SECTION IV :
PRIMITIVE BAPTISTS CONTINUED.
"Many
walk, of whom I have told you often—who mind earthly things." —Phil. 3:18.
300 1. The fourth century commenced with
outward peace to the church; but the pagan priests wrought so effectually on
the fears of Diocletian, as to obtain from 303 him, in 303, an edict to pull down
the sanctuaries of Christians, to burn their books and writings, and to take
from them all their civil rights and privileges, to render them incapable of
any honors or civil promotion. Other orders were issued of a more sanguinary
character; the magistrates employed all kinds of tortures, and the most
unsupportable punishments were invented, to force Christians to apostatize—and
the ministers of religion were in particular the objects of the emperor's
aversion. The severity and indecent measures adopted, with their continuance…
… for two years, were likely to have proved fatal to the Christian
interest.
306 In 306, Constantine, surnamed the
Great, was saluted emperor by the army, and the aspect of affairs towards the
Christian church was soon changed; and 325 in 325, the old corrupt interests
were incorporated by an act of the emperor's from which union we dissent.
2. In 251, there were forty-four Jewish Christian congregations in
Rome. Till the time of Sylvester, the Christians had baptized either in private
baths, or in subterranean waters, or in any place without the city. The emperor
Constantine gave Bishop SYLVESTER the imperial mansion for a sort of
parsonage-house: and here was erected the first artificial baptistery in Rome.
From this period, at proper seasons of the year, all their catechumens went to
be- baptized at the Lateran baptistery. Other churches looked to the bishop,
who presided over the Lateran congregation and the baptistery; consulted him
about the times of baptism, or administering the ordinance, and the regulation
of other ecclesiastical affairs. This mode of proceeding in consulting the
bishop, led to the destruction of civil and religious liberty, and ruined the
independency of the churches.*
3. It might appear to some readers, that the testimonies of early
baptisms, as adduced above, are few in number for three centuries; many more
allusions to the ordinance could be given, yet it should be remembered that
while there existed an harmony among the churches, on the mode and subject of
baptism, and all parties were regulated by the scriptures, there was no
necessity for the churches to…
* Wall's Inf. Bap. vol. ii., p. 352. Robin. Hist. Bap. p. 345.
…record their views of baptism; but when the ordinance became
diverted from the believer, we find an increase of witnesses, recording the ancient
way, and testifying against the innovation. It is in the fourth century our
testimonies increase; and the following plain and consecutive declarations are
no obscure evidence as to the period when infant baptism assumed a decided
station in Christian assemblies. This
evidence is corroborated by the first recorded fact of a youth's baptism:
Galetes, the dying son of Valens, A. D. 370, already mentioned.
4. The following testimonies of the Fathers have outlived the
ravages of time; no doubt thousands of voices were raised against the incoming
abuse, and many things were said and written on baptism, that had only an
ephemeral existence. Some of the subjoined writers advocated baptismal
regeneration; and those view" led to baptize youth and minors, with
infants, at a later period.
360 HILARY, Bishop of Poictiers, in
France, prayeth, "Oh, living Lord, preserve my faith, and the testimony of
my conscience; so that I may always keep what I have confessed in the sacrament
of my regeneration, when I was baptized in the name of," &C.*
360 ATHANASIUS, Bishop of Alexandria,
says, "Our Lord did not slightly command to baptize; for first of all he
said, teach, and then, baptize, that true faith might come by teaching, and
baptism be perfected by faith."†
370 EPHRAIM SYRUS relates that, in his
time, "It was the custom, when any
one was baptized, to declare they did forsake the devil and all his works,
adultery," &c.; also, that "the baptized used to confess their
sins, and testify their faith, before many witnesses.”‡
* Danver's Treat., p. 65.
† Ib.
‡ Bap. Mag., v. i., p. 212.
