguous? But the good seed are the "children of the
kingdom" ; and the tares are unconverted professors: is not that true?
It is the truth, but, as to the last, not the whole truth. We must go more
slowly, and look more carefully, to find that. For, while the good seed in the
second parable is indeed said to be "children of the kingdom," in the
first parable it is as plainly said to be the "word of the kingdom."
Of course there is not the least inconsistency between these two views: the
children of the kingdom are only those in whom the word of the kingdom has grown
up - the wheat. Are the tares, then, produced in any sense by the word of the
kingdom?- and does Satan sow such seed as this? Clearly not. He sows false
doctrine, not true, and the fruit are heretics, not mere unreal professors. All
this has been often told, and cannot be a thing unknown to J. J. S. Its
consistency with the whole meaning of the second parable I have elsewhere
pointed out.
Still, the good seed are the children of the kingdom and the wheat,- are they
not?- gathered into the barn? Yes, the crop. But it does not follow that all the
good seed goes into the crop, as every farmer too well knows. How much he would
like to have all the seed he sows fulfill the likeness to these "born-again
souls" which J. J. S., in complete disregard of all the congruities, would
import from John into Matthew. He is the more inexcusable because the first
parable is plainly given to guard against the very thing that lie is doing. Not
all the good seed furnishes the crop, is its declaration; but here, as part of
that good seed which gives the children of the kingdom, we are taught that the
mere unconverted professors are really to be placed. In entire opposition to
what our brethren teach, the 'children of the kingdom'is not a term convertible
with those born again. And our Lord expressly teaches (Matt. Vii1, 12) that
"the children of the kingdom" may, as none of the converted ever can,
be "cast into outer darkness," where "there is wailing and
gnashing of teeth." How plain, then, that the kingdom is not what they
teach, when such as these are expressly called "the children of the
kingdom"!
It is one thing certain, then, the infants cannot have place "AMONG THE
TARES," as our brother puts it in small capitals, and this as
"bringing them into A PLACE OF BLESSING." If these were his own views
when he practised household baptism, it is not to be wondered at that he has
given it up.
This is a full answer also to J. J., who allows that there are foolish virgins
in the kingdom "ill its outward aspect,"- words that, as we have seen,
Scripture never authorizes. He adds, "what makes them to be 'foolish'is
their taking the place, probably by being baptized." Of course, not as
infants: even our brother will acquit household baptism in this case. As for the
rest, what shows their folly is their taking "no oil with them.they would
not have become "wise" by throwing aside their lamps: no, nor by never
having carried them.
KINGDOM AND CHURCH.
We turn now to look at the question of the distinction between the Kingdom and
the Church; and here our brother C. deserves a first answer, as he has said all
perhaps that can be said. As to the three circles of Eph. iv. he maintains that
"even if verses 5 and 6 here could apply to something else than the Church
or Assembly, we could have no right so to apply them." Why? "Because
Paul's known and acknowledged subject is the Assembly, and verses 5 and 6 will
apply to the Assembly." Now the Church is in tile Kingdom, and therefore
what applies to the subjects of the Kingdom will apply to the members of
Christ's body - the Church. It is freely granted, also, that the passage in
Ephesians would not decide that the Church is not co-extensive with the
Kingdom.*
The relationships implied are different. All Christ's members are also children
of God, but the family of God is nevertheless not identical with the body of
Christ. Much that our brother says here misses the point, therefore. Moreover,
the circle of the Kingdom is not "intermediate," as he puts it,
between the Church and the world. This would imply that the Church was not in
it, which it is. Nor do I need to discuss the question of the Church, for which
the better word, as we all know, would be "assembly,"-a word, too, of
various application, even to a heathen gathering.
By the Church here I mean always "the Church which is His body."
Moreover, our brother is right in refusing to find room under "One Lord,
one creed, one baptism," for those who "deny that Jesus is God."
This is the Kingdom as constituted of God, not designed surely to include the
Satanic work of the second parable. The enemy, "while men slept," may
have introduced his followers into the Kingdom, and Christians be power1ess to
undo what has thus been done; but this, nevertheless, is only an intrusion.
Satan's work is not Christianity, even in its lowest form. On the other hand,
with those who are simply " unreal" (C. ix) the case is different.
They come under the first parable, not the second,- while, of course, that does
not mean any sanction of their unreality. On this subject it is more to my
purpose to quote what I have formerly said than to restate it: "The kingdom
of heaven, with its message of peace and reconciliation, remains the testimony
of a love which goes out to all, and would gather in to God wherever the will of
man is not hardening itself in opposition. We do not, in fact, in Scripture meet
with the long delay of baptism and the preparation of catechumens, which came in
as baptism itself came to be looked at as reception into the Church, and the
symbol of the full Christian state. In the New Testament the catecumens were
inside, not outside, the sphere of discipleship. Instead of being kept waiting
at the threshold, the applicants were met with a generous and unsuspecting
welcome. Three thousand were baptized on the day of Pentecost: how much
preliminary instruction had they? And if, as at Sarnaria, a Simon Magus were
received, with his heart not right in the sight of God, his reception had not
defiled those tender arms of mercy which had been flung around him, and from
which he had, as it were, to burst, to pursue the headlong path to everlasting
ruin. It is evident, upon the face of Scripture, that baptism was not then
fenced round, as many now would fence it round. It was a door, not carelessly,
but readily and with a full heart, opened to the applicant for it. No question
of Christ's heart, no " if Thou wilt,'' was to be permitted."
