DEBATE ON BAPTISM: EMBRACING MODE AND SUBJECTS. BBTWEEN ELDER J. A. HARDING, (Disciple), OF KENTUCKY, AND REV. T. L. WILKINSON, (Methodist), OF BRANIFOBD, ONT. HELD IN MEAFORD, ONT., COMMENCING DECEMBER 15th, 1884, AND CONTINUING FOR SIX CONSECUTIVE DAYS. 8TENOORAPHICAIXY REPORTED BY G. B. BRADLEY, ESQ., OF TORONTO, OFFICIAL REPORTER FOR THE HOUSE OF COMMONS OF CANADA, AND REVISED BY THE RESPECTIVE DISPUTANTS. TORONTO: WILUAM BRINGS, 78 * 80 KING STREET EAST. MONTRBAL : C. W. COATES. Halitaz : S. F. HUESTI8. 1886. Entered, according to the Act of the Parliament of Canada, in the year one thousand eight hundred and eighty-six, by William Bbioos, in the OflBice of the Minister of Agriculture at Ottawa. PEEFACE In introducing this book to the public of Canada, a brief statement of the circumBtanoes of its publication will naturally be looked for by the reader. Those circumstances are as follows : In the month of August, 1884, Elder Harding, of Kentucky, who was then holding evangelistic services in the County of Grey, near Meaford, publicly challenged Rev. T. L. Wilkinson, of Brantford, to a platform discussion of the question of Baptism. The challenge having been accepted by Mr. Wilkinson, it was subsequently agreed that the debate should be held during the ensuing December in the town of Meafcrd. It was to occupy two sessions of two hours each, per day, and continue for six days. Elder Harding being recognized by the Disciples as one of their ablest polemical representatives, and Mr. Wilkinson being regarded as familiar with the various aspects of the subject, and expert in its exposition and defence from the Ptedo-baptist standpoint, a very deep interest was excited in the community at the prospect of this debate. Accordingly, as the time for the conflict drew near, the conviction became general that it would be a misfortune not to have a full and faithful report of the whole discussion preserved for the benefit of other neighborhoods and future generations. The outcome of this feeling was the formation of a small syndicate, or combination, to get the debate reported and published. This combination was altogether independent of either of the disputants, though its action was to be contingent on the consent of both. This being obtained, nego- tiations were opened with Mr. Thomas Bengough, official reporter, of the city of Toronto, resulting in an agreement on his part to furnish a full and impartial report of the whole debate. At the appointed time Mr. Ben- IV PKRFACK. gough Bent Mr. O. B. Bradley, chief of the House of Commons reportorial staff, who attended all the sessions and supplied what was supposed to l)o, and should have been, an impartial and authentic report. As a matter of fact, however, there was a transparent discrepancy in the comparative length of the different speeches, though, with the exception of the opening addresses on each proposition, they occupied the same time in delivery. It was apparent from this that the reporter had not always been equally faithful in the performance of his task. Nor were either of the disputants entirely satisfied with the result, though it is but fair to Mr. Wilkinson to say, that as he had not preserved the notes taken hurriedly during the debate, and did not profess to be able to reproduce his speeches from memory, and being also greatly straitened for time, he only claimed the privilege of making such verbal corrections in the reporter's notes as to secure general accuracy of expression a,nd teaching. This privilege, of course, was fully accorded to both the disputants, but as Mr. Wilkinson frequently spoke with great rapidity his speeches generally occupied a little more space than Mr. Harding's, though, owing to this fact, the latter claimed that he had suffered greater injustice at the reporter's hands than his opponent, and accordingly enlarged the scope of the privilege even to the entire reproduction of nearly everything in his part of the debate. Some of his speeches were enlarged to nearly, if not quite double their original length, and nearly every sentence cast in a different mould. This, of course, would have given him a very unfair advantage, relatively, had not Mr. Wilkinson, in view of this, claimed a like privilege — a privilege which could not in honor be denied him — after which he also, while pre- serving his speeches, for the most part, in their integrity, made such alter- ations and additions as to more perfectly meet the altered attitude of his opponent. This was more especially the case in his later speeches. While the result of all this has been to greatly delay the date of publication, and enhance the size and price of the book, it has at the same time, doubtless, greatly increased the force of the argument, thus enhancing its value and rendering it more acceptable to its readers. The loss in one direction has, we feel sure, been more than repaired by the gain in another. PRSrAOK. ^ Some expreuiuns in the book, on both iideii, may be regarded by aome aa needlessly severe; at the same time considerable latitude should be allowed for the provocation and excitement almost inseiJarable from a public debate. We regret the altercation following the last few speeches of the debate under the "Addenda" headings, and did all we reasonably could to prevent it. When one party resorted to such a course, it i-endered it necessary for the other to do the same; but as they sufficiently explain themselves, any further reference to the matter is uncalled for here. It will be acknowledged by all that the book contains a vast amount of research and valuable information, and the publishers feel assured that they have done a real service to the cause of truth by its publication. The argument on both sides is vigorous and impressive. The debate will be found, in general, not only interesting, but often racy and in many instances not a little amusing. We doubt not that the book will be read by thousands and prove a source of profitable instruction to all. The scarcity of such works in the field of Canadian literature, and the growing interest attaching to the theme, are surely a sufficient vindication of the publishers in ofiering a work of such a character and merit to the patronage of the Canadian public. Each disputant has carefully examined and corrected the proof of his own speeches, both in galley and page form, hence both parties have reason to be satisfied with the result. ' ' Under these circumstances, and for the reasons assigned, the book is sent forth by its promoters to the fulfilment of its mission, and it is ardently hoped, and sincerely believed, that that mission will be one of untold blessing. • James Anderson, John Anderson, > Pvhliahers. RoBT. Abercrohbie, '' ..A ERRATUM. I supply the word " commission. On page a37, first line, for the word " circumcision " the reader will please supply the word "commisBion." ^ ENDORSEMENTS. MR. HARDING'S ENDORSATION. The Publishun of the Hardintj-Wilkinson Debate, Messn. James Anderaon, Juhn Anderson and Robert Abercronibie, have seemed desirous of giving to the public a fair, impartial report of it, and I am well pleased with the result of their efforts. (Signed), J. A. Habuino. WiNcuiwTKK, Ky., Jan. 25, 1886. MR. WILKINSON'S ENDORSATION, I hereby certify that I have revised, corrected, and read proofs of all my own speeches as published in this book, and have no hesitation in endoraing the statements of the publishers in the ^'Preface," as to the circumstances attending the publication. (Signed), T. L. Wilkinson. Pabkoals, Jan. 21, 1886. EEPORT OF DEBATE ON THI MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. FIRST DAY. FIRST SESSION. At the hour of two o'clock on the day indicated in the Preface the Town Hall, Meaford, was well filled with a highly respectable audience, evidently interested to know the truth relative to the vexed question of Christian baptism. The chair was occupied by Mr. Alfred Gifford. After devotional exercises, he announced that Mr. Harding would now open the debate by affirming the first proposition, as follows : " Christian baptism is immersion, — in it there must be a burial in water." The first speech on each side, he said, would occupy an hour, after which the addresses on this proposition would be confined to ^ thirty minutes. Mr. Harding said, — Mr. Chairman, Ladies and Gentlemen: 1 take that every man who loves God, every man who has within him the Spirit of Christ, desires to know the truth, the whole truth, and lothing but the truth. I realize as I stand here that to believe that rhich is false could do me no good in the world, and that to lead >thers to believe that which is false would be very hurtful to them. land very injurious to me. I want, therefore, to know the truth with. my heart. Again, I understand that this audience will expect those who- engage in this debate to display the spirit of Ohristians; and you 3 REPORT 07 DEBATE ought to expect it. I know a great many people come to these dis- cuesions expecting a wrangle, and I hope you will be very much disappointed if you have come hero with any such expectation. Our Chairman has told you that he is somewhat prejudiced against reli- gious discussions, and in the course of his remarks he referred to the fact that in secular debates the debaters very often displayed a spirit by no means complimentary to themselves. My experience I:, religious discussions, — and I have had some little experience in that line, — has led me to a different c^iiclusion. I have had discussions lasting six or eight days, during the whole of which time a kind, fraternal spirit prevailed. Christ said to His disciples, " Go ye into all the world and preach the gospel to every creature ; he that believeth and is baptized shall be saved, and he that believeth not shall be damned." These instruc- tions are recorded by Matthew and Mark. Christ gave this great commission, this great law, under which all Vjaptize who baptize at all, for it is agreed that our authority lor baptism comes from this docu. ment, and in giving this commission He used a word which we are to consider, that is, the word rendered "baptize." The Greek word is baptizo. The question before us is. What does this Greek word mean 1 Not, What does the English word baptize as used to-day mean? That is not the question. If I were writing an Englsh dictionary, and should come to that English word, and should consider the meaning in which it is now used, — for use is the arbiter of language, — it would be necessary to give the definition of the word as it is used to-day. And I would define it something like this : "To baptize, to initiate people into the Church by sprinkling or pouring water upon them, or by immersing them in water." But, mark you, we are not here to find out what the English word baptize as now used means, but to find out what the word baptizo meant when Christ used it more than 1800 years ago. 1 shall call your attention to the authorities as represented in lexicons, and in the Church histories, and in the cyclopaedias, — three classes of authorities. Then I shall call attention to the use of the word in the Scriptures. I will introduce my argument by a few readings with respect to the '^ws governing the interpretation of words. There is scarcely a word in any 'language which has only one meaning. Words are used not only in their literal, but also in figurative senses, — not only in their primary, but in secondary senses. Mr. William Blackstone says, " The words of a law are generally to be understood in their usual and most known signification, not so ON THE MODE AND BUBJEOTB OF 3APTI81f. much regarding the propriety of grammar as their general and popu- lar use ; but wlien words bear either none, or a very absurd signifi- cation, if literally understood, we must a little deviate from the received sense of them." . ' Bishop Taylor says, " In all things where the precept is given in the proper style of laws, he that takes the first sense is the likeliest to he well guided. In the interpretation of the laws of Christ the strict sense is to be followed." Dr. Jonathan Edwards, the greatest of American Presbyterian theologians, has truly said, " In words capable of two senses, the natural and proper is the primary, and therefore ought in the first place and chiefly to be regarded." A greater still, Vitringa, has said, " This is accounted by all a constant and undoubted rule of approved interpretation, that the ordinary and most usual signification of words must not be deserted except for sufiicient reasons." Turretine has said, "It is acknowledged by all that we should never depart from the proper and native signification of words except for the weightiest and most urgent reasons." The English Pirie says, " Law requires words and phrases of the most ascertained and unequivocal sense." Dr. Benson says : " What can be more absurd than to imagine that the doctrines or rules of practice', which relate to men's ever- lasting salvation should be delivered in such ambiguous terms as to be capable of many meanings V Here we have a great law called the great commission given to us by Christ, and in it the word baptixo occurs. The question is, What does it mean t The reason it is important to determine this is because .one minister immerses the candidate in water, and says, " I baptize thee"; another pours the water upon him, and says, "I baptize thee"; and another sprinkles the water upon him, and says, "I baptize thee." The question naturally arises. Which is correct? Are they all correct, or is there but one correct and proper way 1 What does the word meanl I want to make a statement here which I made when I had no opponent before me. It is, that every single lexicographer testifies that this word means to dip, immerse, plunge. Not one of them says it n:"ans to sprinkle. Here I have a stack of lexicons every one of which says the word means dip or plunge, not one of them says it means sprinkle. My opponent will not bring the lexicon that contains sprinkle, because it does not exist. What do the lexicons say 1 William Greenfield (N. T. Lex.) defines ** Baptixo ^from Bapto), to immerse, immerge, submerge, sink; in 4 REPORT OP DEBATE N. T. to wash, perform ablution, cleanse ; to immerse, bap- tize, administer the rite of baptism." Thomas Sheldon Green (N. T. Lex.) defines " Baptizo, properly to dip, immerse ; to cleanse or purify by washing ; to administer the rite of baptism, to baptize. " Baptisma, properly immersion, baptism, ordinance of baptism ; met. baptism in the trial of suffering. " Baptiamoa, properly an act of dipping or immersion ; a baptism ; an ablution." John Pickering gives the following meanings : " Baptizo, to dip, immerse, submerge, plunge, sink ; in N. T. to wash, perform ablution, cleanse ; baptize ; cdao to overwhelm one with anything, to be prodigal towards one. *^ Baptisma, immersion, dipping, plunging; met. misery, calamity, i.e. with which one is overwhelmed ; baptism. " Baptismos, a washing ; baptism." John Groves (Classic and N. T. Lex.) defines . ** Baptizo (from Bapto to dip), dip, immerse, immerge, plunge, to wash, to cleanse, purify, to baptize, depress, humble, over- whelm. " Baptisma, a washing, ablution ; purification, baptism ; the Christian doctrine, depth of affliction or distress. " Baptismos, immersion in water, washing ; ceremonial purification." Edward Robinson (N. T. Lex.) defines " Baptizo, to dip in, to sink, to immerse ; to dip in a vessel, to draw water; in N. T. to wash, to lave, to cleanse by washing; to baptize, to administer the right of baptism ; pcua. and mid. to be baptized, or to cause oneself to be baptized ; to baptize with calamities, to overwhelm with sufferings. " Baptisma, properly anything dipped in or immersed ; in N. T., bap- tism ; trop. baptism for calamities, afflictions, with which one IS overwhelmed. "Baptismos, properly a dipping, immersion; in N. T. a washing, ablution of vessels, couches ; baptism." . James Donnegan (Classical Lex.) defines ' u -^ • "Baptizo, to immerse repeatedly into a liquid ; to submerge — to soak thoroughly, to saturate ; hence, to drench with wine ; met. to confound totally, — to dip in a vessel and draw. "Baptisma, an object immersed, submerged, washed, or soaked." Cornelius Schrevelius (Greek-Latin and Latin-Greek Lex.) defines OK THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. '^Baptizo, baptize, roergo, abluo, lavo ; in English, to baptize, to dip, to wash, to bathe. *'Baptiama, iramersio, tinctio, baptisma; »n J^n^rZisA, immersion, dip- ping (or dyeing), baptism. ^' Baptismos, baptismus, lotio; in English, a baptism, a washing. "Baptistees, qui immergit, baptista ; in English, one who immerses, the Baptist." And last, but greatest of all, I introduce the great standard Greek-English definer, the lexicon of Henry George Liddeil, Dean of Christ Church, and Robert Scott, Master of Balliol, Oxford. No in- telligent reader of Greek would now question the authority of these distinguished English scholars. This lexicon thus defines "Baptizo, to dip repeatedly ; of ships, to sink them ; pass, to bathe, oi bebaptismenoi, soaked in wine ; ophleemasi beb,, over head and ears in debt ; to draw water ; to baptize. " Baptismos, a dipping, bathing, a washing, drawing water ; baptism. " Baptisma, that which is dipped ; equal foregoing in N .T." Having now examined the proper authorities, the lexicons, in order to find the meaning of the word which our Saviour used, we find that all define it to dip, or immerse, or plunge ; that none give sprinkle, or pour upon, as meanings. In the first edition of Liddeil and Scott, the definition "to pour upon" was given; but as no pas- sage could be found in all Greek literature in which the word had this meaning, the words " to pour upon " were cancelled by these dis- tinguished psedo-baptists, and were left out of their second edition ; and though seven editions of that great standard work have appeared, those words remain out to this day. A most significant fact ! Let us now turn to the Church historians and see what was the practice of the early Church. The greatest living Church historian is Dr. Philip SchafF, of New I York, a Presbyterian. His prominence in the learned world is in- dicated by the fact that he was chosen by the Church of England to [form an American committee to assist in revising the common version iof the Bible. I now read from the first volume of his Church history. " The usual form of the act was immersion, as is plain from the loriginal meaning of the Greek Baptizein and Baptismos ; from the [analogy of John's baptism in the Jordan ; from the apostle's com- [parison of the sacred rite with the miraculous passage of the Red Sea, ' with the escape of the ark from the flood, with a cleansing and re- freshing bath, and with burial and resurrection ; finally, from the custom of the ancient Church, which prevails in the east to this day. 6 REPORT OF DEBATB But sprinkling also, or copious pouring, was practiced at an early- day with sick and dying persons, and probably with children and others, where total or partial immersion was impracticable." So testifies this distinguished ptedo-baptist " divine." At just how early a day this "sprinkling" or "copious pouring " began will ap- pear from other readings that are to follow. The prince of all Church historians is the great German, Augustus Neander. He says, " In respect to the form of baptism, it was in conformity with the original institution and the original import of the symbol, performed by immersion as a sign of entire baptism into the Holy Spirit, and of being entirely penetrated by the same." Next after him I introduce John Lawrence Von Mosheim, scarcely less distinguished in this field of learning. He gives the history of the different centuries separately. He thus testifies : Century 1. "In this century baptism was administered in con- venient places, without the public assemblies, and by immersing the candidates wholly in water." Century 2. " Twice a year, viz. , at Easter and Whitsuntide, baptism was publicly administered by the bishop, or by the presbyters, acting by his command and authority. The candidates for it were immersed wholly in water, with invocation of the sacred Trinity, according to the Saviour's precept, after they had repeated what they called the creed," etc. Gregory says, "The initiatory rite of baptism was performed by immersing the whole body in the baptismal font, and in the earlier periods of Christianity was permitted to all who acknowledged the truths of the Gospel," etc. Of modem Church historians the late Dean Stanley stands in the front rank. At one time he was chaplain to Queen Victoria. He visited Russia and the East, and his history of the Eastern Church is now the standard authority on that phase of the Church question. . He says, " There can be no question that the original form of bap- tism, and the very meaning of the word, was complete immersion in the deep baptismal waters, and that for at least six centuries any other form was little known, or regarded, unless in the case of danger- ous illness, an exceptional and an almost monstrous case." Now, when it is remembered that the Eastern is the Greek Church, that it has used the Greek language from the day the New Testament was written in Greek by the inspired penmen to this hour, the fact that this Church does now practice immersion, and always has done so, is most overwhelmingly and conclusively in favor of my position. ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. The next witness to be introduced is Dr. William "Wall, Vicar of Shoreham in Kent, a most learned and candid minister of the Church of England, Dr. Wall wrote a " History of Infant Baptism " many years ago which is distinguished by such scholarly research and acumen that it remains the standard work on that subject to this day. There is nothing in its field of literature that approaches at all near it in excellency. As it was written by a psedo-baptist, of course it is not favorable to immersion any further than it is compelled by the facts in the case — the, truth of history — to be. Dr. Wall says, " Their general and ordinary way was to baptize by immersion, or dipping a person, whether it were ar infant or grown man or woman, into the water. This is so plain and clear, by an infinite number of passages, that as one cannot but pity the weak en- deavours of such psedo-baptists as would maintain the negative of it, so also we ought to disown and show a dislike of the profane scofiB which some people give to the English anti-psedobaptists merely for their use of dipping. It is one thing to maintain that that circum- stance is not absolutely necessary to the essence of baptism, and another thing to go about to represent it as ridiculous and foolish, or as shameful and indecent. It was, in all probability, the way our blessed Saviour was baptized, and for certain was the most usual and ordinary way by which the ancient Christians did receive their bap- tism. I shall not stay to produce the particular proofs of this. Many of the quotations which I have brought for other purposes, and shall bring, do evince it. It is a great want of prudence as well as of honesty to refuse to grant to an adversary what is certainly true, and may be proved so. It creates a jealousy of all the rest that one says. * * On the other side, the anti-psedobaptists will be as un- fair in their turn if they do not grant that in the case of sickness, weakliness, haste, want of quantity of water, or such like extra- ordinary occasions, baptism by afiusion of water on the face was by the ancients counted sufficient baptism. I shall, out of the many i proofs of it, produce two or three of the most ancient." Dr. Wall then proceeds to give several cases of affusion, the most I ancient of which is that of Novatian, who, A.D. 251, while lying in [bed from sickness, received what they called clinic baptism. This is [the most ancient case of afi'usion for baptism on record. Thus we have seen that the lexicons say the word haptizo means to immerse ; the Church historians testify that they immersed in the first ages of the Church, and we now come to the Bible to see how the word is used there. 9- REPORT OF DEBATB Remember the rulo of interpretation to which your attention was called in the beginning : Words are to be taken in their " common and most known signification," unless the nature of the case, or the con- text, forbids. We will examine the Bible accounts of baptisms to see if there is anything to prevent us from taking this word that our Lord used, in its common and most known sense. In Matthew, 3rd chap., we find, "And the same John had his raiment of camel's hair and a leathern girdle about his loins, and his meat was locusts and wild honey. " Then went out to him Jerusalem and all Judea and all the region round about Jordan, and were baptized of him in Jordan confessing their sins." What does that mean ? It does not forbid the idea of immersion. John was ai/ the river. The people came out to be bap- tized there in the Jordan. Farther on it says, " Then cometh Jesus from Galilee to Jordan unto John to be baptized of him. But John forbad Him, saying, I have need to be baptized of Thee and comest Thou to me 1 And Jesus answering said unto him, Suffer it to be so now, for thus it Ixjcometh us to fuliil all righteousness. Then he suffered Him. And Jesus when He was baptized went up straight- way out of the water ; and lo, the heavens were opened unto Him and He saw the Spirit of God descending like a dove and lighting upon Him." Christ went to the Jordan to be baptized, and immediately when He was baptiz d Jle went up out of the water. That is rather significant. I now read fronj John 3 : 23, " And John also was bap- tizing in ^non near to Salim, because there was much water there : and they came, and were baptized." He was baptizing " because there was much water there." We need much water when we im- merse, but not when we sprinkle or pour. Next, take Acts 8:35 »&c., "Then Philip opened his mouth, and began at the same Scripture, and preached uuto hin Jesus. And as they went on their way, they came unto a certain water : and the eunuch said. See, here is water; what doth hinder me to be baptized] And Philip said. If thou believest with all thine hecrt, thou mayest. And he answered and said, I believe that Jesus Christ is the Son of God. And he commanded the chariot to stand still ; and they went down both into the water, both Philip and the eunuch ; and he baptized him. And when they were come up out of the water, the Spirit of the Lord caught away Philip, that the eunuch saw him no more : and he went on his way rejoicing." Here we have Philip and the eunuch coming to the water ; the chariot is commanded to stand ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 9 still ; then they went down into the water, and after the baptism they came up out of the water. And at Rom. 6 : 4, 5, we read, "Therefore we are buried with Him by baptism into death : that like as Christ was raised up from the dead by the glory of the Father, even so we also should walk in newness of life. For if wo have been planted together in the likeness of His death, we shall be also in the likeness of His resurrection. ' Whut does that mean 1 It means that we are buried with Him by baptism into death. I have heard it intimated th it this does not refer to immersion, — that a man is a fool who would think so. So I interpret it. I have here Wesley's notes on the New Testament. He says, "We are buried with Him, (alluding to the ancient manner of baptizing by immersion), that as Christ was raised from the dead by •the glory of the Father, so we also by the same pow should rise again." Lange's Commentary on Romans (SchaflTs edition) says, "To be buried is a stronger expression than to die, for the burial confirms the death and raises it beyond doubt. It withdraws the dead from our sight, — annihilates it, as it were." He adds, " Buried in death ; an oxymoron, according to which burial precedes and death follows, as is illustrated in the immersion into the bath of baptism." In a note Schaff says, " All commentators of note (except Stuart and Hodge) expressly admit, or take it for granted, that in this verse, especially in sunetapheemen and eegerthee, the ancient prevailing mode of bap- tism by immersion and emersion is implied as giving additional force to the idea of the going down of the old and rising up of the new man." Dr. Schaff then quotes Bloomfield, " There is a plain allusion to the ancient mode of baptism by immersion." Barnes, " It is alto- gether probable that the apostle has allusion to the custom of baptiz- ing by immersion." Conybeare and Howson, " This passage cannot be understood unless it be borne in mind that the primitive baptism was by immersion." Webster and Wilkinson, (not this Wilkinson), " Doubtless there is an allusion to immersion as the usual mode of baptism introduced to show that baptism symbolized our spiritual resurrection." Let us pause a moment and consider what has been presented. The word baptizo means to immerse; we have looked into the Church histories, and found that during the first centuries of the Church immersion only was practiced ; we have looked into the Bible, and have seen that they went into the water, into much water, and after they were baptized came up out of the water. Paul says in his letter 10 REPORT OF DEBATE to the Colossians, 2:12, "Buried with Him in baptism, wherein also- ye are risen with Him through che faith of the operation of God, who hath raised Him from the dead." In his lettier to Titus, 3 : 6, 6, he says, "Not by works of righteousness which we have done, but according to His mercy He saved us, by the washing of regeneration, and renewing of the Holy Ohost; which He shed on us abundantly through Jesus Christ our Saviour." In Heb. 10: 22, we find, "Let us draw near mill a true heart in full assurance of faith, having our hearts sprinkled from an evil conscience, and our bodies washed with pure water." We find not only that they went to water, to much water, were buried in baptism, but that their bodies were washed with pure water, — not simply the forehead, or head, but the whole body. At the beginning of this debate I quoted authorities to show that in interpreting words you have to take the usual and most known signification, and you have not to depart from it unless the nature of the case demands it. What is the usual and most known signification of the word baptizo — the word that Christ used 1 Immer- sion. And you are to take it unless the nature of the case forbids. Does the nature of the case forbid it? No. Everything makes it stronger and more conclusive that that is the meaning we are to take. We find not only that the word means immerse, but they did the very things immersionists do now. The piedo-baptists do not do as they did. They went to the water; went down into the water; talked about baptism as a burial, and about having their bodies washed with pure water. This is all true of immersionists, but not of paedo- baptists, to-day. In the next place, let us consider the testimony of the great encyclopaedias. The first I will read is the greatest of all, — the " Encyclopedia Britannica." It says, " The usual mode of per- forming the ceremony was by immersion. In the case of sick persons (clinici) the minister was allowed to baptize by pouring water upon the head, or by sprinkling. In the early Church, clinical baptism, as it was called, was only permitted in case of necessity, but the practice of baptism by sprinkling gradually came in in spite of the oppo?"tion of councils and hostile decrees. The Council of Ravenna, in 1 31 1, was the first council of the Church which legalized baptism by sprinkling, by leaving it to the choice of the officiating minister. The custom was to immerse three times, once at the name of each of the Persons in the Trinity, but latterly the three-fold immersion was abolished be- cause it was thought to go against the Trinity." The Schaflf-Herzog Enqyclopsedia says, " In the primitive Church ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 11 baptism wag by immersion except in the case of the sick (clinic baptism), who were baptized by pouring or sprinkling. These latter were often regarded as not properly baptized, either bf^ause they had not completed their catechumenate, or the symbolism of the rite was not fully observed, or because of the small amount of water necessarily used. * * * The Oountfil of Ravenna (1311) was the first to allow a choice between sprinkling and immersion." Zell's Encyclopaedia goes back a little farther. It says, " In the time of the apostles the form of baptism was very simple. The person to be baptized was dipped in a river or vessel, with the words which Christ had ordered, and to express more fully his change of [ character, generally adopted a new name. The Greek Church retained [this custom, but the Western Church adopted in the 13th century the mode of baptism by sprinkling, which has been continued by the Protestants, the Baptists only excepted. The introduction of this [niode of baptism was owing to the great inconvenience which arose from the immersion of the whole body in the northern climate of Europe. The custom of sprinkling thrice in the administration of the rite spread with the diffusion of the doctrine of the Trinity." This authority says that dipping was the rule for the first 1300 years. The Council of Ravenna, in 1311, was the first that recog- nized sprinkling. Members of the Church of England will find dipping in the Book of Common Prayer ; Methodists will find it in the Discipline ; you will find it everywhere. All say it is right, and that it is proper to practice it. All these great authorities tell you that it was the almost universal practice for the first 1300 years. Dr. Wall gives you the very first case of aff'usion. Two and a-half centuries of the Christian era had passed away before it came into use. I ask i you to pause and consider the evidence heaped up before you. Sup- [pose there is a gentleman present who desires to follow the Saviour and Ito be baptized. I can tell you how to be baptized. I can show that [every one of the lexicographers, and all the Cliurch historians, show [that immersion is the proper way and that by it you can follow Jesus Estep by step. If you go to the water, Christ did so. If you go to luch water, Christ did so. If you are buried in baptism, so was ?aul. In doing so you step along in the very words of the sacred iScriptures, and you can say, '* My body is washed with pure [water." That is what Paul said for himself and for the Hebrew i Christians. If you pause and ask yourself the question, " Is there any Church that will not receive me because my baptism has not been properly performed?" I say that not a single Church, not a 12 REPORi OF DEBATE single congregation would reject you — not one. When I consider all these facts I feci that I am indeed standing on a rock. We gather here to hunt for truth in the name of Christ. We find the word which Jesus gave in the groat commission, and when its meaning is called in question we naturally go to the great dictionaries. We are not going from the Bible in doing that. If, in reading the English Bible, you meet with words you do not understand, and you turn to Webster or Worcester, you are not going away from the Bible — you are simply endeavoring to understand it. When I look at the Greek Testament and find hnpt'zo, and then look up the dictionaries to find its meaning, I am not turning away from the Bible, but simply find- ing out what the Bible means. When I turn to the authorities I do not find that the word means to sprinkle or pour ; not in a single case anywhere. £ #ant to call your attention to another baptism that is sig- nificant. 1 have already told you that words have not only a primary and literal signification, but a secondary or metaphorical meaning. I find that Christ used the word baplizo in that way. He was with H is disciples on one occasion, and the mother of Zebedee's children came and said, " Grant that these my two sons may sit, the one on Thy right hand and the other on Thy left in Thy kingdom. But Jesus answered and said. Ye know not what ye ask. Are ye able to drink of the cup that I drink of, and to be baptized with the baptism that I am baptized with ? They say unto him, We are able. And He saith unto them, Ye shall drink indeed of My cup, and be baptized with the baptism that I am baptized with : but to sit on My right hand, and on My left, is not Mine to give, but it shall be given to them for whom it is prepared of My Father." That baptism is the baptism of suffering. Sufferings are likened by the Psalmist to overwhelming water. Psalm 69 : 14, 15: "Deliver me out of the mire, and let me not sink : let me be delivered from them that hate me, and out of the deep waters. Let not the waterflood overflow me, neither let the deep swallow me up, and let not the pit shut her mouth upon me." So in verses 1 and 2 of the same psalm ; " Save me, O God ; for the waters are come into my soul. I sink in deep mire, where there is no standing ; I am come into deep waters, where the floods overflow me." Would it do to talk about Christ's having been sprinkled with sufferings ? Did he merely have a little suffering poured upon him 1 Go to Gethsemane in the hour of darkness, and hear the groans of the dying Son of God. Great drops of sweat like blood stand on His brow. Go to Calvary, and hear the cry, " My • ON THE MODS AND 8UBJBCTH OF HAPTISM. 19 Ood, My God, why hast Thou forsaken Me 1 " These sufferings ful' filled the saying, " I havo a baptism to be baptized with." He was overwhelmed in sorrow, crushed down with suffering till His great heart broke and He died on the cross for us. It will not do to call that a mere sprinkling of sorrow, or to refer to it as a slight pouring of suffering ; but the great writers say it was an over- whelming suffering. I have a work here by Dr. Stuart, a ptedo- baptist, and one of the greatest men produced by the Presbyterian Church of the United States. He says : " Inasmuch as the more usual idea of baptizo is overwhelming, immerging, it was very natural to employ it in designating severe calamities and sufferings." So when you turn to the metaphorical meaning of the word you find the same idea in it. Not in a single case do you find sprinkle or pour. If we turn to Matthew we read in the words of John : "I baptize you with water, but Christ will baptize you with the Holy Ghost and with tire." And when we turn to Revelation, we find that the wicked were " plunged into a lake of fire." [Time expired.'\ MR. WILKINSON'S FIRST REPLY. Mr. Chairman and Christian Friends, — I sympathize to some extent with the remarks made by yourself. Sir, at i\\ei opening of this meeting. I have not been very strongly in sympathy with public discussions of this kind. I have been engaged in but two before in my I life, and I was crowded into both of them. I did not seek them. I I have never challenged any man to a discussion, but when I was chal- I lenged I had either to accept the challenge or be branded as a coward if I refused, so I have generally preferred to accept the challenge [because I am terribly proud and hate to be called a coward. In fact [1 do not think I am a coward, and therefore do not like to be called lone. Some people are very fond of discussion. They are always seeking it. They are always challenging people to debate. They are ^always branding as cowards those who refuse to debate with them, and once in a great while we have to lay a victim on the altar to gratify their ambition. And I do not know but I may as well be such a victim as any other brother, so occasionally (it is four years since I did it before), I place myself at their disposal just to give them 14 REPORT OF DEBATE an Opportunity of airing their peculiar ■entinienti. Yet I do not altogether dtiprecate discussions like this. I do not like to be in a thunder storm, especially if the wind is very high ; at the same time I believe the air in a great deal purer after a good thunder storm and breeze. Cyclones are not pleasant things to ho in, but they tako away the carbonic acid gas and leave the atmosphere far moio pure and healthy. I have seen the same el^ects with respect to these discus- sions over disputed points of theology. And if I can do anything to purify the air, why of course I shall be glad to do it. I am afraid, however, that I shall not be able to blow as hard as my opponent, for he has a tremendous pair of lungs. However, they are his own. I shall not complain, no matter how much he vociferates. His fists are his own too, and I shall not complain, no matter how hard he smites them together. And if he must die, I would rather he would kill himself than that the responsibility of killing him should be laid on my shoulders. (Laughter.) It is contrary to the rules of this debate for people to laugh, and I do not want you to do it, or to givd expres- sion to your feelings in any way. I suppose, ladies and gentlemen, I need not take up your time, and especially my precious time (for I have a great task to accomplish inside an hour), in telling you how this debate wni brought about. I think this community knows well enough about that matter. My opponent told you in opening that he had been engaged in a number of discussions — I think he said a good many. He has an advantage of rae in this respect, as I was never engaged in but two before, and one of them had no reference to this question, so this is my second debate on this subject. I do not claim to be a specialist, either as a scholar, a speaker, or a debater. We have fifty or a hundred men in the Church to which I belong for whom I could not hold a candle to debate. And as to scholarship, when they are around I always take a back seat. But I do not depend on scholarship alto- gether. I do not propose to bring a cart-load of books here and ask you to believe that they are all on my side. I just came here to talk a little common sense and the Bible to you, and I may have occasion sometimes to refer to scholars in confirmation of the views I advance. Under the circumstances, considering the great disparity that exists between my opponent and myself, he being a scholar and, I under- stand, a graduate of some university in the United States, armed with books without measure and without number, possessing a voice of stentorian tones — to say nothing of his fists — if I should have to sue •umb at his hands before the six days of this debate, or the half of ON TIIR MOPE AND SUIUKCTS Or IIAPTIHM. 15 thom are over, I am surn you will think it nothing surpriaing, espocially when there is such an array of soholarship on his sido. Scholarship, you know, with some people, goes a great way in deciding a question. Now let UH look at the factn. My opponent's proposition is, — " Christian baptism is immersion, — in it there mugt be a burial in water." If I can produce one single instance, therefore, in which Christian baptism was not a burial in water, [ have disproved his proposition altogether, — because in that case there must not he a burial in water. So you see I have only to bring one cose, and if I do that I can sit down in my chair and defy him to bring on his lexi- •cographers, his authorities, his scholarship, his vociferation, and his smiting of the fists, and put his witnesses in the box, because he says there must be a burial in water. But I will take my own way of reaching the point. Libraries are good, but you will find that facts are hard things to deal with. Our purpose in holding this discuHsion, as stated by my opponent, and in which I fully concur, is not to make blackguards of ourselves, or to insult the people's sense of Christian propriety, or to bandy epithets, or to throw dirt, — I am not going to do that, though if dirt is thrown at me I generally cast it back, — but I came here to discuss the question honestly, fairly, fully if you like, and if one week is not enough we will take two, and if two are not sufficient we will take a month, and if a month will not do we will take three months, ! and we will roach the bottom of the subject if it has anv bottom. I have heard men say, when the roads were about three feet deep with ; mud, that they were good roads when you got down to them, but ithey were a long way down. But to the subject. We are told that Christ gave us the word in question in the com- Imission, and that that word was baplizo. That is a matter I may Ihave occasion to dispute, for I think, according to scholarship, on Iwhich such a premium is put to-day, — and which I do not propose to lisparage, — Christ did not speak in the Greek language, and therefore lid not use haptizo at all. I throw out this thought in passing. My jpponent said, incidentally, that if he were making a dictionary to-day ind wished to express the meaning of this term according to the isage of the Church, he would say it meant to initiate people into the Church by sprinkling or pouring a little water on them, or by dipping )r immersing them in water, or in some such way. But he was going to appeal from usage to the meaning of the word. And what did he [do 1 The very first "dip" he made he appealed to the lexicons. " Do 16 . REPORT OF DEBATE you 8ee them," said he (pointing to the pile). It reminded me of a certain Baptist divine who in a written debate with a Methodist brother said, " As I write I have a pile of books before me as hu^e as high Olympus." That is pretty high. My opponent's pile of books is not quite so high, but is nearly so, and far more weighty. Now, how are lexicons made 1 Perhaps it will be interesting to you to know. Take Webster and Worcester. How do you think they de- termine the meaning of any word 1 By usage. But my opponent is going to appeal from usage to the meaning of the word, and he then appeals to lexicons which are made from usage. That may answer his purpose, but he may find that his lexicons, so far as sustaining his position is concerned, are a little lame. But I am not going to the lexicons now. I am just going along taking my own road to get there, and I hope to get there by and by. My opponent admitted that there was scarcely any word that had but one meaning. I am very glad he made that admission, be- cause he will try his best to hold me to one meaning, and yet there was not a lexicographer he quoted that gave one meaning only. You remember how many words he read, defining haptizo. I think the fewest words he read in any of the lexicons expressive of the meaning of this word was four, five, six, ten, and right on up. The fact is that lexicographers have used, to express the meaning of baptizo, in its various forma, between fifty and a hundred different words, yet he will try to prove to you that it has only one meaning and that that meaning is expressed in his proposition, to immerse. In that very proposition he uses two words to express its meaning. In fact, these dear immersionist friends when they find one word fails them, can soon skip to another. When "immerse" will not carry them clear through they take shelter in "dip." When it is shown that that word does not express the idea they take shelter in " plunge ;" and when "plunge" is too big for them they go to "overwhelm;" and when " overwhelm " won't answer they take " overflow," and when that will not do they find some other word. I have a little book here, — it is not a psedo-baptist book, but a book by Dr. T. J. Conant, the greatest light of the Baptist Ohurch in America, and President of the American (Baptist) Bible Revision Committee. He is not only rs. ''ked as one of the finest scholars, but as one of the most honest men in the Baptist Ohurch, — and that is saying a great deal, for they are all fine, honest people ; I have not a word to say against their integrity, — but I think he finds it necessary to employ no less than nine English words to translate this word baptizo, and he sets out to ON THE MODE AND Si: EJECTS OF BAPTISM. 17 prove it has but one meaning. Yet he cannot find one English word that will translate it all the way through. And no other man can. My opponent cannot and never will, and during the present discus- sion you will find that out. Take note of this. I will show you, too, that it has more than one meaning. I propose to show you that • it has a meaning in the Scriptures which it does not bear in the classics. And I will call your attention right here to what I propose proving, viz.. That a number of the very best lexicographers distin- guish between classic use, or the general meaning of the term in secular literature, and the New Testament meaning. I ask you particularly to notice this. Greenfield discriminates between the historical or classic, and the New Testament use; Pickering dis- criminates ; Robinson discriminates ; Liddell and Scott discriminate ; and others, as I shall have occasion to show you. What I want to prove at present is that the Scriptures do not use the term in the exclusive sense of to immerse. But here are a few points to which I wish to call your attention. As an appeal has been made by my jpponent to the meaning of the word outside the Bible, outside the Jible we will go to find what Christian baptism means ! I take this position : — No human being, or living animal, was ever baptized in ^he primary, classical sense of the term, according to Greek writers, that is, completely buried, or immersed, and survived it. Drowning iras the inevitable result. I do not deny that lexicographers give- ' dip, plunge, immerse," and that the word has that meaning primarily, ly opponent wants to confine you to the classical meaning. We will Be where it will land him. And I here declare to you that it will at the bottom of the water somewhere, and when you get him out ^ou will have a real funeral, not a sham or symbolic one. He cannot kroduce a single case from the Greek writers where any individual any living animal was said to be baptized, that is, completely put ider water, and got out alive, and if he does it will be the result of \ huge accident. I will take Dr. Conant's book and read you a few cases— not all I ive noted — in order to illustrate the truth of what I say. Diodorus, his account of the defeat of the Carthaginian army, describes the bstruction of many of the fugitives in the river Crimissus, in Sicily, lich had been swollen o8tles that when the Spirit came to them He would call to their Remembrance everything He had told them, and lead them into all laruth ; and they say that when they wrote, the Spirit told them what to write. They wrote in Greek and used the word baptizo. He told them to go and baptize, and when they wrote the Spirit told tliem how to write, and they wrote in Greek, and used baptizo. He Itys that the word has more than the one meaning, immerse. I glpinted that words have not only a primary, but, as a rule, metapbor- loil meanings. No word, however, has two meanings in the same pbw;e. Here is a great law, — the commission of our Lord. In that law iiiiptizo occurs. In that place it has one meaning and only one. It oitinot have two meanings in the same place. The question is, What ^d Christ mean when He used baptizo ? He did not mean sprinkle. y friend give^ up sprinkling. He did not mean pour upon. My 30 REPORT OF DEBATE friend gives that up. I claim He meant immerse. And when I go to the authorities I find that it means immerse in its primitive sense. He told us finally what the word symbolized. I thought he would say it meant purify, but he said it symbolized cleansing and purification. Let us see about that. Suppose you take purification. Did John purify Christ? Did he symbolize that purification had already taken place ? No. Christ was pure, born pure, and remained pure all the time. He never was contaminated with sin, before his birth, or at any time. My friend said in his speech at Euphrasia that infants are born pure ; that they are as pure as angels. I should like to know what purification baptism symbolizes in them, when they are baptized, if they are born pure. Just then my friend mentioned Dr. T. J. Conant. I am very glad he spoke so kindly of him as one of the most able and honest scholars on the continent. This is Dr. Conant's book. Let me say a word with respect to it. He tells us he has ransacked all Greek literature and has failed to find that baptizo anywhere means to sprinkle ; that it has the idea of over- whelming and covering wherever you find it. He tells us that baptizo means in classic Greek, to put under. If a ship sinks to the bottom of the sea, it is baptized. If reeds along the sides of the river are overflowed, they are baptized, in classic Greek. My opponent took up A glass of water and put some money in it. He sa d, " Is not that money immersed and baptized 1" Presently he took it out and asked, " Is it baptized now V No. Mr, Wilkinson — Hear, hear. Mr. Harding — Yes, it was baptized ; and when it was taken out it was no longer baptized. Does he not kno'v that that is the way baptism is referred to in the Bible? The n ii a mis-translation of Bom. 6 : 4, in the common version, which is j-rected in the revised version. Let me read it. It says, " We were buried therefore with Him through baptism into death ; that like as Christ was raised from the dead through the glory of the Father, so we also might walk in new- ness of life." Not " we are buried," as it is in the common version, but "we were; " every scholar knows it is the past tense in the Greek. Again, I read from Col. 2:12, in the revised version, " Having been buried with Him in baptism, wherein ye were also raised with Him through faith in the working of God who raised Him from the dead." That sets forth that men were buried and were taken out in baptism in ancient days. In Acts 19th chapter we find that Paul said unto cer- tain disciples, " Have ye received the Holy Ghost since ye believed ? And they said unto him, We have not so much as heard "whether there ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM, 31 any Holy Ghost. And he said unto them, Unto what were ye bap- jizedl A.nd they said, Unto John's baptism." Paul then explained unto them that the baptism of John had been )llowed and superseded by that of Jesus ; when th,ey understood this ley were baptized in the name of the Lord Jesus. That is, they rere baptized and taken from the water by the authority of John, id then, some time afterwards, " were buried and raised to walk in Newness of life," in the name of our Lord. It is clear, then, that bap- tism is not, as Mr. Wilkinson seems to suppose, a state in which we remain ; it is an act by which we are brought into a new state. I am not baptized now. I was baptized, but that is a thing of iihe past. I am on this side of the line. lb is said in the Bible — and J may as well refer to it now — that tbj children of Israel "were «11 baptized unto Moses in the cloud and in the sea." They came out of the cloud and out of the sea. It is said, " All oui* fathers were ttnder the cloud and all passed through the sea." That was when the baptism took place. My opponent quoted Josephus from Dr. Conant lor the purpose of showing that when baptizo signifies to immerse it implies that the object immersed must remain under — must be ■destroyed — if a man or beast. I turn to Josephus in order to show that the passages quoted from him do not sustain this idea. Take Jlhe case of the young high-priest Aristobulus. He was a very hand- lK>me, captivating young man, of a most noble family; and when, at ♦bout seventeen years of age, he was elevated to the high-priesthood, the people displayed their love and admiration for him in such a liearty, extravagant, and indiscreet way, that Herod became exceed- fegly jealous of him and determined to kill him. Of course he did not want his wicked jealousy to be known, and therefore he contrived i|he following plan : "With many professions of friendship he induced #e young man to go with him, in the evening, to one of his bathing- ||K)ls. What followed Josephus tells thus : " At first they were only ^^ectators of Herod's servants and acquaintance as they were swim- ipng ; but after awhile the young man, at the instigation of Herod, "'^llfat into the water among them, while such of Herod's acquaintance lif-he had appointed to do it, dipped him as he was swimming, and ;^nged him under water in the dark of the evening, as if it had biin done in sport only, nor did they desist until he was entirely SfliEbcated. And thus was Aristobulus murdered, having lived no ip»re in all than eighteen years." Ant. of Jews, Book 15, chap. 3, 3. 1 have read from Whiston's translation. Ls Mr. Wilkinson quotes, " Continually pressing down and baptiz- 82 REPORT OF DEBATE ing him, while swimming, as if in sport, they did not desist till they had entirely suffocated him." Here, evidently, the death was a result of repeated immersions. As he was swimming they plunged him under repeatedly, as if in sport, nor did they cease baptizing him till he died. The first baptism did not kill ; the second one did not kill ; but many of them, quickly repeated, did kill. By the same author, men swimming in the sea after shipwreck are represented as being baptized by the waves. Baptizo means to immerse. Whether the object immersed comes above the water again or remains under is not determined by the force of the word. While it remains under it is immersed ; after coming up it has been immersed. If my opponent wants to know by what authority we take people out of the water after immersing them, I reply we have the example of Christ and his apostles. They took people into the water, buried them in baptism, raised them to walk in newness of life, and (after this immersion and emersion), they came up out of the water. My opponent says I cannot find one word that will translate baptizo. The word immerse will translate it every time in the New Testament. Let my opponent quote a single passage that immerse will not trans, late. He asked if anyone could translate the word immerse, in certain parts of the New Testament, and he referred especially to Luke 11 :38, "And when the Pharisee saw it he marvelled that He had not first washed before dinner." I have the American Bible Union Revision, which reads thus ; " And the Pharisee, seeing it, wondered that he did not first immerse himself before dinner." And here is H. T. Anderson's translation, which also gives immerse at this place. Here are two translations, both of which render the word immerse, although my opponent thought it would be very amusing if it were translated in that way. That is precisely the way I translate it. During the Wilkes-Ditzler debate at Louisville, Ky., the following question was put to Dr. Kleeberg, the Jewish Rabbi of that city: "Were the Jewish ablutions immersions'!'' He replied, "Before eating and prayer, and after ris- ing in the morning, they washed ; when they have become unclean they must immerse." Louisville Debate, p. 652. Rabbi Maimonides, perhaps the most distinguished Jewish teacher who has lived since the apostolic age, states that if even the tip of the finger remains out of the water the uncleanness remains. Before eating they washed ; but if they had come from the mark'et (see Mark 7 : 3-4), they immersed themselves. ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 33 Again, my friend affirmed that in the various lexicons, in defining aptizo, from fifty to one hundred words had been used. I think ibout thirty difierent words have been used in defining baptizo, — ?rhap8 more. He may be right in saying that perhaps as many as ifty have been used. Some of these definitions, as for instance, " to draw water" (by dip- )ing the bucket), "to confound" (to overwhelm with confusion), innot apply to Christian baptism at all ; but observe this fact : every ^ne of them that can possibly apply to the sacred institution is fulfilled immersion. Let me call attention to some of these fifty ; they are imerse, dip, plunge, submerge, merge, immerge, bury, cover with iter, overwhelm, sink, soak, saturate, drench, wash, wet, etc. In ^ing immersed I fulfilled every one of these definitions ; I was lunged, dipped, buried, overwhelmed, covered with water ; soaked, [kturated, drenched ; washed and wet. His baptism did not fulfil le of them ; he was not dipped, nor plunged, nor washed ; he was )t even wet ; for we never say a man is wet if only a drop or two of ^ater has fallen on him.. Mr. Wilkinson — I got Christian baptism and you got heathen. Mr. Harding — Christianity has not cpme to him yet, for he cannot [eep still while I am talking. [ Time expired.] MR. WILKINSON'S SECOND REPLY. I am exceedingly glad that my task thus far this evening is so ^^tremely light. My opponent has stated that I could not find an thority to sustain my view of this subject. Perhaps I cannot, but t remains to be proved. I might read a number of testimonies it of one book as he has done. I have a little book here with a few i^ the testimonies of scholars, hence I need not take a cart-load of ks along with me. I guarantee that these quotations are correct ; ot, I shall be sacrificed in consequence of their inaccuracy. Before folding these testimonies 1 want to make one remark, and it may psfhaps clear away a good deal of misappreliension. My opponent in „jpioting from scholars was very careful to impress upon you very phatically'that they were psedo-baptist authors. In our day psedo- tists very seldom believe in immersion. A few hundred years ago 3 "i! 84 REPORT OF DEBATE all psedo-baptists were inimersionists. You have the proof of that, to a very large extent, in an expression that fell incidentally from his lips, that if you referred to the Church of England Prayer Book of two or three hundred years ago, you would find the Church practiced immersion. This practice applied even to infants, and I have hero, in Dr. Conant's work, a quotation from the English Prayer Book in the 16th century, where the priest in baptizing an infant was instructed to dip the child three times, first to the right or right side, second to the left side, and third with its face toward the font. They be- lieved in immersion ; they believed in immersing three times ; and just as far back in the records of history as my opponent will find im- mersion practiced in the Church, I will find trine-immersion practiced. In Liddell and Scott's lexicon you will find the word defined " to dip repeatedly." Now, what is the meaning of so defining the term' From what usage does that come 1 He knows I was right when I said that the definitions of lexicons were made from the usage of the time. Why did they insert the meaning " to dip repeatedly 1 " That is the very first definition in Liddell and Scott, which is the only standard Greek-English lexicon, and is used in our universities. Will my opponent let his case stand on that definition? If so, as he was not dipped repeatedly, he was not baptized, neither Christianly nor heathenly, neither scripturally nor classically. And if that is the meaning of the term, why in the name of common sense does he bring the candidates out of the water before they are properly baptized, for I understand he dips them only once, and he thinks that is sufficient. I want to say, then, that those authorities he has quoted as paedo-baptist writers were, for the most part, full-blown immersionists, as much so as Mr. Harding is. No wonder, then, they make a claim for immersion ; but of what value are witnesses of an exparte character like that ? I would as soon take his own statement as theirs. Here we have testimony of scholars on the other side of the question. I quote first from Turretin. He says, " The term baptism is of Greek origin, deduced from the word Bapto, which is to tinge and imbu^t. Baptizo, to dye and to immerse." He says also, " the word baptizo, by a metal epsis, is taken in the sense to wash. Mark 7 : 4. Nor ought we otherwise to understand the baptism of cups, of pots, and of beds, in use among the Jews; and the divers baptisms enjoined upon them, Heb. 9 : 10; and the superstitious washings received from the tradition of the elders, Mark 7 : 4, 5." Dr. Owen says, ''Baptizo signifies to wash ; as instances out of all authors may be given ; Suidas, Hesychius, Julius Pollux, Phavorinus, ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 35 id Eustachius. No one instance can be given in the Scripture, ^herein baptizo doth necessarily signify either to dip or plunge. I lust say, and will make it good, that no honest man, who under- iixds the Greek tongue can deny the word to signify to wash, as ►ell as. to dip. Baptiamos (baptism,) is any kind of washing, [hether by dipping or sprinkling ; putting the thing to be washed ^to the water, or applying the water to the thing itself to be washed." Whitby says, remarking ou Acts 10:48, "'And he commanded ^em to be baptized.' Whom did he command to do this? the entiles 1 It seemeth at first sight absurd, that they who were not I baptized should baptize others : or was it the Jews that came then th him 1 they seem only to be lay-brethren, who only were per- Itted to baptize in case of necessity ; it seemeth, therefore, reason- able to say that he commanded water to be brought for their baptism, a&d then performed himself the office, or left it to be done by gifted arsons." » )oddridge, in his paraphrase on the same passage, says, " Then ker, yielding to the force of evidence, however contrary to his former ejudices, with great propriety answered, Can any one reasonably |:bid that water should be brought." According to this view the Dst natural supposition is that they were baptized by pouring or tinkling. [Dr. Lightfoot says, "The application of water is necessary for the snce of baptism ; but the application in this or that mode indicates fcircumstance. To denote this ablution by % sacramental sign, the Irinkling of water is equally sufficient as immersion in water, since former in reality argues an ablution and purification as well as latter." i^ossius says, "Baptizo signifies to wash or purify. It is trans- ired to the gift of the Holy Spirit ; that is to say, because, that He iht wash, or purify the soul. He is poured out, as water is poured ; as Joel speaks, 2 : 28, and from thence Peter, Acts 2 : 17, like- Paul, Titus 3:6." leza says, "The reality of baptism is the sprinkling of the blood of IS Christ for the remission of sins, and the imputation of His Iteousness, which are, as it were, displayed before our eyes in the of outward sprinkling. Are they, therefore, improperly baptized are sprinkled with water only cast on them ? No : what is in action (of baptizing) merely substantial, (or strictly essential,) to the ablution of water, is rightly observed by the Church (by inkling). But baptizo signifies to dye, or to stain, seeing it comes 36 REPORT OP DEBATE immediately from bapto ; and since the things to be dyed or stained are (commonly) dipped, it signifies to make wet and to dip." Oasaubon says, " Immersion is not necessary to baptism. The opinion (insisted on of immersing the whole body in the ceremony of baptism) has been, deservedly, long since exploded ; for the force and energy of this mystery consist not in that circumstance." I might go on and quote two or three times as many authorities, but I forbear because it is not necessary to inflict further reading on your patience. Let me ask one question. If it be true that all the scholars of any note, as you have heard this afternoon, hold that the word baptizo means to dip, and only to dip ; or to immerse, and only to immerse ; and at the same time practice sprinkling, is there not some inconsistency between their conduct and their teaching 1 If men are so exceedingly inconsistent as to teach one thing and practice something else, their inconsistency should invalidate their testimony in a matter of this kind. John Wesley was referred to this afternoon, and it was thought to be proved that he was an immersionist. It is known that, in the early days of Wesley's ministry, while he still adhered to the Anglican Church, he believed in her traditions, her superstitious traditions, with respect to immersion. I expect to show, before this debate is ended, that it is a superstition, but I will not pause to-night to dwell on that point. I will, however, say that in the early part of his ministry Wesley adopted, to some extent, the traditions of the English Church, and seemed to lean (judging bv some expressions he made use of), to the practice of immersion. But, later in life, he wrote a treatise on that subject, and I propose to give you an extract from it. It may be found in his " Works," Vol. 6. page 12. He says, "As nothing can be determined from Scripture precept or example, so neither from the force or meaning of the word. For the words baptize and baptism do not necessarily imply dipping, but are used in other senses in several places. Thus we find that the Jews were all baptized in the cloud and in the sea (1 Cor. 10 : 2), but they were not plunged in either. Christ said to two of His disciples, 'Ye shall be baptized with the baptism that I am baptized with.' (Mark 10 : 38), but neither He nor they were dipped, but only sprinkled and washed with their own blood. Again, we read (Mark 7 : 4) of the baptisms of pots and cups, and tables or beds. Now, pots and cups are not necessarily dipped when they are washed — the Pharisees washed the outside of them only. And as for tables or beds, none could suppose that they could be dipped. Here, then, the word baptism, in its natural sense, is not taken for dipping, but for ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. ' 37 hing or cleansing. And that this is the true meaning of the word ^ptize, is testified by the greatest scholars and most proper judges on e matter. It is true that we read of being ' buried with Christ in ,ptism,' but nothing can be inferred from such a figurative expres- n. Nay, if held exactly, it would make as much for sprinkling as plunging ; since, in burying, the body is not plunged through the bstance of the earth, but, rather, earth is sprinkled upon it." My opponent assumes that the burial must have been an immersion, t Wesley says it cannot be proved to be such. He has appealed to esley, and to Wesley he must go. Further on in the same book he ^ys, in speaking of those baptized on the day of Pentecost, "The pAace, therefore, as well as the number, makes it highly probable that IkQ these were baptized by sprinkling or pouring, and not by immer •ion." . I will not pause during this half-hour's speech to reply to all my oppo- tl^nt's address ; I will not pause to prove that all the authorities are not on the other side, where many writers are ranked because they make the candid admission, as I have cheerfully done, that immersion did prevail in the Church at a very early period ; (and I am prepared to count for its being there) ; but I must express my surprise that my iponent will persist in quoting from books to prove what is not dis- ited. He does the same with reference to the meaning of the word. ave admitted that in the primary sense it means immerse, no one ^estions that ; but while pisdo-baptists make these candid, honest, tiruthful admissions, they, at the same time, contend that this is not iftie Scriptural sense, and that it is used in a secondary sense in the Word of God. But my opponent carefully stops before he gets to t^ose parts of the statements. But I will quote one more authority, ilie distinguished Dr. Hodge, one of the leading Presbyterians in the TpTjiited States, and Principal of Princeton College. In speaking of 1^. Dale's definition of the term baptizo, he says : " Baptizo is anal- us to the word to bury. A man may be buried by being covered in the ground, by being placed in an empty cave, by being put into iik|jarcophagus, or even, as among the Indians, by being placed upon a itform elevated above the ground. The command to bury may be uted in any of these ways. So, with regard to the word baptizo, e is a given effect to be produced without any specific injunction ^to the manner, whether by immersion, pouring, or sprinkling." I ■l^d the effect was produced by the application of the blood — the blood sprinkling — and that this was symbolized by the sprinkling of ter on the individual to represent outwardly the inward opera- 38 REPORT OF DEBATR tion. To that position I intend to hold ; from that position neither scholarship nor declamation can drive me. We will see if my opponent can overthrow this position before the debate is closed. If he does so, he will be the first man who has ever done it. I have here Dr. Edward Robinson's work, which has been referred to. He says, " In the earliest Latin versions of the New Testament, as, for example, the Itala, which Augustine regarded as the best of all, and which goes back apparently to the second century, and to usage con- nected with the Apostolic Age, the Greek verb is uniforn)ly given in the Latin form baptizo, and is never translated by imviergo, or any like word, showing tliat there was something in the rite of baptism to which the latter did not correspond." A good deal has been said with regard to lexicons. I told you to be careful, as he would attempt to mislead you by seeking to make me responsible for the word pour or sprinkle. Did I not tell you that if thtit meaning was there, it was not the correct meaning of the word ? I repeat, — It is not the meaning of the word. My opponent said, before the debaite closed, they would see whether I would produce any lexicons giving that meaning. I will produce extracts, and I will leave him to deny their accuracy, and, if he does so, I will never rest until I have produced the works themselves, and I will probably give you more than one. I did not think it was necessary to buy, borrow, and beg lexicons to bring here to prove what I did not believe. My opponent says no word has two meanings in the same place. He might have saved himself the trouble of saying that, for no one said it had. I should like to know what that has to do with this debate. The question is, whether a word has ever two meanings, not whether it has two meanings in the same place. He might as well have stated that a man cannot be in two places at the same time, or that two men cannot be in one place at the same time. He asks, with great flourish, Did John purify Christ ? Then he says that Christ was never contaminated with sin, that He was always pure. All right. I never believed that water purified any- body from sin. My opponent has that to prove. I never taught it, I never believed it, I never expect to believe it, I beg of you never to believe it, because, if you go to heaven by water, I am afraid you will get ducked before you get there. My opponent will probably make a handle of the word "ducked." If I use "souse" it will be just as bad, though he used it himself. I say that John did purify Christ. I have no qualms of conscience in committing myself to that state- ment. I say, moreover, that Christ was just as liable to legal defile- ment as you or I might have been, and my opponent will not deny it ON THE MODE A?JD SUBJECTS OP BAPTISM. 89 The ceremonial law, given by Moses, said that if any man touched a |lead body he was unclean. It does not mean that he sinned in his beart, but that his body was defiled by contact with the dead body, (f Christ touched a dead body would He not have been ceremonially inclean, and required to be cleansed, according to that law, before He lould ofliciate in any office in connection with the Church 1 Un- loubtedly He would. John's baptism was not a purification from sin, but a symbolical purification ; and so, if Christ possessed the purity rithin, would it be inconsistent that He should receive a ceremonial purification ? My opponent asks what about infants, and mentioned lat I had stated that infants came into the world as pure as angels. |f I did so I do not go back on it in respect to the question of baptism, tkcause, if infants are pure I will show they have a right to the symbol of that purity. Abraham did not receive the sign of circum- cision before he believed and his faith was counted to him for right- •ousness, but afterwards ; in other words, it was after his sins were pardoned and he was justified by faith. Then he received the sign of inward purity. So we do not teach that individuals ought to be bap- tized by any mode, unless they are first forgiven ; and, if infants are in a state of forgiveness they are entitled to a symbol of that forgive- ness. If we are in a state of forgiveness, we are entitled to the sign 0f that forgiveness outwardly. There is nothing inconsistent in that, lllr. McDiarmid, in a recent debate, raised the same question, "Did John purify Christ?" I say, with emphasis. Yes, John did purify Christ, and I will prove it before I am done. My time is about up. I was going to launch out in other directions, but I find 1 cannot plunge in. [Resumed his seat.] 1 MR. HARDING'S THIRD SPEECH. 5]|Mr. Chairman, Ladies and Gentlemen, — With pleasure t rise to fitinue this discussion. 1 desire to consider, in the first place, some the statements made by Mr. Wilkinson in his last speech. He began l^j- saying the predo-baptists whom I quoted were immersionists as much HNI I am. Mr. Wilkinson is much mistaken about that. I believe it ^ not true of a single one I have quoted. There is a stack of lexicons Dinting to his lexicons] written by paedo-baptists, and Church histo- 40 REPORT OP DEBATE riea written by pwdo-baptists, and I believe every one, without excep- tion, not only said that immersion was proper, but thoy practiced affusion, every one of them. Dean Stanley, from whom I read, states that the Greek Church now practices immersion, that in apostolic days it was the custom to baptize by immersion, but, he adds, " Who would like to go l)ack to the ancient custom i" He says the Church has changed it, and he is glad of it. But he puts it on the ground that the Church had a right to change it. Dr. Wall says that immersion was the most usual custom in the ancient Church, and that the tirst case of affusion was in 251 A.D., and, at the same time, he argues that affu- sion is proper and good. Dr. Edward Robinson gives the definition im- merse, and afterwards argues in favor of affusion. He does not do that in giving the meaning of the word, but in defending the practice. Not a single one of these authorities was an immerstonist as I am. I desire it to be borne in mind that what wo are discussing is, the meaning of the word baptixo. It is granted by Mr. Wilkinson that it is to dip, to immerse. He grants that, and said that I need not have read authorities on the point. He further grants that the word does not mean to sprinkle or pour upon. That is one point gained. But Mr. Wilkinson does not tell you what the word means in the New Testament. I answered one of his questions, and I will now ask him a question. It is this. What does baptizo mean in the commission ] Christ says, " Go teach all nations, baptizing them." Now, I want to know, not what the word symbolizes, but what the word means in that place. He agrees with me that a word has but one meaning in one place. I want him to tell you what this word means in the commission. He will not tell you. He cannot tell you. I answered his question, and^I will answer all his questions to the best of my ability. I ask him to answer, What does baptizo mean in the commission ? If he does not tell you, I will tell you. He says that Liddell and Scott say it means " to dip repeatedly," and that candidates were dipped three times. They did give that meaning in the first edition of their work, and in several editions, but in the sixth and seventh editions they do not give " to dip repeatedly " I have here the definition given in the sixth edition. They define "Baptizo, to dip in, or under water ; of ships, to sink them, to bathe, metaphorical, bebaptisnienoi, soaked in wine, drowned with questions, ophlemasi, over head and ears in debt. To draw up wine in cups (of course by dipping them)." That is the definition given in both the sixth and seventh editions. Liddell and Scott were the only ones in the list of authorit'' that gave " to dip repeatedly," and their reason for thus defining was this : According to its termination (zo) ON TIIK MODK AND SUIUECTS OF" BAPTISM. 41 ^he word is a frequentative, that is, a word that expresses repeated iction, and in their first editions, these gentlefnen so defined it ; but ipon an examination of the passages in Greek literature in which the rord occurs, it was seen tliat the usage of the word does not justify lis meaning; and as use, not form or derivation, determines the Ignitictttion of words, they dropped " repeatedly " from their last two litions, and instead thereof defined the word to " dip in or under rater." Mr. Wilkinson inquires why I do not dip repeatedly. Be- luse the definitions of the lexicons do not require it, nor does the lage of the word. If all the lexicons in their latest and best editions lad defined it, " to dip repeatedly " (as they do define it to dip or immerse), and if all the circumstances connected with the perform- Ittice of the rite in the New Testament had indicated trine immersion ^as they do indicate immersion), I would practice trine immersion. ' My friend then says that pa'do-baptists were imniersionists as much , §8 I am, that some years ago they were generally so, but are not now; ind he referred to the fact that immersion was in the Prayer Book ; it is also in the Methodist Discipline. Mr. Wilkinson — It is not. Mr. Harding — Every copy of the Methodist Discipline that I ever saw requires the minister to immerse if the candidate desires it. If there is one that does not so require I would like to see it. They have been revising the book lately, and if immerse does not occur in it, it has been quite recently stricken out. If Mr. Wilkinson has •ufh a copy, I trust he will produce it. Mr. Wilkinson — I will. Mr. Harding — Very good ; I want to see the book. But," it is often asked, " how is it that the scholars, Church ^torians, lexicographers, and commentators, who testify that in the icient Church immersion was practiced, themselves practice sprink- ig 1 " They think it is not necessary to give an exact literal edience to the commandments of Christ. "If one has the spirit of edience," they say, " it does not so much matter about doing exactly le thing commanded." Although they admit that the meaning of word and the usage of the apostolic Church indicate that Christ imanded immersion, yet they say, so that water is applied in some ^ it does not matter how it is done. I am not disposed to go in t||at way. I want to do exactly what Christ said. The Master says, ^W hosoever heareth these sayings of mine and doeth them, I will ^^!^en him nnto a wise man," etc. It is agreed between Mr. Wilkinson and myself that the word in 42 RKPOKT OK DKHATK the classicH mcanH to iiiiiiierH*^ ; that it doei not tnean to eprinklo or to pour. Iln thou){ht, liowitvor, that ho could find It^xicoiiH that dotino it toHpriiiklu ; hul now \w propoHcs to hring " nxtractH " inntead of the books. I prosunio lio will bring "uxtracts" from Dr, Ditzler ; but I want tho lkxu;on, and havu olForcd a reward for it. Ho spoku al)jut buying, begging, and borrowing lexicons. I have bought them, b(!cau8u I want to know what they Hay, atid I liave not been able to lind a single one that detioes haptizo to Hprinkle. 1 wroto to Dr. Conant, asking this ({ucstion. Does any respcictable lexicon define haptizo to sprinkle? Ho replied, "My dear Brother: No respectable lexicographer gives, or ever has given, " sprinkle " or •' besprinkle," as a definition of haptizo. I have all the ( Jreek lexicons of any name " This is the testimony of Dr. C'onant. Mr. Wilkinson introduced him into this debate, and eulogized him as a scholar and an honest man. [ have, many times, in public debate, in the presence of learned piedo-baptist ministers, called for the lexicon that defines haptizo to sprinkle. It has never been produced. 1 have offered one hundred dollars, and then five hundred dollars for such a book, but to this day it has not been found. Now Mr. Wilkinson says he will bring an extract. I want the book. I do not talk of bringing extracts. I have the books. In his last speech Mr. Wilkinbon read " extracts " from a little book, which he said were taken from Turretine, Owen, Whitby, Doddridge, Lightfoot, Vossius, Beza, and Casaubon, to show that haptizo means " to wash," and that this washing can be done by sprinkling. Well, it so happens that 1 have here quotations from nearly all these gentlemen. You shall hear them. Remember they are his own witnesses. Turretine says : " For as in baptism, when performed in the primi- tive manner, by immersion and emersion, descending into the water and again going out of it, of which descent and assent we have an ex- ample in the eunuch — Acts 8 : 38,39 — yea, and what is more, as by this rite, when persons are immersed in water they are overwhelmed, and, as it were, buried, and in a manner buried together with Christ ; and again they emerge, seem to be raised out of the grave, and are said to be ris -n again with Christ." Frey. on Bap. p. 126. Whitby says : "It being so expressly declared here (Rom 6 : 4, and Col. 2: 12) that we are buried with Christ in baptism by being buried under water ; and the argument to oblige us to a conformity to his death being taken hence, and this imniftrsion being religiously observed by all Christians for thirteen centuries, and approved by our ON THE MODK AND 8UIUKCTH Or FIAPTIHM. 48 Jhurch, and the chatiRo of it into 8prinklinj<, «von without any allow- \ce from the Autljor of this ijistitution, or any licenBo from any Council of the Church, being that which the RonianiHt still urges to justify his refuwil of the cup to the laity ; it were to bo wished that Ihis custom niiglit lie again of general use, and aspersion only permitted, ^8 of old, in cases of the clinici, or in present danger of death.' 7hithy's Com. oil New Tent., Horn. U : 4- Doddridge, in his Family Expositor, on Romans 6 : 4, says : ' Buried with him iri baptism. It seems to me the part of candor to )nfes8 that hero is an allusion to the manner of baptizing by Timersion." Vossius says " That the apostles immersed whom they baptized there in no doubt, and that the ancient Church followed their example U very clearly evinced by innumerable testimonies of the fathers.' JPrngilly, p. 75. Heza, Calvin's friend and associate, says: " Christ commanded us to bo baptized, by which word it is certain immersion is signified." rengiVy />. 7 J. Casaubon, in speaking of the outpouring of the Holy Spirit upon till' apostles, says: "To baptize is to immerse ; and in this sense the apostles are truly said to be baptized, for the house in which this was done was tilled with the Holy Ghost, so that the apostles seemed to je plunged into it as into a fish-pool." R, Fuller, p. 72. So testify Mr. Wilkinson's own witnesses. The extracts he read are very different indeed from these. When lese men deal with the meaning of the word, they testify as scholars; when they argue, they argue as theologians. In a court of law lie testimony of witnesses as to the facts is always important ; the )urt does not want to know what they think. When these men Sstify as to the facts, they say that the word means to immerse, that le apostles immersed, and that for nearly 1300 years immersion was ie almost universal practice of all Christians ; but when they give |leir opinions as theologians, some of them think affusion will do just well. Even father Wesley himself, in commenting, in his notes, Rom. 6 : 4, says, " Buried with him — alluding to the ancient inner of baptizing by immersion." Mr. Wilkinson, like others, thinks that the three thousand con- hrts on the day of Pentecost could hardly have been baptized by imersion, for there was not water at hand with which to immerse lem. I wonder if Mr. Wilkinson forgot about the pool of Bethesda, the Upper and Lower Gihon, of Siloam, of Solomon's pool, and 44 REPORT OF DEBATE the pool of Hezekiah, — why, there were fifteen acres of water in Jerusalem, which was one of the finest watered cities in the whole world, and certainly one of those pools, the pool of Bethesda, would afibrd sufficient water to baptize 3,000 people. Mr. Wilkinson talks about the jailer being baptized in the prison, and says he was not immersed in the prison. The jailer came out of the prison. Paul preached the Gospel in his house, and the jailer afterwards took them out of the house somewhere, Paul baptized then., and they were brought back again. Of course the jailer took them out. Read the account in the 16th chapter of Acts, where you will see that the jailer was taken out of the house. Why was he taken out of the house at midnight to be baptized 1 With respect to the purification of Christ, my friend Mr. Wilkinson is under the impression that John was down thc/e purifying people, or baptizing people as a symbol of purificat. that they were impure, and were baptized to be purified. The people came to John confessing their sins. Christ did not come to John confessing any sin, He did not come because He was impure. My opponent firmly and emphatically affirmed that John purified Christ according to the cere- monial law. But John was not purifying according to the Mosaic law, and if Christ was impure that was not the place for Him to come to be purified. John was not engaged in that work. I will show you how men were purified according to the Mosaic law, when they had become impure by touching a dead body. In Leviticus chapter 15, we read, " When any man hath a running issue out of his flesh, be- cause of his issue he is unclean. ** And this shall be his untl-^^anness in his issue ; v/hether his flesh run with his issue, or his flesh be stopped from his issue, it is his uncleanness. " Every bed whereon he lieth that hath the issue, is unclean ; and everythi.ig whereon he sitteth shall be unclean. " And whosoever toucheth his bed shall wash his clothes, and bathe himself in water, and be unclean until the even." All these are unclean, and if a man touch one he shall be unclean. In verse 13 it is said, "And when he that hath an issue is cleansed of his issue ; then he shall number to himself seven days for his cleansing, and wash his clothes, and bathe his flesh in running water, and shall be clean." We have the remedy in the 14th chapter of Leviticus for cleansing the leper : "Then shall the priest command to take for him that is to be ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 45 Dlieansed two birds alive and clean, and cedar wood and scarlet and iv'jsop. " And the priest shall command that one of the birds be killed in earthen vessel over running water ; " As for the living bird he shall take it and the cedar wood and the icarlet and the hyssop, and shall dip them and the living bird in the jlood of the bird that was killed over the running water ; And he shall sprinkle ;ipon him that is to be cleansed from the leprosy seven times, and shal' pronounce him clean, and shall let the living bird loose into the open field. " And he that is to be cleansed shall wash his clothes and shave off his hair, and wash himself in water, that he may be clean ; and ter that he shall come into the camp, and shall tarry abroad out of his tent seven days." John was not performing that ceremony. He was not sprinkling with any sort of mixture. He came to prepare a people for the Lord. The Pharisees came and asked. If you are not the Christ why are you baptizing 1 They did not understand it. It was a new thing. He was preparing the way of the Lord. I deny that John purified Christ in any sense whatever. He baptized Him, but he did not purify Him. I call attention to Heb. 9:10. My friend asked me what those " divers baptisms " were. Dr. McKnight, the well-known Presby- terian scholar, renders this verse thus : — " Only with meats and drinks, and divers immersions, and ordi- nances concerning the flesh, imposed until the time of reformation." A word with respect to those divers baptisms to which my friend eferred. Remembering that what we are saying will be printed, I ^ant to make a statement here that it may go into the book. Under the Jewish law there were at least eighteen bathings in water rithout any mixture of blood or ashes in it. Those eighteen different ^things, mentioned in eighteen different places, for different purposes, jkust have occurred many times, hundreds of thousands of times, every Bar. These will be found mentioned in the following places : Exod. 89:4; 40:12; Lev. 14:8, 9; 15:5; 15:16; 15:18; 16:4; 16:24; 16:26; 16:28; 17:15; 17:16; 22:6; Num. 19:7, 8, 4aid Deut. 23 : 11. These bathings are all expressed by the Greek )rd louo. This means to wash. There are three words in Greek Baning to wash, viz., louo, nipto, and pluno. The first means to ish the entire body ; the second, to wash the hands and feet, or part the body ; the third, to wash the clothes. Louo, as I have said, 46 REPORT OP DEBATK m means to wash the entire body. That word is used in regard to all bathings. In Heb. 10 : 22 it says, " Having our hearts sprinkled from an evil conscience, and our bodies washed with pure water." The word is louo. That act^is done by immersing, not by spi-inkling. The body is not washed by a little water poured on the head. The sprinkling applies to the heart. In regard to this passage (Heb. 9 : 10), my friend thinks the " divers baptisms " refer to the sprinklings of the law — that they were typical of baptism, or that baptism represents them. But not so ; the " divers baptisms " refer to these various bathings. In cleans- ing a man from any ceremonial defilement there was first a sprinkling of a mixture of water and blood, or water and the ashes of a red heifer, and then a bathing of the body in water. The sprinkling was typical of the sprinkling of the blood of Christ ; the bathing, of bap- tism ; hence Paul says (Heb. 10 : 22), " having o-. aearts sprinkled," "and our bodies washed with pure water." While I am talking about the " divers baptisms," I want to call attention to the sprinklings under the law. There are eight sprink- lings of blood ; of blood and oil, three ; of blood and water, two ; oil, three ; mixed water and oil, four; in all, twenty. The different sprinklings of the law are, as I have said, twenty in number ; the uathings are eighteen. In those sprinklings there are six only in which there is water, and the water is never unmixed. It is mixed with blood and with the ashes of a red heifer. God never commanded unmixed water to be sprinkled on anybody. [Time expired.] MR. WILKINSON'S THIRD REPLY. In regard to the "divers baptisms," mentioned in Heb. 9 : 10, I desire to call your attention to the manner in which my opponent has dealt with them. You will remember I warned you not to let him drag you away to some river. Those baptisms took place " in the tabernacle," which is not necessarily the case with one of the bathings to which he has referred, therefore he has been talking aside the mark. They were blood-sprinklings, as I showed, the only kind of purifications ever effected in the tabernacle. ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 47 He says God never commanded unmixed water to be sprinkled Ipon any one. No, under the old dispensation it was always mixed ; lut by the pro^^het Ezekiel, He says, speaking of the present dispen- fction, " Then will I sprinkle clean water upon you, and ye shall be lean ; from all your filthiness, and from ail your idols will I cleanse Jou," etc. But perhaps God did not say that ! Perhaps my opponent rill quote Dr. McKnight, or some one else to prove that He did |ot mean it. I do not know how he will get out of it, but I know he i in it. In regard to Wesley's testimony, my opponent says that in Rom. [: 3, 4 he sees a reference to immersion, and the same in regard to 3l. 2:12. I have an extract here which I made from Wesley on Heb. 10 : 22, in which he says there is a plain allusion to the mode of baptism by sprinkling. Yet my opponent wants you to believe that he and others believed immersion to have been the only ancient mode, yet fell back on sprinkling as an expedient of their own, it being more convenient, and arguing in support of their practice that they had a right to change the mode. I doubt, however, if my opponent can produce a single case where one of the writers from whom he quotes agrees that baptizo, in the New Testament sense, means to immerse, and then turns round and argues for sprinkling as the mode of bap- tism. They admit, as I do, that in its primary, classical sense, the word means immerse. They know and acknowledge, as I do, that from a very early period the usual mode of baptism was by immersion, but they invariably undertake to prove, as Wesley states in the extract vl have read, that baptisms in the New Testament were performed by prinkling and pouring. They then go on and argue how much better id more convenient and proper for all climes and nations and con- Itions this mode is than the superstitious mode (it was born and bred superstition), of dipping or immersing in water. A good deal has been said about the baptism of Christ. My oppo- ^nt has assumed, or begged the question, that the baptism of Christ IS by immersion, in order to prove that immersion was the meaning imported into the Scriptures from the classics. But that is the very «j|tiestion in dispute, and a man must not beg the question and base his teasonings on his own assumptions in order to prove his point. It is n0t evidence in the case until it is proved. Now, with respect to the l^ptisn^ of Chi-ist, in Matt. 3rd chapter, we have an account of it as "lows: — "Then cometh Jesus from Galilee to Jordan unto John, to baptized of him. But John forbad Him, saying, I have need to baptized of Thee, and comest Thou to me 1 And Jesus answering I 48 REPORT OF DEBATE said unto him, SuflTer it to be so now : for thus it beconaeth us to fulfil all righteousness; then he suffered Him." Now, I want to call your attention to Christ's own definition of this baptism. He called it a fulfilment of righteousness. "Thus," He says, (and it was His baptism He was talking about), " in this way it becometh us to fulfil all right- eousness." Then, let it be understood that it was a fulfilment of righteousness of some sort. What kind of righteousness was it f and how can righteousness be fulfilled 1 We obtain righteousness by faith. We fulfil it by obedience. When Christ preached the sermon on the Mount, recorded in the fifth, sixth, and seventh chapters of Matthew, He said, "Think not that I am come to destroy the law, or the prophets : I am not come to destroy, but to fulfil. For verily I say unto you. Till heaven and earth pass, one jot or one tittle shall in no wise pass from the law till all be fulfilled." Then Christ proposed to fulfil righteousness by obedience to law There is no getting back of that. If my opponent can jump this fence I will think he is pretty breachy. The baptism of Christ was the fulfilment of righteousness. To fulfil righteousness there must be obedience to law. Now, what law did He fulfil by His baptism 1 Was it the moral law, or ten co aand. ments 1 There is not a word in these about baptism. The mc al law does not deal with ceremonies, but baptism is a ceremony, — an outward rite. We must not look to the moral law, therefore, for a command to baptize. If any law was fulfilled, therefore, it must have been the cere- monial law, unless my opponent can find some other law under the obligations of which he existed, and to which he was obliged to render obedience. I know of no other law, however, except the moral and ceremonial, under which Christ lived, and the obligations of which he was bound to accept. And what part of the ceremonial law was fulfilled by Christ's baptism 1 Until my opponent can tell what it was, in vain will he endeavor to make it appear that it was not a purification. I affirmed it was a purification, and I repeat it. He cannot put his finger on anything in the ceremonial law which required Christ to be baptized, unless it was the induction of the priest into his office, and you will find by a reference to this that the very idea of the washing of the priests was for purification. And in reference to this, my opponent endeavored to make a point, by what I regret to characterize as an unworthy quibble. He tried to present me to you as having taught you that Christ was unclean from having touched a dead body. I taught nothing of the kind. That is a purely gratuitous inference and assumption on his part. I simply used that as an illustration. I said if Christ touched a dead body He would be unclean from the ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OP BAPTISM. 49 tact as much as you or I would. I did not say that He touched a d body or that He was a leper. What is the use, therefore, of ing all through the Old Testament to tell you how lepers and pie that touched dead bodies were cleansed'? What I was talking l^ut had no connection with such purifications. I was speaking about symbolizing moral purity, and that was what the priests' baptism at the door of the tabernacle meant. They had to be washed with water before they could officiate in the priestly office. My op- ponent tells you that Christ was not under the ceremonial law, and no doubt he will say that he was not in the priesthood of Aaron and Lpvi, but will he tell you by what law He was inducted into His office 1 He says His baptism was not a purification, but if we turn to John 1 : 31 we read where John the Biptist said, "That He should bf made manifest to Israel, therefore am I come, baptizing with water." How did John's baptism make Christ manifest to IsraeU ■f ''U turn to Mai. 3 : 1-3 and see just ho v it was. John is here CO ^ur Lord's messenger. " Behold I will send My messenger and shall prepare the way before Me ; and the Lord whom ye seek 1 suddenly come to His temple, even the messenger of the enant whom ye delight in ; behold He shall come, saith the Lord .3 imitiitions of a burial. The idea of converting a candidate for baptism into the figure of a corpse, and transforming an ordinance, intended to symbolize the regeneration of the soul by the action of the Holy Ghost, into a funeral scene, is absurd. Does such a representation convey to anyone's mind the idea of moral cleansing and regeneration 1 Nothing of the kind I tell you this burial business, applied to the outward rite of baptism, is a positive superstition. Neither Christ, nor Peter, nor John, nor any one of the apostles down through the early period of Christianity for twenty-five or thirty years, ever referred to such a thing as burial in connection with baptism. It is not in the records. And when Paul alluded to it it was in a spiritual sense. Do you want proof of this? Then turn to first Corinthians 12 : 13 (I presume the apostle understood his own meaning as well as Mr. Harding does), and you will read, " For by one Spirit we are all baptized into one body." If you turn to Galatians 3 : 27, 28, you may read, "For as many of you as have been baptized into Christ have put on Christ. There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither bond nor free, there is neither male nor female, for ye are all one man in Christ Jesus." Are we made one in Christ by being ducked in water 1 But my opponent ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 63 %ye the authoritiRS attirm that baptizo means to dip, or immerse. I Bpeat, I care not a straw for all the books he can pile on his table their interpretations do not agree with the Word of God, and this iterpretation does not. I prefer to manfacture my own creed out of ispired truth, but I will not pin my faith to any man's opinion. I nbinit to your intelligent, candid. Christian judgment whether I havf^ not made it plain that baptism by immersion is not referred to in these passages, and that baptism with water is intended merely to gynibolize spiritual truth, but not to dramatize literal events or occur- rences. Can it be possible that Christ instituted a solemn ordinance fan the Christian economy to commemorate an event which is of no more importance in its atoning or regenerating effect, than a little oil on your nose would be to cure the corns on your toes? (Laughter.) [Time expired.] Mr. Wilkinson — Can I offer a word of explanation, Mr. Chairman, •a to what I mean by that remark 1 Mr. Harding — No, no. Your time is up. Mr. Wilkinson (to the audience) — Then don't carry away a false Ivpression, for I will explain it again. (This closed the proceedings of the first day.) 6i REPORT or DEBATE SECOND DAY. MR. HARDING'S FOURTH SPEECH. Mr. Chairman, Ladies and Gentlemen, — After a refreshing night's sleep, and a quiet forenoon of rest, we come before you again to continue the discussion of this important matter. Bear in mind that I am here to affirm that Christian baptism is immersion — in it there must be a burial in water. Bear in mind, further, that Christian baptism is the baptism instituted by our Lord Jesus Christ, and was first given to the world in the great conmiission given by our Lord to His holy apostles. In that commission the duty of baptism is expressed, as we have had occasion to say, by the Greek word baptize. The real object of this meeting is, therefore, to bring out the meaning of that word in that document, for it is agreed by all that that docu ment, known as the great commission, is the authority for baptism, and the only authority which man has. Jesus used this word. By His Holy Spirit He gave this word to His apostles. His apostles wrote it in the Book ; and we thus have this word coming from our Lord, through the Holy Spirit and through the apostles. What does the word mean 1 We have been considering this matter j we will continue to consider it. I have told you frankly and fairly that the meaning of the word is to immerse. I do not mean that immersion alone is Christian baptism, but simply that the word baptizo, wherever you find it used in regard to Christian baptism, or anywhere else, means to immerse. Christian baptism is immersion by the authority of Christ, and into the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost. But baptizo means to immerse, and I have referred you to authorities to prove mv statement. Bear in mind that I produced eight Greek lexicons, all Greek-English but one, and that is Greek-Latin, and every one defines the word to immerse, dip, plunge. Not one of them defines it to sprinkle or pour. I claim that it was a proper thing for me to g' to the dictionaries, and see how they define the word, and I have done so. It is agreed by Mr. Wilkinson that the word in the classics means to immerse. He says 1 might have saved myself the trouble of producing lexicons and books to prove that it means immerse in I ON THE MODB AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 5!i L_.. ..„.„„__..,... ^^^d that it does not mean to pour upon, and that it cannot in any j^^Bge be ao defined. Indeed he has never yet agreed that the word ^^Beaiis anything hut inunerse. Do you reinoinher that I called upon him to answer this (juestion 1 Tell us what baplizo means in the «Oiii mission. He and I Hgree that a word in one place can have but on«' meaning. What is the meaning of baptizo in the commission 1 I told you he would not give you the meaning. We do not want to know what it symbolizes or represents. We want to know what the word means. Christ told the apostles to do something. " Go disciple the nations, baptizing them." Do something — baptize them. What does il mean ? He says it does not mean to purify or cleanse, but that it dmiflnbolizes that. He admits that in classic Greek it means to ioimerse, but he will not agree that it means anything else. I told you he would not answer that question in his last speech, and he (Hd not, I prophecy that he will not answer it in his next speech, or in any speech. Mr. Wilkinson — Of course not. Mr. Harding — I knew you were a coward and dare not do it, but you persist in interrupting me. Mr. Wilkinson — I deny the charge. Mr. Harding appealed to the Chairman to be protected from such interruptions. The Chairman mentioned that moderators were appointed to regulate the debate. Mr. Harding — He interrupted me. Mr. Wilkinson — In the absence of my moderator [who had not yet arrived] I claim the right to speak for myself. I simply appeal to the audience, through the Chairman, as to whether I have inter- fOpted Mr. Harding in his speech. , Mr. Harding — You spoke up to me. [Addressing the audience.! He is not going to answer that question, because he dare not do it. tufiW tell you the meaning of the word, because I know it. What C^s Christ tell His apostles to do ? To baptize. My opponent does net say what it means. When you ask me the meaning of any word I ip using I will give it you as far as I know it. If I don't know it I l^ill tell you so. My opponent agrees that in the classics it means tOft-immerse. No wonder he agrees to that. JDr. Moses Stuart, professor of sacred literature in Andover Theo- li^cal Seminary, one of the most learned and distinguished Presby- IjiftiHans America ever produced, says in his work on Baptism 06 REPORT or DKBATR (Naahvillo edition), " liapto and baptizo mean to dip, plunge, or imnierge into anything liquid. All loxicographora and critics of any note aro agreed in this." Page ftl. He gives nmny examples illuHtru tive of the use of these words, and then says {page 70), "A review of the preceding examples must lead any one, I think, to the conclusion that the predominant usage of the words bnpto and haptizo is to designate the idea of dipping, plunging, or overwhelming, and (in thi- case of bapto) of tinging and dyeing." I next read from the great Pasor, Bapto and haptizo. " To dip, to immerse, to dye, because it is done by immersing. It differs from dunai, which means to sink to the bottom, and to be thoroughly kuI) merged. Afflictions are compared to a flood of waters in which they seem to be immersed who are overwhelmed with the misfortunes and miseries of life ; yet only so overwhelmed as to emerge again." Donnegan says : " To immerse repeatedly into a liquid ; to sub merge ; to soak thoroughly ; to saturate, hence, to drench with wine. Metaphorically, to confound totally ; to dip in a vessel and draw." Mr. Wilkinson read from what appeared to me to be a scrap book, composed of matter written with his own hand. Mr. Wilkinson — It is not written. (Hands book to Mr. Harding.) Mr. Harding — Is that your sermon 1 He was reading from his own sermon if I am not very much mistaken. I see it was a sermon on the subject of baptism by Rev. Henry Morris. He was quoting from a book of sermons by some member of the Reformed Diitcli Church, of Unionville, N. Y. State. He was quoting from sermons preached by a pwdo-baptist preacher to prove that the meaning of baptizo is not to immerse. I have here a " Manual on Baptism," by G. S. Bailey, President of Shnrtlefi' College. His quotations were verified by the Book Com mittee of the Publication Society. The following quotations are f i ;ii this work. Bishop Smith, Bishop of the Protestant Episcopal Church of Kon tucky, says : " We have only to go back six or eight hundred years, and immersion was the only mode, except in the case of the few bap- tized on their beds when death was near. And with regard to such cases, it disqualified its recipient for holy orders in case he recovered. Immersion was not only universal six or eight hundred years ago, but it was primitive and apostolic, no case of baptism standing on record by any other mode for the first three hundred years, except the few cases of those baptized clinically, that is, lying in bed. If any one practice of the early Church is clearly established, it is immersion."— Bliss' Letter on Baptism, p. 24- ■' ON TIIK MODR AKD HUnJKfmi OF BAPTISM. 57 I prowKl to notion somo rorimrkH nffvr*'A hy Mr. Wilkinson in hi« It nixlit's 8p««'eh. Hn Haid it was p«rf«'ctly ritliculoui to gupposo bhat the Imrial n-fened to in KoniaiiH, HJxth chapttT, wan a hurial in mter. In liiH Hp»'t'(h at Knplirasia Ih> Kai«l tliat anybody was a fool fho »i«'lifV(id that. In IiIh Hpfunh Ihto, in tht! Pn-Hliytcrian Church, ^hen I callfld attention to tli«i fact that his Father We8l«>y gave that iterpretrttion, ho went on to explain that VVcHJi'y in that particular jint was foolish in xiving such an interpretation, and if Mr. Wesley rere living to-day, with the light that we now have, he would not so iterpret it. A tjreater than Father Wesley is living to-day, that is Dr. Philip shair, the greatest church historian now living on earth. In his lition of Lange's Commentary on Romans, page 202, he says : " All )mmentator8 of note (excejjt Stuart and Hodge) expressly admit or ike it for granted that in this verse, especially in aunetapheemen and teyerthtff, [the Imrial and resurrection], the ancient prevailing mode of baptism by immersion and enjersion is implied, as giving additional force to the idea of the going down of the old and the rising up of the new man," Conybeare and Howson, "Life and Epistles of St. Paul," Vol I., p. 4.39, say : " Baptism was immersion, the convert being plunged beneath the surface of the water to represent his death to sin, and then raised from this momentary burial to represent his resurrection to a life of righteousness." Also on Rom. 6: 4, "This pabaage cannot be understood unless it is borne in mind that the primitive baptism was by immersion." Maeknight, a distinguished Moderator of the Presbyterian General Assembly of Scotland, says: " In baptism, tht baptized person is buried under water, hs one put to death with Christ, and on account of sin, o: in order that they may be strongly impressed with a sense of the malignity of sin, and excited to hate it as the greatest of evils." C/ommenting on Rom. 6 : 4, he says: " Christ submitted to be baptized, i that is to be buried under water by John, and to be raised out of it ^ llgain, as an emblem of his future death and resurrection. In like f, jjjanner, the baptism of believers is emblematical of their own death, burial, and resurrection." - John Wesley, the founder of Methodism, in his Notes on Romans 4i : 4 says : " Buried with Him — alluding to the ancient manner of _Jh|aptizing by immersion." These authorities I have quoted for convenience from Bailey, 08 REPORT OF DEBATE though I have the original works here, and can turn to them if it is necessary. George Whitfield says: "It is certain that in the words of our text (Rom. 6 : 4) there is an allusion to the manner of baptizing, which was by immersion." Dr. Wall (who wrote the History of Infant Baptism to which we have already referred, and whose work is the standard authority on that subject, although it was written 180 years ago), says : "St. Paul does twice, in an allusive way of speaking, call baptism a burial." Archbishop Tillotson, of the Church of England, says: " Anciently those who were baptized were immersed and buried in the water to represent their death to sin, and then raised up out of the water to signify their entrance upon a new life ; and to these customs the apostle alludes in Rom. 6:4.". The Edinburgh Reviewers, psedo- baptists, Sfi,y : " We have rarely met, for example, a more weak and fanciful piece of reasoning than that by which Mr. Ewing would persuade us that there is no allusion to the mode by immersion in the expression, * buried with Him in bap- tism.' This point ought to be frankly admitted, and, indeed, cannot be denied with any show of reason." ' I will now call attention to the reason given by Mr. Wilkinson for refusing to believe that the apostle Paul referred to immersion — to a burial in water — ^in Rom. 6 : 4, his reason for ridiculing as fools all who so interpret it. He inquires, " Did you ever see a man buried who trotted out to his own grave ] " This is his great reason for differing from all the scholars of the world (except two), for calling all the commentators and critics (except Stuart and Hodge), of all ages and nations, fools. Did he never hear of any one's being buried '•V alive 1 It does not matter whether one is dead or alive, you can '^ bury him. Suppose we weigh Mr. Wilkinson ; imagine a great pair '♦ of balances with him upon one end, and Schaff, Wesley, the Edinburgh 4 Reviewers, McKnight, Conybeare and Howson, Whitfield, Wall, ; Archbishop Tillotson, with all the scholars of all the ages, upon the ';■ other end : why, the one end would go down, and the other up, with .'i; such vim that my friend here would go right up through the roof. But Mr. Wilkinson says he does not care for the schclarn. He does not care what they say. I, Mr. Wilkinson, tell you it will never do to bury a man alive. In heathen lands it is a common ^hing to bury live men with the dead — to bury servants with their dead masterr He should know that when a man believes in Jesus he dies to sin ; and he ought to know that when a man comes up from the ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 59 ater of baptism he does so to begin a new life, and is called a new- rn babe in Christ. In this very chapter (Rom. 6), in the second verse, the apostle presents the Romans as dead to sin, and then in the fourth, as being luried and raised to walk in newness of life. We have in the passage death, burial and resurrection. He may talk till his head is gray, and may act as a jumping-jack much as he pleases. He reminds me of a jack-on-a-pole that you ork with a string. He is better at it than any man I ever saw. He as cut out for a clown, and he reminds me all the time of the Dar- winian principle of evolution, of raising a man from a monkey. Rev. Mr. Hunt — Mr. Chairman, I protest against such' language. It is not such as a gentleman would use in a public assembly. Any , gentleman would at once take it back. Mr. Harding — I call attention to the fact that the gentleman talked about my bellowing and shouting and clapping my fists. He talked about jumping-jacks, and I am just applying that where it properly belongs. I am here to keep up my side, and by the grace of God I will do it by every means that is fair and right, and I will not be intimidated by any body of preachers on the rostrum, or by any dy of people in the audience. Rev. Mr. Hunt — I call attention to the fact that this gentleman oke of Mr. Wilkinson as not being fit for a clown, if I understood liui correctly. Such an expression should not be used. Mr. Harding — Perhaps I should not have expressed my senti- ents. Rev. Mr. Hunt — No gentleman will express such sentiments. Mr. Harding — You may say what you please about it. I have _used no such expressions as have been used on the other side. I have t called the whole of the scholars fools. Mr. WILKINSON — Did I do that in this debate ? Mr. Harding — You did it in a public speech. Mr. Wilkinson — Was I debating with you then 1 Mr. Sterling (Mr. Harding's moderator) — You intimated that he was a jumping-jack. Mr. Wilkinson — I was not referring to Mr. Harding at all, but I Was referring to the persons in the water whom Mr. Harding tried to |(rove got out of a baptized state alive, who put their heads out of the *ater, and when shot at put them under again. 1 referred to them jumping-jacks, not to him at all. Mr. Harding — I will be more careful how I express my senti- 5 60 REPORT OF DEBATE ments, and proceed with my speech. I was very forcibly reminded when Mr. Wilkinson was speaking of a story I heard concerning an old lawyer giving advice to a young one. He said, " Young man, when you go before a jury, if the law is in your favor and the testi- mony against you, come out strong on the law ; if the testimony is in your favor and the law against you, be very strong on the testimony." Said the young man, " And suppose both the law and the testimony are against me?" "Then," replied the senior, "talk round." If Mr. Wilkinson is not talking round, I do not understand what he is doing. He called on a boy to answer a question, and the boy said, " I don't know." The boy, like the rest of the people, did not know what he was trying to prove. He was talking round and raising a dust. He now tells you that he does not intend to tell you what the word bap- tizo means. Of course he will not do it, although it is the very word in debate. One of tne very first rules in debating is that the words found in the proposition are to be interpreted and explained, so that there shall be no mistake. I explained them to the best of my ability, but he says he will not attempt to do so. I pass on to another point, Christ's induction into His office as priest by John's baptism. (Time expired.) MR. WILKINSON'S FOURTH REPLY. The old lawyer's story is very appropriate at the present tune. But if I had told it, and told it as it is usually told, it would have been quite as appropriate, viz., " When you have no case abuse the plaintiff's attorney." 1 very much regret that my opponent has become so exasperated. I never saw a man in such a sweat as he was in last night, except the same man to-day. A man always gets exasperated when he is getting the worst of it in a contest. The whale is a comparatively harmless animal, I am told, until you har- poon him, and then he can make the water fly tremendously. I am afraid the harpoon has struck in some part which is pretty tender. I never saw a whale flounder so in my life. There is a part of the whale which they call blubber. I do not know whether there is any of that about my opponent or not. He seems to depend excessively upon those books. Now, if I had known the merits of this debate were to depend on reading extracts from books, why I weald have ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 61 lered a special train and have brought a car-load along, for we know that we can produce ten testimonies to their one, among scholars, if it OOmes to that. I have read many leading works on this subject, and know that I could take up your time for hours in reading authorities. I did not, however, come here to weary your patience or tax your attention by reading largely from books, and I would not have read half, nor a quarter of what I have read, only that I deemed it desirable to show you that there are two sides to this question. But, thank God, I did not have to bring my brains to Meaford in a trunk, and pile them np on my table for the congregation to look at. Do you see those brains, friends 1 [pointing to Mr. Harding's pile of books.] Perhaps it would be interesting for you to know what those brains are made of. Well, I can tell you. They are made of basswood, a little straw and a sprinkling of printer's ink ; and if the merits of this discussion are to depend on the amount of such brains that we can pile on our stand and read to the people, then I did not understand the matter. I did not know this when I came here or I would have been better prepared. And even now I had better send down to Mr. Briggs to send me up the Book Room, for it is full of books on my side of this question. I toll you I could have given you books by the score if I had been disposed to load myself down with such trash. But we might stand here from now to eternity reading extracts from books, and settle nothing in the end. This man comes here to affirm that Christian bapti&m is immersion ; not what classic baptism is. Yet he has spent most of his time telling us what classic baptism is, and he has not (Ume that according to the primary sense of the term, for in this sense it means to put anything in water and drown it, if a human being or live animal, and if any other object, to put it under water and leave fit there. He dare ot baptize a candidate in that fashion. T challenge him to perform a single classic baptism if he da^ 1 will not turn and shake my fists in his face, and smite them together, like a rowdy (ttfUx the riff-raff of Kentucky. My opponent does not retract his oHlnsive statement that I was a coward, a clown, a rowdy and a jil|i(»ping-jack, although my moderator called attention to the fact that it'yas ungentlemanly. He only added insult to injury by saying, satiiastically, that he would be a little more careful how he expressed his sentiments. If this debate is to degenerate into a war of this kind we had better close it with this session. I did not come here to .il^e this man, or any other man. I did not come here to tell you the word baftizo means. He says I will not do it, and there is 3od reason. I did not assume the responsibility of doing it. lie 62 REPORT OF DEBATE did. I came here to negative what he affirms. I did not come here to affirm anything about the meaning of the word, but simply to bring rebutting testimony against his abominable theory that Christian baptism is immersion- —a theory which in practice will everlastingly result in drowning unless an accident happens to deliver t!ie poor victim from his fate. I stand here as a representative of Christianity to tell you that Christian baptism never means immersion, and that our Lord never used baptizo in the primary classic sense, for my opponent cannot produce a single classic Greek writer giving an instance of baptism according to the original, primary or classic sense that did not result in drowning. That ought to settle as much as a whole wheelbarrow full of books. Until he can find that instance, let him keep quiet about his books. I told you that if I could produce from the Bible one case of baptism not administered by immersion his whole fabric came to the ground. I t^irf produce it. It is in Hebrews 9:10. I told you he could not meet it. He has not done so. He cannot do so. I called the attention of Bishop Carman to this passage as I explained it last night. He went to the Bible and examined it in my presence, and said, " You are right." It had never struck the Bishop's attention, until I pointed it out to him, that the " divers washings" were effected by means of sacrifices. Those sacrifices involved the slaying of the victim, and the sprinkling of the blood upon the individual to cleanse him from ceremonial defilement. That was baptism according to Paul. Now, I maintain that until he has broken down that testimony his case is gone, and he knows it, and hence this bullying business. But he has treed the wrong coon this time. He woke up the wrong passenger when he challenged me with such defiance, in the little church south of here, a few months ago. I did not come here to be trampled underfoot by any great big — I will not say rowdy — but by any living man from Kentucky or anywhere else. I presume he thought Canadians were only about half civilized and but very partially enlightened, and he could come up here and corruscate with the magnificence of his immortal genius, and we would just open our mouths like young robins and swallow down any- thing he put in them. But he came to the wrong part of the earth, and found the wrong man. I would not have made these remarks only for the treatment I received at his hands during the last speech, If he expects this kind of thing is to settle the question — if he expects the debate to turn on this, let him keep right on, and he will find I have a tongue as long as his and that, though I don't want to brag, as he is in the habit of doing, and although I have not as much brains ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 63 -■,-^/^ on the stand, I have quit« as much in my cranium. I want him to take his hearing and point his compass in the riglit direction, and see if he oan steer the shattered hulk of baptism by immersion into harbor. In my opinion, it is a water-soaked old craft ; it has been scuttled again •nd again from stem to stern ; there is not a timber in it that has not been splintered from end to end ; it has been riddled through and through like a sieve until it will no longer hold water, and if he thinks there is anything in it worth mending, for God's sake let him run it into a dry-dock for repairs. I can follow him up on this line if it is the way to settle this question. I simply appeal now to Csesar. Last night he was so harpooned and driven into a corner, and filled with despair, that he would not allow me to add five or six words to com- plete a sentence, so that you might understand what was in ray mouth when I had to quit. He is very exact as to time. At every little interruption he says to you, Mr. Chairman, " Mark my time. Don't let me lose a minute." He will need every minute before the debate is over, and I will be able to give him an hour to my half hour. Already he is giving you little but watery hash. " I am not mad, most noble Festus, but speak the words of truth and soberness." And now, with regard to the statement I made last night, I say it would be a strange thing — and it would be extraordinary if scholars nfdd anything different — that Christ would institute a sacred rite or ■icrament in the Christian Church to keep in memory an event which, SO far as the efficacy of the atonement is concerned, was of no conse ^ttence whatever. I refer to the mere fact that Christ was buried. So long as He died and came to life again, that was all that was essential to the efficacy of the atonement. If He had been laid on a shelf for three days instead of being entombed, it would not have de- tracted one iota from the merits of His atoning work, so lont* as He gave life to the world by His death and rose again from the dead as a triumph over death and hell, and ascended to the right hand of God. Yet, forsooth, we have to put every candidate for Christian baptism il|#) water to symbolize Christ's burial, they say. We have to do thii, observe, to represent the insignificant fact that after Chri.st died He? was put into a grave. I have as much confidence in the death of CS|Hst and the effects of His death and resurrection as any one, but <*«; mere fact of His being put into a grave after He was crucified not matter a straw. Yet we are to keep it in everlasting re- ibrance by a Christian ordinance ! My opponent challenges me to define baptizo. I appeal to all who Sre here yesterday afternoon if I did not define this word as I under- 64 REPORT OF DEBATE Stand it. I told you then that baptism was a religious purification, out- wardly symbolizing the inward purity of the heart ; and that in what- ever way the inward purification was produced, in that way the out- ward operation ought to be performed. I told you, moreover, that the blood of sprinkling on our hearts was a baptism, the inner bap- tism ; and those very fathers that he says were all immersionists— and I can produce their names one after another — will tell you the same thing, viz., that the sprinkling of the blood of Christ was a bap- tism, and that water baptism is the symbol of it. Yet my opponent says we have to dip people in order to represent the sprinkling of blood. Would you imagine it had any relation to the sprinkling of Christ's blood when you see one man dip another in water ? I should like to ask if the baptisms performed by the Spirit were by immersion. My opponent will perhaps tell you they were immersed by the Spirit on the day of Pentecost, but it is all in his eye. If it was any part of my present purpose, I could give him one or two more examples to chew, but I do not want to expose him too much at once. I am a little like the darkey boy who said to his master, " Massa, one of your oxen's dead. T'other one's dead too, but I thought I wouldn't tell you bof at once for fear you couldn't bore it." 1 find a very little in- toxicates my opponent and turns his head, and I am afraid he will strike me if I give him too much at once. He has smacked his lists together in my face several times, and yesterday I had to move back in order to get out of the reach of his arms, and to-day I had to get behind the partition. [ never saw a Christian minister who could smite his fists together in such a manner, and especially in the face of another person I could never have thought that a man could have become so proficient at this unless he had had a little practice as a bu'i^ ' the prize ring. I do not think he is a prize fighter, but he Avas made for that, and as he has not turned his abilities into that channel, I presume he has mistaken his calling. He still wants to know the meaning of the word baptizo. I have said that it did not mean to sprinkle, or pour, though I gave a passing hint that I could produce a lexicon that gave such a meaning. For the present it will remain a simple question of veracity whether I can or not. 1 don't propose to be bullied into it until I get ready. The lexicons give so many different meanings that no man can fix on any one meaning and say that that is the sense in which Christ used the word in the commission. If it is a question of scholarship, quoting one scholar against another, I can produce as many scholars as he can to prove my position. But I prefer to depend on the brains God has ON THE MOP" AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 65 an me, and not on otuer people's brains. I did not come here to ^dicate my cause by authorities. But when my opponent challenges im to produce a single standard lexicon giving to pour or sprinkle, he knows very well that Liddell and Scott is the only Greek-English one •xtant, and that all the others give their definitions either in Greek 01? Latin, or some other language. Therefore we do not find the Eng- luh words pour or sprinkle in their definitions. But if my opponent Mys I cannot find the equivalent of sprinkle in any of the lexicons, I will uidertake to accommodate him. We will take the word given by the lexicographers in Latin and interpret it with a Latin-Englit-h dictionary, and we can settle the question before we go home whether th« Latin word means sprinkle or not. If he accepts my offer, we will test the question. He said .ast night that the New Testament ywi written in Greek. It is very strange if Christ spoke in some other tongue — and I understood my opponent to admit He did — that iho apostles wrote in Greek. And no>v I wane to give him another little matter to put in his pipe and smoke until he speaks again. I want to give him a passage of Scripture in which a baptism is spoken of, and I want him to tell you whether the word haptizo is used in the sense in which he inter- prets it, or whether there is any immersion in the case. I refer to tke baptism of the three million Israelites in the Red Sea. The pas- sage is in 1 Cor. 10: 1, 2. It reads, "Moreover, brethren, I would not tlbtl^t you should be ignorant, how that all our fathers were under the ok>nd, and all passed through the sea, and were all baptized unto Koses in the cloud and in the sea." My opponent may say that that isiV>t a Christian baptism ; but this will not help his cause, because i1» if used by an inspired apostle who knew what Christian baptism WIM^ and he calls it a baptism. The Israelites came to the borders of tfcwiiea, and the Egyptians were in pursuit. The cloud had hitherto god. Hence he baptized the people, and hence Jesus was baptized. As He came up from the water, the heavens were opened, the Spirit of God descended upon Him, and the voice of God said, " This is my beloved Son in whom [ am well pleased." Then John knew Him as the Lamb of God that takes away the sin of the world. Christ was never made a priest after the Mosaic law. John was not there making priests after that law. He was baptizing hundreds of thousands of people. He did not make Christ a priest, because he was not made a priest according to the law of a carnal commandment. I quote from Hcb. 7: 11-17, "If, therefore, perfection were by the Levitical priesthood, (for under it the people received the law), what further need was there that another priest should rise after the order of Melchisedec, and not be called after the order of Aaron ? For the priesthood being changed, there is made, of necessity, a change also of the law. For He of whom these things are spoken pertaineth to another tribe, of whom no man gave attendance at the altar. For it is evident that our Lord sprang out of Juda ; of which tribe Moses spake nothing concerning priesthood. And it is yet far more evident : for that after the similitude of Mel- chisedec there ariseth another priest, who is made, not after the law of a carnal commandment, but after the power of an endless life. For he testifieth. Thou art a priest forever after the order of Melchi- sedec." ' It is absurd to speak of Jesus being made a priest according to the Mosaic ritual— first, because He was not of the right tribe, and secondly, because He was not made a priest "after the law of a carnal commandment, but after the power of an endless life." I am reminded of another point which I wish to bring before you. Mr. Wilkinson, in one of his speeches — I think it was his last — repre- resented that Christ was placed on a shelf in a stone sepulchre. He was talking about the " burial," in the sixth of Romans. In his last speech he spoke about Christ's burial as of no consequence. I want to read in your hearing 1 Corinthians 15 : 1-4, " Moreover, brethren, I declare unto you the gospel which I preached unto you, which also ye have received, and wherein ye stand ; ON TIIK MODK AND HUIUKCTH OK HAPTIHM. i 1 " By whioh alsoyo are savod if yo koop in nmmory what I preached unto you, unlt'HS ye iiave helicvcd in vain. '' For I d(«livor<>d unto you tlrst of ail that which I aUo rocoivud, how that Christ died for our Bins according to tho scriptures ; "And that llo was hurit'd, and that He rose again tho third day at'conling to tho scripturos." Piiul calls tho doath, burial, and resurrection of Johus the (iospol, luiil l»y it ho says thos«! Corinthians wore saved, if they kept it in tlu'ir nicniories. Ho preached the death, buriol and resurrection of (Christ our Lord ; but Mr. Wilkinson says Jesus was put upon a shelf, and that the burial was of little consequence. Christ Himself tfistitios that, " As Jonas was throe days and three ni;(lits in the whalci's belly, so shall the Son of man be three days and three nights in tho heart of tho earth." Put upon a shelf, indeed ! I have Mr. Wilkinson standing against the scholars of the world with respect to Rom. 6 : 4, calling them III! fools; and now he takes position against Christ Himself. Mr. Wilkinson says, "on a shelf;" Christ says, "three days and three ui;j;hts in tho heart of the earth." Mr. Wilkinson says that Christ's l)urial is a matter of no consequence ; Christ, through His apostle, calls the death, burial and resurrection of Himself the Gospel, and toadies that we are saved hy it. Yet my opponent talks about my being exasperated. Who would be exasperated by such an argu- ment as that ? Now I come to the baptism of the Israelites. Paul says, " More- over, brethren, I would not that ye should be ignorant, how that all our fathers were under the cloud and all passed through the sea ; and were all baptized unto Moses in the cloud and in the sea." Jt is not I who say they were " under the cloud." It is the apostle Paul who says they were "under the cloud," and "were baptized unto Moses in the cloud and in the sea." It took both the cloud and the sea to make the baptism. My opponent wants to know what the baptism was. The Israelites passed through in a single night, as you will find on reading Exod. 14. The Egyptians were rushing upon them, and by command of God the waters parted and the Israelites passed through the sea, 600.000 men. It must have been a pretty wide passage. It must have been from five to eight miles wide. The waters were piled up right and left ; the Scriptures say they were congealed ; and down into that passage they went. The cloud came back oVer them as they went down, and remained between them and the Egyptians all night. They passed down into 72 REPORT OF DEBATE that great passage-way into the sea, and the cloud was behind them and between them and tlieir enemies. About a year ago I travelled on the Western and Atlantic Railway from Chattanooga to Atlanta. I passed around a mountain on the way. Its top was com- pletely covered by a cloud. I could see the cloud come down the mountain side ; the sun was probably shining on the mountain above the cloud. A man might have started above the cloud, have come down, and through, and imder the cloud, and the cloud would then have been behind him, and over him, at the same time. The cloud came back over the Israelites, and was behind them, and between them and their enemies all night; and Paul says they were under the cloud, and passed through the sea. Whitby says, " They were covered by the sea on both sides, (Exod. 14 ; 22), so that both the cloud and the sea had some resemblance to our being covered with water in baptism. Their going into the sea resembled the ancient rite of going into the water ; and their coming out of it, their rising up out of the water." — Pengilly, p. 50. No less a scholar than Dr. Philip SchafF, in his Church Histo y, bases one of his arguments in favor of immersion on that veiy passage. Why? Because there was a buria', they being covered by the cloud and sea. But that is not Christian baptism. It occurred hundreds of years before Christian baptism was instituted. It was a burial and overwhelming, but not a Christian baptism. Christian baptism is not found until we come to the New Testament ; it was instituted by Christ. Christian baptism is not in the cloud and in the sea, but in water. I turn to Ezekiel and read the passage referred to by my opponent to make a showing for sprinkling or pouring. He cannot find his proof in the New Testament, so he goes back to Ezekiel. " Then will I sprinkle clean water upon you T,nd ye shall bo clean ; from all your filthin^ss and from all your idol:-, I will cleanse you." You remember that I affirmed that unmixed water was never sprinkled by the authority of God upon anyone. Mr. Wilkinson agr»^o,s with me so far as the old dispensation is concerned, but he quoic-. this passage from Ezekiel to show that the Lord here pro- phesies that he will sprinkle clean water (which Mr. W. assumes is unmixed water) under the new dispensation. Ezekiel was talking about the Jews V)eing brought back to theii native land and cleansed according to tho ceremonial law from their defilements. [At this point a gentleman in the audience groaned and shook liis head, by way or dissenting from the speaker.] Do you, sir, think I ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 73 am mistaken in saying this prophecy related to the restoration of the Jews to their native land, and that it does not apply to the new- dispensation at all 1 Let us read the context and see. I read Ezekiel 36:16-25: " Moreover, the word of the Lord came unto me, saying, " Son of man, when the house of Israel dwelt in their own land, tliey defiled it by their own way, and by their doings : their way was before Me as the uncleanness of a removed woman. " Wherefore I poured My fury upon them for the blood that they had shed upon the land, and for their idols wherewith they had polluted it : "And I scattered them among the heathen, and they were dispersed through the countries : according to their way and according to their doings I judged them, " And when they entered unto the heathen, whither they went, they profaned My holy name, when they said to them, These are the people of the Lord, and are gone forth out of His land. " But I had pity for Mine holy name, which the house of Israel had profaned among the heathen, whither they went. "Thf .'efore say unto the house of Israel, Thus saith the Lord God ; I do not this for your sakes, house of Israel, but for Mine holy name's sake, which ye have profaned among the heathen, whither ye went. " And I will sanctify My great name, which was profaned among the heathen, which ye have profaned in the midst of them ; and the heathen shall know tha I am the Lord, saith the Lord God, when I shall be sanctified in you before their eyes. " For I will take you from pmong the heathen, and gather you out of all countries, and will bring you into your own land. "Then will I sprinkle clean water upon you, and ye shall be clean : irom all your filthiness, and from all your idols will I cleanse you." My friend groaned too soon. I said God was talking aoout bringing tlie Israelites back to their own land ; and any man wit', three grains of common sense, if he will read the passage, can seo it for himself. Farther down, talking about them after they had been brought back to their native land. He says : " And ye shall dwell in the land that I gave to your fathers ; and ye shall be My people, and I will be yoiir God." Stil! farther down He says, "And the desolate land shall be tilled, whereas it lay desolate in the sight of all that passed by. " And they shall say. This land that is desolate is become like the 74 REPORT OF DEBATK garden of Eden ; and the waste and desolate and ruined cities are become fenced and inhabited." Now in regard to the passage, " Then will I sprinkle clean water upon you," this is the explanation. The blood of Christ cleanses from all sin ; but the blood of bulls and of goats, of the lamb and of the red heifer, was typical of the blood of Christ ; and the ceremonial cleansings of Judaism were typical of cleansing from sin under the new covenant. Blood is applied by sprinkling ; water never is, in the Bible. But blood, when it stands, coagulates ; it cannot then be sprinkled. As there were thousands and tens of thousands of cases of uncleanness every year to be purified by the sprinkling of blood, and as this would have required the slaughter of too many animals, God directed as follows : (Numbers 19.) "This is the ordinance of the law which God has commanded, say- ing. Speak unto the children of Israel that they bring them a red heifer without spot, wherein is no bleirish, and upon which never came yoke." This heifer was to be burned, ''and a man that is clean shall gather up the ashes of the heifer, and lay them up, without the camp, in a clean place ; and it shall be kept for the congregation of the children of Israel for a water of separation. It is a purification for sin " Let me read a little further. He goes on to tell about persons who have become unclean by touching a dead body. " And for an unclean person they shall take of the ashes of the burnt heifer of purification for sin, and running water shall be put thereto in a vessel; "And a clean person shall take hyssop, and dip it in the water and sprinkle it on the tent, and upon all the vessels, and upon the persons- that were there, and upon him that toucheth the bone, or one slain, or one dead, or a grave : ' And the clean person shall sprinkle upon the unclean on the "id day, and on the seventh day ; and on the seventh day he shall pu. fy himself, and wash his clothes, and bathe himself in water, and shall be clean at even. "But the man that shall be unclean, and shall not purify himself, that soul shall be cut off from among the congregation, because he hath defiled the sanctuary of the Lord ; the water of separation hath not been sprinkled upon him ; he is unclean." That will enable you to understand the passage in Hebrews 10 : 22, which my friend cannot understand from his standpoint, where Paul says, " Let us draw near with true hearts, in full assurance of faitli, having our hearts sprinkled from an evil conscience, and our bodies washed with pure >v'ater." ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 75 The hearts were sprinkled from an evil conscience by the blood of Jesus ; this was typified by the sprinkling of the " water of separa- tion," or " purification for sin : " their bodies were washed in the waters of baptism ; this was typified by the bathing of the body in water, which always followed the sprinkling of the water of separa- tion. This water of separation made of ashes of a red heifer mixed with water, was a lye that stood for blood. That the water of separa- tion (ashes mixed with water) typified the blood of Christ is evident from these verses (Heb. 9 : 13, 14) : " For if the blood of bulls and goats, and the ashes of an heifer sprinkling the unclean, sanctifieth to the purifying of the flesh, how much more shall the blood of Christ, who thr' ugh the eternal Spirit offered Himself without spot to God, purge your conscience from dead works to serve the living God 1 " [Time expired.^ MR. WILKINSON'S FIFTH REPLY. I did not think the well would have run dry at the third session, but my opponent, you see, is beginning to pump sand. The water is rather muddy, indicating that the supply is getting low. It might be described, in a popular phrase, as getting " as clear as mud." Just while I think of it, I wish to say that if my opponent runs out of books, I have one or two concordances here which I will lend him. He can read books most effectively, and, as a certain old lady said, she always liked to read the dictionary, because the articles were so short. My opponent has thrown out several insinuations about my scrap- book. I handed him the book, and then he said, "Oh, your sermon!" No more about the scrap-bok, but " Your sermon, your sermon, your sermon," was the cry. At last he turned to the title-page and saw whose sermon it was, and then he accused me of reading from a psedo- baptist sermon. What I read from was not anybody's sermon. He saw it was a sermon at the beginning, and jumped to the conclusion that I had read the extracts from a sermon. He is a tremendous jumper. He reminds me of the old ditty, " Hi diddle diddle, the cat's in the fiddle, The oow jumped over the moon." 76 REPORT OP DEBATE (Laughter.) If I am not much mistaken he has been reading from a scrap-book himself, written witliin and without, like Ezekiel's roll — not, perhaps, with " lamentations, and mourning, and woe," though I think it would be very appropriate to get pieces of black paper and put a black margin round it. (Laughter.) If anybody has read from scraps, I guess he must be the scrap doctor. If anybody has digged in books for brains, I think he is the book doctor. If anybody has been good at begging the question, I guess he has been the beggar. If anybody has re-hashed, I guess he has been the re-hasher. I beg to inform this audience that you will get from him a re-hash of re-hash from this to the end of the debate, or I am not a true prophet. He has gone about the length of his rope. He had just so much cnpital ; he has spent it, and is now going on borrowed money. In fact, he has been running on borrowed capital for some time, and no doubt depended almost exclusively on borrowed capital, from the beginning, to run this immersion machine or water-mill. He even carries bor- rowed capital to the platform and reads volumes of extracts which are, no doubt, very edifying. They are to me, exceedingly edifying. During his remarks he drew the inference that I had never seen a lexicon, and did not know anything about lexicons. If he will hand me one I will show him whether I can read it or not. I refer to what he m ^out my reference to Liddell and Scott as the only Greek- Englis . xicon. It appears I left out the word " standard." At least this is the impression he seeks to convey. He himself acknowledged it as the only "standard" lexicon of the kind, hence all the other Greek-English lexicons from which he says he has quoted are not " standards;" yet he would have you to believe that the authors he quotes are the scholars of the world. So, if I made a slip of the tongue, he made a tremendous slip in asking you to believe that these lexicons were the productions of the greatest scholars of the world, while according to his own admission they are not even standard authorities. He said that no standard lexicon gave sprinkle or pour as a meaning of briptizo. But some of them, I said, gave the equivalent of sprinkle and pour in another language. I dared him to deny it, saying that if he did so I would produce the proof, and he did not dare to do it. He made the most he could out of the little slip [ made in speaking ; but the main point I brought up was passed over as if it were not there. I have seen one or two lexicons in my life, but not being a professional debater, I do not keep all the para- phernalia for this kind of business. I sometimes have to go into in- vestigations in order to defend my belief ; but as I do not expect to m: ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 77 follow the debating business, it will not pay me to spend $100 or $200= in buying lexicons to pile on my stand as a substitute for brains ; and as I do not like to run on borrowed capital, I do not borrow. But I have taken the trouble, when I met a lexicon, to extract from it the meaning of this term, baptizo, and during this debate I may read some such extracts. With regard to Christ's purification, we are told it was in obedience to prophecy, and not to law. We shall need a new term, therefore,, to describe this idea of fulfilling prophetic law. We will call it prophetic law, or legal prophecy, whichever you like. He tells you that the command God gave John the Baptist was the law under which Christ was baptized. Was it? John baptized with water unto repentance for the remission of sins. Was Christ baptized unto repentance for the remission of sins 1 Now, I should like him to repeat what he said, that Christ was baptized under the law Godi gave John to baptize those miserable sinners, the Jews. Some were called Pharisees and Sadducees, steeped to the lips in corruption, and others were called a "generation of vipers," and they were asked by whom they were warned to flee from the wrath to come. And they were to be baptized to prepare them for the coming of the Lord. So the Lord, I suppose, was to be baptized for the remission of sins, and to prepare Himself for His own coming ! Will my opponent please tell. us how it was t But perhaps he has more than one string to his. bow ; and perhaps he will hang out another flag and let it flutter. I do not know that it is necessary to say anything more about this, matter, except to mention that my opponent has told you that Christ was not a priest according to the order of Aaron. I did not say He was. I said He was not. I said He was a priest after the order of Melchisedec. But in Malachi 3 : 2, 3, it is stated that this Christ, (who is evidently predicted there), who should suddenly come to His temple, should " Purify the sons of Levi and purge them as gold and silver." Now, I should like to know, if there is no connection between the order of Melchisedec and Aaron in their typical relations, why Christ is predicted in the Old Testament as coming to cleanse the sons of Levi. If He is to cleanse the sons of Levi, then He must offici- ate as a priest, for such was the business of the priest, and to cleanse the sons of Levi was the function of the Aaronic priesthood. The fact is, that the Aaronic priesthood was included in, and constituted a part of, the priesthood of Melchisedec, and the latter was not abolished during the 1,500 years of the former, but comprehended by it in an important sense, and so perpetuated in an unbroken line but under a 78 REPORT OP DEBATE somewliat different form. Perhaps, after a refreshing night's sleep and a forenoon's nice rest, my opponent will be able to clear up this matter to-morrow. Regarding Christ's burial my opponent did not say anything of any consequence. He quoted some passages to prove that Christ was buried. The Lord knows I never denied that. He quoted a passage to prove that it was predicted that Christ would be three days in the bowels of the earth. But I never denied that. This has no more to do with what I said than the inhabitants of this world have to do with the inhabitants of Jupiter. What did I say? I said that the burial of Christ, which I took for granted was a fact known to the world, had nothing to do in affecting the validity of the atonement. I had a debate with one of the Campbellites — but, I believe, they don't like to be called Campbellites — indeed, I am at a loss to know what to call them. I will not recognize their claim to be called the Disciples of Christ, by way of pre-eminence, for T do not know that they are any better than other disciples of Christ. They can talk as roughly as I can, and that is bad enough, the Lord knows. We are at a loss for some name by which to call them. We must not call them Campbell- ites, so we had better call them Troutites, because that has more affinity with water. I had, I was about to say, a debate with a gentle- man of this same persuasion about four years ago this winter. After he had set up and knocked down several men of straw, I asked him if he could tell what value the mere fact of Christ's burial added to the atonement, as we would then have acquired some knowledge; but he could not tell. I cheerfully admitted that it was an important link in a chain of exceptionally important events, and was mentioned as a connecting link in that chain of events ; but if this link had been left out of the prophecies, and out of the New Testament, and out of the facts of history altogether, would the atonement, I asked, have been less complete than it is to-day 1 Now, I hope my present opponent will deal with the real question at issue, and not manufacture ques- tions. Nor did I say that Christ was laid on a shelf in a stone sepulchre. I said if he had been laid on a shelf and not entombed at all during the three days, it would not have detracted in any degree from the efficacy of the atonement. I terribly hate a man to make up something I never said and put it into my mouth. I am willing to swallow my own pills, but do not want my opponent to make pills and put them into my mouth, I am not here to eat his pills. He can take his own medicine. With respect to the Israelites' baptism. I am glad my opponent ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OP BAPTISM. 79 went down to Chattanooga and saw a mountain with a night-cap on, because if he had not seen that night-capped mountain I do not know what he would have done for an illustration. He could not have made out his case. I did not say the Israelites were not under the cloud. He told us nothing new when he read from Paul. I knew they were under the cloud ; that it went from before them and got behind them ; and to get there it, no doubt, took the short cut and went over them. But the Scriptures do not say that it was over them when they were in the sea. My opponent says they went down, down, down. One would have thought, from his description of it, that the whole night long they were sliding down hill — a hill, as it were, like the Chattanooga mountain. I thought the passage was through a nice little 1 'low, and that the men, women and children got through in a night. It would not have been nice for little chil- dren to have toddled down a steep hill. I do not believe it was so. I have seen lots of places where, when the water was low, there was a nice, gentle declivity ; and I guess God did not choose a very bad place for the Israelites to go through the Sea. The mountain illustra- tion will hardly hold water. My opponent has not proved his case under this head. If he will tell me whether the ice-cake and box modes will not do as well I shall be much happier. But he says this Red gea baptism was not Christian baptism. It was a Christian apostle who called it a baptism. Do you see how these men, when cornered, can hop, skip and jump 1 Christian baptism ! I never dreamed but that my opponent came here to discuss Bible baptism. If not, cut out half the Bible and say, "Yes, you can prove baptism by sprinkling back there," (he has nearly acknowledged that, as I shall show you) ; " but you cannot prove it by SchafF, by Macknight, by Wesley, by the heathen Greek authorities and the lexicographers. You can prove it by Moses and by the ceremonial law, and you can prove that Paul said there was a baptism without any immersion, without any plung- ing, or burial, away back several hundred years ago. But that," you say, " does not amount to anything." I reply, we have found this re- corded in the New Testament, and no matter if it transpired in the moon, or some other world, or even in some other age, still it is recorded in the inspired Word of God, and written down as a baptism ; and as it is written by a man who was writing to Christians, and who understood what Christian baptism was as well as these Troutites do, there must have been something pretty near to Christian baptism in it. And what was there in it that resembled Christian baptism 1 It was simply the taking of them out of their state of bondage and , 80 REPORT OF DKBATE bringing them into liberty ; taking them fronj their state of slavery under Pharoah, and placing them under the government of Moses. And when you want to know how men are baptized into Christ, I would say, that so long as they are brought from a state of sin and slavery into a state of pardoi) and liberty they are baptized, without the necessity of going through a dramatic performance to represent it. I will illustrate this point. Some of you are, doubtless, members of secret and other societies, and know something about the induction of members. How do you do it? Before the " '^'Udate is initiated you say he is outside, and after he is initiated you i y he is inside. How do you get him in 1 Do you duck him in water to symbolize his entrance f Why it does not matter if you merely put a little mark with a pencil on the end of his nose, and recognize ihat mark as his initiation into the society ; that will admit him. Before the mark is there he is out ; when it is there he is in. Suppose the candidate comes before the chief officer who pins a badge on his coat. That may declare him a member of the society. But these people do not seem to be able to comprehend anything unless it is acted out. They must get a man into water and drag him out again to represent putting him into Christ. It is a violation of all known rules and usages of language to call such a performance a figure, or symbol. It is an act. If you go to a theatre you will see some literal transaction, or supposed transaction, acted out by another literal transaction. That is a drama, a scene. Putting a person in water to represent a burial is something like that — a dramatic representation of a funeral. But it is one of the most awkward representations of a burial scene that men or angels ever witnessed. " But the scholars say it is so and it must be so." Let us see. Suppose some famous scholar takes it into his head to write a commentary on the New Testament, and he comes to Rom, 6 : 3, 4, and undertakes to explain it. He has not given much thought to it, but he knows that through hundreds of years the Roman Catholics and nearly all religious teachers had been in the habit of regarding the text as an allusion to the ancient mode of baptism. He will, no doubt, write it down that such is the case. He cannot' minutely examine every point. Dr. Clarke and Wesley thus speak of it as a "probable allusion" to the ancient mode of baptism by immersion, Does it follow that all scholarship must be held responsible for the unguarded statement thus made by a commentator 1 If you take all the little doubtful expressions in the Bible, and sit down to give each one a thorough investigation, and bestow careful thought on each, no man would even get through the book of Exodus. I will appeal to ^ ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 81 my ministerial brethren present if that is not so. [Cries of " Yes."] On that principle no commentator could ever have got a commentary written to the end of Exodus, not even my opponent. Therefore, you may quote this man, and that man, and the other man, who, in his commentary or history, has made statements about things of which he is no better qualified to judge than I am — things transpiring before our eyes, about which we can exercise our intelligence as well as they. They are not questions of history, but simply matters of fact, and we have a right to exercise our judgment about them. I exercise my judgment in respect to this particular matter under dis- cussion ; and I am not alone in the opinion I have formed. There are hundreds of scholars who take the same view of this passage as I do. I will guarantee that my view is substantially the view of the scholars of to-day, and that nine out of every ten of them will endorse it. Regarding Ezek. 31 : 25, referring to the time when the Jews will be restored to their native land in the remote future, I beg leave to deny that they will ever be thus restored. And if my opponent wants to discuss that question for a week, 1 am here. I do not throw this out as a challenge, for I never challenge men. Christ has forever wiped out all religious distinctions between Jews and Gentiles, and He tells us by the apostle Paul that, under this dispensation, "he is not a Jew which is one outwardly ; but he is a Jew which is one inwardly." He tells us in Ephesians, second chapter, that the middle wall of partition between the Jews and Gentiles is removed, and Christ came that by His cross He might make of twain one new man, so making peace. The apostle in Galatians, third chapter, tells you that if you are Christ's, then are ye Abraham's seed, (Abraham's seed were Jews) ; that in Christ there is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither bond nor free, there is neither male nor female. There are none of these fleshly distinctions recognized in the Church of Christ, but ye are one all in Him. [Time expired.] . - I , -^ . " r'i . . ^ ,,. . ., ., 82 HEPORT OF DEBATB EVENING SESSION— SECOND DAY. MR. HARDING'S SIXTH SPEECH. Mr. Hardino — I desire once more to call attention to the fact that the task before us for the first three days of this discur.sion is to answer one question, and that is, what the word bnptizo means where Jesus tells His disciples to go and teach all natioiis, baptizing tiiem I want to call your attention to the line of argumentation which I have presented, and to notice briefly some of the points that have been attacked. In the first place, we have shown from the very best legal authoritiei that a word in law is to be taken in its common and best known signification ; and that there is no exception to this rule unless the context, or the nature of the case forbids. The first question, there- fore, which naturally arises in the mind is, " What is the common and most known signification of Baplizo ? " — the word which we call " baptize " in English. I called your attention to eight of the ^reat Greek lexicons of the world (among them was the greatest of all) that you might hear their testimony. Seven of them are Greek- English, and one, that of Schrevelius, Greek-Latin. All of them define the word to dip, immerse, or plunge, but none of them give to sprinkle, or to pour upon. I spoke of Liddell and Scott's as the only one which, properly speaking, could be called a standard Gieek- English lexicon, and Mr. Wilkinson endeavours to ridicule the idea of my producing authorities that are not atarularda. He displays his ignorance on this subject more and more. A word of explanation concerning this matter. The day was when Donnegan was a standard, and Schrevelius would have ranked high as a standard English-Latin ; but as years roll on, and as men make greater research into Greek literature, they become better able to make lexicons, and hence in these later days there is but one standard — Liddell and Scott ; about this scholars are agreed. But all along the line, in the different ages of the world, they define baptizo to dip, plunge, immerse, but never to sprinkle. I con- clude, therefore, that to dip or immerse is the common and most ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 83 known signification of the word. My friend himself testifies that to put under water is the meaning of tlio word in classic Greek. You will remember that after we had considered the lexicons, another class of witnesses — the Church historians — was introduced. I hold that if )ve can ascertain what the first Christians did, we will know to a certainty what the word means. So I introduced seven Church histories, including,' all of the greatest of the world. Four of these, Neander, Mosheim, Schaff, and Stanley, stand at the very top in their line of learning. These testify, without a single dihsenting voice, that the custom of the primitive Church was to immerse. Neander and Mosheim are particularly clear. But affusion was practiced at an early day, in case of the sick who were supposed to be dying. The first case of this kind these authorities show was that of Novatian, A.D. 2.'51. After considering the lexicons and Church historians, we turn to the Bible in order to see if their teaching is maintained by the Scrip- tures. We find that baptism took place in rivers ; that Christ and ■others went to the water ; that they went down into the water before their baptism, and after it came up out of the water ; their bodies ■were washed in baptism ; and in baptism they were buried. At this point my friend made an attack upon my line of argument. He denied that there is any reference to immersion in water in the burial mentioned in Rom. 6:4. I called his attention to the fact that the scholars of the world, including his father Wesley, declare that this passage has reference to the ancient mode of baptizing by immersion. I quoted Dr. Schaff, the greatest Church historian on this continent, who says that all commentators and critics of note, but two, say that here is a reference to immersion. Looking over my books at home this afternoon, I found Meyer on Romans. This man, who is the greatest of all Biblical exegetes, and a psedobaptist, upon this passage comments thus : " The recipient — thus has Paul figura- tively represented the process — is conscious, (a) in the baptistn gener- ally : now I am entering into fellowship with the death of Christ ; (6) in the immersion in particular : now am I becoming buried with -Christ ; (c) and then, in the emergence : now I rise to the new life -with Christ." So I claim that my position is strongly maintained. I feel that I Am in good company, although it has been said by my opponent that none but fools would give it that interpretation. I stand with all the lexicons, all the Church historians, and, on Rom. 6 ; 4, with all th great critics and commentators of the world (except two). <*s>. ^> A ^\5 BMAGE EVALUATION TEST TARGET (MT-3) 1.0 i^ Hi 112.5 I.I 1.25 m — IIS ■ 40 il 2.2 2.0 1-4 IIIIII.6 ^ A /A '^i M 84 REPORT OF DEBATE Mr. Wilkinson then made an attack upon my line of argument bj taking an afErraative position of his own. He said that Christ w&s baptized by John in fulfilment of the ceremonial law, to be inducted into the priest's office ; and hence was sprinkled. I replied, first, Christ was not made a priest according to the Mosaic law, because He was not of the tribe of Levi, but of Judah, " of which tribe Moses spake nothing concerning priesthood." In the second place, the Bible expressly says that He was made a priest, " not after the law of a car- nal commandment, but after the power of an endless life ;" He was a priest after the order of Melchisedec," and not "after the order of Aaron ; " and the Bible adds, " the priesthood being changed, there is made of necessity a change also of the law." Jesus was greater than Moses and belonged to a higher order of priesthood than that of the Mosaic law, and therefore was not inducted into it by John. In the third place, John did not do, at His baptism, as did Mose» in inducting Aaron into the priest's office. Moses washed Aaron's body with water, clothed him with the priestly garments, anointed him with oil, and put blood upon his right ear, right thumb, and right great toe. (See Ex. 29.) John did none of these things except to wash the body of Jesus. My friend wants to know, then, what Christ's baptism was for. I turn to John, 1st chapter, and find that John the Baptist explained the matter himself. Let us see what he says : "The next day John seeth Jesus coming unto him, and saith, Behold the Lamb of God which taketh away the sin of the world. " This is He of whom I said, After tne cometh a man which is preferred before me, for He was before me. " And I knew Him not : but that He should be made manifest to Israel ; therefore am I come baptizing with water." John here gives the explanation. He was not down there conse- crating priests. He was there preparing people for the Lord, and baptizing, that Christ might be made manifest to the people. The people flocked around John, and John baptized them. And finally Christ was baptized, and the Spirit of God descended in the form of a dove, and the voice of God said, " This is my beloved Son in whom L am well pleased." There were two points in John's baptizing; first, to prepare a people for the Lord ; and, second, to manifest Christ to the world. What was Jesus baptized for t That He might be manifested to the people ; and in submitting to this law of baptism which God gave to John, He fulfilled righteousness, and was thus manifested as the Son of God. These two attacks have been made oa ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 'WW my line of argumentation — feeble ones both of them. My first posi- tion, that to immerse is the primary and most common meaning of the word baptizo has not been assailed. When Mr. Wilkinson said that John purified Jesus, the people actually hissed. That was one time when I thought a hiss was not inappropriate, in that connec- tion he talked about the possibility of Christ's having touched a dead body, and of the purification that would then be necessary. But when I read the law for cleansing one thus defiled, showing that there was first a sprinkling of a mixture of ashes and water (equal to blood) and then a bathing in water, he changed his ground and said He was baptized to be inducted into the priest's office ; but, as we have seen, this position is as untenable as the other. During all this argumentation I have pressed my friend, from time to time, to tell us what baptizo means in the commission. He first said that he would not do it; that I was on the affirmative side, and had to prove my case. I insistttd that we are seeking light on a great Bible question, and that he ought to be willing to give us all he had. He 6nally said, in the most potntive way, that he would not tell. Of course I ridiculed him for not being willing to tell you the meaning of a Bible word, when the express object of our meeting here is to find out the meaning of that very word. Knowing that the gentle* man is not a little proud, and believing that he could be forced to take a position, I pressed it upon him. At last he did tell its mean- ing. He said it meant a religious purification. A day or two ago he said that it did not mean to purify, but, being driven into close quarters, he had to say something, so he said baptism is a purification; to baptize is to purify. Let us see about that. Here is a Greek-English concordance. I want to substitute purification in the place of baptism, for it is a rule of interpretation, that if words are synonymous, you can substitute the one for the other in a sentence. Take the sentence, "They were baptized of Him in Jordan." Can we substitute the word " purify " for " baptize 1" Can it be said, "Purified also the household of Stephanusi" Or, "What shall they do which are purified for the dead if the dead rise not 1" Or, "Are ye able to drink of the cup which I drink of, and be purified with the purification that I am purified withi" When my friend takes a little infant as pure as heaven, does he purify it in the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit 1 Is that the primary meaning of the word 1 If baptism is a purification, the question still remains, How is it performed ? I grant that many lexicographers define baptizo by the words wash, cleanse, purify, in addition to the words dip, 86 REPORT OF DEBATE plunge, etc. If you dip a thing in water, it is washed ; hence as baptizo means to dip, it may "by consequence" mean to wash, to purify. Nothing is said to be washed when only a few drops of water are sprinkled upon it. Yes, the word means to wash — to wash by dipping, not by sprinkling or pouring upon. Just here I am reminded of a statement made by my friend con- cerning the lexicons. He said that he had extracts, written out in his own hand, from lexicons that define baptizo by Latin words that mean to sprinkle. He intimated that I would not dare to deny it. I do deny that there is a Greek-Latin lexicon on the face of the earth that defines baptizo by a word whose first definition is to sprinkle. Here is a square issue. Now come on with your extracts. I will go a step farther. There is not a lexicon defining the Greek into Latin, German, French, or any other language, that defines baptizo by a word whose first definition is to sprinkle. Just here let me call your attention to a singular fact. I can take up the line of argument adopted by my psedo-baptist friends to prove that baptizo means to sprinkle, and by the same method show that our common English word " dip " means to sprinkle. AH of the English dictionaries, as Webster, Worcester, Walker, etc, define "dip" to wet; but you can wet a thing by sprinkling; therefore, according to psedo-baptist logic, to dip means to sprinkle. They say baptizo means to dip, and also to wash ; but you can wash by sprinkling ; therefore baptizo means to sprinkle. Grand logic, indeed ! But now, about that burial. My friend cannot get away from it. He likes to talk about the corpse "trotting along" beside the preacher. I thought of the Methodist preachers who often have to trot out to the water with the candidate. I reminded my friend that his Dis- cipline requires the minister to immerse, when the candidate demands it — that the Discipline has imn^erse in it. He said it did not ; and when I called for the book, he said he would show it to me. Mr. Wilkinson here handed the speaker the Discipline of the Methodist Church. Mb. Harding requested Mr. Wilkinson to open to the place. Mb. Wilkinson — No, you can find it yourself. Mr. Harding handed the book to his Moderator and requested him to turn to the place. I will show you, he said, that the thing is there by implication if not in so many words. Taking the book back from Mr. Sterling, he said. Here is the place, and read, " L The proper subjects of baptism are infants and believing adults, who have not been baptized in infancy. ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. n " 2. The mode of baptism is by sprinkling, or pouring ; but should any candidate for baptism prefer another mode, the officiating minis- ter may comply with his request." Wiiat is that other mode 1 It is dipping in all other editions of the Discipline. This comes out later, 1878. It was dip up to that time ; now it is sprinkling, pouring, and another mode. What is that "other model" ' *• Mr. Wilkinson— Where is immerse? Mr Habdino (laughing) — It is that " other mode." I desire to car your attention to another slip made by my friend. Turn to the passagt' oonceming sprinkling clean water, Ezek. 36 : 25. My opponent agreed with me that in Old Testament times unmixed water was never sprinkled, by authority of God, on anybody. Then, yoii remember, I called your attention to the making of the water of puriiication, or clean water. It was made by mixing the ashes of a red heifer with running water. When my opponent brought up the sprinkling of Ezekiel, I read the passage showing that God's people had been dispersed among the nations on account of their wickedness. And God told them He would bring them back to their own land and sprinkle clean water upon them, and cleanse them from their idolatry whicli they had contracted in distant lands, and that he would cause their land to be again fruitful. My opponent rose and declared that he did not believe the Jews would ever be bi ought back to Jerusalem. Tliat prophecy of Ezekiel was made 587 B.C. Their return to Jeru- salem under Zerubbabel was 536 B.C. ; that is 51 years after Ezekiel's prophecy. That prophecy was therefore fulfilled 536 years before Christ. Fifty-one years after Ezekiel wrote that prophecy, Zerub- babel with about 60,000 Jews returned to Jerusalem and rebuilt the walls of the ancient city, as Ezekiel had prophesied he would do. Nine years afterward Nehemiah went to Jerusalem and rebuilt the temple. Years passed on, the land became fruitful, villages were built, and when Christ came the temple was still standing. Ezekiel's prophecy had then been fulfilled for 536 years. My friend will con- vince us directly that he knows as little about chronology as he does about lexicons. [Time expired.] 88 REPORT OF DEBATB MR. WILKINSON'S SIXTH BEPLY. I am glad, if I am not a very good speaker, that I am a splendid prophet. I told you this afternoon that you would get re-hash. How does it go down 1 About two-thirds of the half-hour my opponent told you what he had told you again and again. That is quite right, of course, and he can spend the whole of his next half-hour in telling you what he told you in this if he likes. I will try to tell you some- thing he did not tell you, and something 1 did not tell you. We have been treated again to a little discourse about the literal use of words. My opponent is very strong on the literal use of words, and he is ex- ceedingly strong on Schaff. I quote from Schaff's "Apostolic Church," pages 610 and 611. He says: "The spirit of the Christian revelation shows itself in the province of language, not so much in coining new words and phrases, as in making a new use of old ones. The apostles made words already at hand the vehicles of infinitely profounder ideas than they had ever conveyed before, or continued to express after- wards in heathen authors. Even the Seventy were compelled to put into many Greek expressions an Old Testament idea, which it requires a sympathy with the whole spirit of the divine revelation to under- stand. To a far greater extent is this the case in the New Testament, which contains a universe of new ideas, throwing even the Old Testa- ment far into the shade. The very terms of most frequent occurrence, and of the greatest importance for Christian faith and practice, as light, life, truth, resurrection, atonement, redemption, Saviour, apostle, church (assembly), election, calling, justification, sanctification, faith, love, hope, peace, libe:ty, humility, blessedness — darkness, flesh, unbelief, sin, debt, condemnation, etc., have a far more comprehensive and profound sense then in any profane writings, or, in most cases, even in the Old Testament ; though this sense is certainly agreeable to the natural import and the etymology of the word. In this view it may be said, that, as Christianity is the perfection of humanity, so the Christian language is the full development of the natural." I also desire to make a few quotations from lexicographers to show that they give not only a secondary meaning, differing from the primary classical meaning, but that many of them distinguish between the New Testament and secular use of the term, and that their New Testament definitions are in harmony with the definition of Christian baptism for which I have been contending. You will remember that my claim has been that Christian baptism is a religious purification. Now, what say the lexicographers? ON THE MODS AND 8UnJBCT8 OF RAPTISM. 89 Kouma, a native Greek of this century, after defining the word in a secular sense, says, "3. In an ecclesiastical sense, to baptize." SchsBtgennius gives, " 2. To wash, to cleanse, (Mark 7:4; Luke 11 : 38.) 3. To baptize in a sacred sense." Metaphorically it means* tifdt, to pour forth abundantly (Matt, 3: 11; Acts 1:5, etc.); second, to be subjected to great dangers and burdens." The editor of Robinson's lexicon of the New Testament says, " In the N. T. first, to wash, to lave, to cleanse by washing ; second, to wash one's self, t e , one's hands, or person, to perform ablution ; third, to baptize." In a note he says, " While in Greek writers, from Plato onward, baptizo is everywhere to sink, to immerse, to overwhelm, either wholly or partially, yet in Hellenistic usage ... it would seem to have expressed, not always simply immersion, but the more general idea of ablution, or affiuion." Stokius, long paraded by immersionists as having no superior, gives, " Baptizo, to wash, to baptize ; passive, to be washed, to be cleansed. (' Washed ' is from lavo, which, according to Freund, is "to wash, bathe, lave ; to wet, moisten, bedew.") In a note he says, " Generally, and by the force of the word, it obtains the sense of dipping or immersing. Specially, (a) Properly, it is to immerse or dip '.i water, (b) Tropically, ( 1 ) By a tnetalepais, it is to wash (lavare) c. leanse (abluere), because anything is accustomed to be dipped or immersed in water that it may be washed or cleansed, although also the washing or cleansing can be, and generally is, accomplished by sprinkling the water, (Mark 7:4; Luke 11 : 38). Hence it is transferred to the sacrament of baptism." You will observe that, according to this authority, it is transferred to the sacrament of baptism because the " washing or cleansing can be, and generally is, accomplished by the sprinkling of water," yet you have been assured that not one of the authorities give " sprinkle " as a meaning of the word. Schleusner says, " Now, because not unfrequently a thing is im- mersed, or dipped in water that i may be washed ; hence, second, to cleanse, to wash, to purify with water. Thus it occurs in the New Testament, Mark 7:4; Luke 11 : 38." He says, " Baptizisthainoi only means to wash, but to wash one's self, etc., hence transferred to the solemn rite of baptism." Certainly wash is not the primary, classical meaning of baptizo, for the Greeks never used it secularly in this sense. Therefore, when it is " transferred to the solemn rite of baptism " because it means " to wash," it must be employed in a secondary sense. 90 REPORT OF DBBATE Oazes gives as one of the meanings of the word, " to wash. 3. To wash the hands or to wash one's self. 4. Among Obristians to baptize." - , I have more, but I forbear. You see that this question is not one- sided, and that the authorities are not all on one side. But 1 am ashamed to stand here and have to heap up authorities outside the Bible when the proposition is, " Christian baptism is immersion, in it there must be a burial in water." When I produce an instance from the Bible where Paul refers to the baptism of 3,000,000 Israelites, my opponent says that is not a Christian baptism, and seems desirous to rule it out as evidence. It is in the Bible, however. But my opponent seems to think that the lexicons are as good as Paul and even better ; hence I hope this will settle it, since I have shown you that the lexicons on which he places so much reliance are actually on my side. They give dip, plunge, immerse, etc., as tho primary mean- ings of the word, which I concede ; but they also give wash, cleanse, purify as the sacred sense, which I also claim. I do not want to go over this business about authorities again. All the great historians, too ! I will read from a history which is a standard work in all the theological colleges of the country at the present day. It is Killaro's "Ancient Church History." It says: (Sec. HI., Chap. 2, page 196) " The Scriptures furnish no very specific instructions as to the mode of baptism, and in its administration the primitive heralds of the Gospel did not adhere to a system of rigid uniformity. Some have asserted that the Greek word translated baptize in our authorized version always signifies immerse, but it has been clearly shown that this statement is incorrect, and that baptism does not necessarily imply dipping. In ancient times, and in the lands where the apostles labored, bathing was as frequently performed by affusion as immer- sion, and the apostles varied their method of baptizing according to circumstances. The ordinance was intended to convey the idea of washing or purifying, and it is obvious that water may be applied in many ways as the means of ablution. In the sacred volume, sprink- ling is often spoken of as an equivalent to washing." Now, this Church historian, whose testimony is equally as good as those quoted by my opponent, distinctly testifies, in harmony with what I have contended for from the beginning, that the ordinance in Scripture " was intended to convey the idea of washing or purifying," and that the water might, obviously, be applied in many ways, while " in the sacred volume sprinkling is often spoken of as an equivalent to washing." ON THB MODS AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. tt I again affirm, therefore, that authorities by the score and the hun- dred can be produced on this same lin& Mejer, who according to my opponent is the greatest of all Biblical exegetes, has been referred to. I have Meyer in my library. But .m I did not bring my brains in my trunk, I left it at home with my wife so she would have some- thing to read. But my impression is that Meyer coincides with my interpretHtion of Rom. 6 : 3, 4. If my opponent will let me see his copy I will be glad. [Mr. Harding hands him the book, which he said he would examine at his leisure.] And now with respect to Christ's priesthood. My opponent has endeavored to prove that Christ was not made a priest after the law of a carnal commandment ; but I never said He was. T never dreamed He was. He was made a priest by the fiat of Almighty God, but as He is revealed to man as the great Teacher sent from God, it was necessary for Him to meet the demands of their expectations which had been raised by the very law of God under which they had been living. My opponent says He was made manifest to Israel by His baptism. How did John make Jesus manifest to Israel by baptizing Him 1 John was Christ's representative, and every man he baptized he taught to believe on Him who was to come, and declared that the great Redeemer and Purifier of the world was coming. And how did he foretell this 1 He said, " I indeed baptize you with water, unto repentance, but He shall baptize you with the Holy Ghost and with fire." He introduced Christ by the rite he performed, as well as by his ministry, as the great Purifier of the world by the Holy Ghost and fire. If in this way we have Christ manifested to Israel, then it is as a Purifier, because the Holy Ghost coming on men purifies them. And if John's baptism with water was to represent Christ's baptism with the Holy Ghost, then I should think the water should come down on the people as the Holy Ghost and fire are represented as doing. That is what I would infer ; but as 1 do not get my brains out of my trunk I may be wrong, and I will stand corrected by the authorites if I am. My opponent wants me to define baptism. I said it was a purify- ing rite, and yet I said it did not mean to purify. This he thinks is inconsistent, but I do not take back anything I said on this point. The meaning of the word is not to purify merely, but I said it was applied to a religiotis purification. A mere cleansing of the hands is not a baptism. In the primary, classic sense it never had the remotest relation to a purification. He cannot find an instance among Greek writers — I have been over them all — where, in the primary, classic «« RRPORT OF DEBATE «ense baptizo ever meant to purify ; but I have told you that some sixteen or eighteen lexicographers give wash, cleanse, purify, etc., as the meaning of the term. If I say it is a religious puritication when an individual is baptized, do I thereby say that the meaning of haptizo was to purify 1 I know there is another Qreek word which implies directly to purify ; but it is not used to describe a baptism because to baptize is not merely to purify, but to purify in a religious sense. And it describes such purification without any reference to the mode by which it is to be performed. We go right back to the Old Testament, however, and nee how religious purifications were effected. From the beginning to the end sprinkling was God's mode of cleansing, no matter how the passage in Ezekiel " I will sprinkle clean water upon you," applies to the Jews. That is a point which I wish you to keep in mind. [Time expirecL] MR. HARDING'S SEVENTH SPEECH. I feel gratified at the pleasant and amiable way in which we are getting on. My opponent calls my speeches " a re-hash." It is evident he is not pleased with the way in which I conduct mj part of this discussion. But I did not expect to please him. I have had two reasons for recapitulating the points made during the discussion. In the first place, the audiences are different; (many country people attend in the afternoons, and not in the evenings, while many of the business men of the town come out to the evening sessions only) ; and in the second place, I desire to keep before you my line of argument, that you may see the solid rock upon which I stand. • I will now consider the points advanced by my opponent in his last speech. He read from Schaff to show that in the New Testa- ment words have different meanings from what they bear in classic Greek. It is true that the classical meaning of a word is often modified by its usage in the New Testament, but the primitive idea of it is rarely, if ever, lost; for example, "savior" in classic Greek means that which saves anyone from anything ; in the New Testa- ment it designates Jesus the Son of God, who saves us from our sins; ON TIIK MODB AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 93 baptizo in classic Greek means to immerse anything into any fluid ; in the New Testament, in the commission, it signifies to immerse one who wants to follow Jesus, in water, into the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit ; the radical ideas " to save " and " to dip " are re- tained. Any man who can read classic Greek can also read New Testament Greek. It is true the meanings of words are often moditied, but they are modified by the contexts, and he who reads, can readily catch the new shades of meaning that are thus given. It has been seen that there is nothing in the New Testament use of baptizo to indicate that, in that book, it has lost its primary and most known signiBcation, to dip, to immerse ; on the other hand, th» Bible use of the word emphasizes this meaning. Again, anyone who can read classic and New Testament Greeks can read modern Greek, with the help of getting the meaning of new words occasionally. When my class was undergoing its last examina- tion at college, the Professor of Greek wrote upon the blackboard for translation some extracts from a modern Greek newspaper. He told us that we could not find all of the words in our lexicons, but if we would exercise our common sense, we could read them from the con- text. We did translate those sentences, and obtained from them an account of the assassination of President Lincoln. The Greek, in the past 1800 years, has changed so little that we were enabled to read it this time from our knowledge of the ancient dialects. My friend quoted from the definition of baptizo by Stokius. I have not that authority, but I have quotations from him by Wilkes,, and Graves, and Ditzler on this word. As they agree in their cita- tions, there can be no doubt about their accuracy. I read, from Wilkes, Stokius' definition of the verb baptizo (to baptize) as follows : " Generally, and by force of the word, it obtains the notion of a dip- ping and immersion. 