GRACE BAPTIST CHURCH
THE ORIGIN OF
THE BAPTISTS
By
S. H. Ford
CHAPTER
XV
Century One
The Primitive Churches
We now make the bold,
yet almost universally admitted assertion, that the primitive
churches were in every distinguishing characteristic Baptist
churches. We affirm that at the time of the departure of the great
Tertullian, their Baptistic features were as yet uneffaced; and that,
though lost in the development of the Man of Sin, they have preserved
those lineaments intact in the churches to this day. Where shall we
seek the proof of this? Whom shall we introduce as witnesses? Shall
we let Baptists speak? Will their testimony be received? No; with all
their research, and learning, and candor, we shall dismiss them as
witnesses in the case. Let Pedobaptists speak; let Presbyterians and
Episcopalians testify; and if a jury of rational men can be found,
who, guided by their report, can give a verdict against our
affirmation, we shall acknowledge that there is no confidence to be
placed in testimony.
DID THEY BAPTIZE INFANTS?
M. De la
Roque:
"The primitive churches did not baptize infants,
and the learned Grotius proves it, in his annotations on the gospel."
(In Stennett's answer to Russen, p. 188).
Salmasius and
Suicerus:
"In the two first centuries no one was
baptized, except, being instructed in the faith, and acquainted with
the doctrines of Christ, he was able to profess himself a believer;
because of these words; 'He that believeth, and is baptized, shall be
saved.' " (Epist. ad Tustum Pacium. Thesaur. Eccles. sub voce
Evrazis, tom. ii, p. 1136).
Curcelleus:
"The
baptism of infants, in the two first centuries after Christ, was
altogether unknown, but in the third and fourth was allowed by some
few. In the fifth and following ages it was generally received. The
custom of baptizing infants did not begin before the third age after
Christ was born in the former ages no trace of it appears, and it was
introduced without the command of Christ." (Epistle to the
Churches of Galatia, chap. iii, verse 27 (2.) Annotat. ad Rom., v.
14).
Venema:
"Tertullian has nowhere mentioned
Pedobaptism among the traditions of the church, nor even among the
customs of the church that were publicly received, and usually
observed; nay, he plainly intimates that, in his time, it was yet a
doubtful affair. Nothing can be affirmed with certainty concerning
the custom of the church before Tertullian, seeing there is not
anywhere, in more ancient writers, that I know of, undoubted mention
of infant baptism. Justin Martyr, in his second apology, when
describing baptism, mentions only that of adults. I conclude,
therefore, that Pedobaptism can not be certainly proved to have been
practiced before the times of Tertullian; and that there were persons
in his age who desired their infants might be baptized, especially
when they were afraid of their dying without baptism. Tertullian
opposed, and by so doing he intimates that Pedobaptism began to
prevail. These are the things that may be affirmed with apparent
certainty concerning the antiquity of infant baptism, after the times
of the apostles; for more are maintained without solid foundation."
(Hist. Eccles., tom. iii, Secul. II, 108,
109).
Episcopius:
"Pedobaptism was not accounted a
necessary rite till it was determined so to be in the Milevitan
Council, held in the year 418." (Institut. Theology, 1. iv, c.
xiv).
Bishop Taylor:
"There is no pretense of
tradition, that the church in all ages did baptize all the infants of
Christian parents. It is more certain that they did not always do it
than that they did it in the first ages. St. Ambrose, St. Hierome,
and St. Austin, were born of Christian parents, and yet not baptized
until the full age of man or more." (Liberty of Prophesying, v,
p. 84).
We might multiply evidence, every word of which is
from those who, nevertheless, practiced infant baptism. But we close
with the testimony of the greatest ecclesiastical historian that ever
lived, i.e., Neander:
"Baptism was administered at first
only to adults, as men were accustomed to conceive baptism and faith
as strictly connected. We have all reason for not deriving infant
baptism from apostolic institution, and the recognition of it which
followed somewhat later, as an apostolical tradition, serves to
confirm this hypothesis. Irenaeus is the first church teacher in whom
we find any allusion to infant baptism, and in his mode of expressing
himself on the subject, he leads us at the same time to recognize its
connection with the essence of the Christian consciousness; he
testifies of the profound Christian idea, out of which infant baptism
arose, and which procured for it at length universal recognition."
(Neander's History, vol. I, p. 311).
Is there any possibility
of denying this testimony? Is it not convincing, overwhelming, that
the churches, previous to Tertullian, practiced but one baptism, and
that it was adult baptism? So far, then, they were
Baptists.
IMMERSION
We pause not now to argue the
question of immersion. We simply wish to ascertain a fact. We ask
historian, what did the churches of the first and second centuries do
when they performed that ordinance called baptism? Again we call on
the most renowned, the most distinguished Pedobaptists, to answer,
men who practiced and apologized for sprinkling, yet dared not, as
scholars, garble or misrepresent the truth of history.