To this the meaning of baptism, and the Lord's words as to little children,
unite their testimony. The doctrine of the Church as Paul declared it, and as to
which our brother writes, "To profess to be a Christian is to profess to be
a member of the body of Christ," was unknown for years after Pentecost; and
therefore, whatever may be the profession now, NONE certainly made it then. The
power of the Spirit was abroad; and, of course, in the same proportion there was
earnestness and reality, yet with proof soon afforded that the first parable of
the kingdom was fulfilling too. The more reality there was the more the Church
and the Kingdom would be co-extensive. The fervour of divine love in souls
refused to allow any neutrality. Men were drawn along with the current that was
then in full tide, or flung out as drift by the eddies along the shore. And
granting, for a moment, that there were growing up with the years that went by
the families that were baptized,- these, too, would be no exception to the rule.
Thus the inability to find more than the "within and without" of which
our brother rightly speaks. When he uses it as an argument upon his side, he
simply is unable to realize the true character of that which he opposes,- that
the grace of the Kingdom was not meant to promote, and did not promote, the
growth of a neutral class, impossible until love slackened and zeal cooled, and
that confusion which the after-parables of the kingdom indicate as so soon to
set in began to appear and grow.
The idea of the open sinners in the Church being left in any "intermediate
circle," such as he imagines for us (C. 19), only shows how little our
brother understands the position which he attacks. When men manifest themselves
as " wicked persons," they cannot be treated as neutral.
"OF SUCH IS THE KINGDOM."
But the case of children shows more definitely the character of the Kingdom. Our
brother C. finds abundant fault with the obscurity of my utterances on this
point. This may be true, that they are obscure; but I believe it proceeds a good
deal from believing that the Lord's words are not obscure, and may be trusted to
speak for themselves. But our brother uses certainly many more words than are
needed to explain the matter. "Of such," of course, means
"likeness." In this I agree with him with all my heart: "'Of
"much displeased" that His disciples would not have suffered it.
"Suffer them to come," He says, which undeniably means here
"Suffer them to be brought," as they were being brought; and which (as
undeniably, one would have thought) did not mean "Suffer them to believe on
Me"(!) which is C's interpretation ! Can he really mean that the disciples
were trying to hinder the babes from believing on Jesus? Or would he, admitting
the simple fact that "coming" means literally what it says, think it
just as reasonable that the Lord should have received sheep or lambs, because it
might be said "of such is the kingdom of heaven"? No; it is He who was
Israel's king of old proclaiming for the new kingdom that was then "at
hand," the continuance of no less goodness than He had shown in the one
passed away. He would not be less gracious in the present than He had been in
the past, nor less answer the craving of the hearts of His people for the
children intrusted to them.
J. J. has less to say than this, and J. J. S. no more than J. J. For both these,
"Suffer them to come" means "Suffer them to believe"; and
"of such "is read so as to exclude those that are most of all
"such"! "If we do not bring our children to Him in any other way
than by baptism, we shall not do it at all"! And if we do not eat the
Lord's flesh in any other way than in the Lord's Supper we shall not do it at
all. Are we, then, indeed, such poor, pitiful ritualists, that we need to be
reminded of such things as these?
But can we make the meaning of the "of such" a little plainer yet, and
show how the babes and the grown people like them are linked together? Let us
try to get at the point of the comparison; and this will be got, I think, by
considering what "the word of the kingdom " must imply for those
receiving it. It implies, of course, submission to the King; that is, to His
commandment, the yoke of discipleship. For this they must be as little children;
for what is the little child the type of but of the learner, of one under the
yoke? The will of man it is that resists the claims of the Lord Jesus,- the
independence of man that refuses submission : "we have turned every one to
his own way" is the inspired description of the world as away from God. For
blessing, therefore, that way must be given up; and men must become like
children, and take, in obedience, the learner's place.
But the children are, in some sense, already there. The state of childhood is
what God has ordained for blessing, when the will is in its plastic state, and
when submission to authority is natural, as it is necessary. Here the parent is
the designed minister of God for good, standing in the place of authority, which
most of all represents God among men. That "that which is born of the flesh
is flesh," is, of course, true: the little child, as soon as it begins to
live, begins to manifest that it is a fallen being. Still, the child's being
"flesh" may be pressed in a harsh way, with which those who press it
are happily quite inconsistent. Rightly, they teach their children; and we are
expressly assured, "Train up a child in the way he should go, and when he
is old he will not depart from it." And we are expressly bidden,
"Bring up your children in the discipline and admonition of the Lord."
God must be with this for any good, but He will be with it: and here we are
bidden to put our children in the place of disciples. "I know him,"
God says of Abraham, "that he will command his children and his household
after him, and they shall keep the way of the Lord, to do justice and judgment,
that the Lord may bring upon Abraham that which He has spoken of him." Now
we know what God had spoken of Abraham's seed; and to us He has given as
comforting assurance of what His mind is toward us: "Believe on the Lord
Jesus Christ, and thou shalt be saved, and thy house." But to this we shall
have to return later on.
DISCIPLES AND DISCIPLING.
C. is right as to the expression "discipled to the kingdom." He will
find it given correctly a few lines further on (Reasons, p. 25), and the force
is on the word "discipled." The phrase is the same as in Matt. xxvii.