2. Specially, (a) Properly, it is to immerse and to dip into water, (b) Tropically. 1 . It is, by metonomy, to wash, ta cleanse, because anything is accustomed to be dipped and immersed in water that it may be washed or cleaned ; although washing or cleans- ing may, and is accustomed to be done by sprinkling water also, (Mark 7:4; Luke II : 38)." The Louisville Debate, p. 477. From this great New Testament lexicographer we get the following points : 1. Baptizo generally, and by the force of the word, obtains the idea, of dipping, immersion. 2. Specially and properly, it means to dip or immerse into water. 3. By a metalepsis, or metonomy, it means to wash or cleanse, be-^ •4 RBPOBT OF DEBATB cause, as a rule, anything is dipped or immersed that it may be washed or cleansed. 4. But washing may be done by sprinkling, and, says Stokius, it accustomed to be done in that way. Mr. WilkinHon, no doubt, refers to this definition because of this last point, Stokius bays the washing may be done by sprinkling— ti acctiatoined to be done by sprinkling. Does not Mr. Wilkinson know that in the days of Stokius, many hundred years after the apostles, sprinkling generally prevailed? To this fact he refers; he says it w dane, not was done. He does not say that the word means to sprinkle, nor that the apostles sprinkled, but he teaches exactly the reverse, u the following reading will show. T now give you his definition of the noun baptiama (baptism) from Wilkes. It is as follows : "1. Generally, and by force of the original, it denotes immersion or dipping. 2. Specially, (a) Properly, it denotes the immersion or dipping of a thing into water, that it may be cleansed or washed. Hence, it is transferred to designate the first sacrament of the New Testament, which they call of initiation, namely baptism, in which those to be baptized were, formerly, imme.tied into water ; though at this time the water is only sprinkled upcn them, that they may be cleansed from the pollutions of sin, receive the remission of it, and be received into the covenant of grace as heirs of eternal life." Louiwilit Debate, p. 477. So testifies Mr. Wilkinson's own witness, the great Stokius. His testimony was introduced because he said the washing of baptism "can be, and generally is, accomplished by sprinkling the water." Had my friend also given his other statement, viz., that " those io be baptized were, formerly (in apostolic times), immersed into water ; though at this time the water is only sprinkled upon thoDi," he would have brought out the whole truth, and would have spoiled his speech. Mr. Wilkinson next introduced the testimony of Edward Robinson, -the distinguished American Presbyterian lexicographer, who says :— Baptizo, " to dip in, to sink, to immerse." " In N. T. to wash, to lave, to cleanse by washing." " To baptize, to administer the rite ol baptism." He refers to Mark 1 : 9, and in his translation of it says Jesus was " baptized into the Jordan." After illustrating these meanings at great length, he closes his definition, and appends to it s note, in which he say« : — ••Note. — While in Greek writers, as above exhibited, from Plato onwards, baptizo is everywhere to sink, to immerse, to overwhelm ON TUB MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. f«ither wholly or partially ; yet in Hellenistic usage, and especially in reference to the rife of baptism, it would seem to have exprfssed not always simply immeraioit, but the more general idea of ablution or afftuiouy" etc. Dr. Robinson's honesty makes him define like a scholar, and tell us that Jesus was " baptized into the Jordan " ; but his pre- judice makes him argue, in the note, like a Presbyterian. Mr. Wilkinson talks about the " editor of Robinson's lexicon ! " Does he not know that Robinson was an American, and that his lexicon had no editor but himself 1 Mr. Wilkinson would doubtless do better if ho had the originals instead of " extracts." Schleusner is quoted by Mr. Wilkinson thus ; — •* Now, because not unfrequently a thing is immersed, or dipped in water, chat it may be washed ; hence, second, to cleanse, to wash, to purify with water. Thus it occurs in the N. T., Mark 7:4; Luke 11 : 38." Yes, he does say that, but unfortunately for Mr. Wilkinson in defining the noun, he adds this: (Louiaville Debate, p. 512.) " Baptiama. (1). Properly, immersion, dipping into water, washing. Hence it is (2) transferred to the sacred rite, which is called baptism, in which those formerly baptized were immersed in water, to obligate them to the true divine religion." When we get the whole truth from Schleusner, the greatest of all the Greek- Latin definers, we find that his testimony is like that of Stokius ; it does no good whatever to Mr. Wilkinson's cause. His own witnesses are most emphatically against him. He quotes a number of authorities to show that the word means to wash. Well, what of it ? They refer to " the washing of cups, pots, and brazen vessels," Mark 7 : 4. Are not such things put in the water to wash them ] If a thing is immersed it is washed, but it would be foolish to talk about washing cups, pots, and brazen vessels (or people either) by putting a few drops of water on them. Besides, these authorities are careful to tell us that the word (baptize) means to wash, becau8e things are immersed that they may be washed. Just here I would call the attention of the audience again to the testimony of Dean Stanley, the distinguished and scholarly historian of the Eastern (that is, the Greek) Church. The Dean wt>s a clergy- man of the Church of England ; he died recently. He says, in speak- ing of the distinguishing characteristics of the Eastern and Western Churches, that the Eastern is like the East, stationary, conservative, and attached to the ancient customs ; while the Western is like the West, vigorous, progressive, and given to changes. He illustrates these ditferent tendencies by referring to the history of baptism. He says : — 96 REPORT OF DEBATE " There can be no question that the original form of baptism — the very meaning of the word — was complete immersion in the deep baptis- mal waters ; a^d that for at least four centuries any other form was either unknown or regarded, unless in the case of dangerous illness, as an exceptional, almost monstrous case. To this form the Eastern Church still rigidly adheres ; and the most illustrious and venerable portion of it, that of the Byzantine empire, absolutely repudiates and ignores any other mode of administration as essentially invalid." Hialory of the Eastern Church, p. 117. Again, he says : " With the few exceptions just mentioned, the whole of the Western Churches have now substituted for the ancient bath the ceremony of letting fall a few drops of water on the face. The reason is obvious. The practice of immersion, though peculiarly suitable to the Southern and Eastern countries, for which it was de- signed, was not found seasonable in the countries of the North and West. Not by any decree of Council or Parliament, but by the general sentimen*^ of Christian liberty, this remarkable change was eflfected." Christian Institutions, p. 18. The Greek Church, the Church which uses the language in which the New Testament was written, immerses to this very day, nor has it ever practiced anything else for baptism. My friend would have you imagine that Dean Stanley favored immersion. He did not. On the contrary, he thinks the change was a " great advantage to Christian solemnity and edification;" and said it was made "by the general sentiment of Christian liberty." {See Christian Institutions, pp. 18 and 19.) He was not in favor of going back to the ancient custom. My friend goes back to the Old Testament to find out what Chris- tian baptism is. His own Methodism shows that that is not the place to go. I have here the Discipline of the Methodist Episcopal Church South. There are so many Methodist Churches it is difficult to keep track of them. I do not know to which he belongs, though I under- stand there has been a union of them all here in Canada, and I sup- pose a new name has been given to the united Church. This is the Discipline of one of the Methodist Churches of the United States. In article 16 (p. 19) it is said, "There are two sacraments ordained of Christ our Lord in the Gospel : that is to say, Baptism and the Supper of the Lord." This correctly teaches that baptism is a New Testament institution — an institution ordained by Christ, in the Gospel. But though you cannot find Christian baptism in the Old Testament you can find types of it there in the cleansings from ceremonial defilemento, in the consecration of the priests, and in the passage of the Israelites through the Red Sea. From Numbers 19 : 17-20 we learn that in ON THE MODS AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 97 cleansing the unclean, after "the water of separation " (water mixed with the ashes of a red heifer, a lye representing blood, v. 9) was I sprinkled upon him, he washed his clothes, and bathed himself in water, and thus became clean. In the New Testament, from Hebrews 1 9 : 13-14, we learn that this sprinkling of " the ashes of an heifer" is I typical of the sprinkling of "the blood of Christ" ; the bathing of the body in water was typical of Christian baptism ; hence we read in [Hebrews 10 : 22, in the same connection, that we have "our hearts sprinkled from an evil conscience, and our bodies washed with pure 1 water." My friend said that I would not find bathings in the tabernacle. I [find at the door of the tabernacle a brazen laver. (See Ex. 30 : 18). And in later times, when the temple had taken the place of the taber- nacle, the laver was supplanted by the molten sea with five lavers on leach side of it. The sea was circular, about 8 feet deep, 16 feet in diameter, and held, it is supposed, about 15,000 gallons. Each of the [ten lavers contained "forty baths" that is, about 300 gallons; each 1 laver was about 6 feet square, and about 5 feet deep. {See Smith* » [Dictionary of the Bible, Art. Laver). The priests in going into the Itemple from day to day washed their hands and feet (Greek nipto) ; but ■at their consecration, when they were first set apart to their work, [their bodies were washed (Greek louo). " The sea was for the priests |to wash in."— 2 Chron. 4:6. I understood my friend to say that Stokius gave " bedew " as a [meaning of baptize. He is mistaken ; he did not. Let hiln give me Ithe Latin word. If it is lavo, its first meaning is "to wash, to bathe," jnot to sprinkle, or bedew. My friend is distressed about my authorities : he brings scraps in bis own handwriting. I have brought only one extract in manuscript; that was the letter of Dr. Conant, in his own handwriting, in which lie says, " No respectable lexicographer gives, or ever has given, sprinkle or besprinkle as a definition of baptizo'," and in which he shows that " to pour upon " has been dropped from the later editions E Liddell and Scott's great lexicon, as a definition of it. By the way, Ir. Wilkinson's idea that these most distinguished of all Greek- ^ligiish definers dropped this definition because the Baptists raised fuss about it, is not only an uncalled for slander upon them, but it evidently incorrect, seeing that these gentlemen are members of the Church of England, and that their lexicon was prepared for a country ?here there are hundreds, perhaps thousands, of paedo-baptists to one imersionist. Would they run the risk of displeasing a thousand to 7 RRPORT OF DEBATE please one 1 Who can believe it? No, they took "to pour upon" out, because they could not find a passage in all Greek literature where bnptizo has that meaning ; and the fact that such men did take it out, is one of the most startling and conclusive arguments against affusion for baptism. The Septuagint uses baptizo in expressing the seven dippings of Naaman, 2 Kings, 5:14. The case is briefly this: Naaman, com- mander of the hosts of Syria, a great man with the king, was a fear- fully afflicted leper. Through the fairh of a little Jewish maiden, a captive, he was sent to the prophet Elisha, who said to him, " Go and wash in Jordan seven times, and thy flesh shall come again to thee, and thou shalt be clean." At first he was angry that the prophet did not come out and cleanse him by some ceremony very different from this ; but being persuaded by his servants, " he went down, and dipped (Greek baptizo) himself seven times in Jordan, according to the saying of the man of God : and his flesh came again like unto the flesh of a little child, and he was clean." The word "dip "here is baptizo in Greek, and taval in Hebrew. The Septuagint. a Greek version of the Old Testament often quoted by the apostles of our Loid, renders the Hebrew taval by baptizo; but in our common version taval is always rendered " dip," or " plunge." Mr. Wilkinson seems to be under the impression that he has found something to help his cause in Malachi 3:3, " He shall sit as a re- finer and purifier of silver ; and He shall purify the sons of Levi," etc. ; bat I do not see the point. There is nothing about sprinkling for baptism there. I don't see the connection. Perhaps his idea is this : Christ was made a priest according to the Levitical law that he might purify the spirittial seed of Levi ; but in the consecration of the priests — the sons of Levi— the type of the spiritual seed, there was a sprinkling. It is true that the priests were typical of Chris- tians, — we are said to be " kings and priests unto God," — but if there was a "sprinkling" in that ceremony of consecration, it must not be forgotten that there was also a "bathing " of the body in it. If my friend could make out that Christ was inducted into the priest's office according to the Levitical ritual (which he can never do), he would not get rid of the bathing of the flesh in water. So this passage does not help my friend's case. The idea which he intends to convey is not in it. It simply sets forth that Christ would come and purify the people. In this process of purification we have our hearts sprinkled with the blood of Christ, and our bodies washed with pure water. No sprinkling for baptism here. [Time expired,] ON THE HODB AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 99 MR. WILKINSON'S SEVENTH REPLY. I am glad we see the end of the debate on this proposition. My opponent tells us that when Naaman went, at Elisha's com- I mand, and dipped himself in Jordan, the word as given in the Greek Septuagint is baptizo, and in the Hebrew tahhal. That is perfectly (correct. And my opponent says this is the very word that Christ used in the commission, and if we can settle the ineaning in this instance we will know what Christ meant. I rather think we can come at it, for what Elisha told Naaman to do was to go and wash, and the word wash does not express any mode. There is a condition Icontaiued in this command. Elisha said, " Go wash seven times in I Jordan and thou shalt be dean." Did Naaman understand the [command. Evidently so, for he said, " Are not Abana and Pharpar, Irivers of Damascus, better than all the waters of Israel 1 May I not \wash in them and be clean ? * What was he going to wash himself Ifor? or dip himself for 1 He was going to wash with a view to being jmade clean, and he went and tahhalled himself. But did he do what Ithe prophet commanded, or something else ? He was commanded to |rae^to, and he tabftalled. Evidently, therefore, labhall must be the synonym of rachats, because the prophet said, " Go wash and be clean," and if he did something he was not commanded to do it is not [likely that the divine power would have been given to make him clean and heal him of his leprosy. Do you think a man would be airaculously healed if he were performing an act of disobedience at ^he time t I maintain that it is as invincible an argument as can be produced that he must have fulfilled the command to " Go and wash," |for he went and tahhalled " according to the saying of the man of Jod." The seventy Jews who translated the Old Testament into rreek 270 B.C., in describing what he did used the very word ^mployed by Christ in the commission. As Naaman was commanded ' go and wash, and did as he was commanded, he must have performed ^ome kind of washing in order to be made clean. Therefore, accord- ng to the judgment of these seventy learned Jews, to baptize is to irash, with a view to purification. Is not this what I have told you luring this debate, that baptizo in the commission has reference to a eligious purification? Here you have the proof of it. But our English immersionist translators have used the word "dipped" in ills place. I call them "immersionist translators," and even 100 REPORT OF DRBATB Alexander Oampbell, the father of the children here, admits it. ' He distinctly testifies that the translators of King James' version, did not, in their renderings, in any case, lean to the view I represent in this debate. So if they translate the word " dip," my opponent cannot say it was paedo-baptisti?, in the present sense of the term, who j did it. Psedo-baptists in our day are not immersionists, but Alexander Oampbell admits that these men were immersionists. My opponent cannot go back on that without going back on his own father ; and I hope that, as he has chided me for going back on Wesley, he will not commit the same fault. That same word tabhal is found in Genesis 32nd chapter, where Joseph's coat is said, in the English version, to have been dipped in the blood of a kid. Those same seventy Hebrew scholars, in this case, translated tabhal by the Greek word molunein. If my opponent will turn up to Liddell and Scott he will, perht^p", find what th»t means in English. It means to wet, moisten, stain, sully, defile, sprinkle, etc. Can I prove that? Yes, and I stand here to doit; therefore the word in the commission means to wet, moisten, stm sprinkle. We have got at it at last. I will not take time to quote authorities unless they are called for. I deny that the word tabkl \ means to immerse. My distinguished opponent in his proposition has undertaken to prove that Christian baptism is immersion. He told you that our Lord, who gave the commission, used the same word tiut the Hebrew scholars used in translating tabhal, and I claim that toiblial must be, to a large extent, the equivalent of rachais, which | means to wash; but it seldom, if ever, in the Bible, means a complete immersion. Take notice whether he proves that it means a complete immersion, a burial in water, for that is his proposition. If it does j not mean a burial in water in every case, then he has forestalled hini' self by the loose manner in which he has stated his proposition, whidi sets forth that there must be a burial in water. But I claim that I there is not necessarily a burial in water in this case. I never did believe that Naaman dipped himself clear under water seven times. If he did it would be as bad a case as that of Aristobulus, who vas | dipped under and drowned. My opponent says the brazen sea at the door of the temple was I the priests to bathe tTi. I believe thei^ is one passage in which it is rendered "in," but in more than one it is rendered " thereat," or as it is properly expressed in the Greek, "thereout." I am prepared to prove that. Besides, don't you suppose it would be an indecent j thing, according to our ideas of propriety (I don't know how it woi OK THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 101 be regarded in Kentucky), for men to wash their hands and feet in the same dish. When an unclean thing was washed in water the water became unclean, according to the law. We want to have the chapter on cleansing read again. We will know it by heart if we hear it once or twice more. As a matter of fact, if they had washed in the vessel when unclean, they would have made both *' j water and the vessel unclean. Thus every time they washed their hands or their feet they would have had to purify the vessel by burning, and they would have had to bring water and fill it again. Consider, too, that the sea in front of the' temple was about twenty-one feet high, round on the sides, the water in it about eight feet deep, and that the priests, every time they went to the altar to minister, would have had to climb up the sides of this vessel and get down into eight feet of water to wash their hands and feet. The authorities say (and my opponent is great on authorities) that there were spigots at the bottom of this laver, to draw water ofif in which to wash their hands and feet. I presume that was the way in which it was done. Where, then, were the im- mersions "in the tablenacle 1" My opponent undertook to show. He read the chapter on purification or cleansing from legal defilement. Bathing in water after the sprinkling of the blood and ashes was what cleansed he says. That was the purification, was HI The chapter from which he quoted says : " But the man that shall be unclean, and shall not purify himself, that soul shall be cut otf from among the congregation, because he hath defiled the congregation of the Lord : the water of separation hath not been sprinkled upon him, he is unclean." Was it the water of separation, according to this, or the subsequent bathing of the body that cleansed him. I maintain that it was the sprinkling of the water of purification; but this, being mixed with blood and ashes, had to be washed ofi'afterwtirds, just as when you put ointment on your flesh to heal a wound. When the desired effect is produced you wash the ointment off. It is not the washing that cures, but the ointment that you wash off. So the water of purifi- cation had to be washed oft from the flesh and the garments because it was composed of ashes and blood. Besides, the bathing which he insists constituted the baptism did not take place " in the tabernacle,'' but I have shown that the " divers baptisms " did take place in the tabernacle and were effected by the sprinkling of blood. Moses purged the tabernacle itself, and the vessels of the ministry and I almost all things by the sprinkling of blood. My opponent recognizes , these "divers baptisms," as being typical of Christian baptism, but he 1 claims that it was the bathing of the flesh and not the sprinkling of 109 REPORT OF DEBATE the blood that comtrtuted the type. But I claim it was the blood that did the business — not the act of sprinkling, but the blood which was sprinkled. Parties were cleansed by means of sprinkling, but not because of sprinkling. If God had appointed poiaring or dipping, the eflfect would have been all the same, not because of the form of act, but because of the effect. But, as a matter of fact, God never did command that one man should put another man in and under water. My opponent has not yet brought a case to prove it, nor does the man exist who can do so. I have proved that every command God ever gave for the cleansing of people, where the mode was specified at all, was by the application of the cleansing element to the individual, and not by the putting of the individual into the cleansing element. When He baptizes men by His Spirit, and cleanses them, it is always by pouring out, never by dipping in. But our immersionist friends actually try to make plunging out of that. In fact, they take the word of the Lord apart and then put it together again to suit them- selves. It has been done here. But we have got this matter settled. The word cur Lord used in the commission was the same word that was employed in the case of Naaman, and that describes a washing for purification, therefore it means the same thing in the commission. I came here to dir.prox o my opponent's proposition that Christian baptism is immersion, and I have done it. And I claim that the dis- cussion on this proposition ought now to close unless he can disprove this position. Referring to Acts 16th chapter, he told you last night that the jailer and his family were taken out somewhere to be baptized, but - he did not know where. Of course he did not, and there is a good reason why. We will just examine the m>T,tter for a moment. In that chapter we read, " And the keeper of the prison awa.king out of his sleep, and seeing the prison door open, he drew his sword and would have killed himself, supposing that the prisoners had been fled." Why should he have done that 1 We find the explanation in 12 : 19, "And when Herod had sought for him and found him not, he examined the keepers and commanded that they should be put to death." Why 1 Because, as any sensible man or woman will see, there must have been a law in that country to put to death any keeper of a prison who should allow a prisoner to escape. What right had Herod to command them to be put to death if such a law did not exist ? Do you suppose he was such an imperious autocrat that he held the death penalty in his hands t He, as governor of that pro- vince, must have governed in accordance with law, and he commanded ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 103 the keeper to be put to death because the prisoners had escaped. Here is another prison-keeper whose prisoners he thought had escaped, and he drew his sword and was going to plunge it into his body, because, rather than be puo to death hj the authorities, he would prefer to die by his own hand. Under these circumstances, is it probable that this jailer, in contravention of law, and at the risk of his own life, took those apostles out of doors somewhere during the midnight dark- ness, to dip him and his family in some remote pond, mud-hole, or other placed To me it is the most improbable " \ng 1 ever heard of, and because of this improbability a good many Baptist writers have gone to work, and in their imaginations have manufactured a big tank or some sort of a receptacle inside the prison into which the poor fellows were plunged one after another, all the dirt being washed off in the same water. The more you look at it and turn it over and view it kaleidoscopically, the more you will not wonder that I repu- diate this miserable dipping business with all the emphasis of my soul. I tell you again it is a superstition. It was born and bred in the lap of superstition, and it is not fit, as a mere matter of decency, to be imported into decent society. It is dangerous besides, and I can pro- duce the proofs that individuals have perished by being immersed, and because of that danger it is a violation of the law that God has stamped upon his works. And the same God that enacted the laws of nature, and wrote them on the face of nature, and stamped them on our nature, wrote that Bible ; and when you can convince me that the laws of God in revelation and in nature are in conflict, vou can convince me that I ought to be an infidel. I guess we have got to the end of this business. Perhaps we will get some further astounding information. (A voice, " hash.") I hear a gentleman say " hash," and no doubt we shall have some more of that. We have had an argument spun out pretty fine. But I don't want you to suppose that my brains are worn out or that my evidence is exhausted. I have a lot over here. If you do not believe it, give me one week after this debate is over to go on night after night, for the whole evening, and I will show you about how much can be said on this subject. I have been over the ground, and consequently I come to this platform with this gentleman, as I will com with any other gentleman, I do not care whether he is white or colored, whether he comes from Kentucky or Halifax, without the least degree of trepida- tion, or the least disturbance of my nerves, — and I am about as nerv- ous a man as I know of, — knowing that we have the truth of the eternal God on our side. Most of you will believe that. 104 REPOhT OP DEBATE I was going to plunge into John's baptism, but I have not time to strike out, «i8 my half-hour is neaWy up. I have all the New Testa- ment baptisms also, to examine yet. But you can judge fr^m what I have given you that the rest is dry — a little too dry to chew well, and too dry to digest easily. However, it may swell out in my opponent's stomach. And this reminds me of a story of a boarder who said that they lived very cheaply at his boarding-house, for they ate dried apples for breakast, drank cold water for dinner, and the apples swelled for supper. I will give my opponent the rest of my time. ' [Time expired.] The benediction was pronounced. MR. HARDING'S EIGHTH SPEECH. I am more and more impressed with the fact that when we want to make an impression on the people for good, it is exceedingly impor- tant that we should display the spirit of the Lord Jesus. We have not had, since this debate began, a single violation of the rules of decorum and propriety, which, I am quite sure, has not been injurious to him who violated the rules. I desire to express a hearty amen to that petition, in the prayer, for decency and good order ; and for my part, I want afresh to endeavor to conduct the debate in a manner which should characterize Christian gentlemen. I was delighted with the discussion yesterday, and with the service of the evening, until that little episode which followed the speaking. That was unfortu- nate ; especially the hot debating that took place all over the room. I want with renewed energy to present these matters as they should be presented, from a Christian standpoint. At the beginning of the service this afternoon, I want to call your attention again, very briefly, before we take up the thread of argumen- tation where it was left last night, to the present state of the discus- sion. In order that I may present the matter in a different light, and that you may consider it from a different standpoint, consider the following facts: (1) I practice immersion; Mr. Wilkinson favors afiusion ; (2) all the lexicons define baptizo to immerse, or dip, or ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 105 plunge; none define it to sprinkle; (3) all the Church hibtorians testify that imujorsion was practiced by the ancient Church ; the first case of affusion for baptism on record is that of Novatian, A.D. 251 ; (i) the encyclopaedias, thoae marvellous repositories of the learning of the ages, testify that for thirteen centuries immersion was usually, almost universally, practiced ; that affusion (" clinic baptism ") was permitted only to the sick in case of necessity; that those that re- ceived it were often regarded as not properly baptized ; and that the Council of Ravenna (1311) was the first to allow a choice between sprinkling and immersion ; (5) all the great critics and commentators of the world (except two) tt.'stify that in Bom. 6 : 4 Paul refers to immersion ; (6) in the Bible accounts of baptisms, they went to water, to much water, down into the water, and (after the baptism) came up out of the water; they were buried in baptism, raised to walk in newness of life, and had their bodies washed with pure water. Now suppose that our positions were reversed : suppose that Mr. Wilkinson had produced a stack of lexicons, every one of them de- fining baptizo to sprinkle or pour upon, not one giving the definition to immerse ; suppose all the Church histories had testified that sprinkling was the almost universal practice of the ancient Church, and that the first case of immersion for baptism occurred two centu- ries and a-half after the beginning of the Christian era ; suppose all the eiicyclopsedias had agreed to this, explaining that immersion did not become general for thirteen hundred years ; suppose all scholars (except two Baptists) had said of some passage of Scripture, that it referred to " baptism by sprinkling," and that it could not be under- stood unless so interpreted ; suppose, furthermore, that Mr. Wilkin- son had shown that in apostolic times they brought the water for baptism, and that they baptized where there was but very little water; that the candidates were spoken of as bedewed, as having their fore- heads moistened, etc. ; then suppose I had come forward in reply, say- ing that some of the lexicons define baptizo to wet, and that you can wet a thing by immersing it in water, "therefore, in the Bible, baptism is immersion. Would not Mr. Wilkinson under such circumstances have gained a most overwhelming victory 1 and would not my defence have been feeble indeed 1, Ah, but he has not done as supposed ! I have brought the "lexicons, the Church histories, the encyclopaedias, the scholars, the favoring circumstances from the Bible, etc. And he replies, Baptizo means to wash, and you can wash a thing by sprinkling it. Yes, and you can wash a thing by immersing it, too, and that is what jou will do, if you baptize according to the Scriptures. 106 REPORT OF DBBATB I will refer briefly to the case of the jailer. My friend read one verse and then stopped. Had he read all the verses, he would have seen that everything I have said about it was correct. What I said was that the jailer took them out of his house to be baptized. I know that it is argued that the jailer was baptized in his house, or in the prison, and that therefore the baptism must have been by affusion. But it is a simple matter of fact that ho took them out of the house, and that fact is made plain to every one who reads the chapter. They were thrust into the inner prison, and their feet were made fast in the stocks (see Acts L6 : 24) ; at midnight an earthquake occurred which hurled every door open, and loosed every prisoner's bands (ver. 26); the keeper of the prison being aroused from his sleep, and supposing that his prisoners had fled, was about to kill himself, when Paul cried with a loud voice, saying, " Do thyself no harm, for we are all here;" the jailer, trembling with awe and amazement, obtained a light, and came in, and brought them out of the inner prison into his house; they then preached the word of the Lord to all that were in his house ; after the preaching, he took them, and washed their stri])e8, and was baptized, he and all his, straightway ; then he brought tlieni back into his house, and set meat before them. As the preaching took place " in his house," and as ho , brought them back into the house after his baptism, anybody who has sense enough to know that you cannot enter a house twice without going out once, knows he took them out of the house, and was baptized. But, it is asked, did not the jailer know that he would violate the law, and endanger his life, if he took them out of the house 1 No, he did not ; for such was not the case. He knew if he let them escape his life would be in danger. But he knew they did not want to escape ; they had a chance to flee, but refused to go. The jailer was satisfied that they were what they professed to be — servants of the Most High God. Why did he take them out of the house at midnight t — to be sprinkled ] Nay, verily ! Here is another case of going to the water, and that too at a very unseasonable hour, to be baptized. I pass from the case of the jailer to that of Naaman. My friend said that this case settles the question. No doubt it would have done so, had it not been settled from the first speech in the debate. You will find the record concerning Naaman in the 5th chapter of 2 Kings. The prophet Elisha said to this great warrior, who was so dreadfully afflicted with the leprosy, " Go and wash in Jordan seven times, and thy flesh shall come again to thee, and thou shalt be clean." In ON THE MODR AND 8UIUECT8 OF nAPTISM. 107 obedience to this command, ho went down, "and dipped himself seven times in Jordan, according to the saying of the man of God ; and his flesh came again like tinto the flesh of a little child, and he was clean." The word rendered "dipped" in the common version, is taval in the Hebrew, and baptizo in the Greek ; that is, King James' translators testify that the Hebrew taval, the equivalent of the Greek baptizo, ■ignides to dip. Taval occurs fifteen times in the Old Testament ; in the common Tersion it i» rendered dip fourteen times, plunge once. This is the Hebrew word for baptism. Mr. Wilkinson says that King James' translators were immersioniitR and therefore rendered taval to dip. I do not accuse my friend of wilfully slandering those men, but he has made a great mistake. They were not immersionists ; neither did Mr. Campbell admit that they were immersionists, for he knew better. I have here "The Twenty- four Books of the Holy Scriptures," carefully translated according to the Massoretic text, by Isaac Leeser. This Isaac lieeser is a Jewish scholar, and he says he translated "after the best Jewish authorities." He renders 2 Kings 5 : 14 thus : " Then went he down, and dived seven times in the Jordan, according to the saying of the man of God, and his flesh was restored (healthy) like tho flesh of a little boy, and he became clean." Verse 10, he renders thus: "And Elisha sent a messenger unto him, saying : " Go and bathe seven times in the Jor- dan, and thy flesh shall be restored (healthy) to thee, and thou shalt be clean." Rachata (wash) he renders " bathe ; " taval (dip) he renders "dive." Not even Mr. Wilkinson, I presume, will say that Rabbi Leeser and these Jewish authorities were immersionists. Neither were King James' translators partial to immersion. On this point. Dr. Wall, who wrote his "History of Infant Baptism" 180 years ago, thus testifies: {History of Inf. Bap. Vol. 1. p. 581.) " In the latter times of Queen Elizabeth, and during the reigns of King James and of King Charles I., very few children were dipped in the font." He explains that through the influence of Calvin over the ministers who had fled to Geneva from Queen Mary's bloody reign, backed by the influence of such men as Dr. Whitaker, of Cambridge, together with the inclination of the people, sprinkling was substituted for dipping, although the latter was requiied by the rubric, except in case of weak- ness. Be it remembered, that it was during the reign of this King James, when, as Dr. Wall shows, sprinkling had almost entirely taken the place of dipping, that our common version was made. The trans- lators inserted the word dip into the Bible because the Hebrew taval means to dip. I have here the Wilkes-Ditzlor debate, which was held 108 BBPOBT or DBUATB at Louisville, Kentucky. During the debate Mr. Wilkes stated that the Jewish Rabbi Kleebiirg had told him in a conversation that taval means to immerse ; Dr. Ditzler said, " I should like to see that in writing." Sometime afterwards it was produced in writing, in these words : •* 1. What does > *->««-» - o » («,#,»* 5 13 ■» ■>-> 03 ^ e8 2 ^ M H m t^H'T IB 1 1 m IM ^ a ^ -> 2 >» fe ■■♦^ 2 ->;> 1^ -M .. OJ M 2 « J= -^ 9) -tJ •♦^ M d ^ 0) l< -^ « ^ N 5-^2 r S C -w ^ «« o a> -a -tj a 1 s ■1 .2 8" > § S to o a 1 1 -e^i 1 cS <= 1 S i .2 O — ' ij * U^ ; '5 S g. a) a; 2 1 i S «5 1 1 ,"» fl t:! o g a O a .2 boW ■§ 1 •|"S 2 2 2^ -*3 *-- c8 = 2-3 .-< ., aj 1 ' a 3 ^ i; =j ® 1 g-S<^ 4-' •■'-. -: X ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 115 and the Lord's Supper to symbolize Christ's death, or the atonement only; and when we put the one ordinance in the place of the other we vitiate the teachings of God's Word. They are as distinct from each other as day and night. If any man can overturn that position he is a better man than my present opponent. I have shown that Meyer and Robinson hold substantially the same view as I have presented. Dr. Dale says on this point : "A false interpretation once taught, that the words of Scripture meant all that could be put into them, the theory adopts this prin- ciple in its interpretation of ritual baptism. Out of the elements entering into this ordinance are selected as symbolic, the water, the believer, and the double action of putting into and taking out of." Again he says : "The water appears in three offices: 1, of a grave ; 2, of a womb ; 3, of the blood of Christ. As a grave the living 'believer' is put into it: (1.) As dead with Christ; (2.) As dead by natural death; (3.) As the old man, dead, to be buried and to be left in the grave. And he is taken out of the grave : (1.) As risen with Christ; (2.) As risen at Christ's second coming ; (3.) As risen ' a new man' to holy living. This would seem to be enough of symbolization for one transaction. It is, however, only the beginning. The water must, again, appear in a wholly new office, that of a womb. The interpretation, here, is not so complex but is more perplexed ; since the putting into the water and the taking out of the water are both represented as a birth." Thus Dr. Dale exhibits the absurdity of this interpretation. My opponent says I am alone in my end of the scale. I shall have illustrious company before we get to the end of this debate. A moment with respect to that jailer. The record says he took them the same hour of the night, and washed their stripes, and he was baptized and all his house. If he took them out to some distant river or pond, he took them out to wash their stripes. Did he need to take them to a river to wash their stripes 1 Might he not have done that somewhere in the jail, or in the back room of his house 1 The record nowhere says he took them out of the house. They were in the " inner prison," and he brought them out of that into the outer prison. Then he took them — probably to a wash-room — and washed their stripes, and was baptized, he and all his, straightway. A great deal is said by my opponent about the jailer's taking them out of the house and bringing them back again, just as though the jail and the h»use were half a mile apart. I never saw them that distance apart in this country ; I do not know how it was in Judea. I pre- 116 REPORT OF DEBATE Bume they were in the same building, and that the prisoners could be easily taken from the one to the other without being taken out of the enclosure. What is the use of raising difficulties where there are none, for the sake of resisting the force of an argun>ent 1 A word with regard to Naaman's case. Dr. Young, author of the greatest concordance of the present day, of which Spurgeon said that Oruden's was as child's play in comparison, translates the word tabhal " to moisten, besprinkle." If there were time I could bring plenty of authorities to show that such was the primary meaning of the word, but I cannot enlarge on that point at present. My opponent's argument about the baptism of the priests, and the analogy which he has pointed out between it auJ the baptism of Christ, very clearly proves the correctness of my position, that Christ's baptism was a consecration to the priesthood. But he has not proved, nor can he prove, that any priest was ever immersed at the door of the tabernacle. They were washed (Hebrew, rachats; Greek, louo), but neic ?r of these words express or imply the idea of immersion, therefore there is no proof either that the Levitical priests or our Lord were immersed. \_Time expired.] MR. HARDING'S NINTH SPEECH. Wherever my friend finds the word " sprinkle " he brings it in. But, unfortunately for his cause, he does not find that haptizo is ever defined to sprinkle. He has not even brought the " extracts " from lexicons that define it to sprinkle. At first he " guessed " he could find such lexicons ; then, feeling the need of more boldness, he hotly affirmed that he could find thom, but said he would take his own time about it ; he would not be driven. He has not produced the book yet, nor will he. It don't exist. I grant you that a great many scholars agree with him in preaching afiFusion ; that a great many agree with him in arguing that " the jailer was baptized in the houae, and therefore inu8t have been baptized by affusion ; "" they think it is " hardly possible that the three thousand were immersed ; " but not one single lexico- grapher will say that haptizo means to sprinkle ; not one scholar of world-wide fame will say, as he does, that affusion or aspersion was practiced in apostolic times, and that immersion is of post-apostolic OK THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 117 origin — an outgrowth of superstition and ignorance. Church historians may argue in favor of aiTubion, may evidently be favorable to the practice of it ; but when it comes to testifying to a matter of fact, there is not one of them who does not testify that immersion was almost universally practiced in the ancient Church ; not one of them who mentions an earlier case of affusion than that of Novation, A.D. 251. Referring to my books, Mr. Wilkinson said that he had left his lexicons at home for his wife to read while he was away. The next time there is to be a debate, instead of sending for Mr. Wilkinson, our psedo-baptist friends would do better to send for his wife, as she has the books. He says I do better after a rest. I should like to return the com- pliment, but I honestly believe he does worse every time. With respect to Dr. Dale's theory : Dipping into water is not Christian baptism. No man that I know of has ever so held. The Doctor need not have stopped with the first thousand years ; he might have said. No man has ever held, at any time, that mere dipping into water is Christian baptism. No, as I told you in a former speech. [my fourth], we do not hold that " immersion alone is Christian baptism, but simply that the word baptizo, wherever you find it, whether used in regard to Christian baptism or anything else, means to immerse. Christian baptism is immersion by the authority of Christ, and into the name of Father, Son, and Holy Ghost. As baptizo means to immerse, and not to sprinkle nor to pour upon, in New Testament times every baptism was an immersion, whether Jewish, Christian, or pagan. I do not hold that every immersion is Christian baptism ; but I do claim that every Christian baptism is an immersion. Let my friend consider the difference between these two statements. T have shown that the scholars of the world say that immersion was practiced in ancient times — though affusion began to be practiced with the sick at an early day. I have brought forward such authori- ties as Dr. Wall and Dean Stanley, who testify that the Greek Church has practiced it all through the ages, even to this day ; but, since my opponent calls for scholars, I will read from Tertullian, who lived and wrote A.D. 200 ; that is, about one hundred years after the apostle John died. He says, quoting Rom. 6 : 3 : — " Know ye not that so many of us as were immersed into Christ Jesus, were im- mersed into His death 1 " Tertullian On tht Resurrection of the Body, ch. 47. A few lines further on he adds : " For by an image we die in bap- 118 REPORT OF DEBATE tism ; but we truly rise in the flesh, as did also Christ." Again he says, speaking of the Saviour's command : " And last of all, com- manding that they should immerse into the Father, and the Son, and the Holy Spirit." Tertullian Against Praxeaa, ch. 26. Referring to trine immersion, ho says : *' Then we are three times immersed, answering somewhat more than the Lord prescribed in the gospel." Tertullian On the Soldier's Crown, ch. 3. In telling what Christian baptism is, he says : "As of baptism itself there is a bodily act, that we are immersed in water ; a spiritual eflfect, that we are freed from sins." Tertullian On Baptism,, ch. 7. Remember, this man was born about the middle of the second cen- tury (A.D. 150), and that he wrote within 100 years after the days of inspiration. Even " clinic baptism " by affusion had not begun then, and hence he says nothing about it. He simply says, " We are im- mersed ;" Christ commanded " that they should immerse," etc. Ambrose (Bishop of Milan, born about 340 A.D.,) says: "Thou wast asked, ' Dost thou believe in God the Father Almighty 1 ' Thou saidst, * I believe ;' and thou didst sink down, that is, wast buried." Ambrose On the Sacraments, Book II. ch. 7. The same writer (Book III. ch. 1, sec. 1) says : "Yesterday we dis- coursed respecting the font, whose appearance is, as it were, a form of sepulchre ; into which, believing in the Father, and the Son, and the Holy Spirit, we are received and submerged, and rise, that is, are restored to life." If this is not teaching that Christian baptism is immersion, it is getting pretty close to it ; — he whose heart has been changed by faith is immersed into the holy names by the authority of Christ. My friend would like to get some help from H. A. W. Meyer, the greatest of all New Testament commentators, and hence he continues to quote from him on Rom. 6 : 3, 4. But Meyer has no comfort for him, as the following statements clearly show. He says (Commentanj on Romans, ch. 6, v. 4) : " The recipient — thus has Paul figuratively represented the process — is conscious, (a) in the baptism generally: now am I entering into fellowship with the death oi Christ; (/>) in the immersion in particular : now am I becoming buried with Christ; (c) and then, in the emergence : now I rise to the new life with Christ.' He says (commenting on verse 3) : " In baptism man receives forgive- ness of sins through faith." Evidently Mr. Wilkinson and Dr. Meyer are on different sides of this question clear through. I have not i^aid that every scholar is with me ; but I do affirm that the great body of the scholarship of the world is with me in this, viz., ON THE MODE AND 8UDJECT8 OF BAPTIHM. 119 in teaching that, in commanding baptism, Christ used a word which means to immerse, and that the apoHth>8 and first Christians did immerse in obeying the command. Remember Schaft''8 testimony concerning "all commentators of note (except Stuart and Hodge)" on Rom. 6 : 4. In his History of the Christian Church, Vol. I., p. 123, lie teaches that the usual form of the act was immersion, and that this is plain from the original meaning of the words baptizo and baplismos ; then he adds : " But sprinkling, also, or copious pouring, wa.s practiced at an early day with sick and dying persons, and prob- ably with children and others, where total or partial immersion was impracticable. Some writers suppose that this was the case even in the first baptism of the three thousand on the day of Pentecost, since Jerusalem, especially in summer, was very poorly supplied with water and private baths." Observe the testimony of this greatest of all living Church historians as to affusion. He says it was practiced at an early day, where total or partial immersion was impracticable, with side and dying persons, and probably with children and others. Although his church con- nection, early training, and social influences all tend to bias him in favor of affusion or aspersion, this is the most that he can say for it. I can say exactly that much for it myself. My opponent is very much exercised about the case of the jailer, although he brought it up himself. I would not have referred to this case at all but for the fact that he, and others on his side, rely on it to show that the jailer could not have been immersed, seeing, they say, that he was baptized in the house. From a careful reading of the passage (Acts 16 : 19-39) it clearly appeared that he did take them out of the house, and was baptized, and then brouglit them back ; then my friend made quite a speech to show, (notwithstanding the testimony of Luke was clear to the contrary), that the jailer could not have taken the prisoners out, for he would have been risking his life. It was then shown that he was in no danger unless his prisoners escaped, which they were not disposed to do ; Paul and Silas did not want to run away. They could have been sprinkled in the house ; but they could not have been immersed there ; therefore, though it was the hour of midnight, they went out. My friend says he is full of matter. He intimated that he had been studying this subject for months ; and he says he only wishes wi could have three months of this sort of thing. Well, there is nothing that I know of to hinder our going on till Mr. Wilkinson is satisfled. I am willing. But, he says, if you think he has run out of matter, 190 REPORT DEDATE just give hill) a wet-k wlicn the dobatn is over, and he will show you, He could go on for a whole week by himself ! No doubt of it ; and he would do a great deal better, too, htiving it all to himself, than he is now doing. But let not my friend flatter himHclf that any 8uch good fortune is awaiting him ; for [ don't intend to go till he dot'H ; 1 will stay hero till this tinje next year, if he does, if I have to h«mu1 for my family to come up. When ho was sent for laat summer to come up and demolish my teaching, by lecturing on baptism, I stayed till he left ; and I intend to do so again. This Kentuckian likes to be with Canadians; they have been very kind to him; and this is a grand country ; so he is not going to leave till ho knows that Mr. Wilkinson has gone — unless they go by the same train. We might have a debate right along as long as we stay. If there is anything 1 enjoy it is debating, even though there is a little row occasionally, A which, however, I do not like. My friend quotes : '* For by one Spirit are we all baptized into one body, whether we be Jews or Gentiles, whether we be bond or free, and have been all made to drink into one Spirit." — 1 Cor. 12:13. Just so ; all Christians are baptized by cne Spirit (the Holy Spirit), into one body (the Church, which is the body of Christ). But the question arises. How are they thus baptized f It is also true that the gospel is preached "by the Holy Ghost sent forth from heaven." How is it thus preached 1 The Holy Spirit came down to earth, and entered into men, into the apostles of our ^ord ; and through them He preached ; Jesus said to them : " It is not ye that speak, but the Spirit of your Father that speaketh in you."— Matt. 10:20. The Holy Ghost preached through men ; just so He baptized ; that is, through men. When the apostles baptized, they did it under the command, and according to the instructions of the Holy Spirit. And just so it is now. When baptism is properly performed, it is done under the command and according to the instructions of the Spirit of God, as they are revealed in the Holy Word of God. Hence the question. What does the word baptizo, which the Spirit used in giving the command, mean? is one of superlative importance; for if we do anything else, the baptism is not of the Spirit. When Christ com- manded His apostles to go into all the world to preach to the people, and to baptize them. He did not permit them to start at once; He directed them to wait till they had received the promise of the Father, till they had been endued with power from on high ; for the preach- ing and the baptizing were to be by the Spirit, and, of course, they could not do the work till they had received the Spirit. But the ON TIIK MODR AND flUIIJKCTH Of UAPTI8M. 121 Imptifini of the comtniBsion (about which wn are do>>atin^) i'h not, as my opponent Hocms to think, l)npti8ni in tho Holy (ihost ; it is bap- tiHin in water. Jesus diil not direct Hisdisciph'H to ^o about baptiz- ing pt'opio with the Holy (>host ; Philip did not baptize the eunuch in tho Holy (ihost, but in water, down into which they both went. Christ HiniMelf performs the baptism in tho Hpirit ; that is His hiisint'SH, not ours. According to the gospel rule, after men were baptized in water Christ gave them the Holy Hpirit. Just here I want to call attention to another matter. It is some- tinu-s said that water-baptism should represent baptism in the Hpirit ; that as tho Hpirit was "poured out " upon tho apostles, " shed forth " upon them, tlmt therefore the water should bo poured, or shed forth, upon the people now in baptizing them. If it could be shown that the act of pouring constituted the baptism in the Hpirit, I grant you there would be much force in this argument. But did it ? Dr. Ditzler, the most distinguished Methodist divine on this continent as a debater, made an argument like this : If Christ had wanted to teach immersion, why did He not teach it? " The Ureek," says the Doctor, "has words for dip, both partial and thorough dips— dupio and embaplo, bnpto — not once are they used for baptism, nor kolumbo. In Greek pontidzo, enduno [another form of enduo], buthidzo, kata- pontidzo, katiuluno, all mean definitely to immerae." — Graves- Ditzler Debate, p. 171. The word enduo, which Dr. Ditzler says means to immerse, definitely to immerse, is the very word which our Lord used when He said, " And, behold, I send the promise of My Father upon you ; but tarry ye in the city of Jerusalem, until ye be e.ndued with power from on high." — Luke 24 : 49. They were endued with power from on high when the Spirit came upon them ; that is, according to the great Methodist, Dr. Ditzler, they were immersed, as this word means definitely to immerse. It is tlie Greek word to indicate put- ting on the clothes. When the Holy Spirit was given to the apostles there came from heaven tho sound of a rushing, mighty wind. (There was no wind, but the Spirit in descending made a sound like unto that of a mighty wind.) It filled all the room in which they sat ; cloven tongues, like as of fire, sat upon each of them ; they were all tilled with the Holy Ghost, endued with power, and they began to speak with other tongues as the Spirit gave them utterance. Dr. Ditzler says endued means immersed ; very good. In this case, then, there was both a pouring out of the Spirit and an immersion in the Spirit. Which is called the baptism 1 Evidently the immersion ; for baptizo means to immerse, as all the lexicographers state ; whereas 122 REPORT OF DEBATE it never means to pour upon. This idea of immersion in the Spirit harmonizes with the sayings of the apostles, too, in other places. Observe the following: " I was in the Spirit on the Lord's day."— Rev. 1:10; "And immediately I was in the Spirit." — Rev. 4:2; " So he carried me away in the Spirit into the wilderness." — Rev. 17:3; " But ye are not in the flesh but in the Spirit, if so be that the Spirit of God dwell in you." — Rom. 8:9; " If we live in the Spirit, let us stlso walk in the Spirit."— Gal. 5:25 The apostles were in the Spirit ; that is, they were immersed. Do you inquire how that can bel The Bible represents the body as being a tabernacle or dwelling- place. Man is dwelling in this tabernacle; and if it is filled with the Holy Spirit, he is in the Spirit — immersed in the Holy Spirit. In order to show you that I am not alone in giving this interpreta- tion, but that it is supported by the best scholarship of the world, I quote the following : Dr. Edward Robinson, in his Greek lexicon of the New Testament, art. bap. p. 118, says : "to baptize in (with) the Holy Ghost, and in (with)Jire, i.e., to overwhelm, richly furnish, with all spiritual gifts, and to overwhelm with 'fire unquenchable,' Matt. 3:11, Luke 3 : 16." Dr. Geo. Campbell, Presbyterian, of Scotland, says: "The word baptism, both in sacred authors and classical, signifies to dip, plunge, immerse. It is always construed suitably to this meaning." "Notes on New Testament" Andover, ^'^.^. II., p. 20. Neander, whose great work '^ liave had occasion to quote before, says : " Baptism was performeu by immersion as a sign of entire baptism into the Holy Spirit — of being entirely penetrated by the same." History of Christian Religion, Vol. I , p. 310. Casaubon says : " To baptize is to immerse, and in this sense the apostles are truly said to be baptized ; for the house in which it was done was tilled with the Holy Ghost, so that the apostles seemed to be plunged into it as into a fish pool." R. Fuller, p. 72. Gurtlerus, in his Institut. Theo., says: "'Baptism in the Holy Spirit is immersion into the pure waters of the Holy Spirit, for he on whom the Holy Spirit is poured out is, as it were, immersed into Him." See R. Fuller, p. 19. Archbishop Tillotson, on Acts 2 : 2, says : " It (the sound from heaven) filled all the house. This is that which our Saviour calls baptizing with the Hohj Ghost. So that they who sat in the' house were, as it were, immersed in the Holy Ghost, as those who are buried with water, which is the proper notion of baptism." Cyril, Bishop of Jerusalem, A.D. 350, says : " As he who is ; ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 123 in the water and baptized is encompassed by the water on every side, so they that are baptized by the Holy Spirit are also wholly covered." Pengilly, p. 75. Remember, this Cyril lived in the very city where this baptism occurred, was the principal leader of the Church there, and that, too, only about three centuries after the baptism happened. These scholars, you see, my friends, sustain my position. It is not the pouring forth of the Spirit, but the immersion in the Spirit that is called the baptism. My friend read a passage in his last speech to show that the baptism mentioned at Rom. 6 : 4, is not water baptism, but that of the Holy Spirit. In that baptism it is expressly stated that we were buried, —buried by baptism : if that is the baptism of the Holy Ghost, then in it there is a burial ; and this agrees exactly with what Dr. Ditzler says about the meaning of enduo ; exactly with the teaching of the apostles, when they write of being in the Spirit, of walking in the Spirit, of living in the Spirit ; they were overwhelmed and immersed in the Spirit. With respect to the chart which my friend has displayed, he has told us that he does not make any great pretension to scholar- ship, and consequently he could not reasonably expect me to pay much attention to his chart. He has displayed such a lack of information about the simplest matters of fact, I cannot i ely upon his productions. For example, he thought the water of separation was made of blood, ashes, and running water. When I explained the passage in Ezekiel abou^ sprinkling clean w^ater, by saying that God here promised that the scattered Israelites should be brought back to their native land, and be purified by having the water of separation sprinkled upon them, he said he did not believe the Jews would ever be brought back ; he did not know that they were brought back forty or fifty years after the prophecy was uttered by Ezekiel. He said that Liddell and Scott's was the only Greek-English lexicon ; that all others define in Latin or some other tongue ; and that, therefore, I was safe in saying that none define by " sprinkle," seeing that is an English word. He did not know that I had lying on my table here nearly a dozen Greek-English lexicons, and that 1 had been quoting from them. It would be unreasonable to expect that I should care much for his maps and charts ; but I do care for his Scriptural quotations. He constructs an argument by his chart from the Passover, the slaying of the paschal lamb, and the deliverance of the children of Israel. The facts in case are these : the lamb was slain, its blood was sprinkled, its eaten ; then the children of Israel arose and fled, and, after three 124 REPORT OF DEBATE days' journey, came to the Red Sea ; here they were baptized unto Moses " in the cloud and in the sea ;" and here they caught the last sight of their enemies, for they left them drowned in the sea. The lamb that was slain, and whose blood was sprinkled, was a type of Christ ; their baptism unto Moses, a type of our baptism into Christ ; the blood was sprinkled ; but in their baptism the cloud was over them, and the sea on either side of them ; they were bvied "in the cloud and in the sea." We pass through the water, are buried in it, and are thus baptized into Christ. [Time expired.] MR. WILKINSON'S NINTH REPLY. My opponent said there was not a single case under the old dinpen- sation where God ever commanded or enjoined the sprinkling of clean water on any one. I quoted Ezekiel 36 : 25, in which it speaks of sprinkling clean water. He has frequently said that that referred to the restoration of the Jews ; that when they were brought back to their native land that prophecy would be fulfilled. I then proved that as God had blotted out all religious distinctions between Jews and Gentiles, their restoration would not be literal, but spiritual, con- sisting in their conversion to Christianity, and that then this prophecy would be fulfilled. He then claimed that it was fulfilled 630 years B.C. But if it happened away back there, why did he say God never commanded any one under the old dispensation to sprinkle clean water i He will please reconcile this discrepancy. A man who can thus con- tradict himself must be getting childish. He will soon require a nursing-bottle. With respect to TertuUian's testimony. My opponent quotes from him to the effect that in baptism thero is a bodily act and a spiritual effect. This is substantially what I have been contending for all the time, viz., an action, ayiy action by which a certain effect may be pro- duced. That effect is, according to my theory, symbolic purity, and it is the effect and not the action by which it is produced that consti- tutes the baptism. With this teaching Tertullian agrees. And if there was a bodily act and a spiritual effect required in order to a baptism, then the bodily act of being put under water was not the whole of it. There is something else besides, and that is the spiritual effect. ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 125 But this does not agree with the primary signification of baptizo, which had no reference to any particular action, but was the name of a state or condition produced by some action. And I have contended that it is used in the secondary sense when applied to the Christian ordinance, viz., an action looking to some effect. And so says Tertullian. Therefore this witness agrees with me and not with my opponent. But Tertullian's testimony betrays his erroneous belief in another respect. I have told you that this whole immersion business is a superstition. I will now tell you where it originated. Under the old dispensation ceremonial purifications were cleansings in a legal sense, not in an actual or real sense. They did not propose to wash dirt off the people, but there were certain classes of things that were legally unclean and others that were legally clean. That distinction was kept up until the sheet from heaven came down to Peter, or the beginning of the Christian dispensation. When anything legally clean came in contact with anything legally unclean it had to be legally purified, and purification removed that legal defilement. The Jews who embraced Christianity in the early days of this dispensation carried that idea with them and applied it to Christian baptism. Baptisms under the law made them actually clean in the eyes of the law ; and they thought, " Now, surely this Christian rite, typified by those old ceremonial purifications, must cleanse us really, also, not only in body but also in our soul." And they began to believe that the soul could be washed from its sin by this baptism. When they thus got to believe that the soul was cleansed from sin by baptism they began to adminis- ter the ordinance by the superstitious mode, which my friend claims is according to Bible doctrine. They found it taught in Genesis that the Spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters. They believed in this way spiritual efficacy was imparted to the waters, and they called that spiritual efficacy vis baptismatia. Then they taught that because of the presence of the Spirit in the water, when applied to the body, it purged the soul from sin. And this was the doctrine of Tertullian. He says : "The nature of the waters having been sanctified by the Holy, it receives itself the power to sanctify. . . . All waters, therefore, have the power to effect the sacrament of sanctification, God being invoked. For immediately the Spirit from heaven comes and is above the waters sanctifying them by Himself, and so they, being sanctified, imbibe the power of sanctifying, .... there- fore, the waters having received healing virtues through the interven- tion of the Angel, both the soul is corporeally purified by the waters and the body is spiritually cleansed by the same." According i2e REPORT OF DEBATE to these early fathers it was not the putting of the individual in the water, nor the putting of the water on the individual that constituted the baptism, but it was the communication of the Spirit by reason of the application of water to the body that purilied the soul, and that was Christian baptism according to their notions. Tertullian is no authority, therefore, on the question of mode ; but he testifies to my contention that it was a bodily act resulting in an effect. When they began to cherish this superstition about the Spirit being in the water, and cleansing the soul, they then had to determine how the desired result could be most effectually realized. They naturally reasoned that if the Spirit was in the water, and communicated by the contact of the water with the body, the less there was to interfere with that contact the better. Supposing that the clothing would be an obstacle to such contact they said, " Off with the coat." No one knew where the sin might be situated, whether in the head or the heart or all through the body. The doctrine of natural depravity was one that applied to every part of man, so they said, " Pants off, too." (A voice, " Shame ! ") Don't cry " Shame " at me. I am hero to establish the truth, and I shall not allow any false sense of delicacy to stand between me and my duty. It's a fact that they stripped themselves bare. And as far back as my opponent can prove immersion I can prove nude immersion. They baptized — excuse me, ladies — men, women, and children, nudr, and there is no fact better established in history than that the baptism of the early Church was nude baptism. Why did they do if? Because of that Spirit power and efficacy that was in the water, which they thought effected a cleansing and regeneration, and that is why they talk about being buried in the Spirit. If my opponent quotes ten thousand million of those early fathers to prove that when a peraon is baptized he is immersed in the Spirit, you can now easily understand it. Immersionists now-a-days immerse with their clothes on, and sometimes with india-rubber water-tight garments at that ; but I think my opponent has a little of the ancient superstition remaining. He has not established from these fathers that a dipping in water is Christian baptism. Was it dipping in water accompaniei by the Spirit that they believed was Christian baptism ? No. Neither was it the water immersion that effected baptism ; it was the Spirit, com- municated through the water as a medium that effected the work. That was baptism according to the early fathers. That superstition you can trace back to the very door of the Apostolic Church, and the whole immersion business was born, bred, and nurtured there, and when that superstition gets out of men's minds the whole immersion fabric will be demolished. ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OP BAPTISM. 127 My opponent again refers to Meyer. He quotes from that writer to show that the candidate is conscious of the fellowship when he goes into the water and comes out ; but he cannot quote Meyer to show that this was a symbol of burial and resurrection. And this is what he teaches. But the question js, whether it is a spiritual baptism or a mere dipping in water that is meant in Rom. 6 : 3, 4 and Col. 2 ; 12. I contend for the former, and Meyer agrees with me, as I have proved. So much for another of his witnesses. As to the jailer and the midnight baptism. It is quite a common thing for some people to believe in midnight baptisms. Here is another case which my opponent can put with the jailer's baptism. At one time the Jews wore invested by the army of the Assyrians. The Jews were entrenched in the fortress of Bethulia, and we are told inJudith 6:11 that the fountains of water were "under Bethulia," and in chapter 7 that Holofernes, the commander of the invading army, took possession of the fountains, and in verse 17 of the the same chap- ter we are told that " they pitched in the valley, and took the waters, and the fountains of the children of Israel." (An army march- ing must have water). A beautiful Jewess by the name of Judith undertook to betray the opposing army into the hands of the Jews. She went into the camp of the invading army as if she were a refugee coming there for succour. They took her into the camp. The Assyrian general was very much attracted by her beauty. The record runs : "She slept till midnight, and she arose when it was towards the morning watch, and sent to Holofernes, saying: Let my lord now command that thine handmaid may go forth unto prayer. " Then Holofernes commanded his guard that they should not stay her: thus she abode in the camp three days, and went out in the night unto the valley of Bethulia, and washed (Greek, haptizo) herself in the camp ' at the fountain. ' " (Dr. Oonant's rendering). These fountains of water were valuable to the Israelites. They needed them, doubtless, for cooking and drinking. The invading army took possession and cut off the Israelites from them. This lady goes out by night and baptizes herself in the camp at the fountain. Perhaps my opponent will tell you it was an immersion. Do you think they would allow such a thing, or that a lady would go and dip herself, head, neck and feet, in the fountain from which the army were constantly drawing water for their own use'? Can you believe iti It is very nearly as likely as that the whole family of the Philippian jailer were taken out at midnight to some distant river and immersed. If it was the law of the land that 128 REPORT OF DEBATE if a prisoner escaped the jailer's life should be sacrificed, it must have been contrary to law to take prisoners out of prison. No matter what personal faith he might have in their integrity, he had no right to let them outside the prison. It is not a question of personal faith. He was there as custodian of the prisoners on behalf of the people, and whatever confidence he might have in the prisoners he must observe the law. Yet these are the kind of probabilities, or rather improbabilities on which the immersion theory is founded. Surely a cause that is driven to such straits as these must be in a forlorn condition 1 My opponent says the Gospel was preached by the Holy Spirit, and therefore baptism by the Holy Spirit was effected in the same way. Is that the inference he intended to convey] The apostles were baptized by the Spirit before they dared to preach the Gospel, They were told to remain in Jerusalem until they were endued with power from on high by the baptism of the Spirit, and then being bap- tized themselves, the Spirit being in them, they should go forth and preach the Gospel to others. The baptism of the Spirit is spoken of as a very distinct spiritual operation upon the individual, and not through the agency of the individual, who acts in obedience to His instructions, and is spoken of invariably as a pouring out or shedding down of the Holy Spirit. But according to my opponent's theory the Spirit does not baptize any one since the days of the apostles; it merely baptizes people in water, by means of some person. This is a new way of being baptized with the Holy Ghost ! The baptism of the Spirit is referred to by the apostles. Paul says, We are saved " by the washing of regeneration and the renewing of the Holy Ghost which He shed on us abundantly." So when Peter saw the Holy Spirit descending upon the Gentiles who were gathered together at the house of Cornelius, he was reminded of the baptism they had received at the beginning. As to the burial, Rom. 6 : 4. My opponent says it represents the baptism of the Holy Spirit by being immersed in it, That is purely begging the question. I am not going to haggle over that sort of evidence. As I understand it, and as a great many Christians understand it, the Holy Spirit pervades a man ; it does not go inside the body and around the soul. It breathes in his every action ; it controls his thoughts, motives, desires, impulses, affections. This idea of the soul being immersed within the body is a superstitious and contemptible notion that has been put forward by my opponent. He got it from the " office editor " at Cincinnati, who used it in his argu- ment with Dr. Watson at Tonawanda, and I am astonished that he should have brought it before an intelligent audience. OK THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 129 Dr. Wall is quoted to prove that at the time King James' translation was made very few children were dipped. What has that to do with the question? I said Alexander Campbell admitted that our present version was made by men who "avored immersion. My opponent does not deny it ; he cannot deny it, unless he goes back on his own father. He has taunted me a good deal about going back on my father Wesley. Alexander Oampbell is as m uch his father as Wesley is my father. They stand in the same relation to us exactly. What does Campbell say t He says : "The translators of the common version were all, or nearly all, genuine Episcopalians, and, at the very time they made the version, were accustomed to use a liturgy which made it the minister's duty, in the sacrament of baptism, 'to take the child and dip it in the water' con- tained in the font. I have seen copies of King James' version, printed in 1611, which contain the psalms and the service of the Church, in which frequent allusions are made to immersion, all indicative of the fact that it was then regarded as the primitive and proper baptism ; consequently, these translators accepted the king's appointment and restrictionH, to retain baptize and baptism, and on no occasion favored the innovation of sprinkling by any rendering, or note marginal, in that translation." Christian Baptism, p. 140. I want him to deny that Campbell said that. I do not care whether he said it or not, only I want to know if my opponent is prepared to go back on his father. If not, he has got to admit that the men who made King James' version leaned to the immersion theory. With respect to louo, washing of the body — does it follow that it means the dipping of the body f In his references to what Paul calls " divers baptisms," my opponent speaks of washings which were per- formed outside the tabernacle, not inside. But suppose those bathings were the baptisms of Paul, is a bathing of the body necessarily an immer- sion of the body 1 Is a washing an immersion 1 If he can prove that bathing or washing is necessarily an immersion, then he can prove that racJiats, louo and all those words mean immerse. I said the word taval was translated the first time it ever occurred in the Bible — in Genesis — molunein, when Joseph's coat was dipped in blood ; and those who translated it molunein in this case translated it baptizo in Naaman's, though molunein signifies to sprinkle. My opponent said that those men understood their own language. Of course they did ; and if they did not know it, who did ? And if they were consistent in translating the same word by a word signifying immerse in the one case, and by a word signifying sprinkle in the other case, it implies 9 * • 130 RBPORT OF DKBATB that immerse means to sprinkle and to sprinkle means to immerse. That would be sprinkle-immersion or immersion-sprinkling. If im- mersion means to wash, then when you whitewash you white-ini merge, or immerse-white. Put these thoughts in combination, and you will iind the immersion theory does not hold together. This fact is as clear as a sunbeam, and will always stare you in the face and become more apparent every session of this debate, that the Old Testament is full of ceremonial washings all of which had reference to purification, They did not mean to purify simply, but to purify religiously. To purify simply is to wash oflf dirt, but to purify religiously is to symbol- ize the washing of the soul by the influence of the Holy Spirit. All those baptisms, whether expressed by sprinkling or washing, whether eflfected by blood or water, I have no doubt, typified Christian baptism ; and therefore Christian baptism is, like them, a purification ; and the visible element ought to effect the outward cleansing as the invisible power effects the inward cleansing. My opponent still harps on my inability to produce a lexicon defin- ing baptizo by the word sprinkle, as if my whole cause depended on that; whereas I have told you, from the very first speech, that baptko does not mean sprinkle, and if any lexicographer so rendered it he would mislead. I contend for sprinkle, not as the meaning of the word, but as the divinely appointed mode of producing the efiect de- scribed by it. What object can he have in view by such haggling, except to raise a dust and divert attention from the real question! Besides, I have told you that the lexicographers sometimes errone- ously define the vord by the equivalent of sprinkle, and challenged him to deny it ; but all the denial he could make was that they did not give this equivalent as the Jirat meaning. . My opponent also persists in misrepresenting me. He accuses me of saying that I have left my books at home with my wife ; and in a previous speech he accused me of saying I had left my extracts at home with my wife, when, in point of fact, all I did say was that I had left Meyer's Commentary at home, not supposing I should require it. He also thinks I do worse and worse in every speech. But I ex- pected he would think that. Each successive speech is worse for him, and will continue so to the end. But he seems to be shifting his base. Doubtless his mind is changing on the subject under debate. He came here to prove that "Christian Baptism is Immersion,"— this and nothing more. Now, however, he says, " Dr. Dale need not haw stopped with the first thousand years ; he might have said, ' No man ON THR MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 181 has ever held, at any time, that mere dipping into water is Christian Baptism." He also says he " does not hold that every immersion is Christian baptism." He should have been a little more prudent, therefore, in his definition, for he certainly believes, according to his own proposition, that immersion and Christian baptism are synony- mous; and if baptizo merely means to immerse, when a thing is immersed it must be baptized. Again, my opponent misrepresents my sentiments when he says I think the baptism of the Commission is the baptism of the Holy Ghost. I think nothing of the kind. He drew on his imagination for tliat. [ Time expired.] MR. HARDING'S TENTH SPEECH. We are now drawing to the close of the discussion of the first pro- position, and I want to call attention here to a rule which has been one of the rules regulating every discussion in which I have been engaged except this one. This discussion is a little peculiar, from the fact that no rules for the regulation of it have been agreed upon. The rule referred to is this : " No new matter shall be introduced in a tinal negative." The leading characteristic of a debate is that the matters under consideration are discussed by both parties, considered from both standpoints. Of course, new matter in a final negative can be considered by one speaker only ; hence the rule which I have just quoted has been generally adopted. We have not agreed to it for this debate, and I shall not insist on it to-night. Mr. Wilkinson — I agree to it at once. Mr. Harding — That is just and fair. No new matter shall be introduced into my last speech on the next proposition. Now, concerning my friend's quotation from Alexander Campbell : I have been called upon frequently, in debate, to endorse what he wrote. I accept his writings just as I receive the Writings of any other man ; when they accord with the truth — the teachings of the word of God, or the truth of history — I receive them ; when they do not, I reject them. But never, in debate, has a quotation from him been presented to me that I could not endorse ; not in a single in- stance, so far as I can remember. My friend said that King James'* 132 REPORT OP DEBATE translators were immertiionists ; that Mr. Campbell said that they were ; that they leaned to the immersion theory. I knew he was wrong about that ; I was certain that Mr. CampV)ell had never gaid any such thing ; he was too well informed to have made such a blunder. Mr. Wilkinson, in endeavoring to sustain his statement, quoted from him as follows : " The translators of the common version were all, or nearly all, genuine Episcopalians, and, at the very time they made the version, were accustomed to use a liturgy which made it the minister's duty, in the sacrament of baptism, ' to take the child and dip it in the water' contained in the font. I have seen copies of King James' version, printed in 1611, which contain the psalms and the service of the Church, in which frequent allusions are made to immersion, all indica- tive of the fact that it was then regarded as the primitive and proper baptism ; consequently these translators accepted the King's appoint- ment and restrictions to retain baptize and baptism, rather than translate them, and on no occasion favored the innovation of sprink- ling by any rendering, or note marginal, in that translation." Camji- bell on Baptism, p. 140. But, by a fortunate accident, I understood Mr. Wilkinson to say page 144; I turned to that page, in the first place, and read as follows : " Evident, then, it is, not only that the English translators did not even translate baptizo, or its lineage, by the words pour, sprinkle or purify, but that they could not so translate them from their know ledge of the ancient customs and the classic and sacred use of these terms. " Thus, then, we have, by a new, distinct, and independent class of witnesses, of the highest celebrity for eminent literary attainments and for highly cultivated and refined conscientiousness, furnished another argument in proof of our first proposition, which, without regard to any other, would seem sufficient to establish it beyond the possibility '^^ refutation. For, will not that distinguished doctor, Common Seii^e, whom all believe, naturally conclude that so many learned, conscientious, and religious men, having so much at stake themselves, continually sprinkling in the name of the Lord, would, if they could, have given some countenance to their own favorite prac- tice, by translating some one or more of these one hundred and twenty- six occurrences of these terms in a way favorable to their own beloved practice. Certain it is, then, that their practice had some other foundation than the meaning of the word in the apostolic commission, ON THE MODE AND 8UUJECTH OF UAPTISM. 133 concerning which foundation we may hereafter speak." Campbell on Baplimn, p. U4. Ill this last extract, Mr. Campbell says of King James' translators that they were " continually sprinkling in the name of the Lord ; " and he calls sprinkling " their own favorite practice." So I will not have " to go back" on my father (to adopt the elegant (!) language of my opponent) after all. He did not say that the translators of our com- mon version wore immersionists. Nor were they. As I have said, Dr. Wall, the distinguished writer of the History of Infant Baptism, who was a member of the Church of England, and who wrote about 180 years ago, plainly teaches that dipping, by the time of the later years of Queen Elizabeth, had very generally gone out of use, and that sprinkling had taken its place. I have heard it said a number of times that King James' translators were immersionists. There never was a greater mistake. They were not. It is a well-established fact that sprinkling had come into general use about that time. About 1311 the first decree was issued making sprinkling or immer- sion optional with the administrator, and by 1500 sprinkling had come into very general use in England; and in 1611, when King James' translation was made, it is a matter of history that very few dippings took place. In the ritual of the Church immersion was re- tained; in practice it was dropped. These things understood, Campbell's statements are seen to be perfectly harmonious with them- selves, and with the truth. Now, with respect to the clean water of Ezekiel : We agree that under Judaism water unmixed was never sprinkled by authority of God. I have called attention to Ezekiel's prophecy, '* J will sprinkle clean water upon you." Mr. Wilkinson claims that that was a refer- ence to future times when God in the fulness of time would draw the people to Himself through Christ. I deny that. I claim that that was a prophecy delivered by Ezekiel, when in captivity in Babylon, in which he prophesied that God would restore the Jews to their native land, and then He would sprinkle this clean water upon them. But did you not say that clean water was never sprinkled upon anybody under Judaism ? I said water unmixed was never sprinkled ; it was always mixed with ashes, or something else. But does not this pas- sage speak of clean water ? Yes, but remember that the ashes of a red heifer and running water, mixed, formed what is called in the Bible "the water of separation," "a purification for s n." This " water of separation," on account of its cleansing efficacy, is called here by the prophet " clean water." When the deliverance of the 134 RKPOKT OV UKUATB Jews had come, when they had hoen tfparnted from their idolatry, and from the idolatroiiH peopli; ainoii>( whom tlicy liad \m-\\ scattered, it was neceHHary that tliu water of Hf^paration Hhould be Hprinkled upon them, to cleanse them from their ceremonial defilements. This is the clean water of Ezekiel. Mr. Wilkinson did not know that that prophecy was delivered before the return of the Jews under Zorul)babel, as he said he did not believe that they would ever bo brought back to their native land. Then I called his utttm- tion to the fact that fifty-one years after the prophecy was deliverwi they did come i)ack to their native land, and the walls of JeruHaleni were rebuilt ; and sixty years after that Nehemiah came back and the temple was rebuilt ; all this was r)00 B.C. He did not know that before. Not only is he ignorant of Greek lexicons, but he is ignorant of the common history of the Bible. When I quoted that passage from Ezekiel, and said it was a prophecy concerning the children of Israel being brought back to their native land, some of the audience expressed their dissent. I turned to the passage and read it. You can read it when you go home. God told them that because they had disobeyed His law He had scattered them among the nations, but in His own time He would bring them back to their native land, and their cities would be rebuilt and their lands made fruitful. Then He would sprinkle the clean water, the water of sepa ration, upon them and they should be clean, " From all your filthiness, and from all your idols, will I cleanse you," said He. Remember this water is typical of the blood of Christ, with which no one is ever said to be baptized. With respect to the Red Sea baptism, Mr. Wilkinson asked me another question ; he wants to know if the cloud was over them while they were in the sea ; if it did not pass over them before they entered the sea. I like to answer his questions, and to give him information, for I see he needs it badly. For a reply to his question let him con- sider the following passage : •' Moreover, brethren, I would not that ye should be ignorant how that all our fathers were under the cloud, and all passed through the sea ; and were all bai)tized unto Moses in the cloud and in the sea." 1 Cor. 10:1, 2. Paul says they were un- der the cloud, and passed through the sea, and were baptized unto Moses " in the cloud and in the sea." Now, it is evident that if they were under the cloud at one time, and passed through the sea at another time, there would have been two baptisms — one in the cloud, and another in the sea. But no one holds that there were two bap- tisms here : all agree that the Israelites were baptized but once ON TIIK MODE AM) HUIUKCTH OF IIAPTI8M. 13S '•unto Moses." Honce, it follows that whilo thoy woro in tho spa the cloud was over thom : they wont buried in the cloud and sea. It was not a liuptiHiii in tho cloud ; nor was it a haptism in the sea : both cloud and sea were required in the performance of tho baptism. It geeiiiH to me that even a blind man could see tiiis ; but there are none 80 liliiid as those wlio will not see. Just here Mr. Wilkinson takes occasion to say aj^ain that there is more in baptism than mere dipping. Certainly. No one supposes that ChrMnn baptism is a nierf dipping ! As TertuUian says : " Of liaptisiii itself there is a bodily act, that we are immersed in water ; a spiritual crt'fct, that we are freed from sin." As Peter expresses it (Acts 2 : 38) : " Repent, and bo baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ for the remission of sins, and ye shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost." "Yes," says my opponent, " *a spirit- ual etl't'ct ; ' that is what I have been claiming all tho time." Yes ; and there is a bodily act, and that is what I have been talking about. Christ attnnd.s to the spiritual effect. He forgives sins ; He gives the Holy Ghost. It is our business to attend to the bodily act. Whpn Jesus connnanded His apostles to preach the Gospel to the people, and to baptizo those that believed it, it was the bodily act that was expressed by the word baptize. When Peter told the people to "repent and be baptized," it was the bodily act he wanted them to submit to ; he assured th"m that the spiritual effect would follow. Nobody denies a " spiritual effect ; " but the question to be settled by this debate is. What is the bodily act 1 But, as Mr. Wilkinson talks much about water baptism symboliz- ing the washing of the soul by the Holy Spirit, I will call your attention briefly to the impartation of the Holy Spirit. The Gospel rule is that the Spirit is given after baptism in water — not before. To this rule there has been but one exception since Christian baptism was instituted. This exceptional and peculiar case was also miracu- lous, and therefore not an example for all time. Observe the rule : After Christ came up from the waters of baptism He received the Holy Spirit, which descended upon Him in the form of a dove ; the apostles received the Spirit after their baptism ; the three thousand, on the day of Pentecost, received the Spirit after their baptism — they were told to repent, and be baptized for the remission of sins, and they were promised that they should receive the Spirit. Philip preached at the city of Samaria — (see Acts 8 : 5-17) — and multitudes wth of men and women believed his preaching, and were baptized, and afterwards received the Holy Spirit. There were a number of 136 REPORT OP DEBATE men — about twelve — at Ephesus, who had been baptized by the bap- tism of John, whom Paul instructed in the way of the Lord more perfectly, and then baptized in the name of the Lord Jesus, to whom the Spirit was then given, upon tie laying on them of the hands of Paul. So in every case of the impartation of the Spirit : whether it was the ordinary gift, or a miraculous manifestation, it was preceded by baptism in water, barring the one exception already referred to. I mention this matter, although it has nothing to do with the action of baptism, because Mr. Wilkinson has b?*^n talking about it. If he wants to debate the questioi- nf the Spirit's work, let him get his brethren to endorse him. My uffcchren will endorse me, and we will discuss it next week, or whenever it suits him. My friend refers to another irrelevant question — to " nude immer- sion." I am not going to say much about that matter. I do not think it should have been introduced. I grant you that people were immersed while naked. Ladies went into the baths with deaconesses, and they were taken into the water up to the neck. Then the officiating minister came in, placed their heads under water, and turned and went out. Then they were brought out by the deacon- esses, who were, of course, women. I would not have referred to that fact if Mr. Wilkinson had not brought it up, not to prove any- thing tha<^ 1 can see, but simply to ridicule an institution that, as I understand it, Christ gave to His disciples. There is no argument in it one way or the other. Though, if there is any force in it so far as this question is concerned, it is in favor of immersion. So at least thinks Moses Stuart, the great Presbyterian. I read from him as follows : "Still, say what we may concerning it in a moral point of view, the argument to be deduced from it, in respect to immersion, is not at all diminished. Nay, it is strengthened. For if such a violation of decency was submitted to in order that baptism miglit be performed as the Church thought it should be, it argues that baptiz- ing by immersion was considered as a rite not to be dispensed with, — Stuart On Baptiar/i, p. 151. I do not make that argument, but Stuart, as great a Presbyterian as ever lived on this continent, does. Now I come again to that midnight baptism of the jailer. (I am following my notes on Mr. Wilkinson's speech.) It is an undoubted fact, that we have a host of pasbages, in and out of the Scriptures, clear and strong, teaching immersion. What my friend wants to find is one case where immersion could not have been performed He goes to this case of the jailer : the jailer was baptized in the house, he thinks, and therefore could not have been immersed. A careful ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 137 reading of the passage, however, clearly shows that he was taken out of the house. Hence, instead of an argument in his favor, it proves to be a boomerang, which comes back and destroys him. Why should he have gone out with his prisoners and family unless it was to be immersed 1 Would he have gone out with all these simply to be sprinkled f My friend, in the next place, commented at some length on the midnight baptism of Judith ; though why he did so is a mystery* seeing that every point that can be made from it is altogether against him. The case is recorded in the apocryphal book Judith. This Jewish lady desired to betray the Assyrians into the hands of her own people : and so, professing to be a deserter, she entered into the camp of Holofernes, their general. Her stratagem succeeded ; she was kindly received. She claimed to be a prophetess, and to have been sent to the Assyrians by the Lord. On account of her wonderful beauty, her attractive manners, and great wisdom, she was fully believed by Holofernes and his men. She was accompanied by a maid-servant. She requested the privilege to go out by night to pray to God that she might receive revelations from Him. Her real object in thus going out was to cleanse herself according to the Jewish customs. (See Judith, chapters 11 and 12.) Verse 7 of chapter 12 reads thus: "Then Holofernes commanded his guard that they should not stay her. Thus she abode in the camp three days, and went out in the night into the valley of Bethulia, and washed (baptizo) herself in a fountain of water by the camp." Then, it is said, " she came in clean." What did she go out, at midnight, into the valley of Bethulia for 1 — to sprinkle herself with three or four drops of water 1 She went out, at midnight, into a valley, to a fountain of water, and baptized herself. The Greek verb used to indicate what she did is baptizo. My friend would have you believe that she did all this to sprinkle herself. He must think you are credulous, indeed ! The word rendered " valley " means a ravine, or chasm. On Jewish bathings the great Rabbi Maimonides says : " Wherever, in the law, washing of the flesh, or of the clothes is mentioned, it means nothing else than dipping the whole body in a laver ; for if a man dips himself all over except the tip of his little finger, he is still in his uncleanness." And again, he says : ^'Everyone that i'' baptized [upon coming from the market] must immerse the whole body." This Maimonides is regarded by the Jews as one of the greatest of their race. They consider him inferior only to Moses. They call him The Doctor, The Great Eagle, The Glory of ihe Weit, The Light of the East, [See Encyclopcedia A»iericana.] 