Why We Baptize Infants
What it means that baptism is a sacrament which includes children.
Note:
Murray's view here is characterized by speculation and logic if taken
simply on its own accord. In this way, the article does not rest
on Scripture. However, taken in the context of his own writings in
the 4 volumes of his Writings, we find him utilizing
Scripture. In this article, the main points of his own thoughts
are to be had in a simple train of thought. Murray, in general, in
my opinion, does not represent the best of covenant theology on this
topic. Read with a discerning mind. (CMM)
Why
We Baptize Infants
by Dr. John Murray
Baptism is one of the two ordinances of
the New Testament that we call sacraments. Baptism is administered in
the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost. Baptism
"in the name of" means "into union with" or
"into the discipleship of." Baptism in the one name of the
triune God means baptism into subjection and devotion to the one living
and true God. It means that the mark of the triune God is placed upon
the recipients of it.
The placing of the mark of God upon us in baptism does not, however,
mean that it is the authentication or seal of an ownership on the part
of God or of discipleship on our part that is naturally and natively a
fact. It is true that there is a natural ownership on the part of God
and an inalienable devotion that we as His creatures owe to Him. But
baptism is not the mark of an ownership that is natively and properly
God's nor of the devotion on our part that we naturally owe to Him. It
is the mark of an ownership that is constituted, and of a devotion that
is created, by redemptive action and relation. In other words, it is the
mark of the Covenant of Grace. In it, and bearing it, we profess to
renounce every other lordship but that of the Father, and of the Son,
and of the Holy Ghost in all the manifold relations that we come to
sustain to each Person in the terms of the Covenant of Grace.
More specifically, baptism signifies washing or purification, washing
from the defilement or pollution of sin by regeneration of the Holy
Spirit, and washing from the guilt of sin by the sprinkling of the blood
of Jesus Christ. Manifestly, it is only in and through Christ and His
work that these blessings can be enjoyed. Union with Christ, therefore,
is the bond that unites us to the participation of these blessings. Our
Shorter Catechism gives a rather succinct and comprehensive definition
when it says that "Baptism is a Sacrament, wherein the washing with
water, in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost,
doth signify and seal our engrafting into Christ, and partaking of the
benefits of the covenant of grace, and our engagement to be the
Lord's."
We believe that Scripture warrants the dispensing of this ordinance of
baptism to infants. Just as infants were circumcised under the Old
Testament - and circumcision meant fundamentally the same thing as
baptism, namely, the removal of the filth of sin and the imputation of
the righteousness which is by faith - so children who stand in a similar
covenant relation with God should be baptized under the New Testament.
What, we may ask, does this precisely mean?
It means that children, even newly-born infants, stand in need of
cleansing from sin both in its defilement and in its guilt. Children do
not become sinful after they grow up or in the process of growing up.
They are sinful from the very outset. They are conceived in sin and
brought forth in iniquity. They go astray from the very womb. No one who
is truly convinced of sin remembers when he became sinful. He knows that
it was not by some deliberate decision or act on his part that he became
sinful. He knows that he was always sinful. Truly he recognizes that
that innate and inherent sinfulness has been aggravated, and has
repeatedly come to expression, in his voluntary acts of sin. But it was
sinfulness already inherent that was aggravated, and came to expression,
in his voluntary acts of sin. Furthermore, no one who is truly observant
of the growth and development of others from infancy to adulthood
remembers any point when sin first began to take possession of their
heart and interest and purpose.
The disposition is always with us, and is at the present time
particularly prevalent, to minimize the seriousness of this fact. There
is the tendency to think and act in terms of the innocency of little
children. The consequences of such an attitude are disastrous to all
true nurture and instruction. For to eliminate from our attitude and
conduct so basic and far-reaching a fact as the innate pollution of
fallen human nature is to eliminate a fact without which nurture and
direction must lead on to a perversion and falsehood manifoldly more
desperate than that with which it began. Infant baptism is a perpetual
reminder that infants need what baptism represents and there can be no
escape from, or amelioration of, that awful fact.
But baptism is after all a sacrament of grace. And therefore it means
more than the fact of need. It means that by the grace of God infants
may enjoy precisely and fully what baptism represents. They may be
regenerated by the Spirit and justified in the blood of Christ. They may
be united to Christ in all the perfection of His mediatorial offices and
in all the efficacy of His finished work.
We should pause to consider the preciousness of these truths. Truly we
shall have no appreciation of their preciousness unless we are persuaded
of that awful fact to which we have already made reference, namely, that
of original sin. But if we sincerely face the fact of the dismal
pollution of human nature in its present state, no human words can
adequately express the joy we experience in the contemplation of that
which baptism means for infants. We may briefly reflect on the
preciousness of these truths for two considerations.
