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ON THE NATURE AND IMPORTANCE OF A CHRISTIAN
PROFESSION,
AND ITS CONNECTION WITH MEMBERSHIP IN THE VISIBLE CHURCH.
Rev. J.G. Shepperson
Southern Presbyterian Review, Volume 6, Number 4, April 1853.
What is a Christian profession? What is implied
in membership in the visible Church? These are solemn and important
questions; but
few, perhaps, have studied them with the attention they deserve.
To most of our readers the views now to be presented will probably
seem novel and objectionable.[Footnote] They have not, however, been adopted
hastily, or on slight grounds; and whatever maybe their merits,
should the exhibition of them lead to thorough investigation, we
shall not have labored in vain.
As there will be frequent occasion to refer to the following passages
of Scripture, we deem it expedient to introduce them here.
Luke 12:8, 9—Also I say unto you, whosoever shall confess me before men,
him shall the Son of Man also confess before the angels of God: but he that
denieth me before men, shall be denied before the angels of God. Romans
10:8-10—The
word is nigh thee, even in thy heart: that is, the word of faith, which we
preach; that if thou shalt confess with thy mouth the Lord Jesus, and shall
believe in thine heart that God hath raised him from the dead, thou shalt be
saved. For with the heart man believeth unto righteousness, and with the mouth
confession is made unto salvation. Hebrews 10:23—Let us hold fast the
profession of our faith without wavering; (for he is faithful that promised.)
Mark 16:16—He that believeth, and is baptized, shall be saved but he
that believeth not shall be damned. Acts 2:37-47—Now, when they heard
this, they were pricked in their heart, and said unto Peter and to the rest
of the Apostles, Men and brethren, what shall we do? Then Peter said unto them,
Repent and be baptized, every one of you, in the name of Jesus Christ, for
the remission of sins; and ye shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost. For
the promise is unto you, and to your children, and to all that are afar off,
even as many as the Lord our God shall call. And with many other words did
he testify and exhort, saying, Save yourselves from this untoward generation.
Then they that gladly received his word were baptized: and the same day there
were added unto them about three thousand souls. And they continued steadfastly
in the ‘Apostles’ doctrine and fellowship, and in breaking of bread,
and in prayers. And fear came upon every soul: and many wonders and signs were
done by the Apostles. And all that believed were together, and had all things
common; and sold their possessions and goods, and parted them to all men, as
every man had need. And they, continuing daily with one accord in the temple,
and breaking bread from house to house, did eat their meat with gladness and
singleness of heart, praising God, and having favor with all the people. And
the Lord added to the Church daily such as should be saved. Matthew 28:19,
20—Go ye, therefore, and teach all nations, baptizing them in the name
of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost; teaching them to observe
all things whatsoever I have commanded you. Genesis 17:7—And I will establish
my covenant between me and thee, and thy seed after thee, in their generations,
for an everlasting covenant, to be a God unto thee, and to thy seed after thee.
Verses 9-11—And God said unto Abraham, Thou shalt keep my covenant, therefore,
thou, and thy seed after thee in their generations. This is my covenant, which
ye shall keep, between me and you, and thy seed after thee; Every man-child
among you shall be circumcised. And ye shall circumcise the flesh of your foreskin;
and it shall be the token of the covenant betwixt me and you. Exodus 12:48—And
when a stranger shall sojourn with thee, and will keep the Passover to the
Lord, let all his males be circumcised, and then let him come near and keep
it; and he shall be as one that is born in the land. Isaiah 56:6, 7—Also
the sons of the stranger, that join themselves to the Lord, to serve him, and
to love the name of the Lord, to be his servants, every one that keepeth the
Sabbath from polluting it, and taketh hold of my covenant; even them will I
bring to my holy mountain, and make them joyful in my house of prayer; their
burnt offerings and their sacrifices shall be accepted upon mine altar: for
mine house shall be called an house of prayer for all people.
From the first five of these passages we shall now deduce a series of observations,
which will serve as a foundation for much of our subsequent reasoning, and
to which the careful attention of the reader is earnestly solicited.
1. The confession of Christ, enjoined in the first and second of these
texts, is evidently identical with the profession of our faith, mentioned
in the
third—and
is that Christian profession which we are to consider. This, it is presumed,
will be admitted without an argument.
2. The first of these passages teaches us that the confession, or profession
in question, is an infallible test, by which to distinguish the heirs
of salvation from the heirs of perdition; all who make it, belong to
the former
class; all
who refuse, to the latter.
3. From the third of these texts it is evident that the profession must
be permanent. Though made, originally, by a single act, it must be
adhered to,
under all circumstances, to the end of life.
4. In the case of persons not previously baptized, the divinely appointed
mode of making this profession is in baptism. We are not representing
confession and baptism as the same thing. The one is the duty of
which we speak; the
other
we affirm to be the divinely appointed mode of performing that duty;
and what would be the effect of an involuntary mistake as to the
mode, we are
not now
inquiring. So explained, the truth of our observation is established
by a comparison of the second and fourth of the texts quoted. In
both, the
terms
of salvation
are professedly and formally stated; and as there can be no contradiction
between them, it follows that in both the same duties are enjoined.