Neander's
History of the Christian Religion:
"Baptism was
originally administered by immersion; and many of the companions of
St. Paul allude to this form of its administration. The immersion is
a symbol of death, of being buried with Christ; the coming forth from
the water is a symbol of a resurrection with Christ; and both, taken
together, represent the second birth, the death of the old man, and a
resurrection to a new life. An exception was made only in the case of
sick persons, which was necessary, and they received baptism by
sprinkling."
Mosheim's Ecclesiastical History, first
century:
"The sacrament of baptism was administered in
this century without the public assemblies, in places appointed and
prepared for the purpose, and was performed by immersion of the whole
body in the baptismal font.
"The sacrament of baptism was
administered publicly twice every year, at the festivals of Easter
and Pentecost or Whitsuntide, either by the bishop or the presbyters,
in consequence of his authorization and appointment. The persons that
were to be baptized, after they had repeated the creed, confessed and
renounced their sins, and particularly the devil and his pompous
allurements, were immersed under water, and received into Christ's
kingdom by a solemn invocation of Father, Son, and Holy Ghost,
according to the express command of our blessed Lord. After baptism,
they received the sign of the cross, were anointed, and, by prayers
and imposition of hands, were solemnly commended to the mercy of God,
and dedicated to his service; in consequence of which, they received
the milk and honey, which concluded the ceremony. The reasons of this
particular ritual coincide with what we have said in general
concerning the origin and causes of the multiplied ceremonies that
crept, from time to time, into the church."
History of
the Church, by George Waddington, M. A.:
"The ceremony of
immersion (the oldest form of baptism) was performed in the name of
the three persons of the Trinity; it was believed to be attended by
the remission of original sin, and the entire regeneration of the
infant or convert, by the passage from the land of bondage into the
kingdom of salvation."
Cave's Primitive
Christianity:
"The action having proceeded thus far, the
party to be baptized was wholly immerged, or put under water, which
was the almost constant and universal custom of those times, whereby
they did more notably and significantly express the three great ends
and effects of baptism. For, as in immersion there are, in a manner,
three several acts, the putting the person into water, his abiding
there for a little time, and his rising up again, so by these were
represented Christ's death, burial, and resurrection; and, in
conformity thereunto, our dying unto sin, the destruction of its
power, and our resurrection to a new course of life. By the person's
being put into water was lively represented the putting off the body
of the sins of the flesh, and being washed from the filth and
pollution of them; by his abode under it, which was a kind of burial
unto water, his entering into a state of death or mortification, like
as Christ remained for some time under the state or power of death.
Therefore, as many as are baptized into Christ, are said to be
'baptized into his death, and to be buried with him by baptism into
death, that, the old man being crucified with him, the body of sin
might be destroyed, that henceforth he might not serve sin, for that
he that is dead is freed from sin,' as the apostle clearly explains
the meaning of this rite. Then, by his immersion, or rising up out of
the water, was signified is entering upon a new course of life,
differing from that which he lived before, that, 'like as Christ was
raised up from the dead to the glory of the Father, even so we also
should walk in newness of life.' "
Bishop Taylor
(Episcopalian):
"The custom of the ancient churches was
not sprinkling, but immersion; in pursuance of the sense of the word
(baptize) in the commandment and example of our blessed Savior. Now
this was of so sacred account in their esteem that they did not think
it lawful to receive him into the clergy who had been only sprinkled
in his baptism, as we learn from the Epistle of Cornelius to Fabius
of Antioch."
Richard Baxter (Presbyterian):
"It
is commonly confessed by us to the Anabaptists, as our commentators
declare, that in the apostles' time, the baptized were dipped over
head in the water, and that this signified their profession, both of
believing the burial and resurrection of Christ; and of their own
present renouncing the world and flesh, or dying to sin and living to
Christ, or rising again to newness of life, or being buried and risen
again with Christ, as the apostle expoundeth, (Col. iii, and Rom.
vi;) and though we have thought it lawful to disuse the manner of
dipping, and to use less water, yet we presume not to change the use
and signification of it."
Bossuet (Catholic
Bishop):
"The baptism of John the Baptist, which served
for a preparative to that of Jesus Christ, was performed by plunging.
When Jesus Christ came to john, to raise baptism to a more marvelous
efficacy in receiving it, the Scripture says, that he went up out of
the water of Jordan, (Matt. iii : 16; Mark i : 10). In fine, we read
not in the Scripture that baptism was otherwise administered; and we
are able to make it appear, by the acts of councils, and by the
ancient rituals, that for thirteen hundred years, baptism was thus
administered throughout the whole church, as far as was possible."
(In Mr. Stennett against Russen, p. 145-76).
