Dimensions of Baptism Biblical and Theological Studies

(Michael S) #1

WRIGHT Out, In, Out: Jesus' Blessing 205


We are reminded that, whatever historical conclusions we reach con-


cerning the early development of the practice of baptizing babies, evidence


of liturgical formulation to cater for it scarcely emerges before the end of


the patristic era, perhaps not until the sixth century. For some time before


this, and certainly for much of the fourth century and well into the fifth,


the majority of children born to Christian parents had not been baptized


but were enrolled in the catechumenate at birth. The commonest ritual for


this purpose was sealing with the sign of the cross, but Augustine, who is


the best-known witness to this observance, knew that he had also been


seasoned with salt. What we can scarcely trace as yet is the use of laying


on of hands, and with it the possible reading of one of our three Gospel


passages, for such infant dedications during a century or more that seems


almost not to have known infant baptism. Cyril of Alexandria appears to


distinguish between the chrism of the catechumenate and the chrism of


baptismal initiation for new-born babies.^62 As we have noted, other suit-


able Gospel verses might equally have served such occasions of infant


dedication. There are, then, at least hypothetical possibilities to be borne in


mind as a spur to investigation of an obscure phase in the emergence of


paedobaptism as the normal baptismal practice.


The fortunes of Mk 10.13-16 par. may be said to have come full circle,


or at least be completing full circle. In the early centuries only marginally


linked with the baptism of young children, and applied by a few Fathers to


one or another non-baptismal form of blessing or dedication, it secured its


liturgical place in the awkward assimilation of infants into a catechu-


menate for responsible believers, in the weeks before Easter. As infants


came to monopolize baptism, and it increasingly took place on demand


throughout the year, their catechumenal induction collapsed into an imme-


diately pre-baptismal church-door sequence. The Protestant Reformers


unified elements of this pre-baptismal observance with baptism itself within


the congregational context. No doubt Mk 10.13-16 par. had its own appeal


to them as Anabaptists challenged them to furnish their 'Scripture-alone'


justification for baptizing babies, but unwittingly they took it over from an


1958), pp. 164-66; Dondeyne,^4 La Discipline', pp. 774-77; Chavasse, 'L'Initiation a
Rome dans Fantiquite et le haut moyen-age', in Communion solennelle etprofession
defoi (Lex Orandi, 14; Paris: Cerf, 1952), pp. 28-31; H.O. Old, The Shaping of the
Reformed Baptismal Rite in the Sixteenth Century (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1992),
pp. 6-9.



  1. Cyril of Alexandria, Commentary on John, on John 11.26 (PG, lxxiv), col. 49;
    and P.E. Pusey (ed.) (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1872), II, p. 276.

Free download pdf