57, where Joseph of Arimathea is said to have been "discipled to
Jesus"; that is, of course, made a disciple of Jesus. It will not do, from
any interpretation of Luke xvii. 21, to make the kingdom and the king
convertible terms. The kingdom was in the midst of Israel, I do not question, in
the person of the king; and those who were discipled to the kingdom were, of
course, discipled to the king, but that is no ground for changing the one into
the other. The phraseology of Scripture is always the most accurate; and in
Matt. xiii, which treats of the "mysteries of the kingdom,"- things
unknown before-we see at once how the Old Testament "scribe," brought
to the understanding of these mysteries, would have new treasures added to the
old ones. The parables show, also, if they show anything, that the kingdom is
formed by the word of the kingdom being received into men's hearts: that is, it
is the sphere of discipleship. The first parable also shows that there were
disciples, and "disciples indeecl,"- disciples who
"continued" in the word, and those who did not (Comp. John vi. 66).
This merely means, and is only taken to mean, that the word is not at all
equivalent to "child of God," or "member of Christ." Our
brother C. complains, as '' unfair,'' of the use of our Lord's words in John
viii. 31, "as if it implied the existence of a recognized class of
disciples of a lower grade." It is simply used to show that continuance (as
the wheat which had no proper root did not continue) distinguished true
disciples from the unreal. C. says it is in contrast with some who had just then
(v. 30) become convinced that He was the Messiah." There is no contrast at
all; and there was, as yet, nothing to contrast with. It is a word of
encouragement, and, at the same time, of admonition; and what they might turn
out to be is of no account whatever. By the fact of their professed belief in
Him they were taking the place of disciples, and He spoke to them in that
character. As a fact, it is well known what "disciples" meant. There
were "disciples" of John, of Moses, of the Pharisees: the word is a
common word for the followers of any teacher, and does not decide as to the
reality of the profession even. Who can deny it?
When the Lord is risen from the dead, and the kingdom is ready to be proclaimed,
He says, "All authority"- not power-" is given unto Me, in heaven
and in earth: go ye, and disciple all nations." It is plain He would not
say "Make children of God": this was within His own power only.
"Disciple" was the suited word in reference to the kingdom; and this
THE COMMISSION AND THE KEYS.
The words here, literally, are "Go and disciple all the nations, baptizing
them . . . teaching them."
J. J. S. remarks upon a quotation: "The writer admits that the grammatical
construction requires that the them should be connected with disciples.' "
Grammatical construction makes this quite impossible, for there is no word
"disciples" for "them " to be connected with. "Disciple
all the nations, baptizing them."
I agree with C. that "it is certain that individuals, not nations
collectively, are meant." I should have thought the other view impossible.
How could nations be got at "collectively"? A nation could not be
"discipled " in the mass, but only by individuals. The discipling is
defined, I doubt not, as to be effected in two ways,.- by baptism and teaching.
Our brother C. demurs, and produces passages in proof that the grammar does not
necessitate this construction of it. Yet it is, at least, the most natural way
of expressing mode: "Preach, saying"; "disciple, baptizing."
But, moreover, if "teaching" must be allowed to enter into the very
idea of discipling, as our brother would allow it must,- for it is what is
taught that makes the real scholar,- then still more must the ''baptizing,"
put side by side with this, serve to fill out and explain further the same
thing. It was fit, where the Master was at the same time the Lord,- where the
school was at the same time the kingdom,-that there should be this sign of
submission on the part of those taking their place there. They are
"baptized unto the name of the Lord Jesus"; and this is connected with
the authoritative "remission of sins."
The "keys of the kingdom" are here clearly to be seen. "But where
does it say there were just two keys?" asks J. J. S. If he can find a third
we shall not object; but it surely requires more than one to make a plural. The
Lord Himself speaks of the "key of knowledge"; but there needs
another, if the expression be an accurate one. Our brethren are evidently shy of
the question. "The real truth is," says J. J. S. again, "that
Peter had the authority given him to open the door, that being what the keys
represent in Scripture; and when the door was once opened it did not need to be
opened again, so we don't need any man with keys today." This settles the
matter, if an assertion can settle it; but why should not the key of knowledge
be enough, then, without "keys"? Why "keys" at all? Take the
commission as it reads, and the whole is clear: we see that the keys are needed
still, and that the door was not thrown open once for all.
But "the keys were given to Peter, and to Peter alone"! It is not said
"alone." Was the promise "and whatsoever thou shalt bind on
earth" to Peter alone? Certainly as much as that of the keys. Did it hinder
the Lord extending this to the assembly a little after? Why should the promise
of the keys not have a similar extension in the commission to disciple here?
But, urges C., "if infants are in the kingdom, they are in it without the
key of knowledge, why may they not also be in it without the key of
baptism?" A fair question; and it call be as fairly answered. With regard
to infants, they are received as the household of the parents, whom God has put
in the place of authority over them. The key of knowledge is not set aside, but
the parent acts as the guardian and representative of the child before God,
charged with its interests, and not for the setting aside of the truth, but for
its complete establishment over it. The exception is only apparent in this case,
the spirit of the rule being perfectly observed.
Why could one only baptize among the heathen those who give evidence of some
real conversion? It is because baptizing must be discipling; and where this is
not meant to take the Lord's yoke really, it would be merely a mockery to
baptize. For the child it is the parents' will that gives confidence as to this,
and so one can "disciple." In either case the result may, alas,
disappoint our hope.
One more objection only: it is that of J. J., who says: " As to baptism
being one of the keys of the kingdom, if it be such it was an unaccountable
omission not to give it to Paul, who was sent 'not to baptize.' But I question
very much whether the Lord would have called an ordinance a 'key.'
Now I should think that the keys being given to all the disciples after the
resurrection of the Lord would be the very best reason why they should not be
given to Paul as part of his special commission Paul was the special minister of
the Church (Col. i. 25) in its full character, and in this the baptismal
commission could have no place.