138 &KPOKT OF DEBATE Mr. Wilkinson gets back to taval, the Hebrew for haptizo. You remember I quoted Kleeburg as to its meaning ; you have now heard also the testimony of Maimonides. In addition to these Jewish teachers, consider the following : — Robinson's Gesenius' Ileb. Lex., p. 364 : " Taval, to dip, to dip in, to immerse, to dip or immerse one's self. Example : 2 Kings 5 ; 14, He went down and dipped himself seven times in Jordan." Parkhurst, p. 255: ^^ Taval, 1. To dip, immerse, plunge; 2. To tinge or die with a certain color, which is usually performed by dipping." Robertson's Heb. Diet., hy J oaeph, p. Ill: "Taval, 1. He dipped; 2. He was dipped." Stokius' Vet. Test, Vol. I., p. 421 : " Taval, dip, dip in, immerse,* submerge." Schleusuer, Art. Baptizo, defines taval, in defining haptizo, thus : " To immerse, dip, plunge into water ; from bapto, and corresponds to the Hebrew taval." Davidson's Heb. Lex. : " Taval, 1. To dip, to immerse ; 2. To stain." Buxtorf's Heb. Lex : " Taval, to dip, to dip into, to submerge, to immerse." (See Brent's Gospel Plan of Salvation, pp. 302, 303.) But, above all, as to the meaning of this Hebrew word which ex- presses the action of baptism, remember it occurs fifteen times in the Old Testament, and is translated in our common version " dip " four- teen times, and '* plunge " once. This gives you to understand what King James' translators, who, as we have seen, were sprinklers, thought of its meaning. Mr. Wilkinson thinks " it is a superstitious and contemptible no- tion " that the Spirit fills a man's body and surrounds his soul. The apostles were endued with power from on high when they received the Spirit ; and enduo, says Dr. Ditzler, means immerse — it means to be " clothed u[)on." The Christian is said to be " in the Spirit." The body is represented as being the dwelling-place of both the human Hpirit and the Holy Spirit, by the apostle Paul. I am free to confess that I do not understand how a Divine person can be in a man's body- how the man can be immersed in Him ; but it is not more incompre- hensible than that a Divine person should be "poured out" or "shed forth " upon a man. I don't understand either ; I believe both. Mr. Wilkinson understood me to admit that some foreign lexicons define baptizo by words that are equivalents of sprinkle, and merely to deny that these words were given as the first meaning. He is very ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM, '^Kl much mistaken ; I made no such admission. What I did say is this: No lexicon which defines Gieek into another tongue, whether Latin, German, French, Italian, or any other tongue, defines haptizo by a word wlwae first meaning is to sprinkle. In getting the meaningSv of definitions, the common and most known significations must always be taken, since there can be nothing in the context to forbid. In no ' lexicon known to me is a word used to define baptxzo, whose first — that is, whose common and most known — meaning is to sprinkle. I know a German lexicon, that of Passou, by Host and Palm, which, after defining baptizo " to dip in, to immerse" gives, as a derived or consequential meaning, in a few cases, a word whose first meaning is " to water ;" this word (begieasen) sometimes means opon us of the blood of Christ. The flesh of this Lamb was to be 160 REPORT OF DEBATE eaten, and its blood sprinkled, resulting in the preservation of the people. A feast was by Divine appointment instituted among the Israelites, to be observed every year in commemoration of this event; a lamb must be slain as at first, and its flesh eaten. This feast was called the feast of the Passover, and the lamb is usually called the Paschal lamb. Now, that this circumstance was typical of Christ, is evident from the fact that Christ is especially pointed out by John the Baptist as " the Lamb of God which taketh away the sin of the world," and Paul says (1 Cor. 6:7), that "Even Christ, our Passover, is sacrificed for us." Now, if Christ is our Passover Lamb, then that other Passover lamb must have been a type of Him. Further, the eating of that lamb was typical of the people's reception of the benefits of the victim by whose blood they were delivered, or at the expense ot whose life they had been redeemed. The Lord's Supper stands in precisely the same relation to the Lamb of God as the Passover feast did to the Paschal lamb. The type, however, is done away, and the symbol remains ; for that feast, like the ceremonial c'eansings, was both typical and symbolic. The Lord's Supper is symbolic only, and is observed in commemoration of the world's deliverance from sin, through His death. No one would ever be found to deny this only that it stands sadly in the way of a favorite theory. This illustrates the fact that God has provided in a special manner for keeping the great fundamental doctrine of the atonement before men's minds by means of visible types and symbols, from the days of Moses, at least, and will do so to the end of the world. But wliat about the regenerating /eaturs of the divine plan ? This is a twofold operation, including cleansing and renewal, and must have been effected the same as it is now, by the inward action of divine grace. But because of its importance, like the atoning feature, God would make it visible to the mind, through the eye, by outward signs and symbols. But as human kind were not, in that comparatively infantile age of the world, as capable of perceiving moral truths as now, God employed two symbols for the exhibition of this twofold operation, one for the cleansing and the other for the regeneration. By the washings, cleansings, purifications, or properly typical baptisms of the law, the people were taught the nature and imperious necessity of inward purity. Whether they enjoyed it or not, they were impressed from day to day with its necessity. By circumcision they were taught the imperious necessity of having fleshly passions and lusts crucified and removed, however painful it might be ON TIIK MODE AND 8UDJECT8 OF BAPTISM. 161 to the carnal nature. Hence this rite was also instituted and en- joined by God's command, and must be observed under pain of being cut off, in figure, fron> the benefits of tlie covenant. It may be said, however, that circumcision was instituted long before the legal baptisms, hence, during that interval the people had no rite to repre- sent cleansing. I reply that circumcision itself involved cleansing, and represented it, but the people did not clearly and impressively perceive it, chiefly, no doubt, because of their moral perversity rather than their natural imbecility, hence " the law was added Viecause of transgressions, till the seed should come to whom the promise was made " (Gal. 3 : 19), which promise refers to the covenant of redemption made with Abraham (Gen. 12 : 1-3 and 17 : 1-8), in which God pro- mises to be Abraham's God and bless him, and make him the father of many nations. In this covenant God also promised Abraham that in his seed, viz., ('hrist, all the families of the earth should be blessed, or justified. He then sealed the covenant with a seal indicative of moral purification find regeneration. And now do you require any proof that baptism under the new dis- pensation includes both these ideas ? We have it in Titus 3 : 5, where the apostle says, we are saved " not by works of righteousness which we have done, but according to the mercy of God, by the wash- itig of regeneration and the renewing of the Holy Ghost." This passage, my opponent has admitted, refers to baptism, and it distinctly teaches both cleansing and renewal, therefore this twofold truth is embodied in and represented by this Christian ordinance. And now do you want any proof that baptism and circumcision are identical in their nature and import ? Well, this same apostle has, by inspiration of God, married them together in Col. 2: 11, 12 (I quote from the revised version as being a more literal and accurate rendering) : " In whom (Christ) ye were circumcised with a circum- cision not made with hands, in the putting off of the body of the tiesh by the circumcision of Christ ; having been buried with him in baptism," etc. That is, having been buried with Him in baptism we are circumcised with Him, thus proving plainly that circumcision is effected by baptism, and vice versa, by which they are shown to be I identical. And they are joined together by the authority of God, 1 and " what He hath joined together, let no man put asunder." To make this point clear, I want to call your attention again to this chart (the one previously exhibited and explained, see p. 1 1 4), in which I Christianity is represented under the figure of an arch, supported by 11 163 HEPORT OF UEUATE two great pillarH, representing the fundanuintal truths to which I liave referred — atonement and regeneration. As exphiined on a pre vious occasion, this pillar, representing atonement, was nuide visildi during the oUl dispensation by the Passover; and under the new, liy the Lord's Supper, as shown in the diagram ; hence the Lord's Hup per and the Passover are not two things, but two dirterent foriim of the same thing, both being outward shadows or patterns of tlic saim- truth. So during tlie old dispensation this other pillar truth, wa^ represented hy circumcision, baptism (ceremonial cleansing) beiiii; subsequently added to make the twofold aspect of the truth more manifest ; while under the present dispensation baptism alone is ein ployed for the symbolic illustration of this truth. Circumcision ai.d baptism, tlierefore, are not two separate things, but two dirt'ereiit forms of the same thing, each adapted to the genius of its respective dispensation, but both serving the same end. If, therefore, circuni cision was by Divine authority applied to children, so must liaptism be, unless God himself forbids it, which He has never done. Tlieiv fore, instead of demanding a command from us to baptize infants, we have a right to demand a command from our opponents not to baptize them. God put them in this covenant and ordered the seal applied, and until He puts them out of the covenant and forbids I he application of the seal, the Divine arrangement must stand. Tliis is our authority for the administration of this rite to infants, and unless my opponent can prove that circumcision and baptism are not identical in nature and design, or that God has revoked the covenant of which circumcision was the seal, the argument for the baptism ot infants is simply irresistible. At this point I want to remove an impression that may have ob tained in some quarters, viz., that God made three separate covenanth with Abraham, and that circumcision was only the seal of one, and that one is now abrogated. Let us see : In Gen. 12 : 1-3, we read, " Now the Lord had said unto Abrani. Get thee out of thy country and from thy kindred and from thy father's hou^e, unto a land that I will tell thee ; " And I will make of thee a great nation, and I will bless thee, and make thy name great ; and thou shalt be a blessing : " And I will bless them that bless thee, and curse him that curseth thee ; and in thee shall all families of the earth be blessed." Paul quotes from this passage as the covenant of spiritual blessings. in Gal. 3 >8, ♦* In thee shall all nations of the earth be blessed," thus identifying this with the covenant of grace. But on this point there is no dispute. OS THE MODE AND HUHJECTS OF DAPTI8M. 163 On receiving this coinnmnd and promise — it is called a covenant |,t,i>e — Ahrani went to Canaan. Ood appeared to him there (Gen. !•') : 11-16), and said un»o liim : " Lift up now tiiine eyes, ond look from the place where thou art ^in the nei^idiorhood of Bethel), northward, and soutliward, and east- ward, and westward. " For all the land which thou seest, to thee will I give c ond to thy seed for ever. " And 1 will niak(! thy seed as the dust of the earth," etc., thus iTiifwing the promiHu made in chapter 12:2, "I will make of thee a "reat nation." In Gen. 17 : 1-8 we have another record of this covenant. It reads : " And when Abram was ninety years old and nine, the Lord npiM'arHd to Abram, and .said unto him, I am the Almighty God : walk liefore Me, and be thou perfect. " And I will make My covenont between Me and thee, and will multiply thee exceedingly. ' "And Abram fell on his face : and God talked with him, saying : " As for Me, behold. My covenant is with thee, and thou shalt be a iather of many nations. "Neither shall thy name any more be called Abram, but thy name shall be Abraham ; for a father of many nations have I made thee. "And I will make thee exceeding fruitful, and I will make nations of thee, and kings shall come out of thee. " And I will establish My covenant between Me and thee, and thy seed after thee, in their generations, for an everlasting covenant, to be a God unto thee, and to thy seed after thee. "And I will give unto thee, and to thy seed after thee, the land wherein thou art a stranger, all the land of Canaan, for an everlasting Ijossession : and I will be their God." It certainly must be clear to all right thinking persons whose minds are not obscured by prejudice, that these covenants are but repetitions and enlargements of the same thing at different times. You will observe that in these passages God promises Abraham the land of Canaan, not only, but He promises aho to make of him " a father of many nations ;" and Paul, in his epistle to the Romans, quotes this very clause to establish the spirituality of the seed to whom these promises are intended to apply. He says, in chap. 4:13, etc., that " the promise that he should be the heir of the world was not to Abraham or to his seed through the law (his legal descendants), but through the righteousness of faith. -w^'i; ?i..v. ^■. ,v.- ,, '^■.... -^...ajuK.^ 164 REPORT OF DEBATE " For if they which are of the law be heirs, faith is made void^ ar 1 the promise made of none effect : " Because the law worketh wrath ; for where no law is there is no transgression. " Therefore it is of faith, that it might be by grace ; to the end the promise might be sure to all the seed; not to that only which is of the ^aw, but to that also which is of the faith of Abraham, who is the father of us all (Jews and Gentiles). " (As it is written, I have made thee a father of many nations)," etc. This passage identifies the covenant recorded in Gen. 17, with the covenant of spiritual blessings intended for all nations — blessings to be procured by faith, including justification. Therefore the covenant promising the land of Canaan was a spiritual covenant, or the covenant of grace. This truth is raaae still more manifest by the fact that in this same covenant Isaac is promised, who was to be the progenitor of the Messiah, the author of all spiritual blessings. I will read from verse 15 : " And God said unto Abraham, As for Sarai thy wife, thou shalt not call her name Sarai but Sarah, shall her name be. " And I will bless her, and give thee a son also of her ; yea, I will bless her, and she shall be a mother of nations ; kings of people shall be of her, " Then Abraham fell upon his face, and laughed, and said in his heart. Shall a child be born unto him that is an hundred years old ? and shall Sarah that is ninety years old, bear ^ "And Abraham said unto God, O tuat . raael might live before thee ! " And God said, Sarah thy wife shall bear thee a son indeed; and thou shalt call his name Isaac : and I will establish my covenant with him for an everlasting covenant, and with his seed after him. " And as for Ishmael, I have heard thee : Behold, I have blessed him, and will make him fruitful, and will multiply him exceedingly : twelv ^r-'nces shall he beget : and I will make him a great nation. " But my covenant will I establish with Isaac, which Sarah shall bear unto thee at this set time in the uext year." Now, here we have the promise of Isaac who is distinctly set forth by the Apostle Paul in Gal. 4 : 2,2, etc., a'^ the representative of the spiritual, as distinct from the national covenant. The passage reads: '* For it is written that Abraham had two sons ; the one by a bond- maid, the other by a freewoman. ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 166 " But he who was of the bondwoman was born after the flesh ; but he of the freewoman was by promise. " Which things are an allegory : for these are the two covenants ; the one from the mount Sinai, which gendereth to bondage, which is Agar. " For this Agar is mount Sinai in Arabia, and answereth to Jeru- salem which now is, and is in bondage with her children. " But Jerusalem which is above is free, which is the mother of us all. "For it is written, Rejoice thou barren that barest not; break forth and cry, thou that travailest not ; for the desolate hath many more children than she which hath an husband. " Now we, brethren, as Isaac was, are the children of promise. "But as then he that was born after the flesh persecuted him that was born after the Spirit, even so it is now. " Nevertheless what saith the Scripture ? Cast out the bondwoman aiud her son : for the son of the bondwoman shall not be heir with the son of the freewoman. " So then, brethren, we are not children of the bondwoman, but of the free." It is somewhat strange, if the covenant in Gen. 17 contained a promise of earthly blessings only, that Isaac, who was begotten by the intervention of the Divine Spirit and made the representr.tive of thd spiritual dispensation, should be connected with that earthly covenant alone. The truth is, and it is very transparent, that the covenant recorded in Gen. 17 was a covenant of spiritual blessings. And it was this covenant of spiritual blessings that was sealed with the seal of circumcision, for God said to Abraham in Gen " : 10-14 : "This is My covenant, which ye shall keep, between Me and you, and thy seed after thee : Every man child among you shall be circumcised. " And ye shall circumcise the flesh of your foreskin ; and it shall be a token or the covenant betwixt Me and you. " And he that is eight days old shall be circumcised among you, *very man child in your generations ; he that « born in the house, or bought with money rf any stranger, which is not of thy seed. " He that is born In th^ house, and he that is bought with thy money, must needs be oircrmcised : and Ky covenant shall be in your tiesh for an everlasting covenant. " And the uncircumcised man child, whose flesh of his foreskin is 166 REPORT OF DEBATE not circumcised, that soul shall be cut off from his people ; he hath broken My covenant." Circumcision is here called a "token" of the covenant. For an explanation of this we turn to Rom. 4:11,12: " And he (Abraham} received the sign of circumcision, a seal of the righteousness of faith which he had, yet being uncircumcised." Now, " righteousness," or justification, obtained by faith, was a spiritual blessing, yet it waj sealed to Abraham by what some people would have us believe was the seal of temporal blessings only. There is something very strange, indeed, about this. And he received this seal, " that he might be the father of all them that believe, though they be not circumcised," i.e., of all Gentile believers, who obtain the same blessing (justitication) in the same way, or " who walk in the steps of that faith of our father Abraham which he had before he was circumcised,'" showing that it sealed this same spiritual blessing to all his spiritual seed. And the same seal, or " token " was applied to Isaac at eight days old. Did it seal some different blessing to him from what it did to his father? Did it mean one thing in the one case and quite another thing in the other case I And, if so, where is the proof 1 The fact is that the Scriptures are silent concerning such double meaning ; and this is sufficient to condemn such an interpretation. Therefore it must have sealed the same blessing to Isaac and to all other Jewish children, that it did to Abraham, and nothing but the stern demands of an erroneous theory would think of questioning a truth so plain. If this reasoning is correct, then God put children originally into the covenant of grace made with Abraham, and caused the seal of that covenant to be put upon them in common with believing adults, and until that covenant is revoked, or God himself arrests the opera- tion, we must continue to affix the seal to such. In further illustration of this position I want to add : 1. That the covenant made with Abraham was an "everlasting covenant." This being the case it must still be in force, and as the seal was to be co-extensive with the covenant, at least so long as new candidates are received into it, hence the seal, in some appropriate form, must still be applied. Baptism, as we have shown, means the same thing and answers the same end as circumcision, therefore it should be ap- plied to all persons possessing the requisite qualifications. Children possessed the requisite qualifications and were sealed with circumcision, hence they possess the requisite qualifications and should also w sealed with baptism. .*. ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OP BAPTISM. 167 2. It was a covenant on God's part that He would be a God unto Abraham and his seed after him forever. Tlie fact that the phrase " in their generations " occurs in connec- tion with the promise, by no means limits the blessing to Abraham's natural seed, as it was one of the most common expressions among the Jews to denote unbroken perpetuity. In fact, the term "genera- tion" is employed in dozens of instances in the Bible as a mere measurement of time, denoting in general about the average length of human life. But what ought to settle this question beyond any reasonable doubt, is the fact that Peter (1 Ep. 2 : 9) speaks of be- lievers, or the spiritual seed of Abraham, as a " chosen generation," etc. Surely this has no reference to natural generation, as some would have you believe. The Psalmist (105 : 8) says, " He hath re- membered His covenant forever, the word of His commandment to a thousand generations," or practically forever. 3. In this covenant, through Abraham's seed, " all the families of the earth shall be blessed." In this part of the covenant the seed had special reference to Christ, and consequently the blessing must have had reference to the lilessings secured to the world through Him, viz., the blessings of re- demption. Paul says (Gal. 3:16), '* Now to Abraham and his seed were the promises made. He saith not, And to seeds, as of many ; but as of one, And to thy seed which is Christ." There is something significant in this limitation of the term "seed" to Christ. As spirit- ual blessings chiefly are secured to the world through Him, it teaches -ery distinctly that the blessings promised to the world through Abraham's seed were spiritual blessings pre-eminently. Also the limitation of the promise to Christ proves that the blessings promised were intended especially for the spiritual seed of Abraham, all be- lievers being identified and reckoned as one with Christ. " Therefore they who are Christ's are Abraham's seed and his heirs according to the promise " (covenant). — Gal. 3 : 29. 4. Circumcision was the appointed seal of this covenant. The covepant, or its token, was to be in their flesh for " an everlaating covenant." — Gen. 17:13. Therefore, until the covenant of spiritual blessing to mankind through Christ is revoked, this seal or " token " must be applied under some divinely-appc: ^ted form to all persons claiming the promised blessings. If the seal has been removed from the covenant, w^e have no guarantee as to the validity of the said cov- enant, or the certainty of the promised blessings. We l;now that t'od has removed that form of seal called circumcision, ar'd ii He 168 REPORT OP DEBATE has substituted nothing in its place we have great cause for alarm. We have no guarantee that God considers Himself as bound by that covenant at all ; hence when a man succeeds in proving the abroga- tion of circumcision and the substitution of nothing in its place, he succeeds in blotting out the world's hope. This may be illustrated bv the case of a deed. Suppose you received a deed of a farm, and it was duly signed, sealed, and delivered, and laid by for safe keeping. Now, let it be remembered, that it is the seal that gives validity to this document in law. But suppose that you take out your deed some day and find no seal on it. What would you think 1 You would consider your claim to the farm virtually worthless unless the seal could be restored. So, too, in regard to this covenant. If the seal has been removed the covenant has been annulled, and the na- tions are robbed of all hope in Christ. This is a terribly serious consideration. But if we have the same seal under an altered form still affixed to the covenant, then have we " hope toward God through Jesus Christ our Lord." 5. That the covenant has never been abrogated. Paul says (Gal. 3 : 17, 18), " Now this I say : A covenant confirmed beforehand by God, the law, which came four hundred and thirty years after, doth not disannul, so as to make the promise of none effect. For if the inheritance is of the law, it is no more of promise; but God hath granted it to Abraham by promise." Heb. 8 : 6-10, 13, "But now hath he obtained a ministry the more excellent, by how much also He is the mediator of a better covenant, which hath been enacted upon better promises. For if that first covenant had been faultless, then would no place have been sought for a second. " For finding fault with them, He saith. Behold, the days come, saith the Lord, that I will make a new covenant with the house of Israel, and with the house of Judah ; "Not according to the covtnant that I made with their fathers in the day when I took them by the hand to lead them forth out of the land of Egypt ; for they continued not in My covenant, and I regarded them not, saith the Lord. " For this is the covenant that I will make with the house of Israel after those days, saith the Lord ; I will put My laws into their mind, and on their heart also will I write them : and T will be to them a God, and *-hey shall be to Me a people." " In th\t He saith, A new covenant, He hath made the first old. But that which is becoming old and waxeth aged is nigh unto vanish- ing away.'' (Revised version.) ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 169 This, you will observe, was the covenant that God made with the fathers " in the day when He took them by the hand to lead them forth out of the land of Ei^ypt," which may be called " the covenant of Sinai," or " the covenant of ceremonies ;" and this is the only cove- nant that God has abrogated. Therefore, the covenant He made with Abraham 430 years before, and which neither tlie enactment nor abrogation of tlie law could disannul, is still in force. And if the covenant is in force, its seal must be valid. And if the first form has been altered, we have a right to look for its equivalent in some other form ; and we find it in baptism. This seal, before the alteration of tlie form, was applied to infants, therefore we argue it should be applied still unless it can be shown that God has ordained other- wise. 6. The seal of that covenant had a spiritual import. The follow ing passages are given in proof of this : — Deut. 10:16. "Circumcise therefore the foreskin of your heart, and be no more stiff-necked." Deut. 30 ; 6. " And the Lord thy God will circumcise thine heart, and the heart of thy seed, to love the Lord thy God with all thine lieart and with all thy soul, that thou mayst live." Jer. 4:4. " Circumcise yourselves to the Lord, and take away the foreskins of your heart, ye men of Judah, and ye inhabitants of Jerusalem." Col. 2:11. "In whom also ye are circumcised with the circum- cision made without hands, in putting off the body of the sins of the flesh by the circumcision of Christ." In V. 13 an unregenerate state is called the " uncircumcision of the flesh." Rom. 2 : 28, 29. " He is not a Jew which is one outwardly ; neither is that circumcision which is outward in the flesh ; " But he is a Jew, which is one inwardly ; and circumcision is that of the heart, in the spirit, and not in the letter, wliose praise is not of men but of God." 7. The seal was to be applied to all of Abraham's children. Rom. 4:11-17; Gal. 3:26-29. They who are Christs are Abraham's children and heirs. Little children are Christ's, therefore they are "Abraham's seed and heirs according to the promise." 8. The child characr.er is the standard of admission into the divine kingdom. " Except ye be converted and become as little children, ye shall in no wise enter into the kingdom of heaven." 170 REPORT OP DEBATE " Suffer little children to come unto Me, and forbid them not, for of such is the kingdom of heaven." 9. The Church is tlie same under both dispensations. This is illustrated by the apostle Paul by the olive tree, which was a figure of the Jewish Church, the trunk of which remains, and the Gentiles are grafted into it. Tliere is no new olive tree planted, but the old one perpetuated under a new form. The apostle says : " And if some of the branches be broken off, and thou, being a wild olive tree, wert graffed in among them, and with them partakest of the root and fatness of the olive tree; " Boast not against the branches. But if thou boast, thou bearest not the root, but the root thee. " Thou wilt say then, The branches were broken off, that I might be graffed in." Rom. 11 : 17-19. The same truth is represented under other figures in Eph. 2 : 13- 22. The apostle says : " But now in Christ Jesus ye who sometimes were far off are made nigh by the blood of Christ. " For He is our peace, who hath made both one, and hath broken down the middle wall of partition between us ; "Having abolished in His flesh the enmity, even the law of com- mandments contained in ordinances ; for to make in Himself of twain one new man, so making peace ; "And that He might reconcile both unto God in one body by the cross, having slain the enmity thereby ; "And came and preached peace to you which were afar off, and to them that were nigh. " For through him we both have access by one Spirit unto the Father. " Now therefore ye are no more strangers and foreigners, but fellow-citizens with the saints, and of the household of God ; "And are built upon the foundation of the apostles and prophets, Jesus Christ Himself being the chief corner stone ; " In whom all the building fitly framed together groweth unto an holy temple in the Lord ; " In whom ye also are builded together for an habitation of God through the Spirit." Under both dispensations we have the same God, the same Saviour, Jesus Christ, the same Holy Spirit, the same covenant, the same law, the same conditions of salvation, the same olive tree, the same ON THE MODE AND 8UBTECT8 OF DAPTI8M. 171 kingdom, hence I argue that the Church is the same and the member- ship the same. Little cliildren were members of tliat Church under the old dis- pensation ; why not now 1 That Peter recognized the continued existence and authority of the covenant made with Abraham, and the rights of children to a recog- nition by its seal, is evident from his great inaugural address on the (lay of Pentecost. It will be remembered that this was the grand in- augural day of the new dispensation, a large body of Jews were assembled at Jerusalem to celebrate it, and Peter was the chief speaker. In addressing those Jews he said, Acts 2 : 38, 39 : "Repent, and be baptized, every one of you, in the name of Jesu.9 Christ, for the remission of sins, and ye shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost. "For the promise is unto you and to your children, and to all that are afar oft", even to as many as the Lord our God shall call." By the " promise " here, he evidently meant the covenant. The blessings promised are ''remission of sins (justification), and the gift of the Holy Ghost," showing that these were the blessings in- cluded in that covenant. These blessings are promised on condition of repentance and baptism, (not circumcision now), and the covenant for the bestowment of these blessings is said to be to them, as Jews, and to their children, which we certainly know included infants, (and so every Jew must have understood it, their children having always been regarded as belonging to the covenant and sealed with its seal), "and to all that are afar off," by which Gentile nations are doubtless meant. And now I reason, that if the infant children of Jews were included in the "promise," then the infant children of "them that were afar off" must have been included also. Thus God, as if to guard against any misapprehension on this point, has included Gentile children in the covenant of promise along with the infant children of Jews. [Time expired.^ 172 REPORT OF DEUATE MR. HARDING'S FIRST REPLY. It affords nie ^) asure, ladies and gentlemen, to stand before you to debate this great and important question. I agree most heartily •with Mr. Wilkinson in saying that what we want is truth. I know .well enough that what is false will do me no good, and by the grace of God I intend to stand on the right side. The man who stands on the side of truth is strong ; he has God on his side ; he is in the majority, and will come out conqueror in every conflict. I want to be a conqueror ; I want to be in the majority ; wherever, therefore, I find truth, I will stand right there. Mr. Wilkinson thinks he has the truth on this question, and he is here to show it to you, viz.: "That Infant Baptism is of Divine authority, and has been practiced by the Christian Church from Apostolic times." If that is the truth, I have not found it. I have three little children, and if that proposition be true, I should like to have them baptized. If God has any blessing for my babies, I want them to have it. One of them has been baptized ; two have not ; the one because he was old enough to understand, and of his own free will to come forward to serve God. But I do not want to hold back any blessing from any of them. If infant baptism is authorized by the Word of God, and is of Divine authority, let our children have it. The Discipline of Mr. Wilkinson's Church — the one that does not have the word dip in it — says, "The Holy Scriptures contain all things necessary to salvation ; so that whatsoever is not read therein, nor may be proved thereby, is not to be required of any man that it should be believed as an article of faith, or be thought requisite or necessary to salvation." — page 14. If, therefore, infant baptism is taught in the Holy Scriptures, it is right, proper, and scriptural that Ave should practice it ; if it is not, even according to the Discipline, it is not to be required of any man. To the law and to the testimony let us go. Is it taught in the Holy Scriptures 1 Not one unprejudiced mind has been able to see that Mr. Wilkinson has produced a single passage of Scripture which teaches infant baptism. Indeed, I will show you that men on his own side, men far more learned than he is, and as anxiou . to prove infant baptism, cannot see infant baptism in any of the passages he has quoted. I am going to stand by the authorities still. Do you in- quire. What for 1 why not read directly from the Bible 1 I answer, If I had time to read the whole Bible through, I should be able to show .Jf-J""^ ON THE MODE AND SUnJECTS OF HAPTI8M. 173 clearly that infant baptism is not taught there-in. I have not time to do this, so I will produce the testimony of men on his own side of the ([uestion, who have read it through many times, while studying this very question, and who testify that it is not to be found in the Book ; I will also produce the testimony of men on his own side of the question, who will say of his arguments, that they do not prove his position. My friend says his duties are pleasant and light under this i)roposi- tion. I am neither a propliet, nor the son of a prophet ; but if his l)urdens do not become heavier and his work more unpleasant, day by (lay, till this dicussion ends, his fate will be different from that of any picdobaptist I have ever met in debate. He is on the wrong side of the question. Now to the authorities : Dr. George E. Steitz, a well-known Lu- theran, in his treatise on baptism {llerxoy^s Encyclojncdia, Vol. XV^., p. 431) iisserts that "among scientitical exegetes it is regarded as an established conclusion that not a trace of infant baptism can be discovered in the New Testament." As was shown to you on the former proposition, the greatest of all these " scieutifical exegetes " is Dr. H. A. W. Meyer. In his com inentary on Acts 16 : 15, he says : " This passage, and verse 33, with 18:8, and 1 Cor. 1 : 16, are appealed to in order to prove infant baptism in the apostolic age, or at least to make it probable." After making several remarks, showing clearly that these passages do not teach the doctrine, he adds : " The baptism of the children of Christians, of which no trace is found in the New Testament, is not to be held as an apostolic ordinance, as indeed it encountered early and long resistance ; but it is an institution of the Church, which ffradually arose in post-apostolic times in connection with the develop- ment of ecclesiastical life, and of doctrinal teaching, not certainly attested before TertuUian, and by him still decidedly opposed, and although already defended by Cyprian, only becoming general after the time of Augustine in virtue of that connection." Meyer on Acts, pp. 311, 312. Neamler, the greatest of Church historians, testifies : " Baptism was administered at first only to adults, as men were accustomed to conceive baptism and faith as strictly connected. We have all reason for not deriving infant baptism from apostolic institution, and the re- cognition of it which followed somewhat later, as an apostolical tradi- tion, serves to confirm this hypothesis." — Neander's History of the Christian Religion and Church, Vol. I., p. 311. 174 KRI'OKT OF DEBATE Mosheiin tcachos (see his Ecclesiastical History , Book I., chap, 4, sec. 13,) that in the second century, people were not baptized till • after they had repeated what they called the creed (symbolum), and had renounced all their sins and transgressions, and especially the devil and his poiiiji." He substantiates this ])y the quotation of a very full and complete account of their manner of receiving new converts into the Church, by Juutiu Martyr, which was written about the year 150 A.D. Dr. Schart' (see History of the Christian Church, chap. 4, sec. 37. p. 124) says: "The apostolic origin of infant baptism is denied not only by the FJaptists, but also by many p.*edo- baptist divines." He says also, on the same page, that " The New Testament contains no express command to baptize infants." Mr. Wilkinson teaches the mothers of the land that it is tlioii duty to have their infant childroji baptized ; that the Bible requites it at their hands ; and yet these '' scientifical exegetes," such as Neander, Meyer, Steitz, and the " many psedo-baptist divines " men- tioned by Dr. Schaff, cannot tind a vestige of it in the Bible. How then does he expect the plain, unlettered women of the land to tind it there 1 These men wanted to find it ; their Churches practice it> and require them to do it ; but, in spite of their own practice and of the practice of thoir Churches, their honesty compels them to say it cannot be found in the Book. My opponent says that man's nature is depraved ; that he is under a twofold curse ; that his nature must be renewed. Well, if all that were so, what has it to do with the question we are discussing '\ Does he baptize the infant to get him from under the curse 1 Does he baptize the little ones to save them '? I want him to tell us plainly, without any equivocation, what their baptism is for. Does he bap- tize them to save them from the wrath of God '? or, because they an saved from it ? To bring them into Christ's Church 1 or, because they are in it ? He intimates that my doctrine would send them to hell Does he believe that baptism saves them from hell 1 Mr. Wilkinson — Not much ; nor adult baptism either. Mr. Harding — Then you do not believe the doctrine of your Dis- •cipline ; for it plainly teaches that infants are baptized that they may be delivered from the wrath of God, and that they may be received into the ark of Christ's Church, and may so pass the waves of this trouble- some world, and come to the land of everlasting rest. But I will read to you, my friends, from the Discipline, that you may know for your- selves the doctrine of his Church, the doctrine that he said he believed, ■^ ON THE MODK AND SUBJECTS OP BAPTISM. 175 when lie was received as a preacher, and tliat lie obligated himself to support. Before doing so, liowever, a word of (explanation is necessary concerning the terms " visible Church," and " invisible Church." Tlu'st! are not Scriptural expressions, but they are much used by piedo- baptists, and if you would understand their literature you njust under sUmd their use of them. In Article XIII. of the Discipline of the Mfjthodist Church of Canada (p. 17) it is said: "The visible Church of Christ is a congregation of faithful men, in which the pure Word of (lod is preached, and the sacraments duly administered." It is evident from this definition of the " visible Church " that infants are not received into it ; for they are not faithful men — they have no faith at all— the Word of God is not preached to them, and the Lord's Supper is not given to them. If, therefore, they are received into any Church, it must be into what is known as the " invisible Church." This "invisible Church " they understand to include all that are in Christ, all tl'at are saved through the death of Christ. (See the testimony of Dr. Ditzler, Louiaville Debate, p. 17.) Bear in mind, now, that into what the Discipline calls the " visible Church " infants cannot come, from the very nature of the case ; and then, with this in your mind, read the following prayer, which the minister is required to pray just before ho baptizes a baby : " Almighty and everlasting God, who of Thy great mercy didst save Noah and his family in the ark from perishing by water ; and also didst safely lead the children of Israel, Thy people, through the Red Sea, figuring thereby Thy holy baptism, and has set apart water for this Holy Sacrament ; and who hast condescended to enter into gracious covenant with man, wherein Thou hast included children as partakers of its benefits, declaring that, " of such is the kingdom of heaven ;" we beseech Thee for Thine infinite mercies that Thou wilt look upon this child ; wash him and sanctify him with the Holy Ghost ; that he, being delivered from Thy wrath, may be received into the ark of Christ's Church, and being steadfast in faith, joyful through hope, and rooted in love, may so pass the waves of this troublesome world, that finally he may come to the land of everlasting life, there to reign with Thee, world without end, through Jesus Christ our Lord. " merciful God, grant that the old Adam in this child may be so Ijuried, that the new man may be raised up in him. " Grant that all carnal affections may die in him, and that all things Ijelonging to the Spirit may live and grow in him." The minister, after he reminds the Father that He saved Noah from IMAGE EVALUATION TEST TARGET (MT-3) M 1.0 I.I 11.25 |^|28 |Z5 *ii M 12.2 li ■U 140 12.0 ^|v 176 REPORT OF DEBATE perishing, that He saved the children of Israel from their enemies at the Red Sea, says, " We beseech Thee for Thine infinite mercies that Thou wilt look upon this child ; wash him [he regards him as unclean], sanctify him [he regards him as unsanctified, unholy] with the Holy Ghost ; that he, being delivered from Thy wrath [he regards him as being under the wrath of God], may be received into the ark of Christ's Church." He then prays that the old Adam may be buried in him and the new man raised up in him. He does not regard the " new man " (Christ) as being in him yet. Evidently, according to the Discipline, babies are baptized in order to be brought into the invisible Church, to be saved from the wrath of God, saved from hell. It would not be strange, if .Mr. Wilkinson believed the doctrine of his Discipline, that he should say that my doctrine sends them to hell, seeing that I do not baptize them. But he does not believe that doctrine. He says they coine into this world as innocent as angels. But, notwithstanding this, he lifts his hands over them and prays that they may be washed and sanctified by tlie Holy Ghost, and delivered from the wrath of God ; that the old Adam may die in them, and the new man be raised up. A strange prayer to pray over a being as innocent as an arigel ; a being no more under the wrath of God than Gabriel ! Then he talks about their being under a twofold curse! But, says he, were not infants circumcised in ancient days, under the Mosaic economy? Yes, they were; but that fact has nothing whatever to do with infant baptism. Mr. Wilkinson's entire address, in which he is supposed to lay the foundation of his argument in defence of infant baptism, is devoted to what is known as the " Argument from the Covenant of Circumcision." If this argument is worthless, theti all that he has said in his speech of one hour amounts to nothing — absolutely nothing. It seems a pity to spoil ihe results of so much labor, but it must be done. Listen to the follow- ing startling statement from the most distinguished Methodist debater on this continent. I read from the Graves-Ditxler, p. 692, as follows: '' [Note by Reporter. — As Dr. Graves was about to commence. Elder Ditzler motioned him to his seat, where a short conference was held, at the conclusion of which Elder Ditzler arose and said : — "We have agreed not to debate the question of the covenants further, as I here express my conviction that the covenants of the Old Testament have nothing to do with infant baptism." Dr. Graves. — I want it to be recorded alongside of that frank ad- mission, that I am rejoiced to hear him say this. The Old Testament ON THE MODB AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. ITt covenants have been the basis of this rite heretofore, and I am glad this ground is at last abandoned by Methodists. So much is gained by this discussion. From this day onward, so long as Elder Ditzler bears the endorsement of the Bishops of his Church, that he is a re- presentative of their doctrines, let no Methodist elder or preacher in all the South ever go back to the old covenants with Abraham, or the Jews, to find a ground for infant baptism. I was never better prepared to discuss the covenants, one and all, than now, but Elder Ditzler has at last fully surrendered them. I close the Old Testament. After this mutual explanation, Dr. Graves commenced his sixth reply.] It must be exceedingly distressing to my opponent, after that hour speech on the covenants, to hear his noted brother Dr. Ditzler say : " I here express my conviction that the covenants of the Old Testa- ment have nothing to do with infant baptism." But there are many Presbyterians present, and perhaps some of them would like to hear a little Presbyterian testimony. In his day. Dr. Moses Stuart, of Andover Theological Seminary, was the greatest Presbyterian light on this W estern continent. Concerning the covenant argument he testifies thus : " How unwary, too, are many excellent men in con- tending for infant baptism on the ground of the Jewish analogy of circumcision . . . Numberless difficulties present themselves in our way, as soon as we begin to argue in such a manner as this." Again, " The covenant of circumcision furnishes no ground for infant baptism." — Stuart on Baptism (Nashville edition), p. 32. And now, there is here, no doubt, a third class, people who are anxious to hear what the Bible says. They care more for the say- ings of inspired men than they do for those of Methodists and Pres- byterians, howsoever learned and distinguished they may be. Let them consider the following facts : 1. According to the Scriptures, males only were circumcised ; males and females both are baptized. 2. It was proper and right for a man to circumcise himself ; one has no authority to baptize himself. 3. Either parent could circumcise the child. 4. When a Jew bought a servant — a male — he was required to circumcise him ; in the days of slavery in the States, I never heard of a psedo-baptist's baptizing his men-servants because they were his ser- mnU. Mr. Wilkinson's Discipline would not allow him to do it. 5. Circumcision did not belong to God's peculiar people, the Jews, only ; but it was observed by all the descendants of Abraham : Ish- maelites, Edomites, and the children of Keturah, as well as the Jews ; 12 . . ., 178 REPORT OF DEBATE whereas, in the New Testament, baptism is given only to those who are discipled to Christ. 6. No intellectual nor moral qualifications were required as pre- requisites to circumcision ; for every male descendant of Abraham, and all of their male servants, from eight days old and upwards, big and little, old and young, philosophers and idiots, good and bad, were entitled to circumcision ; this is not true of baptism, for, among Pro- testants, all agree that of adults only believers in Christ are entitled to it. 7. Circumcision was a visible mark ; baptism is not. 8. All Jews not circumcised were cut off from their people ; few psedo-baptists of our day are willing to say that of the infants that are not baptized. 9. I have reserved for ray last point the most conclusive of all. It is perfectly clear and explicit, perfectly conclusive and satisfactory, in settling the question ; it shows beyond the possibility of a reason- able doubt that baptism did not come in the room of circumcision. It is this : both were practiced by inspired servants of the Lord at the same time. Men were baptized who had been already circumcised, and men were circumcised who had been already baptized, and that, too, by the authority of God. Christ was circumcised when eight days old, and afterwards baptized ; so were the apostles ; so were the three thousand who were received on the day of Pentecost ; so were the tens and hundreds of thousands of Jews who were baptized by John the Baptist, Jesus, and the apostles. On the other hand, after Timothy had been baptized, Paul circumcised him. (See Acts 16 : 1-3.) Of course baptism did not come in the room of circumcision, notwith- standing my opponent tried so hard, in that long speech, to prove it. It is a question settled — settled by facts, and facts are stubborn things. Paul circumcised Timothy because there was Jewish blood in his veins ; but Titus was a Greek, and him he would not circumcise ; he was stubborn in his refusal, for, he argued, being a Greek he had no claim to the rite. If a Jew should be converted to Christ to-day, under my ministry, and should ask me the question, " Shall I continue to circumcise my children 1" I would reply, "Yes, by all means." If I should be asked for my authority for so saying, I would show that it is a fact concerning which there is no room for doubt, that Jewish Christians continued to practice circumcision all through the apostolic age, with the knowledge and approval of the apostles. In the seventeenth chapter of Genesis, one of the chapters from which Mr. Wilkinson ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTb OF BAPTISM. 179 read, th« chapter in which the covenant of circumcision is given, it is said of it (ver. 13), " My covenant shall be in your flesh for an everlasting covenant." God intended it to last until the end of the a(»e3. In proof of this consider the following facts : 1. The great question which divided the Church in the apostolic age was, whether or not the Gentile Christians should be circumcised. ITie Judaizing teachers in the Church said unto them (Acts 15 : 1) ; " Except ye be circumcised after the manner of Moses, ye cannot be saved." This discussion was waged hotly even till towards the end of the days of inspiration. Now it is perfectly evident to every re- flecting mind, that it could never have arisen had the Jews them- selves ceased to circumcise their children upon entering the Church of Christ. 2. About the year 52 A.D., Paul and Barnabas went from Antioch up to Jerusalem to lay the matter before the apostles and elders for their decision. They were kindly received, and patiently listened to, while they laid the whole matter before them. After much discus- sion and disputation (see Acts 15 : 4-7), it was unanimously agreed by the apostles and elders as follows : " That we trouble not them which from among the Gentiles are turned to God ; but that they abstain from pollutions of idols, and from fornication, and from things strangled, and from blood." 3. About a year after this, Paul became acquainted with Timothy and circumcised him ; showing clearly that while the Gentiles were not to circumcise, it was still lawful for those of Jewish blood. (See Acts 16 : 1-3.) 4. About seven years after this, Paul came up to Jerusalem on his last visit to the city (A.D. 60), and on the day following he went in unto James and the elders, and declared all that God had wrought by his hand among the Gentiles. " And when they heard it they glorified the Lord, and said unto him. Thou seest, brother, how many thousands of Jews there are which believe ; and they are all zealous of the law ; and they are informed of thee, that thou teachest all the Jews which are among the Gentiles to forsake Aloses, saying that they ought not to circumcise their children, neither to walk after the customs. What is it therefore 1 The multitude must needs come together ; for they will hear that thou art come. Do therefore this that we say unto thee : We have four men which have a vow on them ; them take, and purify thyself with them, and be at charges with them, that they may shave their heads ; and all may know that those things, whereof they were informed concerning thee, are 180 REPORT OF DEBATE nothing ; but that thou thyself also walkest orderly, and keepest tht law."— Acts 21 : 20-24. If baptism had taken the place of circumcision, it is certain thaft Paul, and James, and these elders had never found it out ; for the " many thousands of Jews " that believed were practicing both, and that, too, with the approval of these apostles and elders. This pas- sage shows that they regarded it as disorderly for a man to teach Jewish Christians not to circumcise their children. These are the same parties that, eight years before, had written to the Gentiles to- " observe no such thing." (See ver. 25.) I want to teach and prac- tice just as the apostles did. But did not Paul tell some people that they must not be circum- cised ; that if they were, Christ would profit them nothing 1 Yes, but he was writing to Gentiles when he said this. Let us now consider the Abrahamic covenants. T will call your attention to two ; one of them is found in the 12th, and the other in the 17th chapter of Genesis. The first reads thus :. " Now the Lord had said unto Abram, get thee out of thy country, and from thy kindred, and from thy father's house, unto a land that I will show thee ; and I will make thee a great nation, and I will bless thee, and make thy name great ; and thou shalt be a blessing ; and I will bless them that bless thee, and curse him that curseth thee ; and in thee shall all families of the earth be blessed. So Abram departed, as the Lord had spoken to him ; and Lot went with him ;. and Abram was seventy and five years when he departed out of jlaran." This covenant (contract) you see was this : Abram, the party of the first part, was to leave his country, his kindred, his father's house, and go unto the land which God should show him ; God, the party of the second part, upon the condition of his doing this, agreed to make of him a great nation, to bless him, and to make his name great ; He bound Himself further, saying, '* I will bless them that bless thee, and curse him that curseth thee ; and in thee shall all families of the earth be blessed." Abram arose at once, and fulfilled his part of the contract : he went forth into the land of Canaan, journeyed through the land, and then, on account of a famine, having fulfilled his part of the contract, he went down to Egypt — according to the received chronology, all in one year. The covenant of circumcision mentioned in the 17th chapter was given to Abram when he was ninety-nine years old*. So> nearly twenty- ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OP BAPTISM. 181 five years had passed away from the giving of one covanant to the giving of the other. You cannot change a covenant after the contract has been finished. God told Abram, in the 12th chapter, to leave that country, and go to the land He would show him. That wm Abram's duty, and God said, then " I will bless thee." And He adds, "And in thee shall all families of the earth be blessed." Abram arose and fulfilled his part of the contract, and travelled under it for nearly twenty-five years. This was the covenant concerning Christ, given 430 years before the law. It was given B.C. 1921, the law B.C. 1491, a difference of 430 years exactly. After about twenty- five years we come to the covenant of circumcision (Gen. 17 : 1-14). The first verse tells us Abram was ninety-nine years old. Mr. Wilkinson tells us that this is the same covenant enlarged ; that God added to his require- ments the rite of circumcision. Do you suppose that God, after his ^aithful servant had been operating under th«>;t covenant for twenty- five years, would then add to it, or change it t Even a man would not do that. Listen to Paul : " Brethren, I speak after the manner of men ; though it be but a man's covenant, yet if it be confirmed, no man disannulleth, or addeth thereto." (Gal. 3:15.) Let us consider this covenant of circumcision (Gen. 17). From it I read the following extracts : " I will make My covenant between Me and thee, and will multiply thee exceedingly." (Verse 2.) " Neither shall thy name any more be called Abram, but thy name shall be Abraham ; for a father of- many nations have I made thee." (Verse 5.) " I will establish My covenant between Me and thee and thy seed after thee in their generations for an everlasting covenant, to be a God unto thee, and to thy seed after thee." (Verse 7.) " And I will give unto thee, and to thy seed after thee, the land wherein thou art a stranger, all the land of Canaan, for an everlast- ing possession ; and I will be their God." (Verse 8.) " This is my covenant, which ye shall keep between Me and you and thy see>„ after thee : Every man child among you shall be circumcised. (Verse 10.) "And he that is eight days old shall be circumcised among you, every man child in your generations, he that is born in the house, or bought with money of any stranger, which is not of thy seed. He that is bom in thy house, and he that is bought with thy money, must needs ha circumcised ; and My covenant shall be in your flesh for an ever- covenant. And the uncircumcised man child whose flesh of 182 REPORT OF DEBATE liis foreskin is not circumcised, that soul shall be cut of!' from hi» people; he hath broken My covenant." (Verses 12-H.) Mr. Wilkinson said God had made this covenant with Abram twenty-four years before this ; that this is the same covenant as that recorded in Genesis 12; but the Lord here says, "I will make 'My covenant between Me and thee," etc. Mr. Wilkinson comes square up against the Holy Scripture : God says, "I will make;" Mr. Wilkin- son says, You have made it already, twenty-four years ago. Which will you believe, my friends, the Lord, or Mr. Wilkinson 1 the word of God, or the word of man ? Mr. Wilkinson argues that the Church of Christ is built upon thi& covenant; that it is the same, therefore, as the Jewish Church; that it has, therefore, the same membershi]) ; and that as the Jewish Church had infant membership, so has the Christian. How about the servants bought with one's money ? How about the females 1 Circumcision did not admit one into the Jewish Church ; itj membership was born or bought into it ; and then, if one was not circumcised he was cut off. How about that, if baptism has taken the place of circumcision 1 No wonder Dr. Stuart said, " How un- wary, too, are many excellent men, in contending for infant baptism on the ground of the Jewish analogy of circumcision. . . . Numberleaa difficulties present themselves in our way, as soon as v;e begin to argue in such a manner as this." Com. 0. T. ch 22. And no wonder he concludes, "The covenant of circumcision furnishes no ground for infant baptism." {Lecture on Galatians.) In the 10th verse of the 1 7th chapter, God says to Abraham, "This is My covenant." Mr. Wilkinson interjected a word, and made the passage read " this is the token of my covenant." Mr. Wilkinson — Turn to Genesis and you will tind it there. Mr. Harding — You can do so when your time comes. The promise concerning Christ is given in the 1 2th chapter : the covenant of circumcision and the promise concerning Canaan in clie 17th, twenty-four years later. Mr. Wilkinson quoted from Gal. 3: 17; though why he did so I can't imagine, for it ruins him. The verse reads thus : " And this I say, that the covenant, that was confirmed before of God in Christ, the law, which was 430 years after, cannot disannul, that it should make the promise of God of more effect." This verse shows that the Abrahamic covenant concerning Christ was confirmed 430 years be- fore the giving of the law. This takes us back beyond the 17tb chapter of Genesis, and the covenant of circumcision, to the day 05 THE MODE AlfD SUBJECTS OP BAPTISM. IBS when Abrain was 75 years old. (Gen. chap. 12.) The count is made thus : It was 25 years till Isaac was born, Abraham being 100 at his birth (Gen. 21:5); Isaac was 60 years old when Jacob was bom (Gen. 25 : 26) ; Jacob was 130 years old when he went down into Egypt (Gen. 47 : 28). And, according to the received chronology — that of Archbishop Usher and Sir Isaac Newton — the sojourn wag 215 years. 25 + 60 + 130 + 215 -= 430. This goes back 24 years too far for Mr. Wikinson's purposes — it ruins his argument. The cove- nant in Gen. 12 is fulfilled in Christ, Abraham's spiritual seed. That in Gen. 17, concerned his fleshly offspring, had a fleshly seal, circumcision ; and a temporal reward, the land of Canaan. I want now to read to you about the covenant under which we now are. You will find that in it there are no infants. I read from Jeremiah 31 : 31-34 : " Behold, the days come, saith the Lord, that I will make a new covenant with the house of Israel, and with the house of Judah ; ** Not according to the covenant that I made with their fathers, in the day that I took them by the hand, to bring them out of the land of Egypt; which My covenant they brake, although I was an hus- band unto them, saith the Lord ; "But this shall be the covenant that I will make with the house of Israel ; After those days, saith the Lord, I will put My law in their inward parts, and write it in their hearts, and I will be their God and they shall be My people. " And they shall teach no more every man his neighbor, and every man his brother, saying. Know the Lord : for they shall all know Me, from the least of them imto the greatest of them, saith the Lord : for I will forgive their iniquity, and I will remember their sin no more." Under the old Jewish covenant it was often necessary for a man to instruct his neighbor, and to tell him about God ; for they were bom into it, and bought into it, and were often even ignorant that there is a God. Not so under the new. God says the new covenant is this : " I will put my law in their inward parts, and write it in their hearts." The new covenant is for those who can receive the law of God into their minds and hearts. Paul quotes this passage from Jeremiah in the 8th chapter of Hebrews, and applies it to the Christian dispensation. In establishing this dispensation, Jesus said, "Go ye, therefore, and teach all nations, baptizing them," etc. (Matt. 28 : 19.) «' Go ye into all the world, and preach the gospel to every creature. He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved," etc. 184 REPORT OF DEBATE The teaching first, and then the baptism after the teaching and prcao'.- ing had been heard, understood, and believed. Under the old cove- nant, circumcision came first, and afterwards the teaching. Jt was a flesh and blood affair. Under the new we have a spiritual religion — one that appeals to the mind and heart. Into it no one can come except he be born again. But that Mr. Wilkinson's Church is not the Church of the new covenant is certain ; for, as every one knows, there are a great num- ber in it that don't know the Lord, nor anybody, nor anything else. What does the little infant know of the Lord, upon whom the minis- ter sprinkles water, and prays that it may be delivered from the wrath of God 1 The little one of whom we are told at one moment that he is as pure as an angel in heaven, and in the next breath that he is under a twofold curse ? What does ho know about the Lord 1 Mr Wilkinson — I will give my opponent an extra half-hour if he will answer a question at this point. Mr. Harding — Sit down until your time comes. What does a little babe know about the covenant of the Lord ? Nothing. But everybody under the new covenant knows the Lord, from the least to the greatest. Mr. Wilkinson — I will give him an hour if he will answer my question. Mr. Harding — Excuse Mr. Wilkinson, my friends ; it makes a Methodist wonderfully restless to show up his inconsistencies and the blunders of his creed ; it is almost impossible for him to keep still. My friend absolutely came out with the statement that " ye must be born again," in talking about these covenants ! What ! Does he agree that infants must be born again to enter the new covenant ! Does he know what it is to be born again"! Listen. "Whosoever believeth that Jesus is the Christ is born of God." — 1 John 5:1. " Of His own will begat He us with the word of truth." — Jas. 1 : 18, " Being born again, not of corruptible seed, but of incorruptible, by the word of God which liveth and abideth for ever. . . . And this is the word which by the gospel is preached unto you." — 1 Peter 1 : 23-25. In order to be born again one must believe the proposi- tion that Jesus is the Christ. Can infants do that 1 He must be begotten by the word of truth. Can infants hear and understand the word of truth ? Are the babies begotten again of God 1 Do they know Christ and love Him V Dear friends, the Church is not for infants ; it is for the lost, for those that need to be saved. The infant does not need to be saved. ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 185 I will go further and say that an infant is not saved. It is safe, noi saved. It Avill go to heaven because it is safe. Infants are not lost ; they never were lost. The Bible says " sin is the transgression of the law," and God says " the soul that sinneth it shall die." When infants become old enough to sin, it is necessary for them to be saved ; but while they are in their infantile purity they are not lost. They cannot fulfil any law, they do not violate any law ; they are under no curse two-fold or otherwise. I would rather that my tongue fihould cleave to my mouth, than pray for the delivery of infants from the Divine wrath, when they are not under His wrath. Infants are as pure as the angels in heaven. My opponent admits that they do not need the Lord's Supper. But what is the reason he does not give the Lord's Supper to infants, as he gives them baptism 1 Is baptism more important than the Lord's Supper to save them from the wrath of God 1 If this chart exhibited by my opponent proves anything— which it does not do — it involves this, that the Lord's Supper, as well as baptism, shop'd be given to infants ; and, indeed, in the Greek Church they give the Lord's Supper to infants. Mr. Wilkinson — They immerse them, too. Mr. Harding — My friend will talk about immersion, he cannot get away from it. Now, as he is so anxious for more on that sub- ject, I will give him one other little point. Section 1. (p. 13) of his Discipline reads thus : " The Doctrines of the Methodist Church of Canada are declared to be those contained in the twenty-five Articles of Religion, and those taught by the Rev. John Wesley, M.A., in his Notes on the New Testament, and in the first fifty-two Sermons of the first series of his discourses, published during his life time." But Wesley, in his Notes, says Rom. 6 : 4 refers to immersion. So then this interpretation which Mr. Wilkinson said none but a fool would give, is the doctrine of his own Church. On page 73 of the Discipline, this question is asked of preachers : " Do you sincerely and fully believe the doctrines of Methodism as contained in the Articles of Religion, and as taught by Mr. Wesley in his Notes on the New Testament, and Volumes of Sermons 1" To this question Mr. Wilk- mson said. Yes, upon becoming a preacher. He is a nice man, is he not, to accuse his Church, his father and himself of being fools ? While I am on the matter of consistency, you may take another point. There is a minister on this platform [Mr. Paterson, Presby- terian,] who said in a public speech that Irenaeus mentioned infant baptism. I shook ray head. He vociferated, " I will stake my word and honor as a Christian and a minister that he did do it." I have 186 REPORT OF DEUATE just read in your hearing a statement from the great Meyer, who gayg it is not certainly attested before Tertullian. But Tertullian, you know, wrote after Irenwus. What of the gentleman's word and honor ? (ione, gone forever. My opponent referred to the Commission: "Go ye therefore and teach all nations baptizing them in the name of the Father, tSon, and Holy (ihost, teaching them to observe all things whatsm'ver I have commanded you, and lo I am with you always even unto the end of the world." He then argued that as infants are in the nations, they uhould be baptized. Did he not notice that " teaching " came before 'baptizing." That is the covenant we live under. The first thing we must do is to teach. In Mark, Christ gave this command, " Go ye into all the world and preach the Gospel to every creature. He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved, but he that believeth not shall be damned." "Go teach," says Matthew. " Go preach +he gospel," says Mark ; so teaching comes first and afterwards baptii:ing. And after the baptizing, they are taught to observe all things which God had commanded them. The late Dr. \. T. Bledsoe, editor of the Southern Review (Metho- dist), ranked hv^h among the honorable, accomplished, and scholarly men of tho United States. He practiced infant baptism ; but con- cerning the Commission he thus writes in a discussion with his bro- ther Dr. Miller :— " Take this command for example, ' Go ye into all the world and preach the gospel to every creature.' — Mark 16 : 15. Now, here the ' class' is every creature. But stocks and stones and dumb brutes are ' a part of this class.' Shall we, then, in obedience to Mr. Miller's logic, preach the gospel to stocks and stones and dumb brutes? Reason and common sense forbid ! These compel us, in spite of his logic, to limit the preaching of the gospel, first to human beings, and then to that portion of the class thus limited who are capable of hearing and understanding the gospel." The Sout/iem Jievieio, July, 1874, p. 176. Dr. Bledsoe, learned and astute though he was, devoted to Meth- odism, given to the practice of infant baptism, nevertheless could not see it in the Commission, which is our only authority for baptizing any body. Were they not to baptize the nations 1 Yes, they were to teach all nations, baptizing them ; that is, baptizing the taught. My opponent is in a bad way. He points to a passage of Scripture and says, " Here is infant baptism." One of his own brethren steps up, a man more learned, more critical, more distinguished by far than ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF UAPTI8M. 187 hiinwlf, and, after looking carefully at the paHsage, sayH, " I can- not see it." He has gone to the covenant of circumcision ; but auch men as Ditzler and Htuart say, " It is not there." He goes to the Comniission, hut Uledsoc, Ncander, and Meyer say it is not there. He goeH to the " new covenant ;" hut behold ! (iod says, •' I will put My law in their inward parts." Then He says of those under this covenant, " All shall know Me, from the least to the greatest." Then, through Dr. SchaH, wo hear many pn>do-baptists rhouting, " Infant baptism is not of apostolic origin at all." Dr. HUidsoe says, " Tertullian is the first writer in the Church who makes any express mention of the custom of infant baptism." Smilliern Review, April, 1874, p. 339. But Tertullian wrote about A.D. 200, that is, 100 years after John, the last apostle, died. The passage fronf Irena>us (who wrote about thirty years before Tertullian) that is by some supposed to refer to infant baptism, reads thus : — . " Therefore as He was a master, Ho had also the age of a master. Not disdaining nor going in a way above human nature ; nor breaking in His own person the law which He had set for mankind ; but sanc- tifying every several age by the likeness that it has to Him. For He came to save all persons by Himself : all, I mean, who by Him are regenerated unto God — infants and little ones and children and youths and elder persons. Therefore He went through the several ages : for infants being made an infant, sanctifying infants; to little ones He was made a little one, sanctifying those of that age ; and also giving an example of godliness, justice, and dutifulness ; to youths he was a youth," etc. Wall's In/ant Baptism, Vol. I., p. 45. It is argued that by the word " regenerated " Irenteus meant "baptized." That he did not so mean is evident from the following quotation from him on the next page : " And again, when He gave His disciples the commission of regenerating unto God, He said unto them, 'Go teach all nations, baptizing them, in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit,' " where the " commission of regenerating " plainly means the commission of teaching and baptizing. To regenerate a man according to the Bible, with which Irenseus agrees, is to fill his heart with loving faith in Jesus by teaching him, and then to baptize him. Tertullian is the first writer that ever mentioned infant baptism, so far as any mortal knows. This is what he says : — "Therefore, according to every one's condition and disposition, and also their age, the delaying of baptism is more profitable, es- 188 RKPORT OF DEHATK pocially in the caso of little children. For, what need is thnro that the godfathers should be brought into danger 1 Because tli(;y may either fail of their promises by death, or they may be mistaken l)ya child's proving of a wicked disposition. Our Lord says, indeed, Do not forbid them to come unto Me. Thenifore, let them come when they are grown up ; let ihv.iu come when they understand, wluai they are instructed whither it is that they come ; let them be inadf Christians when they can know Christ. What need their guiltifss ago make such haste to the forgiveness of sins ? Men will proceed more warily in worldly things ; and he that should not have earthly ^'oods committed to him, yet shall have heavenly. Let them know how to desire this salvation, that jon may appear to have given to one that asketh. " For no less reason unmarried persons ought to be kept off, who are likely to come into temptation ; as well those that never were married, upon account of their coming to ripeness, as those in widowhood, for the miss of their partner, until they either marry or be confirmed in continence. They that understand the weight of baptism will rather dread the receiving it than the delaying,' of it. An entire faith is secure of salvation." Wall's History of Infant Baptism, Vol. I., p. 58. Origen, who wrote about ten years after Tertullian, is the first writer to speak favorably of infant baptism. He thought babies ought to be baptized to vmsh away the yuilt of original sin. He says :— " Having occasion given in this place, I will mention a thing that causes frequent inquiries among the brethren. Infants are baptized for the forgiveness of sins. Of what sins'? Or when have they sinned ? Or how can any reason of the laver in their case hold good, but according to that sense that we mentioned even now : none is free from pollution, though his life be but the length of one day upon the earth 1 And it is for that rc^ason, because by the sacrament of baptism the pollution of our birth is taken away, that infants are baptized." Wall's History of In/ant Baptism, Vol, I., p. 05. [Time expired.^ ON THE MODE AND 8UaiECT8 OP UAPTI6M. 183 EVENING SESSION— FOURTH DAY. MR. WILKINSON'S SECOND SPEECH. Mil. CiiAiiiMAN, Ladikh and Gentlkmen, — I will endeavor afr rapidly as is consistent witli clearness to run over, by way of reviiitiK\tfi'Ai- -oi. _,jr/iT?.',"» .... 192 REPORT OP P BATE Christ's Church ; and being steadfast in faith, joyful through hope,^ and rooted in love, may so pass the waves of this troublesome world, that finally he may come to the land of everlasting life," etc. Now, it will V)e remembered that the Methodist Church has always recog- nized the fact that little children being in the kingdom of heaven, they are already delivered from God's wrath. That clause in the prayer, therefore, points to something that at present actually exists. My opponent can make a terrible hullabaloo about our crying to God to deliver children from His wrath, but we never do thus cry. There- fore it creates a false impression, and that, conveyed intentionally, is an untruth. If my opponent did not intend thus to tell an untrutii, he made a big mistake, because he stated what' was false, though not a falsehood. He makes a great many mistakes that I let pass, but this is a pretty serious one. Besides, it will be seen that we ascribe the deliverance of the child from God's wrath, to the washing and sane- tification of the Holy Ghort and not to water ; hence it is not to deliver the child from God's wrath that we baptize him. As to the expression in the prayer, " may be received into the ark of Christ's Church," we believe that the infants belong to the invisible Church which we teach and believe to be the same as the kingdom of heaven inco which we recognize they are already brought by the Spirit through the atonement, and therefore we only mean that they may thus pass visibly to the eyes of the people, representing what has already occurred invisibly. I want to read another part of our Discipline to show how passages can be construed. " Grant us, therefore, gracious Lord, so to eat the flesh of Thy dear Son Jesus Christ, and to drink his blood," etc. It could be said by an opponent who was discussing the question of the Lord's Supper, that as Methodists pray to the Lord to help them so to eat the flesh of His Son, and so to drink of His blood, that certain results may accrue to them, that therefore they believe in transubstantiation, as does the Church of Kome. Yet no one really thinks that the Methodist Church holds any such belief. The passage I have quoted is fully explained in another clause, which reads: " Hear us, C merciful Father, we most humbly beseech Thee, and grant that we, receiving these Thy creatures of bread and wine, according to Thy Son, our Saviour Jesus Christ's holy institution, in remembrance of his death and passion, may be partakers of His most blessed Body and Blood." So also with regard to baptism. I turn to our articles of faith in the first part of the Discipline and read respecting baptism : " Baptism is not only a sign of profession and mark of difference ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 193 whereby Christians are distinguished from others that are not bap- tized, but it is also a sign of regeneration, or the new birth." That is what we teach. Is it fair, therefore, for a man to take a scrap away from the context and ring the changes on j t, and strive to make the impression that we teach some heresy which we have always repudiated ? But in this way the teachings of the Bible, or any other book, maj be made to appear ridiculous, and such a prin- ciple of interpretation is exceedingly unjust. To act fairly with any Church we must interpret their teachings according to their own interpretations of them. The " office editor " of the Standard, four years ago, used the same argument about Methodists crying to the Lord to save little children from His wrath. But the people got sick of it : it was hash, hash, and rehash. I think the people here will get sick of resurrection hash too ; and if my opponent has any respect for himself or his friends he will bury the stinking thing out of sight. If you don't get more from my present opponent, it will be an agreeable disappointment to the congregation. He accuses me of saying that his doctrine would send infants to hell, because he does not baptize them. I deny that I said so. The " office editor " was very much in the habit of taking hold of my statements and trying to misconstrue them, and he did this so per- sistently that on the fifth evening of our debate I publicly oflfered five dollars to any person for one argument that I had brought for- ward, and which he had attempted to reply to, which he had not first twisted out of shape. It is my solemn impression that my present opponent put that statement in my mouth with the intention of giving a false impression. If he apologizes, I will take this back. Mr. Harding — I will not do it. Mr. Wilkinson — No, he never apologizes for anything he says, no matter how mean or unjust the statement is. I will repeat what I said, and I challenge him to say that I am not repeating it correctly. I said that his doctrine would logically consign children to hell. To- night I am going to prove it. God made a covenant with Abram in Gen. 12 : 1-3, in which all the families of the earth were to be " blessed." This blessing must include whatever benefits are procured for man by the atonement, for my opponent himself claims it was the covenant of redemption securing spiritual blessings, as distinguished from the covenant in the 17th chapter, which he says was a covenant of temporal bless- ings. Now, families include little children, especially " all the fami- 13 ": '(:■ '■ •irf-»ip?fe'''i: ^,.-Art(vt>.-.«'l^ -■«?.^*-**;,.!^.5. 194 REPORT OP r^EBATE lies of the earth." Consequently, the covenant of redemption included little children who are saved !')y means of the atonement. But my opponent now excludes b'ttle children from the blessings of salvation, because they cannot " know the Lord." Jesus says, " This is life eter- nal, that they may know Thee, the only true God, and Jesus Christ, whom Thou hast sent." The children cannot meet the conditions, according to my opponent, therefore cannot inherit eternal life. This is why I say that his doctrine logically sends the little ones to hell, and I cannot, for the life of me, see how he can escape from the con- clusion. He quoted something about the Oraves-Ditzler debate to prove that Dr. Ditzler agreed not to debate the question of the covenants, because he admitted that they had nothing to do with infant baptism. I doubt if Dr. Ditzler said anything of the kind. In the foot-notes of his own work on Baptism, Dr. Ditzler has pointed out where his sentiments in that debate were misrepresented, misquoted, and dis- torted all through the book. J will give you a sample. He says on page 139, in a foot-note : "After the rebuke we gave Dr. Judd, and him at OarroUton, which he never resented there (pp. 146-7), Dr. Graves, in his last speech— not as deliared, but as re-written by him after I had returned to Ken- tucky (p. 530) — repeats the shameful untruth, and says, * Amad in Syriac, as all standard lexicographers testify, primarily sigki- piEt TO immerse 1' A more wilful falsehood was never uttered by any perjured, oath-bound member of a robber clan on earth. These, with hosti^ of other statements in these last speeches on Mode, and all subsequent parts of the so-called debate, account for their not sending to me a single proof-sheet after my sixteenth speech on the First Proposition, though I requested it, and gave them my address." If necessary, I can give more examples, which I have here. But, for the present, I forbear. My opponent tells you that under the old dispensation only males were circumcised. Under the old dispensation Abraham's seed were justified by faith and circumcised. Only those circumcised were to be admitted to the Passover. As a matter of fact, females were jus- tified by faith, partook of the Passover, and therefore must have been accounted eta circumciaed, though excused from any outward operation except purification by water. Why do we baptize females 1 Because this dispensation is the dispensation of the Spirit. Males and females are one in Christ, and in both the original and the revised version we read " all one man in Christ." In that spiritual sense no one but the ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 195 " one man " ic baptized. The female, therefore, wan included in the male in circumcision, and the female is included in the male in bap- tism. [Time expired.] MR. HARDING'S SECOND REPLY. I observe that Mr. Wilkinson is very much out of humor this evening ; and I am not at all surprised at it. Had I received such a " dressing down " as he did, I would have been out of humor myself. He says that I have been out of order, that I have made insinuations, and so forth ; he doubts whether or not I have properly represented the authorities, and he is certain that I have misrepresented the Discipline. I don't care what he says about me, how many insinu- ations he makes about my being unfair, nor how many doubts he expresses. It is not what a man says, nor what he doubts, but what he proves, that does the damage. If he would destroy the force of my quotations, let him show that I have misrepresented at least one of the authors quoted. I propose to follow him right along, and to show him up as I go, and to keep in a good humor, too, while about it. He started out by intimating that I had scrapped the prayer of the Discipline which is used at the baptism of infants. I read it right through, and I will read again the part which he claims I misrepre- sent ; and you shall see that it is he that distorts and misrepresents his own Discipline. It reads thus : "We beseech Thee, for Thine infinite mercies, that Thou wilt look upon this child ; wash him and sanctify him with the Holy Ghost ; that he, being delivered from Thy wrath, may be received into the ark of Christ's Church, and being steadfast in faith, joyful through hope, and rooted in love, may so pass the waves of this troublesome world, that finally he may come to the land of everlasting life ; there to reign with Thee, world without end, through Jesus Christ our Lord." " merciful God, grant that the old Adam in this child may be so wried, that the new man may be raised up in him." — {Discipline, p. 168,) Mr. Wilkinson claims that the expression, " being delivered from ^rf»*W^-'^-'f^''~r^T*.», Pftul says, '* I Iwisooch you, brethren, (ye know the house of Stephanas, that it ip the first fruits of Achaia, and that thoy have nddictt'd themselves to the ministry of the saints,) that ye submit yourselves unto such, and to every one that helpeth with us, and labor- eth." Now, this letter was written about five years after Paul had plant4>d the Ohurch at Oorinth, and not longer than six years after his entrance into Achaia. If there were a..y infants in the house- hold of Stephanas, they must have developed wondeH'ully, ^r within six years they hod addicted themselves to the ministry of the saints, and Paul exhorted the Ohurch at Corinth to submit to such as they were. Babies that can be so well develope ' in six years that they are (jualified to be rulers in the Church of Ood, I freely grant, are (it subjects for baptism. 10. About this case we learn the following things : All those assem- bled at the house of Cornelius were there to hear all tltings that Ood had commanded (see Acts 10 : 33), " The Holy Ghost fe on all tiiose that heard the word " (verse 44). Peter comrnonded those upon whom the Holy Ghost had fallen to be boptized (verses 47 and 48). All these were saved by the words that Peter told chem, — of course by hearing, believing, and obeying the words (see Acts 11 : 14). Of course there were no infants here. Yea, I am very glad that I found Mr. McKay's book. He has summed up for us all the cases of baptism recorded, or referred to, in the New Testament ; and, upon examining them, we find in every case (but one) proof positive and clear — proof so conclusive that not the least room for doubt remains — that no infants were among those baptized. This one exceptional case is that of a woman and her house- hold. In examining this case, we have seen that there is no proof that she had infants, no proof that she had children, no proof that she had a husband, and, of course, in the case there is no proof for infant baptism. But does the New Testament ever speak about little children at all ? Oh, yes ! about blessing little children, praying for them, feeding them, travelling with them, and so on, but never a word about bap- tizing them : in this last connection " believers," " men " and " women," are spoken of, but children never. The following extracts from the Scriptures illustrate this : '* Then were brought unto him little children, that he should put his hands on , them, and pray ; and the disciples rebuked them. But Jesus said, Suffer little children, and forbid them not, to come unto me ; for of .,^;.-,^*^'-yr^f,p,^f,yfn-^.^^ ^-.-.iJ!' -^ , ^ 202 REPORT OF DEBATE such is the kingdom of heaven." Matt. 19 : 13-14. " And they that had eaten were about five thousand men, besides women and children." Matt. 14 : 21. "And they that did eat were four thousand men, beside women and children." Matt. 15 : 38. When Paul and his company left Tyre, the disciples there accompanied him, " with wives and children," till they were out of the city; then they kneeled and prayed, and separated (see Acts 21 : 5). Thus men, women and children were mentioned ; but not so when Church membership or baptism were spoken of. Then the records run thus: " And believers were the more added to the Lord, multitudes both of men and women." Acts 5 : 14. "But when they believed Philip preaching the things concerning the kingdom of God, and the name of Jesus Christ, they were baptized, both men and women." Acts 8: 12. A difference in phraseology which is very significant indeed. Mr. Wilkinson holds (as psedo-baptists generally have done, though we have seen that some of the greatest minds among them have recently given up the position as untenable), that baptism comes in the room of circumcision — that the two ordinances are different in form, but the same in substance. But the uncircumcised man-child was " cut off" from God's people (Gen. 17: 14) ; is that true of unbap- tized children 1 Are the little babies cut off from God's people if they are not baptized 1 This must be true of them, if baptism has now taken the place of circumcision. Then he tells us that the little ones are baptized to bring them into the visible Church. But they were born into the visible Jewish Church, and were cut off from it afterwards if they failed to be circumcised. Moreover, according to his disciples, a " visible Church " is a congregation of " faithful men, in which the pure word of God is preached, and the sacraments duly administered," etc. Of such a Church infants cannot be members. By no law of language known on earth can you call infants " faithful men." Therefore, according to the Discipline, they cannot be in the visible Church. No, the framers of the Discipline evidently believed that by baptism they are brought into the " invisible " Church. [Time expired.^ .-.■i^f^^.'*^.,.*^,-«i<.-*«vs«*!»-=^?««^;?^'''^^ ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 203 MR. WILKINSON'S THIRD SPEECH. In my last address I called for an explanation regarding the quota- tion made by my opponent from Dr. Stuart, about the meaning of baptizo. He has not, however, condescended to give us any expla- nation, thus virtually admitting that my charge, to the effect that he had misrepresented the authorities, is true. He has boasted, crowed and threatened like a rowdy (of course he is not a rowdy, however), and like a bully (but of course he isn't a bully), the dear man ! He is a pink of propriety, but his conduct has reminded us very forcibly of such characters. He has done his best to drive me off the platform by his demonstrations on that line, he then interprets his rowdyish gesticulations as arguments, and has the audacity to stand before this congregation and crow about the "dressing" he gave me. This is what I would call " whistling to keep his courage up." He had better allow the congregation to judge about ^he " dressing," and then he will not expose himself to the charge of "tooting his own horn." But since he has had so much to say about the Psedo-baptist authorities which agree with him, and disagree with me, I have a challenge to make. It if tliis : That he accepts the appointment of a committee of either four or six persons, any number you like, of scholars, half on each side, to take the authorities from which he has quoted in this debate, and examine them and see if they really favor immersion and only immersion ; also as to whether they have been correctly inter- preted before this audience ; and if the committee, after examining the books, say they have been correctly quoted and represented, then I shall think he has been acting an honest part, that he means business, and that there is something in his position. With respect to the quotation from Dr. Ditzler, I have only to say that I read from him correctly. Mr. Hahding — Let me see the book. Mr. Wilkinson — (Handing Mr. H. the book), I read from page UO. If there is a lie anywhere it is not between my opponent and myself, but between Dr. Ditzler and the publishers of that debate ; and it is impossible for me to settle the question here. I intend, however, to get at the bottom facts of this matter and publish them to the world. I am satisfied that if all the facts were known a satisfac- tory explanation could be given, and I shall have it if it is to be had.* * The reader is referred to pp. 8-10 of Dr. Ditzler's work on Baptism where the trickery practiced on him is clearly exposed.— T. L. W. .,•.- 'f^ftr-. ^--^.-'-, ,-> - .--"?>.7V:-,5a^!p!«»fl(*>|fc^ t|^„<^ jrs.