Dr. Whitby
(Episcopalian):
"It being so expressly declared here,
(Rom. vi : 4, and Colos. ii : 12,) that we are buried with Christ in
baptism by being buried under water; and the argument to oblige us to
a conformity to his death, by dying to sin, being taken hence; and
this immersion being religiously observed by all Christians for
thirteen centuries, and approved by our church, and the change of it
into sprinkling, even without any allowance from the Author of this
institution, or any license from any council of the church, being
that which the Romanist still urgeth to justify his refusal of the
cup to the laity." (Note on Rom. vi:4).
Dr. Wall
(Episcopal):
"Their (the primitive Christians) general
and ordinary way was to baptize by immersion, or dipping the person,
whether it were an infant, or grown man or woman, into the water.
This is so plain and clear by an infinite number of passages, that as
one can not but pity the weak endeavors of such Pedobaptists as would
maintain the negative of it, so also we ought to disown and show a
dislike of the profane scoffs which some people give to the English
Antipedobaptists, merely for their use of dipping. it was, in all
probability, the way by which our blessed Savior, and for certain was
the most usual and ordinary way by which the ancient Christians did
receive their baptism. 'Tis a great want of prudence, as well as of
honesty, to refuse to grant to an adversary what is certainly true,
and may be proved so. It creates a jealousy of all the rest that one
says. As for sprinkling, I say, as Mr. Blake, at its first coming up
in England, 'Let them defend it who use it.' They (who are inclined
to Presbyterianism) are hardly prevailed on to leave off that
scandalous custom of having their children, though never so well,
baptized out of a basin, or porringer, in a bed-chamber, hardly
persuaded to bring them to church, much further from having them
dipped, though never so able to bear it." (History of Infant
Baptism, Part II, chap. ii, p. 462).
"In the case of
sickness, weakness, haste, want of quantity of water, or such like
extraordinary occasions, baptism by affusion of water on the face,
was by the ancients, counted sufficient baptism. France seems to have
been the first country in the world where baptism, by affusion, was
used ordinarily to persons in health, and in the public way of
administering it. There has been some synods, in some dioceses of
France, that had spoken of affusion, without mentioning immersion at
all, that being the common practice; but for an office or liturgy of
any church, this is, (Referring to Calvin's "Form of
administering the Sacraments) I believe, the first in the world that
prescribes affusion absolutely; and for sprinkling, properly called,
it seems it was, at 1645, just then beginning, and used by very few.
It must have begun in the disorderly times after 1641." "But
then came The Directory, which says: 'Baptism is to be administered,
not in private places, or privately, but in the place of public
worship, and in the face of the congregation,' and so on. 'And not in
the places where fonts, in the time of Popery, were unfitly and
superstitiously placed.' So they reformed the font into a basin. This
learned assembly could not remember that fonts to baptize in had been
always used by the primitive Christians, long before the beginning of
Popery, and ever since churches were built; but that sprinkling, for
the common use of baptizing, was really introduced (in France first,
and then in the other Popish countries) in times of Popery; and that
accordingly, all those countries in which the usurped power of the
Pope is, or has formerly been, owned, have left off dipping of
children in the font; but that all other countries in the world,
which had never regarded his authority, do still use it; and that
basins, except in case of necessity, were never used by Papists, or
any other Christians whatsoever, till by themselves." "What
has been said of this custom of pouring or sprinkling water in the
ordinary us of baptism, is to be understood only in reference to
these western parts of Europe, for it is used ordinarily nowhere
else." (History of Infant Baptism, Part II, chap. ix).
Mr.
John Wesley:
"Mary Welsh, aged eleven days, was baptized
according to the custom of the first church, and the rule of the
Church of England, by immersion. The child was ill then, but
recovered from that hour. (Extract of Mr. John Wesley's Journal, from
his embarking for Georgia, page 10). 'Buried with him,' alluded to
the ancient manner of baptizing by immersion." (Wesley's Notes
on Rom. vi: 4).
NEED WE ADD MORE? Is any other endeavor
necessary to substantiate beyond a question that the churches of the
first and second centuries were Baptist Churches, so far as baptism
is concerned in subject and action? The testimony that might be
produced would fill a volume; but the foregoing is sufficient for the
candid. Certain it is as that the heavens are above us, that the
primitive churches immersed all who joined them, and that none were
received but professing believers. One other feature of Baptist
Churches must be noticed.
THEIR CHURCH GOVERNMENT
Were
they Episcopal, Presbyterian, or monarchical? Again let history
speak. Mosheim says:
"The churches in those early times
were entirely independent on of another: none of them being subject
to any foreign jurisdiction, but each governed by its own rules and
its own laws. For, though the churches founded by the apostles had
this particular difference shown them, that they were consulted in
difficult and doubtful cases, yet they had no judicial authority, no
sort of supremacy over the others, nor the least right to enact laws
for them. Nothing, on the contrary, is more evident than the perfect
equality of these primitive churches. Having witnessed, in the second
century, that the custom of holding councils commenced in Greece,
whence it soon spread through the other provinces."(Mosheim,
first century, chap. 10, sec. xiv).
