Baptism in the United Methodist Church

Through baptism,
we accept God’s gifts through Jesus. There is no strict rule among
United Methodists about how baptism must be performed, although
sprinkling water on the head of the person being baptized is most
common. Everyone is accepted and welcome at the communion table, whether
members of the Church or not, kids or adults.

Who
tells you who you are?
We
receive our identity from others, from the expectations of friends and
colleagues, from the labels society puts upon us, and from the influence
of family.
To
become Christian is to receive a new identity. You no longer allow
others to tell you who you are. Christ now claims you and instructs you.
A Christian is one who has “put on Christ.”
Baptism celebrates becoming that new person. That is why the church’s
ritual begins with putting off the old, renouncing sin and the evil
powers of the world, and pledging our loyalty to Christ.
God
Initiates the Covenant
We
also believe that in baptism God initiates a covenant with us, announced
with the words, “The Holy Spirit works within you, that being born
through water and the Spirit, you may be a faithful disciple of Jesus
Christ.” This is followed by the sign-act of laying hands on the head,
or the signing of the cross on the forehead with oil. The word covenant
is a biblical word describing God’s initiative in choosing
Israel
to be a people with a special mission in the world, and Israel’s
response in a life of faithfulness. The baptismal covenant calls us to a
similar vocation.
God
Has Chosen Us
Christians have also understood the baptismal covenant in light of
Jesus’ baptism. At Jesus’ baptism, God said: “This is my son.” While
Jesus’ relation to God as Son is unique, for Christians baptism means
that God has also chosen us as daughters and sons, and knows us
intimately as a parent.
So
the most important things about us, our true identity, is that we are
now sons and daughters of God. That is why the introduction to the
United Methodist Baptismal Covenant states, “We are incorporated into
God’s mighty acts of salvation and given new birth through water and the
Spirit.”
The
introduction also says, “Through the Sacrament of Baptism, we are
initiated into Christ’s holy church.”
Baptism Is the Door
From
the beginning, baptism has been the door through which one enters the
church. It was inconceivable to many that one could respond to God’s
grace by reciting the renunciations, affirming one’s faith in Christ and
loyalty to the Kingdom, without joining the fellowship of those who are
committed to mature in that faith. As the “Body of Christ” in the world,
baptism commissions us to use our gifts to strengthen the church and to
transform the world.
Why
Baptize Babies?
From
the earliest times, children and infants were baptized and included in
the church. As scriptural authority for this ancient tradition, some
scholars cite Jesus’ words, “Let the little children come to me…for it
is to such as these that the kingdom of God belongs” (Mark 10:14).
However, a more consistent argument is that baptism, as a means of
grace, signifies God’s initiative in the process of salvation. John
Wesley preached “prevenient grace,” the grace that works in our lives
before we are aware of it, bringing us to faith. The baptism of children
and their inclusion in the church before they can respond with their own
confirmation of faith is a vivid and compelling witness to prevenient
grace.
Baptism Is Forever
Because baptism is a sacrament of God’s grace and a covenant that God
has initiated, it should not be repeated. However, God’s continuing and
patient forgiveness, God’s prevenient grace, will prompt us to renew the
commitment first made at our baptism. At such a time, instead of
rebaptism, The United Methodist Church offers the ritual for the
reaffirmation of baptismal vows, which implies that, while God remains
faithful to God’s half of the covenant, we are not always faithful to
our promises. Our half of the covenant is to confess Christ as our
Savior, trust in his grace, serve him as Lord in the church, and carry
out his mission against evil, injustice, and oppression.
Baptism Is the Beginning, Not the End
You
have heard people say, “I was baptized Methodist,” or “I was baptized
Presbyterian,” which could mean that in baptism they got their identity
papers and that was the end of it. But baptism is not the end. It is the
beginning of a lifelong journey of faith. It makes no difference whether
you were baptized as an adult or as a child; we all start on that
journey at baptism. For the child, the journey begins in the nurturing
community of the church, where he or she learns what it means that God
loves you. At the appropriate time, the child will make his or her first
confession of faith in the ritual the church traditionally calls
confirmation. Most often, this is at adolescence or at the time when the
person begins to take responsibility for his or her own decisions.
If
you experienced God’s grace and were baptized as an adult or received
baptism as a child and desire to reaffirm your baptismal vows, baptism
still marks the beginning of a journey in the nurturing fellowship of
the caring, learning, worshipping, serving congregation.
What
Is a Sacrament?
The word sacrament is the Latin translation of the Greek word mysterion.
From the early days of the church, baptism was associated with the
mystery that surrounds God’s action in our lives. That means that at
best our words can only circumscribe what happens, but not define it. We
cannot rationally explain why God would love us “while we were yet
sinners” and give his only begotten Son that we should not perish but
have eternal life. That is the most sacred and unfathomable mystery of
all. We can experience God’s grace at any time and in any place, but in
the sacrament of baptism we routinely experience that amazing grace.
—From
A United Methodist Understanding of Baptism by
Mark C. Trotter. Copyright © 2001 by The United Methodist Publishing
House. Used by permission.
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