^do-baptist friends give baptism to the little ones, but withhold from them tlie Lord's Supper ? Why give one and not the other ? Does not the one belong to the new covenant as much as the other 1 If baptism is given because it is an mstitutiou of the new covenant, the Lord's Supper should be also, for the same reason ; it, too, is an institution of the new covenant. The fact is, infants are not in the new covenant. The new covenant is a contract which God makes with sinners for their salvation. Its design is to bring the wicked back to the innocency of childhood, and tlius to prepare them for heaven. The Greek Church, arguing that man's spiritual nature is depraved at birth — by virtue of his connection with Adam tainted with sin — claims that infants must be redeemed according to the provisions of the new covenant ; and hence it gives to the babies both baptism and the Supper. Mr. Wilkinson and his people, holding to precisely the same view concerning the nature of the child, give baptism, but not the Supper. If the logic of these parlies is correct, and their premises true, the Greeks are evidently right hi practice, the Methodists wrong. But neither of the parties are correct in argument, nor are tjiey in practice. Our spiritual natures are in no wise corrupted by virtue of Adam's sin. All infants are safe in Christ till they are old enough to sin. Mr. Wilkinson — How old is that 1 ^Ir. Harding — Whenever they are old enough to understand and to violate the law of God, they are old enough to sin ; when they have 212 REPORT OF DliBATE actually violated the law, they are sinners ; and then, and not till then, they need all the provisions of the new covenant. But thoy can eat lonp; before they can understand the law. My opponent gets back to our tirst proposition, to the action of baptism, and makes me a challenge. He wants to have a committee appointed to examine the authorities tlmt I have been quoting, to gee if they favor immersion, and only immersion ; and to see whether they have been correctly interpreted by me. With quite a tiourish he challenges me to tlie appointment of this committee. Does not the gentleman know that I have taken pains from the beginning to emphasize the fact that nearly all these authorities are Piedo -baptists, who practice affusion and aspersion for baptism ? They candidly oAwnt W\vX hajttizo primarily and usually signifies to immerse; that immersion was almost universally practiced for many hundred years: that sprinkling and pouring gradually came into use ; that certain passages of the New Testament plainly refer to immerrfion — that they cannot be understood unless that practice is kept in mind ; but some of them immediately turn about and argue that it is hardly possible that immersion was always practiced, even in apostolic times, and that aspersion will do just as well. I never claimed that these men favored immersion, and onhj immersion. My opponent knows well that in talking about Robinson's lexicon, I stated that he defined baptizo to dip, immerse, etc., but never to sprinkle ; and then immedi- ately added, that, in a note appended to his definition, he makes an argument to show that " in reference to the rite of baptism, it would seem to have expressed not always simply immersion, but the more general idea of ablution or affiponent plainly intiniates that Stuart agrcoH with him aH t'l the Hiblo meaning, you hIwiII hear the great l*reHl)yterian on that phase of the question. I read from Stiinrt ot /tnplimn, p. l.'i.'l (Nasli ville edition). Ho says : " We have collected facts enough to author- ize us now to come to the following general conclusion respecting the practice of the Ohristian Church in general, with regord to the iuckIc of baptism, viz., that fron> the earliest ages of which we have any account, subsequent to the apostolic age, and downward for sevt-ral centuries, the Churches did generally practice baptism by immersion: perhaps by immeraion of the vihole person ; and that the only excep- tions to this mode which were usually allowcid were in cases of urj,'ent sickness, or other cases of immediate and imminent danger, wheiv immersion coidd not be practiced." He says that n (fusion and o-ipn-- sion were gradanVy introduced, and then on the Hame page adds : " In what manner, then, did the Churches of Christ, from a very early period, to say the least, understand the word haptizo in the New Testament 1 Plainly, they construed it as meaning immersion. They sometimes even went so far as to forbid any other method of admin istering the ordinance, cases of necessity and mercy only excepted. ' On the n»xt page he gives his own opinion thu.s : " For myself, then. I cheerfully admit that bajdizo in the New Testament, when applied to the rite of baptism, does in all probability involve the iilea that this rite was usually performed by immersion, but not always. 1 say usually, and 7iot always, for to say more than this, the tenor of some of the narrations particularly in Acts 10:47,48; 16:32, 33, and 2:41, seem to me to forbid. I cannot read these e.\ample3 without the distinct conviction that immeraion was not practiced on these occasions, but washing or offaaion." Mr. Stuart here cheerfully testifies that from the days of the apos- tles, down through several centuries, innnersiou was the general prac- tice ; that aspersion and affusion were gradually introduced ; that the Churches in those days understood baptizo in the New Testament to mean immersion ; and, finally, he freely admits that he himself believes that in all probability it does generally involve the idea of immersion in the New Testament My friends, I leave it to you to decide who is in danger of failing 0^f THB MODE AWD BUaTECTS Of nAPTIRM. •21B •'to be III! l>on"Rt man," " to toll the truth," and " to go from here with a good reputation." Whiit' my opponent was talking about the covenants — ahout my |i(isitioii that Jewish ChriHtianH Hhould still practice circumcision — he uski'il 1110 if I wouUl also Imptizo JowH ? CVrtaiuly I would. Christ was circumcised, and afterwards baptized ; so were t)ie apostles; so were the tlmw thousand on the day of Pentecost ; all believers were to be liaptizecl, according to the commission, regardless of whether they had liet'ii circumcised or not. Then, on the other hand, Timothy was cir- lUintised after he had been baptizinl ; then, as late as A.D. GO, that is, about '27 years after the beginning of the Christian dispensation, Paul, Janit's, the litadera of the Jerusalem Church, and the " many thousaiuU of Jews that believed," regarded it as disorderly for Jewish Christians to neglect circumcision and the customs. (See Acts 21 : 17- 25.) There is not an intimation in the New Testament that Jews were to give up circumcision. On the contrary, the circumcised were liaptizetl, and the baptized circumcised. Of course the one did not come in the room of the other. Mr. Wilkinson has argued that the covenant we are now under is the old Jewish covenant of circum- cision ; that under the Mosaic dispensation circumcision was its st-al ; that while the covenant is the same under the Christian dispensation, we have another seal, baptism, which, he claims, has taken the place nf circumcision. But all this wo liave seen to be incorrect ; we are uiuler a " new covenant ;" circumcision has not been done away ; liaptisni has not taken its place ; each has its own place to thi.t day. So the only argument upon which my friend has placed any stress since wo Ijegan to discuss this proposition is worthless, absolutely worthless. In order to show that circumcision has been done away, Mr. Wil- kinson (juotes Gal. 3 : 28, 29 : '* There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither bond nor free, there is neither male nor female ; for ye are all one in Christ Jesus." The point which he wishes to make fi'om this is that when a Jew becomes a Christian he ceases to be a Jew, and hence must give up all the Jewish customs and peculiarities. Whatsuperlrttive nonsense! for then a Greek must cease to be a Greek; a servant must cease to be a servant ; a woman must cease to be a Ionian, and must give up all of the customs and peculiarities of women ; and so of the men. The passage simply teaches that there are no partialities with God ; people that are equally good he treats with equal favor, whether they are of Jewish or Greek extraction, whether they are bond or free, male or female. In this connection I V/.A. 216 REPORT OF DEBATE will read 1 Cor. 7:17-21 : "But as God hath distributed to every man, as the Lord hath called every one, so let him walk. And so ordain I in all the churcheH, " Is any man called being circumcised ? let him not become uncir- c umcised. Is any called in uncircumcision 1 let him not be circum- cised. " Circumcision is nothing, and uncircumcision is nothing, but the keeping of the commandments of God. " Let every man abide in the same calling wherein he was called. " Art thou called being a servant t care not for it : but if thou mayst be made free, use it rather." Remember that "the circumcision " is the Jew; "the uncircum- cision," the Gentile ; and then the meaning of the passage is plain. If a man is called being a Jew, let him not cease to be a Jew, but let him be a Jewish Christian ; let the Gentile be a Gentile Christian ; the servant, a Christian servant. There is nothing in circumcision, nor in baptism either, but everything in keeping the commandments of God. God gave circumcision to the Jew as an " everlasting cove- nant," therefore let him observe it ; he did not give it to the Gen- tile, therefore he must not observe it. Every one must abide in the calling wherein he is called. Paul, who so readily agreed to circum- cise Timothy, would never allow that Titus should be circumcised. The ^ne was a Jew, the other a Greek ; to the one circumcision had bet" 41 ""en, but not to the other. There is everything in doing just wba' God requires — no more, no less ; and all who do this equally well, stand equally high in His favor. For as Peter says (Acts 10 : 34, 35), " God is no respecter of persons ; but in every nation he that feareth Him, and worketh righteousness, is accepted with Him." Mr. Wilkinson — Are the females all "one man " in that sense? Mr. Harding — Yes, all who are in Christ are one, constituting one Church, regardless of sex, nationality, or condition in life. Don't forget, my friends, that Neander says, " We have all reason for not deriving infant baptism from apostolic institution ;" Mosheim says that they were immersed " after they had repeated what they called the creed ; " Schaff says, " The apostolic origin of infant bap- tism is denied, not only by the Baptists, but also by many Psedo-bap- tist divines ;" Meyer says, "The baptism of the children of Christians, of which no trace is found in the New Testament, is not to be held as an apostolic ordinance ;" and then, to cap the climax, the learned George Edward Steitz, though a Lutheran, testifies that, " Among ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 217 scientifical exegetes it is regarded as an established conclusion that not a trace of infant baptism can be discovered in the New Testament." And we know that this conclusion is correct, too, for M^. McKay has summed up for us all the cases of baptism mentioned in the New Tes- tament, and we have examined them carefully, and have found not a vestige of the practice. And then, when our unfortunate friend Mr. Wilkinson turns des- perately to the covenant of circumcision, his great brother Dr. Ditzler says, " The covenants of the Old Testament have nothing to do with infant baptism." This was more than he could patiently stand, so he claimed that Ditzler had been misrepresented, and his sentiments dis- torted all through the book. I then turned to the first of the book and found a note signed by both Graves and Ditzler, saying that they had read and corrected the whole work, and that it is a faithful transcript of what they said in the discussion at Carrollton. 1 learned, moreover, from the introduction, that Mr. Ditzler had been paid $500 to do his part of the work. Neither does Ditzler now claim that his own speeches were in anywise tampered with ; though he does charge, in his work on baptism since published, that Mr. Graves had added to his speeches, and made many changes in them. But if Ditzler had never said so, we have seen there is nothing in that old covenant argu- ment; for after Christian baptism was instituted, circumcision was still practiced. As Dr. Stuart says, in speaking about arguing from circumcision, " Numberless difficulties present themselves in our way as soon as we begin to argue in such a manner as this." Com. 0. T., chap. 22. There is a circumcision of the heart mentioned in the Bible, both in the Old Testament and the New, to which I wish to call your atten- tion. " Circumcise therefore the foreskin of your heart, and be no more stiff-necked." Deut. 10:16. "And the Lord thy God will circumcise thine heart, and the heart of thy seed, to love the Lord thy God with all thine heart, and with all thy soul, that thou mayest live," Deut. 30 : 6. " Circumcise yourselves to the Lord, and take away the foreskins of your heart, ye men of Judah and inhabitants of Jerusalem : lest My fury come forth like fire, and burn that none can quench it, because of the evil of your doings." Jer. 4:4. " For he IS not a Jew, which is one outwardly ; neither is that circumcision which is outward in the flesh : but he is a Jew, which is one inwardly ; and circumcision is that of the heart, in the spirit, and not in the letter ; whose praise is not of men, but of God." Rom. 2 : 28, 29. "In whom also ye are circumcised with the circumcision made with- out hands, in putting off the body of the sins of the flesh by the ■'•■I 218 REPORT OP DEBATB circumcision of Christ: buried with Him in baptisn*, Avherein also ye are risen witli Him through the faith of the operation of God, who hath raised Him from the dead." Col. 2 : 11, 12. To circumcise the heart is to produce in it a loving, trustful faith in God. As we have seen from these readings, to have a circumcised heart is the opposite of being " stiflf-necked." But this faith which purifies the heart is produced by the Word of God, the sword of the Spirit (see Rom. 10 : 17); that if as the foreskin of the flesh is cut away with a knife, so the foreskin of the heart (its stubbornness against God) is cut away with this weapon that " is sharper than any two- edged sword." This circumcision is not baptism, for it is " made without hands." When a man preaches the Gospel to a sinner, and the faith that loves and obeys Jesus is thus produced in his heart, he has a circumcised heart ; then, in apostolic times, he was " buried in baptism : " the one was without hands ; the other with hands. The apostle John says (1 John 5:1), " Whosoever believeth that Jesus is tlie Christ is born of God ;" it is evident that he who is born of God lias a circumcised heart ; and hence it follows that to believe is to circum- cise the heai't. Mr. Wilkinson is much mistaken in saying that circumcision was a type of bai)tisui. Jt never was a type of baptism. Mr Wilkinson — I never said it was. Mr. Harding — Did you not say that baptism came in the room of circumcision ? Mr. Wilkinson —What did outward circumcision nieanl Mr. Harding — Is baptism in the room of circumcision 1 Mr. Wilkinson — Yes. Mr. Harding — So I might believe, were it not for the facts. But unfortunately for Mr. Wilkinson's theory, and the doctrine of infant baptism, the facts in the case are all against him : the two lites are alike in no respect scarcely ; and if the one came in the room of the other, the apostles never found it out, for they practiced both riglit along. " What did circumcision mean?" inquires my friend. Well, it did not " mean " what baptism does ; for after Timothy was baptized, he was then circumcised. What did circumcision " mean" there? Mr. Wilkinson — They all knew liis father was a Greek. Mr. Harding —They all knew his mother was a Jewess ; he had Jewish blood in his veins, and therefore had a right to circumcision. But if baptism had taken its place, Paul would simply have said so, and that would have ended the matter. [ Time expired.] ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OP BAPTISM. 219 FIFTH DAY— AFTEENOON. MR. WILKINSON'S FOURTH SPEECH. I shall end(!avor as hurriedly as possible, in my first address, to run over a few of the points dealt with last night by my opponent, and in ray second address I will endeavor more fully to illustrate the question under discussion. I will pass by, for the time, any objections which may be advanced by my opponent in his next speech, and deal with the historical aspect of the question. If anything remains to be said on that phase of the subject, I will deal with it in my first address this evening. My opponent again referred last evening to our Discipline, and quoted certain parts of it relating to the baptism of infants, and was very emphatic with regard to some particulars. But without spend- ing any more time over that matter, I want to say, once for all, that I have been a Methodist preacher longer than he has, and have baptized more infants than he has ever done, or ever will do, unless I convert liira in this debate (which I can scarcely expect to do), and I never !)aptized an infant in my life (and 1 would appeal to other ministers present, who baptize under our Discii)line, or that of other Churches, if the same is not true concerning them) with the thought of any change being effected in its present condition, but recognizing an infant as a human being newly launched upon the great sea of life, with a variety of experiences to pass through, subject to many evil influences common to our nature, our prayers are designed toai)ply to its whole life. That is the way in which they are to be interpreted. I make this remark to explain that any mnn who attempts to confine our prayers, either written or oral, to the present condition of the child, will put into our mouths sentiments which we do not entertain, and which we emphatically disclaim. But suppose it were all true, that Methodists believe and teach a lot of blasphemous and unscrip- tural things, what connection has that fact with the merits of the question whether infants are to be baptized or not? The question is not whether we utter orthodox sentiments in our prayers, with respect to the moral state of infants, but whether it is right and proper that mfants should be baptized; and I hope my opponent will bear in mind tliat it is my proposition, and not the Methodist Discipline, that we are met here to discuss. If, however, he is anxious to abandon the 220 REPORT OF DEBATE real issue and raise some other where he thinks he will have a better chance of maintaining his ground, he had better say so and have the programme changed. But while ray proposition is the recognized ground of debate, I trust he will stick to the point. With respect to Timothy's circumcision, it has been quoted again and again to prove that under the Christian dispensation the Jews had a right to circumcision. Acts 16:3 says, " Him would Paul have to go forth with hira ; and took and circumcised him because of the Jews which were in those quarters, for they knew all that his father was a Greek." Timothy, therefore, had never been circum- cised. This was an objection to the Jews, especially when he was going to preach the Gospel to them, and seek to c nvert them to Christianity. They were not Chiistian Jews, but unconverted Jews, as yet, and their prejudice on account of his not being circumcised would be so strong that his influence among them would be destroyed. Hence, to overcome this objection, and as a matter of expediency, having no religious significance whatever, Paul took Timothy and circumcised him, not because he was a Jew, but because he was a Greek, the lineage of a child being reckoned from his father, and not from his mother. If anything could be made out of this case, there- fore, it proves that if circumcision is to be still practiced, it is to be practiced, not on the Jews, but on the Gentiles. But an effort was made to prove that it did not apply to Gentiles, but still applied to Jews I challenge my opponent to prove from all his histories and encyclopaedias that circumcision, as an historical fact, was practiced in the early age of the Christian Church upon Jewish converts, or that it was ever insisted upon by the Church after the introduction of Christianity, save when the people were passing over from one dispensation into the other. Paul says in Gal. .5 : 2, " Beho'd, I Paul say unto you, that if ye be circumcised, Christ shall profit you nothing." Such Jews, then, as trusted in circumci- sion were profited nothing by Christ. He " is become of no effect unto you," says the apostle ; " whosoever of you are justified by the law, ye are fallen from grace." This shows that circumcision was an appeal to the ceremonial law as a means of justification, though that law was abrogated. " For we," says Paul (and he was a Jew, and as he uses the first personal pronoun, he includes himself with others), " through the Spirit wait for the hope of righteousness by faith. For in Jesus Christ neither circumcision availeth anything, nor uncircum- sion, but faith which worketh by love." If, therefore, in Christ Jesus, neither circumcision availeth anything, nor uncircumcision, circum- ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 221 cision is not to be regarded as entitling us to be called Abraham's seed. My opponent's argument on that point entirely falls to the ground. In Romans 2 : 25 we read, " For circumcision verily profit- eth if thou keep the law : but if thou be a breaker of the law, thy circumcision is made uncircumcision." That is to say, if you have fulfilled God's law so perfectly that there is no other demand upon you, having met all its requirements, then circumcision might profit you something, but not otherwise, for if there be a breach of the law, then circumcision has become uncircumcision ; and a state of uncir- cumcision is, in the Scriptures, equivalent to a state of sin, or con- demnation. Therefore Paul says in the 26th verse, " If the uncir- cumcision keep the righteousness of the law, shall not his uncircum- cision be counted for circumcision" (or justification) 1 That is to say, those who are not circumcised at all would be counted as circumcised if they kept the law, and those who were circumcised would be counted as uncircumcised if they broke the law. He continues, " for he is not a Jew which is one outwardly ; neither is that circumcision which is outward in the flesh. But he is a Jew which is one inwardly; and circumcision is that of the heart, in the spirit and not in the letter; whose praise is not of men but of God." In Phil. 3 : 3 we read, " For we are the circumcision which worship God in the spirit, and rejoice in Christ Jesus, and have no confidence in the flesh." By the term " flesh " the apostle evidently means fleshly rites as a means of justification. If the Jew has confidence in fleshly rites, then he is not circumcised, and is not a Jew, and all those who put their trust in fleshly rites for the regenerating of their hearts are excluded by this passage from being of the circumcision. These are ruled out of the covenant, and if my ojJponent and his friends put their confidence in fleshly rites to remove sin from their souls, this passage rules them out of the covenant. In 1 Cor. 7 : 19, Paul says, "Circumcision is nothing, and uncircumcision is nothing, but the keeping of the com- mandments of God." Gal. 5:11," And I, brethren, if I yet preach circumcision, why do I yet suflfer persecution % " Did Paul preach cir- cumcision then 1 It is said he did, because he circumcised Timothy. If so, why did he yet suffer persecution 1 " Then is the oflfence of the cross ceased." Now, according to the inspired teachings of Paul, the Jews can never be saved if they keep on everlastingly being circum- cised. You put them out of the covenant, and Christ can profit them nothing. The Jew being circumcised, and having confidence in the flesh, is not, in a Christian sense, a Jew at all, therefore he is not in Christ, therefore he is not of Abraham's seed, therefore he is not an "i»*» A'«j ■;''«v'- : ", 222 REPORT OF DEBATE heir of the covenant, and therefore he is not saved at all. j\Iy oppo- nent's interpretation sends the Jews to hell as well as little children: that is, logically. I do not think he believes it, but he cannot put his creed and the legitimate consequences of it together and make them harmonize witliout becoming a preacher of Jewish damnation ull through. Besides, I would like to ask why the word circumcision is, in the Scriptures, so frequently applied to the regeneration of the heart, as quoted by my opponent in his last speech, if it possesses no spiritual significance 1 He tells us that it simply sealed the land of Canaan to the Jews. If so, there was nothing spiritual in its mean- ing. Why, then, should it be so frequently used to describe a spirit- ual operation ? Where is the analogy 1 I hope he will tell us. And now I want to show that my opponent's doctrine, interpreted in the light of the Gospel, sends his own soul to the bad place; too, Paul says they are of the circumcision who have no confidence in the flesh, or in fleshly rites. My opponent distinctly said last night that baptism regenerated. It is well known that this is the doctrine of his persuasion, viz., that it is by baptism that the soul is regenerated, that without it it cannot be regenerated ; and I am told he taught the people last summer that it was under the water that the soul came in contact with the blood of Christ, and was cleansed from sin. Therefore he has confidence in fleshly rites as a means of puri- fication. If he has confidence in the flesh, then Christ profiteth him nothing ; he is not of the circumcision ; he belongs to the uncircum- cision, and consequently he cannot be saved ; he must be with the Jews and little children in limbo or some other place outside the sphere of happiness and bliss. With respect to little children, my opponent says they are not saved, but safe. Of course I know where he got that. He got it from the " office editor " of the Standard. Mr. Harding — We both got it from the same source, the Bible. Mr. Wilkinson — That is exactly the way the " ofiice editor " put it. He says the children are sa/e, not saved. If not saved, they are not Christ's, for Christ's people are such as He has redeemed, and only those. I read in Ephesians 5 ; 25, 26, " Husbands love your wives, even as Christ also loved the Church, and gave Himself for it, that He might sanctify and cleanse it with the washing of water by the Word ; that He might present it unto Himself a glorious Church, not having spot, or wrinkle, or any such thing." No children in Christ's Church, according to my opponent, for He has not given Himself for them, nor sanctified and cleansed them. " For we are ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OP BAPTISM. 223 members of His body, of Hia flesh, and of His bones." The Church is His body. He is the head over all things to that body, and if the children are not in that body, they do not belong to Christ. My opponent distinctly puts them out of that body ; and if they are not Christ's, they are not Abraham's seed, and if they are not Abraham's seed, they are not I is heirs according to the covenant, hence they are left to perish. That is where Alexander Campbell and Mr. Harding put the babies. My opponent says their bodies will be raised through Christ's redemption, but it has nothing to do with their souls. He (lied for the r bodies, but not for their souls. Yet their bodies die because Adam sinned, and in dying for their bodies it was to redeem them from the effects of Adam's sin, but that sin did not affect their souls, nor did Christ die for their souls, though as soon as they are old enough to sin then He died for their souls too. What a convenient theoi-y ! And it is the soul that is saved ! Strange doc trine! Will my opponent tell us how Adam's sin could affect the body and cause its death without affecting the soul and causing its death ! And how Christ could redeem the body by His death without redeeming the soul at the same time 1 Remember Christ redeemed us, and cleanses us with His blood. He sprinkles the heart from an evil conscience with His blood. In Peter 1 : 18, " Forasmuch as ye know ye were redeemed, not with corruptible things, as silver and gold, from your vain conversation, received by tradition from your fathers, but with the precious blood of Christ, as of a lamb witiiout blemish and without spot." Let us take a peep into heaven, and see if there are any children there. In Rev. 7 : 9 we read, "After this I beheld, and lo, a great multitude, which no man could number, of all nations, and kindreds, and people, and tongues, stood before the throne, and before the Lamb, clothed with white robes, and palms in their hands." And when John asked the angel whence came they, the angel answered, " These are they which came out of great tribulation, and have washed their robes and made them white in the bluod of the Lamb." There was not a single baby among them, according to my opponent's theory, for the whole multitude in heaven had been washed in the blood of the Lamb, and He does not wash infants in His blood. In fact, he cannot get a baby into heaven on that theory ; it is not broad enough ; he leaves them to perish in the quagmire of human depravity. They are outside the covenant, outside the Church, outside the Gospel, and outside sal- vation ; and he cannot get them into heaven until he gives up his present theory, according to which there are no children before the 234 REPORT OF DEBATE throne. In Rev. 5:12, they are " Haying with a loud voice, Worthy is the Lamb that was slain to receive power, and riches, and wisdom, and strength, and honor, and glory and blessing." In v. 9 they Hay, " Thou hast redeemed us to God by Thy blood, and hast made us unto our God kings and priests." But there are no children, says my opponent, to join in that song, because they were never redeemed and never washed in the blood of the Lamb, but simply by reason of their belonging to the old Adam, I suppose, they are taken to lieaven without an atonement ; they are not saved by an atonement ! This doctrine which ignores original sin, ignores the necessity of an atone- ment, except for adult sinners. Though men are born in Adam they, as children, are able to get to heaven without an atonement. Accord- ing to this theory, we are placed at no disadvantage, spiritually, by reason of Adam's sin. It is generally supposed that Adam was created able to stand, yet free to fall. If not, he could not help sin- ning. And what a man cannot help doing is not sin. Now, if all men are born as free from sin as Adam was, without an atonement, and all as able to stand, how is it that nobody does stand, but all men fall, and that, too, as soon as they get old enough to know better 1 If not able to stand, but fall in spite of themselves, it cannot be sin, hence we are at a loss to know why they need an atonement. I admit, with my opponent, that children are born pure, but they are pure because Christ has redeemed and saved them from hereditary pollution. He says they are pure by birth, and go to the Father because they have never sinned. But in point of fact, " No man," says Christ, "can come unto the Father but by Me." If a soul gets to heaven, it has to get there through the blood of the Lamb. That is the only way I ever heard of until I heard these people preach. Some of them may be astonished that they hold a heresy, an old superstition that inevitably and logically (I admit they do not believe it) excludes little children from the kingdom of heaven. Unless they can get these barriers out of the way, let them cease their sneers at infant sprinkling. I want to show you that there is such a close relation between men, under the moral government of God, that the parent cannot sin without aflFecting the child. In Rom. 5:18, 19, we are shown the connection between the parent and child in regard to the moral nature. I cannot explain the philosophy of it. I do not suppose anyone can. I take it that Paul is a better authority than Mr. Harding, even with all his authorities and basswood brains, and Paul says, " Therefore as by the offence of one judgment came upon all men to condemnation ; even so by the righteousness of one the ON TIIR MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 225 free gift came upon all men unto justification of life." My opponent has admitted that all are dead morally, and in Christ we are all made alive, and we are born into the world redeemed from what Adam's sin brought upon us, viz., "Judgment to condemnation," "For, as by one man's disobedience, many were made sinners, so by the obedience of one shall many be made righteous." I claim that just as many as Adam's trangression brought judgment and condemnation upon, just that many, and no more, Christ's righteousness and obedience brought life to. Therefore I am an ardent believer in universal salvation, and here, and now, I announce myself as a pronounced believer in the doctrine of universal salvation, in the sense that Christ has redeemed and saved all from hereditary or imputed sin. Christ has reconciled the world unto God. " God so loved the toorld," of which infants form a part — and every man belonged to that class in the beginning of his existence — " that He gave His only begotten Son, that whoso- ever believeth in Him should not perish, but have everlasting life." All men are justified from Adam's sin, and if they are ever damned it will be for their own. If they trust in Christ He will anchor them safely in the heavenly harbor, beyond the storms of life and the rough waves and dangerous quicksands of life's tempestuous sea. Coming into the world under the scheme of Divine redemption, all are alike entitled to the benefits of Christ's sacrifice. My opponent will say that refers to men. Well, suppose it does, is it any more equitable, under the Divine government, to damn a man than an infant for Adam's sinl Are men any more responsible for Adam's misdeeds than infants are 1 If so, on what principle can it be 1 What does he gain by such an alternative ? In Psalm 51 we read, "Behold I was shapen in iniquity, and in sin did my mother conceive me." In Eph. 2nd chapter, " And you hath He quickened, who were dead in tres- passes and sins; wherein in time past ye walked according to the course of this world, according to the prince of the power of the air, the spirit that now worketh in the children of disobedience : among whom also we all had our conversation in times past in the lusts of our flesh, fulfilling the desires of the flesh and of the mind ; and were by mture the children of wrath, even as others." And now let my opponent take up the Methodist Discipline and howl as much as he pleases about our praying to the Lord to deliver little children from His wrath. " We were," says Paul, " by nature the children of wrath, even as others." There is no getting out of that by either the front or the side door. My opponent asks, why not give the Lord's Supper to children after 15 '■**%. 296 REPORT OF DEBATK they are baptized 1 Ho said they did give them the Passover after they were circumcised, and thinks to be consistent wo should give them the Lord's Supper. Mr. McDiarmid, four years ago, took the same position. He said tliat undoubtedly they gave the Passover lo little children. Then I said, You must suppose that babies eight days old were able to eat meat 1 He said he did not know how they gave it to them, but he thought they might possibly have made soup and given them the soup. That would be a soupy business, and the argument itself is rather thin. We do not give the Lord's Supper to little children for the same reason that the Jews did not give the Passover to little children. At twelve a Jewish child was recognized as belonging to the Church. It was in the covenant visibly at eight days old ; but at twelve the child was recognized as a member of the congregation, and permitted to receive the ordinances of the Church in connection with the existing dispensation of things. There- fore the child did not get the Passover until it was twelve years old. and we will give the Lord's Supper to twelve-year-old children who liave sense enough to know what they are doing. My opponent has put forth a herculean effort to extricate himself from the charge of garbling the authorities, and has quoted a number of extracts to prove that he quoted Dr. Stuart correctly. And in order the more effectually to shirk the responsibility of misrepresent- ing the attitude of Piedo baptist writers ho tries to transfer the charge of falsification to me, and insinuates that I have been guilty of unkindness, injustice, cowardice and meanness besides. If all this were true, he has an easy and speedy way of establishing his charges and ridding himself of all suspicion. Why not at once accept my challenge to appoint a committee of scholars representing both sides to examine the books and report 1 I am willing to abide the conse- quences, but he does not seem to be. But he seems terribly exasper- ated by the proposal, which makes me think he has been hit where it is sore. Surely there has been some proud flesh touched, or he would not writhe so over the proposition. I did not insinuate that if I had the books, and were sufficiently well acquainted with them, I could show that my opponent had mis- represented them. That statement was invented by Mr. Harding. and lacks the first essential of a reliable statement. As to the case of Dr. Stuart, though Mr. Harding states that he gave dip, plunge, immerse, as the classical meaning of baptizo, but not the Bible meaning, I emphatically deny the statement, and assert that he quoted it in direct proof of his proposition tha'. ON THE MODE AND HUIIJECTS OF UAPTISM. 227 '•Christian Imptiani is immersion," etc., witljout the remotest hint that ho was quoting Dr. Htuart's definition of both bapto and baptizo in their classical sense, and not baptizo alone, in the Bible sense. He proceeds on the presumption that these two senses are synonymous, hut I deny it, and nearly, if not quite, every Puedo-baptist authority hfi has quoted, or can quote, denies it, and furnishes proof in support of his denial. I maintain, therefore, that it is not honest for any man to quote a Pa'do-baptist's classical definition of these words as their Bible definition, and no amount of contortions in movement or distor- tions in statement will suffice to justify such a perversion of facts. My ojiponent has given a number of quotations from Dr. Stuart to neutralize or outweigh the quotations I made from him. But, as a matter of fact, the only thing of any importance that Dr. Stuart says in those quotations, to M'hich I have not already assented, is that "bapttzo in the New Testament, when applied to the rite of baptism, (Idcs in all probability involve the idea that this rite was usually per- formed by immersion," but even this is a mere conjecture, based on a "probability," unsupported by and incapable of any direct proof. And Dr. Stuart distinctly testifies on page 313 of his book that " there is no absolute certainty from usage, that baptizo, when applied to the rite of baptism, means to immerse or plunge," and on page 388, that according to his belief we "do obey the command to baptize when we do it by affusion or sprinkling." And in the very language quoted by iny opponent, the Professor says it " does not always" involve the idea of immersion in the Bible, though my opponent's proposition says it does always involve it. So it will be seen that Prof. Stuart does not sus- tain my opponent's position any more than he does mine, nor as much. My opponent says that the point which I wish to make is that when a Jew becomes a Christian he ceases to be a Jew, a Gentile ceases to be a Gentile, a woman a woman, a man a man, etc., and for this he imputes to me " superlative nonsense." Yes, it is superlative nonsense, no doubt, but he himself is the author of it, for I didn't wish to make any such point. I simply wished to make the point tliat all these classes stood in precisely the same relation to Christ spiritually, and possessed neither superiority nor inferiority as Chris- tians, but occupied common ground, and were subject to common con- ditions in the matter of salvation. It is a comparatively easy thing to construe another man's meaning into superlative nonsense when it suits our purpose and our cause requires it. But I prefer that ray opponent should father his own folly. If he does, I have no doubt his family will be sufficiently large. 228 RKPOKT or DEIIATK He still insists that Paul circumcised Timothy because his mother was a Jewess, but, as I have fre(iuontly pointed out, Luke says, Acts 16:3, that it was because his father was a Greek. My oppotient's interpretation agrees with hiu theory, and has one quality to com- mend it, viz., it is new. Mine a<^rees with the Word of Clod, and needs no other commendation. You can choose between Mr. Hard- ing and the Bible. Perhaps he knows better tlian an inspired apostle, and perhaps he doesn't. Whatever he lacks, it isn't cheek. My opponent repeats the statement that Dr. Ditzler said in his debate with Dr. Graves that they had agreed not to discuss the cove- nants, also that Dr. Ditzler did not complain of his speeches having been tampered with. Now, I must say, in justice to myself, that I never intimated that Dr. Ditzler's speeches had been tampered with, I simply quoted Dr. Ditzler's own statement tnat Dr. Graves had been guilty of making " hosts " of statements which were not true in re-writing his speeches, and that this accounted for their "not sending him a single proof-sheet after his sixteenth speech on the First Proi)osition, though he requested it, and gave them his address." Now, what are the facts 1 Simply these, that in the introduction to his book, pages 8-10, Dr. Ditzler distinctly testifies that ufUr they had subscribed their names to the report as an accurate one. and after Dr. Graves had professedly published his speeches on Mode, he re-wrote all of his own speeches, "adding as many as six, eiglit, ten, and even twelve pages of new matter at a time in single speeches, not a line of which was used during debate, and leaving out what he did say wherever exposed." Dr. Ditzler also declares that " what- ever he says of covenants is just the reverse of the facts t» tolo." Moreover, he testifies that " not a page after my seventeenth speech in the book was proofed by me." He says, " I wrote for the proofs of our speeches, but neither his nor mine were ever sent to rae." [Note. — It is but fair to say, that as I did not recall these state- ments at the time, and admitted at the close of the session, as the only apparent way of harmonizing Dr. Ditzler's testimony in his book with his endorsation of the debate, that he must have meant that Dr, Graves' proof-sheets had not been sent him, I was taunted by my opponent with not being able to understand my own authorities. But it now appears that I did understand my authorities, though my oppo- nent was quoting from a work of deception. And this is the kind of testimony that is generally employed to buttress up the anti-P«do- baptist theory.— T. L. W.] [Time expired.] ON THE MODS AND 8UBJECT8 OF BAPTISM. 229 MR. HARDING'S FOURTH REPLY. Infant baptism came into the world to save infants from the sin of Adam, to take away " the pollution of our birth." a,^ I have stated, Origfn (A.I). 210) is the second writer of the world to mention the custom, the tirst one to/avor it ; and he expressly states that " In- fants are baptized for the forgiveness of 'jina." When asked, "Of what sins?" he replied, " None is free from pollution, though his life be but of the length of one day upon the earth : and it is for that reason, because by the sacrament of baptism the pollution of our birth is taken away, that infants are baptized." Wall's Hiat. Inf. Bap., Vol. 1, p 65. The idea prevailed that they would be damned if they were not baptized. In proof of this I read from Zell's Ency- clopedia (Art. Baptism) as follows : " In the first centuries of the Christian era, when, generally speak- ing, adults only joined the new sect, the converted (catechumens) were diligently instructed ; the power of this sacrament to procure perfect remission of sins was taught, and while some converts delayed their baptism from a feeling of sinfulness not yet removed, others did the same from the wish to gratify corrupt desires a little longer, and to have their sins forgiven all at once. But the doctrine of St. Augus- tine, that the unbaptized were irrevocably damned, changed this delay into haste, and made the baptism of children general." The Methodist Discipline, the book which Mr. Wilkinson has said that he believes, and which he has pledged himself to defend, teaches that all men are totally depraved by nature ; so did Mr, Wesley teach ; and he claimed that, " in the ordinary way, they cannot be saved unless this be washed away by baptism." Doct. Tracts, p. 251. On page 73 of the Discipline, among the questions asked of local preachers are these : " Do you sincerely and fully believe the doctrines of Methodism as contained in our Articles of Religion, and as taught by Mr. Wesloy in his Notes on the New Testament and volumes of Sermons'? — especially the following leading ones : a Trinity of Persons in the Unity of the Godhead ; the totnl depravity of all men by nature in consequence of Adam's fall ; the Atonement made by Christ for the sins of all the human race," etc. Mr. Wesley teaches that infants are " guilty of original sin" {Doct. Tracts, p. 251) ; the Discipline teaches " the total depravity of all men by nature ;" while Mr. Wilkinson says men are liom pure — pure as angels. How can you say of a being as pure as "*?!?> - '^f^^^*''!":~y^p!iif':^^''^-r9'fyT>*<"-^*fi f*SKi/K 380 REPORT OF DEBATE an angel, that it is totally depraved, guilty of original sini It seems to me that my opponent no more believes this doctrine than he does that other one of his Church, namely, that Rom. 6 : 4 refers to bap- tism by Immersion. Mr. W ILKIN80N — The Church dofes not believe it. Mr. Harding — You could not become a local preacher w'thout saying that you believed it. In the light of v/hat has now been pre- sented, my friends, you cannot fail to understand the baptismal ser- vice used at the baptism of infants. You remember the minister ren^inds the people that "all men are conceived and born in sin," and thav . . Saviour Christ saith, " except a man be born of water and of the Spirit he cannot enter the kingdom of God ; " he asks them to pray that the child " being baptized with water, may also be baptized with the Holy Ghost, be received into Christ's holy Church, and become a lively member of the same ; " the minister himself then prays for the child that the Father may " wash him and sanctify him with the Holy Ghost;" that he, being delivered from the wrath of God, may finally come to the land of everlasting life ; he prays that the old Adam may be buried in the child, and the new man raised up ; " that all carnal affections may die in him, and that all things belonging to the Spirit may live and grow in him." Now, as Mr. Wesley and the framers of this prayer of the Discip- line believed the child to be depraved by nature, and that baptism is for the forgiveness of sins, it is clear that the ground of infant bap- tism, according to this service of the Discipline, is the pollution of the child, and " the mystical washing away of sin " by water, as the Book of Common Prayer puts it. True, neither Mr. Wilkinson nor the Meth- odist people of to-day believe these doctrines ; but the}' hold on to the practice ; they have given up the ground of it, but continue to cling to the thing itself. Nor is this the worst of it ; it causes them to distort and pervert the plain meaning of words in the endeavor to make their Discipline teach that which they believe. Observe the following statements, which I read from the Discipline. Of an appli- cant for membership this question is asked : "Question, Will you cheerfully be governed by the rules of the Methodist Church of Canada, hold sacred the ordinances of God, and endeavor as much as in you lies to promote the welfare of your brethren and the advancement of the Redeemer's kingdom 1 "Answer. I will." (Page 177.) As we have seen, the applicant for the ministry is required to state that he sincerely and fully believes the doctrines of Methodism .M^^^^' ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OP BAPTISM. 231 as taught in the Articles, Wesley's Notes, and his volumes of Sermons. On page 73 it is taught that he must "believe and preach all our doctrines; " that he must duly observe the Discipline. On page 74 he i.s asked, "Will you endeavor fully and faithfully to preach these doc- trines'!" And now, to add to the ugliness of the case which I am making out against Mr. Wilkinson, the following statement from page 113 is added: " If a member of our Church shall be tried and convicted of endeav- oring to sow dissensions in any of our Societies, by inveighing against cither our doctrines or Discipline, such person so offending shall be tirst reproved by the Superintendent of his Circuit, and, if he persist in such pernicious practices, he shall be expelled from the Church." He has been inveighing against the doctrines of his Church ever since this debate began, since it is one of the doctrines of the Church that Rom. 6 : 4 refers to baptism by immersion. Not only so, but the doctrines of his Church logically involve infant damnation, that is, of infants that die unbaptized. But he had to say that he accepted them before he could become a preacher in the Church. On pnge 87, it is said, "A Methodist preacher is to mind every point, great and small, in the Methodist Discipline." But Mr. Wilkinson seemed to "swing around " to the doctrine of his creed on the question of infantile depravity in his last speech. He talks about my leaving the littler ones " to perish in the quagmire of human depravity," because I do not understand that they wash their robes and make them white in the blood of the Lamb : I don't think their robes need any washing ; he does; he thinks they are in " the quagmire of human depravity,' I suppose. He boldly announces himself a believer in the doctrine of original sin, and in that connection talks about ^^ adult sinners ;" from all of which it appears that he now believes that babies are sinners. He charges me with admitting that all— infants as well as adults— are morally dead ; and he talks about men — infants and all — being justi- fied from Adam's sin. No man was ever justified from Adam's sin, except Adam himself, nor will any other man ever be. We have in- herited some of the consequences of Adam's sin, but none of the guilt of it. We die the natural death in consequence of Adam's sin (seeing that by it we were separated from the tree of life, of which, if we could eat, we would live forever) ; but the moral death comes from our own sina. No man is "a child of wrath" until he commits sin, Eph. 2:1,2. (Revised Version) reads : " And you did He quicken, when ye « ere dead through your trespasses and sins, wherein aforetime ye walked," etc. The Ephesians had been dead, and then were quickened j but .f»f^l'¥9^*^il?-^:1^-* 232 REPORT OF DEBATE observe that they were dead through their treapaasea andaina (plural), not through Adam's sin. This miserably false doctrine of infantile depravity has been the fruitful mother of a wretched brood of false teachings and improper practices in the Churches. Mr. Wilkinson said, " My opponent distinctly said last night that baptism regenerated." His opponent said no such thing, neither distinctly nor indistinctly. Nor does he believe any such thing. I said baptism was for the remission of sins. I invite him to deny it. If his Church will endorse him we will debate that. In talking about the circumcision of Timothy, Mr. Wilkinson chal- lengea me to show, from my encyclopaedias and histories, that it was the custom of the Apostolic Church to circumcise Jews. Very good. I will do it by one of the very best and most reliable of Church histo- rians, Luke, the writer of Acts of Apostles. In the 15th chapter of this book he gives us an account of occurrences which took place about eighteen or twenty years after the resurrection of Jesus. The first verse of the chapter reads thus : " And certain men which came down from Judea taught the brethren and said, 'Except ye be circum- cised after the manner of Moses, ye cannot be saved.'" The city of Antioch, to which these Jewish brethren had come, and where they thus taught, was headquarters for the evangelistic forces that operated in the Gentile world, as Jerusalem was for the laborers among the Jews. These Jewish brethren, who were members of a Church that had been presided over by the holy apostles of our Lord, Peter, James and John, and the others, for nearly twenty years, understood, not only that the Jews should continue to observe the rite, but they insisted that the Gentiles also should be circumcised after the manner of Moses, or they could not be saved. This shows conclusively that for at least eigh- teen years after the beginning of the Christian dispensation circum- cision was still practiced by the Jewish Christians ; for had their lead ers, the apostles, been teaching them through all these years that circumcision was done away, and that baptism had taken its placet they would not have said that the believers among the Gentiles would be lost unless they observed it ; of course, if the Jews had given up the practice they would not have insisted that the Gentiles should take it up. Paul and Barnabas stoutly opposed these brethren from Judea, denying that the Gentiles should be circumcised. Listen whil"^ I read to you the account of the matter as it is recorded in this chapter : " When, therefore, Paul and Barnabas had no small dissension and disputation with them, they determined that Paul and Barnabas and ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 233 certain other of them should go up to Jerusalem unto the apostles and elders about this question. "And being brought on their way by the Church, they passed through Phenice and Samaria, declaring the conversion of the Gentiles : and they caused great joy unto all the brethren. " And when they were come to Jerusalem they were received of the Church, and of the apostles and elders, and they declared all things that God had done with them. "But there rose up certain of the sect of the Pharisees which believed, saying. That it was needful to circumcise them and to com- mand them to keep the law of Moses," Mr. Wilkinson — Read right on. Mr. Harding — I shall when I get ready and not till then. Mr. Wilkinson — You dare not read on. Mr. Harding — I intend to read every word of it. That is a mean pretence, a cowardly dodge. There is not a greater coward on earth than this man behind me. He knows well enough that there is not a word in this whole connection that I need be afraid to read — not a word that militates against my position. He only wishes to divert your attention from facts that are crushingly against his theory that baptism has taken the place of circumcision, and hence he insinuates that I would keep back some truth that, if known, would spoil my doctrine. Mr. Hunt — Mr. Chairman, I call the gentleman to order. Mr. Harding — You do? Well, you can just call on. How does it happen that you never call Mr. Wilkinson to order 1 Mr. Hunt — That is the duty of your moderator. Mr. Harding — It is the duty of the moderators to keep order, as far as is in their power. I should think that you, sir, would be even more solicitous that Mr. Wilkinson should deport himself in a fair and honorable manner than that I should do so. Are we not here to seek for truth? I have requested my moderator not to call Mr. Wilkinson to order at any time, and I am glad that he has not done it. He is an honorable man and a gentleman. Mr. Wilkinson intimates to you, my friends, that I am purposely holding back some truth from you that you ought to know. Why, let me show you what sort of a man this T. L. Wilkinson is. On the 13th page of his Discipline the doctrines of his Church are summed up, and among them are " those taught by the Rev. John Wesley, M.A., in his Notes on the New Testament." But Wesley, in these Notes, says that at Rom. 6 : 4 Paul alludes to " the ancient manner of bap- 234 REPORT OF DEBATE tizing by immersion ;" hence this is one of the doctrines of the Churcli. On page 73 of the Discipline we find the questions which candidates for the ministry are required to answer affirmatively ; among them are these : " Do you sincerely and fully believe the doctrines of Methodism as contained in our Articles of Religion, and as taught by Mr. Wesley in his Notes on the New Testament and Volumes of Sermons?' " Will you endeavor to fully and faithfully preach these doctrines'!" Just think, my friends ! Mr. Wilkinson said *' Yes " to all these questions. Mr. Wilkinson— Well, what of it? Mr. Harding — What of it 1 Yor "aid you believed the doctrines of the Methodist Church, Wesley'.. ^V :es and all, when you believed no such thing. Ym made a s*-.tement as true, when you knew at the time you were mu ng it that it was false. That is all there is of it. That may not be i ach for you, but it would be a good deal for me. Mr. Hunt — Mr. Chairman, I protest against this gentleman's course. He insinuates that Mr. Wilkinson is a liar. He does not say so, but he would make that impression. Mr. Harding — Certainly I do not call him a liar. There is no need that I should ; these people are not fools. Mr. Hunt — A gentleman will not call a man a liar. Mr. Harding — Christ was a gentleman, yet he called men liars, for they were ; and so did Paul. The wrong is in being a liar, not in being called one. But I have not called Mr. Wilkinson a liar, nor do I intend to ; 1 will simply give you the facts. You have eyes and ears, and can see and hear for yourselves. But, ladies and gentlemen, this is the man v/ho would have you believe that I misrepresent the authorities, that I hold back the truth. It is all right for him to "insinuate," but, forsooth, it is very wrong and unkind for me to do so. The dreadful fact of it is I don't insinuate ; I prove. A number of you were here last evening and heard Mr. Wilkinson s first speech. From the beginning of it to the end he sought to leave the impression that I was a falsifier. I had been told in the after- noon that an eflfort would be made in the evening to break up the discussion, and I was warned to be on my guard and keep cool. I said, " He may call me anything under heaven to-night and I will not interrupt him, but woe be to him when my time comes." This man has indulged in insinuation and inuendo, in sneers and scoffs, from the beginning of the debate, but he has never shown me to be incor- rect in a single statement ; whereas he has made blunder after blunder, ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 235 has misrepresented authors, and has been compelled to take back his incorrect statements. Don't forget that Wesley, in his Notes, says that the burial in bap- tism refers to immersion ; that Mr, Wilkinson has been ridiculing and sneering at this interpretation from the beginning of the debate ; that he was required to say he believed the doctrines of these Notes before he could become a Methodist preacher ; and that when I called his attention to these facts he merely said, " What of it?" With respect to interruptions : He has interrupted me ten times as often as I have him, and he began it. His brethren, as you know,, have interrupted me from the floor, and not unfrequently not less than a half-dozen Paedo-baptist ministers have been on their feet on this platform at one time breaking into my speeches. [There were numbers of these interruptions of which the reporter kept no record. J, A. H.] There never was a more unjust, a more unrighteous set of preachers congregated on a platform than those who have been here on his side of the question. Mr. Hunt — T protest against such language. Mr. Harding — Do you think because you outnumber us three or four to one that you can domineer over us? You were nevermore mistaken in your lives. For, standing as I do for the defence of God's eternal truth, I feel myself more than a match for all of you together. My brethren in the audience and upon the platform have been quiet and serene, as only those who are confident in the strength of their position can be. My preaching brethren are gentlemen, and they have acted as such from the beginning. Let us return now to the 15th chapter of Acts, which Mr. Wilkinson was so afraid I would not read. I begin where I left oflf, that is, with the 6th verse : " And the apostles and elders came together for to consider of this matter." That is, to consider whether or not they should require Gentile converts to be circumcised. Remember, this was about twenty years after Jes^s came from the grave. Could this question concerning the circumcision of the Gentiles have ever arisen if the Jews themselves had already given up the practice ? If they had ceased for twenty years to circumcise themselves and their children, would they have insisted that the Gentiles should take up the practice at this late date, and that they could not be saved with- out it ? Common sense will answer this question. My opponent, in order to sustain his position that baptism came in the room of circum- cision, claims that the Jews who embraced Christianity ceased to practice this latter rite. Well, this one thing is certain: About -•*»ft^-t«>ffpf.^fr^ '■'-^. 236 REPORT OF DBBATB twenty years after Christ, many of them were insisting that the Gen- tile Christians, who had already been baptized, could not be saved unless they were also circumcised ; and that was the question before this council at Jerusalem. I read on : "And when there had been much disputing, Peter rose up, and said unto them. Men and brethren, ye know how that a good while ago God made choice among ua, that the Gentiles by my mouth should hear the word of the gospel, and believe. *' And God, which knoweth the hearts, bare them witness, giving them the Holy Ghost, even as He did unto us ; " And put no diflference between us and them, purifying their hearts by faith. " Now therefore why tempt ye God, to put a yoke upon the neck of the disciples, which neither our fathers nor we were able to bear 1 "But we believe that through the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ we shall be saved, even as they." After this address, Paul and Barnabas declared what wonders and miracles God had wrought among the Gentiles by them ; then James made a speech and gave the decision, which was acquiesced in by all the apostles and elders, in these words : " Wherefore my sentence is that we trouble not them, who from among the Gentiles are turned unto God. " But that we write unto them, that they abstain from pollutions of idols, and fornication, and from things strangled, and from blood. " For Moses of old time hath in every city them that preach him, being read in the synagogues every Sabbath day." That this decision was for the Gentiles and not for the Jews is evident from two facts : 1. About one year after this (see next diop- ter) Paul circumcised Timothy. 2. About eight years after this, Paul returned to Jerusalem : on the next day, he went in to James and the elders, and after he had saluted them, he declared particularly what things God had wrought among the Gentiles by his ministry. " When they heard it, they glorified the Lord, and said unto him. Thou seest, brother, how many thousands of Jews there are which believe ; and they are all zealous of the law ; and they are informed of thee, that thou teachest all the Jews which are among the Gentiles to forsake Moses, saying that they ought not to circumcise their children, neither to walk after the customs. " What is it therefore ? the multitude must needs come together: for they will hear that thou art come. Do therefore this that we say unto thee : We have four men which have a vow on them ; them take, ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 237 and purify thyself with them, and be at charges with them, that they may shave their heads : and all may know that those things whereof they were informed concerning thee are nothing ; but that thou thy- self also walkest orderly, and keepest the law. "As touching the Gentiles which believe, we have written and concluded that they observe no such thing, save only that they keeyt themselves from things offered to idols, and from blood, and from strangled, and from fornication." Acts 21 : 20-25. This was in A.D. 60, about thirty years after Christ died. Here we have the elders and James, the very ones who made the decision recorded in the 15th chapter, explaining that by it they meant only that the Gentiles should not observe circumcision and the customs ; that they would consider it disorderly for the Jews to neglect these matters ; and Paul evidently agreed with them heartily in the whole matter. It was to Gentiles that Paul was writing when he said, " If ye be circumcised Christ shall profit you nothing." Do you suppose he would have circumcised Timothy if he had known that in so doing he would cause him to be damned ? It was after he wrote this sentence that he took pains at Jerusalem to show that he had not taught the Jews to neglect circumcision. If Paul had circumcised the Gentiles it would have been will-worship ; it would have been like sprinkling for baptism — something that God had never authorized to be done. If Timothy had been a Gentile, without any Jewish blood in his veins, Paul would not have circumcised him. He would not circum- cise Titus. Why 1 Because of the Gentiles it is true, " If ye be circumcised Christ shall profit you nothing." But did not Paul say, "Circumcision is nothing, and uncircumcision is nothing, but the keeping of the commandments of God?" Yes, and his saying is truel the commandment of God is the important thing. When we do in the worship of God that which He has not commanded, we are guilty of will-worship, of observing the commandments of men ; all such worship, Jesus says, is vain ; and those who do such things worship in vain. Circumcision was a commandment to the Jew ; it was not to the Gentile. Therefore when a Jew was circumcised he obtained a blessing ; but when a Gentile was circumcised, he presumptuously did that which he had never been authorized to do, was guilty of will- worship, and received a curse instead of a blessing. Let me call your attention to a singularity in Mr. Wilkinson's position. He tells us at one time that infants are born pure ; and then he says that they are regenerated, redeemed, that their souls are cashed and made white in the blood of the Lamb. When are their ,vl/3 \i»r 238 REPORT OF DEBATK souls washed? Afterbirth? How could that be, seeing that they are born [Jure? But he claims that by virtue of being thus washed they go to heaven ; if, then, one should die before the washing it would be lost ; but if the washing takes place after birth, and the child should die in birth, it would bo lost. According to Mr. Wilkin- son's theory, the infant must be regenerated (that is, born again) hffore it is born the first time, before it is born into the world; and that places the second birth before the first, and reminds me of the way the Irishman wanted to take his music lessons — the last one first Then, to increase the muddle, comes the doctrine of the Discipline, that infants are totally depraved ; and the Discipline holds it just as Wesley did, that they are born sinners, born vile. But Mr. Wilkin- son, I suppose, thinks they are totally depraved before they are born, regenerated before they are born, and hence, born pure as angels. But we have to do with people that have been born — people that are in the world. And I don't hesitate to affirm that whoever is as innocent as an angel, and at the same time incapable of sinning, is safe ; such an one does not need baptism, nor the Lord's Supper, nor the Church. If such an one dies he will go to heaven ; for nothing but sin separates man from his God. But what are we debating about ? My opponent is insisting that infants should be baptized ; I am most earnestly opposing him ; and he charges that my doctrine logically sends them to hell ; does not that look as though he baptizes them to save them. That is what Origen baptized them for ; no other reason for their baptism was known for hundreds of years. But Mr. Wilkinson says they are born innocent. Then they are in no danger of hell till they are old enough to sin. Mr. Wilkinson has repeatedly charged me with perverting the authors that I have quoted. I have denied being guilty of this mean kind of lying, and have affirmed that he could not find the slightest support of the charge. If he fails to maintain the charge, he must publicly acknowledge that he has falsely accused me, or else he will stand convicted of the mean crime that he would have you believe I am guilty of. So far he has made but one specification (that I re- member), namely, that I misrepresented Moses Stuart. I quoted Mr, Stuart thus : " Bapto and baptizo mean to dip, plunge, or immerge into anything liquid. All lexicographers and critics of any note are agreed in this." Stuart on Baptism, p. 51. (Nashville Edition). Mr. Wilkinson does not deny that the quotation is strictly correct, but he affirms that I used it unfairly. He says I sought to make the ON TUB MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 239 impression that Stuart gave these as New Testament meanings, whereas he gave them as classical meanings. Mr. Wilkinson's charge is false. I made the quotation to show the classical meaning. My exact words are these : " My opponent agrees that in the classics it means to immerse. No wonder he agrees to that. Dr. Moses Stuart, professor of sacred literature in Andover Theological Seminary, one of the most learned and distinguished Presbyterians America ever produced, says in liis work on Baptism (page 51) : " llapto and Ij^ftizo mean to dip, plunge, or immerge into anything liquid. All lexicographers and critics of any note are agreed in this." [Note. — The reader can see how I used Stuart by turning back to pages 55 and 56 of this printed debate. — J. A. H.]. After making this quotation from Stuart, I quoted from Donnegan, whose lexicon I had already informed the audience ivas a classical lexicon. Moreover, on pages 153 and 154 of his work on Baptism, Stuart distinctly teaches (1) " that from the earliest ages of which we have any account, subsequent to the apostolic age, and downward for several centuries, the Churches did generally practice baptism by immersion ;" (2) " that aspersion and affusion, which had in particular cases been now and then practiced in primitive times, were gradually introduced;" (3) that "the Churches of Christ, from a very early period, to say the least, understood the word baptizo in the New Testament as meaning immersion ;" (4) he himself cheerfully admits "that baptizo in the New Testament, when applied to the rite of baptism, does in all probability involve the idea that this rite was usually performed by immersion ;" (5) he specifies but three cases in which he thinks immersion was not practiced, namely, that of Cornelius and his friends, Acts 10 : 47, 48 ; the jailer, Acts 16 : 32, 33 ; and the three thousand. Acts 2:41. Stuart did not think that immersion could have been performed in these cases, but the discussion of them which has taken place since his time has clearly shown that it could have been done ; (6) on pages (55 and 66, speaking of the use of kptoa,nd baptizo in the Old Testament, Stuart says : " The verb bapto signifies to plunge, immerse, dip in ;" and after giving a number of examples illustrative of this meaning, adds : "In like manner baptizo lakes the same signification.'' He claims that bapto in the Old Testament sometimes means to bedew, to moisten ; but he does not claim to find any such use of baptizo, which is the word our Saviour used to indicate the rite of Christian baptism. Now, my friends, I leave you to decide which of us has deviated from the path of recti- tude and truth in this matter concerning Stuart ; for one of us has 240 REPORT OF DEBATE sinned sadly about the matter, and I don't tMnk it will take a Solomon to decide which has done it. As to the GravesDitzler debate, I would only remind you that Mr. Ditzler himself, over his own signature, in a note prefixed to the debate, testifies that he and Mr Graves read and corrected the whole work, and that it is a faithful transcript of what was said in the discussion. Mr. Wilkinson says that he claims, in another book, since published, that they never did nend him the proof-sheets of many of his own speeches. Why, then, did he sign that endorsement of the bookl Why did he take the $500'? I would hate to stand in the position in which Mr. Wilkinson leaves his distinguished brother. Seeing Mr. Ditzler is not to be trusted, in any event, I prefer to believe the Baptist Publication Society, ^Time expired.] MR. WILKINSON'S FIFTH SPEECH. My opponent is lavish of strange statements, and affects to be wise above that which is written. He stated in his last speech that Origen was the first man to favor infant baptism. I would like him to tell us how he found that out. Origen himself, in his Eighth Homily on Leviticus, chapter 12, says : " According to the usage of the Church baptism is given to infants. ' How it could have become "the usage of the Church" if nobody favored it, is somewhat mysterious. He also says in his Commentary on the Epistle to the Romans, book 5 : •' For this cause it was that the Church received an order from the Apostles to give baptism even to infants." Now, this testimony is either true or false. If true, my opponent's testimony must be false. If false, it must be either because Origen was an untruthful witness or an incompetent one. No one will charge Origen with untruthfulness in the matter, for two reasons. First, because he had no motive for telling a lie about it, and secondly, because the irreproachableness of his character forbids it. As to Ids competency as a witness, surely he would be as likely to know as my opponent. He was born only eighty-five years after John died, and had access to all the writings of the age, most of which have since been destroyed, and was doubtless contemporary with men who lived in the days of the last of the ON THE MODE AND SUnJECTS OP BAPTISM. 241 apostlps. Ho must have known, therefore, and on the supposition that ho was a man of integrity, his testimony is unimpeachable. Can my opponent claim to be a more competent witness? If not, then how dare he make such an unauthorized statement, that Origen was the first man to favor infant baptism 1 Besides, it will be shown that both Justin Martyr and Irennpus speak of the existence of infant baptism in their day, and the fornier was born within about five years of John's death, and the latter about the same time, if not still earlier. Hence it is a piece of inexcusable recklessness for a Christian minister to stand before you and make such absolutely unfounded statements. My opponent would have you to believe that infant baptism orig- inated in the belief that infants would be damned if thoy were not baptized. I have only to say that saving efficacy was ascribed to adult baptism just as far back as to infant baptism, hence it was to save the big folks from being damned as truly as the little folks. More- over, the quotation from Zell's Encyclopedia in support of this state- ment ascribes this doctrine of infant damnation to Augustine, who lived nearly 200 years after Origen, and about 250 after the testi- mony of Justin Martyr and Irenwus was given. Moreover, Im can- not find an instance where an early father, prior to Augustine, taught the doctrine in question. Therefore this statement, like the one just examined, is utterly without foundation. And this is the kind of evidence on which we are asked to reject infant baptism. But we would prefer something a little more authentic. My opponent cannot seem to understand how a child can inherit original sin and yet be born pure, and he tries very hard to convict me of inconsistency for holding such doctrines. Perhaps he will tell us how a person guilty of personal sin can become pure. If he will, I will tell him how a person unclean by nature can be made pure at birth. If he says, by faith, I deny it. Faith is the condition of purity, not the agency, and surely it is as easy for God to cleanse a child without faith, as an adult sinner by faith. I think my opponent is trying to create difficulties where none exist. But if he will deal with the difficulties and inconsistencies of his own theory, he will have a task sufficient to tax all his energies. Again, my opponent squarely denies the doctrine of original sin, and says " no man was ever justified from Adam's sin, nor ever will 'le," I de.sire again to cite him to Rom. 5:18, 19, where the apostle says: "As by the offence of one judgment came upon all men to con- flemnation, even so by the righteousness of one the free gift came upon 16 242 KKPOKT OK D-.HATK all men to justification of life," etc. Now, I leave him to settle the iiiattf'r with Paul and his Master. It is needless for n)e to spend tinn' with a Christian minister who ignores the teachings of the IJiblc. Such men, if they were not ministers, would be called infidels. You caji call them what you like. And remember he has not yet attempted to explain this passage in any other light than that in which I have presented it. He simply denies and ignores its plain teachings alto gather. I therefore call upon him to tell us what this "justification of life" means. If not justification from Adam's sin, it must bf justification from personal sin ; and if all men are justified from per sonal sin, then all men will be saved. Does he believe this 1 If so, let him proclaim it. And then let him tell us in what way "judgment to condemnation" came upon "all men by the ofifence of one," or how "through one man's disobedience many were made sinners." Till he does this I must just leave him pinned to the wall by the javelin of divine truth, and let him M'rithe. No doubt it will be painful, but I cannot relieve him. He referred to Eph. 2:1, 2, but did not quote the whole passage. If he had, he would have found that we are all " hy nature the chil- dren of wrath even as others." But this fact was slurred over and concealed by an et cetera — another convenient way of dodging an un welcome truth. It is evident that my opponent manufactures his own gospel and then patches up the Bible to make it correspond. Of course he can uj).set everybody's creed on that principle and prove anything he pleases. But most people will demand " a more excellent way. " He seems very keen to debate some other question besides the one under discussion, and I don't wonder at that. No doubt a temporary respite from his present unpleasant situation would be a great relief. But, as the old lady said, he must comfort himself with the passage which says, " You must just grin and bear it." When he gets done with this subject it will be time enough to prepare for another. But he probably won't be so keen by that time. He had better not get too many jobs on hand at once, or he will get mixed worse than ever, which is needless. In response to my challenge, my opponent makes a flourish of proving that the apostolic Church practiced circumcision. But my challenge related to the early Christian Church, and not to the apos tolic Church at all. And I challenged him to prove it from his Church, histories and encyclopaedias, but he tries to prove it from the Bible. It is so much easier to prove something that is not disputed ON TIIK MODK AND BUHJKCTS OF HAPTIHM. 243 thiiii 8oii)ethiiig that \h. I am aware that Paul circumcised Timothy, and that the Jewg clung to the ceremonial law after the days of Christ ; hut I want him to prove that in post-apostolic days Christians held or taught that JewH ought still to he circumcised. And he can- not do it. My opponent has lahored very hard to prov(j me a liar on the ground of my having agreed to the doctrines of Methodism as tauglit in Wesley's Sermons and Notes on *lie New Testament. It is a very 8ul>linie spectacle, no doubt, for one Christian minister to appear l)efore a public audience to prove another a liar. But the employ- ment of such tactics can only recoil on the unworthy head of the man who employs them. They are beneath contempt, and I only con- descend a reply to such vile and unchristian inuendo lest it might liave some little weight with the thoughtless. In the first place, it would not prove me a liar if it could be shown that I had at one time endorsed Wesley's Notes and Sermons and afterwards rejected them. It would only prove that my religious belief had undergone a change. And surely a man may change his creed without being branded as a liar. But, in the next place, I never promised to accept Wesley's Notes and Sermons as the exponents of my belief, not having been ordained in the Canada Methodist Church, but having come into it by a union of Churches ; and, in the third place, my present teachings are not at variance with " the doctrines of Methodism as contained in our Articles of Religion and taught by Wesley in his Notes and Ser- mons." The mode of baptism is not one of our " articles of religion," and if it were, it is declared to be " sprinkling or pouring " (see Discipline, p. 34), and not immersion ; so all my opponent's ammuni- tion and effort on that point are thrown away. Besides, a mere con- jecture indulged in by Wesley, that Rom. 6 : 4 contained " an alht- don to the ancient manner of 'izing by immersion" can hardly be exalted into a doctrine of his, )ecially when he himself, in another place, declares that " nothing can be inferred from such a figurative expression. Nay," he says, " if it held exactly, it would make as much for sprinkling as for plunging ; since, in burying, the body is not plunged through the substance of the earth, but rather earth is poured or sprinkled upon it." So I am quite as much in accord with Wesley as my opponent is, and his hue and cry on this point is just to raise a dust. While men have arguments to advance they do not need to resort to twaddle. One cannon is worth a cart-load of such fire-crackers. The twaddle indulged in by my opponent about the attempt to be made this evening to break up the discussion, I have 244 REPORT OF DEBATE no doubt, is the thinnest kind of moonshine. I have not patience to deal with such unworthy tricks to excite the prejudice of the com- munity against myself and my people. I know not how anything short of the most desperate extremities could induce a man to resort to such tactics. Drowning men catch at straws. But I cannot spend any more time over my opponent's reply. 1 want to adduce a few more arguments in support of my proposition. The proposition which I am here to affirm is that infant baptism has existed in the Christian Church from apostolic times. It occurred to me that if I had a little chronological chart extending from Christ down through a few centuries, including the period that would be covered by this debate, it would greatly aid friends on both sides of the question in apprehending the period when each individual lived, and consequently the value of his testimony as a competent witness because of his proximity to the days of the apostles. I have there- fore prepared this chart (see accompanying chart). The perpendicular lines mark the centuries, and the broad horizontal lines the witne sses I propose to examine. The name of each is printed in large letters, which I trust all will be able to see, just over the line representing the relative length of his life. The proportion of each century covered by the.se lines indicates exactly the proportion of such century during which the individual lived. My chart shows that John was born in the early part of the first century, and died about A.D. 100. Polycarp was born about 80 A.D., and died in the second century about 169. He was contemporary with John for about 20 years. Justin Martyr was contemporary with Polycarp, being born about the close of the first century or beginning of the second. His birth is generally put down at about 105 A.D. He died between 165 and 170. Irenaeus was for more than half his life contemporary with Polycarp. Polycarp was acquaintpH with John and heard him describe our Lord and His miracles ; therefore these men must have known what the usage of the Church was in the days of the apostles. Their evidence will accordingly b« valuable on this point. Tertullian comes in as the alleged opponent of infant baptism. He was born about the middle of the second century, and lived, you will observe, till near the middle of the third. I propose to give you the testimony of some others of the early fathers, but I propose to begin down the line and work up to the time of the apostles. I will begin with Pelagius, who, so far as my present knowledge of Church history goes, was the first promi- nent individual to deny the doctrine of original sin. He believed, just as my opponent believes, that children came inio this world without O a a o 3> >W >> "3 B "Z c« a a ! a> _^ ;ri 4J !« « "o 0) ED J3 § O "*>"'■ fairlv inferred ! " The Southern Review, vol. xiv. p. .'}.'}9. As we liave seen, the first man to mention infant baptism opposes it on the ground of the innocency of the little ones ; the first one to favor it does it on the ground of their guilt. And on this ground, viz., the pollution of the child, every ortliodox advocate of the practice has contended for it from the days of Origen to the time of John WeHley. So far as 1 know, there has tiot been an exception to the rule. Even the unorthodox Pelagius, though he thought tliey were innocent at birth, believed they would " viina heaven " unless they were baptized, John Wesley thus testifies : " As to the grounds of it, if infants are guilty of original sin, then they are proper sul)jects for baptism : seeing in the ordinary way they cannot be saved unless this lie washed away in baptism. It has been already proved that this original sin cleaves to every child of man, and that liereby they are children of wrath and liable to eternal damnation." Doctrinal Tracts, j). 251. This quotation is from the edition " Published by order of the General Conference," in New York, in 1850. In 1861, the tract on Baptism, from which this quotation is taken, was left out of the "Doctrinal Tracts," and another substituted in its place. Dr. Ditzler says Wesley is not the author of the tract ; but it is probable that he is wrong in this, for the Tract Committee that published it called it " Mr. Wesley's Short Treatifjt on Baptism ; " at any rate, it was published with the endorsement o5 the General Conference. The whole bap tismal service, as it ralatos to infants, is built upon this idea, and as Mr. Wilkinson rejects the idea — as he holds that infants are born "pure as angels" — he can never explain the minister's petition that the " child being delivered from Thy wrath, may be received into the ark of Christ's Holy Church ! " But in his last speech Mr. Wilkinson seemed to switch around again. He says : " We understand that in a moral sense there was a corruption of the stream that flowed from the original Adamic foun- tain, in consequence of the corruption of the fountain ; that the effect is on our souls as well as on our bodies ; tliat wlien Adam fell the corruption deocended to every one that descended from him, and that man in his physical, intellectual and moral nature is impaired because of his descent from Adam." In these words he clearly shows that he believes the souls of all men were corrupted by the fall of Adam— the ON TIIK MODR AND HUIUECTH OF UAI'TIHM. 265 souU an well as thn l)0iearing of faith 1 Even as Abraham be- lieved God, and it was accounted to him for righteousness. Know ye, therefore, that they which are of faith, the same are the children of Abraham." Before reading further I pause to remark that Abraham was the father of two seeds — a natural seed, and a spiritual : the one was composed of his fleshly desceiidents, the other were children of the promise; the one became his children by natural generation the other in the manner which will appear from the following reading : "And the Scripture, foreseeing that God would justify the heathen THROUGH faith, preached before the Gospel unto Abraham, saying, In thee shall all nations be blessed. So then they which be of faith are blessed with faithful Abraham. . . . Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the law, being made a curse for us ; [this shows whom Christ redeems, namely, those who are under a curse for having violated law] ; for it is written. Cursed is every one that hangeth on a tree; that the blessing of Abraham might come on the Gentiles through Jesus Christ ; that we might receive the promise of the Spirit through faith. . . . But the Scripture hath concluded all under ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OP BAPTISM. 259 sin, that the promise by faith of Jesus Christ might be given to them that believe. But before faith came, we were kept under the law, shut up unto the faith which should afterwards be revealed. "Where- fore the law was our schoolntaster to bring us unto Christ, that we MIGHT BE JUSTIFIED BV FAITH. But after that faith is come, we are no longer under a schoolmaster. For ye are all the children of God BY faith in Christ Jesus. For as many of you as have been baptized into Christ have put on Christ. There is neither Jew nor Greek, there is neither bond nor free, there is neither male nor female; for ye are all one in Christ Jesus. And if ye be Christ's, then are YE Abraham's seed, and heirs according to the promise." From this reading we learn that those who are under the " new covenant" receive the Spirit "by the hearing of faith :" that "they which are of faith, the same are the children of Abraham : " that Christ hath redeemed them "from the curse of the law:" that they were under the curse because they had not continued in " all things which are written in the book of the law to do them : " that they had become "children of God by faith in Christ Jesus;" and that if they were Christ's they were Abraham's seed. So, we see, under the new covenant it is all a matter of faith. Jesus Christ, in giving this covenant, said : " Go ye therefore, and teach all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost ; teaching them to observe all things whatsoever I have commanded you." Matt. 28 : 19, 20. Teach them, baptize them, teach them ; that is the divine order ; they must be instructed before they are fit to be baptized. Mark records these instructions of the Lord in these words : " Go ye into all the world, and preach the gospel to every creature. He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved ; but he that believeth not shall be damned." Mark 16: 15, 16. By comparing these we see that the teaching which comes before baptism is such preaching of the Gospel as will produce faith in Jesus. Without this faith none is a proper subject for baptism. Those who were under the old covenant came under it by birth ; % the natural birth, being children of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, they were children of the covenant ; but to come under the new cov- enant, people must be "born again," "born from above," "born of •^'od." Even to Nicodemus, a man born under the old covenant, circumcised the eighth day, a teacher in Israel, Jesus taught, Ye must be born again. He said, " Except a man be born again, he 'Cannot see the kingdom of Gad." Yet, my friends, Mr. Wilkinson 260 REPORT OF DEBATE would have us believe that the old Jewish covenant of circumcision, under which this man had been living all his life, which he had entered at birth, is the Christian covenant, under which we now live ! Nay, verily ! This leader under that covenant could not enter this without the new birth. He was a child of Abraham by the birth of the flesh, but in order to be a child of Abraham according to the Spirit, in order to be of the spiritual seed, he must be born again by believing in Jesus Christ ; for, saith the Apostle John, " Whosoever believeth that Jesus is the Christ is born of God," or, as the Revised Version has it, " is begotten of God." Again I say, it is impossible that infants should be in this covenant, for Jesus says, " Except a man (Greek, tis, anyone) be born of water and of the Spirit, he cannot enter into the kingdom of God." We have seen that they are incapable of being born again, seeing that they cannot believe that Jesus is the Christ, and hence they cannot enter the Church, the kingdom of God, otherwise called the new covenant. Paul, at Heb. 8 : 6, talking about Christ, says, "But now hath he obtained a more excellent ministry, by how much also he is the medi- ator of a better covenant, which was established upon better promises. ' To the Jew was promised the terrestrial Canaan ; to the Christian, the celestial ; to the Jew, the earthly Jerusalem ; to the Christian, the heavenly Jerusalem, " a city which hath foundations, whose builder and maker is God." The Jew was born with a title to these earthly possessions, but if he was not circumcised on the eighth day, he for- feited his title, and was cut off" from his people. All men are born with a title to these celestial possessions, seeing that they derive their spirits from God — that God, the owner of them all, is their Father. But when one sins, he forfeits all these rights, and must be " born again," that he may be classed as a son of God, and have a place in the kingdom of God. Why are not infants received into the Church^ Because they have a title to the celestial land without coming into it. They have not wandered from the Father's house, nor transgressed His laws, nor forfeited their rights. Jesus says, " Blessed are the pure in I eart, for thej shall see God." Both Mr. Wilkinson and I have been telling you that infants are born pure, — they are as pure in heart as the angels. Hence they do not need bapti.sm nor anything else to fit them to see the Father — to enter His presence, and to enjoy Him. If Christ had said. The infant that is not baptized shall be cut off from God's people, then I would have said. Baptize them ; i>y all means baptize them ; and do it quickly, lest they be lost. But will my opponent say they will be cut ofi if not baptized ? No, indeed ! ;.,^. ,.,„ ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OP BAPTISM. 261 But I claim that his creed teaches it, when fairly and honestly inter- preted ; and it is certain that the advocates of the practice, from the (lay it began to be observed, and for hundreds of years, gave this as the reason for it, that the child might not " miss the kingdom of heaven," that it might not be separated from God's people. To those who held to this view there was some meaning in this rite, when applied to infants ; in giving them baptism they gave them something. But what do the Paedo-baptists of to-day give to the little ones that immersionists do not 1 Nothing, absolutely nothing, but water, and precious little of that. Do they teach them 1 So do we. Do they strive to bring them up in the nurture and admonition of the Lord ? So do we. Do they endeavor to have them lead moral lives'? So do we. They do not give them the Lord's Supper ; nor do we. We do not think they will be damned if they die unbaptized ; neither do they. But what harm does it do to baptize them, do you ask 1 Before I would lift up my hand over a little babe and say, "By the authority of Jesus Christ I baptize you," when He has given me no such authority, I would suffer my arm to be torn from its socket, and my tongue from my mout'i : for me to do such a thing would be the most horrible blasphemy. " But," do you inquire, "is it possible that there is no authority for infant baptism ? " Remember ( I am determined you shall not forget it), the learned Lutheran, George Edward Steitz, says, " Among scientifieal exegetes it is regarded as an established conclusion that not a trace of infant baptism can be discovered in the New Testament.' Neander says, "We have all reason for not deriving infant baptism from apostolic institution." Meyer says, "Of it no trace is found in the New Testament ; " and he adds that it " gradually arose in post- apostolic times." Dr. Philip Schaff says, " The apostolic origin of infant baptism is denied not only by the Baptist^, but also by many Paedo-baptist divines." In addition to these testimonials from v n who rank among the very greatest in learning, talent, and scr ral research in the Paedo-baptist world, consider the following Ulai the late Dr. A. T. Bledsoe, editor of the Southern Review, a quarterly published in the interests of one of the Methodist Churches of the United States. Dr. Bledsoe was distinguished for his learning, his great logical powers, and his calm, impartial spirit. He says : — . " With all our searching, we have been unable to find in the New Testament a single express declaration, or word, in favor of infant baptism. We justify the rite, therefore, solely on the ground of logical inference, and not on any express word of Christ cr His apostles. This may, perhaps, be deemed by some of our readers a strange posi- 262 REPORT OF DEBATE tion for a Psedo-baptist. It is by no means, however, a singular opinion. Hundreds of learned Pajdo-baptists have come to the same conclusion; especially since the New Testament lias been subjected to a closer, more conscientious, and more candid exegesis than was formerly practiced by controversialists." Southern Review, Vol. 14, p. 334. There, now, my friends, what do you think of that"? How can you expect me to find infant baptism in the Bible, when such men as these, who want to find it, and who search for it eagerly, thus testify? Some of these men plainly say that the rite, as applied to infants, is not of apostolic origin at all, that there is not a trace of it in the New Testament, that it is of post-apostolic origin ; while others, as Drs. Bledsoe and Stuart, while declaring that there is " no express declara- tion, or word, in favor of infant baptism in the New Testament," nevertheless believe that there are principles set forth in the Bible from which, by a logical inference, the rite may be justified. But Jesus says, "Whosoever heareth these sayings of mine and doeth them. I will liken him unto a wise man," etc., and it is certain, from the testimony of " hundreds of learned P»edo-baptists," that He did never utter one word about it. It is mentioned in none of His sayings. Now, concerning that creed affair : Mr. Wilkinson says he came into the Canada Methodist Church by a union of churches, and hence he never promised to accept Wesley's Notes, and his doctrine that Rom. 6 : 4 refers to immersion. He slipped into this church, and under this creed, without obligating himself to believe and teach the doctrines, as those who are ordained in the regular way are compelled to do ! In order to bring about this union of churches it became necessary for the different churches to agree upon a creed ; they did agree, it appears, to take that of the Canada Methodist Church ; and every one thus accepting it is in honor bound to support it, or else to get out. Mr. Wilkinson ought now to sneak out just as he sneaked in. For my tjart, I would not have a creed, and present it to the world for its acceptance, that I believed taught lies. Moreover, when I called attention to the fact that Wesley's Notes are a part of the doctrine of Mr. Wilkinson's Church, and that he had said he believed and would maintain them, knowing at the same time that he did not believe them, and that he did not intend to advocate them, he merely said, " What of if?" But after further reflection he feels the necessity of trying harder to save his honor. A poor out he makes at it. 