In the one, they
are to believe and confess; in the other, to believe and be
baptized. Of course, the command to confess, and the command to be baptized,
relate to the same
duty. A Baptist, we know, would object to the limitation which we
have mentioned. That question need not be here discussed. If the observation
is admitted
as true of all the cases to which we have applied it, our reasoning
will not be
invalidated, even though it be extended to others.
5. It is by baptism one becomes a member of the visible Church.
This is evident from the fifth of the passages quoted. The last
sentence in this passage, let it be observed, relates to persons
not previously mentioned. Here, for the first time, is anything
said about admission to the Church; and here is not one word about
baptism. If; then, our observation be incorrect, the following
consequences will follow: On the one hand, we have no account of
the admission of the three thousand into the Church, though they
evidently enjoyed all the privileges of membership; and on the
other, as to those who are recorded to have been added to the Church,
notwithstanding the emphasis with which baptism was enjoined on
others, we have no evidence that they ever received that ordinance.
6. From the truths now stated, it follows that the profession to which
the promise of salvation is annexed, is the same which an adult is divinely
required
to make in baptism, and the same that he is divinely required to make in
becoming a member of the visible Church.
Our materials are now collected, and we proceed to use them. Our first
position, then, is this:
I. A Christian profession does not consist, either wholly or in part, in
a declaration that he who makes it either is, or believes himself to
be, a regenerate
person.
That every unregenerate person is absolutely disqualified for making
that profession, is certain; the reason for this will be given hereafter.
But
there are those
who believe that, according to the will of God, the Church is to consist
solely of regenerate persons; that her peculiar privileges are designed
exclusively for edification—not at all for conversion—and
that should one of her members be duly ascertained to be still unconverted,
his connection with
her ought, on that account alone, to be dissolved.
To these views we oppose—
1. Infant baptism.
So far as external ordinances are concerned, our Savior has instituted
but one baptism. It may, indeed, be administered in different circumstances;
and
these may vary the consequences incidentally connected with it. But to
imagine a difference as to its primary design—its direct meaning
and effect, is to imagine a plurality of baptisms. But an infant is not
baptized in the
character of a regenerate person. The reason for baptizing him rests not
at all on any supposition of his having experienced that change. Of course,
in
the case of an adult receiving the same ordinance, a declaration on that
subject cannot be the direct meaning and design.
The argument will appear still stronger, if we reflect on the ecclesiastical
effect of baptism. The party baptized, whether infant or adult, is thereby
constituted a member of the Church. Is that relation intended solely
for the edification of believers, and not at all for the conversion of
sinners?
Why,
then, are infants admitted? On this hypothesis, it must be absolutely
useless till they are converted. Why not wait, then, as in the case of
those who
are born of unbelieving parents? That an infant may be regenerated, we
have no
doubt; and in such a case, should life be continued, the evidences of
piety would be exhibited just as soon as the evidences of capacity for
moral
action. But such instances are, at best, extremely rare; and it surely
will not be
contended that God has established the general law of infant baptism
merely as a provision for such rare exceptions.
Besides, it will hardly be contended that, in all ordinary cases, persons
baptized in infancy ought to be excommunicated as soon as they exhibit
satisfactory evidence of having arrived at years of discretion. A position
so paradoxical,
so manifestly unsupported by the word of God, and repugnant to the
dictates of common sense, need not be examined, unless it should be distinctly
affirmed. But if this idea be rejected, the doctrine we are opposing
will lead to
another conclusion, equally strange and unreasonable. It will require
a distinction
to be made in the administration of ecclesiastical censures; the delinquent,
if born of pious parents, must be dealt with on one principle; and
if
his connection
with the Church was formed by his own act, on a different and harsher
principle. When this conclusion shall have found an advocate, we shall
be prepared
to discuss its merits.
2. The original Constitution of the Church.
In common with Pedo-Baptists
generally, we regard the covenant with Abraham (already cited) as
the charter under which
the Church exists at the present moment. The token of the covenant
has, indeed, been changed; but it by no means follows that the covenant
itself
has been
abrogated. Paul expressly affirms that, by circumcision, Abraham
became the father of all believers, whether circumcised or uncircumcised.
See Romans
4:11, 12. The terms of membership, no doubt, have been more clearly
illustrated since
the time of Abraham; but to suppose that they have been essentially
altered, is to suppose that the original charter has been revoked,
and a new one
granted—which
would be a surrender of the foundation on which infant baptism rests. What,
then, was necessary to constitute one who bad been born of Gentile parents
a member of the Jewish Church? Our quotations from Genesis, Exodus, and Isaiah,
are intended to throw light on that question, and will be used for this purpose
hereafter. At present our inquiry relates to a single point: Was such a person
required, as a condition of admission, to avow a persuasion that he was already
in the enjoyment of Jehovah’s favor? Let the reader examine
the texts which we have quoted, and judge for himself. So far as
we now recollect, that
idea has never yet found an advocate.
The arguments hitherto offered, we are aware, would have no weight
with a Baptist; the same is not true of those which remain to be
adduced.
3. The principle that Christian baptism is not to be administered
to the same person more than once.
This may be safely assumed;
and we
have only
to inquire
how far it is consistent with the theory under discussion.
Suppose an adult baptized on a profession of faith. This, according to
the theory,
is a
public declaration that his sins are pardoned, and his nature
is renewed. It is
afterwards proved by sufficient evidence, and even declared
by himself; that the fact
is otherwise. As to the present argument, it is quite indifferent
whether he deceived himself or intended to deceive others.
