Institutes of the Christian Religion (Vol. 2 of 2)
Pædobaptism Perfectly Consistent With The Institution Of Christ And The Nature Of The Sign - Reading 08
XXIII. They proceed, in the next place, to the practice of
the apostolic age, in which no one is found to have been admitted
to baptism without a previous profession of faith and
repentance. For in answer to those who “were pricked in
their heart, and said, What shall we do? Peter said unto them,”
first, “repent,” and then “be baptized for the remission of
sins.”[1204]
In like manner Philip, when the eunuch requested
to be baptized, replied, “If thou believest with all thine heart,
thou mayest.”[1205]
Hence they think themselves justified in
concluding, that baptism ought never to be administered to any
person without being preceded by faith and repentance. But
if we adopt this reasoning, the first of these passages, which
makes no mention of faith, will evince the sufficiency of repentance
alone: the second, where repentance is not required,
will prove that faith alone is sufficient. I suppose they will
reply that one passage is elucidated by the other, and that
therefore they ought to be connected together. I also contend
that other places ought to be consulted, which may contribute
to the solution of this difficulty. For there are many passages
of Scripture, the sense of which depends on the circumstances
connected with them. This is exemplified in the cases now
under consideration. For the persons addressed by Peter and
Philip were of an age capable of exercising repentance and
faith. We strenuously deny that such persons ought to be
baptized, without a knowledge of their repentance and faith, as
far, at least, as they are capable of being ascertained by the
judgment of men. But that infants ought to be ranked in a
different class, is sufficiently evident; for, under the former
dispensation, if any person connected himself with the Israelites
in religious communion, it was necessary for him to be
taught the covenant of the Lord, and instructed in the law,
before he received circumcision, because he was an alien by
birth, not one of the Israelitish people, with whom the covenant,
which was confirmed by circumcision, had been made.
XXIV. So the Lord himself, when he adopts Abraham,
does not begin with circumcision, concealing for a time what
was intended by that sign; but he first announces the covenant
which he designs to make with him, and then, after he
has received that promise in faith, makes him a partaker of that
sacrament. Why does the sacrament follow faith in the case
of Abraham, and in Isaac, his son, precede all exercise of understanding?
Because it is reasonable that a person, who at an
adult age is admitted to the fellowship of a covenant, to which
he had hitherto been a stranger, should first learn the conditions
of it; but this is not necessary in the case of an infant, who, by
hereditary right, according to the form of the promise, is already
included in the covenant from its very birth. Or, to express it
with greater clearness and brevity, if the children of believers,
without the aid of understanding, are partakers of the covenant,
there is no reason why they should be excluded from the sign
because they are not capable of expressing their consent to the
stipulation of the covenant. This is evidently the reason why
God sometimes declares the children descended from the Israelites
to be born to himself;[1206]
for he undoubtedly considers
as his children, the children of those to whose seed he has
promised to be a Father. But he who is an unbeliever, descended
from impious parents, is accounted an alien from the
communion of the covenant, till he be united to God by faith.
It is no wonder, therefore, if he be not a partaker of the sign,
the signification of which in him would be delusive and vain.
In this sense Paul tells the Ephesians, that as long as they
were immersed in idolatry, they were “strangers from the
covenant.”[1207]
The whole of the subject, if I mistake not,
may be clearly and summarily stated in the following position;
that persons of adult age, who embrace the Christian religion,
having been hitherto aliens from the covenant, are not to
receive the sign of baptism without the intervention of faith
and repentance, which alone can give them an admission to the
fellowship of the covenant; but that the infant children of
Christian parents, being admitted by God to the inheritance of
the covenant as soon as they are born, are also to be admitted
to baptism. To this must be referred what is related by the
evangelists, that the people “were baptized of John, confessing
their sins”[1208]
—an example which we think ought to be
followed in the present day. For if a Turk or heathen were
to offer himself to baptism, we would not hastily admit him to
that sacrament, without his having first made a confession to
the satisfaction of the Church.
XXV. Moreover, they adduce the language of Christ, which
is recorded by John, and which they suppose to represent a
present regeneration as requisite to baptism; “Except a man
be born of water and the Spirit, he cannot enter into the kingdom
of God.”[1209]
See, they say, how baptism is called regeneration
by the mouth of the Lord. When it is evident, then,
that infants are utterly incapable of regeneration, on what
pretence do we admit them to baptism, to which regeneration
is indispensably necessary? In the first place, they are deceived
in supposing that this passage refers to baptism, because
it mentions water. For, after Christ had declared to Nicodemus
the corruption of nature, and shown him the necessity of being
born again,—because Nicodemus was dreaming of a second
corporeal birth, he here indicates the manner in which God
regenerates us, namely, by water and by the Spirit; as if he
had said, by the Spirit who, in the ablution and purification of
the souls of believers, performs the office of water. I therefore
understand by “water and the Spirit,” simply, the Spirit who
is water. Nor is this a novel mode of expression; for it perfectly
corresponds with that declaration of John the Baptist,
“He that cometh after me shall baptize with the Holy Ghost
and with fire.”[1210]
As to baptize with the Holy Spirit and
with fire, therefore, is to confer the Holy Spirit, who, in regeneration,
has the office and nature of fire, so to be born of
water and of the Spirit is no other than to receive that influence
of the Spirit, which does in the soul what water does on
the body. I know that others give a different interpretation,
but I have no doubt that this is the genuine sense; because
the intention of Christ is simply to teach that all must be divested
of their own nature, who aspire to the kingdom of heaven.
However, if we were desirous of imitating their cavils,
it would be easy for us, granting what they require, to retort
upon them, that baptism is prior to faith and repentance, because,
in the words of Christ, water is mentioned before the
Spirit. It is certain that this phrase denotes spiritual gifts;
and, if these follow baptism, I have established what I wish.
But, leaving all subterfuges, let us adhere to the simple interpretation
which I have proposed—that no one, till he is
renewed by living water, that is, by the Spirit, can enter into
the kingdom of God.
XXVI. It is further evident that their notion ought to be
exploded, because it adjudges all unbaptized persons to eternal
death. Let us suppose their tenet to be admitted, and baptism
to be administered to adults alone; what will they say will
become of a youth who is rightly instructed in the first principles
of piety, if he desires to be baptized, but, contrary to the
expectation of all around, happens to be snatched away by sudden
death? The Lord’s promise is clear: “Whosoever believeth
on the Son, shall not come into condemnation;” but “is
passed from death unto life.”[1211]
We are nowhere informed
of his having condemned one who had yet not been baptized.
By this I would not be understood as implying that baptism
may be despised with impunity; for, so far from attempting to
excuse such contempt, I affirm it to be a violation of the
covenant of the Lord; I only mean to evince that it is not so
necessary, as that a person, who is deprived of the opportunity
of embracing it, must immediately be considered as lost.
But if we assent to their notion, we shall condemn all, without
exception, whom any circumstance whatever prevents from
being baptized, whatever faith they may otherwise have, even
that faith by which Christ himself is enjoyed. Moreover, they
sentence all infants to eternal death, by denying them baptism,
which, according to their own confession, is necessary to
salvation. Let them see, now, how well they agree with the
language of Christ, which adjudges the kingdom of heaven to
little children. But though we should grant them every thing
they contend for relative to the sense of this passage, still they
will gain no advantage from it, unless they first overturn the
doctrine which we have already established respecting the regeneration
of infants.