'Tis a pity he cannot do better. [ Time exinred.^ ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 263 EVENING SESSION— FIFTH DAY. MR. WILKINSON'S SIXTH SPEECH. I was speaking upon the historical parts of my subject when my time expired. I was showing how Pelagius introduced the doctrine in his day that we were born into this world without any hereditary taint by reason of our descent from Adam, that we did not need any regeneration of our nature, and therefore he claimed in the case of infants that baptism was not for the remisRion of sins or the cleansing of their nature. His antagonists pressed him very hard as to why he baptized infants if they were not unclean ; for it was generally believed by the Church in his day, and admitted by himself, that baptism was a means of i,'race by which sins were actually removed and the soul actually cleansed. In other words, they believed in baptismal regeneration, as my opponent does. They attached similar efficacy to the water as they did to the bread and wine which ended in the transubstantiation of the Roman Catholics. This question raised such a disturbance in the Church at the time that a great many rose up to oppose Pelagius. The Carthage Council was held in A.D. 418. It was composed of 254 bishops, and they all endorsed infant baptism, and that before the child was eight days old. Another Council was held at Carthage in 253 A.D., at which 66 bishops were present, and it decided in favor of infant baptism ; and not only so, but they held that it might be administered before the child was eight days old, showing that they still recognized the old circum- cisional rule. They must have believed, therefore, that baptism took the place of circumcision. Cyprian, who presided over the Council, wrote to Fidus, a country bishop who had written about the matter and desired to get the tentiment of the Council, stating that all the bishops present were of one mind in the matter. I also quoted Origen, who was born only about eighty years after John died. No doubt there were men living who were between eighty and one hundred years old, with whom he could have conversed, and who must have been intimate with the apostles and others living in the apostolic age, and in this way he must have known the usage in the days of the apostles without either printing presses, newspapers, or telegraphs. 264 REPORT OP DEBATE He says the Church received infant baptism as a tradition, or order, from the apostles. This is important testimony, conung from so illus- trious a father of the Church as Origen, and one who possessed such unquestionable facilities for knowing all the facts. Surely no one living in our day can pretend to be as competent an authority. Tertullian, we are told by my opponent, was the first to oppose infant baptism. If he opposed it, it only serves to prove that it must have existed before the days of Tertullian and at the very door of the apos- tolic Church. But I deny that Tertullian opposed infant baptism. He only recommended its delay because he had, like my opponent, embraced the superstitious belief that as sins were blotted out by baptism no sins committed after baptism could be forgiven. And he recommended the delay of the ordinance in the case of other persons as well as infants. But he never once denied either the scriptural- ness or apostolic authority of this rite as applied to infants, as I explained in a former session. But, owing to his superstitious belief, he recommended the delay of baptism in the case of infants lest the godfathers should be brought into danger and be made responsible for the sins of the children committed after their baptism ; and so he recommended delay also in the case of unmarried people and widows and those exposed to peculiar temptations, because there was danger of committing sin after baptism and thus rendering themselves liable to the consequences in the future world. I do rot know how those who hold the doctrine of baptismal regeneration can escape from the logical dilemma into which Tertullian was brought. Yet, if he did not know whether infant baptism had existed from the days of the ai)Ostles, it is difficult to say who had a right to know ; and he said, " It is more profitable," not, " It is inexpedient." But he is an important witness in this controversy from the fact that his recom- mending delay is a proof that infant baptism was the prevailing custom of the Church. It was so in the time of Tertullian, who wrote not more than one hundred years after the death of John, and was born only a little over fifty years thereafter. My opponent is very fond of running away back to the birth of Christ, to make the distance appear as great as possible, but remember Christ did not begin his ministry until within three years of His death, or A.D. 30, and the apostles flourished after that. I claim that it would be n< unusual thing for scores or hundreds of individuals to be living in the days of Tertullian who lived in the days of John. Therefore ha muat have known whether infants were baptized in the Church in the days of the apostles or not. I have here a little ON TIIK MODK AND SUHJECTS OF HAPTI8M. 260 clipping from the Scientijic American. There is an enumeration in it of individuals who have attained great longevity, and in the 18th century no less than six are mentioned (and the paragraph was not written for my benefit) who lived to the age of 1 40 years. Suppose even in middle life TertuUian had met an individual a hundred years old it would have brought him back to the time of the death of John. Suppose he had met one 120 years old it would have brouglit him back to twenty years before the death of John. Would it not have been an easy matter for TertuUian to have conversed witli people who had seen John before liis death 1 My opponent said they had not printing presses and books in those days, and he would like to invali- date the testimony of these fathers on this ground, but they did not need them because they had only a small length of time to cover. My opponent says that TertuUian is the first man known to have mentioned infant baptism, and he mentioned it to oppose it. But in mentioning it to oppose it he testified that it existed. So we have his testimony that it existed at the time. And just here I want to point out a little bit of inconsistency on the part of my opponent. He said in his last speech that " the false doctrine that infants were sinners" came first, "and then the practice of baptizing them to save them from sin, and give them a place in heaven." Yet he says TertuUian was the first to mention infant baptism, and he mentioned it to oppose it, though he believed that baptism was for the remission of sins, and that it actually remitted them. And this is the man, too, who said, " What need their guilt- less age make such haste to the forgiveness of sins ? " It is false, therefore, according to his own testimony, that the false doctrine that they were sinners came first, and then baptism afterwards. Out of his own mouth he stands condemned. Moreover, he made that state- ment purely on his own authority, for he neither has furnished nor can furnish one scrap of proof in support of it, and the reason is that it is not true. But he does not seem to consider it necessary to prove a statement. So long as any notion agrees with his theory, he feels at liberty to announce it with as much gusto and dogmatism as an oracle. And now I hasten to give the testimony of Irenseus. In order to get an idea of the competency of Irenaeus as a witness I will read a short extract from his writings. In his old age, speaking of Polycarp, who was a friend and companion of John before he died, Iremeus said: " I remember the things that were done then better than do I 266 REPORT OF DKIUTK thoso of later timos, so that I could descriho the place where he sat, and his goin^ out, hikI coiuiiig in ; his manner of life, his featunvs, IiIh discourse to the people concerning the conversations he had had witli John (the apostle) and others that Imd seen our Lord ; how he rehearsed their discourses, and what he had heard them that wert> eye-witnesses of the Word of Life, say of our Lord, and of His iiiirn- cles and doctrine, all agreeable to the Scriptures." Ilibbard, p. ISS. Now, this witness, who lived at the very door of the Apostolic Church, and conversed with a man who had heard the apostle John preach and bear testimony as an eye and ear witness of our Lord, testifies as follows : " For He (Christ) came to save all persons by Himself ; all, I say. who by Him are regenerated to God ; infants, and little ones, and children, and youth, and elder persons." Moreover, we contend that l)y " regenerated," in this passage, Ire- nteus meant baptized. We claim this not only on the ground that this was a customary use of the term in the days of our Lord and His apostles, but also in the days of Irenwus himself, who elsewheif undoubtedly uses the word in this sense. He says : "When Christ gave to His apostles the commission of regenerating unto God, He said unto them, ' Go and teach all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost.'" Hibbard,-^. 184. This is an important witness, who knew a man who knew John and others living in the apostolic age, and heard their testimony that they had seen the Lord, heard Him preach, and witnessed His miracles. That is getting into the neighborhood of the origin of this matter. If infant baptism is a Popish superstition, how is it we iind it in the time of Irenseus, when the first pope was not elected until 606 A.D. My opponent does not believe that little children are regenerated, but he believes that adults are regenerated in baptism. Irenaeus believed that they were regenerated by the baptism of the Holy Ghost, and regenerated symbolically by water, which was a symbol of the invisi- ble truth. With respect to the word regenerate, we claim it is used synonymously with baptize. I have proved that Irenteus used the terms synonymously, hence no intelligent man can resist the proof that Irenajus taught that infants were baptized unto God. My oppo- nent, in the discussion of the previous proposition, admitted that the phrase referring to the " washing of regeneration and the renewing of the Holy Ghost " was baptism. He has never denied it ; on the con- trary, he has acknowledged it again and again. He himself accepts in ON TIIK MODE AND 8lJH.IKCTfl OP IIAPTI8M. S67 the writings of Paul l)i« application of the phrase regeneration to haptinni. Our Lord says, " Except ye be horn again " — that is, regen emtod — " of water and the Spirit ye cannot enter into the kingdom." Our Lord, then, applied this very phrase to baptism. Is it any won- dor that those who followed our Lord in the n - ,rld has any chance of getting to heaven except through Christ, by faitli ] And how is it that God has assumed the responsibility of supplying a pure, spotless, immortal spirit to every offspring of mankind, whether in wedlock or out of it, whether to Christian or heathen parents, whether to be brought up in His "nurture and admonition," or trained in the school of the devil? I am amazed that my opponent should commit himself to a theory so inexpressibly silly and absurd. And this is only necessary in order to escape from the pitiable dilemma into which his false theory about original sin has betrayed him. My opponent says that when Adam sinned he was driven away from the tree of life, lest he should eat and live forever. Let me ask him why his posterity should be also driven away from it before they had sinned t The story of the prodigal son is just as beautiful to illustrate my theory as my opponent's. I claim, as well as he, that every man is bom in the Father's house, and I can understand why every man turns out a prodigal. It is because of native depravity. But he denies native depravity, therefore I cannot see how he can account for it. Unless men are bom with a natural bias to sin, I cannot understand why they should all drift in the same direction, no matter how favorable their chances in the right direction. My opponent makes another tremendous effort to prove that nobody can be saved except by faith. He might have saved himself much time and a deal of effort, for evidently the Bible was written to and for those who could understand it, and not for babies. And all who can understand it are supposed to be personal sinners, and as faith is the condition of pardon for personal sin, no one can be pardoned but those who believe. But my contention is that all men are born into the world under an economy of redemption, and consequently saved from what is popularly called original sin unconditionally. 1 have ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 271 never disputed the necessity of faith for adults, therefore the ammu- nition fired at the man of straw has all been wasted. And now, will my opponent furnish one scrap of proof apart from his own unsup- ported ipse c?t.«i< that "all men" are not saved from "judgment to condemnation " by Christ's righteousness, independently of personal faith or repentance. If he will, he will be doing something for his country and his cause. He admits that " all men are born with a title to celestial posses- sions," and "when one sins he forfeits his right" to them, and "must be born again that he may be classed as a son of God, and have a place in the kingdom of God." Yes, and this is where faith comes in as a condition of recove y. And the reason this condition is not required of children is, that they have not sinned, and therefore have not for- feited their rights. He is beginning to see men as trees walking. As for the two seeds of Abraham, the natural and the spiritual, my opponent admits that the spiritual seed were believers and those entitled to spiritual blessings. Yet he denies that circumcision was the seal of the covenant conveying those blessings. Will he tell us, then, why Abraham was circumcised " that he might be the (spiritual) father of all them that believe " (a spiritual seed) ? Rom. 5 : 11. It seems strange that he should receive the seal of a covenant including his natural seed only, in order that he might be the father of a spiritual seed. Perhaps he will solve this mystery before throwing any more dust. Moreover, my opponent has failed to explain to you why circumcision was " a seal of righteousness '' to Abraham, and a seal of the land of Canaan to Isaac. Is there so much as a whisper liy any inspired writer that it meant one thing to Abraham and another to his seed 1 But he will not tell us. He finds it easier to raise quibbles and throw dust than to answer objections. But no doubt he is wise in steering clear of rocks. My opponent admits that the Church is the kingdom of God, and says no one can enter into it but Abraham's spiritual seed, or such as are born again. But Christ says (Luke 18: 16), concerning little children, " of such is the kingdom of God ; " I therefore infer from luy opponent's own premises that little children belong to the Church, are born again, and therefore Abraham's spiritual seed. Will he extricate himself from this dilemma ? My opponent's quotations from authorities may seem very formid- able upon a superficial examination, but in point of fact they prove little or nothing against my position, since, for the most part, they utter my sentiments. Neander is quoted as saying, " We have all 272 REPORT OF DEBATB in of 'aedo- lence « an nota- not isti- rite reason for not deriving infant baptism from apostolic institutl Certainly ; and that is my position exactly, hence I have not at| for it as an " apostolic " institution. So, Neander is right, no: his testimony affect my position. Dr. Scbaff is also quoted as saying that " the apostolic ori] infant baptism is denied not only by Baptists but also by many baptist divines." Evidently the intention is to impress the auc that Dr. Schaff is opposed to infant baptism. But he giv elaborate argument in favor of it in his encyclopedia, and the tion from him proves nothing that I do not cordially admit. I claim that infant baptism is of apostolic origin. Dr. Bledsoe's mony also agrees exactly with my own position. I "justify the solely on the ground of logical inference, and not on any exp words of Christ or his apostles." Meyer does not oppose infant baptism, but expresses himself soincwhat doubtfully about the groAind on which it can be justified. And surely all men are not compe^Jled to think with the brains of the Lutheran Steitz ! ' But the effort to persuade a congregation that because a Lian admits that infant baptism is not a New Testament institution !hat therefore he has difficulty in finding it in the Bible is a dishor^st trick, unworthy of a Christian man, since Faedo-baptists the wold over, almost with one consent, hold and teach that infants re baptized because they are included in the covenant God made vith Abraham that in his seed (Christ) all the families of the earth iixovld be blessed. [Ti7ne expired.] Hon. MR. HARDING'S SIXTH REPLY. / / , ^ Just before closing my last speech I opened up a matter that 1 want to finish now, lest I should forget it, viz., the testimony of Dr. A. T. Bledsoe. 1 doubt if there was ever a more learned, or a more candid man among the Methodists of the United States than Dr. Bledsoe. His " Theodicy " is the clearest, the most profound, and the most powerful refutation of Calvinism that I have ever seen. At the time of his death, which occurred a few years ago, he was the editor of the quarterly magazine published in the interests of his ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 373 Church, The Southern Review, In this Review he published an article on infant baptism, which led to the discussion of the question in a number of articles by himself and Mr. 0. W. M iller, a brother in his Church. The following quotations are taken from Dr. Bledsoe's articles. He says : " With all our searching, we have been unable to find in ecanie tk author of eternal salvation to all them that oliey Him," says Paul at Hebrews f) : 9. Unless baptism springs out of a loving trustfulness in Christ, out of a heart changed by faith, it is worthless ; if it is not an expression of faith, it is nothing ; it is the obedience, not the wat^. that reaches the blessing. ON THR MODR AND 8URTK0TS OF BAPTISM. 281 But those wlio intrmluocd infant Itaptisni ((.^ripon and those of his Any, for, though Tertullian mentioned it, he opposed it) tho»>j»l»t that by it luinian depravity original sin was washed away. AcooixHitg to their notions, water, witliout faith, love, hope, knowledge, oIh'- (lience, or anything else, reached th»> Messing. Even Jolm Wesley thought that hy, or in, Uaptisni the infant's pollution was washed away. And to this day Methodists, in baptizing hahies, pray (Jod to witsli thotn, sanctify them, that, Wing delivered frouj His wrath, they may he ivceived into the ark of Christ's Chuieh. They are a nice 8««t (if people to find fault with anybody foi- l>elieving in the power of water ! Yes, tlie ancitnits argued, infants ai'e horn sinn«'rs. and as they oainiot believe, nor love, nor ol)ey, nor even eat the Lord's Supper, we will baptize them, and wa:^h aioay their sins. And then the litth' wafers were invented for this purpose, I pi-esunie, that as soon as possible the little ones might partake of the Supper. Mr. Wilkinson wound up his address by another appeal to the covenant of circumcision. Ditzler says this covenant has nothing to do with infant baptism; Stuart says the man is "unwary" who (^udeavors to nuike an argument from it in favor of the rit(^ ; but it is Mr. Wilkinson's chief stivH*, and a broken reed it is. Figures, Hgui*es that will not lie, show clearly that tlie covenant made with Abrahain, which was fulfilled in Christ, was not the covenant of circumcision. .\t (talatians 3 : 17, Paul teaches that the covenant which was coi\- tiriued in Christ wtis given 430 years befoi-e the giving of the law at Sinai; but the covenant of circumcision ((lenesis 17) was given 406 years before the law ; tlierefore it cannot be the one contirmed in Christ the one under which we live. It was made when Abraham was 91) years old. If you go back to the time that Abrani was 7r) years old (Genesis 1 2), you tind God making a covenant with l»im ; this was just 430 years l)eforo the giving of tlie law, and 24 years t>efore the giving of the covenant of circumcision. Look at th»> chronology as given in your Bibles wlien you go home, and you will see this. From the time of the calling of Abmham out of Haran to the going c getting pretty well played out when he ha.s to make such an edbrt to extract moonbeams of comfort from cucumbers." My opponent says I an> here " to show that Jesus Christ requires infant baptism." He knows better. He knows I undertook to ♦'stablish the "divine authority" of the rite from any part of the inspired record, hence he is attempting wilfully to alter my position. All these petty quibbles serve to show either his desperation or his dishonesty, or both. And when he repeats the shameful untruth that infant baptism was not practiced within a hundred years after the last apostle died, in face of the testimony I have adduced from men living at the time, and especially in face of the testimony of Origen that it wtis received as a tradition or order from the apostles, he deserves to forfeit the respect of all right-minded men. And on whose authority does he make such reckless statements ? On no less autho- rity, forsooth, than that of the great, and wise, and immaculate Elder J. A. Harding, the Kentucky evangelist ! Tell it not in Gath ! And what analogy, let me ask, is there between Jesus Christ and Socrates 1 Did Socrates exist in spirit thousands of years before he was incarnated, and reveal his mind to the world through the medium of othei's t If so, and we are allowed to embrace these ante-incarnate utterances of the philosopher, as well as those spoken by him during his earthly life, then the analogy will hold good ; otherwise it is unadulterated deception. And this, again, reveals the hopelessness of the cause that requires such support. My opponent's organ illustration is about of a piece with his Socra- tic one. Suppose that some writer were to recommend delay in the use of the organ in churches until near the close of each service, would not the plain inference be that organs, in his church, were now used at the commencement of the service 1 If not, why recommend delay 1 Will my opponent please tell ? But, as I have shown, Ter- tullian advised delay in the baptism of "widows" and "unmarried persons " in general, and for the same reason that he recommended delay in the case of infants. Therefore, if Tertullian's testimony proves that infants were not baptized before his time, it equally proves that widows and unmaiTied persons were not previously baptized. 1292 RKPORT OF I>KIUTR And if it provog that he waa oppoHod to infiint baptigtii lui an utiNcrip- tural innovation, it also and tHjually proven that he was op^mm^d to the haptinin of these other classeH as an unscriptural innovation. This is where jny opponent's own logic lands him. I wonder if he is willinj( to ahide Ity the conHe(|uence8 ! My opponent says my interpretation of the word " regenerated," nh used hy Ireniwus, would imply that Christ came only to save haptized {)ersons, and con8e(|uently that little children not Itaptized would l»e lost. Now, I rennsus teaches that Christ "came to save all who 1)}' Him are regenerated to (»oraiu to bless him, to make his name great, and to make liiin a blessing. Ht' promised to Itless tljose that blessed Abrnm, and to curse the one wiio cursed him. To this He add* d : "And in hee shall all families of the earth be blessed : " but all this was H)>j,i the condition that Ahrain should leave his coiuUry and kindred, and go into the land ir/tlch the Lord would show him. With the promptness and trustful- ness that always characterized him, he arose at once and did wiiat (lod told him to do. Now, can any of you believe, n>y friends, that after (Jod had made this covenant with him, after it had been con- tinued, and after he had fultilled his part of the contract lovingly and faithfully, that CJod would adil the bloody and painful rite of circum- cision to the conditions upon which He would give the blessing] Why, even a man would not do as mean a thing as that, if he had about him a particle of honesty. Any man who would so change his contracts would be considered a mean, dishonest character. When a covenant has been contirmed and sealed, it is not right to tamper with the seal, nor to change any of its provisions. But, accord- ing to Mr. Wilkinson, change after change lias been made in this covenant. In the first place, he tells us circumcision was the seal of it : now baptism is the seal. According to hnn the seal lias been changed. Then the seal was applied only to males, now to males and females alike ; then, if a man bought a male servant the seal was applied to him, but not so now. Our Methodist friends in the United States, in the days of slavery, bought many servants, but they did not immediately baptize them. Why did they not do it 1 They said then, as numy of them do now, " Baptism has come in tlie room of cir- cumcision, and therefore we ought to baptize our children." Why did tliey not say with equal force : " Baptism has come in the room of oirounuision, and therefore we ought to baptize our servants as soon as we buy them 1" If the one piactice is correct, the other would hnvp been equally so. The fact is, these people have been tam- pering with the Word of God, adding to it, taking from it, and chang- ing it to suit their own foolish fancies. They tell us that God began the work of changing by adding the promise of the land of Canaan, and 'ly atlixing the seal of circumcision ; now, they themselves, with- out one word of warrant from the Word of (iod, tear this seal otl' and put in the place of it baptism— a thing which God has appointed for a different purpose : then, without the slightest intimation that it is God's will, they give the baptism (or what they call baptism) to the female as well as the male infants ; then, with as little warrant, they 296 REPORT OP DEBATE cut off those bought with their money. It is a serious thing, my friends, thus to trifle with the Word of God, and to change His appointments at every shifting of the foolish fancies of silly men. Arguments cannot set aside facts. A man may argue as long as he pleases, but the facts remain. I might present to you a most plausi- ble argument to show that Canada had been annexed to the United States ; but it is not so. During our civil war I heard men demon- strate (?) to the perfect satisfaction of their ardent listeners that the Confederacy must — that iu the very nature of things it was bound to — succeed ; but it did not. It has been proven (?) to the satisfaction of the whole world that the sun moves around the earth every twenty- four hours ; but it does not. Mr. Wilkinson argued most earnestly to show that in the fifteenth chapter of Acts, Paul, James, Peter, with the other apostles, and all the elders at Jerusalem decided that cir- cumcision had been done away, and that it should be practiced no more, neither by Jews nor Gentiles ; he would have us believe that baptism had taken its place, and that these apostles and elders were aware of the fact ; but, unfortunately for his argument, the fact remains — it is recorded in the very next chapter — that Paul did, after this council, circumcise Timothy, and that too after he had been baptized. It is also a fact that about eight years after this council the "many thousands of Jews" which believed still practiced circum- cision, still thought it was lawful for them so to do, and still held it to be disorderly for any man (even though it were Paul himself) to teach Jews to neglect to circumcise their children, though they were agreed that the Gentiles should observe no such thing ; and, finally, it is a FACT that Paul took steps to show that he perfectly agreed with James, and the " many thousands of Jews that believed," in these things. I ref^at it, Mr. Wilkinson may argue till his head grows white to show that circumcision passed out of God's covenant at the beginning of the Christian dispensation, and that baptism took its place, but the fact remains that both circumcision and baptism con- tinued to be practiced even to the close of the days of inspiration ; nor did any apostle ever intimate that it ought not so to be, that the one had taken the place of the other, though it would have been the most natural thing in the world to have said, had it been the fact When those Judaizing teachers were clamoring that the Gentile con- verts should be circumcised, what a quietus it would have put upon them if the apostles could have said, " Baptism has taken the place of circumcision, you know it well ; you yourselves have ceased to cir- cumcise your children : these Gentiles have been baptized, and that is ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 297 enough." What sane man can doubt but that the apostles would have made such statements as these, had tliey been true? " But," my opponent will say, " Timothy's father was a Greek." What if he was? Paul would never have circumcised him had not his mother been a Jewess. Such a case was settled in the person of Titus, whom he would not circumcise — he stubbornly refused to do it —because he was in no wise connected with Abraham according to the flesh. Before we leave this case of Timothy, I want to show you by another argument that, it seems to me, is so simple and satisfactory that it ought to satisfy any reasonable man, that circumcision continued to be practiced by the apostles, and hence that it was not supplanted by baptism. Suppose, my friends, that Mr. Wilkinson could turn to his New Testament and read from it that Paul came down to Lystra, where he found a certain pious woman named Eunice ; and suppose he could read, a little further on, that Paul took the infant child of this excellent lady and baptized it ; suppose he could show that this took place about seventeen years after the beginning of the Christian dispensation; would you not exclaim, That settles the question: we have here apostolic example for infant baptism 1 Ah, you say, but no such tiling can be shown. True enough ; but I have shown that Paul took Timothy, the son of the excellent and amiable Eunice, and cir- cumcised him, about seventeen years after the ascension of Christ ; does not that show that this rite continued to be observed by divine authority ? If this proof would be abundantly sufficient to establish infant baptism, why is it not sufficient to establish the continuance of circumcision ? Possibly it is because some people want to believe .the one, whereas they do not want to believe the other. When you remember that I have shown you not simply one such case, but thousands of them, and not simply the examples, but also the teaching of James and the elders at Jerusalem, in which Paul heartily concurred, (see Acts 21 : 17-26) it seems to me that even ca unreason- able man ought to be convinced. He who understands this does not need to change the seal, nor to tamper with the covenant ; for circum- cision has its own place, and baptism has another. I asked Mr. Wilkinson why Christ did not baptize those infants that the mothers brought to Him, when He said, " Suffer the little children to come unto Me," etc. He replies Jesus did not baptize but His disciples. True enough ; Jesus baptized through His disciples as agents ; why then did He not tell His disciples to baptize them 1 To this Mr. Wilkinson replies : " As a matter of fact, Christian baptism 298 REPORT OP DEBATE was not, at that time, appointed. He, therefore, just took them in His arms and blessed them, and thereby showed that infants were capable of receiving the divine blessing." If I understand my oppo- nent, then, he admits that infants were not baptized during the life of Christ unto the baptism of Joh i. He says Jesus did not baptize them, for as a matter of fact Christian baptism was not yet appointed. We are to understand then, I suppose, that John's baptism did not come in the roon of circumcision; but that Christian baptism does. If these things are so, my friends, does it not appear strange to you that God did not make known by some plain revelation that the one was not in the room of circumcision, but that the other is? As Mr. Wilkinson limits the baptism of infants to the Christian dispensation, let us come down to the institution of Christian baptism, and see how the matter stands. After Jesus came up from the grave He became the ruler ; His dispensation opened; and He said, "All power is given unto Me in heaven and in earth. Co ye, therefore, and teach all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost ; teaching them to observe all things whatsoever I have commanded you : and lo, I am with you alway, even unto the end of the world. Amen." Matt. 28:19, 20. The same thoughts are expressed in Mark's account thus : "And He said unto them, ' Go ye into all the world, and preach the Gospel to even- creature. He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved, but he that believeth not, shall be damned." Mark 16:15, 16. As Matthew expresses it, they were to teach the nations and baptize them ; or, as Mark has it, they were to preach the Gospel to every creature, and baptize those who believed it. This, now, is the place to which Mr. Wilkinson goes to find the beginning of infant baptism ; and when we look at the passages we find it plainly written that Christ in- structed His followers to teach the people, and then to baptize those who received and believed the teaching. This commission furnishes all the authority that any man has for baptizing anybody, and its order is (1) teaching (or the preaching of the Gospel), (2) faith (the faith that includes repentance), (3) and then baptism. Thus we come into the new covenant ; and hence it is that all in it " know the Lord. from the least to the greatest." As we have seen, Christ did not baptize infants ; nor did the apostles ; nor is it strange that they did not, seeing that they labored under this commission ; nor did any ot the immediate followers of the apostles ever so much as mention it ; nor is this strange, fo they were accustomed to see the apostles first teach, and then baptize the taught ; nor, so far as we know, did any ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 299 man that had ever seen a man that had seen an apostle ever even so much as mention the rite ; Irenajus knew the aged Polycarp ; and Polycarp, when he was a youth, knew John ; but neither Irenivus nor Poiycarp ever spake a word about infant baptism. When Christ ascended to the skies, infant baptism had not been mentioned ; when the last apostle died, infant baptism had not been mentioned ; when the last man who had ever known an apostle died, infant baptism had never been mentioned ; not until one hundred years after the last apostle died do we find a mention of infant baptism, and then it is by a man who opposes it. But Mr. Wilkinson teaches that water baptism is " an outward sign of an inward grace ;" that when the inner man has been baptized with the Holy Ghost, the body should be baptized with water as a sign of it ; with him water baptism is a sign of regenera- tion ; according to him, the unregenerate are under the " imputed curse;" and as he will not agree that the little ones are regenerated — born again — before they are born the first time, T suppose we must conclude that, according to his theory, they are " born again " at the same time that they are born the first time ; seeing that lie will have them born pure. But the whole theory is most ridiculously nonsen- sical, withotit any basis in reason or revelation. He baptizes people with water because they have been baptized with the Holy Ghost, he tells us ; whereas the apostles taught the people to be baptized in water that they might receive the Holy Ghost. It was Peter who stood up, a few days after the ascension of Jesus, and preached the first discourse of the Christian dispensation, the first one under the great commission under which we now live and labor. As he preached, many of those who listened became convinced that the Jesus whom they had killed fifty days before was indeed the Son of God, that the grave had not been able to hold Him, and that He was then seated at the right hand of God, King of kings and Lord of lords. They were pricked in their heart, and they crid out to Peter, and to the rest of the apostles, saying, " Men and brethren, what shall we do?" Peter replied, " Repent, and be baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ, for the remission of sins, and ye shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost." Here the order is (1) Repentance, (2^ Baptism, (3) Re- mission of sins, and (4) The gift of the Holy Ghost. Since Christ came up from the grave the Holy Spirit has, in every case, without a single exception, been given after faith ; and in every case, but one excep- tional and miraculous one — that of Cornelius — it has been given after tism. The Gospel rule, to which there is this one exception only, is 300 REPORT OP DEBATE faith (including repentance), baptism in water, and then the gift of the Holy Spirit. Baptism was for the remission of sins that the recipients of it might receive the Spirit ; it was not for innocents, on the ground that they had received it. Hence, in the New Testament, we find it stated time and again that " believers " were baptized, that " men and women " were baptized, but never that infants were. Remember that Mr. McKay, in the little book that Mr. Wilkinson has here, suras up for us all the baptisms of the New Testament. As he was a Presbyterian, writing on baptism, of course he did the best he could for his side. He finds ten cases. We went over them, you remember, carefully, and in every case but one we found proof positive that no infants were among them ; in the one exceptional case, while it is true we found no express proof that would clearly show she had no infant, it is also true that there is nothing indicating that she was married, or that she had any children at all ; every intimation of the text seems to indicate that she was single. What a miserable condi- tion these advocates of infant baptism are in ! Not only is it true that the commission justifies the baptism of believers only, but it is also true that every figure that shows our connection with Jesus as the Saviour of sinners, predicates that con. nection upon faith. If the figure of a birth is contemplated, it is said, "Of His own will begat He us with the word of truth;" and again, " Whosoever believeth that Jesus is the Christ is begotten of God ; " if the figure of turning from darkness to light is used, it is said, " The law of the Lord is perfect, converting the soul ; " if the sinner is represented as dead, the quickening to a new life is ascribed to the word in these words, " Thy word hath quickened me ; " if the new covenant is presented, all under it know the Lord, and have His laws written in their minds and hearts ; and so of the figure of the olive tree to which Mr. Wilkinson referred, and which is often appealed to in support of infant baptism. The record concerning it is found in the letter to the Romans from which I now read. " For if the first fruit be holy, the lump is also holy : and if the root be holy so are the branches. And if some of the branches be broken off, and thou being a wild olive tree wert graffed in amongst them, and with them partakest of the root and fatness of the olive tree : boast not against the branches : but if thou boast, thou bearest not the root, but the root thee. Thou wilt say then. The branches were broken off, that I might be graffed in. Well ; because of un- belief they were broken off, and thou standest by faith. Be not high- minded but fear. . . . And they also, if they abide not still in ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 301 unbelief, shall be graffed in : for God is able to graff them in." Rom. 11 : 16-23. Here it is expressly said that those that were broken oft' were broken off" on account of unbelief ; those that stood, stood by faith ; and if those that were broken off" remained not in unbelief they would be grafted in again. So you see it is all a matter of faith. Just so when the relation of sonship is considered. In writing to the churches of Galatia, in speaking to the many members of these churches, Paul says, " Ye are all the children of God by faith in Christ Jesus. For as many of you as have been baptized into Christ have put on Christ. . . . And if ye be Christ's, then are ye Abraham's seed, and heirs according to the promise." Gal. 3: 26-29. Thus in speaking of all the Christians of the regions of Galatia, Paul said that all of them were children of God by faith in Christ.' No infant members in that country. This perfectly harmonizes with the statement of John that, " Whosoever believeth that Jesus is the Christ is born of God." Observe, too, that Paul teaches that those who are thus the children of God are the seed of Abraham, and heirs according to the promise. Thus we see that the covenant with Abraham that was fulfilled in Christ involves only those who become children of God by faith. The Lord says, teach the people and then baptize them ; preach the Gospel and baptize them that believe it. This is the commission that I am working under. But Mr. Wilkinson says baptize the babies first, and teach them afterwards. Is that working under the commis- sion'? When TertuUian made that first mention of infant baptism, he said, " Let them come when they are grown up ; let them come when they understand ; when they are instructed whither it is that they come ; let them be made Christians when they can know Christ ;" and in saying that he expressed the correct idea ; Christ explains (John 6 ; 44, 45) that God draws the people to Himself by teaching them. So, I say to you mothers, if you want to bless your children the way to do it is to teach them. " Oh," says my friend, " surely there is a blessing for the children." Certainly there is. Christ took the little children, and put His hands on them, and prayed. I am glad when a true man of God prays for my children : I believe in praying for God's Messing to rest upon them : I do it myself, and I ask others to do it, because that is what Christ did. If ,He had baptized them, I would have wanted mine baptized ; but as He prayed for them, I will do likewise ; I want to follow Him. If you follow Christ you will pray for the children, and teach them ; and then, when they understand ind believe the Gospel, you will baptize them. That is the way 302 REPORT OF DEBATE Christ did ; that is the way His apostles did. But you ask, " Is there not a blessing in brptisii) for the child ] " No; there is not. What spiritual blessing is there in water — nothing but water 1 Our Metho- dist friends of to-day admit that they give the little ones nothing but a few drops of water ; the child neither believes, nor repents, nor obeys ; nor does it receive anything — neither forgiveness nor the Holy Spirit — in its baptism : formerly it was supposed to bring pardon and the Holy Spirit to the infant, and to deliver it from hell ; but now it is an empty, meaningless rite. One of the worst features of it is that the minister professes to do by the authority of Christ that which the Lord never gave any mortal the authority to do. It is horrible ! It is a fearful thing for them to say, *' By the authority of Christ we do this," when He has given them no such authority ; when they grant that He did not baptize infants, and when they admit that all of us derive all the authority that we have for baptizing from the commis- sion. I would rather lose my right arm than to make such a declara- tion. " But," you inquire, " what harm can be done to the child by sprinkling a few drops of water on it?" No trouble can come from simply sprinkling a few drops of water ; but to do this as an institu- tion of Christ is awful blasphemy ; for it is an established fact that Christ has given no man authority so to do. But to practice infant baptism as a divine institution does harm in other ways. If this doctrine were to prevail, it would not be long till every man, woman, and child in the world would be in the Church (that is, in whatever Church this rite would bring them); and thus all the distinctions between the world and the Church would be broken down; just to the extent that the doctrine does prevail does this miserable result follow ; and just to this extent is Christ's appointment — believer's baptism- set aside. Now, my friends, consider another tangle in which these believers in infant baptism find themselves. " Infant baptism is for every- body," say the Methodists, " for all infants ; " " Not so," reply the Presbyterians, " the father or the mother must be a believer ; there must be at least one believing parent." Mr. Wilkinson will baptize any infant ; but his friend, Mr. Paterson who sits here by his side, and is so zealous in helping him, will not administer the ordinance unless one of the parents is a believer. Why, my friends, the advocates of infant baptism are in a perfect muddle from the beginning to the end. They do not agree about any passage that is quoted to maintain the rite ; some say the passage teaches the doctrine, while ON THE MOOR AND SUBJECTS OF 0APTI8M. 303 others of them deny that it refers to the matter in any way at all ; they do not agree about any argument tliat is found to sustain it ; some think the argument is suilicient, while the others positively athnn that it is not : they do not agree about what infants should be liaptized ; some tay that all may be, while the others say there must he a believing parent : wlio, my friends, can believe that God is the originator of such a miserable lot of tangles ! Before Mr. Wilkinson endeavois to convert the rest of us, he would better try his hand on his friend, Mr. Paterson ; and if he succeeds with him, they can go on with their work ; then, if they could accomplish their desires, in the next generation there would be in their Church the world and the flesh, to the great delight of the devil. Mr. Wilkinson is exceedingly anxious to find a mention of infant liaptism before the time of Tertullian ; and it is not strange that he is. The prophets say nothing about it, nor does Jesus, nor do the apostles ; it is not mentioned in the Old Testament, nor in the New ; hence it is not strange that those who practice it should be anxious to tind as early a mention of it as possible after the days of the apostles. Mr. Wilkinson claims that Justin Martyr and Irenteus mention the practice. They do not. I know there is one sentence in the writings of each of these fathers that is relied upon as favoring infant baptism hij some. But no one of candor and intelligence claims that these writers clearly and expressly mention it. But, my friends, consider the sentences and judge for yourselves. Thus reads the one from Justin Martyr. " Several persons among us of sixty and seventy years old, of both sexes, who were discipled to Christ in their childhood, do continue uncorrupted." Of this sentence it is enough to say that the word rendered '' child- hood" is the exact equivalent of our word "youth." They became Christians in childhood, in youth. Does that have any bearing on infant baptism ? I was baptized in childhood myself, and I have bap- tized Imndreds of children, but not one infant (brephos), which Justin would have used instead of pais (youth) had he desired to express the idea of infancy. Thus reads the testimony from Justin Martyr. Now, my friends, do you not agree with Bledsoe and Meyer that he does not mention infant baptism ? 304 REPORT OF DEBATE And now you shall have the sentence from iRENiSUB. "For He came to save all persons by Himself ; all, I mean, who hy Him are regenerated unto God ; infants and little ones, and children and youths, and elder persons. Therefore He went through the several ages ; for infants being made an infant, sanctifying infants ; to little ones He was made a little one, sanctifying those of that age," etc. Irenteus not only tells us that Christ came to " regenerate," "save," all by Himself; but he explains how he understood that the Lord did it, viz., by passing through the several ages, lie thus sanctljied the persons of that age. Not a word is said about baptism. Moreover, Irenieus wrote 67 years after the death of John. Thirty-three years after that time — one hundred years after the death of John — we find the first unmistakable allusion to the practice ; and it is made by one who opposes it as though it were an innovation suggested, but not yet adopted. Ten years later we find the practice in the Church ; but it still •' causes frequent inquiries," says Origen, who is the first writer to favor it. It is a characteristic of innovations that they cause " frequent inquiries." Now, my friends, if you can have your babies baptized on such testimony as that, you are easily convinced ; that is all I have to say about it. Mr. Wilkinson denies that he misrepresented Neander. He says : " In the passage I quoted from Neander he expresses my sentiments." This is not true ; Neander does not express his sentiments. Had Mr. Wilkinson quoted the entire sentence, and the one just preceding it, instead of a part of one sentence, it would have appeared that Neander's sentiments were exactly the opposite of his own. Mr. Wilkinson holds that infant baptism is not an apostolic institution, because it began before the days of the apostles ; and so he quotes Neander thus : " We have all reason for not deriving infant baptism from apostolic institution." Then he (Mr. Wilkinson) adds : "Cer- tainly ; that is my position exactly ; hence I have not argued for it as an apostolic institution ; so Neander is right, nor does his testimony affect my position." Now, my friends, Neander's position is that infant baptism is not an apostolic institution because it began after t/ie days of the apostles. He takes my ground exactly on this point, and had Mr. Wilkinson quoted two sentences, instead of a part of one, this fact would have clearly appeared. The sentences read thus : " Baptism was administered at first only to adults, as men were ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 300 accustomed to conceive baptism and faith as strictly connected. We have all reason for not deriving infant baptism from apostolic institu- tion, and the recognition of it which followed somewhat later, as an apostolical tradition, serves to confirm this hypothesis." Neander's History, Vol. 1, p. 311. It is no pleasure to me to show you that Mr. Wilkinson is guilty of |)erverting and misrepresenting this great historian; but he did it knowingly, as the circumstances clearly show, and it is due to the truth that it should be shown. I say again, he is one of the last men in the world who ought to accuse others of misrepresenting authorities. • [Time expired.] 20 306 REPORT OP DEnATE SIXTH DAY— AFTERNOON. MR. WILKINSON'S EIGHTH SPEECH. My opponent last night endeavored to make the impression tliat tin- covenant of circumcision recorded in Oen. 17, was a covenant momly to give Abraham and each of his boys a farm in Judea forever and for- ever, it being an everlasting covenant, and it was sealed with a seal to the boys only, thus leaving the girls, according to his theory, with- out a patrimony. But Peter said Acts 7 : 5, that God " gave Abra- ham none inheritance in that land, no not so much as to set his foot on," and when Sarah died he had to buy a hole in the gifound to bury her in. And Paul declares that he " sojourned in that land by faith, as in a strange country, dwelling in tabernacles with Isaac and with Jacob, the heirs with him of the same promise, and he looked for a city which hath foundations, whose builder and maker is God. Throuj,'h faith also Sarah herself received strength to conceive seed, and was delivered of a child when she was past age because she judged Him to be faithful that promised. Therefore sprang there even of one and him as good as dead so many as the stars of the sky in multitude, and as the sand which is by the sea shore, innumerable. These all died in faith, not having received the promises, but having seen them afar off, and were persuaded of them, and confessed that they were strangers and pilgrims on the earth. For they that say such things declare plainly that they seek a country. And truly if they had been mindful of that country from whence they came out they might havf^ had opportunity to have returned, but now they desire a better country, that is a heavenly, wherefore God is not ashamed to be called their God for He hath prepared for them a city," even the heavenly Jerusalem. In 1 Peter 1 : 3 the apostle says, " Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ which according to His abundant mercy hath begotten us again unto a lively hope, by the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead, unto an inheritance incorruptible, unde- filed, and that fadeth not away — reserved in heaven," etc. Now, according to my opponent, Abraham's sons were circumcised to seal the earthly inheritance to them. We are begotten again, or boni again, unto a lively hope of an inheritance reserved in heaven. This new ON TIIK MODE AND BUIURCTH OF llAt>TI8M. 307 birth is eflfoctcd by spiritual baptinin, ihei symbol of which ih baptism by water. And in this spiritual baptism wo are not only buried with Christ, but raisttd with Him to walk in nownoss of life, or as the gaino apostle elsewhere describes it, •' raised up to^^ether (as believers), ami made to sit together in heavenly places in Ohrist Jesus." Our iiihoritance is not earthly but heavenly — hence said Ohrist to His Jewish disciples, " In my Father's house are many mansions ; if it wen* not so 1 would have told you. I go to prepare a place for you ; and if I go and prepare a place for you I will come again and receive you unto myself," etc. John 14:1-3. Where did He go 1 He went to the Father — to heaven, and He said in addressing the Father, in chap. 17 : 24, " I will that they also whom Thou hast given Me be with Me, wliore I am," etc. Heaven, then, is to be the future eternal inheritance of all believers, and Ohrist has undertaken by His cross to "break down the middle wall of partition between Jews and Gentiles, having abolished in His flesh the enmity, even the law of command- ments contained in ordinances, for to make in Himself of twain one new man, so making peace, and that He might reconcile both unto Uod in one body by the cross, having slain the enmity thereby. And came and preached peace unto you who were afar off and to them that were nigh, for through Him we both have access by one Spirit to the Father. Now, therefore, ye are no more strangers and foreigners (as they were under the old dispensation), but fellow-citizens with the saints and of the household of God, and are built upon the foundation of the apostles and of the prophets," etc. I call your attention to Rom. 4: for I want to show what the oiessiug was that was promised to Abraham. We read from v. 6 as follows : — " Even as David also describeth the blessedness of the man unto vhom God imputeth righteousness without works, " Saying, Blessed are they whose iniquities are forgiven, and whose sins are covered. "Blessed is the man to whom the Lord will not impute sin." He is talking about the blessing of justification and a man is pro- nounced blessed who receives that blessing. The blessing received by Abraham was the blessing of justification, a better blessing than Canaan, Egypt, or all the rest of the world. It was the blessing of solvation. " What profiteth it a man if he gain the whole world and 'cse his own soul 1 " After this blessing came circumcision, which was 'seal to Abraham of the same blessing. He was not circumcised and justified afterwards as my opponent is trying to show, but he was 308 REPORT OF DEBATE justified first and circumcised afterwards. " For," said the apostle, " he received the sign of circumcision, a seal of the righteousness of the faith which he had yet being uncircumcised : that he might be the father of all them that believe, though they be not circumcised : that righteousness might be imputed to them also. "And the father of circumcision to them who are not of the cir- cumcision only, but who also walk in the steps of that faith of our father Abraham, which he had being yet uncircumcised. " For the promise that he should be the heir of the world, was not to Abraham, or to his seed, through the law, but through the righteousness of faith. " For if they which are of the law be heirs, faith is made void, and the promise made of none effect. " Because tfcc law worketh wrath : for where no law is, there is no transgression. " Therefore it is of faith, that it might be by grace ; to the end the promise might be sure to all the seed : not to that only which is of the law, but to that also which is of the faith of Abraham ; who is the father of us all, ("As it is written, I have made thee a father of many nations.") You will see from this testimony that circumcision referred to and sealed justification to Abraham himself, but it sealed it to him as the father of all believers, who are Abraham's spiritual seed. Now it is passing strange, if circumcision had no reference to anything but an earthly inheritance for Abraham's natural seed, that it should be applied to him that he might be the father of a spiritual seed. Per- haps my opponent will tell us how a seal of temporal blessings only could constitute a man the father of a spiritual posterity. It is clear, moreover, that baptism was given with reference to the same blessing, viz., justification. On the day of Pentecost, the great inauguration day of the new dispensation, Peter, addressing a congre- gation of Jews, said, Acts 2 : 38, " Repent and be baptized, every one of you, in the name of Jesus Christ, for the remission of sins ; " and what was remission of sins but justification 1 Men were circumcised then to seal justification to them, and now they are to be baptized to seal the same blessing. Besides, Peter knew that those Jews to whom he was speaking were accustomed to have the seal of justification applied to their infants at eight days old, and that the covenant made with Abraham distinctly included such. He also knew that when he mentioned the fact of their children being included in the covenant they would understand it to refer to their infant children, yet he ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 309 exhorts them to be baptized for (or with reference to) justification, or the remission of sins, because the promise (covenant) was to them and their children, v. 39. Baptism, then, relates to the same blessing that circumcision did, and is administered because of the covenant made with Abraham, of which circumcision was tliR seal, therefore, I argue, without a divine prohibition it must still be given to the same classes of subjects, — infant children and believing adults. I have shown that Peter distinctly mentions the children, hence when he adds, " and to all that are afar off (Gentiles), even as many as the Lord our God shall call," we know by parity of reasoning that he must have meant their infant children xl&o. Consequently, by the unquestionable authority of this inspired apostle on this great occasion, we have Jews and their infant children, and Gentiles and their infant children included in the covenant made with Abraham, of which circumcision was the seal, and Peter calls upon his Jewish auditors to be baptized on account of this, therefore baptism must have been involved in the covenant with Abraham, the covenant which included the Jews "and their children." But as a matter of fact there was no mention of baptism in that covenant, hence it will be necessary to inquire in what way it was involved in it. I have shown that circumcision was the seal of that covenant, and all who were admitted to its provisions must receive the seal. But under the present dispensation baptism signifies the same thing (regeneration) and occupies the same place, hence, says Peter, " repent and be baptized, every one of you, in the name of Jesus (the promised seed), for (or because) the promise (which involved baptism by another name) is unto you and your children," etc., hence baptism is the New Testament seal of the same covenant, and must be applied to infants as circumcision was under the old dispensation. My opponent thinks infants are not included in the covenant under this dispensation until they get old enough to commit sin, but I think they are taken in as soon as they are born, and unless he can prove that they are incapable of receiving justifica- tion and the gift of the Holy Ghost, he cannot prove that they are excluded from the covenant of redemption. To establish these points he will need to prove that circumcision sealed a different blessing to Isaac from what it did to Abraham. We know it sealed justification to Abraham as an adult, and we know it was applied to Isaac as an infant, and I claim it was for the same purpose in both cases. And there is not a word in the Bible to the contrary. If it meant two different things in these two cases, why did God give us no intimation to that effect in His word? I hope my opponent will tell us. 310 REPORT OP DEBATE But, as a matter of fact, the covenant with Abraham not only involved justification or pardon, but the gift of the Holy Ghost. The renewal of the nature which is symbolized by circumcision, as I have clearly shown, is effected by the agency of the Holy Ghost, and as Abraham received the former he must have received the latter, hence it is an important part of " the blessing of Abraham," as intimated by Paul in Gal. 3 : ll, where lie says Christ hath redeemed us from the curse of the law " that the blessing of Abraham (the blessing promised to and enjoyed by Abraham) might come on the Gentiles through Jesus Christ; that we might receive the promise of the Spirit through faith." It is evident, then, that the gift of the Holy Ghost as well as righteousness, or regeneration, was involved in the Abrahamic covenant, and no doubt this was intended by the phrase " I will be a God unto thee, and to thy seed after thee," hence, Peter, on condition of repentance and baptism, promised his auditors the Holy Ghost, and assigns as a reason for this that "the promise" or covenant to bestow the Spirit, " is unto you (Jews) and your children," etc. And just here let me ask why, if circumcision was understood by the Jews to seal to them the land of Canaan only, that they were not only so ready to receive Gentile proselytes into the covenant with them before Christ, but that they insisted, as a condition of their being saved, that they should be circumcised and keep the law of Moses 1 And why was it that " no uncircumcised person " was allowed to eat the Passover, the acknowledged symbol of atonement? It is evident, from these considerations, that circumcision was dis- tinctly connected not only by its divine author, but also in the Jewish mind, with religious truth and human salvation, yet my opponent and his co-religionists would degrade it to a mere secular use. Evidently they have not the mind of the Spirit. On the ground of infants being cut off who were not circumcised, Mr. Harding asked, last evening, if I would say that they were cut off under this dispensation because they are not baptized. I answered emphatically. Yes, in a visible sense. And that is the only sense in which any one was ever cut off because he was not circumcised. Neither baptistO, circumcision, or any other outward rite can bring any person into God's covenant any farther than to visibly or ritually recognize the relationship. It makes a spiritual state or relationship apparent by a visible rite or operation, and the person who is not visibly recognized as belonging to God is ceremonially, or apparently cut off from Him. The visible Church is Christ's visible body, and ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 311 those who are not visibly inducted into it are visibly outside of it. They are not recognized as belonging to the Church, not having received the badge of Christian discipleship, and that is what I under- stand by their being cut off from it. And this is what happened to an uncircumcised male child under the old dispensation. He was not sent to hell because his parents did not circumcise him, but he was cut off from the religious assemblies of God's people, and was not recognized as in the outward dispensation of the covenant. Circum- cision of the heart, or justification, saved the soul, and those who were not justified were lost. Circumcision of the flesh illustrated the nature and necessity of this spiritual state, for as uncircumcision of the heart cut the individual off from God in fact, so uncircumcision of the flesh cut him off in figure. My opponent has said that infants are not saved but are safe. How can they be aa/e when they come to die and not be saved while they are alive f Will he tell us 1 Scholars were quoted to prove that there is no command for infant baptism. In the quotation made from Dr. Bledsoe he is represented as saying that hundreds of Psedo-baptists deny that infant baptism is taught in the Bible, yet he says, in the same quotation, that " It is clearly deducible from the New Testament." And this is what they all claim. I have read hundreds of Psedo-baptist authorities and I know exactly how they explain the matter. They say there is no express command in the New Testament on the subject because an express command was not called for ; and I hope to be able to show you why. If God put infants in the covenant of redemption away back 1900 years before the new dispensation began, no express com- mand was required to put them in again at the beginning of the new dispensation, since without a command to put them out they were recognized as still being there. It is not necessary to re-enact a law before it is first abrogated. God had never abrogated this law. My opponent cannot produce a single proof that the law which put the children into the covenant in infancy was ever abrogated. I might illustrate this point by relating a little incident I recently heard. Two men who were neighbors were very fond of disputing on this point. One said, " You have no right to do anything for which there is no command in the Bible." The other opposed bim, by maintaining that there were many plain duties for which there is no express command or injunction in the Bible. One day this man who insisted on com- mands 80 strongly happened to fall into a well and could not get out. He sent his little boy to tell the neighbor with whom he had so oft 312 REPORT OF DEBATE disputed to come and help him out of the well. He did not come for a long time, and when he did come he was rebuked for his tardiness. He replied, "You know you have been telling me that I should not do anything except there is a command for it in the Bible. I have been studying the Bible to see if there was any command for pulling you out of the well. I read the command that if an ox or an ass fall into a pit, you are to haul it out ; but you are neither an ox nor an ass. At length I found the passage, ' Do good to all men, especially to those who are of the household of faith,' and I thought I might come and take you out under that command." This question under discussion occupies very nearly the same position. We are constantly beset with a demand for some command to baptize infants. We reply that this is not necessary, because it is woven into the very warp and woof of the whole scheme of human redemption, and the scholars of Christendom through all ages — with few exceptions in latter days- have agreed, and the more so the more fully the Divine arrangement has been examined and understood, that God Himself put the children into the covenant of redemption and put His seal on them at eight days old, and until He puts them out they must stay there and receive that seal. Who is man, then, that he should ask for another command for this 1 My opponent stated that there is no mention of infant baptism during the life of Christ or the apostles nor for the first 200 years. In point of fact there was no opposition to it for the first 200 years, and then by a man who believed no sins committed after baptism could be remitted. Now, if you believe it possible for such an inno- vation to have been brought into the Church without opposition, then you must believe that human nature has changed, when an organ can- not be introduced now without raising such a dust. But the fact is that there was no opposition except TertuUian for the first 1300 years. I have proved that it existed all this time, and ray opponent has failed to produce one tittle of proof to the contrary except this plea that no one mentioned it before TertuUian, Avhich I have shown you is not true, for Irenseus distinctly mentioned it under the name of regenera- tion. And until he can give us some modicum of evidence to the contrary I can afford to let his assumptions pass for what they are worth, which is but very little. But suppose his statement were true. Would that prove the practice did not exist 1 Suppose a man was arraigned in court on a charge of theft. And suppose you could pro- duce ten thousand witnesses who would testify that they never saw him steal. Would not one reliable witness testifying that he did see ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 313 him steal outweigh them all 1 Undoubtedly so. So in the present case. Irenseus says it was there, Tertullian says it was there, Origen says it was an order from the apostles, others living near the time say the same thing, and no one was ever silly enough to deny it for upwards of a thousand years after the days of the apostles, yet my opponent wants to overturn all this positive evidence by a mere nega- tion — " nobody mentions it before Tertullian," — and even this negation is a mere assumption in opposition to the facts before us. But his whole line of defence, for the most part, consists of just such unsup- ported assumptions, which he, no doubt, finds a very convenient method of whiffing away arguments against which he has nothing more substantial to advance. However, it pleases him, I presume, without materially injuring me, so let him fiddle away on that line. I now call attention to the fact that my proposition does not call for historical pro;-t any farther back than John's death. The proposi- tion is that infant baptism has been practiced in the Christian Church from apostolic times. I did not undertake to prove from history that it was practiced in the apostolic age. I knew what I was doing. A party who was present when I framed the proposition asked, " What do you mean by the phrase 'from apostolic times?'" I said, "I mean just what it says." And now I ask, have I not traced it back to the apostolic age 1 Has my opponent made out a better case for immersion in the early Church than I have for infant baptism 1 Yet lie claims to have established the point that the early Church immersed, a point I have not denied. If he proved the one I have proved the other. He says Irenseus' reference to the commission was to regene- ration by teaching, for in the commission Christ says, " Go teach and baptize them." I say Christ gave no such command. He simply said, if He spoke Greek, " Go mathetettsate." Turn to the Greek lexicon and see what that means. Every scholar knows that in the New Testament sense it means " Go make disciples." And what is a dis- ciple 1 A pupil or learner. Then it means " Go get the nations into ray school by baptizing them, and then let them come and learn of me," The Christian Church is Christ's school where He is teaching them by His word and Spirit. First, make disciples of them, then baptize them, and then teach them. Teach them to observe all things whatsoever I have commanded you. That is the Divine order and arrangement, hence Irenseus must have meant by regeneration, baptism and not teaching. My opponent said we had to make wafers in order to give children the Lord's Supper. The " office editor," Mr. McDiarmid, said they 314 REPORT OF DEBATE had to make soup in order to give the children the Passover. I do not know but a wafer is as sensible as soup. But I don't consent to be held responsible either for the errors of the Roman Catholics or Campbellites. I neither administer wafers nor soup. My opponent is still greatly exercised about the change of the cove- nant which to his mind is involved in the addition of the seal. I have explained that no change in the covenant was involved, but he cannot see it, apparently. I still maintain, however, that God was supreme, and it was His prerogative to affix the seal whenever He pleased, whether at the time the covenant was first given or at any time there- after, and the addition of the seal twenty-four years afterwards no more involved a change of the terms of the covenant than the addition at the time the covenant was made. This is all the change, I claim, that was made (though my opponent represents otherwise), and this, as I have shown, was not a change in the terms of the contract, but only a ratification of its provisions. By the addition of the seal, there- fore, I again insist, God neither disannulled the covenant nor added to it. Besides, I want to ask my opponent how covenants are " con- firmed." I always thought it was by signing and sealing. If so, will he tell us when the covenant God made with Abraham as recorded in Gen. 12 was ever "confirmed," and what was the seal, unless the covenant in Gen. 12 and 17 are the same and circumcision the seal? The fact is he cannot do it. My opponent struggles heroically against the testimony of Justin Martyr and Irenseus, because he knows it is corroborative of my posi- tion and destructive of his. As to there being no mention of infant baptism by either of these writers, he seems to forget that Justin dis- tinctly identifies circumcision and baptism as the same thing when he says, " We are circumcised by baptism with Christ's circumcision." And again when he says, " We also, who by Him have had access to God, have not received this carnal circumcision, but the spiritual cir- cumcision, which Enoch and those like him observed. And we have received it by baptism, by the mercy of God, because we were sinners : And it 18 enjoined upon all persons to receive it in the same way," viz., by baptism. It is perfectly clear, therefore, that Justin Martyr must have believed in infant baptism, because he knew circumcision was a rite peculiar to the infant age, and he declares that it is " enjoined upon all persons to receive circumcision by baptism." Now what does it matter if no mention of infant baptism, as dis- tinct from the baptism of adults, could be found prior to the time of TertuUian, so long as it can be so unmistakably proven that these ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OP BAPTISM. 315 early fathers identified these two rites as one and the same thing under different forms 1 Does it not follow with all the force of moral demonstration, that when they identified these rites as the same, they must have identified the subjects as the same 1 It seems childish to call this in question. Besides, the very fact that whole households were uniformly baptized during the apostolic age goes far to sustain the position I have taken. True, my opponent fails to find any babies in those households, but I suspect he is not a good hand to search for them. He shuts his eyes, puts stoppers in his ears, feels in the wrong place, and then swears there is not a baby in all that region. But a good many wise men think they see children, even infant children, in these households ; and in favor of this view much may be said. 1. The term oikoa, used in two of the cases referred to, manifestly include all the inmates of a house, or home, whether great or small. Therefore the language is just such as we would expect on the sup- position that there were children in these houses. If the word cir- cumcise had been used in each of these instances, instead of the word baptize, no one would ever have questioned that infants were present. 2. The universal desire among Jewish women to be the mothers of the promised seed, and the feeling that barrenness was a reproach to them, constitute a strong presumption that these households were composed of something more than strangers. 3. The Syriac version, the oldest and most literal version in the world, in the case of Lydia reads, " Lydia and her children." 4. Nor is it any valid objection to my position that it is recorded concerning the Philippian jailer that Paul " spake the word of the Lord to all that were in his house ; " and concerning the household of Stephanus that they "addicted themselves to the ministry of the saints." Such general expressions are common, both in conversation and writing. As Dr. Wardlaw expresses it, " When we ascribe to a family anything of which infants are universally understood to be incapable, we never think of making a formal exception of them. The man who from my saying, * I spoke to the whole family — to all in the house,' or, ' They are a very benevolent family — they lay themselves out for doing good,' should conclude that I was certainly speaking of a family in which there were no infant children, — I should be apt to regard either as in jest, or as a hypercritical fool. When Joshua says, 'As for me and my house, we will serve the Lord,' does any one ever think of inferring that his family could not contain any infants be- 316 REPORT OF DEBATB cause infants were incapable of serving the Lord 1 Yet the inference would be as legitimate in this case as in either of the others ; and it may not be amiss for our Baptist brethren to make it the subject of a little self-examination, by what principle it is that they are led to such a conclusion in the one case, when they never think of it in the other. What is the precise difference in the state of their minds, when they read the 15th verse of the 24th chapter of Joshua, and when they read the 34th verse of the 16th chapter of the Acts, or the 16th verse of the 16th chapter of the first epistle to the Corinthians. " Let us only consider for a moment into what ridiculous absurdities we should be led by the adoption of such a principle of criticism. The children of Israel were commanded, in preparing the Passover, 'to take a lamb for a house according to the number of souls. Are we to infer from this that they numbered the mouths of sucking infants? or that there were no such infants at that time in the families of Israel 1 They were enjoined to eat it ' with their loins girt, and their shoes on their feet, and their staff in their hand.' Children could not do this, therefore we conclude again that there must have been none ; and the conclusion is irresistibly confirmed by the testimony of the Psalmist respecting the passage of the Red Sea, for ' they went through the flood,' he says, ' on foot,' which infants, none will dispute, were incapable of doing. When the paralytic Eneas was cured by Peter, it is said " all that dwelt at Lydda and Saron saw him and turned to the Lord;" from which, amongst other inferences, it will follow that these places presented the singular anomaly of a population without infants ! Paul writes to the Thessalonians that ' if any would not work neither should he eat :' were the babes of Thessalonica, then, to be left to starve because they were incapable of earning, or of being willing to earn, their daily bread ? Let no Baptist say indignantly, ' This is ridiculous ; it is making a joke of the matter.' I grant it is. It is fit for nothing else. But let him recollect that the materials of the joke are furnished by his own friends. Let the argument (if it must have a name to which it has no title) be withdrawn, and there will be no room left for the joke. I am only ashamed, indeed, of being obliged to argue it at all. It is not worth the ammunition." Thus the unspeakable absurdity of my opponent's plea that there could have been no infants in the house of the jailer because Paul and Silas "spake the word of the Lord to all that were in his house," and none in the household of Stephanus because they had " addicted themselves to the ministry of the saints," is glaringly exposed— and the exposure might be carried to much greater length ; hence I claim ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 317 the baptism of these households as invincible proof of infant baptism. I trust he will supply us with Hoinethiixg more cogent in the way of objections, if he has anything at hand. [Time expired.] MR. HARDING'S EIGHTH REPLY. I will begin my review of Mr. Wilkinson's speech by calling your attention for a moment to his remarks concerning the authorities. Dr. Bledsoe says that although there is no express mention of infant baptism in the New Testament, the rite may be justified on the ground of logical inference ; and Mr. Wilkinson says that all the Psedo-baptist authorities that I have been quoting agree with him in this j that is, that all of them teach that infant baptism is taught in the Bible by a logical inference. Let us see about that. Dr. Bledsoe says : "We might, if necessary, adduce the admission of many other profoundly learned Psedo-baptists, that their doctrine is not found in the New Testament, either in express terms, or by implication from any portion of its language." — Southern Review, Vol. 14, p. 336. This aged and powerful Methodist editor here says that "many profoundly learned Psedo-baptists " deny that infant baptism is taught in the New Testament at all, " either in express terms " (that is, by command or example), " or by implication " (that is, by logical infer- ence). My opponent is mistaken, then, in saying that all of them agree that it is clearly deducible from the New Testament. If a doctrine is taught neither by express terms, nor by implication, it is not taught at all. Many Paedo-baptist authorities say it is not of apostolic origin. Mr. Wilkinson — I say that. Mr. Harding — They say it is of post-apostolic origin. Do you say thatl Mr. Wilkinson would have us believe that he agrees with Neander, Meyer, and tlie many Paedo-baptists who deny the apostolic origin of this rite ; but does he 1 He claims that it is of divine origin, and he goes back to the Old Testament to find the beginning of it in circumcision ; do they so claim 1 Hear them testify, my friends, and know for yourself. Neander says, (see his Church History, Vol. 1, p. 1511) " Baptism was administered at first only to adults, as men were accustomed to conceive baptism and faith as strictly connected. 818 REPOHT OF DKOATE We have all reason for not deriving infant baptism from apoatolic institution, and the recognition of it which followed somewhat later, as an apostolic tradition, serves to confirm this hypothesis." This greatest of Church historians here testifies (1) that "baptism was administered at first only to adults;" (2) that "men (including the inspired apostles and evangelists, of course, as they did most of the baptizing ' at first ') were accustomed to conceive of baptism and faith as strictly connected ; '' and (3) that it was recognized somewhat later than the apostolic age, "as an apostolic tradition." But some one may inquire, " Is there not much force in its having been received as an apostolic tradition ] " No ; for they called infant communion also "an apostolical tradition." Says Dr. Knapp (Pa-do-baptist)," Augus- tine calls infant baptism apostolica traditio ; and we should un- questionably attach some importance to this testimony, if he had not also called infant communion apostolica traditio ; we know ho was mistaken in this case. Why not then in the other?" — Southern Review, Vol. 14, p. 344. Dr. Bledsoe adds to this testimony of Knapp's that " When the Fathers were called upon to defend any custom of the Church, they seldom, if ever, failed to plead an apostolical tradition in its favor." Meyer says it is " an institution of the Church which gradually arose in post-apostolic times \ " and yet Mr. Wilkinson would have you believe that all these great authorities agree with him, and that I very much misrepresent them. Does he think that infant baptism arose in post-apostolic times t that it cannot be found in the New Testament in " express terms," or " by implication from any portion of its language 1 " Certainly he does not ; then he does not agree with these authorities. Mr. Wilkinson still insists that Irenseus referred to infant baptism, when he said, speaking of Christ, " He came to save all persons by Himself ; all who by Him are regenerated unto God ; infants and little ones, and children and youths, and elder persons." Irenseus then explains that " He went through the several ages, for infants being made an infant, sanctifying infants ; to little ones He was made a little one, sanctifying those of that age," etc. By " regenerated," he means " baptized," says Mr. Wilkinson. He meant no such thing; nor would any one have been silly enough to say so, had it not been for the sad necessities of this argument for infant baptism. Drown- ing men will catch at straws. I am willing to leave this case of Irenseus with you, with simply reminding you that Dr. Bledsoe says " Before the time of Tertullian, A.D. 200, there is not an allusion to ON TIIK MODK AND HUIMECTS OF OAPTIHM. 319 the custom from which its existonco may be fairly inferred ; " and with reminding you, moreover, that Dr. Meyer says, " It is not cer- tiiinly attested before Tertullian, and by him still decidedly opposed, and, although already defended by Cyprian, only becoming general after the time of Augustine [A.D. 400] in virtue of that connection." While Meyer and Bledsoe agree with me about a matter of this kind, I shall not trouble myself as to whether Mr. Wilkinson does or not. He thinks that Tertullian did not oppose it on the ground that it was not of Divine origin, but on the ground that he did not believe that sins committed after baptism could bo forgiven. This is not so ; as Bledsoe truly says, he condemns it "as having no foundation either in reason or revelation." Neander says Tertullian was " an uncondi- tional opponent of infant baptism ; " and he claims that his opposi- tion to it grew out of *' the great importance which he attached to its spiritual conditions." (Vol. 1. pp. 231, 2.) Moreover Tertullian does make a clear argument from the words of Jesus : he says, '* ' Do not forbid them to come to me.' Therefore let them come when they are grown up ; let them come when they can understand ; when they are instructed whither it is that they come ; let them be made Christians when they can know Christ." Dr. Watson is an authority of a different class. He believes that infant baptism can be deduced from the Bible, though he admits that he can find no express mention of it in the New Testament. He says, "Though there is no expressed example in the New Testament of Christ or the apostles baptizing children, yet there is no proof that they were excluded." If they were never excluded from baptism, it is because they had never been admitted to it. As we will see by and by, when we come to that part of Mr. Wilkinson's speech, when Christ authorized His apostles to baptize, He limited them to the baptism of believers. My friends, it is a thing made out that there is not the slightest reference whatever, of any kind, in the New Testament to infant baptism. Bledsoe, Neander, Meyer, Schaff, Watson, Mosheim, and hundreds of other Peedo-baptists have searched diligently for it, but have not been able to find a single clear case or express mention of it ; they cannot find a single reference to it from Matthew to Revela- tion; and some of the greatest of them frankly admit that it did not begin to be practiced for many years after John died : some of them, however, as "VY^tson and Schaff, like Mr. Wilkinson, go back to the Old Testament, and try to draw an inference in favor of the prac- 320 REPORT OF DRUATB tioe from the rite of circumcision. Ii it not strange that if it is taught anywhere in tlie Bible, the greatest of Biblical critici, Meyer, failed to find it there 1 that if it was practiced from apostolic times, the greatest of Church historians, Neander, did not discover the fact? that if Irenii'us mentions it, Meyer and Bledsoe can not so undt^r- stand him 1 Indeed, my friends, as Dr. George £. Hteitz says, "among Bcientitical exegetes it is regarded as an established conclusion that not a trace of infant baptism can be discovered in the New Testa- ment." Is it not singular that men practice "by the authority of Jesus Christ " that about which Christ and His apostles are as silent as the grave 1 Is it not singular that the Lord should expect us to baptize infants " by His authority " when neither He nor His apostles ever said a word about, or gave us a single example of it ? There are frequent references in the New Testament to the baptism of men, of women, and of believers, but not one to the baptism of babies. My opponent has rested his case almost entirely upon the claim that as circumcision wac formerly the seal of the covenant of redemp- tion, baptism is now. The covenant is the same, he argues, but baptism is now the seal, whereas circumcision formerly was. Observe, my friends, and you will see that he goes to the wall on this point, as emphatically as any one ever did since the world began. He gives baptism the place that God has given to His Holy Spirit. At Eph. 1:13 we read, " In whom ye also trusted, after that you heard the word of truth, the Gospel of your salvation ; in whom also after that ye believed, ye were sealed with that Holy Spirit of promise." From this we learn that the Holy Spirit, not baptism, is the seal. Again at Eph. 4 : 30, we read, " Grieve not the Holy Spirit of God whereby we are sealed unto the day of redemption." Also at 2 Cor. 1 : 22 it is said, " Who hath also sealed us, and given the earnest of the Spirit in our hearts." My opponent has occasionally hinted that we lay too much stress upon the efficacy of water ; but we have never put water in the place of the Holy Spirit of God. Baptism is never called the seal of the new covenant, never ; not a word was ever spoken by an inspired man that intimates that it has any such place ; on the contrary, we are said to be baptized into Christ, baptized for the remission of sins, and as we are not sealed as Christ's till we are in Him, the gift of the Holy Spirit, which, according to the gospel rule, follows baptism, is appropriately called by the apostle the seal ; and hence the Bible doctrine (Gal. 4 : 6), " Because ye are sons God hjith sent forth the Spirit of His son into your hearts, crying Abba, Father." Truth is ON TUB IIODB AND 8UBJE0T8 OF UAPTI8M. 331 conaiatent, error ia not, hence Mr. Wilkinson'a poaition ia forever leading him to contradict and pervert the Word of (lod. When my friend began to road from the fourth chapter of Romana, I thought within myae^f, aurely he ia hard preased indeed to go there; for if one wants to show that infant baptism ia not found in the Bible, but that under the new covenant (which ia with Abraham'a spiritual seed), believers are baptized, not infants, he should take thia chapter to begin with. Abraham has two seeds: (1) those who sprang from his loins according to the law of natural generation, and (2) those who became his sons by being "born again" through his great son Jesus Christ ; as saith the Scripture, " If ye be Christ's, then are ye Abraham's seed, and heirs according to the promise." Re- membering that Abraham has two seeds, and that the new covenant is with the spiritual seed, just as the covenant of circumcision is with the natural, let us road from this fourth chapter of Romans. The apostle quotes David (ver. 7), " Blessed are they whose iniquities are forgiven, and whose sins are covered. Blessed is the man to whom the Lord will not impute sin." Then he says of Abraham (ver. 11), " He received the sign of circumcision, a seal of the righteousness of the faith which he had yet being uncircumcised : that he might be the father of all them that believe, though they be not circumcised ; that righteousness might be imputed to them also." This veree shows that his spiritual seed are ali them that believe, whether circum- led or not ; and this agrees exactly with the saying of the apostle John, "whosoever balieveth that Jesus is the Christ is born of God :" nil those born of God are Christ's, and hence are Abraham's seed according to the promise. But infants, never having sinned, not Heing dead in sin, do not need to be bom again ; as a matter of fact they cannot be born again, seeing they cannot believe that Jesus is the Ohrist. It is said (ver. 12) that Abraham is "the father of circum- cision to them who are not of the circumcision only, but who also *alk in the steps of that faith of our father Abraham which he had being yet uncircumcised." This verse teaches that Abraham ia the father of those who " walk in the steps " of his faith. No infants in that. At verse sixteen it is said, speaking of imputed righteousness, "Therefore it is of faith, that it might be by grace ; to the end the promise might be sure to all the seed ; not to that only which is of the law, but to that also which is of the faith of Abraham ; who is the father of us all." Abraham is not the spiritual father of every- body who is bom into this world, as Mr. Wilkinson seems to believe, seeing that he would have all baptized, but as these verses clearly 21 322 REPORT OF DEBATE show, he is the father of all that believe that Jesus is the Christ, of all who walk in the steps of his faith. These, and these only, should be baptized, for Jesus said, " He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved." If we turn to Galatians we tind the same doctrine. Paul there says (Gal. 3 : 7), " K aow ye therefore that they which are of faith, the same are the children of Abfaham." But it is hard to get Mr Wilkinson to know this ; he goes blundering around with his eyes shut, claiming that every body that is born into this world is of the seed of Abraham, and that they should all receive the seal of the covenant that God made with his spiritual seed ; then he adds the blunder of supposing that baptism is the seal. By the way, if infants must be regenerated in order to be saved, if, in point of fact, they are all regenerated (born again) even at their birth, is not that being born again without faith, repentance, prayer, understanding, or anything else 1 And then when they believe that Jesus is the Christ, with a trusting obedient faith, are they not born again the third time ? How many new births does Mr. Wilkinson believe in, anyhow 1 I am sure I don't know, and I don't believe he does himself ; but the Bible doctrine is, " Ye are all the children of God by faith in Christ Jesus," and, "If ye be Christ's, then are ye Abraham's seed." Gal. 3 : 26, 29. Mr, Wilkinson thinks that if I can prove " that infants are in- capable of receiving justification," I can show that they are not in the covenant of redemption. Certainly, that is so. To justify is to pardon, to forgive. How can God forgive one who has never siimed 1 how can He justify one who has done no wrong 1 Remember, John says, " Sin is the transgression of the law " (1 John 3:4); and Paul says (Eph. 2 : 1, Revised Version), " Ye were dead through your trespasses and sins;" and God says' (Ezek. 18:4), "The soul that sinneth, it shall die." So infants are not sinners, seeing they have transgressed no law ; they are not dead, seeing we die through sinning, through our trespasses and sins ; and hence it follows that they cannot be justified, seeing that justification includes the forgiveness of sins. Mr. Wilkinson says Abraham never possessed the land of Canaan. Well, what of it ? God did not promise it to him for himself, but for his seed. What has that to do with our question 1 I understood him to deny that God promised the land of Canaan to him and his seed for an eve. asting possession. Read and see : "I will give unto thee, and to thy seed after thee, the land wherein thou art a stranger, all the land of Canaan, for an everlasting possession. Gen. 17:8. Had not the Jews broken the covenant of the Lord they Would have been dwelling in that land to this day ; and if they turn ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 323 to the Lord, doubtless, they will have it restored to them. At any rate this one thing is certain, viz., the very last time an inspired man makes any reference to the pracfce of circumcision among the Jews, he teaches that they were still circumcising their children and that it would be disorderly for any one to instruct them to do otherwise. About this there is no room for doubt. Of the two circumcisions, that of the flesh and that of the heaj*t, the one belonged to the natural seed of Abraham, and was connected with the earthly inheritance ; the other, to the spiritual seed, is connected with the celestial inheritance ; the one was made by a knife cutting the foreskin of the flesh ; the other with the sword of the Spirit cut. ting the heart. When Peter spake to the people, using the sword of the Spirit with such tremendous power (Acts, 2nd chapter), it is said, " Now when they heard this, they were pricked in their heart ; " observe, this sword that is " sharper than any two-edged sword " pierced to their hearts, cut oflF their stubbornness, and made them anxious to do the will of God ; thus were they circumcised in heart. In the one case a material knife cuts a material body, and this cutting is the token of a material inheritance ; in the other, a spiritual knife cuts the spiritual or " inner man," and this cutting leads to an eternal inheritance. This sword of the Spirit pierces to the dividing asunder of soul and spirit, joints and marrow, and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart. By using this sword Peter so pierced the hearts of the people that many men and women cried out in their anguish, "Men and brethren, what shall we do?" He replied, " Repent, and be baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ for the remission of sins, and ye shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost. For the promise is unto you, and to your children, and to all that are afar off, even as many as the Lord our God shall call." Acts 2 : 37-39. Mr. Wilkinson thinks that as the promise (the gift of the Holy Spirit) was to them and their children, they would naturally conclude that their infants should be baptized. He told them " to repent," and to be baptized " for the remission of sins ; " as infants cannot repent, and as they have no sins to be forgiven — and never did have — I infer they would not expect their infants to be baptized ; and as the promise was to all whom the Lord should call, wd as He came not to call the righteous but sinners — those who are weary and heavy laden — it is clear infants are not among those who we to receive this promise. They do not need it. The word rendered "children" means " offspring," without any reference to age. ■ My opponent wants to know something about the time when the 324 REPORT OP DEBATE seal is applied. As he needs information on that subject very badly indeed, it gives me pleasure to furnish it. We have it as a fixed fact — a matter settled by the very words of God — that we are sealed by the Holy Spirit. When does one receive Him 1 At John 7 : 37-39 we read, ** In the last day, that great day of the feast, Jesus stood and cried, saying, If any man thirst, let him come unto Me and drink. He that believeth on Me, as the Scripture hath said, out of his belly shall flow rivers of living water. (But this spake He of the Spirit, which they that believe on Him should receive ; for the Holy Ghost was not yet given ; because that Jesus was not yet glorified)." In this place Jesus plainly foretells that believers will be sealed by the Spirit. Paul, as we have seen, in writing to the Ephesians tells them that they were sealed by the Spirit "after that they believed." (Eph. 1 : 13). And as they are baptized with water in token that they have received the Spirit, according to the Methodistic theory, baptism in water must follow faith ; unless they can show that one is born again of the Spirit twice, once in infancy, and again when he believes ; a thing that all who know anything about the Bible teaching on this subject, know cannot be done. My opponent spoke about the Gentiles being fellow-heirs with the Jews under this new dispensation. Yes, they are. How did they get in'? In that allegory of the olive tree, so often referred to, Paul says to the Gentiles that the natural branches (the Jews, who were connected by natural generation with Christ) were broken off" "be- cause of unbelief ; " and that the Gentiles stood " by faith ; " he added that if- the Jews continued not in unbelief they would be grafted in again, and that if the Gentiles should forsake their faith they would not be spared. So we see the Gentiles came in by faith. It is all a matter of faith. Mr. Wilkinson wants to know, if babies are not saved while they live, how they can be safe when they come to die. Infants are born innocent, we agree, and hence are safe when they are born ; during their infancy they dannot sin, and hence remain safe through that period ; if they die in infancy, being sinless, they die safe. Will Mr, Wilkinson tell us Low one can be saved from that from which he is already absolutely and unconditionally safe 1 To talk about infants being saved is to intimatv; that at some period in their infancy they are in danger of hell fire — are lost — than which nothing is more unscriptural and nonsensical. Mr. Wilkinson does not approve of the doctrine of the disciples that one should have a " thus saith the Lord " for all that he does in \ ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OP BAPTISM. 