378 JEROM or HIEROM, a presbyter in
Dalmatia, observes on Matt 28:19. "They first teach all nations, then,
when they are taught, they baptize them with water; for it cannot be, that the
body should receive the sacrament of baptism, unless the soul have before
received the true faith."* He declares, "that in the eastern
churches, the adult only were baptized;" also, "that they are to be
admitted to baptism to whom it doth belong: viz., those only who have been
instructed in the faith."† He also appealed to his auditory, and remarked,
"When you were baptized, did you not swear allegiance to Christ, and that
you would spare neither father nor mother for her sake?"‡
378 BASIL, bishop of Caesarea,
addresses his hearers with, "Do you demur, and loiter, and put off
baptism, when you have been from a child catechized in the word—are you not
acquainted with the truth?" S He declares, "One must believe first, and then be sealed
with baptism."|| "Must the faithful be sealed with baptism? Faith
must needs precede, and go before." Again, "None is to be baptised
but the catechumens, and those who are duly instructed in the faith."([ He
observes, "Faith and baptism are two means of salvation nearly allied, and
inseparable; for faith is perfected by baptism, and baptism is founded on
faith: * * * and the confession which leads us to salvation goes before, and
baptism, which seals our covenant, follows after."**
Dr. Wall remarks on the address of Basil to his…
* Wall's Hist.
p. 2, c. 1, p. 7.
† Danver's
Treat, p. 67.
‡ Morris's Biog,
v. i, 377.
S
Wall's Hist., p. 1, c. 12, p. 148.
|| Id. p. 2, c.
1, p. 7.
([Danver's
Treat., p. 65.
** Stennett's
Answer to Russen, p. 90.
…auditory, "Part of Basil's auditory at this time were such
as had been from their childhood instructed in the Christian religion, and
consequently in all probability born of Christian parents, and yet not
baptized."* The emperor Valens sent for Basil, in 370, to baptise his
dying son, Galetes: the ground of the request was the illness of the youth. The
above extracts from Basil's works show he could not confer the ordinance
without a profession of faith: and, from Fox's account, it appears he did not
baptize the child, but that the rite was administered by an Arian bishop.
* Inf. Bap., p.
1, c. 12, p. 148. Basil was a great advocate for trine immersion, a custom
which prevailed in the church for centuries. Baronius Ann. v. viii., p. 30,
fol. Wall's Hist. 2, 384. Bingham's Antiq. v. i., b. 10, c. 3, S 4.
Baptism was so much in vogue in the early ages, that one class of professors,
the Hemerobaptists, religiously dipped themselves every day: Gale's Reflec. p.
136. Mosh. Hist. v. iii., p. 189. Robinson's Bap. 33. Modern Paedobaptists
assert, that baptism by immersion cannot be proved to have been the early
mode.—Evan. Mag., v. xxii., p. 104; Congre. Mag., 1824; Alb. Bames's Notes on
Rom. vi. 4. We would ask those persons who are so hardly driven to maintain
their rite, what proof they require? Scripture is supported by authenticated
facts for ages; yet all evidence on this point, with them, amounts to nothing.
The opposers of the Bible are constantly demanding proof of those miracles
recorded, of a Providence, &c. Errors of all degrees borrow the same
weapons! It is to be regretted, Paedobaptism lends its aid in so many ways to
the opposers of vital religion, and unites in destroying the testimonies of the
most accredited historians, weakens the authority of Scripture, and endeavors
to lessen the creature's fealty to his Savior. All early churches immersed; the
Grecians, Russians, Armenians, Prussians, Abyssinians, &c. &c., do so
to this day, and thousands of incidental and correlative circumstances on
record, with the direct statements of early and modern historians, and the
concessions of later writers, which will be detailed, PKOVE, if any fact admits
of proof, that believers, before admitted to fellowship, in any early primitive
church, were immersed once or thrice, on a profession of faith; and that there
is no trace of infant baptism in early scriptural communities.
NOTE.—For
additional authority under this head, see Preliminary Historical Essay by the
Editor.