We ask, does the
effect of
his baptism continue? Is he still to be numbered among baptized
persons? Answer in the affirmative, and you have the singular
assertion, that
a claim which
a man has once set up in his own favor, remains in force after
it has been deliberately, publicly, and formally retracted.
Answer in
the
negative, and the conclusion is inevitable, should he be truly
converted at a subsequent
period, there will be precisely the same reason for declaring
that fact in
baptism as if he never had been baptized. In short, if, in
the case of adults, to be baptized is to claim the character of regenerate
persons, then to retract
the claim is to nullify the ordinance and all who now disclaim
the
character
are, with respect to baptism, on the same level—whence
it follows that, if on conversion, it becomes the duty of any
to be baptized, the same, in like
circumstances, becomes the duty of all, without any distinction
between those who have and those who have not been baptized
at an earlier period. 4. Apostolic teaching and practice in reference to baptism.
The ordinance now in force was first administered on the day
of Pentecost; and no instruction necessary to a proper reception
of
it, we may
be assured, was omitted on that occasion. Did Peter, then,
require of
his hearers
a persuasion that they were already in favor with God, as
a necessary qualification?
Did
he intimate that baptism was an expression of such a persuasion?
Assuredly he did not. The whole passage has already been
quoted and, in reference
to this point, is now commended to the careful examination
of the reader. It
is utterly impossible to gather from it that baptism is an
avowal of any sentiment
or state of mind not included in the repentance with which
it is connected. Repent and be baptized, &c. Could the three thousand learn from this that
before being baptized they must receive an assurance, or entertain a persuasion
that their sins were already pardoned? Here it may be proper to mention another
passage in which the qualifications for baptism, in the case of an adult, are
formally stated: Acts 8: 36-38. “And as they went on their way, they
came to a certain water and the eunuch said, see, here is water; what doth
hinder me to be baptized? and Philip said, if thou believest with all thine
heart, thou mayest. And he answered, and said, I believe that Jesus Christ
is the Son of God. And he commanded the chariot to stand still; and they went
down both into the water, both Philip and the eunuch, and he baptized him.” Here,
it is evident, the profession made related solely to the Lord Jesus; the applicant
expressed his views and feelings in reference to him—but neither gave,
nor was required to give, any expression of opinion, as to himself as a pardoned
or unpardoned sinner. And we may add, there is not an instance recorded in
the New Testament where a candidate for baptism was required to express any
opinion on that subject. The question, uniformly, is not what
think ye of yourselves? but, what think ye of Christ?
Self-examination is the principal means for determining whether
our sins are forgiven or not; and in this view it is frequently
enjoined
in the
New Testament.
But the injunction is uniformly addressed to those who
are already members of the Church. Nowhere is the candidate commanded
to
examine himself,
in order that he may know whether he is qualified for admission;
and in no
instance is it recorded that baptism was delayed in order
to give opportunity for
such
self-examination. The danger of inconsiderate haste is,
indeed,
brought distinctly to view but the remedy prescribed by
the Redeemer is not
examine yourselves, but count the cost. Consider the life you must live, the
sacrifices you will be required to make. When a scribe
proposed to follow
him, he said
not a
word about self-examination. His answer was of a different
kind: “The foxes
have holes, and the birds of the air have nests; but the Son of man hath not
where to lay his head.” “You propose to follow a Master who is
poorer than birds or foxes; and the disciple is not
above his Master. Will
you be my disciple on these terms.” And the means he employed for this
purpose were uniformly of the same kind.
5. The requirement of steadfastness in the Christian profession.
When the Apostle says, Let us hold fast the profession of
our faith without wavering, he surely does not mean that we must, under
all circumstances, persist in the declaration that our sins are
pardoned, and we are heirs of glory. Such an interpretation is
utterly irreconcilable with the injunction: Examine yourselves,
whether ye be in the faith. It follows that the profession of our
faith does not include the declaration specified. There is not
a passage in the word of God which so much as seems to suggest that the question, whether a man’s connection with the Church
shall be continued or dissolved, must be decided by self-examination.
There are, we know, some who believe that a right to membership
in the Church necessarily involves a right to the Lord’s
table; and it is sometimes asserted that a member of the Church
who, in consequence of doubts as to his own piety, abstains from
the sacred supper, commits a disciplinable offence, which, if persisted
in, ought to draw down upon him a sentence of excommunication.
This whole theory we unhesitatingly pronounce unfounded and unscriptural.
And a single text ought to dislodge it forever from every Christian
mind. 1 Cor. 11:26-29: “For as often as ye eat this bread,
and drink this cup, ye do show the Lord’s death till he come.
Wherefore, whosoever shall eat this bread, and drink this cup of
the Lord, unworthily, shall be guilty of the body and blood of
the Lord. But, let a man examine himself, and so let him eat of
that bread, and drink of that cup. For he that eateth and drinketh
unworthily, eateth and drinketh damnation to himself; not discerning
the Lord’s body.”
From this passage we learn that a spiritual qualification is
indispensable to an authorized approach to the Lord’s table—that the communicant
not thus qualified incurs all the guilt of neglecting that ordinance, with
the additional guilt of profaning it—and that self-examination is necessary,
because to eat and drink unworthily is worse than to abstain entirely. But
when do we read of withdrawing from the Church because self-examination has
detected the want of that spiritual qualification? This passage, assuredly,
contains not a syllable that ingenuity can torture into such a meaning.