325 the service of God. And no wonder ; a Methodist could never be very strongly attached to that doctrine. But the illustration by which he blunderingly tries to ridicule the doctrine does not serve him well. In his illustration, you remember, the man who argued for the "thus saith the Lord," fell into a well ; and the other man searched the Scriptures to find a command for taking him out ; and he found one ; if he had not been an ignoramus he would have thought of it without searching ; he was a very ignorant man, indeed, not to have thought of the golden rule. I venture to say, and will undertake to maintain the statement, that there is absolutely no good thing that a man can do, that is not taught, directly or indirectly, in the Bible. Mr. Wilkinson — Hear, hear. Mr. Harding — And heed what you hear. Infant baptism is not taught in the Bible, in any way, and hence it is not a good thing. A great many of the most earnest and faithful men have been con- strained to say it is not to be found in the book, although strongly prejudiced in its favor. Such a one is Neander, and such the great Meyer, who tells us not only that there is not a trace of it to be found in the New Testament, but that it is of post-apostolic origin, an institution of the Church that arose after the days of the apostles. And that brings me to this red line on my friend's chronological chart (A.D. 100.) He says his proposition requires him to trace infant baptism just to that point, to the death of John, as he is only to show that it has been practiced from the apostolic age He is mistaken. Mr. Wilkinson — I said the latter part of my proposition only called for this. Mr. Harding — In arranging for the debate he wrote, " Infant baptism is of divine authority, and has been practiced by the Christian Church from apostolic t^imes." I said, " I deny that," and promptly Signed my name as taking the negative of it. Just then one of my brethren, now present, looking at it said, '"From apostolic times,' that only requires him to trace it back to the edge of the apostolic age." I remarked, " * Divine authority ' covers the ground : that takes him into the apostolic times." " But," said the brother, " I would rather have him say that it was practiced in apostolic times." This Mr. Wilkinson declined to say. I then said, " Very good ; if Mr. Wilkinson wants to acknowledge that it was not practiced in apostolic times, I am willing ; but how then will he get his ' divine authority.' " In his last speech he says, " I did not undertake to 326 REPORT OF DEBATE prove from history that it was practiced in the apostolic age. I knew what I was doing." That is, I suppose, he knew it was not practiced in the apostolic age. I know that, but I supposed that he was ignorant of the fact. That which has begun since the apostles has for it no divine authority. He now asks if he has not traced it back to the apostolic age. No sir ; you lack just one hundred years of it ; there is just that much of a gap between the beginning of your practice and the death of the last apostle ; so testify the most learned of Psedo-baptists. Now to the commission : Mr. Wilkinson calls attention to the fact that the word rendered " teach," in Matthew's account of it, is -i.».- ■•teuo, which he properly rendered "to disciple," "to make dis- ciples of ; " then he paraphrased the passage thus : " Go get the nations into my school by baptizing them, and then let them come and learn of me." A gross perversion of the p9,ssage ! The word matheteuo signifies to disciple 6y teaching ; Greene defines it thus : *'To be the disciple of, to follow as a disciple ; in If. T., to make a disciple of, to train in discipleship ; pass., to be trained, discipled, instructed." Mark gives the same commission in these words : " Go ye into all the world and preach the Gospel to every creature. He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved ; but he that believeth not shall be damned." Mark 16 : 15, 16. Where Matthew says, " make disciples," Mark says, " preach the Gospel ;" and the latter adds : " He that believeth and is baptized ; " showing that to make disciples is to make believers by preaching, and that the baptizing comes after the believing : I take it that Mark is a very good commentator on Matthew. This commission harmonizes perfectly with what Jeremiah says about the new covenant ; for under it God writes His laws in the minds and hearts of the people, and all shall know Him from the least to the greatest. [Time expired.] ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 327 MR. WILKINSON'S NINTH SPEECH. T ara not going to haggle any more about authorities, but I will continue the argument in support of my proposition. My opponent says that Psedo-baptist authorities are with him. He quotes from one such authority who declares that infant baptism is of post- apostolic origin and has no foundation in the word of God ; but there are thousands who hold differently, and for every scholar among the ranks of the Psedo-baptists who can be found on that side, a thousand can be found on this side. Besides, it is very strange, if the authori- ties he quotes are so certain about infant baptism not being taught in the Scriptures, that they are Psedo-baptists, yet I'll guarantee they all defend their practice from the Bible. It is also strange if Dr. Bledsoe declared at one time that " the doctrine is not found in the New Testament, either in express terms or by implication," and at another time that is "clearly deducibl" " Irom the Scripture. Still, you will observe, his remark, as quoted by my opponent in his last speech, relates to the New Testament, and not to the whole Bible. And so you will find in every case, almost without exception, there is some explanation of these men's utterances not found in the scraps quoted by their opponents, which if supplied would make their teach- ings consistent. I have never known an instance where this was not the case. Let this suflfice about the authorities. In my debates with these gentlemen I have been treated to a great many dishes of resurrection hash, but I think the last speech I listened to from my opponent contained the biggest dose I ever had to take. I think the audience is entitled to a dish of something fresh from him, and I hope they will get it unless he has exhausted the supply. He tried to create an erroneous impression with respect to my proposition. Let us look at the subject fairly. I say, first, that infant baptism is of Divine authority. That confines me to the Scriptures. But I do not stop there. I say, not only that it is of Bivine appointment, but also that it has been practiced in the Chris- tian Church from apostolic times. My proof under the first clause must necessarily be confined to the Scriptures. Under the latter clause I have simply to prove that it has existed from the close of the New Testament Canon to the present time in the Christian Church. There is no use in his attempting to take any advantage of me by trying to make the two parts of my proposition overlap each other, for it is not fair to do so. The dodge is quite transparent. 328 REPORT OF DEBATE My opponent says there is not a case of conversion before baptism recorded in the Bible, except that of Cornelius, and that was a miracle. I shall be glad if he will tell us what he means by a miracle. Effects are produced chiefly in three ways : by natural law, by human agency, and by Divine power outside of natural law. It is a miracle when God exercises His power outside of natural law. In which of these ways are all conversions effected 1 Are they effected by natural law 1 This one conversion, my opponent says, was a miracle. What about other conversions 1 In what way does this conversion differ from the rest ? God can exercise His saving power when He pleases 1 He is not confined to outward ordinances in order to save men. You are not required either to have a dip in the water or a lot of water poured over you in order that Christ may get into your heart. " But God is the author of those outward rites," says my opponent, "and must operate on men's hearts through their instrumentality." It would be a strange thing, however, if He put up a barrier between Himself and man's salvation so that it should by necessity depend on human instrumentality. God cannot convert a man, according to my opponent's theory, until He can get him, or some other Disciple priest, to come and dip the individual. Thus the Lord Jesus has got to send for Mr, Harding before He can convert a man ! What do you think of such a doctrine as that ? The Lord Jesus has bound His hands behind Him so that He cannot convert a man's soul, nor get into his heart by His Holy Spirit till He gets some one who believes in dipping to put the candidate under water so that He can get at him ! It amuses me. This case of Cornelius was the first case of conversion after the intro- duction of the Gospel to the Gentiles, It was therefore a representa- tive case. It showed the way in which Christ would receive the Gentiles as soon as they believed in Him, and Divine truth got into their hearts, water or no water. In ordinary cases God does not visibly manifest the pouring out of His Spirit. We do not therefore know when it takes place. We have to take a man's word for it, if he is an adult ; if an infant we know he is all right, for God says so, John was filled with the Holy Ghost from his mother's womb, but . surely it was not because of his faith ! There is another " skeleton in the closet" for my opponent, and he is terribly afraid of it. Abraham was justified, regenerated, made a child of God, then the Divine seal was put upon him. The same thing took place in the case of Isaac at eight days old. Adults have first to be made new creatures by faith in Christ, and then visibly sealed. The seal is applied in the case of infants without any faith, proving that they are already in Christ, ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 329 This is another " skeleton in the closet." Isaac received the same seal as Abraham and enjoyed the same Vjlessing. Will my opponent deny this 1 Did the seal mean one thing to Abraham and another thing to Isaac 1 I say it meant the same thing in both cases. It meant that both belonged to the Lord and that He had a right to put His mark upon them. Will Mr. Harding please tell us where there is a "thus saith the Lord" for teaching that the seal to Abraham meant one thing and the same seal to Isaac another 1 He has given us nothing yet but the authority of his own illustrious opinion, Now, with respect to the olive tree illustration. My opponent in- terprets the term "natural branches" as referring to the connection between the Jews and Christ " by natural generation." Yet he admits they were "broken off" from that connection by unbelief. That is, the connection resulting from natural generation ceased because of their unbelief ! And the Gentiles were "grafted in" by faith in the place of the Jews and became our Lord's natural relatives, and if the Jews continue not in unbelief they will be restored again as our Lord's natural relatives ! Well, well, I never knew before that faith and unbelief had anything to do with natural relationships. But my opponent's false theory of interpretation frequently lands him in just such absurdities. The fact is that the olive tree has nothing to do with natural generation, but is a figure of the Jewish Church of which all Jews in their infancy were considered members in a spiritual sense, and so continued until " broken off by unbelief," This membership was recognized by the seal of circumcision. They knew no other. Now, when the Gentiles are grafted in and become branches of the same olive tree are they not to be sealed also 1 They were under the old dispensation. All Gentile proselytes to the Jewish Church were sealed with circumcision. Are they not to be sealed under the new dispensation also ? If so, with what seal ? My opponent admits that Gentiles are not to be circumcised. But he says the Spirit is the seal under this dispensation. Very good. And the gift of the Spirit is called baptism. Water baptism simply makes this visible, hence as the Spirit's baptism is the spiritual seal, so ritual baptism is the sym- boUc seal. This being the case, baptism answers precisely the same end now that circumcision formerly did. I do not believe that cir- cumcision sealed righteousness to Abraham in its spiritual essence, but only in ceremonial figure. This outward seal was the sign and pledge of it. I believe as much as my opponent does tliat the Holy Spirit seals us " to the day of redemption ; " therefore I do not believe it is done in ritual baptism. I believe baptism is the outward visible 330 REPORT OP DEBATE illustration of it. As circumcision was the outward seal and pledge of justification under the old dispensation, so baptism is the outward pledge and seal of justification under the new dispensation, and the outward seal is not the seal itself, it is only the sign of it (see Rom. 4:11). It was not the circumcision of Abraham's fiesh, therefore, that regenerated his heart ; nor was circumcision a spiritual seal. The real sealing was effected under the old dispensation as well as this by the Holy Spirit. Nor does baptism regenerate the heart ; baptism with water only makes the Spirit's operations visible. I hope my opponent will remember to draw a distinction between things that differ ; the spiritual reality and the outward shadow of that reality are two things, yet he has put the substance in place of the shadow and the shadoinr in place of the substance. 1 pointed this out last night and I hope he will bear it in mind. He says we give no blessing to children in baptism, except a few drops of water. He has sought to leave the impression on your mind that because he prays for children he is a prayer ahead of us. But we pray for children, too, therefore we give a few drops of water more than he does. And we symbolize the safe condition of the child, and religiously recognize that it is neither a heathen nor a child of the devil. There is no such distinction, as far as their religious con- dition is concerned, in the case of my opponent's children. They are in the same condition in the eyes of the world as are the children of barbarians and heathens. What does he confer in baptism that we do not, except a good wetting, a burial in water in imitttion of a funeral, and often a bad cold and not unfrequently a shroud and coffin. I have just received a letter from a Presbyterian minister in the county of Simcoe who said he had an interview with a gentleman near Ottawa within the last few days who told him that a daughter of one of his neighbors was recently baptized by immersion, took cold and died. I have a book in my possession giving a number of such instances. That is what my opponent gives more than I give, because no one ever heard of any one taking cold from being baptized by sprinkling. He admits that our doctrine would put every man, woman and child into the Church in a short time. Well, I cannot say as much for his, for it puts every infant and invalid and all, however sincere, who cannot accept this immersion-superstition-dogma, outside the Church, and keeps them there, relegating their souls to the limbo of the un- circumcised. As for the assumption that infants go to heaven without the media- tion of Christ, it is a bald, baseless assumption of his own, without the UN THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 881 first scrap of reason, or Scripture, or common sense to recommend it. Until he gives us soraetliing besides his own unsupported ipse dixit to support it, it isn't worth a rush. And the very idea of a man's re- quiring people in a debate to accept his own solitary opinion as evidence is rather cool even for winter weather. He cannot find a child in heaven if he or she has not come there by the blood of the Lamb ; he cannot find a scrap of Scripture evidence that any child or human being goes to heaven except through the death of Christ. " No man can come to the Father except by Me." My opponent has prated much about faith, faith, faith. We attach as much importance to faith as he does. He says the Lord does not enjoin any condition on children. They are not capable of complying with conditions. What is faith 1 It is resting on Christ for the forgiveness of sins, and infants do not require to do so, for they have no sins to forgive. My oppo- nent quotes from Romans, 4th chapter, to show that Abraham was the father of all that believe. True, and circumcision sealed their faith Yet he says it was a seal of an earthly land property — a huge pile of dirt. He says it did not refer to spiritual blessings at all, it meant nothing but a pile of dirt in Judea. He says the covenant of circum- cision was not the one fulfilled in Christ. Then Paul must have been much mistaken. (Compare Rom. 4 : 16 with Gen. 17 : 5.) Either Paul is wrong or Mr. Harding is wrong, and you can pin your faith to which ever of those gentleman you think is best deserving of your belief. It does not matter to me, it matters to you. You would think, to hear ray opponent talk, that it is impossible to admit children into a covenant along with adults except on the same conditions. Or if the conditions should be difierent, this fact raust always be specified when any reference is made to the matter. Yet we have a covenant made with Abraham involving faith as a condition on his part before receiving the seal, and we know that his infant ofi"- spring were included and the same seal applied to them and nothing said about conditions of any kind. So, if there is any incongruity about the matter, God is the author of it. And the very same thing may be said about baptism. We know it is the symbol of the same blessing as circumcision, namely, righteousness. We know that adults are required to believe before receiving it, and we see no greater in- congruity about applying it unconditionally to infants than in the case of circumcision. Adults must believe, as I have shown, in order to be justified. Infants are already in a justified state before God and have no need of faith, hence it is not required of them. He imputes tb me the statement that the covenant of circumcision 332 REPORT OF DBUATB was not an everlasting covenant. I never uttered such a word. I never dreamed of making such a statement. My argument is based on the fact that it ia an everlasting covenant and therefore cannot be confined to the land of Judea, because the land o'f Judea is not ever- lasting, and the New Testament points us to an " inheritance, incor- ruptible, undefiled, and that fadeth not away, reserved in heaven." Nothing could be more false tlian to impute to me the statement that the covenant was not everlasting. With respect to the word matheteuaate. He says it means to in- struct. Certainly. But when I say, matheteusate, go make disciples of, I am simply tolling you to go and bring the people into the school where they may be instructed. The law was our instructor or " school master " until Christ came, but when He camo we had no need of such a school master any longer. Christ became our teacher according to Divine prophecy concerning the Christian Church, which says that " all her children should be taught of the Lord," Therefore, says Christ, "Take My yoke upon you and learn of Me." Bring the nations to Christ and let them learn of Him, is the meaning of the commission. It is not a command confined merely to instruction ; it is to bring in the people that they may receive instruction; bring them in by baptism ; then " teach them to observe all things whatso- ever I have commanded you." That is the Divine command. Is this to put Mark against Matthew t If he consults the revised Testament — no doubt he knew it — he will find that the passage in Mark, from verse eight to the end, is set ofi" from the rest of the chapter, and con- stitutes a separate paragraph. He will also find in the margin the statement that all the verses of the chapter after verse eight do not appear in the two oldest Greek MSS. and some other authorities, and that some other authorities have a different ending to the Gospel. Yet my opponent placed the passage which is to be found among these verses against an authority which was never questioned. He insists on faith, faith, faith. But Mark says, " He that believeth not shall be damned." A baby believes not, and therefore in every sense, according to his own doctrine, he logically damns the babies. They cannot believe, therefore they must go under. I want to show that the Church of God which was begun in the days of Abraham and sealed with the seal of circumcision is the same to-day as it was then. It is not another institution, but the same insti- tution. It is too often assumed that there is nothing in common between these two dispensations, that everything under the former had been swept away and everything started anew. YoU would scarcely ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 333 suppose that God's people under these two dispensations were as nearly related as forty-Heoond cousins. With respect to the olive tree : Paul says, " And if some of the branches bo broken off and thou being a wild olive tree wert graffed in among them and with them partakest of the root and fatness of the olive tree, boast not against the branches. But if thou boast thou barest not the root, but the root thee." That is a perfectly clear illus- tration of the fact that the Gentile Church is not some new institu- tion, but a continuation of the old Ohurcb, grafted on the original stock, Christ being the administrator of this dispensation, Moses and his successors in the Levitical priesthood the administrators of that dispensation. The now covenant was with the House of Israel and the House of Judah. The very same fact is more fully stated in Ephesians 2:11, 12, "Wherefore remember that ye being in time past Gentiles in the flesh, who are called uncircumcision by that which is called the circumcision in the flesh made by hands ; that at that time ye were with- out Christ, being aliens from the commonwealth of Israel and strangers from the covenants of promise, having no hope and without God in the world." But Gentiles and Jews were made one by the blood of Christ, and He hath broken down the middle wall of partition between us. It is needless to multiply proof although I have plenty at hand. It is the same God that established all things from the beginning, the same Christ, "who is over all, God blessed forever," and yet not the same Church 1 the same Saviour under the old dispensation as under the new, yet not the same Gospel salvation 1 the same Spirit under the old as under the new ; the same doctrines precisely under the old as under the new ; the same moral law under the old as under the new ; the same design, viz., the regeneration of the heart, preparing man for heaven, under the old as under the new ; the same result, the cleansing of the soul, under the old as under the new ; the same end, taking man to heaven when he shall die, under the old as under the new ; the same heaven promised and believed in and hoped for ; the same salvation — all the same, but illustrated to the world in diflferent ways. Yet my opponent would have you believe there is nothing in common between those two institutions. It is the same thing, but under diflferent manifestations. But you see it is the same. So, if I show you the Church of Christ in its infancy and in the bud under the former dispensation, and show you the same Church under the new dispensation in its full bloom, in its manhood and strength, it is the same institution. Because the dispensation is changed and the Divine plan concerning human redemption is more fully unfolded, is it 334 REPORT OF DEOATK not, therofore, the same ] Is it not the same Divine stream of truth runnin|{ clown through and permeating the whole 1 and is not that fact illustrated in the prophetic river of Ezekiel.that flowed out from under the threshold of the temple ? First, the waters were up to the ankles; second, to the knees; third, to the loins; fourth, a river to swim in ; fifth, an ocean, npreading out and taking in the whole wide world. "Go into all the world and preach the Gospel to every creature." Not two rivers. The same in its Divine expansiveness, in its all-comprehensiveness. Those who have but feeble intelligence to comprehend, and so but imperfectly understand the Divine purposes, cannot see it in its comprehensiveness. Let me recommend my opponent to come up into the Divine mount with Moses and look out over the promised land, if he cannot enter it, and get a little glimpse of the all- comprehensiveness and harmony and glory and beauty and magni- tude of the Divine plan as it is unfolded before all the nations in all its magnificence. Let him behold tho Divine superstructure rise like the temple of Solomon without even the sound of any human instru- ment upon its stones and pillars, a lovely temple of the living God. It seems to me if there is anything under tho whole canopy of heaven calculated to impress the unbelieving or sceptical mind with the Divine origin or authenticity of the Christian religion, whatever evil spirit may be manifested by its adherents, it is this great fact that because of the unity, harmony, and superabounding glory of the whole it is manifest that one all-pervading, superintending, infinite mind must have originated, must have supervised the erection of the super, structure, and will do so until the last stone is brought on with shout- ings of grace, grace unto it. My opponent's theory, on the other hand, by denying the unity of the plan, destroys the harmony, and detracts from the magnificence of the superstructure, making it fragmentary and to a large extent earthly in its nature and design. Thus instead of spiritualizing the covenant and raising men's thoughts to God, he materializes it and points them to the earth. For my part I prefer the former. And now let me give a passing 'glance at a few of my opponent's positions before I resume my seat. I. He is fond of quoting the fifteenth chapter of Acts to prove that it was the Gentiles only who were exempted from circumcision by the action of " the apostles and elders " in their council at Jeru- salem. I want to remind the congregation that at that council Peter distinctly testified that " God put no difference " between the Gentiles and the Jews, "purifying their hearts by faith." "Now, therefore," ON TUB MODR AND 8UIIJECT8 OP IIAPTI8M. 33S said he, "why tempt ye Qod, to ^ut a yoke upon the neck of the disciples, which neither our fathers nor wo were able to bear." Yet my opponent expects to convince you that the Jews are still bearing that yoke, by Divino authority, and must continue to bear it while the world stands; and all tliis because Paul, to allay the prejudices of certain Jews, on one occasion circuniciaed a young man who was, by descent, a Greek, und not a Jew ; and on another occasion ho shaved his head and purified himself, ceremonially, to satisfy the Jews that he was not striving to overthrow circumcision and the law of Moses. (See Acts 21:20, etc.) Now, if this proves that Paul was still advocating circumcision among the Jews, it equally proves that ho was still advocating the Mosaic law, for these two things are coupled together in the account. But the facts are, not that Paul sanctioned the continuance of either, but simply showed to the Jews that he was not seeking to undermine either. His aim was simply to show that the provisions of the Gospel fully mot the demands of both. But the blinded minds of those bigoted Jews were not to be enlight- ened in a day, nor by a single apostolic lesson ; therefore, until he could gradually undermine and remove their prejudices, he deemed it better to convince them that he was not an enemy of these old insti- tutions, as they had been told. Now, whenever, in future, my opponent quotes this circumstance in support of circumcision, let him bear in mind that it equally supports the ceremonial law, which he himself will not deny has been abrogated. I hope, therefore, to hear no more nonsense on this subject. 2. Regarding the case of Timothy, my opponent persists in affirming that Paul would not have circumcised him if his mother had not been a Jewess. How does he knowl Does Meyer, "the greatest of I'iblical exegetes," say so 1 Does Neander, " the prince of Church i. -ians," say sol Does Bledsoe, "the most able, learned, and lid of all the Methodists of the United States," say so 1 " Where are all the scholars gone in this emergency? And what can my opponent do without the scholars ? He can vociferate, only vociferate his empty assertions. It is enough for sensible people that the inspired penman says it was because his father was a Greek. There I rest my cause. The case of Titus was not a parallel case at all. The demand for his circumcision was " because of false brethren unawares brought in, who came in privily to spy out Paul's liberty, • . . that they might bring him into bondage. To whom he gave place by subjection, no, not for an hour." (See Gal. 2 : 3, etc.) Yet my opponent persistently tries to convey the impression that it was 336 REPORT OF DEBATE because there was no Jewish Wood in his veins that Paul refused to circumcise him, which is false. But what say the scholars, Bledsoe, Meyer, and Neanderl We know what Paul says, and with all intel- ligent and unprejudiced persons that will suffice. 3. But my friend supposes a case, viz., that if I could find a case of infant baptism seventeen years after the beginning of the Christian dispensation, would not that settle the question ? Now, let me sup- pose a case. Suppose baptism had been the seal of the covenant under the old dispensation, and circumcision had been appointed under the new ; and suppose the Jews had been so much wedded to baptism as a distinguishing sign that they were very reluctant to relinquish it. And suppose Paul, to allay Jewish prejudice toward a fellow-laborer, had baptized him some seventeen years after the beginning of the Christian dispensation, while at the same time declaring to his countrymen that " if any man is called out of baptism let him not be baptised ; that baptism is nothing, and the absence of baptism is nothing, but the keeping of the commandments of God " — that "in Jesus Christ neither baptism availeth anything, nor the want of baptism, but faith, which worketh by love " — that " as many as desire to make a fair show in the flesh they constrain you to be baptized; only lest they should suffer persecution for the cross of Christ" — that " I, if I yet preach baptism, why do I yet suffer perse- cution? then is the offence of the cross ceased;" that "in Christ ye are baptized with the baptism made without hands, in putting off the body of the sins of the flesh by the baptism of Christ ; having been circumcised with him," etc., would this single case of baptism, under these circumstances, prove that the Jews were to continue to baptize their children through all time, especially if the new rite (circum- cision) was transparently for the same purpose, a symbol of the same truth 1 Surely no one will so argue. Yet this is a parallel case, and my opponent's supposed case doesn't come within forty gun-shots of being parallel. In fact, judging from his efforts thus far, he seems incapable of dra-.ing a parallel. I guess he uses a crooked ruler. 5. With regard to John's baptism not coming in the place of circumcision, I reply that John's baptism, like all ceremonial purifi- cations, belonged to the same dispensation that circumcision did, and, hence, could not be its substitute ; while Christian baptism belongs to another dispensation, under which circumcision, as I have shown, is abolished. Hence the difference. But I am ashamed to have to meet sach objections. 6. Children, we are told, cannot believe, therefore they cannot be ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OP BAPTISM. 337 baptized under the circumcision. My opponent haggles most persist- ently over this point. Let me, however, remind him that tbey cannot confess their sins any more than they can believe. Yet we are told, in Matt. 3 : 5, 6, that there " went out to John Jerusalem, and all Judea, and all the region round about Jordan, and were baptized of him in Jordan, confessing their sins." Now, on my opponent's prin- ciple of reasoning, it is evident either that there were no infants in those parts, else that they "went out" to John, and "were baptized of him in Jordan, confessing their sins." He can impale himself on whichever horn of this dilemma he thinks will be most comfortable. One thing is certain, viz., there is no exception made of children. So, also, of the commission as found in Mark, of which my opponent is 80 passionately fond ; it says, " Go ye into all the world (surely there are infants somewhere in the world), and preach the gospel to every creature " (surely infants are creatures, and there is no exception made of them) ; hence, on the same principle of reasoning, the gospel is to be preached to them. Does my opponent say that this is "silly?" I admit it. But it is exactly of a piece with his own reasoning when he says infants cannot believe, therefore infants can- not be baptized under the commission. Nobody misunderstands such general expressions but those who have an interest in doing so. For a further illustration of the folly of such reasoning I refer my opponent again to the extract from Dr. Wardlaw, given in another speech. 7. The same remarks are pertinent in the case of the covenant referred to by Jeremiah, in which all are to know the Lord, " from the least of them unto the greatest of them." Of course this does not apply to children any more than the passages I have just quoted ; nor does that prove, by any means, that children are excluded. But such passages afford a convenient pretext to a forlorn cause to indulge in petty quibbling. 8. My opponent is very much exercised about the diversity of belief between my friend Paterson and myself ; but if he will address himself to the reconciliation of the diversities between the different schools of immersionists, he will have his hands full. If diversity on my side proves, infant baptism unscriptural, diversity on his side proves immersion unscriptural. But this seems to show on what a small hook he can hang a big quibble. 9. My friend says that Abraham is the father of all who walk in the steps of his faith. Let me remind him that Paul says he is the father of circumciaiort to all such, which means that they, being chil- 22 338 REPORT OF DEBATE dren of the father of circumcision, are themselves accounted as circumcised — " their uncircumcision is counted for circumcision." Rom. 2 : 26. This being the case, all who walk in Abraham's steps are entitled to the inheritance of which circumcision was the seal. My opponent says this was the land of Canaan. I say it was righteous- ness. If lie is right, then the only inheritance believers can claim is a few square inches of ground in Judea, for, considering the number of the " heirs," there will be but little for each. But if I am right, then all believers, including their father Abraham, will inherit a heavenly inheritance, of which the land of Canaan was but the imper- fect type and pledge. I will let the people judge. 10. Mr. Harding says that to justify is to pardon, to forgive. I admit that when used with reference to sinners it involves this ; but in the proper sense of the term it signifies to pronounce just, or innocent in the eyes of the law. We are told in Matt. 11 : 19 that "wisdom is justified of her children." In Luke 7 : 29, that " all the people and the publicans justified God." In 1 Tim. 3 : 16, that "God was mani- fest in the flesh, justified in the Spirit," etc. But in these, as in other cases, it cannot mean pardoned, but only vindicated, or pronounced just. Hence my opponent cannot prove that infants are incapable of justification, and therefore he cannot prove them incapable of baptism. 11. In one of his speeches he says that God did not promise the land of Canaan to Abraham for himself, but for his seed. In the very next .. °iath lie quotes the passage in Gen. 17:8, where God says, "I will give unto thee, and to thy seed t" v thee, the land wherein thou art a stranger, all the land of Canaan, for an everlasting pos- session." So, out of his own mouth he is not justified. God prom- ised Abraham that land just as much as He did his seed, and Abraham did not forfeit it through unbelief, but, with many others of the patriarchs, he " died in faith, not having received the promises;" for God "gave him none inheritance in that land, no, not so much as to set his foot on." (Heb. 11:13; Acts 7:5.) I argue, therefore, that the land of Canaan was only the visible type and pledge of the inheritance God intended for His people, else His promise to them has failed. Now, my opponent can take whichever side of this question that suits him best. Neither one will relieve his difliculty. 12. I don't know why my opponent persists in representing me as teaching that infants are born again. I teach no such thing. I teach that they are, by virtue of the atonement, in the same moral and spiritual condition, without either faith or repentance, as adult believers are brought into by faith. But I, as fully as he, believe in ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 339 the necessity of regeneration in the case of every human being who is a moral agent ; but I do not believe it can take place in any soul until it is conscious of the motions of evil in itself and capable of exercising a personal trust in Christ. Moral agents are dealt with on a different principle, under the divine economy, from unconscious infants. The atonement is imputed unconditionally to the latter — conditionally to the former. Hence, when an infant attains to accountability it ceases to enjoy the benefits of the atonement with- out its p^sonal acceptance of the same. Prior to this it is justified, or guiltless (not pardoned), in the eyes of the law, and this is what I mean by its being justified and pure. Nor can any infant, born under the economy of grace, be in danger of hell-fire. Now let us hear no more twaddle on this point. 13. My opponent is right, no doubt, that there is no good thing that a man can do that is not taught, directly, or indirectly, in the Bible. Hence the man who pulled his neighbor out of the well found an indirect command for it. On the same principle, precisely, we baptize infants. But our opponents are not satisfied with the infer- ential command, and so demand a direct one. According to their own principle, however, they must justify female communion, the change of the Sabbath, family prayer, and a great many other good things, by inference. [Time expired.] MR. HARDING'S NINTH REPLY. Mr. Wilkinson says he is " not going to haggle any more about the authorities." Well, if he could find one inspired author who makes a favorable mention of infant baptism, that would be enough. But it is a fact — and the fact is ruinous to his cause — that he cannot find any mention of it at all, by an inspired man, either favorable or unfavorable. And just here I have not one, but hundreds, of the most learned of Psedo-baptists agreeing with me; that is, learned Psedo- baptists generally grant that no express mention of infant baptism can be found in the Bible : they agree that there is no command to baptize infants, and that there is no example of an infant's being baptized in the entire Bible. I think a religious ordinance is in a 340 REPORT OF DEBATE bad way when its most learned supporters freely grant that it does not appear that any inspired man ever commanded it, or ever gave an example of it by practicing it himself. If infant baptism was commanded or practiced in the days of inspiration, it does not appear — it is not shown by the divine records. But just here these learned Pfedo-baptists begin to divide : some of them say that while the rite is not taught by command, nor by example, in the Scriptures, it can be deduced from them by a logical inference, and that it was doubtless practiced in New .Testament times ; while others of them boldly affirm that it is of post-apostolic origin, an institution of the Church that arose after the days of inspi ration. Not one man, as Mr. Wilkinson would intimate, but many, with Neander and Meyer heading the list, belong to this latter class ; some of whom, it is proper to remark, are affected with the Roman Catholic idea that the Church has the right to make or change ordinances as she needs them. Of the former class — that is, of those who hold that the rite can be drawn from the Scriptures by a necessary inference — it can be truly said that they are in the most inextricable confusion ; there is not a single argument, or passage, upon which they agree as teaching their practice. Some of them, like Mr. Wilkinson, appeal to the argument from circumcision ; others of them say this has nothing to do with infant baptism ; and others still. Dr. Stuart for instance, say, " The covenant of circumcision furnishes no ground for infant baptism," that men are " unwary " who so argue from it, and that " numberless difficulties " present themselves in their way as soon as they begin to do it. Some depend upon the commission, while others say there is nothing in this document in favor of the practice ; some depend upon the households, while others shake their heads sadly and turn away from them ; and so on to the end ; they agree about not one single passage ; one man shouts, " Here is the passage that teaches infant baptism by a necessary inference ;" his brethren rush about him, look eagerly at the place, and then mournfully say, " We cannot see it." Why is all this 1 Why cannot these men, who want to sus- tain this ceremony, agree about a passage upon which to depend 1 Simply because it is not taught anywhere in the Bible ; for, if it were, they could all see it and agree. In order that you may see the unfortunate plight in which these Psedo-baptists are, my friends, I ask you to consider the following supposition : Suppose immersionists were divided into two parties, one holding that immersion is of post- apostolic origin, an institution of ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 341 the Church ; the other, that it is of Divine institution ; suppose this latter party should very generally grant that there is neither command nor example for immersion in the Bible, but that it is taught by infer- ence only ; suppose the party should be very much divided in itself so that it could not agree upon any one passage, or argument, as teaching the rite ; and suppose, finally, it could bo shown that the first mention of immersion for baptism was made one hundred years after the death of the last apostle, by a man who opposed it ; do you not think that we immersionists would be in a bad way, under such circumstances 1 Well, Psedo-baptists are exactly in that case with their infant baptism. Mr. Wilkinson talks a good deal about the " two parts " of his proposition ; he is to show (1) that infant baptism is of Divine authority, and (2) that it has been practiced from apostolic times. Well, I don't care anything about the second part of his proposition ; it matters not to me whether it has been practiced from apostolic times or not ; if it is of Divine authority it ought to be practiced now; if it is not, it ought to be given up now, even though it had been observed from the times of the apostles. Does God require it ? Did Christ and the apostles observe it 1 If God did require it, J/e did it without mentioning it; and not a trace of it can be found in tlie say- ings of Christ, or in the writings of the apostles. Let Mr. Wilkinson show tjjjat the rite was given to us by the Lord, and I will freely grant the second part of his proposition. But as long as he can not find any reference to it whatever, by the Lord or by anyone else, till the time of Tertullian, I will be constrained to believe that it began to be practiced about that time, and that the Lord was no more the author of it than He was of infant communion, which began about the same time. Mr. Wilkinson switches oflF the track again and discusses the ques- tion of the Spirit's work in conversion — a matter that he no more understands than he does the Bible doctrine concerning baptism. He represents me as saying, " There is not a case of conversion before baptism recorded in the Bible, except that of Cornelius, and that was a miracle." I said no such thing. No man who knows what conversion is could say such a thing. What I did say, and what is true, is this : Since Christ ascended on high there has not been a case in which the Spirit was received before baptism, except one^that of Cornelius and his friends — who received a miraculous outpouring of the Spirit, by which they were enabled to speak with tongues, as did the apostles at the beginning. The gospel rule is, that the Spirit is ,,- ;5 342 REPORT OF DEBATE received after baptism ; and to this rule the case at the house of Oornelius is the only exception. Conversion consists (1) in believing with the heart that Jesus is the Christ the Son of God, (2) in repenting of one's sins, (3) and in being baptized upon a confession of this faith of the heart into the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit. Then God forgives and imparts His Holy Spirit. Pardon and the gift of the Spirit are not parts of conversion at all ; they are consequents that immediately follow it. In this connection I want to introduce two statements bearing upon this point, which were made by Peter at different times and to different audiences to which he had j'-^t preached. The first is this : "Repent ye, and be baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ unto the remis- sion of your sins ; and ye shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost." (Acts 2 : 38, Revised Version.) Here we have : (1) Repentance ; (2) Baptism; (3) Pardon; (4) The gift of the Spirit. The connection shows these people were already believers. The second passage is this : " Repent ye, therefore, and turn again, that your sins may be blotted out, that so there may come seasons of refreshing from the presence of the Lord." (Acts 3 : 19.) Here the order is : (1) Repentance ; (2) Turning ; (3) The blotting out of sins ; (4) The seasons of refreshing from the presence of the Lord. After the repentance comes the baptism (turning), and then the gift of the Spirit (the seasons of refreshing). This is the great gospel rule, to which, as I have said, there is but the one exception. Mr. Wilkinson teaches that the Holy Spirit operates immediately upon the sinner's heart in his conversion. I deny it. We will continue this debate for two or three days longer and discuss that proposition, if he says so. I challenge him to meet me here on Monday to debate that proposition. Moreover, I agree to the conditions which he specified the other day — to every one of them.* I will debate with him whether any Church will endorse him or not ; and not one will do it, for his brethren have already said in your hearing that their Churches do not feel the need of engaging in debates ; that they think such debates do no good, or words to that effect. And they are right, too, in one sense ; they do their cause no good. I have now accepted his conditions. (Addressing * Note.— On the day alluded to, Mr. Wilkinson had publicly said that he would not debate with Mr. Harding again, unless it should be agreed that the books used by each party should be open to the inspection of the other during the intermissions ; that rules of drder and decorum should be agreed upon ; and that personalities should be avoided. To these conditions Mr. Harding at once agreed. J* ■^' "• ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 343 Mr. Wilkinson) : Will you mee*; me on Monday and debate that proposition for two or three daysl Mr. WiLKiNSON-^No bravado in thatl Mr. Harding — No; I mean business. Mr. Wilkinson — ^I thought you agreed to drop bravado. Mr. Harding — I thought you came here to debate for two weeks, or three, or for three months, if necessary, (so you said in your first speecli.) He twists and squirms, you see, my friends. I told you that you would see who would be the readiest for this discussion to go on. He does not want it to go on, and he knows well that his friends do not. Mr. Wilkinson thinks it is terrible that conversion is invariably brought about through human agency. Well, it is a fact, no matter how dreadful it may seem to him. "The Lord Jesus has got to send for Mr. Harding before He can convert a man," he exclaims. Yes, it is true that the Lord does always use a preacher when He wants to convert anybody. When He wanted to convert the eunuch. He sent Philip to him; when He wanted to convert Lydia, He sent Paul to her; when He wanted to convert Cornelius, He sent Peter to him. Paul said (2 Cor. 5:18), God "hath given to us the ministry of reconciliation." Was there ever a conversion without faith? Was there ever faith without a preacher'? Plear Paul's answer: "How then shall they call on Him in whom they have not believed? and how shall theybelieve in Him of whom they have not heard ? and how shall they hear without a preacher?" (Rom. 10: 14.) Then in the 17th verse he says: "So then faith cometh by hearing, and hearing by the word of God." So, we see, there was never a conver- sion without faith, and never faith without a preacher. Mr. Wilkinson has been telling us all the time that baptism is the seal of the covenant, and that as infants are in the covenant they should receive the seal. But when I showed him that the gift of the Spirit is the seal of the covenant, that we are sealed by the Spirit, he promptly informs us that the Holy Spirit is the inward, spiritual seal, while baptism is the outward, visible manifestation of it. Now, anybody who has even a very slight knowledge of the New Testament ought to know that is not so ; for, under the Christian dispensation, the Spirit is invariably given after baptism, with but the one exception mentioned. See the case of Jesus (Matt. 3:16); of the apostles (Acts 2:4); of the three thousand (Agts 2 : 38) ; of the Samaritans (Acts 8 : 14-17) ; of the twelve men of Ephesus (Acts 19 : 1-7) ; and so on. Of course baptism could not be " an outward sign of an 84i BKPORT OF DEBATE inward grace," when the •' inward grace " did not yet exist — when the Spirit had not yet been given. Again, the Spirit, without a single exception, was given to l)eliev- ers. Now, if baptism is the outward sign of the indwelling Spirit, it, too, must be given to believers only. Consider the following pass- ages : " If any man thirst, let him come to Me and drink. He that believeth on Me, as the Scripture hath said, out of his belly shall flow rivers of living water. But this spake He of the Spirit, which they that believe on Him should receive." (John 7 : 37-39.) Paul says to the Ephesians : " In whom ye trusted, after that ye heard the word of truth, the gospel of your salvation ; in whom also after that ye believed ye were sealed with that Holy Spirit of promise." (Eph. 1:13). So you see they received the Spirit — were sealed by it — after they believed. And, of course, if baptism is the outward sign of that inward work, it, too, must take place after faith. Mr. Wilkinson, in striving to get out of one tangle, has gotten into another equally as bad — "out of the frying-pan into the fire." But did not the angel prophesy that John would be filled with the Holy Ghost from his mother's womb 1 Yes ; but had that been true of children in general, he would no more have prophesied it of John than he would that he was to have ten fingers and two ears. The fact is, John was the greatest of all the prophets ; he was marvellously and miraculously endowed from his mother's w>mb, and that is what Gabriel foretold. Just here Mr. Wilkinson left the subject again to tell us that he has a letter from a Presbyterian minister, who said he had an inter- view with a gentleman, who said he had a neighbor, who had a daugh- ter, who was immersed recently, and took cold, and died. Just so ; I have heard just such yarns as that before. Somebody said, that some- body told him, that somebody had heard, that somebody was killed by being immersed ; but I have never yet been able to come to the exact place where it happened. (Though I have been at the exact place where a Methodist preacher's wife died just after "shouting.") Per- haps the lady was baptized — very likely — perhaps she died ; but that her death was a result of the baptism I do not believe ; and it would take a little more direct and specific testimony than has been given to convince me. But suppose it were true, what then? Did you never hear of people dying, in ancient times, for Christ ? If Jesus tells us to do anything, must we not do it, even if it kills us 1 In such ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAVTISH. 345 a case, to die \h gain. But I don't believe the statement is true — not a word of it. But if it were true, it would not in the least affect the case ; for if Jesus conunands us to be immersed (and I have shown you that He does), we must be, even if it kills us. Mr. Wilkinson intimates that, as circumcision was given to Abra- ham as " a seal of the righteousness of the faith which he had, yet being uncircumcised," whereas it was given to Isaac while yet an in- fant, that it was designed to be an outward sign of the inward work of the Spirit, a work which he tells us is wrought in the heart of the adult only when he believes, but one which is wrought in all infants : then he adds that baptism has now taken the place of circumcision, and hence should be so applied (that is, to adult believers and to all infants). The heart of his theory — the very sum and substance of it — is this : circumcision was given as a sign of inward purity ; but baptism has taken its place, and therefore it should he given to the pure. This argument is false in both premises : circumcision was not a sign of inward purity to the descendants of Abraham ; baptism has not taken its place. Abraham was circumcised ; so was Ishmael, his thirteen-year old boy ; so were all the males that had been born in his house, or that had been bought with his money, in the self-same day. (See Gen. 17 : 23.) And from that time on adults were circumcised, whether believers or unlielievers, whether good or bad, if born in the house or bought with the money of a Jew. Mr. Wilkinson's argument would be excellent were it not that both premises, and the conclusion, are false. Now, concerning that olive tree argument for the perpetuity of the Church. Mr. Wilkinson claims that the Church of Ohrist began in the days of Abraham, and has been continued till now. He so concludes from the allegory of the olive tree. Here again facts, unmistakable facts, flatly contradict this theory. Nicodemus was '* a ruler of the Jews," " a master of Israel," a leader in the Jewish commonwealth, cir- cumcised according to the Mosaic law; nevertheless, Jesus said to him, "Ye must be born again." He told him plainly, " Except a man be born of water and of the Spirit, he cannot enter into the kingdom of Crod." (John .3 : 5.) That is, one of the most eminent in the Jewish Church was told that he must be born again in order to enter the Church of Christ. He had gotten into the one by a natural birth, but it required a spiritual birth to bring him into the other. Hence we find, all through the Christian dispensation, that the Gospel was preached to the Jew first as it was to the Gentile, and the two parties were received into the Church in precisely the same way. 346 REPORT OP DRnATB Paul says (Gal. 3:24, R. V.), "The law hath been our tutor to V)ring us unto Christ." The Jews were in a preparatory school ; but when Christ came they were invited to leave that school, and, with the Gentiles, to enter the school of the great Master, the Church of God. Some Jews, and many Gentiles, did enter the school by being ••born again," by becoming now creatures. Mr. Wilkinson says I impute to him the stiitoment, '• that the cove- nant of circumcision was not an everlasting covenant." I did no such thing. He is mistaken. But I did understand him to deny that God promised to Abraham the land of Canaan for an everlasting posses- sion. He argued that the land would be destroyed, and hence it could not be an everlasting possession. As usual, Mr. Wilkinson's argument is a direct contradiction of the Word of God. God says, " I will give unto thee, and thy seed after thee, the land wherein thou art a stranger, all the land of Canaan, for an everlasting possession ; and I will be their God." (Gen. 17:8.) It is a statement of the Lord against one of Mr. Wilkinson ; weigh them in the balance, and take your choice, my friends. The Jews are not now dwelling upon their land, because they broke the contract, and God dispersed them. When they turn to the Lord, no doubt they will be restored to their place. Mr. Wilkinson comes to the commission as recorded by Matthew. He comments on the word matheteuo (which means to teach, to make disciples of) thus : " When I say, mathetetisate, go make disciples of, I am simply telling you to go and bring the people into the school where they may be instructed." Just so ; but what did Christ mean when He said it 1 That is what we are concerned about ; net about Mr. Wilkinson's meaning when he says it. By malheteuaate, Jesus meant to preach the Gospel and make believers ; so Mark understood Him. Where Matthew says, " Go ye, therefore, and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them," etc., Mark says, " Go ye into all the world, and preach the Gospel to the whole creation. He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved," etc. According to Mark's understanding of the matter, to make a disciple of one is to produce faith in him by preaching to him. I take him to be a much better authority than Mr. Wilkinson. I don't put Mark against Matthew, as my opponent expresses it, but Mark against Mr. Wilkinson. The fundamental idea in matheteuo is to teach ; and Mark explains that that teaching is done by preaching the Gospel. Mr. Wilkinson feels the force of all this ; he knows that if Mark's testimony remains unimpeached, preaching and faith come before baptism, that they are implied in the command, " Go, makedisciplea" ON THE MODE AND 8UDJECT8 OF BAPTISM. 347 Hence he attacks that passage from Mark. True, there was a doubt in the mind of the revisers about it, but the doubt had reference to its authorship, not to its inspiration. I will bring hero to-night tho Companion to the Revised Version, a work gotten out by one of tho revisers, to prove this statement. They doubted whether Mark wroto the last few verses of his gospel, or whether they were written by some other inspired man ; but they did not doubt their inspiration. The Christian scholarship of the world is divided as to who wrote tho letter to the Hebrews, but they are united as to its inspiration. It is a well-known fact that Moses did not write the latter part of Deuteronomy, since the last chapter gives an account of his death, and of the mourning for him ; but none deny the right of that chapter to a place in the inspired canon of Scripture. But the very best proof in the world that the commission as given by Mark is correct is this : The work of the apostles and evangelists in establishing the Church was in perfect accordance with it. The commands of the commission, as Mark gives them, aretheso : (1) Go ; (2) Preach the gospel ; (3) Baptize the believers. On tlie day of Pentecost the apostles preached ; 3,000 gladly received the word and were baptized ; Philip went to Samaria, preached Christ unto them, and, when they believed the preaching, he baptized them, both men and women ; Peter went to Cornelius, preached Christ to him, and, when he believed, baptized him ; Philip went to the eunuch, preached Ohrist to him, and, when he believed, baptized him. So the practice of these first preachers demonstrates Mark's record of the commission to be correct. But Mr. Wilkinson argues that as Mark says, " He that belie veth not shall be damned," according to my doctrine, infants are logically damned. Not so ; according to my doctrine the commission has nothing to do with infants. It is for those wlio can hear, understand, believe and obey ; who are sinners that need to be saved. But as Mr. Wilkinson claims that infants are under the commission, his doctrine logically damns them, without doubt. Certainly all who come under the commission are damned if they believe not. Mr. Wilkinson grants that his doctrine of infant baptism, if it should prevail, would soon bring every man, woman, and child in the world into his Church. And a nicb (?) Church it would be, with all the murderers, whoremongers, liars and thieves in the world in it 1 Think of the millions of Greek infants that are immersed, of the mil- lions of Roman Catholic, Episcopalian, Presbyterian and Methodist babies that are sprinkled. Think how few of these prove to be God- 348 RKPORT OF DEIIATB foaring iikmi and woinun. What a mass of corrupt Hesh thoy have in their Churohes ! Did Christ ever institute such a miserable rite? Never. Did the apostles over pra ;tico such a one? No. It is an outgrowth of super- stition and ignorance, which began to be adopted to save the little ones from hell ; it has resulted in evil, and only evil ; and it can only be defended by perversion of the word of Ood.and distortion of the facts of history. I have known a man to argue that infants are believers in order to show that they ought to be baptized. [Time expired.] ADDENDA. In preparing our speeches for the book, I saw Mr. Wilkinson's Ninth Speech in printed proof sheets, and then corrected and sent in my Ninth Reply. After n»y reply had been thus prepared and sent in to the printer, Mr, Wilkinson added about four and a half pages to his address. Beginning on page 334 with the words, " And now let me give a passing glance," etc., all from that to the end was added after my reply was given to the printer. To the thirteen paragraphs added I desire to make as brief a reply as possible here. 1. In this first added paragraph Mr. Wilkinson grants that Paul did practice circumcision after the beginning of the Christian dispen- sation, and did convince the Jews that he was not an enemy to the practice. But he wants us to believe that Paul and James knew all the time that it was wrong — that baptism had taken the place of circumcision — but that they pretended that it was right, and practiped it, merely to gratify blinded Jewish bigots. That is, he has Paul and James teaching and practicing a lie, until they can educate the people up to receive the truth. Mr. Wilkinson, with his regard for the truth, may believe that ; I cannot. Paul did right in circumcising Timothy ; he did right in convincing those Jews that it was proper for Jewish Christians to circumcise their children ; he aid right in purifying himself with those four men, in shaving his head, and in entering into the temple with them. When we find the teaching and practice of one apostle approved by another and condemned by none, surely we must receive it. If Mr. Wilkinson could establish his ON THK MODK AND 8UUJRCT8 OF BAFTIHM. 34^ poRitinn that Paiil and .Tames were hero toachiiij? and acting a lio, he would go far towards overthrowing all faith in the Bil)le ; for what could we th(Mi believe 1 Little did I imagine when I Htarted out to dificUHH infant haptiHm, that it would l>e neceKsary for me to defend the sincerity and truthfuliicHH of two apostles of the Lord against the attack of Mr. Wilkinson. But the necessities of his cause force him to make the attack ; for if Paul and •James were sincere and true, then circumcision continucnl to be practiced by the will of the Lord ; baptism did not t<>(;oiu(i childntii of Ahr.iham hy faith, and who hold out faithful unto d((ath, will (UM-tainly hav<^ an inlM^ritancii in tho city of (lod, which will coin(i down out of Imavon to earth, that (Jod may (Iwoll with inon ; and all infants tliat di(! in infancy shall hav(* a place th(!ro. Hut all this has nothing whatovor to do with our «|u«Htion. 10. Christian baptism is not for tho just ; it is "for the ntmission f' J} Kins. 11. This paraf^raph has nothing to do with the quostion under oonsidoration. 12. In this paragraph Mr. Wilkinson says : "1 don't know wliy njy opponent persists in repre.senting mo as teaching that infants are horn again. 1 teach no such thing." In his sixth speech, on page 271, near tln^ bottom of the page, ho says : " I therefore infer from my opponent's own premises that little children Iwilong to the (Jhurch, are liorn again, and thensfore Abraham's spiritual scsed." Who t!an have any confidence in a man who will thus contradict himself? In one place lie teaches that the little ones are membors of tho Church, are Abraham's spiritual seed, are boryi ai/ain ; and then, a little further on, lie flatly denies that he teaches that they are born again. What a miserable doctrine it must be that will thus forc(! a man into such inconsistencies and contradictions ! How much better it would bo for him if he would just believe and teach the truth ! I have never yet mot a Pujdo-baptist in a public discussion who was not forccul into such contradictions and misrepresentations. Tho troul)le is in their causes. 13. If Mr. Wilkinson could .show that infant baptism is taught in tho Bible, in any way, by command, or example, or necessary infer- ence, I would gladly receive it. His opponents do not demand an express command, as ho says ; they will b(i content if ho can find it taught in any way in the Bibhi. But he cannot even convince his own people that it is taught there. J. A. 11. 352 REPORT OP DEBATE SIXTH DAY— EVENING, MR. WILKINSON'S TENTH SPEECH. I might spend considerable time in dwelling on the details of mj opponent's reply, but as this subject is by this time well understood by this congregation, I will speak but briefly in reviewing his last speech. In fact, I find very little in it which I desire to review, and much of it had no bearing whatever on the question at issue. As to the quotations from authorities with respect to the practice of immersion after the apostolic age, I have admitted the existence of the practice very soon after the days of the apostles, hence he has been frittering his time in constructing and demolishing another man of straw. No doubt it is very pleasant pastime for him in the absence of more profitable employment. I never charged him with quoting Moses Stuart to misrepresent the case in regard to the post-apostolic practice ; but what I did accuse him with doing was that of quoting Dr. Stuart's explanation of the classical meaning of bapfo and baptizo as dip, plunge and immerse, but failing to tell you that Stuart, like all Paedo-baptist authorities, explained that it did not mean that in the New Testament, and that we do obey the word of God by baptizing people by affusion and sprinkling. That is the position of Moses Stuart, and Mr. Harding never touched that point, but left the impression that the definition he quoted from Stuart was that of Christian baptism. My friend is very much exercised about the disagreement of Psedo-baptists, but if he will be so kind as to show the weakness of ray arguments, and leave Psedo-baptists to reconcile their own differ- ences, he will be doing much better service to his own cause. Besides, he knows full well, that with very rare exceptions Paedo-baptist scholars are a unit in believing and teaching, as I do, that baptism occupies the same place under the new diiipensation that circumcision did under the old, being the New Testament seal of the covenant of grace, and that so sure as circumcision was administered to infants under the former dispensation, so sure must baptism be administered to them under this. Nor has he succeeded, with all his sophistry, in .T. ON THE MODE AND SURTECTS OF BAPTISM. -353 overthrowing this position. The fact that, perhaps, one Psedo-baptist in a million thinks otherwise, by no means affects the validity of this position. A far greater proportion of Psedo-baptists imagine that immersion was the apostolic mode of baptism, but they are generally pitied by their brethren for their simplicity. Besides, the position of nearly all. the early fathers of the Church is identical with my own. Justin Martyr, one of the oldest and most reliable of the Christian fathers, in speaking of baptism and circumcision unites thorn together as the same thing at the beginning of the post-apostolic age. Not only Justin Martyr, but St. Basil, who lived from 327 to 379 A. D., testifies to the same effect. Chrysostom testified to the same effect. We have also the testimony of Gregory, Origen and others, who, with one accord, recognized and acknowledged the doctrine which I have been teaching, viz., that baptism in the early post-apostolic Church was recognized everywhere as having come in the place of, and as a substitute for, the rite of circumcision. I am not aware that there was a single opponent of this view in the early post-apostolic Church. I think tho.se early fathers who lived in the immediate neighborhood of the time of the apostles, and certainly knew what the sentiments of the Church were in those days, must have had a better understanding of that matter than we can possilily have after the lapse of 1800 years, and consequently must be better witnesses than we are, or can be in this day; and they with one accord recognized the fact I have stated. With respect to the 16th chapter of Mark, I said the revisers stated that the latter part of the chapter was not to be found in some of the most ancient MSS. In reply my opponent said that he would bring an explanation by one of the revisers, and read it to-night. I will read to you, in anticipation of what may be read to-night on the other side, the note in the Revised Testament : " The two oldest Greek manuscripts, and some other authorities, omit from verse 9 to the end. Some other authorities have a different ending to the gospel." My opponent has therefore based his argument on a portion of S'cripture not to be found in the oldest and best MSS. Having made these brief references to his statements, I will now pass hurriedly on to give some of the reasons why the outward form of the seal was changed. I have shown that the senl itself was not changed — I claim that most distinctly — but the mere outward form of the sed was changed, because a change of dispensation had taken place &nd it was necessary that there should be a change in the outward S23 354 REPORT OF DEBATE form of the seal in order to agree with the genius of the dispensation to which that seal belonged. Why the seal was changed. I cannot enter too minutely into this question, but may assign some reasons that have been suggested to my own mind. 1. Circumcision was adapted to only one sex. We are not called upon to prove why God selected a rite of only partial application to designate membership among His ancient people, but we know that such was the fact. Nor can we show on what ground, ritually, females claimed Church membership. There was certainly no initiatory ordi- nance, yet they certainly were recognized as Church members and enjoyed all the privileges of such. It is conjectured that ablutions and sacrifices served them instead of circumcision, and also "that they were considered as being completely represented in the man." This is a subject, however, on which I cannot enlarge in a promiscuous audience. 2. The present dispensation is pre-eminently the dispensation of.the Spirit. Under the old dispensation spiritual influences were enjoyed, and circumcision denoted spiritual operations, even the purification of the heart through faith ; yet this idea was not then so conspicuous in fact, therefore it was not made so conspicuous in the initiatory ordi- nance. But when the gift of the Spirit became the conspicuous and distinguishing feature of the divine administration, and pre-eminently the seal of the covenant whereby we are " sealed unto the day of redemption," circumcision as a seal became inappropriate, and some- thing more distinctly and clearly symbolic of spiritual influences was required, hence the introduction of water baptism in palpable fulfil- ment of the prophecies : "So shall He sprinkle many nations;" "I will sprinkle clean water upon you, and ye shall be clean ;" "I will pour water upon him that is thirsty, and floods upon the dry ground," etc., which, although doubtless referring to the eff"usion of the Spirit under the similitude of water, evidently also allude to the symbol itself in the fact, as well as the mode, of its application. 3. Circumcision also denoted purity of heart, as intimated, but was certainly not so suggestive of this, nor so significant as the use of water. Besides, heart purity is the distinguishing object of the entire scheme of redemption. It was for this that Christ shed His blood, that He might "redeem us from all iniquity, and purify unto Himself a peculiar people," etc. To this great fact multitudes of prophecies point, and this is the burden of the New Testament teachings, and the grand design of the giving of the Holy Ghost. It was meet, there- '■?f ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 366 fore, that a sign should be employed under this dispensation more dis- tinctly indicative of the purifying influences of the blood of Christ, and of the Holy Spirit. No element in nature is better adapted to this end than water, as it is, pre-eminently, the uniform and universal element employed for purposes of cleansing. Hence the propriety of such a change in the ordinance as to substitute baptism for circum- cision. 4. Another probable reason for a change in this rite was the severe and painful nature of the operation in connection with circumcision. It was appropriate under a dispensation where men must be constantly reminded that the putting away of sin could only be effected by suf- fering, and the shedding of blood, but since *' grace and truth came by Jesus Christ," through the shedding of His blood once for all, such a rite would be inappropriate — such a seal would be an anomaly, hence the substitution of a milder and more ajjpropriate seal, if we exclude the dipping-in-cold-weather process. 5. The Holy Ghost being " not yet given " under the old dispensa- tion, and many never having heard that there was any Holy Ghost, and Jesus Christ not having come into the world, and people's views concerning Him being very vague^ it would have been exceedingly unintelligible to administer religious ordinances in the name of the Son and the Holy Ghost, accordingly no such formula was used in connection with any religious observance under the old dispensation. But when the names of the Son and Holy Ghost became, and were intended to become, so common under the dispensation of the Gospel, and when the manifestation of the Divine character and personality was so clear and complete, it was fitting that the names of the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost should be made prominent in connec- tion with all religious teachings and observances. Accordingly, at ihe inauguration of the New Dispensation the Church's Divine Lord commissioned his ambassadors tr ptize, or seal, all who entered into covenant with Himself, in th oie of the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost. 6. Still another ground of necessity for a change in the seal of the covenant was the fact that this seal had been so long in vogue among the Jews that they had erroneously come to regard it as a kind of badge of distinction, and gloried in it, calling themselves " the cir- cumcision," by way of pre-eminence, and all others "The Uncircum- cision;" and this, on the other hand, had begotten a prejudice to this so-called Jewish badge on the part of the Gentiles, wh: had no love either for Jews, or Jewish peculiarities. To remove a stumbling- 356 REPORT OF DEBATE block, therefore, out of the way of the Gentiles, and afford no ground for Jewish arrogance, or seeming superiority, this national badge is taken away, and another, a badge, too, that had been applied to the Gentile proselytes to Judaism, is substituted for it. And, doubtless, one reason why so little was said about the identity of these two rites in the New Testament, was to avoid prejudice on the part of the Gentiles, and to prevent arrogance and pride on the part of the Jews. But, 7. The long association of circumcision with the ceremonial law had no doubt tended to identify it with the ceremonial observances in the Jewish mind, and now that that law was to be abolished, it was inex- pedient that anything should be retained that would serve as an excuse for the Jews to cling to those observances. As the sequel proved, there was a very strong and almost insurmountable tendency on the part of the Jews to do this. It would therefore seem impera- tive that nothing should be associated with the Gospel rites that would justify or encourage this tendency. To this end circumcision must be swept away. Besides, 8. Circumcision had reference to the covenant in which a Messiah is promised, involving faith in the promise of His coming. When He had come, however, it became inappropriate, and must be suc- ceeded by one involving a believing acceptance of the Saviour who had already appeared. For these and other reasons it was manifestly expedient and highly proper that the seal of the New Covenant should differ from that of the Old, in form at least, as all must admit. But it was certainly not expedient that the New Covenant should have no initiatory seal, since this would be a strange anomaly in the Divine economy of redemp- tion. Hence the substitution of a new seal when the dispensation of the covenant was changed. To all unprejudiced minds these reasons will, doubtless, be considered as ample to justify the change of seal for which I plead. And now I will specify a few presumptions that infant baptism was practiced at the beginning of the Gospel dispensation. 1. It would, unquestionably, have been a great grievance to the Jews, who had long been taught to regard their children as heirs of covenant blessings, to have those children now excluded from the covenant. And I opine that it would have been a moral impossi- bility for any covenant that did not include their children to have been foisted upon that people without strenuous opposition and bitter murmurings. But, on the supposition that such was the case, viz., ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 367 that infants wero excluded from the covenant, is it not passing strange, nay altogether unaccountable, that not a uiurniur of dis- satisfaction is ever heard from any Jew concerning the hardship of having his children left out of the provisions of this covenant, and no recognition of their rights and privileges given in the initiatory seal 1 Nor do we ever hear one word of explanation from any apos- tle, or from the Master himself, as to why children sustain any dif- ferent relation to the covenant from what they did under the former economy, but the very reverse, as we shall presently show, 2. If it were intended that children should not be recognized under the new dispensation, as they were under the old, by any visible rite, certainly we have reason to suppose that some men- tion would be made of the fact. Such a change in the adminis- tration would be a vital one, and could not take place without somo specific injunction to that effect, especially as the covenant remained unchanged in essence, as we have shown. Now, to illus- trate. Suppose that before Confederation in this Dominion there had been a law in force in Upper Canada securing certain rights and privileges to the Indians of this Province, and suppose that in the Act of Confederation no mention had been made either of the Indians or of their rights, would any one suppose that the mere absence of any mention of them would disinherit them, or deprive them of those rights ? Or would it not rather be supposed that in the absence of any mention of the Indians in the Act of Confederation, it was tacitly understood that they were to enjoy the same privileges as they did before Confederation, and that as no change was to be effected in regard to them it was considered unnecessary to make any stipula- tions 1 I leave it for this intelligent congregation to determine. And suppose that, instead of the Indians, it was the children of the natural born citizens to which certain rights and privileges were secured by some law of entail in the Statutes of Upper Canada ; if nothing were expressly stipulated in the terms of Confederation cancelling those rights, or repealing that law of entail, would not all natural born citizens of Upper Canada claim for their children the same rights and privileges under Confederation, by virtue of this law of entail 1 And no court of justice under heaven could deny them those rights, and no sane man would think of doing so. And would it not be a litrange piece of legislation if our statesmen, at the time of Confederation, had enumerated the several laws that they did not intend to repeal, and written after each one, "No change to be made in this law V And would it not be a stranger proceeding for any intelligent citizen to put 398 REPORT OP DEBATE up the plea that all laws not so re-enacted were intended to be repealed ? What would people say with reference to such a man's sanity? Would they not say that he was a little non compos mentis? Now, I maintain that the case under consideration is a precisely similar one in principle. God's covenant made with Abraham has never been repealed. It is still in full force and virtue, as much as ever. The form of administration is changed, but not the essential principles of the covenant. That covenant included Abraham's seed, not only his natural, but spiritual seed. Those who are Christ's are Abraham's seed, and distinctly said to be his heirs, having a claim to all the rights and privileges secured by that covenant. Infant children are unquestionably Christ's, therefore they are Abraham's seed. The token of that covenant was to be given to all the seed, and be "in their flesh for an everlasting covenant." Baptism, under the new form of administration, is unquestionably the token of that covenant, hence infant children have an inalienable and unquestion- able right to that token, and to refuse it to them is virtually to ignore their saving relation to Jesus Christ. I hold, therefore, that unless it can be proved that the Abrahamio covenant has been repealed,, no man has a right to stand between Christ and His "little ones " and say that they shall not be brought to Him to receive His mark, or the grand badge of distinction by which those who are His may be distinguished from those who are not His. With those who do so Jesus will undoubtedly be " much displeased ;" hence, what becomes of all my opponent's noise about no command or mention of infant baptism by our Lord or the apostles 1 They had no need to give a special introduction to an institution as old and familiar as the covenant of redemption. It was sufficient that they recognized it by applying it to whole households, and in other appropriate ways. This argument receives additional force if we consider it in the light of the New Testament teachings. What says the New Testament ? If I have correctly stated the case, then it would be absurd to expect any express re-enactment of each detail involved in the original charter to Abraham, at the commence- ment of the Gospel dispensation, but we may expect to find incidental allusions to such details implying that they are still regarded as being in full force and virtue. Now, what are the facts of the case ? Do the New Testament Scriptures furnish any ground in support of infant baptism 1 We do not ask for an express command, for we not only admit that there is no re-enactment of the Old Testament Church charter as it specifically relates to children, but we claim that there ■¥,■ ON THE MODE AND SUnJECTS OP nAPTIRM. 359 was no necessity for it. But are the necessary conditions, or grounds for infant baptism, to be found in the New Testament ? I reply, they certainly are. 1. The moral condition of infanta is such as to entitle them to bap- tism. We are told that faith is essential as a pre-requisite to baptism. But why necessary "i What does faith do for uh 1 If we are in the same moral condition before we believe that we are after, then why are we required to believe before we are baptized ? Evidently because we are justijied by faith, and it is anomalous and profane for any one to assume the badge of Christian discipleship who is not in a state of justification, or in other words, who is not reconciled to God. On this point, however, I need not enlarge. But I would simply remark that the Scriptures distinctly recognize the existence of this condition on the part of children. Christ says, " of such is the kingdom of heaven ;" and when asked, " Who is the greatest in the kingdom of heaven 1 " He "set a little child in the midst of them, and said, Verily I say unto you, except ye be converted and become as little children, ye shall not enter the kingdom of heaven. Whosoever, therefore, shall humble himself as this little child, the same is greatest in the kingdom of heaven." (Matt. 19 : 14, and 18 : 2-4.) Moreover, I have already shown you that according ^o the statement of the apostle Paul in Rom. 5:18, "As by the offence of one judgment came upon all men to condemnation ; even so by the righteousness of one the free gift came upon all men unto justification of life." If, therefore, adults are baptized on the ground of their justification, surely children may be baptized on the same ground. In other words, if children possess the thing signified, we infer that they are entitled to the sign of that thing. Now, baptism is not a sign of faith, but a sign of purity, which on the part of the adult sinner can only be secured by faith, but on the part of the infant child is secured unconditionally <-hrough the atonement, and on the ground of its innocency it is entitled to the badge of innocency. 2. Children are capable of sustaining covenant relations to God, and of enjoying covenant blessings. I scarcely need do more on this point than merely to state the proposition, as it is well known that in nearly every case where God is represented as making covenants with man, especially where spiritual blessings are involved. He has included the children, — the little ones. It was so in the covenant with Noah after the deluge, (Gen. 9 : 9, etc.) It was so with Abraham, (Gen. 15 and 17). It was so in the covenant with Moses, (Deut. 29 : 10-12) ; and it has frequently been the case, thus proving that God regards 360 REPORT OF DEBATK infants as nuitahlo subjects for covenant relations, covenant rip;ht8 and covenant blessings. In accordance with this fact our Lord Jesus Christ, as if forever to settle the question as to the relation they should sustain to the new covenant, called them unto Him, and said, " Suffer little children to come unto Me, and forbid them not ; for of such is the kingdom of heaven." (Luke 18 : 10). " And He took them up in His arms, puts His hands upon them, and blessed them." They were reckoned as believers the same as females were reckoned as circum- cised. Now, what is this kingdom of heaven to which children belong but the New Testament Church 1 It is the whole body of believers, or those who have been born again of the Spirit. For, " Except a man be born again he cannot see the kingdom of God." Children, there- fore, must be in a regenerate state, as they belong to that kingdom, and belonging to the kingdom they must be in covenant relations with God, and being in covenant relations with God they have a right to the token of the covenant, or the seal God puts upon his covenant people, which seal is baptism. Mr. Hibbard, in his able work on this subject, says, "If infants, equally with theii pious parents, are sharers in the bounteous provi- sions of the atonement, (which were the great blessings secured in the Abrahamic covenant), they obviously possess an equal right with their parents to the visible mark, or token of participation in such blessings. Under all civil governments children have rights ; and it is a law of nature and a dictate of justice that these rights should be recognized and protected. The protection of the laws, the rights of citizenship and of property, are secured to them, not on the principle of their being of a certain age, or of their being competent to judge of the value of these blessings, but on the principle of their relation to their parents. . . . This, then, is the principle for which we contend. Children are as capable of sustaining covenant relations to God, so far as the question of natural fitness and propriety are concerned, as they are of sustaining any civil relations to government. They are as capable of possessing spiritual rights and immunities as civil rights ; and as capable of being injured in respect of the former as the latter. Their spiritual rights are not founded on the circumstance of age or intellectual acquirements, but on the fact of their being human beings, included, equally with their parents, in the covenant of Abraham. It is in view of these facts that we may well repeat the caution, ' Take heed that ye despise not one of these little ones.' " 3. The rights of infants to the seal of the covenant is plainly implied, if not specifically expressed, in the New Testament. Paul says, (Gal. ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 361 ;J : 29), " And if yo bo Christ's thfin are ye Abraham's seed, and hoirs according to tho protniso." Certainly, if this passage teaches anytliing it teaches that every genuine Christian, or true believer, sustains tho same relation to Abraham, and to tho Abrahnmic covenant, as a pious Jew did before tho time of Christ. To the same i)urport is verse 7 of tho same chapter : " Know yo, therefore, that they which are of faith tho same are the children of Abraham," Again, Rom. 2 : 29, 30 : " For ho is not a Jew which is ono out- wardly, . . . but ho is a Jew which is one inwardly," etc. Now, tho only question to be settled here is this, " Are infant children Christ's?" If so, they are Abrahain's seed. Are infant children Jews inwardly 1 If so, they are Abraham's seed. Thoy are tlie true spiritual circumcision. The blessing of Abraham, which is justification, has come on them. They are therefore in tho covenant God made with Abraham, and as the seal was to be co-extensivo with tho covenant, so they are indisputably, according to inspired authority, entitled to tho seal. I really have not time to follow my opponent through all the random statements he sees fit to make outside tho subject in hand, such as his analysis of the commission, the order of the Spirit's work, and a host of other absurdities, but will allow him to amuso himself and you by such exploits, if you are so easily amused, while I briefly glance at two or three remarks more directly connected with the subject in hand which he made during his last address. He made a great display of bravery, or rather bullying bravado, during his last speech, in daring me to further debate. I now put it on record that' the spirit manifested during this debate has been so intensely disgusting to myself and the good people of Meaford in general that I cannot be a party to imposing any more of it upon an innocent community without the expressed wish of the people among whom it would be held. Whenever tho Paido-baptists of Meaford deem it desirable to give Mr. Harding another opportunity of airing his notions, testing his lung power, smiting his fists like a representative of a backwood's prize-ring, and displaying his pugilistic propensities generally, in tho name of the Lord, and invite me to ch.