380 CHRYSOSTOM, bishop of
Constantinople, asserted that "the time of grace was the time of baptism,
which was the season the three thousand, in the second of Acts, and the Eve
thousand afterwards, were baptized." Again, "to be baptized and
plunged into the water, and then to emerge or rise out of it again, is a symbol
of our descent into the grave, and of our ascent out of it; and, therefore,
Paul calls baptism a burial, when he says we are buried with him."*
384 SIRICIUS, bishop of Rome, declares
"that those only should be admitted [to baptism] who have given in their
names forty days or more before Easter, and have been cleansed by exorcisms,
and daily prayers, and fastings, to the end that that precept of the apostle
may be fulfilled, of purging out the old leaven that there may be a new
lump."†
385
CYRIL, bishop of
Jerusalem, exhorts his auditory, "not to go to baptism as the guest in the
gospel who had not on the wedding garment; but having their sins Erst washed
away by repentance, they might be found worthy at the marriage of the Lamb.‡
You must pre-pare yourselves by purifying the conscience, and not consider the
external baptism, but the inward grace that is imparted by it, for the water is
sanctified by invocation. The water washes the body, but the Spirit sanctifies
the soul; and being thus purified, we are made meet…
* Stennett's
Ans., p. 145. Chrysortom baptized youths with their parents, all in a state of
nudity. Wall's Inf. Bap., p. 2, c. 9, S 3. Bing. Antiq., v. i., b. 11, c.
11, S 1.
† Wall's Hist.,
p. 1, c. 17, p. 250.
‡ Baptist Mag.,
v. 1, p. 211.
…to draw near to God. If any one be baptized with-out having the Holy Spirit, he receives not the grace of baptism; and if any one receive not baptism, he cannot be saved. Candidates," he says, "are first anointed with consecrated oils; they are then conducted to the laver, and asked three times if they believe in the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost; then they are dipped three times into the water, and retire out of it by three distinct efforts."*
386 GREGORY, Bishop of Nazianzen,
says, "Baptism consists in two things, the water and the Spirit; that the
washing the body with water represents
the operation of the Spirit in purifying the soul." He asserts baptism to
be, "a compact which we make with God, by which we oblige ourselves to
lead a new life." He re-marks, "there are three different classes of
persons that receive baptism, and there are three sorts who do not receive
baptism;—the impious and vicious, who have no relish for it; others delay for
liberty to sin; the last are those who cannot receive it, either because of
their infancy, or some accident"† He asserts "the baptized used in
the first place to confess their sins, and to renounce the devil and all his
works, before many witnesses;" and "they were prepared for baptism,
by watchings, fastings, prayer, alms-deeds, restitution of ill-gotten
goods;" and that, "none were baptized of old, but they that did so
confess their sins." He shows also, the necessity of keeping the baptismal
vow, and that "the most acceptable posture, or preparation to receive it,
is a heart inflamed with a desire…
* Dupin's EC. Hist., c. 4, v. ii., pp. 109—113.
† Dupin, c. 4, p. 171. Who will pretend to say that unconscious infants were baptized in the bishopric of Gregory, at least?—ED.
…for it."* Again, "We are buried with Christ by baptism,
that we may also rise again with him; we ascend with him, that we may also be
glorified together." †
388 GREGORY, Bishop of Nyssa, asserts,
"In baptism, there are three things which conduct us to immortal life.
Prayer, Water, and Faith. That the re-generation wrought in baptism ought not
to be attributed to the water, but to a divine virtue; that by dipping the
person under water three times, the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ is
represented; that without baptism no man can be washed from sin.‡
390
AMBROSE, Bishop of
Milan, speaking of baptism, says, "there were three questions propounded,
and three answers or confessions made, without which none can be baptized; S * * * "at last you are introduced into the place where the
sacrament of baptism is administered, you are obliged to renounce the devil and
all his works, the world, and all its pomps and allurements. You found in this
place the water and a priest who consecrated the waters; the body was plunged
into this water to wash away sin; the Holy Ghost descended upon this water; you
ought not to fix your mind upon the external part of it, but to consider in it
a divine virtue."|| He asserts, "Thou wast asked. Dost thou believe
in God the Father Almighty? thou sadist, I do believe, and wast dipped, that
is, buried. Thou wast asked again, Dost thou believe on our Lord Jesus Christ,
and his crucifixion? thou sadist, I believe, and wast dipped again, and so wast
buried with Christ. Thou wast interrogated the third time. Dost thou believe in
the…
* Wall's Hist.,
v. i. c. 11, p. 112. Orat. in Bapt. Mag., v. 1, p. 212.
† Stennett's
Ans. p. 144.
‡ Dupin. c. 4,
p. 178.
S
Morris's Biog. v. i. p. 356.
|| Dupin, c. 4,
p. 214, &c.