Again, the simple and external nature of baptism would in no wise hinder its
being a token of the Lord's authority, in its place very needful thus; and, when
intelligently practised, a witness to much essential truth. Bnt we shall have to
look at this further, presently.
It is evident that our brethren cannot show us any other keys; and thus these,
spite of their protests, fit the lock in this way also.
THE MEANING OF BAPTISM.
"'Scripture speaks of baptism as a 'figure,'" says J. J. "'The
like figure whereunto even baptism doth also now save us' (i Pet. iii. 20). A
figure is not efficacious in itself. It is a figure of something else which is
efficacious." This is simple enough, surely. It is a figure of salvation;
and a figure cannot really save.
But while this is very well as a protest against ritualism, it is not the whole
thing. An ordinance may accomplish something, and yet be a figure of that which
it does not accomplish. Yet J. J. says: "Any system of doctrine which
attaches efficacy to an ordinance is ritualistic, and is so far a departure from
the truth. It is an unintentional but practical denial of the fact that
ordinances are taken out of the way and nailed to the cross of Christ. It is to
take them down again from the cross, and to assume to use them to effect what
only a work of grace can accomplish. The two ordinances of Christianity -
Baptism and the Lord's Supper - are not ordinances at all in this sense: they
have no power whatever to 'effect' anything."
Where does our brother find this teaching in Scripture? The passage which he
quotes for it does not bear him out, and his appeal to it is of the loosest
kind. The apostle is speaking of "the obligation of ordinances (or decrees)
which was against and contrary to" those in Judaism. 'l'his Christ has
"wiped out," and stricken through with the nails of His cross. Without
any ordinance whatever, the dying thief, according to the word of the Lord, goes
to Paradise with Him. Cornelius receives the Holy Ghost, with all his company,
before they are baptized. This is the grace of God in Christianity, gloriously
free. But this household Baptism granted fully - and the meaning left wholly
unimpaired - how should this hinder that for the entrance into the company of
His people on earth there should be this simple but significant and
authoritative admission? Must we say, with J. J., that baptism, though to
Christ, effects nothing?- that even though one is baptized unto remission of
sins,- is baptized and washes away his sins,-still this is nothing?-and as he
would not, but still we must, say that baptism is discipling, yet it
accomplishes nothing?
Nor are we sacramentalists because we cannot grant this (C. 21). Our brother may
find, if he please to look, whether in the Episcopal prayer-book, or the
Westminster Confession of Faith, that a sacrament is understood to be an
ordinance that conveys the grace it signifies. Thus if baptism is figuratively
(as they hold) "the washing of regeneration," it imparts this grace-
it regenerates. This, assuredly, I do not hold. And yet I do hold that there is
a congruity between the figurative meaning and what is accomplished by the
baptismal act.
Baptism is "discipling." It brings a person out of the outside world
into the company of disciples, the Lord's followers on earth. It does not work
the spiritual change which this would imply for one becoming in heart a
disciple, but it does figure this. It does not save in fact, but it does in
figure. (i P. iii. 21.)
It is easy to see why the figure of the internal work should be found in what is
external. The outward discipling becomes in this way a witness to the inward
necessity,- a gospel pledge or assurance that if that be truth in the heart
which is here outwardly declared, then the highest and fullest blessing which it
witnesses an "if," from the human side. God knoweth the heart; and
hence the conditionality always connected with the kingdom.
Take the "remission of sins." In the absolute way we know that the
Jews were right in their question, guilty as they were in their unbelief of
Christ's glory, "Who can forgive sins but God alone?" Yet the Lord can
say, and does, to His disciples, "Whose sins ye remit they are remitted to
them"; and baptism at disciples' hands is to the remission of sins. Is
this, then, the same kind of remission as His? No, assuredly: it is for the
present kingdom, and for earth,- not for heaven and eternity. Yet it is the
witness and conditional declaration of the other. And such conditional remission
we have in the parable of the unforgiving debtor (Matt. xviii. 23-35), a parable
of the kingdom of heaven.
"The reference here is plainly" however, J. J. S. says, "to the
Jewish nation"; although there is nothing that I can see in the Lord's
words to Peter to suggest such a thought. The Jewish nation never sued for
forgiveness at his hands, never took the place of those forgiven; and there is
nothing in the context of the parable to make it likely. The connection with
baptism, which our brother cannot find, is simply that it is a parable of the
kingdom.
Let us look now at the figurative meaning of baptism, and we shall find that
nowhere does it figure the state, but the process,of salvation. Says J.J.
"Baptism is a figure of Christ's death; and . . . it supplies the answer to
the demand for a good conscience, because it is the figure of the death of
Christ; and as He is risen from the dead, faith finds in His death all the
demands of conscience met." But it is not the action in baptism that
expresses this. The death of Christ is what we are baptized to: we are baptized
to Christ, to His death. The water, like Jordan after Christ had been in it,
does express to us that by which salvation comes; but the baptism proper is the
immersion into it. But, again, "it supplies the answer to the demand for a
good conscience" ! Not at all: it is the "demand" itself, not the
answer to the demand; and this shows that the one coming to baptism is not, in
idea, one saved, but one seeking salvation. Baptism is the burial of the person
himself, as judicially dead already, to meet Christ in His death. It is thus
"burial with Christ,"- Christ remaining in the efficacy of His death
for all who need Him, even while and because Himself risen; so that baptism is,
in figure, salvation,- the process, not the state.
Again he says, speaking of those baptized upon the day of Pentecost, "their
baptism was 'upon' their confession." Not exactly, either: their baptism
was their confession. But this, too, he states elsewhere.