If
a member of the Church evinces by his outward conduct that he is not qualified
for an acceptable approach to the Lord’s table, the spiritual officers
of the Church ought to forbid his approach. But if; while his behavior is in
other respects such as becometh the Gospel, he refrains in consequence of apprehensions
in his own mind that he is unqualified, the matter lies between his own conscience
and his God; and his fellow creatures may not interfere, except by simply giving
him such instruction as may aid in self-examination. For what purpose can discipline
be applied? To induce him to communicate, without reference to the question
whether, in his own judgment, he is qualified or disqualified? According to
the scripture just quoted, for him to do so, would be daring impiety. Shall
he be censured, merely because he judges unfavorably of his own case—doubts
his own piety? How is the remedy suited to the disease? or where has God prescribed
it? The Scriptures, then, require a man to examine himself, in order to ascertain
whether he is in the faith, and whether he is qualified for the Lord’s
supper; but they do not require him to determine by self-examination whether
he shall continue in the Church, or whether he shall retain his Christian profession.
Let the reader draw his own conclusion.
6. The connection between a Christian profession
and salvation.
See Luke 12:8, 9—already quoted. Did the Savior make it
a condition of salvation, that we should declare before men that
we are already heirs of salvation? If not,
the theory under discussion is irreconcilable with this passage. II. We proceed to state what we conceive to be the true theory.
The Church is the visible kingdom of God,
distinguished from every other society by this important circumstance,
that all
her members, and no
others, are bound
by a solemn and public covenant to the evangelical service of Jehovah.
That obligation may be described in other words, thus: They are bound
by such
a covenant, to trust and love, to serve and glorify the Mediator,
in the character
in which he is revealed, as Lord and Savior. As it is by baptism
one is made a member of the Church, it is, of course, by that
ordinance
he is
brought
into this covenant. And a Christian profession is simply a cordial
and open acknowledgement
of the obligation which the covenant imposes. By saying, the acknowledgement
must be cordial, we mean simply that it must be prompted by a state
of heart corresponding with it nature. It is not needful to
dwell on the
distinction between entering into this covenant by baptism, which,
in the case of those
not baptized in infancy, is the prescribed mode of originally making
this profession, and the subsequent acts by which the obligation
of the covenant
is recognized.
There is evidently no such difference as can affect the nature of
the profession.
Hoping that this statement of our views will be found to be sufficiently
clear and explicit, we proceed to exhibit our proofs.
Here we lay much stress on the connection
between a Christian profession and salvation. Notice the first of the passages
quoted at the outset
(Luke 12:
8, 9). It will, of course, be admitted that the confession here
required must be cordial, that it must be connected with a state
of heart
corresponding with
its nature; but this is only saying in other words that it must
spring from a heart that recognizes Christ as Savior and Sovereign.
And
such a recognition
is the faith to which the promise of eternal life is uniformly
annexed. He that believeth on the Son hath everlasting life. And as it is
a living faith
that is required, the believer cannot, of course, be either afraid
or ashamed to acknowledge his obligation to the Redeemer. Understood
as
now explained,
the text referred to is in full accordance with the uniform teachings
of the word of God; but the same will not be true, if we attach
any other meaning to the term confess.
Let this passage be compared with the second which we quoted
(Romans 10: 8-10). In the one, no duty is specified but confession;
in
the other, both
faith and
confession. On our principle, the difference is easily explained.
It will not be imagined that a hypocritical profession will
meet the Redeemer’s requirement;
but such is the nature of the thing to be confessed, that without faith the
confession cannot be sincere. The mention of faith in the latter text, therefore,
explains the nature of the confession required. In the same paragraph which
contains this latter passage, faith is described by us immediate effect—calling
on the name of the Lord. Whosoever shall call upon the
name of the Lord shall be saved. The state of heart involved in a Christian profession is, therefore,
identical with that which is implied in a sincere application to Christ for
his salvation; and he who is qualified for the latter is qualified for the
former.
Our theory removes every appearance of difficulty from the
inspired exhortation: Let us hold fast the profession
of our faith without
wavering. Whether
a man may claim before his fellow men the character of an
heir of salvation, depends
on the results of self-examination; but whether he shall
recognize and acknowledge
his obligation to trust, serve, and glorify the Lord Jesus,
is a question about which he may not hesitate for a single
moment,
or
under any circumstances;
and such is the duty to which that exhortation relates.
Our next argument is drawn from the Savior’s
manner of treating those who proposed to become his disciples.
The general direction to count the cost, has already been
noticed. We have mentioned, too, his reply to the scribe
who proposed
to follow him.
One
more passage of the same class will suffice. Luke 14
: 25-27: “And there went
great multitudes with him; and he turned and said unto them: If any man come
to me, and hate not his father, and mother, and wife, and children, and brethren,
and sisters, yea, and his own life also, he cannot be my disciple. And whosoever
doth not bear his cross, and come after me, cannot be my disciple.”
What means, then, did the Savior employ to prevent unsuitable
persons from enrolling themselves among his disciples?
Did he tell them
to examine themselves?
Did he require an account of their past religions experience?