…Holy Spirit? thou answeredst, I believe, and wast dipped a third
time."*
395 EPIPHANIUS, Bishop of Salamis,
wrote on 80 heresies in the Christian church; he speaks of faith, as a
disposition necessary to the receiving of baptism. He does not charge any class
of professors with the error of conferring the ordinance without a profession
of faith, † Epiphanius, with others, does not mention any thing concerning
infant baptism, ‡
400
AUGUSTIN, or AUSTIN,
Bishop of Hippo, in Africa, says, "It is evident that men who still
persevered in sins, desired to be baptized; and there were those who supported
their unreasonable wishes, and thought it sufficient to teach them after
baptism how they ought to live, still holding out a hope to their minds, that they
might be saved as by fire, because they had been baptized. True saving faith
works by love; that the instruction of
catechumen includes morals as well as doctrines; that the labor of
catechising is exceeding profitable to the church; and that persons ought to be
catechized before they receive baptism, that they may know how vain it is to
think of being saved without holiness: as in the case of the eunuch who was
catechized before he was baptized.
S
Augustin's view of original sin led many to inquire how it could
be taken away from those who could not believe; the answer was, that sin was
removed in baptism: consequently, this view of baptism drove him into
pasdobaptism,…
* Stennett’s
Ans. p.144, and Cox on Bap. p. 48
† Dupin, c. 4,
p. 234 &c.
‡ Wall’s Hist.,
p. c. 21, p. 411, S 4.
S Miln. Hist. Of the Ch., C. 5, c. 7.
…his views of infant salvation by water, called an assembly, of
which we shall speak hereafter.*
5. We here subjoin a few extracts from those early assemblies of ministers, commonly called councils; and the rules they adopted called canons.
305 The counsel of ELVIRA, or GRANADA,
enjoins a delay of baptism if the catechumi act worldly: also adultery and intermarriages
should be checked, and ministers of religion should not have strange women with
them.†
315 The counsel of NEOCESSAREA, in the
sixth canon, saith, "That confession and free choice were necessary to
baptism."‡
365 The counsel of LAODICEA required
notice from the person who intended to be baptized, and resolved all should be
instructed before they received it;
S and determined that the baptized should rehearse the articles of
the creed. ||
333
The counsel of
CONSTANTINOPLE decreed that certain persons should remain a long time under
scriptural instruction, before they receive baptism.([
307 The council of CARTHAGE, in canon 34, declares, that "sick persons shall be baptized, who cannot answer any longer, when those who are by them testify that they desired it." Again, "those who have no testimonials, and do not remember that they were baptized, shall be baptized anew."**
* Rob. Bap. c.,
23.
† Dupin's Hist.
c. 4, p. 242.
‡ Magde. Cent.
in Danver's, p. 68.
S
Dupin, c. 4, p. 262.
|| Magde. Cent.
in Danver's, p. 68.
([ Dupin, c. 4,
p. 273.
** Dupin c. 4,
p. 279.
398 The council of CARTHAGE, in canon
85, enjoins, that catechumens shall give in their names, and be prepared for
baptism. That the clergy should not cohabit with strange women; that they
should not go to fairs; that those ministers shall be degraded who are
traitors, and those who speak lascivious words be removed; that those be
reprimanded who swear by the creaturel*
These clergy prepare us for the next declaration.
401 The fifth counsel or CARTHAGE, in
canon 76, declares children ought to be baptized. †
416
The counsel of MELA,
in Numidia, in Africa, enjoin Christians to baptize their infants ‡ for
forgiveness of sin, and curse all who deny the doctrine. S
517
At GIRONA, in Spain,
seven men of different provinces made the first European rule for infant
baptism. ||
789 Charles the Great, in 789, issued
the first law in Europe for baptizing infants.([
6. To strengthen those testimonies as to the early subjects and mode of baptism, we shall merely run through some miscellanies, confirmatory of our practice.
The Greek word baptize, regulates all the Grecian and eastern churches in dipping. The Mahometans baptize by immersion, and have every conveniency for that purpose. References to rivers at an early period, imply the way of administering the ordinance among Christians. Many paintings are extant, representing the act of immersion. The extensive and beautiful buildings erected, with their apartments and apparatus, prove the mode to have been…
* Dupin, c. 4, p. 282.
† Id. p. 288.
‡ Rob. Bap. p.
216.