First, children may and often do die at a very early age. If they should
die without regeneration and justification, they would be lost just as
surely as others dying in an unregenerate state are finally lost. The
baptism of children, then, means that the grace of God takes hold of
children at a very early age, even from the very womb. That is to say,
in other words, we must not exclude the operations of God's efficacious
and saving grace from the sphere or realm of earliest infanthood. It is
to this truth our Lord gave His most insistent and emphatic testimony
when He said, "Suffer the little children to come unto me, and
forbid them not, for of such is the kingdom of God."
We would not, of course, be misunderstood when we assert this principle.
We do not say that the operations of God's saving grace are present in
the heart of every infant. The fact is only too apparent that multitudes
grow up to years of discretion and intelligence and show that the saving
grace of God did not take hold of their hearts and minds in the days of
their infancy. Neither are we taking the position necessarily that all
who die in infancy are the recipients of the saving grace of God. For
ourselves we must leave that question in the realm to which it belongs,
namely, the unrevealed counsel of God. But it is nevertheless true - and
that is the point we are now interested in stressing - that the grace of
God is operative in the realm of the infant heart and mind. "Out of
the mouth of babes and sucklings thou hast perfected praise." What
a blessed thought and hope and confidence is extended to believing
parents when in baptism they commit their children to the regenerating
and sanctifying grace of the Holy Spirit and to the purging efficacy of
the blood of Christ, so that, if perchance the Lord is pleased to remove
them in infancy, they - believing parents - can plead and rest upon the
promises of the Covenant of Grace on their behalf. It can surely be said
of them that they have no need to mourn as those that have no hope.
But secondly we should appreciate the preciousness of these truths for
the reason that children do not need to grow up to the years of
discretion and intelligence before they become the Lord's. Just as
children are sinful before they come to the years of discretion and
understanding, so by the sovereign grace of God they do not need to grow
up before they become partakers of saving grace. They may grow up not
only in the nurture and admonition of the Lord, but also in His favor
and sanctifying grace. They may in their tenderest years be introduced
into the family and household of the heavenly father. When believing
parents present their children for baptism they are confessing that
their children are innately sinful, they are confessing their need of
regeneration and justification, but they are also pleading on the behalf
of their children the regenerating and justifying grace of God. In
reliance upon the promise that "the mercy of the Lord is from
everlasting to everlasting upon them that fear him, and his
righteousness unto children's children; to such as keep his covenant,
and to those that remember his commandments to do them," they are
entertaining the encouragement and the hope that "those that be
planted in the house of the Lord shall flourish in the courts of our
God. They shall still bring forth fruit in old age; they shall be fat
and flourishing; to shew that the Lord is upright; he is my rock and
there is no unrighteousness in him."
Baptism is the ordinance that initiates into the fellowship of the
visible church. The visible church is a divine institution. It is the
house and family of God. It is a divine sanctuary where God's glory is
made known. It is the channel along which normally the current of God's
saving grace flows. What a privilege it is for parents by divine
authority in the reception of the ordinance of baptism to introduce
their children into this blessed fellowship.
If infant baptism has the divine warrant, then what dishonor is offered
to Christ and what irretrievable damage is done to the church and to the
souls of children by refusing to introduce children into this glorious
fellowship. No argument from apparent expediency, no seeming
evangelistic fervor will counteract that dishonor to our Lord and that
damage done to the souls of men.
In concluding this brief study of the meaning and privilege of infant
baptism, there are two warnings that must be given. The first is that
against the doctrine of baptismal regeneration. We must not look upon
baptism as having some semi-magical effect. Baptism derives all its
efficacy from the sovereign grace of the Holy Spirit. We do well to
remind ourselves of the words of our Shorter Catechism, "The
Sacraments become effectual means of salvation, not from any virtue in
them, or in him that doth administer them; but only by the blessing of
Christ, and the working of his Spirit in them that by faith receive
them." We must never take for granted that the infant who is
baptized is by that mere fact assured of eternal life. Baptism is
certainly a means of grace which God has, in accordance with His
appointment, abundantly honored and blessed throughout the whole history
of the Christian church. But we must ever preserve the true
evangelicalism of our Christian faith that, in the last analysis, we are
not saved by any external rite or ordinance, but by the sovereign grace
of God that works mysteriously, directly and efficaciously in the heart
and soul of each individual whom He has appointed to salvation.
The second is that infant baptism does not relieve parents or guardians,
as the case may be, of that solemn responsibility to instruct, warn,
exhort, direct and protect the infant members of the Christian church
committed to their care. we must repeat again the text we have already
quoted, "The mercy of the Lord is from everlasting to everlasting
upon them that fear him and his righteousness unto children's children,
to such as keep his covenant and to those that remember his commandments
to do them." The encouragement derived from a divine promise must
never be divorced from the discharge of the obligations involved. It is
only in the atmosphere of obligation discharged, in a word, in the
atmosphere of obedience to divine commandments, that faith in the divine
promise can live and grow. Faith divorced from obedience is mockery and
presumption.
The Presbyterian Guardian,
Volume 5 (1938) |
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