Institutes of the Christian Religion (Vol. 2 of 2)
CHAPTER XV.03
Baptism - Reading 03
X. Now, we may clearly perceive the falsehood of the notion
which some have long ago disseminated, and which others
persist in maintaining,—that by baptism we are delivered and
exempted from original sin, and from the corruption which
has descended from Adam to all his posterity, and are restored
to the same righteousness and purity of nature which Adam
would have obtained if he had continued in the integrity in
which he was first created. For teachers of this kind have
never understood the nature of original sin, or original righteousness,
or the grace of baptism. Now, we have already
proved that original sin is the pravity and corruption of our
nature, which first renders us obnoxious to the wrath of God,
and then produces in us those works which the Scripture calls
“works of the flesh.” [1155]
XI. The other thing to be remarked is, that this depravity never ceases in us, but is perpetually producing new fruits—those works of the flesh which we have already described, like the emission of flame and sparks from a heated furnace, or like the streams of water from an unfailing spring. For concupiscence never dies, nor is altogether extinguished in men, till by death they are delivered from the body of death, and entirely divested of themselves. Baptism, indeed, promises us the submersion of our Pharaoh, and the mortification of sin; yet not so that it no longer exists, or gives us no further trouble; but only that it may never overcome us. For as long as we live immured in this prison of the body, the relics of sin will dwell in us; but if we hold fast by faith the promise which God has given us in baptism, they shall not domineer or reign over us. But let no one deceive himself, let no one flatter himself in his guilt, when he hears that sin always dwells in us. These things are not said in order that those who are already too prone to do evil may securely sleep in their sins, but only that those who are tempted by their corrupt propensities may not faint and sink into despondency; but that they may rather reflect that they are yet in the way, and may consider themselves as having made some progress, when they experience their corruptions diminishing from day to day, till they shall attain the mark at which they are aiming, even the final destruction of their depravity, which will be accomplished at the close of this mortal life. In the mean time, let them not cease to fight manfully, to animate themselves to constant advances, and to press forward to complete victory. For it ought to give additional impulse to their exertions, to see that, after they have been striving so long, so much still remains for them to do. We conclude, therefore, that we are baptized into the mortification of the flesh, which commences in us at baptism, which we pursue from day to day, and which will be perfected when we shall pass out of this life to the Lord.
XII. Here we say nothing different from what is most
clearly stated by Paul in the sixth and seventh chapters of the
Epistle to the Romans. For after he had argued respecting gratuitous
righteousness,—because some impious men concluded
from that doctrine that they might live according to their own
corrupt inclinations, as we are not accepted by God for the
merit of our works, he adds, that all who are clothed with the
righteousness of Christ are also regenerated by his Spirit, and
that of this regeneration we have an earnest in baptism.
Hence he exhorts believers not to suffer sin to reign in their
members. Because he knew that there always remains some
infirmity in them, that they might not be dejected on account
of it, he adds for their consolation, that they are not under
the law. On the other hand, as it might seem to encourage
licentiousness in Christians, to say that they were not under
the yoke of the law, he discusses the nature of that abrogation,
and shows what is the use of the law—a question which he
had already determined. The sum of all that he says is, that
we are delivered from the rigour of the law to adhere to
Christ; and that the office of the law is to convince us of our
depravity, and lead us to a confession of our impotence and
misery. Now, because the depravity of our nature is not so
easily discovered in a profane man who indulges his corrupt
passions without any fear of God, he gives an example in a
regenerate man, that is, in himself. He says, therefore, that
he has a perpetual conflict with the relics of his corruption,
and that he is bound with a miserable servitude, which prevents
his entire consecration of himself to an obedience of the
Divine law; so that he is constrained to exclaim, “O wretched
man that I am! Who shall deliver me from the body of this
death?” If the children of God are captives detained in
prison as long as they live, they cannot but feel great anxiety
from reflection on their danger, unless there be something to
obviate this fear. For this purpose, therefore, he has added a
consolation, that “there is now no condemnation to them
which are in Christ Jesus;” [1156]
XIII. Baptism also serves for our confession before men. For it is a mark by which we openly profess our desire to be numbered among the people of God, by which we testify our agreement with all Christians in the worship of one God, and in one religion, and by which we make a public declaration of our faith; that the praises of God may not only be breathed in the secret aspirations of our hearts, but may also be loudly proclaimed by our tongues, and by all the members of our body, in the different modes in which they are capable of expressing them. For thus all that we have is devoted, as it ought to be, to the glory of God, to which every thing ought to be subservient, and by our example others are incited to the same pursuit. It was with this view that Paul inquired of the Corinthians, whether they had not been baptized in the name of Christ; signifying that, in having been baptized in his name, they had dedicated themselves to him, had avowed him as their Lord and Master, and had bound themselves by a solemn obligation before men; so that they could never again confess any other except him, unless they intended to renounce the confession which they had made at their baptism.