Again, "This forgiveness of sins was eternal re-mission, for it was founded
upon Christ's death, upon the confession of whose name they were baptized."
If this be so, what becomes of ordinances effecting nothing, as he tells us,
when they were baptized to get eternal remission! Surely extremes meet here!
As to the gift of the Holy Spirit following, Heb. vii, 4, surely shows that it
did not necessarily result that a person made "partaker of the Holy
Ghost" was saved. The historical account, as in Acts, is not the record of
the inward state of souls. Nor, indeed, do we know how far the signs of the
Spirit's presence manifested themselves in the baptized. All did not work
miracles, or speak with tongues.
Again, very strangely, J. J. quotes, "The like figure whereunto even
baptism doth also now save us," and adds "plainly linking it with a
saved state." But in what way? As the result of the baptism, or in order to
it?-absolute or conditional ?-figure or fact?
J. J. S., commenting on Rom. vi., says:- "We are buried with Him by
baptism: that surely implies death with Him. We are 'baptized unto His death';
that is, in recognition of His death. But we are buried,- not to His, but unto
death; that is, an acknowledgment of our death with Him. The way our household
baptists try to reason out of this plain Scripture is a remarkable instance of
the really blinding effect of following human theories. The very truth it is
taken up to develop - that is, in connection with sin - is enough to show it is
only believers, and true believers, that could be in question here."
It is, however, " plain," if anything is, in J. J. S.'s argument, that
the truth of our being "dead with Christ," which the apostle reaches
only in the 6th and 7th verses, he implies in the beginning of the 4th; yet the
apostle is carefully reasoning up to it. The truth of being dead with Christ has
not been stated before at all. He reaches it in this way:- We were baptized to
Christ: But the dead only can have title to the place of death: have we such
title? Yes; but not because naturally dead in sins, for we could never find
Jesus there: that could not be the death He took. Judicial death, then, the due
of sin ? Yes; this is ours; we can take this place, and Christ is in it. We must
be buried with Him,- buried in His sepulchre, so to speak; to touch and get
virtue from Him, that we may live.
Remember that we are baptized to Christ, to His death; and baptism is the soul
on its quest for Christ, the demand for a good conscience, not the declaration
that we have found it. The baptism is to Him, to gain Him,- ends with effecting
this. The rest is His work. The life, He gives. The satisfaction of conscience
is the fruit of His cross. Buried with Him by baptism unto death, it is that, as
Christ was raised from the dead by the glory of the Father, we also should walk
in newness of life. For now (mark) if we have become united to Him (R. V.) in
the likeness of His death - the quest of baptism attained - we shall be in the
likeness of His resurrection.
Here, now, in this new state of things, we can look joyfully around. Knowing
this, that our old man is crucified with Him that the body of sin might be
destroyed -(annulled)- that henceforth we should not serve sin."
Yes, now we may begin to speak of being dead with Christ: before we could not.
This is the effect of what baptism speaks of - impossible before we had the
effect. And now we can go on to the deliverance from the power of sin, where, as
J. J. S. says, "only believers, and true believers, could be in
question." But we have reached this point by a legitimate path, not
implying, at the start, what was really the conclusion, as our baptist brethren
do. That the conclusion is for believers, we are equally sure with them; but
that does not involve the unscriptural thought of baptism being the expression
of a saved state, instead of the "demand for a good conscience," and
that which, as a figure, saves. These are two opposite thoughts, impossible to
reconcile; and upon this rock J. J. S.'s argument is capsized and lost, without
hope of recovery.
BAPTISM IN RELATION TO CHILDREN.
We have learnt, then, four things as to baptism which are in
direct opposition to our brethren's contention:-
First, that it is to Christ's death, not to show that one was dead with Christ
before.
Secondly, that (as a figure) it saves, not expresses the thought of having been
saved before.
Thirdly, it is the demand for a good conscience, not the answer of one already
good.
Fourthly, that it is for the remission of sins, not the sign of their having
been remitted.
All this is in clear consistency with the thought of it as one of the keys of
the kingdom, a kingdom not yet set up in power, nor yet spiritual in such sort
as to require to be born again to see it or enter into it. On the contrary, it
is the kingdom of God in man's hand, so entirely that the Lord represents that-
"So is the kingdom of God as if a man should cast seed into the ground, and
sleep and rise, night and day, and the seed should spring and grow up, he
knoweth not how. . . . But when the fruit is brought forth, immediately he
putteth in the sickle, because the harvest is come." (Mk. iv. 26-29.)
How unlike this to a kingdom into which God alone introduces by new birth ! Oh,
it is said, that is the "outward aspect,"- that is, "as men see
it,- when they have just told us that it is so spiritual that not one can
"see" it, except by being born again, nor one enter it except by a
door safely guarded by God's own hand. On the contrary, if men sleep, the tares
spring up in it in plenty.
But the Church, you say, has not that the two aspects? Yes; because the Church
is not only the body of Christ, into which the Spirit baptizes, but also the
house of God, which bad builders may extend unduly (i Cor. 3. 12, sq.) But the
history of the body of Christ has never been written; and it is never said, and
could not be said, The body of Christ is like a field in which an enemy
sows tares! Once make the kingdom of God what the body of Christ is, and such
views of it become wholly and forever impossible. But now as to baptism in
relation to children.
A babe newly born has no "sins" as yet to be remitted. True; though,
alas, that difficulty soon passes away. But the true answer lies a little
deeper. For the Christian, remission of sins has in view the evil of the old
nature and the practical frailty belonging to us all. And it applies, therefore,
not as men soon began to think, to the past merely, but to the present ever, as
the future comes continually into it. A Christian always has the forgiveness of
sins, for it is according to the riches of a grace at all times sufficient for
us. Thus the objection will be found, after all, a superficial one.