Did he give a particular statement of what that experience
ought to
have been?
Nothing
of
the kind. He simply stated the terms of discipleship,
and called on them to decide whether they would be
his disciples
on these
terms. In other
words, he set before them the obligation of the covenant
into which they proposed
to enter, and demanded neither more nor less than their
hearty consent to that
covenant.
We have already promised to state the reason why every unregenerate
person is incapable of making a Christian profession, and disqualified
for uniting himself, by his own act, with the Church of God. We
now fulfill that promise: No such person sincerely consents
to God’s covenant. That covenant requires a cordial recognition
of Jesus as Lord and Savior, in the sense in which these characters
are ascribed to him in the sacred volume. But, No man can say
that Jesus is the Lord, but by the Holy Ghost (1 Cor. 12:3). If, then,
a man heartily consents to this covenant, it follows that the spirit
of Christ dwells in him and, of course, that he is Christ’s.
(See Romans 8:9.) But, let it be observed, his consent to the covenant
is the evidence of his Christian character—not his Christian
character the evidence of his consent to the covenant—and
he who can sincerely signify his consent to the covenant is, therefore,
qualified for admission into the Church—no matter whether
he has or has not drawn the delightful inference that he is a child
of God, and an heir of glory.
Our next argument is drawn from the original
Constitution of the Church—the Abrahamic covenant.
At the outset, we quoted, from the seventeenth chapter of Genesis,
the covenant, arid the appointment of circumcision as its token.
Here, for the first time, did Jehovah authorize mortals to
speak of him as the God of Abraham; and whenever this title
is applied
to Him, the reference is to this covenant. In whatever sense,
then, He is the God of Abraham, in the same sense is He the
God of all
who are reckoned, according to the covenant, as the seed the
seed of Abraham. This, however does not include all who are
bound by
the covenant, or whose visible relation it determines: For
they are not all Israel which are of Israel; neither, because
they
are the seed of Abraham, are they all children: but in Isaac
shall
thy seed be called. That is, they which are the children of
the flesh, these are not the children of God: but the children
of
the promise are counted for the seed” (Rom. 9:6-8). The next
passage which we quoted (Exodus 12:48) provides for the admission
of strangers (persons who were Gentiles by birth) into this Church,
or covenant relation; and that, in the case of males, was by circumcision.
We have already referred to Romans 4:11 and 12. Let the reader
examine it attentively, and he can hardly fail to perceive that
Abraham “received the sign of circumcision” in the
specific character of a believer; and furthermore, that
circumcision constituted him the father of all believers, whether
circumcised
or uncircumcised. But this latter proposition is only expressed
in terms slightly varied, when we affirm, that Abraham was constituted
the father of believers, by the covenant of which circumcision
was the token; and that is to say, it is by faith one becomes a
child of Abraham in the sense of the covenant. Of course, every
person included in that covenant, as to visible relation, is bound
thereby to the exercise of a faith like Abraham’s—an
evangelical, living, active, obedient faith.
If further information on this point be required, we have only
to refer to the last of the passages quoted at the commencement
of this discussion (Isaiah 56:6 and 7). The last sentence,
we conceive, contains a promise, the fulfillment of which
belongs to the Christian
dispensation, though the language is accommodated, as in
many other instances, to the dispensation then in force. The
rest
of the passage
announces a general principle, applicable, as we think, to
the
Church, under all dispensations—certainly applicable to the
Jewish dispensation. The candidate was required to enter into covenant
with God; or, in the emphatic language of inspiration, to “take
hold of my covenant.” The meaning is, he must heartily consent
to the covenant, and signify his consent in the prescribed form,
which then was by circumcision. And the following are specified
as the duties to which he bound himself by that act—to love
the name of the Lord, to be his servant, and serve him, and to
keep the Sabbath from polluting it. The Abrahamic covenant, then,
bound all who were comprehended under it to the evangelical service
of God; and all who were prepared to enter into such an engagement
(and, so far as adults were concerned, no others) were prepared
for admission into the visible Church. That the same principle
is still in force, is the precise doctrine of this article. We
proceed, then, to notice, as our next argument,
The teachings of the New Testament in reference to Christian
baptism.
Among the texts which we quoted at the commencement,
is Matthew 25:19 and 20, to which the serious attention
of the reader
is now requested. The nations are to be baptised in (or
into eis)
the
name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost—thus
bought into that visible family of which the Most High
is the acknowledged Father and sovereign—and solemnly
and publicly devoted to his service. This view is corroborated
by the following words:
Teaching them to observe all things, whatsoever I
have commanded you. It is natural to understand this direction
in reference especially
to persons already baptized; and the meaning will then
be, “illustrate,
in all its extent, the obligation of the covenant into
which they have entered; inculcate the duties involved
with the utmost zeal,
and enforce obedience by all the means which I have appointed.” If
this is the true interpretation, (and to us it seems
indisputable that it is,) this passage establishes the
proposition, that the
party baptized is thereby brought into a covenant with
God, precisely similar to, or rather identical with,
the Abrahamic covenant already
noticed; nor is it any objection that the three Divine
Persons are expressly mentioned in one passage, but not
in the other; in
each, he is solemnly bound to the evangelical service
of the same God, and the corresponding blessings which
he is authorized to
expect are the same.
