Dimensions of Baptism Biblical and Theological Studies

(Michael S) #1

ELLIS The Baptism of Disciples 351


theologically the baptism of believers flows out of this view of the Church.


Thus, to use Kelleher's language, to see this baptism as an example of


liturgical praxis enables us to see it as 'an example of incarnate mean-


ing'.^45 Here is an embodiment of the Church as a believer-Church and this


is clearly exemplified in those baptismal services where the one baptized is


also welcomed at the Lord's Table and received into the membership of


the local church. As the congregation witnesses the testimony of the new


Christian and celebrates their entry into the Church it also embodies the


very nature of that Church as a company of believers. However, baptism is


not only an embodiment of this ecclesiology but 'an instrumental act of


meaning', for baptism creates the Church both by adding to its number and


by highlighting the faith of the one who is welcomed. The baptism of


believers reminds the Church that it is a response in faith to the gospel of


Christ and that membership should not be separated from faith in Christ.


Secondly, we should remember that the focus of baptism is not ulti-


mately the faith of the one being baptized but the one into whom that


person is baptized. This is where Schillebeeckx's presentation of Christ as


the primordial sacrament is so helpful. Baptism is an embodiment of the


gospel of Christ, with its washing imagery embodying the forgiveness of


sins and its burial imagery embodying new life in union with the one who


was crucified, buried and raised.^46 We may here employ Wainwright's


image of patterning and, if we explore the instrumental nature of this


christocentric focus, we shall be brought both to biblical accounts of the


baptism of Jesus and a challenge to what we mean by 'believer'.


We have seen how Baptists have from the earliest days seen faith as


more than a matter of doctrinal assent. They have looked for evidence of


experiential faith, a change of lifestyle and a transformation of values in-
dicative of a work of God in the life of the believer. For this reason, it may

be helpful to talk not of the baptism of believers so much as the baptism of


disciples. The word 'disciple' makes more explicit an emphasis on obedi-
ent faith and the desire to follow Jesus Christ. Baptism can be seen as an
embodiment of such discipleship. Indeed, the early emphasis on baptism
as an ordinance and the requirement that faithful followers should be


  1. Kelleher, 'Liturgy', p. 492.

  2. Because of the polemical nature of much writing about baptism, Baptists have
    tended to use Rom. 6.3-4 as a support for their argument concerning immersion as the
    proper mode of baptism. However, it offers great possibilities both for the ethical
    theme of new beginnings and as an embodiment of the mystical union of the believer
    with Christ.

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