This evidence is
conclusive that neither Episcopacy nor Presbyterianism was known in
the first churches; their government was that now existing among
Baptists. but further, Gibbon, the classic historian of Rome,
says:
"Such was the mild and equal constitution by which
the Christians were governed for more than a hundred years after the
death of the apostles. Every society formed within itself a separate
and independent republic, and although the most distant of those
little states maintained a mutual, as well as friendly intercourse of
letters and deputations, the Christian world was not yet connected by
any supreme authority or legislative assembly. Toward the end of the
second century the churches of Greece and Asia adopted the useful
institutions of provincial Synods, and they are justly supposed to
have borrowed the model of a representative council from the
celebrated examples of their own country, the Amphictyons, the Achean
league, and the assemblies of the Ionian cities."
We here
pause again and review our course. We found, in the early part of the
third century, ere one hundred years had transpired from the death of
the apostles, Tertullian and the Montanists breaking away from the
dominant parties in the churches, on the ground of the innovations,
the formalities, and the corruptions, which had almost quenched their
life and light. We found that these Tertullianists were Baptists, and
that from the churches planted by them descended those persecuted and
slandered in every age as Anabaptists. We have now found, by the
light of impartial history, recorded by Pedobaptist scholars, that
previous to Tertullian and the Montanist schism, that is, previous to
the third century, none but adults were baptized. The action of
baptism was immersion, universally; and each church was an
independent little republic.
We have now found, by the
glimmering and oftshaded lamp of history, relumed by Pedobaptist
scholars, that, previous to Tertullian and the Montenses schism:
I.
None but believers were baptized.
II. Baptism was
immersion.
III. Each Church was an independent little
republic, knowing nothing of ecclesiastical conferences, synods,
general assemblies, or authoritative councils.
IV.
Consequently they were all Baptist Churches then.
For, if the
baptism of none but professedly converted believers, and that by
immersion, with independent and democratic church government,
constitute Baptist churches, then the primitive churches were Baptist
Churches.
Where, then, did the Baptists come from?
When
the learned Mosheim, after tracing the origin of every sect, came to
the Anabaptists, or Mennonites, that laborious investigator paused
and said:
"The true origin of this sect is hidden in the
depths of antiquity; and it is of consequence extremely difficult to
be ascertained."
Never was truer statement penned. All up
the stream of ecclesiastical history had tracked them, up to its main
spring he had gone, and found them there. Amid the scenes of
apostolic labor, in the purest ages of the church, he traced their
existence, but not their origin. Further up into the light of
inspired history he would not pass. Their origin was hidden in those
remote depths of antiquity. It could be found in the Epistles and
Acts of the Apostles, and in the testimony of Jesus. But here he
would not seek for their origin, and so he proclaimed that it was
lost. it is not hid in those remote depths. It stands forth in
unadorned simplicity on the shores of the Jordan, amid the scenes of
the Pentecost, and the cities of Greece, while the New Testament
flings a flood of historic light over the whole subject. ere, then,
is our ancestry, of whom we are proud, the origin of our
denomination, for which we are grateful.
On the shores of the
Jordan, thronged with the wondering citizens of Jerusalem, and the
gathering multitudes of Judea, the harbinger of the Messiah announced
the setting up of the kingdom of Jesus, the institution of the church
of Christ. The last of the prophets, and the first of the heralds of
the gospel, like the star of morning, shining clear and radiant from
the bright sky, and then fading away in the cloudless splendor of the
orb of day, in the beginning of the gospel of Jesus Christ came john,
baptizing in the wilderness. That was the beginning.
Amid the
multitudes stood Jesus. Behold the Lamb of God! exclaimed the
enraptured herald of the kingdom. And then in those waters,
consecrated by a thousand sacred associations, Jesus was baptized,
while from the parting heavens came the approving voice of the
Father, and the anointing symbol of the Holy Ghost. thus it was, and
there it was, that our denomination had its origin. Nor can learning
nor ingenuity fix another spot, nor another period.
Baptists!
the flag that floats over you is that of Jesus only; the principles
that govern you have the authority of Jesus only; the ordinances
which distinguish you have the example of Jesus only; and the founder
of your churches is Jesus only. Let deep devotion be yours. Let
earnest zeal be yours. Let the spirit that animated to deeds of valor
and endurance our noble and martyred ancestors be yours. Let us move
in harmony, and fight on manfully and wear the armor constantly, and
soon the songs of the angels will announce the advent of the era when
"the kingdoms of this world shall become the kingdoms of our God
and of His Christ, and He shall reign forever and ever."
THE
END