Let us next turn to the passage which was quoted from
the second chapter of Acts. The clause most material
to our
purpose is,
Repent, and be baptized, &c. Few will need to be informed that the
word translated repent, means to change one’s mind; and whether
a general or a particular change is meant, can be determined only
by the connection. In this instance, as appears from the context,
Peter was replying to an inquiry extorted from his hearers by the
overwhelming charge, made and proved against them, that they had
rejected Him whom God had made both Lord and Christ, and had horribly
signalized that rejection by procuring his crucifixion. When in
connection with this subject, Peter said, Repent, and be baptized,
every one of you, in the name of Jesus Christ, what could they
understand but this: that they must so change their minds, as to
receive as Lord and Christ him whom they had hitherto rejected,
and, as a public acknowledgment of him, must be baptized in his
name? So explained, this text accords with all those passages which
connect faith with baptism, as saving faith consists in receiving
Christ. It receives him as both Deliverer and Sovereign; nor can
he be received in either character, unless he is received in both;
but it may be proper to observe that, in this instance, the latter,
but not the former, is expressly mentioned. Such is a fair specimen
of the uniform teaching of the sacred writers. They represent Christian
baptism as an oath of allegiance—a solemn acknowledgement
of the supremacy of the mediatorial King. Hence the obligation
to a holy life, which they connect with that ordinance. How shall
we, that are dead to sin, live any longer therein? Know ye not
that so many of us as were baptized into Jesus Christ were baptized
into his death? Therefore we are buried with him by baptism into
death: that like as Christ was raised up from the dead by the glory
of the Father, even so, we also should walk in newness of life.
Before leaving this part of the subject, it seems proper
to mention two additional considerations, which the
reader is
at liberty
to take for arguments, or not, according to his own
pleasure. One
is, that
Our theory gives a clear and consistent view of the
meaning and effect of baptism, as administered
to an infant.
Whether it is administered to an adult, or to an
infant, the rite is the same, and its symbolical
meaning the
same; moreover,
it
seals the same promises, and imposes the same
obligation. Of course, it is the same ordinance. The difference
is purely circumstantial, and it is this: In
the
one case
the person
enters into this relation
by his own voluntary act; in the other, he is
brought into it through
his connection with others. A foreigner arrives
on our shore, and in due time takes the oath
of allegiance;
his children
born afterwards
are born citizens—brought into that relation, not by their
own act, but through their connection with him—and are as
strictly bound to all the duties of allegiance, as if they had
taken the obligation by their own act. They are not, indeed, subjected
to any rite corresponding with the oath administered to their father.
But, though the parallel does not hold in every particular, here
is the principle upon which infant baptism rests—the child
brought into a covenant relation through his connection with his
parent. We pass to the other consideration:
Our theory suggests the reason why baptism
may not be repeated. That ordinance is designed
to bring
the subject
under the
obligation of God’s covenant;
of course, it is presupposed that he is not already under that obligation.
But, the relation once formed, the obligation is perpetual, and can no more
be canceled than the soul can be annihilated.
But, we shall be asked, Would you retain a man in the Church,
when it is evident that, were he not already a member,
he must be judged
utterly
unqualified
for
admission? Undoubtedly. In taking an oath of allegiance,
a man ought to act sincerely and advisedly; but he who
has taken
it,
no matter
in what
state
of moral feeling, is truly a citizen; nor can he be permitted
to plead, in answer
to a charge of treason, that he took that oath rashly,
or in jest, or that at the moment of taking it he meditated
treasonable
designs.
Thus we have endeavored to explain the nature of a Christian
profession, and its connection with membership in the
Church of God. Let us
proceed to consider,
III. The importance of such a profession.
This the Son of God has exhibited in the strongest
light, in the memorable declaration: Whosoever
shall confess
me before
men, him
shall the Son
of man also confess before the angels of God; but
he that denieth me before
men, shall
be denied before the angels of God.
In the case of those who have not been baptized
already, this confession, as we have seen, is
required to
be made by connecting
themselves
with the Church
of Christ; of persons who have been baptized
in infancy is demanded a cordial, solemn, and public
recognition
of the
baptismal obligation,
to be given
in the specific character of members of the Church.
To every reader who
has
not already done so, we say: This is your duty;
you are bound to embrace the earliest
opportunity for performing it; and for the consequences
of neglecting it, you are referred to the awful
words of your
final Judge,
which have just
been quoted.
You ask, then, can no man be saved who does not
place himself in the condition of a communicant?
Undoubtedly,
if God,
in his providence,
denies him the
opportunity. The opportunity being supposed,
the question resolves itself into this: Whether
any person, supremely desirous to do the will
of
Christ, is ever left
to mistake that will in reference to this matter?
and this can never be a
practical question
with any man, in reference to his own case.
The denunciation is leveled, not against invincible
ignorance, involuntary
error, or
a failure
to do what Providence
has rendered impracticable; but against resisting
the Savior’s authority,
and willfully neglecting to render him the honor which he claims. Every man
shall be saved who believes in Jesus with the faith
that worketh by love; but
where there is affectionate faith, there is submission to His authority—there
is the spirit of unconditional obedience to all his known requirements.
The obligation rests on the revealed will of
Christ. Still the reasonableness of the requirement
is,
in several views,
exceedingly
obvious; and
devout meditation on this subject is both
proper and profitable.