As to all else that may be objected, the answer has been already virtually
given. The parent, by his God-given place, represents the child, and is
distinctly accepted of the Lord in bringing his child to Him,- that being the
"coming" which the disciples were bidden to "suffer." It is
amazing that our baptist brethren can interpret this coming as
"believing." It is really an interpretation scarcely respectable
enough to deserve serious answer. Whas it their believing - that the disciples
were hindering?- and was it that that called forth the Lord's displeasure when
He said, "Suffer them to come unto Me, and forbid them not"? We have
surely good right to feel that there is a veil over the eyes of those who can
argue in this way. Why, if anything is clear, it is so that it is the parent's
desire that the Lord is meeting, on the part of those who were young enough, at
any rate, to be taken up into the Saviour's arms. Are there any who will read
this who need to be told what this desire was? And it is to justify His granting
it that He adds, as to the babes, "of such is the kingdom of heaven."
There was, of course, no baptism; for the kingdom was not yet; nor, therefore,
baptism into it. When this should come, then baptism for them would express in
His own personal absence, what as present He here gives them assurance of! It is
as if He said, I accept them in this relation to Me which you desire for them.
They are Mine : you, as delegates for Me, bring them up for Me. That is what the
baptism does: it formally admits them into the school of Christ,- disciples
them. The baptism of the household expresses this. It is the precious pledge of
the absent Redeemer's love, which is to be answered by the faith that says, in
the sense of the responsibility it implies, "Lord, they are Thine, and they
shall be Thine." Answer is easy, therefore, to the question, why not
baptize all babes? Why only believers' households? Why, because only believers'
households can be, in fact, "discipled." Only those who have come to
Christ can bring to Christ, or therefore bring up for Christ. And this governs
all right practice, and shows clearly how household baptism is the only
consistent form of infant baptism: to those for whom baptism is to be real
"discipling," clear and simple as the day
And this, too, shows, as to those in the household, the rule that should govern
us. The "atheist" son, of whom C. speaks, for instance, if old enough
and developed enough to be such, has clearly passed from under his father's
authority and care. If, in any case, the reins of authority have dropped out of
the parents' hands, how can one treat the one of whom this is true as any longer
of the household ? As for servants, and in a clay such as this, the thought of
baptism, if any entertain it, is beyond my comprehension. Let baptism be
discipling,- a thing identified with and implying the Lord's yoke for those
baptized,- and the practice is simple as it is holy: only holy thus.
But the kingdom is the sphere of profession? Yes; I believe so. But how can a
little child profess? It is not meant that it does, or necessary that it should.
It is under authority, according to God's order in the world; and, in this
sense, in professed subjection, though it be the father's will, and not the
child's. The term is, however, not applied in Scripture directly to the kingdom,
and if thought unsuitable need not he pressed. Yet the household baptized is
professedly Christ's, and "HOLY." I do not believe in holiness by
"birth," even "of a Christian parent." The baptism is that
setting apart to God, which alone gives in Scripture the applicability of such a
title. "The child," it is said, "is already set apart by the will
of God to the care of its Christian parents, and is not to be put away as
unclean, even if one parent be unconverted." Every child is set apart by
the word of God to the care of its parents, which only confirms what Nature
already teaches. But this does not make it holy, that is, set it apart to God.
The unbelieving wife or husband is sanctified only in the other partner, so as
to make the child clean; but that does not make it "holy." The
unbelieving wife is "clean"; that is, does not defile the believing
husband: she is not "holy,"- set apart to God.
C. mistakes entirely the meaning here, and certainly seems to charge me with
practising deception. Will he allow me to assure him that I thought everybody
knew what he has explained to us - that to sanctify is to make holy? The
argument is that, while the wife or husband is looked at as holy only
"in" another, in such a sense as not to defile the issue of the
marriage, the children are not merely clean, they are holy; and the relationship
to Jewish law intimated is quite instructive. In Judaism every one knows that
the children were brought into covenant relationship to God by circumcision. In
the case of marriage with one of the prohibited nations, this would so defile
the Jew contracting it as to deprive the child of the right to circumcision.
Christianity reversed this, sanctified (so far as the marriage was concerned)
the unbeliever, looked at both as (in this respect) within the covenant; and
showed it did so by accepting the children of the marriage.
Thus the " holy '' comes with special force,- not merely clean.
"Clean" would not express for the Jew the thought conveyed by holy;
that is, "consecrated, dedicated, or sanctified to God "; and hagios
is the word which would be used in Greek for expressing this. To have said
"clean" would have been enough to have proved the lawfulness of the
marriage. The "sanctified" and "holy" were both needed in
order to express the thought of relationship to God. The use of the two words,
therefore, here, is every way significant.
It is true that circumcision was connected with a nation after the flesh. That
was, then, how the promises were entailed. But surely even here the spiritual
relation was that ever insisted on; and apart from this the other was nothing,
or brought only condemnation. How even for the Jew does the apostle press the
meaning of circumcision; and that that was not truly such which was merely
outward in the flesh! (Rom. ii. 28.) How, then, can one make the fleshly
relation rule, as if it were the whole thing? That was, indeed, the form taken
at the time by the kingdom of God. 'I'he form has passed, but the kingdom of God
remains; and, according to the Lord's express assurance, the children brought in
their parents' faith to Him have still their place in it. Strange it would have
been if He had cut them off!
