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Consultation on Believers’ Baptism

Having engaged in the process of discernment together they make the following affirmations:

  • We continue to affirm with BEM that believers’ baptism is the most clearly attested pattern for baptism in the New Testament.
  • We acknowledge the growing acceptance, among some of our traditions, within the process of Christian initiation of a place for infant baptism.
  • We recognize the challenge to believer-baptist churches to find ways of affirming the importance of children in the life of the church.
  • We affirm the diversity of the meaning and mode that exists between and even within traditions who are practitioners of believers’ baptism.
  • We affirm the importance of acknowledging that baptism is into Christ and his body, the Church, as well as into a particular congregation and church tradition.

As there was great enthusiasm with those places of agreement so there was great interest in naming those areas that require further exploration. The participants noted various areas, which gave them new insights:

  • The potential for new understanding of the image of the Christian life as a journey which includes initiation, participation in the Lord’s Supper, the development of the fruits of the Spirit, and meeting with Christ at the end of time.
  • The change that takes place when we understand the Holy Spirit as the source of our diversity as well as our unity.
  • The need to give expression to the fact of our unity in Christ now alongside the reflection of this in the unity of the Church.

We invite the traditions from which we come to continue to explore the following questions:

  • Is there dynamic equivalence between the journey from infant baptism to confirmation and from infant dedication/presentation to baptism of believers? And, if the primary purpose is to create disciples, does the order of the process matter?
  • Can there be a thorough exploration of the ways in which ministers and others in local churches have to achieve a balance between fundamental theological insights and practical pastoral circumstances?       Can there be a deeper appreciation of the wide variety of circumstances in which persons seek some kind of reaffirmation of commitments that may have been made by their parents?
  • If our traditions were to allow “rebaptism” out of pastoral concern for a particular person, in what sense could it be said that we believe baptism is an unrepeatable act?
  • If such “rebaptisms” were seen as a sign of recommitment, are there other existing rituals (such as foot-washing) that could be used to signify re-commitment.
  • Does there need to be a more developed, and more clearly articulated, theology of children and family in our believers’ baptism traditions?

The participants suggest that all churches within the one ecumenical movement be invited to consider:

  • Whether they need to reexamine their understanding of ‘ordinance and sacrament’, ‘sign’ and ‘symbol’? Is a new vocabulary needed to talk about baptism? The participants felt strongly that the time had come for a fresh examination of the understanding of sacramentality.
  • Since the traditions practicing only believers’ baptism are not the only ones in which what some churches regard as ‘rebaptism’ takes place, how do those other churches justify their practice?
  • What is at the heart of baptism: believing, remission of sins, belonging, the action of God in Christ through the Holy Spirit…?
  • In what ways, and with what limitations if any, can they affirm that diversity is a gift of the Holy Spirit as well as unity?
  • Can we truly separate the question of baptism from the wider table of ecclesiological concerns?
  • When a person is baptized, are they baptized into a local congregation, a tradition or the one body of Christ?
  • What fears act as obstacles in the way in which discussion of the issue of baptism takes place?

We celebrate the fact that God continues to move in the church and is present at baptism in all our churches. We lament the continued divisions and barriers to mutual recognition as we seek to obey the Great Commission (Matthew 28:19-20) and “make every effort to maintain the unity of the Spirit in the bond of peace (Ephesians 4:3),” so that we “might all be one (John 17:21).” We pray God might continue to guide and direct the Church as we seek to live fully into the one hope of our calling (Ephesians 4:4).

Press Release: Believers’ Baptism Consultation

Observations on the Believers’ Baptism Consultation by Tony Richie

[1] It is noted that believers’ baptism can be used for paedo and credo baptism but for purpose of the consultation, believers’ baptism denotes credo baptism

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Category: Ministry, Winter 2015

About the Author: Tony Richie, D.Min, Ph.D., is missionary teacher at SEMISUD (Quito, Ecuador) and adjunct professor at the Pentecostal Theological Seminary (Cleveland, TN). Dr. Richie is an Ordained Bishop in the Church of God, and Senior Pastor at New Harvest in Knoxville, TN. He has served the Society for Pentecostal Studies as Ecumenical Studies Interest Group Leader and is currently Liaison to the Interfaith Relations Commission of the National Council of Churches (USA), and represents Pentecostals with Interreligious Dialogue and Cooperation of the World Council of Churches and the Commission of the Churches on International Affairs. He is the author of Speaking by the Spirit: A Pentecostal Model for Interreligious Dialogue (Emeth Press, 2011) and Toward a Pentecostal Theology of Religions: Encountering Cornelius Today (CPT Press, 2013) as well as several journal articles and books chapters on Pentecostal theology and experience.

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