The Church is the kingdom of Christ—all without it, the kingdom of the
devil. If, then, you heartily submit to Christ, can you wish to remain, formally
and visibly, in the kingdom of Satan?
Piety, necessarily, spreads its influence
over the whole character of its possessor.
It must
control every part
of your conduct—that which is open and visible,
as well as that which is secret. Now, if ashamed or afraid openly to acknowledge
Christ as your Lord, will you not be ashamed or afraid openly to do His will
in other respects?
If a believer, you regard the Lord Jesus
with supreme reverence and love. But,
entertaining these sentiments,
you cannot
possibly be
reluctant to honor Him
and acknowledge your obligation to
Him, in the boldest and most open manner.
Many of the most formidable difficulties that attend a life of
piety, arise from the influence of the ungodly. Let it be known,
then, that you belong to a different class—are actuated by
other motives, guided by opposite principles, and bound by the
most solemn vows to the service of another Master. Nothing can
tend more obviously to diminish the number and force of the temptations
arising from that quarter, or to facilitate the work of resistance.
Intercourse with the pious, in the specific character of a fellow-disciple,
is a divinely appointed and most precious means of grace; and the
same is true of that official supervision, government, and discipline,
which God has established in his Church. But these you cannot enjoy,
unless you are connected with the Church.
God, only wise, has instituted the Church for the most important
of all ends—the glory of his own name, the honor of his Son,
the salvation of a lost world. To decline connection with the Church
is, therefore, palpably inconsistent with sincere attachment to
these momentous interests.
Say not, I doubt the reality of my own conversion. You are not
required to make any declaration on that subject; but you are required
to declare, in sincerity and truth, the following things: That
you regard Jesus as the only and all-sufficient Savior of lost
sinners, and therefore rely exclusively on his atoning blood, his
perfect obedience, his prevalent intercession, and his boundless
mercy, for your own salvation; that you regard him as supreme and
rightful Lord of all—and therefore, relying on his grace,
are resolved to devote yourself henceforth to his service. And
the evidence on which all this is to be declared, is your own consciousness.
Do you still refuse? Then observe the true nature of the controversy
between the Redeemer and yourself. He commands you to seek assurance
of his favor by doing his will; and you answer that you will not
do his will, till assured of his favor. Will you yield? or do you
think he will?
Another excuse relates to the division of the Church into various
denominations. But can you find no particular society which you
can conscientiously recognize as really a Church of Christ, and
which does not require, as a term of membership, anything that
you deem sinful? If you can find one such society, your duty
is plain; if more than one, it is still plain: form that connection
which at present you judge to be most conducive to your spiritual
welfare; and should you ever perceive it to be your duty to transfer
your membership to a Church of a different denomination, there
can be no real difficulty in doing so. It is better to be
in any
part of the kingdom of Christ, than in the kingdom of Satan. (Our views on this topic will probably be more fully developed
in a
future article.)
IV. It cannot be expected that
we should attempt to develop all the consequences that flow from
our doctrine
but on two subjects
its bearings are too important
to be passed over in silence.
1. The duty of ecclesiastical officers as to receiving persons
into the communion of the Church.
There is a duty required of every hearer of the gospel, to be
performed by their assistance; and the only question for their
consideration is,
whether
what the candidate proposes to do is really the duty enjoined by Christ.
Here is no room for consulting either their own wishes, or the dictates
of human
prudence. A definite profession is to be made, and they have only to
inquire whether the profession offered is such as the law requires.
They may not
administer the oath of Christian allegiance to one who does not understand
its nature;
or who gives them reason to think he is in sport, seeking to deceive;
or acting under the influence of caprice or momentary excitement. But
these
seem to be
all the grounds on which they are authorized to reject an applicant.
There are, in the opinion of many persons, serious objections
against receiving very young persons into the communion of
the Church; and
ecclesiastical officers, there is reason to think, have often felt
some difficulty on
that subject.
Let it be remembered, no one is required to believe in Christ who
is not
likewise required to confess him before men. Hence it cannot be consistently
maintained
concerning any human being, that he is too young to become a communicant,
unless it is maintained that be is likewise too young to become an
evangelical believer;
and that the command to believe has, as yet, no application to his
case. A child, we know, is peculiarly prone to act hastily. But it
is not more
difficult
to distinguish a deliberate act from a mere ebullition of excited
feeling in his case than in that of an older person. Nor is
there any peculiar
difficulty in judging of his sincerity, or of the degree of his religious
knowledge.
But much may be said of the immaturity of judgment, and unsteadiness
of purpose, which mark that tender age. We shall perhaps be reminded,
that
to become
a communicant is a transaction of the utmost solemnity and importance;
and that,
according to the common sense of mankind, a child is not competent
to transact serious business. We answer: As to maturity of judgment,
a child
is capable
of deciding, which is preferable, the service of Christ, or the
service of Satan. As to steadiness of purpose, the perseverance
of the oldest
Christian depends solely on the grace of Christ; and that grace
is as sufficient
for
a little child as for any other. Besides it is in the Church we
enjoy those means which the Savior has appointed for confirming
the souls
of the disciples; hence the more pressing the danger, the more urgent the necessity
for such a connection. And finally, the Redeemer’s command to believe in His name,
and to confess Him before men, is attended with no limitation as to age. To
defer on this account, or to require or advise others to do so, is, therefore,
at once to question his wisdom, and to violate his law.
