Dimensions of Baptism Biblical and Theological Studies

(Michael S) #1

76 Dimensions of Baptism


That a household's embracing the (new) religion of its head would have


been a commonplace in Roman antiquity underscores the importance of


exploring the significance of these episodes in Acts. What might the inclu-


sion of a detail so expected, so mundane, contribute to the narrative?



  1. The Baptism of Cornelius and His Household (Acts 10.1-11.18)


It is unnecessary to name Cornelius and his household as the first Gentile


converts in order to measure the import of this narrative sequence within


the book of Acts. If, as I think more probable, the first Gentile conversion


episode is found rather in Acts 8.26-40, in the encounter between Philip


and the Ethiopian, it remains no less true that, from the vantage point of


the Jerusalem community of Jesus' followers, the episode with Cornelius


and his household poses the real dilemma. This is because, first, within the


Lukan narrative, Jerusalem never learns of the baptism of the Ethiopian;


the Ethiopian returns to his home and Philip, snatched up by the Spirit of


the Lord and having 'found himself in Azotus', moves up the coast to


Caesarea where he apparently remains (8.39-40; 21.8). Secondly, the


obstacle that must be overcome is not the legitimacy of bringing good


news to Gentiles (which would be consistent with Jesus' practice [Lk. 7.1-


10] and directives [Lk. 24.46-48; Acts 1.8]), but rather table fellowship


among Jews and Gentiles.^15 And issues of fellowship or hospitality are not


on the table in Luke's account of the Ethiopian episode, but rather occupy


centerstage in the account of Peter's encounter with Cornelius. At the cli-


max of the Cornelius episode stands the baptism of this Gentile household


by the Holy Spirit and their subsequent baptism with water. It is here, with


reference to the household, that the juxtaposition of the Jerusalem/temple-


centered ideology with the boundary-crossing mission of God comes into


sharpest focus.


By the shorthand of Jerusalem- or temple-centered ideology, I am refer-


ring to the role of the temple as the premier institutional context of the


social world of Second Temple Judaism, and particularly to its central


function of defining and organizing the life-world of the Jewish people.


Using the categories of sacred space, Luke treats the temple as sacred


center (axis mundi), the navel of the earth, an institution with two axes.


Christian Families: Family as a Social Reality and Metaphor (London: Routledge,
1997), pp. 150-65(153-56).



  1. Contra, e.g., S.G. Wilson, The Gentiles and the Gentile Mission (SNTSMS, 23;
    Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1973), pp. 171-78.

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