It is a little bold, then, to say that " no Scripture shows that the family
of the believer comes in with him." In both these places the Scripture does
so.
(GREEK) two words appear here which my keyboard cannot render.
The baptism of households is, then, a thing of course; and our finding it only
confirms what should be already clear to us. The word used for household in
every case of this kind is the regular one where a man's own children are in
question, ozxoc; and the apostle seems to put these households in a class
distinct from those baptized as believers, and so naturally coming into the
assembly. (i Cor. i. i6.) Let us note again the argument, as our brethren take
no proper notice of it.
There were divisions at Corinth; and because baptism is discipling, the apostle
was glad to think that he had baptized but two out of the whole number, Crispus
and Gaius,- too few for a party, or to allow people to think that he had been
making disciples of his own. This he thanks God for: "I baptized none of
you but Crispus and Gaius." He adds (lest any, it would seem, should demur
to such a statement) that he had baptized the household of Stephanas; for the
rest, he did not know that he had baptized any other. The natural inference
here, and especially in view of all that we have seen already,- the argument is
cumulative: it gathers strength as it goes on,- is, that here are two classes of
the baptized. Of those in the assembly he had only baptized two; of the
households (in which the numbers would soon mount up) he had baptized one
certainly, perhaps more, though he was not aware of it. We can see how
consistent all this is, if he is speaking of families: it was of no consequence
that he should remember the number he had baptized among these: they were not
the promoters of division in the assembly.
Our brother C. suggests that the family of Stephanas was away from Corinth,
because Stephanas himself had been; but his coming to the apostle as a messenger
from the assembly was very recent, and it is very little likely that he carried
his household with him. Journeys were journeys in those days of old. Nor would
that have hindered their being essentially a part of the assembly, if away at
the time he wrote. Neither does this explain the doubt of the last words. The
household of Stephanas," mentioned in the last chapter of this epistle, who
had addicted themselves to the ministry of the saints, has been always the ready
argument against those before spoken of being children. An effectual one, too,
it is, if the households are the same. But a different word is used here (ozxza,
not ozioza), which, it is contended, is nol the word for children of a family,
nor for the household baptized. But this is in question. C. contends that they
are used interchangeably. We ought to be able to see if this is true.
If we turn, then, to the Greek version of the Old Testament (the Septuagint),
and look first of all at what is clear, we find that wherever we have undoubted
reference to the children of the family,- to blood relationship,- ozxoza, not
ozxici, is the word used. Thus for Noah's house saved in the flood (Gen.vii. i)
the souls of the house of Jacob that came into Egypt with him, and which are
enumerated as those that came out of his loins (ch. xlvi.), the house of Israel
(the nation), the house of Joseph, etc. (the tribes), the fathers' houses into
which these were divided, the house of Eli, condemned for their iniquity, the
houses of Saul and of David, rivals for the throne, the house of Jeroboam,
smitten for his idolatry, of Baasha, of Ahab, similarly judged, of Rechab,
commended for obedience, and many more that could be named,- all these (without
exception that I know) are ozxoc, ozxza never once. How many occurrences?
Speaking roughly, we may say, about four hundred. Is not this a number
sufficient to establish pretty well the force of this word in doubtful cases ?
Take now ozxza. Here we have the eldest servant of Abraham's house; Jacob tells
Laban he has been twenty years in his house,- where he was treated like a
servant; Potiphar's wife speaks to the men of her house about Joseph; and
although the lamb of the passover is taken according to the ozxo of their
fathers, the measure of eating is a lamb for an ozxza, because the servants must
be included here: Joshua's "as for me and my house (ozxua), we will serve
the Lord," naturally includes the servants.
The word is used (both words are) more for a material building-house, in that
sense - than for the inmates. The latter sense has naturally grown out of the
former; and one would expect to find, therefore, in this fundamental meaning of
the words something of the difference attaching to them in the higher one. I
think no one who examines with any care will fail to realize that there is a
distinction, and that they are not, by any means, used indifferently. Thus, for
the house of God the word is always ocxici, never ozxza; and the latter seems to
have always a lower character. Thus, for the house of the sparrow (Ps. lxxxiv.
3) and the stork (civ. 17), the word is ovita; and this is generally used for
the houses of a town, or when there is nothing noteworthy about them; while for
house as implying home, or as the better class of abode, it is generally ozxoc.
I say "generally," for there are, naturally, apparent exceptions,-
which, however, seem often to carry their reason in their face. These things it
would take too long to go into in detail; but there seems, plainly, a difference
even in this respect, which corresponds with the difference in the higher
meaning.
When we come to the New Testament, which is inspired and perfect, the use of
these words corresponds, even in their lower signification.There is one apparent
exception, however, which at. first sight may seem absolutely unaccountable, bnt
which we must look at directly. The house of God is still always (word),
and there are here nineteen occurrences. For kings' houses the word is ozxos
(Matt. xi. 8); so with the high priest's (Luke xxii. 54); and the ruler's (Mark
v. 38); SO where home is emphasized (Mark v. iv VIll. 26; Luke i. 23; V. 24;
viii. 39; ix. 6i; xv. 6; John vii. 53; i Cor. Xi. 34; XIV. 35; I Tim. V. 4).
Except " my servant lieth at home '' Matt. viii. 6), where it is ozxza;
as it is iii "the servant abideth not in the house forever'' (John viii.
35), and where a man "left his house, and gave authority to his
servants" (Mark XIII. 34). Oixza is, again, the general term for
houses.