2. The nature and proper grounds of excommunication.
A member of the Church is one who stands in the public and visible
relation of a servant of Christ. How far he is an obedient
servant, is a very
different matter. He is bound by the baptismal covenant, and
if capable of acting
for himself, acknowledges the obligation. Excommunication transfers
his public
and visible relation to the kingdom of Satan. It is the act
described by Paul in the awful phrase, to deliver such
an one unto Satan. This differs
widely
from mere suspension. The suspended member is still regarded
as a citizen of Christ’s kingdom; but a disorderly citizen. He is still under ecclesiastical
government; and the power of that government is exerted for the special purpose
of bringing him to repentance therefore he is debarred from some of those privileges
to which, if an orderly citizen, he would be entitled. We count
him not as an enemy, but admonish him as a brother. Excommunication, on the contrary,
is thus described by our Savior: Let him be unto thee as
an heathen man and a publican. The excommunicated person is an enemy, not a brother. To him, as
to other sinners, the gospel must be preached; but he is not under ecclesiastical
government. He has assumed such an attitude of daring rebellion, that, in this
sense, the Church can interfere no farther. She leaves the controversy to be
settled between the rebel and the eternal Sovereign whom he has defied. He
is without: and, What have I to do to judge them also that are without? do
not ye judge them that are within? But them that are without God judgeth. Therefore
put away from among yourselves that wicked person.
In view of these truths, we may easily discover what is the
only lawful ground of excommunication. It is that the person
concerned
has renounced
the baptismal
covenant in other words, has renounced his allegiance to
the Lord Jesus. This crime may be committed in various ways;
it
may be done
either
directly or indirectly;
but to warrant the sentence in question, it must have been
done unequivocally. On no other ground can the sentence be
valid.
He who has been brought
into the baptismal covenant, is still in the visible kingdom
of Christ; nor
is it in the power of creatures to transfer him to the visible
kingdom of Satan.
The covenant may be renounced by resisting ecclesiastical
authority when properly exercised. This is evident from
Matthew 18:17.
While the Church
is doing only
what her Lord has required her to do, to resist her is
to rebel against him. Before proceeding on this ground, however,
it
must be satisfactorily
ascertained
that the resistance relates not to a doubtful matter, springs
not from involuntary error, or even from a momentary excitement;
but
can be
rationally ascribed
to nothing short of contempt for the Redeemer’s authority.
Suppose one not previously charged with any disciplinable
offence shall signify to the Session a wish to be regarded
no longer
as a member
of the Church;
how ought such an application to be treated? To this
question, with which many
have been perplexed, our doctrine furnishes, as we conceive,
the true solution. All will agree that the Session ought,
in the first
place,
to satisfy themselves
that the application is made intelligently and deliberately.
The applicant ought to be carefully instructed in the
true nature of
the step he
proposes to take, and ample time afforded him for reflection.
And we now add that
if; after this, his intentions remain unchanged, he must
be excommunicated. Excommunication
is simply an official declaration, that the party concerned
has renounced the baptismal covenant; and, in this case,
the declaration
is based,
not on an
inference, but on the explicit avowal of the person excommunicated.
Such an avowal places him who makes it in the attitude
of an avowed enemy of God, and of his Son, and of his
Church—differing from other avowed enemies
only in this; that to the common guilt of daring impiety he super-adds the
peculiar aggravation of the basest perfidy. Before God, and angels, and men,
he declares that, preferring the service of Satan to the service of Christ,
he will submit to no government administered in the name of the latter. He
is an apostate; and, as to the nature of the crime, it makes no essential difference
whether he serves the devil in the form of mere godlessness, or in some form
of Pagan idolatry. Against no other sin are the denunciations of the word of
God so awful as against this. Now the just shall
live by faith: but if any man draw back, my soul shall
have no pleasure in him. If we sin willfully after
that we have received the knowledge of the truth, there
remaineth no more sacrifice for sins, but a certain
fearful looking-for of judgment and fiery indignation
which shall devour the adversaries. For it had been
better for them not to
have known the way of righteousness, than, after they
have known it, to turn from the holy commandment delivered
unto them. But it is happened unto them
according to the true proverb: The dog is turned to
his own vomit again; and the sow that was washed to
her wallowing in the mire. The Scriptures contain
not a solitary intimation, that he who has once been a member of the Church,
can either withdraw, or be lawfully excommunicated, without placing himself
in the condition these passages describe.
Footnote: From the days
of Pres. Edwards till now, they have had little currency in this
country. That distinguished man, as is well known, contended
that none but those who give satisfactory evidence of true conversion
should be admitted to full communion in the visible Church; and
this view, which caused his rejection by his people at Northampton,
after having served them faithfully for twenty-three years, though
it met with strenuous opposition in quarters hardly to be expected,
has long prevailed in the Presbyterian Church in the United States.
The arguments of Edwards, in his “Enquiry concerning qualifications
for Communion,” and in his reply to Williams, have never
yet been satisfactorily answered. The Church of Scotland, and
the Presbyterian Church in Ireland, however, practice on a different
principle, and though dissenting from them, and the author of
this article, it is but right that we should allow the discussion
as he has ingeniously conducted it, a place on our pages.—Eds.
So. Pres. Review.
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