Dimensions of Baptism Biblical and Theological Studies

(Michael S) #1

18 Dimensions of Baptism


can hardly be that they were dipped in wine. The same metaphor, of a


person drowned in wine, is found in Josephus (Ant. 10.169). It would,


therefore, appear that the strict meaning of immersion does not fully repre-


sent the usage of the verb. It may also have the idea of being drenched in a


liquid poured out from above.^29 In terms of the results there is not a lot of


difference in the end between being immersed in water or being over-


whelmed by a torrent or being caught in a cloudburst (like Noah's flood):


one is soaked to the skin and if the event is on the grand scale the results


can equally be fatal.


It is important to bring in here the fact that archaeological evidence


supports the view that in some areas Christian baptism was administered


by affusion. Discoveries of early baptisteries shows that they were incapa-


ble of being used for immersion.^30 With the exception of the find at Dura


Europos the evidence is admittedly not very early (that given by Emming-


haus is from the fifth to the seventh centuries). But it is corroborated by


the reference in Did. 13 to sprinkling with water as an acceptable substi-


tute where a fuller supply of water is not available; G. Theissen argues that


sprinkling is better explained as a derivative of affusion rather than of


immersion.^31 There is, of course, indubitable early evidence for a form of


baptism in which the candidates were either immersed in water or perhaps


stood in water while they were affused with water; this is to be found in


the use of the terms 'go down' and 'come up' with reference to baptism


(Barn. 11.11; Hernias, Sim. 9.16).^32



  1. For the variety of usage see Oepke, TDNT, I, pp. 529-30; cf. E.W. Burrows,
    'Baptism in Mark and Luke', in Porter and Cross (eds.), Baptism, pp. 99-115 (p. 104);
    Dunn,' "Baptized" as Metaphor', pp. 302-303. Oepke, TDNT, I, p. 538, finds in John's
    baptism^4 the idea of a life-giving inundation'.

  2. E. Stommel, 'ChristlicheTaufritenundantikeBadesitten', J^C2(1959),pp. 5-
    14; J.H. Emminghaus, 'Die Gruppe der fruhchristlichen Dorfbaptisterien in Zentral-
    syrien', RQ 55 (1960), pp. 85-100. See also Schumann, Lukasevangelium, p. 156, espe-
    cially n. 62, p. 176; C.E. Pocknee, 'The Archaeology of Baptism', Theology 74 (1971),
    pp. 309-11; Taylor, The Immerser, pp. 53-54.
    For illustrations of early baptisteries, see F. van der Meer and C. Mohrmann, Atlas
    of the Early Christian World (London: Nelson, 1958), pp. 42, 125-31.

  3. G. Theissen, A Theory of Primitive Christian Religion (London: SCM Press,
    1999), pp. 131,345.

  4. O. Skarsaune, In the Shadows of the Temple: Jewish Influences on Early
    Christianity (Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 2002), pp. 366-67. See further
    J. Danielou, The Theology of Jewish Christianity (London: Darton* Longman & Todd,
    1964), pp. 233-48 (cited by Skarsaune).

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