To all this there is, however, as I have said, one objection, which, at first
sight, might seem insuperable. When the Lord says to His disciples, "In my
Father's house are many mansions," the word used for ''house'' is ozmaa.
(John XIV. 2.)
Yet for temple, or tabernacle, and the Father's house, when meaning this, it is oixoc
that is used; and, of course, when it is said " whose house are we"
(Heb. iii. 6), it is still ozxoc.
And is not this the explanation ? If so, a precious witness of the Lord's value
for His people, that the higher term is thus reserved for them! The "many
mansions" are, after all, only the Father's dwelling-place in a lesser and
external sense. The Church of God is what He counts and calls His house- ozxoc.
For the rest, it is still the latter word that is used for the house of Israel,
house of David, house of Jacob,- twelve occurrences; the elders are to "
rule their own houses well, having their children in subjection with all
gravity." (i Tim. iii. 4.) So, too, the deacons are to rule their children
and (or "even ") "their own houses well" (ver. 12). The
baptized households are similarly ozxoc. And if five in one house (ozxoc)
are divided, they are given as father and son, and mother and daughter, and
daughter-in-law. (Luke xii. 52, 53.)
But we must hear now the protests of our brethren. J. J. replies that if ozxza
"includes the servants," as I had put it in my former tract, it does
not exclude the children: "Will F. W. G. say that when the ozxia ate
the lamb, the children were excluded?" No; F. W. G., as may be seen, has no
such thought. But yet the term, as contemplating the servants, would naturally
be used where only they might be intended; and if i Cor. xvi. i6 does not in
itself exclude the children, the first chapter implies their exclusion.
J. J. S.'s argument that Joseph being governor over "all the house of
Pharaoh" (Acts vii. io), where the word is ozxoc, "clearly
refers to servants only," is, after all, not so clear. 'Thou shalt be over
my house," says the king, "and according to thy word shall all my
people be ruled; only in the throne will I be greater than thou. . . . Without
thee shall no man lift up his hand or foot in all the land of Egypt." Can
J. J. S. say just how far such power extended ?
But the deacons ruling their children and their own houses well ! " Here,
also, the word for house is ozxoc, and is definitely linked on to
servants" ! Not at all.
The elders show rather the reverse, as the requisitions are otherwise so
similar; and the emphasis on "their own houses" similarly shows the
ground of the repetition. Their ability to care for the houses of others must be
shown by the care given to their own. The "and" may just as well be
"even."
C. finds great fault with my appeal to the house divided against itself; but he
is wrong. "Five in one house" is peculiar to Luke; and Matt. X. 36, is
different. Here the Lord says, "And a man's foes shall be they of his own
household,"- words not repeated in the other gospels. Here the word is ozxzako,
derived, of course, from ozxza; and which is used again, quite in accordance
with the significance of oziza in the 25th verse of the same chapter in
Matthew: '' The disciple is not above his master, nor the servant above his
lord: it is enough for the disciple to be as his master, and the servant as his
lord." If they have called the master of the house Beelzebub, how much more
shall they call them of his household"? Now in the 35th verse there is no
reason to limit this to those specified in the preceding. " Five in
one" would be very different. It is the parallelism of words that we are
examining, and not of texts. All the rest of his remarks I have already
answered.
THE HOUSEHOLDS.
Few words will now suffice as to the "households," and our brother C.
will give us all the arguments. In the case of the jailer he tells us that
"having believed" could not be plural. Of course the form of the word
shows it could not: I do not know what else. It is, certainly, "he
rejoiced," and he having believed. The adverb iravotxi is hard to
put in English and that is why, I suppose, translators generally accept
"with all his house" as an equivalent. But 1 do not see how "all-householdly
" would authorize this any more than "domestically." It would
rather imply, I think, ''over" or "as to all his house." But the
remark in ver. 31 is still more strange. "It was not said 'you now, and
your house by and by.' " No; there is neither the "now" nor the
"by and by." But the salvation of his house is connected with his own
faith, whether it were now or by and by; and just as much in the former case as
in the hatter. Why, then, call it " sentimentality,' or ''sacramentalism,"
to accept the connection of such blessed words with the doctrine which runs
through Scripture of the connection, in God's design, of blessing to a man's
house because of his faith? Is it easier to believe that God should do this once
in the way and of a sudden for the jailer here, than that he should imply his
desire to do it for every believer? Is it good, by making this a special and
exceptional thing, to take it away from any significance that one can see for
any one else? Had the jailer even expressed any desire for his children? And if
he had, what would save it from "sentimentality" in his case, when it
seems it would be only that in ours?
As to the case of Lydia and her house, I think there is nothing that needs more
reply, as far as I am concerned. Nor do I find anything of importance elsewhere.
We may here, therefore, bring this discussion to an end.
In conclusion, only, it is well to observe that the divine word tests us often
by what may seem to us the triviality of a positive institution. Wherever we can
show what is manifestly moral in a command, the idea of the morality comes so to
enforce the precept as sometimes to overshadow it as aprecept. If I obey only
where I know the why of the command, that is not obedience, properly. If duly
obedient I can no longer question as to what I know to be of God. Thus the whole
temper and spirit of my life may reveal itself in the breach of some command
which to me may seem - and just because it does seem to me trivial -a small
matter, whether in this particular I do His will or not. Cannot I present my
child to God, apart from baptism? I can, surely; but is my way or His the best ?
Cannot I remember the Lord's death apart from the symbols of bread and wine? As
to how much, may we not argue similarly ? But, after all, the simple acceptance
of Christ's word will be found the way of surest blessing. If the baptism in
itself be little enough, at how much shall we value the Christ who is behind it?