S
Wall's Hist., p. 1, c. 19, sec. 37, p. 372, &c.
|| Rob. Hist. of
Baptism, p. 270.
([ Id. p. 283,
ch. 26.
…dipping, and the subjects, men and women. The clothes worn, and
the officers in attendance on these occasions, sup-port the same views. Records
mention persons and youths having been drowned in baptisteries; and immersion
in those places has been attended with those casualties which are too delicate
to record, and circumstances which would now be deemed reproachful. The canon
law required for ages trine immersion, with creeds and rituals, which
ex-pressed the subject and described the mode. Sermons were addressed to all
catechumens, after long preparation; and orations were delivered to candidates,
with homilies expressive and confirmatory of the same things. Inscriptions, mottoes,
and poetry, convey the same information. The earliest reformers scripturally
administered the ordinance; while the German and other revivers of religious
knowledge, with every respectable historian, admit, on record, the early
practice to have been believers' immersion, and dipping is now continued by all
those nations not subject to the authority of the pope.
7. The record of children born of Christian parents, 300 and yet not baptized during
infancy, we next sub-to join.
400 BASIL, son of Basil, bishop of
Nicene, and his wife, Eumele, whose grandfather was a martyr, was tenderly
educated like a second Timothy, under his gracious mother. He became a learned
man, and a great preacher, and was baptized in Jordan, by Maximinus, a bishop.*
Also Chrysostom, Jerom, of Strydon, Theodore, the emperor, † Gregory Nazianzen,
Augustine, Ambrose,‡…
* Danver's
Treat, pp. 69—71.
† Gibbon's Ro.
Hist., c. 27, vol. v. p. 12.
‡ Danv. Treat.
70.
…Polycrates,* Nectaries,† the emperor Constantine, with other
nobles.
Dr. Field observes, on the histories of these great men,‡
"that very many that were born of Christian parents (in the fourth and
fifth centuries), delayed their baptism for a long time, insomuch, that many
were made bishops before they were baptized. The same views are supported by
Beatus Rhenanus, and Mr. Den; the latter mentions Pancratius, Pontius,
Nazarius, Tecia, Luigerus, Erasma Tusca, all off springs of believers, and yet
not baptized till aged. Similar observations are made by the learned Daille and
Dr. Barlow. S
The great champion for infant baptism. Dr. W. Wall, remarks,
"It seems to me that the instances which the Baptists give of persons not
baptized in infancy, though born of Christian parents, are not (if the matter of
fact be true) so inconsiderable as this last plea [the sayings of the
Fathers] would represent. On the
contrary, the persons they mention are so MANY, and SUCH NOTED PERSONS, that
(if they be allowed) it is an argument that leaving children unbaptized was no
unusual, but a frequent and ordinary thing. For it is obvious to conclude, that
if we can in so remote an age trace the practice of so many that did this; it
is probable that a great many more of whose birth and…
*
Gale's Reflect, p. 470
†
Danver's Treat, p. 72, and Rob. Hist. of Bap. Ch. 13, S 5, p.
67.
‡ Since these
names, with others which could be recorded, are some of the most distinguished
for respectability, in the annals of history, one plain evidence enforces
itself upon our attention, that Psedcbtiptism was unknown among royalty,
courtiers, and respectable persons in Europe, at the period of these eminent
men's births.
S
Danver's Treat., p. 72. Daille's Use of the Fathers, b. 2, ch 6, Reas 6, p.149.
…baptism we do not read did the like. This I will own, that it
seems to me the argument of the greatest weight of any that is brought on the
Baptist side in this dispute about antiquity."*
We conclude this chapter with the words of CURCELLEUS,
"Paedobaptism was not known in the world the two first ages after Christ,
in the third and fourth it was approved by few; at length, in the fifth and
following ages, it began to obtain in divers places; and, therefore, we
(paedobaptists) observe this rite indeed, as an ancient custom, but not as an
apostolic tradition. The custom of baptizing infants did not begin before the
third age after Christ, and that there appears not the least footstep of it for
the first two centuries."†
* History of
Inf. Bap. p. 2, S
16, p. 42. We admit sprinkling to be more ancient than John, Jesus, or Moses:
see Robins. Hist. of Bap. c. 6, pp. 39—42.
† Stennett's
Ans., &c., p. 87.