Friday, January 20, 2006

More Adventures in Baptism: Gospels

I thought I would wander through the NT and think about baptism for a few entries.

I thought the gospels were a fair enough place to start... and a pretty easy place to start, really.

In Matthew, Mark, and Luke, the baptism mentioned is primarily that of John the Baptist. We would not, as Christians, consider this baptism to be Christian baptism. Matthew 3:11 does predict that Christ will baptism with the Holy Spirit and fire. Mark 1:8 similarly mentions a coming baptism with the Holy Spirit.

But of most interest to us of these is Luke 3:16, which also predicts that Christ will baptize with the Holy Spirit and fire.<1> This prediction in itself is not unique, but in the case of Luke we have Acts to give us what Luke understands to be the "rest of the story." Of greatest interest to us here is Acts 19:1-7, where Paul clearly does not consider baptism by John to be Christian baptism because it did not include baptism with the Holy Spirit. Paul insists that this group of twelve men be baptized in the name of the Lord Jesus.

Baptism in Matthew, Mark, and Luke thus is more indirectly related to our subject than directly. John the Baptist of course baptized Jewish individuals who repented of their sins with a view to forgiveness and in preparation for the coming of the Messiah. For JB this was a one time act of preparation, but baptisms were not uncommon, repeatable things in Jewish life at this time. Miqvaoth were cleansing pools that you can find in any number of places in the Holy Land (e.g., at Qumran, Masada, etc...).

John is a little more complicated, for John is the only gospel that says Jesus' disciples baptized before JB was arrested (John 3:22, 26; 4:1-2). Are we to understand these acts as Christian baptisms? Certainly not in the world of Luke-Acts, for the Holy Spirit does not come until the Day of Pentecost. In that sense Jesus "baptizes" no one until that day and we cannot properly even speak of any Christians until that day. Paul agrees in his own way: "If someone does not have the Spirit of Christ, they are not his" (Rom. 8:9).

But I think John also agrees in his own way with these ideas, for he makes it a point to say that Jesus himself did not baptize (4:2). John also teaches that Christ will baptize with the Holy Spirit (1:33) and symbolically presents the beginning of such baptism after the resurrection (20:22).

So what do we learn from any of these gospels about contemporary issues relating to baptism?

1. Mode: It seems more likely than not to me that JB immersed or dipped people in the river water. I suppose it is possible that he poured water over their heads. The text doesn't really say and I don't really buy the argument that the word baptizo in Greek itself proves it was immersion. This seems a kind of root fallacy that insists the root must dictate how a word is used in practice. But words take on a life of their own and often leave the root or etymological building from which they came. Nevertheless, I have no problem with the usual suggestion that JB probably immersed in the river. Again, this does not take us yet to the question of what a Christian mode of baptism might be.

2. Infant: It seems to me very likely that all or at least nearly all of those who came to JB were adults. They were preparing Israel for the Messiah by purging it of its sins. Of course, I would not say absolutely that no children were involved. It seems a little difficult logistically in that they would have to travel out to the river from wherever. I also wonder how many women he would have baptized. I wonder if there were many.

Does this impact the discussion of Christian infant baptism? We'll have to wait for the argument that baptism involves repentance and therefore does not apply to an infant. For the moment, we will simply note that JB's baptism is not Christian baptism and therefore that it is somewhat of a unique moment in salvation's history that does not directly affect our discussion of Christian baptism.

3. Repeatable? I doubt that JB's baptism was meant to be repeatable, although baptism in general was in Jewish culture at the time. JB was preparing for the Messiah. That would normally have been a one time act I think.


<1> By the way, the story of John the Baptist is one of those rare places where Matthew and Luke agree in wording against Mark. Given the extra stuff that Matthew and Luke have in common in this story, it is often suggested that the JB story was in Q.

4 comments:

Ken Schenck said...

Probably... Actually, I'm trying to be really fair with the data. I think the New Testament gives space for infant baptism, but I'm really going to try to be true to the "fill in the blank" nature of the interpretation. I'm not 100% sure what it will all turn out to look like...

Anonymous said...

So there are two baptisms. I get that. Water and Spirit (John 3:5)? So is the reason why we get baptized in the Church to associate with John's baptism of repentance for the forgiveness of sins? If so, I think we still can signify this with infant baptism. Christ died once for all, which was the very act JB's baptism was pointing to. That's still significant in the life of all people, know matter what their age. So if water baptism (from JB's persepctive) for an infant does this theological argument justice, when does that child receive the baptism of the Holy Spirit? Does that come later, and is that what it means to be "sealed with the Spirit"? I know that in Acts, some received the baptism of the Spirit at a different time than their water baptism. Do we practice this in the church just so we can feel we've dotted our "i's" in view of John 3:5? (I'm trying not to proof text this, but seeing this from JB's perspective as well.)

Ken Schenck said...

I'm holding off saying that JB's baptism has any significance for Christian baptism until I look at Acts. I think Christian baptism in Acts ends up being parallel in some ways to John's baptism, but at this point of the study (trying to be "methodical") it is not clear whether JB's baptism will have any significance at all for Christian baptism or not.

I plan to visit Paul next, since Acts has a way of trumping everything else. So I want to try to get the everything else out in its own right before we get to Acts.

Heather Cooper said...

Ken,

You said that JB was baptizing "in preparation for the coming of the Messiah." Do you think that preparing for the Messiah and preparing for the kingdom of God were synonomous for JB? As I continue to fall deeper into the world of apocalyptic literature and it's influence on the Jewish culture and scripture, I can't help but notice that JB was a bit apocalyptic. Baptism even seems to be a preparation for the last days and the coming of God's kingdom. Do you think that this apocalyptic mindset could effect how they viewed baptism? Is baptism a preparation for future things or is it a sign of what has taken place spiritually? And do either one of these things relate to an infant being baptized?

Perhaps we've changed baptism into to much of an individual occurance as part of the "relationship" mentality that you talked about in your last blog. It seems logical in the NT that if a family became believers that they would have the entire household being baptized as a symbol that that household now follows Christ. For example, in Jonah, when Nineveh repents and brings out the sackcloth, they even put all the living animals and livestock in sackcloth. Why? Did the animals need to repent? Or was it a sign that the "entire" city has gone into a time of repentance. I feel that this is what happens when an entire family become believers of the Lord Jesus Christ.

Perhaps over the last 2000 years our changing culture has slowly shifted the meaning of infant baptism. Back then it was a household sign of a family conversion, now an infant is baptized alone and brings personal meaning for that individual child. Then the question has become how does this effect the child alone and we have lost the communal value of the sacrament of baptism. I think it would be great to baptize an entire household when the family comes to believe in the Lord Jesus, yes, even the infants! However, I start asking a lot of questions when we baptize an individual child that does not understand how to prepare for the kingdom of God or have a great need of repentance. I wouldn't be surprised if we could trace this practice back to early catholic belief that baptism was required for salvation. Perhaps it's morphed and changed shapes in an attempt to survive throught time.