-impion their cause, 1 will duly consider the matter. But I cannot consent, merely for the sake of gratifying the ambitions of a conceited aspirant to polemical fame, or affording him an opportunity of further haranguing an already outraged community, to perpetuate such a farce as the people of Meaford have witnessed during the last six days. In fact, my opponent, failing in argument, seems determined to make the 24 V. ^\S W IMAGE EVALUATION TEST TARGET (MT-3) 1.0 I.I 11.25 110 "^" [25 1^ 1^ |22 ^ Illli4 V] 7. /^ iV [v >^ 362 IV REPORT OF DEBATE battle one of physical endurance, and so accomplish by superior brute force what he has lacked the mental powers to accomplish. As a representative of the mere animal creation I cordially concede to him the palm. At the same time I cannot resist the conviction that all this bluster and banter are designed to disguise his consciousness of defeat, — a mere whistling to cheer his failing courage. It is not pleasant to make such remarks, but his persistent banter, after promis- ing to indulge in no more of it, merits prompt and faithful rebuke. My opponent strangely enlarges the scope of my remark about God's inability to convert a man without help, and then swings out into a lengthy disquisition on human agency in the work of human salvation. But he very well knows that my remark had exclusive reference to God's act by which the penitent believer obtains forgiveness and salvation. I have never denied the fact of human agency in leading sinners to Christ, hence there has been another serious waste of ammunition. The question is. Can God absolve a man without human agency, or aid 1 Let my friend deal with the real difficulty, and not fix up something pleasanter to handle. ^ His effort to prove that baptism with water is not the outward sign of the Spirit's baptism, exhibits him in a sorry light before the public. In the name of all that is sober in human reason, why are they both called by the same name if this correspondence does not exist between them 1 Of what use is a symbol at all if it has no corresponding spiritual reality ? Will he tell us t Such unworthy quirks to extri- cate himself from the unpleasant consequences of a false theology are by no means creditable either to his candor or his intelligence. My opponent is incredible, of course, about the young lady near Ottawa having died as a result of her immersion. Of course ! Well, I would advise him to remain incredible, it will make him feel so much more comfortable. But to ask the congregation to share his incredulity in face of the evidence is unseasonably cool. And as for the Methodist preacher's wife who died from shouting, I have only to say it is quite likely (!), though evidently she was not as much accus- tomed to it as my opponent, otherwise it must have been an unearthly shout to kill her. He ought to be warned of his own danger. He seems to think that to die for Christ, and to die as the result of observing an institution of Christ's appointment, are quite analogous. Evidently he belongs to that class who lack the power to distinguish between things that differ. Well, be it so. Men are only responsible for what they possess. I am quite willing for my opponent to draw the shades as dark as CV THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 363 they deserve to be in describing the various Psedo-baptist Churclies, as I have no disposition to conceal or defend any improprieties in any of them ; but when he has selected the worst of them, and drawn the shades at the darkest, I am quite wiP'.ng that it shall sustain a fair comparison with his own. It is well known that laxity of teaching and discipline, and the immorality of the priesthood, have far more to do with the morality of a Church than the conditions of admission. Besides, if we cannot secure a high standard by taking the chi> iren into the Church and instructing them from their infancy in the fear of the Lord, I cannot see how we are to accomplish it by letting them grow up in the service of the devil and trust to a speedy dip in water to wash all the evil out of them. Such dips, as a matter of fact, too often leave them, like Simon Magus, in " the gall of bitterness and the bonds of iniquity." I prefer trusting to an early religious training. And then my opponent seems to overlook the fact that when persons within the Church become immoral they can be " cut oflF," or excom- municated. H(3 can only see what serves his own purpose. My opponent'^ denial that circumcision was a sign of inward purity, and that baptism takes it place, may comfort his poor sore heart a little, but doesn't fill the bill of demands on the part of this congre- gation. How could it be a seal of righteousness at all if it had no spiritual significance corresponding thereto ? And how could a state of uncleanness be uniformly described by the word wn-circumcision t And why did the Jews teach the Gentiles that unless they were circumcised they could not be saved ] And why could no uncircum- cised person eat the passover, — the symbol of the atonement, — and why was every uncircumcised person cut off from the religious assembly, if circumcision had no connection with moral purity 1 I blush to be obliged to argue a case that is so plain. The fact is that Abraham's natural seed were typical of his spiritual seed, and those bom in his house or bought with his money were reckoned as belonging to Abraham's family and subject to the conditions of his religion, — servants of his God, — hence they ate the passover, which, my opponent has not denied and cannot deny, was symbolical and typical of the atonement This accounts for their being circumcised. And if circumcision was the symbol and type of renewal, as the passover was of the atonement, then it follows, undeniably, that baptism takes its place, for it fills the same bill and answers the same end. It repre- sents the " washing of regeneration and renewing of the Holy Ghost." Regarding the olive tree and Nicodemus, I want to say a word. You would think from my opponent's style of reasoning that no one 864 REPORT OF DEBATE ever had to be born again until the gospel dispensation began. Did they go to heaven, then, without regeneration, or did they all go to hell ? Does he not know that the language of our Lord to Nicodemus is just as applicable to every formalist and mere nominal Church member to day, and all down through the ages, as they were to Nico- demus 1 It by no means follows because he was a master in Israel that therefore he was living up to all the spiritual requirements of the Jews' religion, though my opponent first assumes he was and then bases an argument on the assumption, and thus perpetrates a logical farce technically called petitio principii, or by common mortals a begging of the question. And this is the style of his reasoning throughout, as could be easily shown were there time to deal with it in detail. [Time expired,] ADDENDUM. Respected Reader, — For the anomaly of this addendum, in what is professedly fm oral debate, I disavow all responsibility. Fearing it would lead to an unseemly personal altercation, and so mar the book, I protested to the extent of my ability against the insertion of Mr. Harding's " Addenda" to his last speech. The publisher-in-chief wrote him, on the strength of my protest, strongly urging him to embody in his speeches any replies he desired to make to my addi- tions, but he was invincible in his determination to have his reply appear under a separate heading. The reader may not be able to detect the design of this, though I surmise that I see men as trees walking. Probably the sequel will betray the plot. The pretext was that it would make his speech too long for a half-hour's speech, hence it must appear separately. The sincerity of this may be seen in the fact that his fifth reply, under the same proposition, contains just three lines more than his ninth speech, including the " Addenda," and his sixth reply just two lines less, and his fourth reply only twenty-three lines less, and other speeches are of but slightly smaller proportions, though he occupied some eight lines in the " Addenda " explaining to the reader about the additions I had made after he saw my speech in the proof-sheets. Had he left this explanation out, bis ninth speech, with the additions, would have been eleven lines shorter ON THE NODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 365 than his fifth, six lines shorter than his sixth, and only fifteen lines longer than his fourth, though he does not seem to have considered these speeches too long for a half-hour. I fear it is another wolf and lamb story. But to give the reader a still further illustration of the true inwardness of this business, let me say, that after making an exact estimate of the length of our respective speeches up to the close of the ninth under the second proposition, I find that his first twenty speeches occupy just seventeen pages and eighteen lines more than my corresponding twenty speeches ; yet as soon as I enterec a practical protest against such injustice by adding four and a half pages to one of my speeches, nothing would please the dear man but an exposure of my crime (1) in a separate paragraph to the reader. Hence the "Addenda." These facts will have all the more weight when it is remembered that I spoke with much greater rapidity than Mr. Harding, as the reporter frequently testified during the debate. But it will probably be asked, " Why did you add the four and a half pages after your speech had gone to the printer, and the proof of it had been sent to Mr. Harding 1 " The time is now so long past that I cannot possibly remember the circumstances connected v/ith each individual case, but sufiice it to say that both parties had been in the habit of adding to their speeches from time to time, as they saw fit, after seeing their opponent's reply, even after the matter was made up into page-form in some cases; and I either made these additions to meet similar additions in my opponent's previous speeches, which I discovered after the copy of my ninth speech had been sent to the printer, else because I took advantage of an interval of leisure to reply to objections overlooked in times of hurry or absence from home. At all events, I have a distinct recollection that I noticed additions to Mr. Harding's speeches when the proof came to me in page-form. At what stage his additions were made I cannot say. I only know when I made the discovery. But no matter. I distinctly testify that he aJded to his seventh and other speeches after the proof-sheets were sent to me, hence he has no cause for complaint. And he was the man who began this business of garbling and enlarging the reporter's notes to suit his jealous caprices, though he is the first to show his teeth by exposing me. It is evident that no personal advantage was sought, or injustice intended in the matter on my part, or my proof-sheets might have been with- held from him, and it never entered my mind but that when he saw ad- ditions to my galley-proofs he would make corresponding additions to 366 REPORT OF DEBATE his galley-proofs, as he had been in the habit of doing. But the fact is, he found the pages I had added put him in a very unpleasant dilemma, from which he saw no way of escape except under cover of a cloud of dust, hence he concocted a plan to prejudice the argument he could not answer. If any one imagines that this is mere empty bantiT, let him read carefully the last four and a half pages of my ninth speech, clause by clause, and after reading each clause let him read Mr. Harding's reply to it in the " Addenda," and see how it was met. If he is not satisfied by that time, let him glance over the sub- joined reply to the ** Addenda." The experiment will well reward the trouble. Let me call attention also to another fact. Mr. Harding admits that it was after he saw my ninth speech " in printed proof-sheets," that he " corrected and sent in " his " ninth reply." Now, I want to say that I could not wait till I saw his speeches " in printed proof- sheets " before I sent in my replies^ unless I had assumed the responsi- bility of hindering the publication as he has done. In fact, I some- times had to send two or three of my corrected speeches before I saw his reply in proof-sheets to the first of them. Hence, according to his own admission, he enjoyed an in>portant advantage which I could only recover by making changes in mine after his proof-sheets came to hand. In this matter he ha& miconsciously borne witness against himself. Another item worthy of note is the fact that Mr. Harding has positively rewritten and enliarged every one of his speeches from first to last. There is scarcely a paragraph, and comparatively few sentences, from the beginning to the end, except quotations from authorities, that has not been entirely remodelled. Hia speeches as they appear in this hook are not his speeches as delivered in Meaford, and I can prove it. The reader has no guarantee that anything printed here is what he- said there, and in point of fact very little appears here as he said it there. While pursuing the same general well-beaten track, from: which it seemed almost impossible for him to get away, he has so entirely re-cast the argument that it would require a philosopher to discover even a remote degree of consanguinity, and in not a few instances he has actually left out of his rewritten speeches all reference to things he said, according to the reporter, thus making much that appears in my replies appear irrelevant. Instances of this can be given, if need ba On the other hand, with the exception of slight verbal Corrections and additions to meet his new and revamped arguments and quotations, my speeches are published herein, almost ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 367 bodily, from first to last, as reported. Yet he is the man to make a noise and mar the book with " addenda " in order to expose ma And now, as I have some fourteen or fifteen more pages of space at my command, before I get even with my opponent, I will indulge in a brief reply to his " Addenda." REPLY. 1. He appears exceedingly anxious to convey the impression either that I am wrong about Timothy's circumcision, or that the apostles acted a lie. Of course it is to his interest to put the matter as strongly as possible from his standpoint, but I think a moment's reflection will convince the i*eader that it is possible for me to be right without involving the apostles in either hypocrisy or falsehood. First, I do not claim that it was wrong for Paul to circumcise Timothy, under the circumstances, for I am not aware that there was any specific law against it. Besides, Paul recognized the law of expediency in the absence of express injunctions, and all I claim is that he was governed by this law in this particular matter. If my opponent repudiates this law, willf he tell us on what principle the apostle could become " all things to all men, that he might by all means save some." 1 Cor. 9 : 22. He testifies that " unto the Jews he became as a Jew, that he might gain the Jews ; to them that were under the law, as under the law, that he might gain them that were under the law ; to them that were without law, as without law, . . . that he might gain them that were without law; and to the weak he became as weak, that he might gain the weak." Thus, so long as no moral wrong, or com- promise of principle, was involved, he " pleased all men in all things, . . . that they might be saved." 1 Cor. 10 : 33. I presume it was on this principle that Paul " took and circumcised Timothy because of the Jews which were in those quarters : for they knew all that his father was a Greek." Acts 16:3. All of which plainly implies that he would not have circumcised him but for the Jews that were in those quarters, nor even fc this reason had they not known that his father was a Greek. But " being crafty," I suppose he endeavored to catch these Jews "with guile." And I presume his "purifying himself with those four men, and shaving his head and entering into the temple with, them," may consistently be explained on precisely the same principle. So, if Paul acted a lie in these matters I will just leave him and Mr. Harding to fight it out. It doesn't affect my position in the least. 368 BEPORT OF DBDATB But I ana under the painful necessity of calling attention to a moat unworthy quibble in my opponent's " Addenda." He quotes me as saying that " the inspire^ penman says that Timothy was circumcised because his father was a Greek," and then he vociferously denies it. He says, "The inspired penman says no such thing. The statement is untrue." Now, what does the inspired penman say 1 He says, as I have just quoted the words, that he " took and circumcised him because of the Jews which were in those quarters ; for (and this means hecauat) they knew' all that his father was a Greek." It was, then, according to the inspired penman, first, " because of the Jews," and secondly, •' because they knew that his father was a Greek." Did I tell a lie, then, when I said it was because his father was a Greek 1 I leave the reader to judge. In the meantime I repeat the statement, that the inspired penman says it was because his father was a Greek, and because the Jews know it, that Paul circumcised Timothy. Now, let him deny this in his next "addenda." But my opponent f 2. He would like to know why, if baptism has taken the place of circumcision, baptized persons are not, like circumcised persons, " debtors to do the whole law." I thought I had succeeded in making it plain that circumcision was the form of seal peculiar to the old dispensation, when the ceremonial law was in force, and that, there- fore, persons receiving it (except on the ground of expediency, as in the case of Timothy) acknowledged the continued obligation of "the whole law ; " but that baptism was the form of seal peculiar to the new dispensation, under which the ceremonial law was abolished, and that persons receiving baptism virtually recognized the fact of its abrogation. I trust this explanation will satisfy him. 3. My opponent cannot see any " sense " in some things I have said, and therefore declines a reply. This will, no doubt, occasion a great loss to the world's literature, but I presume if he had said he could see no " sense " in any possible reply he could make, he would have come much nearer the truth. 4. When he concedes that all infants who die in infancy will have a place in the city of God which is to come down out of heaven, he sadly gives away his whole contention. That city is the Ohurch, called " The bride, the Lamb's wife " (see Rev. 21:9, 10). Now the Ohurch is Christ's body, composed of His redeemed ones (see Acts ON THE MODE AKD SUBJECTS OP DAPTISM. 369 20 : 28), and if children dying in infancy are to have a place in the Ohurch, then they have been " purchased " with atoning blood, a truth that my friend has stubbornly denied. But now he virtually admits it. That will do. I think before the debate closes he will get a good many of these cobwebs of error out of his eyes, and then he will be able to see infant baptism in the Bible. I thank him very cor- dially for this admission. It concedes that little children are Ohrist's, and, therefore, Abraham's seed, and heirs according to the promise (covenant) ; hence, if he refuses them baptism, he must circumcise them, as Paul did Timothy, even though, like him, they are of Greek descent. 6. My friend thinks he convicts me of a serious slip because I said in my last speech that infants were not born again, though he finds I said in a former speech that " I infer from his premises " that they are. He thinks that this is a great "contradiction" and "incon- sistency," and altogether destroys my title to the confidence of my fellow-men. I would simply remind him that I do not endorse every doctrine I deduce from his premises. If I did I should be as hetero- dox as he is, which I would greatly deprecate. By bearing this simple fact in mind, it will greatly relieve the distress he feels for me in consequence of my pitiable dilemma. If he has any more " addenda " exposures or replies to make I hope he will send them along. He has sadly delayed the publica- tion of this book by the months of time spent, according to his own public admission, in research and writing since the debate closed. What a pity he had not spent this time beforehand in preparing for the debate, it would have cost him so much less time afterwards, and he would have appeared to so much better advantage on the platform at Meaford. And now we await the rising of the curtain for the next scene. T. L. W. 370 REPORT OF DEBATE MR. HARDING'S TENTH REPLY With pleasure I rise to continue the discussion of this proposition. I realize that we are drawing near to the end of what has been to me a very profitable discussion ; and I desire now, as earnestly and faith- fully and kindly as I can, to continue the debate to the close. Mr. Wilkinson still talks about my misrepresenting Moses Stuart- I am perfectly willing to leave that matter to the judgment of this audience— especially as this debate is to be published — for my quota- tions can then be carefully examined by any one interested in the matter. These facts will then appear : 1. That when I introduced Stuart it was avowedly /or the purpose of giving his classical definition of bapto and baptizo. 2. That Stuart is of the opinion that baptizo in the New Testa- ment, when applied to the rite of baptism, does, as a rule, involve the idea of immersion. 3. That to this rule he thinks there are at least three exceptions. 4. That Mr. Wilkinson misrepresented Stuart when he stated in his last speech that he, " like all Psedo-baptist authorities," explained that it did not mean dip, plunge, immerse in the New Testament. With perfect serenity I submit this matter to you, that you may decide whether Mr. Wilkinson or I has been dishonest in dealing with this great author. It is certain that one of us has been. Now we will turn our attention to the latter part of the sixteenth chapter of Mark. As you have been told, in the revised version a blank space is left between the eighth and ninth verses. Mr. Wilkinson thinks that the latter part of the chapter is of doubtful authority, and that therefore it was thus set off by the revisers. But you shall hear the testimony of one much more competent to speak on this question than Mr. Wilkinson. This volume [holding up a book be/ore the audience] is the " Companion to the Revised Version of the New Testament" by Alexander Roberts, D.D. Mr. Roberts was a member of the revision committee — of the English New Testament company — and of course he knows whereof he testifies. The " Com- panion " was written by him to explain the reasons for the changes from the common version. Ooncerning these last verses of the book of Mark, he says (p. 63) : " On the whole, a fair survey of all the facts of the case seems to lead us to these conclusions : First, that the passage is not the imme- ON TUB MODE AND BUDJECT8 OF BAPTISM. 371 diate production of St. Mark ; and, secondly, that it \b, nevertheless, possessed of full canonicnl authority. We cannot ascertain its author, but we are sure he must have been one who belonged lo the circle of the apostles. And, in accordance with this view of the paragraph, it is marked oiF from the words with which, for some unknown reason, the Gospel of St. Mark ended ; while, at the same time, it is inserted, with- out the least misgiving, as an appendix to that gospel in the Revised Version." So, according to Dr. Roberts, the revisers had not the least doubt as to the inspiration of the passage : they only doubted as to whether Mark or some other man of the apostolic circle wrote it. As you were reminded, it is certain Moses did not write the last part of the Pentateuch, and it is doubtful who wrote the book of Hebrews, but their canonicity is undoubted by the Christian scholarship of the world ; and so of these last verses of the book of Mark. While they are not found in two of the oldest MSB., it is a fact that they are found in translations older than any of them; moreover, as Dr. Roberts remarks, " Irenseus quotes the passage, without the slightest misgivings, in the second century," and he antedates both of these MSS. It is not strange that Mr. Wilkinson should be anxious to get rid of the fifteenth and sixteenth verses of the last chapter of Mark, for while they stand it must be evident to every unprejudiced observer that infant baptism is not only unscriptural, it is also antiscriptural. For the command to " make disciples " (matheteusate), which precedes the command to baptize, in Matthew's account of the commission, is the exact equivalent of the preaching of the Gospel, and the faith, which precede the baptizing in Mark's account. While these verses stand, therefore, preaching and faith must precede scriptural baptism. And, as you have just heard from Dr. Roberts, the revisers did not doubt their inspiration. Nor should Mr. Wilkinson, for Ireneeus quoted the passage long before in/ant baptism was ever heard of. To use Mr. Wilkinson's own argument, How could Irenseus have been mistaken about the passage, seeing that he knew Polycarp, who knew John f The fact that he quoted it without misgivings of any kind shows that, as early as sixty years after John died, the passage was received by the Church with the same confidence that any other part of the New Testament was. In order to maintain this silly, useless and unscriptural practice of infant baptism, you see, it has become necessary for my opponent to try to cast doubt upon a part of God's word. 372 REPORT OF DEBATB In hi> last speech, which Mr. Wilkinson read in your hearing, he explained at great length why circumcision was changed to baptiHm | I take it that his speech would have had more effect if it had not already been shown pretty conclusively that circumcision was not changed to baptism. He has wasted his time in showing why that was changed which was never changed at all. Does not a change of practice follow a change of law 1 Over in the United States we recently had a change in the postal law, so that two cents will now annwer where three were formerly required. We all began at once to use the two-cent stamp instead of the three ; there was a change of practice growing out of the change of law. If there had been a change of law with regard to circumcision, would there not also have been a change in practice 1 Was there a change in practice ? No ; Christ was circumcised and then baptized ; so were the Apostles ; so were the three thousand ; so were the Jews generally ; while Timothy was baptized and then circumcised. Do you suppose that any man in the States was ever silly enough to use both a two- cent and a three-cent stamp on the same letter 1 Not only did the Jewish converts to Christianity continue to practice circumcision, but many of them also insisted that the Gentiles who camo into the Chur/*h should be required to submit to the rite, and th y stoutly contended that they could not be saved without it. Why did not Peter, or James, or Paul, or some other one of the apostles arise and say, " Brethren, have you lost your wits f do you not know that baptism has taken the place of circumcision 1 these people have been baptized, and that is enough." Oau any sane man doubt that some such speech would have been made, had it been true 1 Then Paul, instead of circumcising Timothy to please the Jews in those quarters, would simply have explained that his baptism was sufficient, seeing that the one had taken the place of the other. Then, too, when they at Jerusalem (see Acts, chap. 21) charged Paul with teaching the Jews which were among the Gentiles not to circumcise their children, he would simply have replied, " You know well enough that baptism has taken the place of circumcision ; hence I teach them to practice baptism and to cease from circumcision." But as a matter of fact, Paul made no such reply ; instead thereof he took steps to show that the charge was false. No, no ; Psedo-baptists lean upon a broken reed when they depend on this circumcision argument ; for there is no fact susceptible of a clearer and more satisfactory demonstration than that Jewish Christians continued to practice circumcision for many, many years after the ascension of Christ — after the beginning of the Chris- OK TUB MODE AND 8UDJECT8 OF 0APTI8M. 373 tian dispensation. It is not worth while to argue against facts; no amount of argument can set aside a fact. Mr. Wilkinson then proceeds to give us " a few presumptions " that infant baptism was practiced at the beginning of the gospel dis- pensation. What does he want to give us "presumptions " for] Does he (!xpect us to receive the rite as a divine ordinance on the strength of a presumption 1 It is a significant fact, that at the end of a six- days' debate " a few presumptions " are the best things that can be offered to show that infant baptism was practiced in apostolic times. If the gentleman has any Bible teacliing on the subject, it is about tiriio to produce it ; nobody is going to be very materially afl'ected by his presumptions ; an ounce of Scripture is worth many thousand pounds of presumption, and hence we want the Scripture. But let us consider these presumptions. The first one is this : he thinks the Jews would have been terribly grieved had their children been excluded from the covenant, and that thoy would have complained about it. As they made no comi)laint, he concludes the children were not excluded. Just so ; that id exactly the fact in the case. The children were in the covenant of circum- cision, and they remained in it ; their parents continued to circumcise them, as we have seen. True, it was rumored that Paul was trying to get the little ones out by stopping the practice of circumcision among Jews, but the rumor was false, and he promptly took steps to stop the complainings by showing that it was false. They were never in the new covenant, which includes baptism, hence nothing was ever said in any way about their being baptized. His second presumption is this : " If it were intended that children should not be recognized under the new dispensation, as they were under the old, by any visible rite, certainly we have reason to suppose that some mention would be made of the fact." It seems to me far more reasonable to presume thus : If God had wanted infants to be baptized, He would certainly have said so, seeing that when -He wanted them to be circumcised He did say so. Moreover, I presume that pious. God-fearing Jews would have been very certain not to change circumcision to baptism without being expressly taught so to do, seeing that God had cautioned them very particularly not to add to, nor take from, nor change His laws. And let it be remembered, in this connection, that circumcision was practiced long before the giving, and long after the taking away, of the Mosaic law. Mr. Wilkinson then supposed a cose by way of illustration : If, before the confederation of the provinces of this Dominion, Upper 374 REPORT OF DEBATE Canada had granted certain rights to the Indians (or children), and if these rights were not referred to at all in the Act of Confedera- tion, would any one suppose that the mere absence of any mention of them, or of their rights, would deprive them of their just inherit- ance t I should say not ; I should say that Upper Canada would be bound by every principle of justice to give to those Indians exactly what she had promised ; and no contract which she might after- wards make with other provinces would free her from her obliga- tions to the Indians. And now for the application. God gave the covenant of circumcision to Abraham and his seed for ** an ever- lasting covenant ;" about^four hundred years afterwards He gave the law for temporary purposes ; but this could not invalidate the cove- nant of circumcision, which continued to be observed ; about fifteen hundred years later he took away the law ; it had served its purpose ; but circumcision continued to be observed ; and so up to the very close of the days of inspiration there is not the slightest hint that the Jewg ceased to hold to this " everlasting covenant," nor is there the least intimation that it was to be changed to something else. After these " presumptions," which, as we have seen, do not amount to a row of pins in his favor, Mr. Wilkinson reads on to what he alls " the necessary conditions or grounds for infant baptism," which, he claims, are to be found in the New Testament Infants are pure, hence they ought to be baptized, he says, as baptism is a sign of purity. Adults need faith before baptism, seeing that faith makes them pure; but the infant is pure without faith, and hence has an equal right to baptism, he argues. Just here I have a question : How did it happen that, under the old dispensation, circumcision was given to adults regardless of faith or purity ? Every male born among the descendants of Abraham, or bought with the money of his children, was to be circumcised, regardless of any other conditions whatever. There, now, is a nut for my friend to crack. If baptism is in the room of circumcision, how does it happen that the same rule does not hold good 1 y But, as a matter of fact, baptism is not for the pure ; it is " for the remission of sins." John preached " the baptism of repentance for the remission of sins ;" and the people were " baptized of him in the river of Jordan, confessing their sins." (See Mark 1:4, 5.) Jesus said, " He that believeth, and is baptized, shall be saved." Mark 16 : 16. Peter said, " Repent, and be baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ for the remission of sins, and ye shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost." Acts 2 : 38. Ananias said to ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OP BAPTISM. 376 Paul, "Arise, and be baptized, and wash away thy sins, calling on the name of the Lord." Acts 22 : 16. And, finally, we are baptized into Christ (see Gal. 3 : 27), and in Him we have forgiveness (see Eph. 1 : 7). So it appears that infants have not the moral conditions that demand baptism ; since, in order to be a proper subject for baptism, one must be a sinner, who trusts in Jesus, and who looks to Him for salvation. Mr. Wilkinson next claims that children are capable of sustaining covenant relations to God ; and in this connection quotes the saying of Jesus, " Suffer little children to come unto Me, and forbid them not, for of such is the kingdom of heaven." Did Jesus baptize these little ones 1 No. Did He baptize men and women who believed in Him 1 Yes ; He did, through His agents, His disciples. Why this difference? Because infants are innocent ; but adults havo to "be bom of water and of the Spirit " to become like them ; hence the necessity foi" faith and baptism. But Mr. Wilkinson's practice is different from the Lord's ; he baptizes (or rather rantizea) both babies and adults ; and this difference in practice grows out of a difference in doctrine. Immei'sionists practice as the Saviour did ; that is, we pray for the little ones, and we baptize the believing adults. Which is the more likely to be correct, my friends, the practice of the Lord Jesus, or something that differs from it f For my part, I am willing to follow Jesus, especially as He exhorts us so to do. Mr. Wilkinson argues that infants are Christ's, therefore they are Abraham's seed, and therefore they ought to be baptized. He quotes from Galatians 3 : 29 : ** If ye be Christ's, then are ye Abraham's seed and heirs according to the promise." Bi* if he had read the entire chapter, and if he had been willing to receive what he read, without addition or subtraction, he would not have so argued ; for in the seventh verse it is said, " Know ye, therefore, that they which are of faith, the same are the children of Abraham." Mr. Wilkinson pre- sumes to add to this statement. According to his theory, it should read thus : " Know ye, therefore, that they which are of faith, the same are the children of Abraham, and so are all in/ants." And then, to make his argument complete, it should have been added, " And all of Abraham's spiritual seed — infants and believers— ought to be baptized." It would take these two additions to make the argu- ment good for infant baptism. Had Mr. Wilkinson read the entire chapter, he would also have found these words : " For ye are all the children of God by faith in Christ Jesus. For as many of you as have been baptized into Christ 376 REPORT OP DEBATE have put on Christ." So it appears from his own proof text that it takes both faith and baptism to bring adults back to the state of innocency that they had in their infancy ; and, as in Christ " we have redemption through His blood, the forgiveneos of sins," we have here a statement that perfectly harmonizes with the saying of Jesus, "He that believeth, and is baptized, shall be saved." But here again the Psedo-baptists get into another tangle. The Presbyterians argue that baptism came in the room of circumcision ; that circumcision belonged to God's people and their children ; hence they claim that baptism should be given to Christians and their chil- dren. They will not baptize (rantize, sprinkle) any infant unless at least one of its parents is a believer. They understand that believers are children of Abraham, and that Abraham's children and their infants are entitled to baptism. You have seen that the Methodists view the matter very differently. It is singular, if the matter is so clear as they would have us believe, that Mr. Wilkinson and his Pres- byterian brother, Mr. Paterson, who sits here so lovingly by his side, can not see it alike. Here is an infant that the one would baptize (rantize) while the other would not, for its parents are unbelievers. So you see, ray friends, the Presbyterians can no more see any force in Mr. Wilkinson's " purity " argument than immersionists can ; and no wonder, for (excepting the Lord Jesus Christ) there is not a par- ticle of evidence that any pure person was ever baptized since the world began. Baptism, as we have seen, brings the believer into Christ, where he obtains purity ; hence men and women were baptized, '" confessing their sins," " for the remission of sins," to " wash away sins," and hence Jesus said, " He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved." Again, if baptism is for the pure, why did not Jesus have His disci- ples baptize those infants that were brought to Him by their mothers 1 Who can tell? It is true, moreover, and should be constantly borne in mind, tl: if we were to grant that infants are of Abraham's spiritual seed (which is not the fact), it would still be necessary to show that bap- tism has taken the place of circumcision, and that very many changes have been made as to the application of it As you, who have listened with unprejudiced minds, know well enough, these things can never be shown, simply because they are not true. And now a word to those of you who are fathers and mothers. What do you think of that which you have heard 1 Meyer, who is confessedly the greatest of New Testament commentators, has been ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 877 brought before you as a witness, and he freely testifies that not a trace of infant baptism can be found in the New Testament ; that it is of post-apostolic origin. Neander, the prince of Church historians, has been called to the stand to testify, and he tells us that at first adults only were baptized, that infant baptism is not of apostolic origin, that it arose later : with this the testimony of Mosheim, another great Church historian, fully agrees. SchafF, another famous writer of Church history, tells us that the apostolic origin of infant baptism is denied not only by Baptists, but also by many Paedo bap- tist divines. Steitz, a great Lutheran scholar, says, among scienti- fical exftgetes it is agreed that not a trace of infant baptism can be found in the New Testament. Then comes forward Mr. McKay (I am glad he wrote thai, little book), who sums up for us all the cases of baptism mentioned in the New Testament ; as he is a Presbyterian, of course he is not prejudiced in my favor; we examined the cases, one by one, and find not a trace of infant baptism in anyone of them. Coming on down from New Testament times, Mr. Wilkinson talks about Polycarp, Justin Martyr, and Irenseus ; but Meyer and Bledsoe step forward and say these men do not teach the doctrine — that the first writer who makes any certain reference to it is Tertullian — that it cannot be fairly inferred from any utterance made by any previous writer. But Mr. Wilkinson goes back beyond the New Testament, to the Old, to the covenant of circumcision ; he says baptism has come in its room ; we look at the facts to see about it, and we find tiiat the statement is not true ; moreover, Stuart, the great Presbyterian, promptly testifies that the covenant of circumcision furnishes no ground for infant baptism : then, to add to the confusion and discom- fiture of Mr. Wilkinson, the Presbyterian Church radically differs from him as to what children ought to be baptized. Then, to cap the climax of the ridiculous, and to make the whole thing unutterably nonsensical and absurd, when Mr. Wilkinson arises to sprinkle a baby, " bev-^ause it is as pure as an angel," " because it has been redeemed » by Jtsus Christ," " because it has been cleansed from all the corrup- tion end defi^f'tnent of original sin by the Spirit of God," he prays to the I'ather thus : ' Look upon this child ; wash him and sanctify him with the Holy Ghoi^t j that he, being delivered from thy wrath, may be received into the ark of Christ's Church ; " and then he prays that the old Adam may be buried in him, and the new man raised up. Moreover, John Wesley agrees with Origen, the first advocate of infant baptism, thai in baptism original sin is washed away ; he says : "If infants are guiHy of original sin, then they are proper sub- 25 378 REPORT OF DEBATE jects of baptism, seeing, in the ordinary way, they cannot be saved unless this be washed away by baptism. It has been already proved that this original stain cleaves to every child of man, and that hereby they are children of wrath, and liable to eternal damnation." Doc- trinal Tracts, published in the year 1850, p. 251. What think you of all this, my friends 1 For my part, I shall be content to do as Christ did ; that is, I will pr^y for the babies, and baptize the believers. If you choose to baptize infants, just remem- ber you will do that for which you have not a word of divine authority. There is not the slightest proof that any inspired man «ver baptized a baby. [Time expired."] MR. WILKINSON'S ELEVENTH SPEECH. It is not necessary to say much with respect to the speech we have just heard ; we have heard it so often, and I have answered it so often. It is very amusing to see a sheep trying to knock down a stone wall by butting his head against it. At first he fails. Then he backs up and tries it again. The action is not successful. Then he goes a little further back, and makes another tremendous effort, bat the stone wall still stands. The sheep's head is not so fortunate — it suffers harm. So all efforts to demolish the structure of doctrinal truth that I have been endeavoring to rear in your presence from the Word of God seem to be as futile as the efforts of the sheep to knock down the stone wall. In fact, you might as well attempt to demolish an army with a pop-gun, as to try to overthrow this doctrine ; hence I can afford to let my opponent amuse himself with his futile efforts without trying to follow him into every nook whither he seems inclined to run. '^>ut as this is my last speech in this hot and interesting debate, I will briefly reply to some of his main points, and then give a cursory review of the ground I have gone over, so that I may present my argument in its completeness at the close of toy addresses. 1. I am accused of misrepresenting Professor Stuart by saying that he explained that Baptizo did not mean dip, plunge and immerse in the New Testament. Now, what Dr. Stuart said was, as I quoted in ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. ' 379 a former speech, that " there is no absolute certainty from usage that the word baptixo, when applied to the rite of baptism, moans to im- merse or plunge," atkd that '' we do obey the command to baptize when we do it by aifusion or sprinkling." Also, that Stuart gives us as Old Testament meanings of bapto and baptizo, " to wash, to bedew, to moisten." Now, the audie*-';e can judge how far I misrepresented him by my remark. Certainly, whatever concession he makes, inci- dentally, to the immersionists, he does not believe that the word necessarily means immerse, or plunge, in the New Testament. But drowning men clutch at straws. And now I take the liberty of denying emphatically (whatever complexion may be put upon the matter in his rewritten speeches for publication) that when my opponent first introduced Stuart's testimony in this debate, he said it was Stuart's classical definition of bapto and baptizo, instead of his New Testament meaning. The auditors or readers can accept whichever statement they please. In regard to Mark 16 : 16, and the Companion to the revised edition of the New Testament by A. Roberts, I want to say a word. In the first place, I am not anxious to get rid of this passage, for it suits my case very well — much better than it does my opponent's. At the same time it is but fair to take an honest look at the facts pert^iining to it. I told you that the revisers had separated the last twelve verses from the r^st of the chapter, and stated in a marginal note that " the two oldest Greek manuscripts, and some other authorities," omit them from the text. Also, that " some other authorities have a different ending to the gospel." Those facts alone were sufficient to cast doubt upon the genuineness of these verses, hence the revisers felt the neces- sity of offering a defence for inserting them at all. Dr. Roberts, therefore, on behalf of the revisers, has made that defence, during which he admits that " there is something peculiar about the para- graph " — that it " has no place in the two oldest manuscripts in our possession," and quotes the saying of Tregelles, that " Eusebius, Gregory of Nyssa, Victor of Antioch, Severus of Antioch, Jerome, as well as other writers, especially Greeks, testify that these verses were not written by Mark, or not found in the best copies." But after giving the various considerations, pro and con, he concludes by saying, as my opponent has told you, that " on the whole, a fair sur- vey of all the facts of the case seems to lead us to these conclusions : first, that the passage is not the immediate production of St. Mark ; and, secondly, that it is, nevertheless, possessed of full canonical authority. We cannot ascertain its author, but we are sure he must 380 ' REPORT OP DEBATE have been one who belonged to the circle of the apostles." Observe, he says, " a fair survey of all the facts of the case seems to lead to these conclusions." That is not a very positive statement, I confess. No wonder, therefore, that he immediately adds, " In accordance with this view of the paragraph it is marked cR" from the words with which, for some unknown reason, the gospel of Mark ended, viz., the einjhth verse." The setting of it off, as the revisers have done, in itself stamps the passage as doubtful, and the most that they claim for it is "an appendix to that gospel." In view of these facts 1 claim, that whatever veneration we may feel for this paragraph, it does not stand in the same undoubted position as the commission recorded in Matthew ; hence, while it would be perfectly proper to appeal to Matthew for a clearer explanation of Mark, it is not proper to appeal to Mark as the expositor of Matthew. A well understood rule ol interpretation among scholars is that the doubtful is always to be intt^rpreted in the light of the undisputed. Hence, if my oppo- nent really venerates the scholars as much as he pretends to do when hhey seem to agree with him, I hope he will cease to clamor for the passage in Mark as the exponent of the passage in Matthew. JT', opponent coolly assumes that he has proyed that baptism did not taire the place of circiracision, and then expresses his astonish- ment that I should present reasons why it did. Well, the reason I did so was that ids reasons were not very cogent, but exceedingly paltry, to me. There is a species of fallacy known to logicians called the petitio principii, or begging of the question, and he seems to he quite expert in its use. And then he wonders that I am not con- vinced by it. I may as wcW intimate to him just here, that it takes a stronger species of logic than that to convince me. My friend says a change of law brings a change in practice, and wants to know why, if the law was changed in regard to circum- sion, there was not a change in practice. I answer, there was a change in practice, and I am surprised to learn that he is ignorant of the fact. I would therefore take this opportunity of informing him that though the Church always circumcised its members under the old dispensation, she has always baptized them under the new. Most people are aware of this. Oh ! yes, my friend, there was a change in practice, undoubtedly. The unwisdom and prejudice of a few Jewish converts at the first doesn't affect the case an iota. It would have been exceedingly strange if they had accepted all the changes involved in the introduction of Christianity without showing any signs of undue attachment to their former usages. No sensible per- ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 381 son attaches an}' importance to the crotchets of those Jewish bigots. But tlie fact that they insisted so strongly that the Gentiles could not be saved without circumcision proves unmistakably that they attached peculiar spiritual significance to the rite, and did not regard it merely as a pledge of a small farm in Judea. Let my opponent note this fact. He objects to my " presunipf-'ons," and wants to know why I give them. The reason is that one ^re-sumption is worth fifty a«-sump- tions. 1 use the former, and leave him the monopoly of the latter. Still, if I had nothing but presumptions to offer, he might complain, unlesj they were very strong ; bui, I have only thrown these in as extras after suppl_ying an avalanche of indispuia\)le arguments. But I don't wonder that he is annoyed with them, nor can I relieve his annoyance. His elaborate reply to my presumptions, while exhibit- ing the annoyance he feels, does not merit or require any further notice. My friend also a«-sumes that the circumcision of the " one born in thy house, or bought with thy money of any stranger," was ^^regard- leas of any v:s9r conditions whatever." And this he calls a " nut" for me to "crack." I am glad it is not a "hard-shell." Let me say, then, that in the absence of any expressed conditions, it is to be pre- sumed that the same conditions were recognized in such cases as in the circumcision of an Israelite. If the candidate were an infant it would be unconditional. If an adult, faith in Israel's God would be required. Let it be remembered that the apostle Paul says (Rom. 2:25), " Circumcision verily profiteth if thou keep the law: but if thou be a breaker of the law thy circumcision is made uncircum- cision." The obligation to keep the law of God, therefore, was laid upon all circumcised persons, whether they received the rite in in- fancy or age. The privilege of eating the passover, too, belonged to all circumcised persons, and it was enjoined upon them as a duty to do it ; and surely no one will be bold enough to affirm that this was " regardless of any other conditions whatever," except to be ' born in the house " of an Israelite, or " bought with his money." The pass- over was a type and pledge of atonement, and must have involved faith in the promised Messiah. The plain inference is, therefore, that Israelites were supposed to train all those born in their houses in the faith of Abraham, and to buy no servants who were unwilling to embrace it. The servants they bouglit must not be supposed to have been bought, like African slaves in the United States, as mere chat- tels, without their consent or approbation, (though my friend seems 382 REPORT or DKBATB to model his notions after this pattern), but such persons may rather be supposed to be pers'^ns willing to embrace the Jewish religion and become servants in Jewish families. And this «dea harmonizes with the well-known fact that the Jews were expected to keep themselves separate from heathen, or idolatrous, associations. If these remarks bo correct, then there is no foundation for my opponent's statement that in such cases circumcision was " regardless of any other condi- tions whatever" than to be born in the house or bought with the money of a Jew. I leave the congregation to judge whether the nut is cracked or not. My friend says that " as a matter of fact, baptism is not for the pure, for it is for the remission of sins." Just so, having reference to the remission of sins, this is the meaning. And what is remis- sion of sins if it does not involve purification? All I claim, or have claimed, either for baptism or circumcision, is that it is a symbol of purity, or purification, and that the inward purification is supposed to have taken place before the symbol is given. This was not so, I am aware, in the case of Simon Magus, and perhaps in millions of other cases, but it is the legitimate order. And this is virtually recognized, even by my opponent^ else why does lie require faith before baptism ? Will he tell us in what way faith fits us for baptism, if not because God forgives us when we believe 1 This is a nut for him to crack, and I predict that he will find it a genuine '• hard-shell." My opponent, I fear, will never give over the use of that logical (or illogical) fallacy just now referred to, viz., the petitio principii. He begs the question when he assumes that our Lord's disciples baptized men and women, but not children; he begs the question when he assumes that faith and repentance are always requisite before bap- tism ; he begs the question when he assumes that my practice is different from our Lord's ; he begs the question when he assumes that I do not baptize, but rantize ; he begs the question when he assumes that my doctrine differs from our Lord's ; be begs the question when h<) assumes that immersionists practice just aa the Saviour did; and, in fact, if you eliminate the assumptions from his speeches there would hardly be enough substance left for a decent bowl of gruel. But I cannot waste time in replying to assumptiona I prefer to deal with arguments, where I can find them. I have replied so often to the assumption about no one being Abra ham's seed except believers, that I am ashamed to refer to it again. Let me ask my opponent, once for all, if Isaac was Abraham's seed 1 UN TliK MODS AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 383 If 80, was it faith that constituted him such > Or was lie bom so? Yet he received the very same recognition that his father did on the ground of his faith. Now, why may not an infant to-day reof^ive the same recognition as its father on the ground of his faith ? Will ho tell us why 1 My explanation is this : Adults being sinners, they must believe in Christ before they are accepted in Him, and they cannot be baptized until they are accepted. When they believe, faith is im- puted for righteousness, as in the case of Abraham ; and they are justified when through Christ's mediation the guilt of their sin is no longer imputed to them. Will he tell us what people require, when they grow up to be sinners, before baptism ] If he will do that he will give us something new in his next speech. To make this matter plain: he contends that faith is a prerequisite to baptism. I ask why it is such. There must be a reason unlesb God so appointed it arbitrarily, or without reason. This supposition would impeach the Almighty. If there is a reason we have a right to ask what it is. Suppose, e.g., that we take two disconnected links of a chain, and call number one faith and number two baptism. Now we want to connect these two together by a third link which we will, for the present, ckU a reason. Will he give the proper name of that third link] My explanation is, that it is justification. We are justified by faith. And being justified we are entitled to baptism. Now, according to this explanation, faith is a prerequisite to justification, and justification a prerequisite to baptism. Adult sinners must be- lieve, therefore, before they are baptized ; but infants, as I have shown, are already in a justified state, regardless of faith, hence there is nothing between them and baptism. They possess the necessary qualification. Will he tell us why faith precedes baptism if not for the reason I have given 1 I want to say also that it matters not a rush, so far as the issue of this debate is concerned, what Presbyterians or any other body of Christians believe. It is not the belief of Presbyterians, but my arguments, that he is expected to concern himself with. But when these get too strong for his digestive organs, he swings ofi* and tells> us what Presbyterians believe. I hope in future he will leave them- to attend to their own theology,, and spend his time and strength on my positions. This will be more to the point, and conduce muchi more to the edification of his hearers. I don't know how you like the dish of re-hash that my opponent has served up to you for the fortieth time about "Meyer, the greatest of Biblical exegetes;" "Neander, the prince of Church historians;"" 384 RKPORT OF DRDATB " BledsoA, the most candid, ablo, and learned of all the Methodistfi of the United States ; " '• Schaff, the famous writer of Church history ; " "Steitz, the great Lutheran scholar;" together with McKay, Mo- sheiin, etc. ; but it looks to me very much as though he had committed these high-sounding qualifications of these great men to memory, from some Baptist publication, and recites them in each speech, when he runs out of other matter, just to fill in the moments till time is called. No doubt it is convenient for him, and it must be supremely edifying to you, s6 I will say no more about it. My opponent says that Paul never once mentions that baptism came for circumcision. I have quoted again and again what Paul plainly sets forth, that spiritual baptism is the same as spiritual circumcision. In the revised edition, Col. 2:11, 12, Paul says, "Ye were circum- cised with the circumcision made without hands, having been buried in baptism." Thus he identified the two rites as equivalents of each other, hence he must have believed that the one was to be applied to the same class of subjects as the other. As I intimated in a former speech, it was a gracious act not to magnify this fact in the early ages of Christianity. Suppose you had all been Gentiles with strong anti- Jewish prejudices, and this had been the distinguishing feature be- tween you and the Jews, and I came and preached the Hubstitution of baptism in place of circumcision, it would have aroused your Gentile prejudices, and you would very naturally have said, " If this is but another form of the same rite that has always distinguished the Jews from us, and made them boastful over us, we want nothing to do with it." And the Jews, on the other hand, would have continued to glory in it as their distinguishing badge, and have claimed that unless the Gentiles were baptized, and kept the law of Moses, they could not be saved. It was therefore expedient, no doubt, that little should be said on that subject in introducing it, so that it might produce as little friction as possible. This is the strongest evidence for so little being said on the subject in the New Testament. We are told that there is no infant baptism in the Bible. Three million men, women and children wore baptized in the cloud and in the sea. It is admitted that the deliverance of the children of Israel from Egypt, and their being brought under the administration of Moses, was typical of man's deliverance from a state of sin, and his entrance into the liberty of the sons of God. To set forth the former, men, women and childran were baptized, and their baptism was typical ; hence, under the administration of Christ, men, women and children should be baptized, and their baptism is antetypical. ON TUR MODK AND SUaiKCTS OF DAPTIBM. 385 And tlie antetypn should a^ree with the type. If yon d«8troy infant baptism in the Ohristian dispensation, you destroy the antetype. > No man knows whether Lydia had any children or not, says my opponent. Let us see what the scholars say. As explained in a former address, the Syriac version, the most ancient and literal, as well as one of the most reliable versions in the world, sup- posed to have lieen made in the first century after tlie Christian era, says, " Lydia and her children." Bo there is no " supposing " about it, for that version settles the matter. Before entering upon my review, I want to remind you that my opponent has agreed to introduce no new matter in his final reply. But I do not know that it is necessary to use any safeguard, for he is not likely to do so. We have had scarcely anything new in any of his replies for the last two days, and I predict that we shall get noth- ing in his next speech but the same thing warmed over, so I pass hurriedly on to briefly review my entire argument. I have referred to the fact that in our federal head, Adam, sin waa brought into the world ; that unless a dispensation of grace had been then introduced Adam must have suffered the extreme penalty of the Divine law, and been destroyed nt the hand of God, and our race would have been blotted out. The human family would have been extinguished in its very germ. Accordingly, from the days of Abel to the present time there has been recognized on the part of man the necessity for an atonement between him and his God. And this recognition on the part of man is an evident result of the teaching of God on this subject. Away down in the dajs of Abraham God made an express covenant with him and his family in respect to this matter of the atonement. That covenant implied that God would be his God, and to be a man's God means to give Himself to man. The Godhead was to be placed at the disposal of the manhood ; in other words, God was to employ all His Divine resources on behalf of man, and bless him in body and soul, for time and eternity. Anything less than this would have been to belittle and disparage the promises of God. He made this covenant with Abraham, that in his son Isaac all the nations of the earth should be blessed. Yet the word "seed," as explained by Paul, has special reference to Ofirist, Hence Isaac was a type of Christ, and represented the spiritual element in the covenant. That covenant was sealed with the seal of circumcision, hence circumcision was a seal of spiritual blessings. I have shown, moreover, that Paul quoted from the same covenant that was sealed witTi the seal of circumcision to prove that Abraham was to be the father of many nations ; in that covenant 386 RBPORT or DBBATK little ohildron were included and Healed ; that was an everlasting cove- nant and hai never been abrogated, but ii to-day in full force and etTect. True, many of the natural branches were cut oH* through unbelief, but the Gentilei were grafted in by faith, and when the natural branoheu give up their unbelief and believe in Ohrint they too will be grafted in again. Rut it is the same covenant including lit le children. Accordingly in the Psalms we read, *' He hath remembered his covenant to a thousand generations." Under that covenant Christ when he came into the world took little children in His arniH and blessed them, and said, "Of such is the kingdom of heaven." It is an insult to the Ohristian intelligence of this audience to seek to make out that the kingdom of heaven is too small a kingdom to include little children. It is also an insult to Ohrist, who came to establiHh on the earth a kingdom which was to include all for whom He died, even those who had committed personal transgression, when they received Him by faith, but especially those who had not personally trans- gressed. Christ said of the latter class, " Of such m the kingdom of heaven." I have shown that from the very days of the apostles down to the present time the rights of children in the covenant have been recognized. They were never denied until 1300 years after the begin- ning of the Christian dispensation. My opponent has failud to produce a case refuting this fact, and he cannot produce one. So, little children have always been regarded as in the covenant under the Christian dispensation, and received the seal of God, even the seal of righteous- ness. And this seal of righteousness is baptism, which the early fathers of the Church believed came in place of circumcision. Little children have thus been recognized as members of the Church of God and heirs of the eternal kingdom, ever since the days of Abraham, at least, and they will be crowned with glory in our Father's heavenly mansions. We become children of God by virtue of the atonement. But my opponent's argument cuts off little children altogether from the atonement : no atonement, he says, is made for them. There is no place in the fold of Christ for them, because they cannot commit personal sin ; therefore, they are passed by, and stand in the same relation to God and His church and the covenant of redemption that your cat or dog might do. They have never committed any personal sin, therefore they have never been redeemed. They go to heaven, if they go at all, simply because they do not know any better, not be- cause Christ died for them. ,They hove no connection whatever with the atonement ; it brings redemption only to humanity when humanity has begun to be personally sinful. But Romans 5:18 and ON TIIR MODR AND BUIURCTS Or BAPTISM. 387 19 oomplotely sweeps this doctrine aw»y. That is the skeleton in the closet which my opponent does not like to venture near. I could not get Mr. McDiarmid to venture near it, either, any more than if it had been a ghost. He threatened to tell what it meant, but took good care not to execute the threat. My opponent, also, said he would tell us what it meant. Well, that is just the thing I want him to do, but he docH not do it ; his offer was just made to throw dust in the eyes of this audience. There is the doctrine of original ■in — some kind of taint in our nature which we cannot get over. If my op()onent could get the 18th and 19th versed of 5th Romans out of the Bible, together with some other passages, his sailing might be comparatively clear ; but with those passages there, he will run on a rock every time he tries to navigate these waters. I have shown you that according to his theory not only would it exclude the children from the Church of Christ, but also from the kingdom of heaven. My opponent's theory excludes the entire Jewish nation from the covenant of redemption, for Paul said distinctly, " If ye be circum- cised Christ shall profit you nothing." He says that Paul taught this doctrine of circumcision to his Jewish countrymen. I have shown you that he did no such thing. It is a libel on the teaching of Paul to say he taught or encouraged circumcision in his day. He was the great apostle to the Gentiles who discouraged it, and he dis- tinctly taught that neither circumcision availeth anything nor un- circumcision, but a new creature. But if he taught circumcision he excluded himself and all other believers from the atonement of Christ and the kingdom of heaven. I have shown y^u that by my opponent's teaching Christ has virtually tied His hands behind Him and cannot save a soul from hell, though it should fulfil every con- dition of His own appointment, unless he can get some Disciple preacher to come and put the individual under water. If my oppo- nent says that Christ can work, but that he can work only in a certain way, that virtually amounts to the same thing. No matter how sin- cerely you repent and believe, you cannot get to heaven unless you can get a Disciple preacher to come and plump you under the water. Will my opponent be kind enough to deu^ that such is the case 1 I have shown you that the whole superstructure from my point of view is consistent and harmonious. Ood has all through the ages been build- ing up a Church, not one under the old and another under the new dispensation, but one grand living temple under both dispensations ; and He has built it on the foundation not only of the teachings of Christ and the apostles, but also of the teachings of the apostles and $$!§' REPORT OP DEBATE '' i prophets, — ^joining the teachings of the old with the teachings of the new — the great doctrinal foundation of which Jesus Christ is the chief corner stone, in whom all the building fitly framed together groweth unto an holy temple in the Lord. Solomon's temple was a grand type of the spiritual temple built on Christ, and when that temple was dedicated the glory of the Lord came down and filled it, and that was illustrative of the fact that His presence was to pervade the Church in all ages, though the glory was to be greater under the latter dispensation than under the former, for the Lord Himself would come to this latter temple, the spiritual temple, and fill it with His presence. He promised to be with it and in it when He gave His disciples the commission to go into all the world and preach the gospel to every creature. He added the consoling promise, " Lo, I am with you alway, even to the end of the world." Paul, addressing the believers at Corinth, said, "Ye are the temple of God, and the Spirit of God dwelleth in you." Thus by fitting each stone into the temple, by perfecting each stone in the temple, and by making alive each stone of the temple, Christ was building for Himself a glorious house, beautified, garnished, adorned, and purified even as a bride for her husband ; and by and by the bridegroom is coming back to receive His bride. One fold, one Shepherd, one Lord, one faith, one baptism, — not a mere dipping in water, which would be a degradation to this great spiritual truth, but one spiritual purification — one Lord over all, one faith on the part of the whole, one baptism of the Holy Ghost, regenerating, quickening, anointing, and filling the whole for the glorious temple above where we shall shine with infinite splendor throughout an eternal day, and make the temple of heaven resound with the praises of the redeemed gathered *"rom all nations, peoples, tribes, and tongues, baptized with the Spirit of God, washed in the blood of the Lamb, and arrayel in white robes before the throne. This will be the consummation of our labors here on earth, this the consummation of our Redeemer's work, when He shall see of the travail of His soul and shall be satis- fied. Go home and read the 7th chapter of Revelations. John, who saw the glorified company, thus records the elder's testimony concerning them : " These are they which came out of great tribulation." How many? "A company whom no man could number, of all nations and kindreds, and people and tongues." Are the parents in that company without their little ones? Mothers, are you not to meet your little ones that have gone before you in that blood-washed throng ] Are you not to take them again to your .^ ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 389 bosoms in that immortal laud ] Are they not to share with you the glories of heaven that Christ has bought for you and your seed for- ever 1 Are tliey to be gathered in some separate place set apart for babies and babies only 1 Christians are represented as one family in Christ — as, " one Chyrch above, beneath, though now divided by the stream, th3 narr>)W stream of death." Thank God, Christ will gather all His loved ones home by and by. The ship is coming home, no matter how boisterous and stormy the voyage, no matter how great the trials and tribulations, how many the tears and sorrows. God will gather His family unbroken before His throne ; He will wipe all tears from their eyes, and lead each one to living fountains of water. Is it possible that Christ will separate the older ones from the little ones 1 1 am astonished that any people can believe such a doctrine. Nothing but a want of investigation, or strong prejudices that harden the heart so that it will not yield to truth and conviction, could lead anyone to cling to a superstition so deadly, so at variance with all our instincts concerning Christ and His government. His life and His redemption. O ! mothers, will you bring your children to Christ, and put the seal of the everlasting covenant, the visible seal, on their bodies, and before hifjh heaven and before men let it be known thit as for you and your house you will serve the Lord. Then having recognized their right to Divine truth and to Divine grace, " bring them up in the nurture and admonition of the Lord." Allow me, in closing, to thank you, ladies and gentlemen, for your close attention. Many of you are present under circumstances of great personal discomfort, and in this hall, day after day, and night after night, I have admired your patience and your behavior. No peo- ple could have conducted themselves more orderly than you have done. And now, if either by word or act I have been rude or offen- sive to you, may God forgive me, and I trust you will forgive me too. In the heat of debate we sometimes give expression to sentiments un- premeditated, uttered on the spur of the momeij^, and from impulse, oefore we have time to consider what the effect is going to be. You cannot expect quite such slrict and rigid propriety under such circum- stances as if we were dispassionately considering the subject alone and uncontradicted. A certain spirit on one side provokes a similar s{)irit on the other side. I only regret that I allowed myself to be provoked by it. I again earnestly thank you. I am sure my intro- duction to the people of Meaford has not been attended by all unplees- antness. I am sure the recollection in the memory of some will be pleasant. I am sure some of the mist and fog has been blown away 390 .',«,,.»>' REPORT OF DEBATB " by this little cyclone of theological debate, and you will all be able to see better in the clearer atmosphere. May God bless you, and if we meet no more on earth, may we meet, one and all, in our Father's kingdom. Amen. [Time expired.] • ■ ' ■. ADDENDUM. Resprctbd Reader, — Having received the proof-sheets of Mr. Har- ding's eleventh speech, together with his second " Addenda," I am forced to the painful necessity of addressing myself to you again in this un- usual and anomalous way. I deeply regret that this necessity has been forced upon oip, but I suspected when he introduced the " Addenda " business at the close of his ninth speech, that he wanted to get a pre- cedent established so as to make use of some pretext to put in a sting at the tail end of his last speech, when he knew I would have no chance of replying in the regular way ; and my suspicions have proved correct, hence I claim the right of anticipating, in this place, some things he has added to his next speech. I would be glad if his ''Ad- denda " were read before this. 1. He says, " About one-half of Mr Wilkinson's eleventh speech has been altogether added, or very materially changed, since it was first sent to me in print." And suppose it has. Has not Mr. Wil- kinson the same right to alter and enlarge speeches that Mr. Harding has 1 I have already pointed out, in a previous " Addendum," that Mr. Harding, though repudiating the report of his own speeches when " first sent to him ^n print," on the ground that he was not as fully reported as I was, yet up to the end of his twentieth speech had seventeen pages and eighteen lines in this book more than I had. Does he expect me to allow him to add to and alter his speeches all he pleases without making any additions or alterations in mine ? If he does, he takes me for a greater simpleton than I am. Besides, I have been requested by the publisher to alter my speeches to meet the altera- tions in my opponents. This I have done to some extent, though I can prove that he has made half a dozen additions and alterations to my one. In fact he has entirely rewritten, recast and enlarged every one of ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 391 his speeches from first to last ; yet, as soon aa I take the same liberty I must be exposed in this odious manner. Had I suspected that the man was capable of such conduct I would never have consented to the publication of this debate at all. When he says my speech was changed " since it was first sent to him in print," he evidently intends the reader to understand that this was done since it was put in print for this book. But his own " Ad- denda " unintentionally supply the correct solution. He admits that " the stenographer's manuscript was given to Mr. Wilkinson, and appeared in printed form first in his paper, The Iconoclast. My speeches," he says, " were clipped from his paper and were sent to me for correction." But he does not say that Mr. Wilkinson's eleventh speech was sent to him as it appeared in printed iorm in The Icono- clast, months before it was set up for this book, though this was evidently the case, for he admits having The Iconoclast of February I5th, 1885 (not clippings from it), hence I have no doubt that all the numbers containing the debate were sent to him also. This, it will be observed, puts quite a different complexion on the matter. 2. With regard to the question of veracity concerning Dr. Stuart, I admit that he has succeeded in putting the case in such a light as to make my position look somewhat doubtful. But when the whole truth is seen it will wear quite a different aspect, and he will be able to make use of all the flattering unction at home that was intended for me in the sentences, " He who would succeed by misrepresentation and trickery needs a good memory," and "The way of transgres&ors is hard." Now, in order to make me out a false witness he quoted two brief sentences prior to the introduction of Dr. Stuart's definition, and from these two sentences alone, it would seem as if it was the classical definition he was trying to get at. But we will take in a little more of the context and see if this seeming intention is true. Here is the whole paragraph, verbatim et literatim, with the exception of some interruption notes which have no bearing on the point : "It is agreed by Mr. Wilkinson that the word in the classics means to immerse. He says I might have saved myself the trouble of producing lexicons and books to prove that it means immerse in the classic use of it. He also admits that it does not mean to sprinkle, and that it does not mean to pour upon, and that it cannot in either case be so defined. Indeed, he has never yet agreed that the word means anything but immerse. Do you remember that I called upon him to answer this question, Tell us what baptizo means in the com- mission. He and I agree that a word in one place can have but one meaning. What is the meaning of baptizo in the commission ? I 392 REPOBT OF DEBATE told you he would not give you the meaning. We do not want to know what it symbolizes, or represents. We want to know what the word means. Christ told the apostles to do something. ' Go disciple the nations, baptizing them.' Do something, — 'baptize them. What does it mean 1 He says it does not mean to purify or cleanse, but that it symbolizes that. He admits that in classic Greek it means to immerse, but he will not agree that it means anything else. I told you he would not answer that question in his last speech, and he did not. r prophesy that he will not answer it in his next speech or anv speech — ** Mr. WiLKiNSOX — Of course I won't. " Mr. Harding — I knew you were a coward, and dare not do it. " He is not going to answer that question because he dare not do it. I will tell you the meaning of the word because I know it. What does Christ tell His apostles to do t To baptize. My opponent does not say what it means. When you ask me the meaning of any word I am using, I will give it you as far as I know it. If 1 don't know it I will tell you so. My opponent agrees that in the classics it means to immerse. No wonder he agrees to that." (See also pages 54 and 55 of this book). Now the reader can here see the scope of the context, including the two sentences quoted by Mr. Harding, and I ask all intelligent readers whether it is the classical or scriptural meaning which he was trying to drag out of me and proposing to define. He states, in the brief paragraph quoted, no less than four times, that I admit the word means immerse in the classics. He also calls upon me no less than five times, in the same paragraph, to tell what it means in the com- mission. He tells the audience no less than six times that I will not or dare not tell them what the word means in the commission, and in one case uses the word "coward." He also boasts that he can tell and vrill tell what I won't tell, and then immediately quotes from Stuart, Donnegan, Doddridge, Turretin, Casaubon, and Bishop Smith, of Kentucky, all in the same column, to develop the meaning that I was too big a coward to tell them ! Surely a man of good sense would hardly take so much pains, and array so much scholarship, especially in a hotly contested debate, when every moment was precious, in order to prpve what he repeatedly says 1 admitted ! I could not give him credit for being so stupid. Yet he persists in shouldering the folly, and wants the reader to believe that I told a lie, and was guilty of " trickery and misrepresentation " when I tried to put a more chari- table cons'.ruction on the matter. But the candid reader will have no trouble in deciding the case. If I told a lie, then his course was supremely foolish, but if he acted wisely I told the truth. There is no force whatever in the fact that he used those two sentences im- ON THE MODE AND SUBJECTS OP BAPTISM. 393 mediately before Dr. Stuart's definition, for he used them there, as I have shown, for the fourth time in the paragraph quoted. Besides, his proposition referred exclusively to Christian baptism, and not to classic baptism, hence I cannot conccWe why he should want to qi'ote authorities to prove the latter, especially when there was no dispute between us on that point In view of all these considerations I again " emphatically deny that when my opponent first introduced Stuart's testimony in this debate, that he said it was Stuart's classical definition of bapto and baptizo instead of his New Testament meaning." 3. As to the charge of " adding to the Word of God," let the reader turn to and read my entire argument on the point in question, and not the garbled extracts given by Mr. Barding, and I am willing to be judged by the result. 4. Mr. Harding wo'dd convey the impression that the report of this debate, as supplied by Mr. Bradley, was a one-sided one. This is not true. Mr, Bradley received instructions to supply a full and correct report of the whole debp^te, and I testify tliat it was quite as fair to Mr. Harding as to myself. The Syndicate referred to in the Preface was not organized in the interest of either party. 5. He says that his speeches, as they appeared in my paper, were " very much abbreviated, and most miserably distorted and perverted." I affirm that they were published exactly as reported by Mr. Bradley, with the exception that where a wrong word had leen used by the reporter, the right one, as far as possible, was inserted ; and I have challenged him and some of his satellites, who have repeated his insinuations, to appoint a committee to compare the published report with the reporter's MS., Agreeing to publish the result of their findings in my paper. This they have failed to do. T again affirm that the insinuation is essentially false in every particular. Mr. Anderson, who has made the comparison, has publicly testified to the untruthfulness of this charge, and would d6 so under oath if necessary. 6. I also deny that I materially enlarged or altered my own speeches as they appeared in The IconoclasL Nearly every alteration was made on the reporter's MS., and consisted almost entirely of mere verbal and grammatical corrections. Mr. Anderson will also bear me out in this. 7. Again, I deny that my speeches, as they appear in this book, have been altered as his have been. I have elsewhere stated the facts. 26 394 REPORT OF DEBATE /«i. 8. Besides, I don't complain of his changes, and never should have made any allusion to them in this book had he not commenced the trouble by exposing the additions I made to one of my speeches merely to meet the additions and alterations in his. I have acted merely in self-defence. 9. His efforts to prove that I taught the actual regeneration of infants in the debate are too puerile to require any notice. I shall, therefore, pass them by unnoticed. 10. I would like to remind Mr. Harding that the " horses and cattle, dogs and cats, pots and kettles, and other such things," were not baptized in passing through the Red Sea, unless they are included in the phrase "our fathers." (1 Oor. 10:1, 2.) He can accept the relationship involved, if he wishes, but for my part I repudiate it. I accept the children as included in the phrase, because they after- wards became the " fathers," but not the horses and cattle, and dogs and cats. This is quite as bad as to talk of baptizing skunks. I am surprised to find such quibbles in a rewritten speech, over which so much time and study have been spent. It would have been disgrace- ful even in an extempore speech. And the same is true of a good deal of the banter interspersed throughout this book. It is an unwelcome and unpleasant task to be compelled to make such exposures of a Christian minister, but he has stubbornly and persistently courted it. ' T. L. W. ox THE MOOS AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 395 MR. HARDING'S ELEVENTH REPLY. I rise to bring to a close the discussion to which you have listened so patiently, for so long a time; and I desire at this point, lest I should forget it at the close, to thank the people of this conimunity for the great patience and kindness which they have manifested during the debate. For considering the crowded hall, and the excitement and disorder that hps sometimes been displayed on the platform, we could hardly have expected such quietness and attention from the audiences. But I do not desire to weary you, and so will address myself at once to the subject before us. Viewed even from the standpoints of its friends, the doctrine of infant baptism is in a most hopeless condition. The following different and conflicting statements are made concerning it by different advocates of the practice : 1. There is not a vestige of it in the New Testament. So say Meyer, Steitz, Neander and others. 2. It is taught in the New Testament by a logical inference. So say many. 3. The covenants of the Old Testament have nothing to do with infant baptism — furnish no ground for it. So say Stuart, Ditzler and others. 4. The covenants of the Old Testament justify infant baptism. So say Mr. Wilkinson and others. 5. Infant baptism is of post-apostolic origin. So say Meyer, Nean- der and others. 6. Infant baptism originated before the days of the apostles, teaches Mr. Wilkinson. And now follows the most astonishing fact of all : The different churches that practice this rite base their practice upon different grounds altogether. The Methodists, as Mr. Wilkinson has been teachiilg you from the beginning, claim that infants are entitled to baptism because they are pure ; and hence they are willing to baptize (rantize, rather) any infant. The Presbyterians, on the other hand, claim that infants have a right to baptism because their parents are the children of God ; hence they will baptize (rantize, sprinkle) a child only when one, at least, of its parents is a believer. Hence we have two o^er conflicting statements to record, viz. : 7. The child is pure; therefore it ought to be baptized. So say Mr. Wilkinson and the Methodists. 396 REPORT OF DEBATE 8. Not SO ; the child must have a Christian parent, or it is not fit for baptism. So say Mr. Paterson and the Presbyterians. 9. Whereas, formerly, the doctrine of all Psedo-baptists was : The child is polluted with original sin, and this pollution is washed away in baptism ; therefore it ought to be baptized. Suppose a mother starting out with her infant to determine the question whether or no it shall be baptized. Her husband, though a pious Methodist, says there is no warrant for the practice in reason or revelation (as many such Methodists do), and he objects. She is seeking for information to use in overcoming his objections. She returns, and upon being questioned by him reports thus : Dr. A. said our child is totally depraved, stained by ^he sin of Adam, and there- fore he ought to be baptized. Dr. B. said that be is pure as an angel, and as baptism is for the pure, therefore he ought to be baptized. Dr. C. said that infant baptism is not taught in the Old Testament at all, but that ■*; is taught in the household baptisms, and in other places, in the New. Dr. D. said that it is not taught in the New Testament at all, but that it is taught in the covenants of the Old. Dr. E. said that it is not taught in the Bible at all ; that it is of post-apostolic origin ; but that it is a good thing, and that the Church had a right to institute the practice, which it did about one hundred years after John died. Dr. F. said if we are Christians, or if either of us is, our child should be baptized. Dr. G. said it matters not whether we are Christians or not, the child ought to be baptized. "What do you think, my friends, would be the state of that woman's mind? Every one of those statements can be obtained from learned Psedo-baptist divines this day. Indeed I have here in my possession, and have quoted in your hearing, utterances from the most learned among them, justifying every one of those answers. Truth is con- sistent ; error is contradictory. Now if this father and mother should learn, in the course of their investigations, the fact that no mention of infant baptism can be found, in any form of words, by any writer, until one hundred years after the last inspired apostle died, would they not, if they were reasonable, conclude that their child could get along without it 1 So it seems to me. Mr. Wilkinson tells us he is not anxious to get rid of Mark's account of the commission, "Go ye into all the world, and preach the gospel to every creature. He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved; but he that believeth not shall be danined." Mark 16 : 15, 16. It is well enough that he is not anxious to get rid of it, for it can not be done. Of the five most ancient manuscripts, it is contained in three; ON TUB MODE AND SUBJECTS OF BAPTISM. 397 all the most ancient versions — versions much older than any manu- script — contain it ; then the passage is quoted by Irenieua, Hippolytus, Augustine and others of the early fathers. When it is known that the oldest manuscript which omits this passage (Vfiirk 16 : 9-20) was written about A. D. 360, and that Irenteus, who quotes it, wrote 176 years earlier, it will be understood that its failure to appear in the manuscript does not invalidate it as Scripture ; for it is demonstrated that the passage was in the world nearly 200 years before the exis* tence of that MS., and it was quoted as Scripture by one who knew Poly carp, who knew John. Would not Mr. Wilkinson be happy if he could link his infant baptism to the apostles in that wayt That Syriac version that he relies upon to show that Lydia had children, contains the passage. It (the version) was made in the second cen- tury ; or, as Mr. Wilkinson prefers to express it, " in the first century after the Christian." No wonder, therefore, the revisers (as Dr. Roberts tells us) did not doubt its full canonical authority, and hence inserted it without the least misgivings as to its being inspired. The book of Acts is an excellent commentary on this account of the com- mission; the apostles did just what Christ told them to do, as this account gives His instructions. They went to the people, they preached the gospel to them, they baptized those that believed their preaching, and they taught that those who would not believe would be damned. And as long as these verses (Mark 16 : 15, 16) stand as inspired, just so long does Jesus limit us to the baptism of believers, and just so long does the "make disciples," which precedes the baptism in Matthew's account, equal the production of faith by preaching the gospel, which precedes the baptism in Mark's account ; that is, to "make disciples" is to produce faith in the hearts of people by preach- ing to them. It is no light thing to change Christ's order, and put the baptism before the faith. If Mr. Wilkinson could produce one case in which a man, woman, or child was baptized by divine authority without faith, from the institution of Christian baptism to the death of John, I would give up the debate. But such a case can not be found. Mr. Wilkinson seems to rely with great confidence on Colq^siang 2 : 11, 12, to show that baptism came in the room of circumcision. Let us read the passage and see if it has this meaning. It reads thus: "In whom ye were also circumcised with a circumcision not made with hands, in the putting off of the body of the flesh, in the circumcision of Christ: having been buried with Him in baptism, wherein ye were also raised with Him through faith in the working of 398 REPORT OF DKUATB <•• God, who raised Him from the dead." Of this circumcision, we learn from the text (1) that it was "not made with hands," and (2) that it consists "in the putting off of the body of the flesh;" we Hnd here the idea off a cutting off, which properly belongs to the word circumcision; "the body of the flesh" which is cut off is equal to the "old man," "the body of sin," of Rom. 6 : 6, where the mntter is discussed in much the same way. Of the baptism here mentioned, we learn that in it tliey had been buried with Christ and raised with Him. The facts brought out in the text are these : (a) the Colossians had been circumcised without hands ; (6) this circumcision consisted in the putting off of the "old man," "the body of sin," "the body of the flesh;" that is, in the pardon of their sins ; (c) it is called "the circum- cision of Ohrist," because it is in and through Christ that we obtain pardon ; (d) this pardon takes place in baptism, that is, it is given by our Lord to those whose faith is madeperfect by works. (See James 2:22-24.) Hence Peter and other inspired men direct people to be baptized " for the remission of sins." It is hardly necessary to add that almost every scholar of the world, of whatsoever faith he may be, understands the baptism of the passage to be water baptism, and that the apostle had the common practice of immersion in his mind. In denying that there is in the passage any reference to water baptism, or to immer- sion, Mr. Wilkinson has again (as is not unusual with him) the infeli- city of running counter to common sense, and to the best scholarship of the world. I am perfectly willing to leave the question as to whether baptism came in the room of circumcision, and as to what bearing this passage has upon the matter, to this intelligent audience. When the Israelites crossed the Red Sea, th iy were baptized unto Moses "in the cloud and in the sea." Mr. Wilkinson reminds us that this baptism was typical of Christian baptism, and he argues that as there were infants in the one, there should be in the other: ''the ante- type should agree with the type," he says. Yes, but there were horses and cattle, dogs and cats, pots and kettles, and other such things, in that passage through the Red Sea; must we have these things in the antetype? Must we baptize all of our live stock and household utensils, because such things were in the company when the "fathers" were baptized unto Moses? The fact is, Mr. Wilkinson was bent on finding a baby and a baptism in the same passage; and, as he could find no such passage in the New Testament, he went to the Old ; as he could not find it in any case of Christian baptism, he went to this passage through the Red Sea. But after all his trouble he finds no comfort, for the passage shows just as conclusively that cattle should be baptized ON TIIR MODE AND 8UHJECT8 OF BAPTtHM. 399 as bal)it>s. As long as we are governed by our Lord's instructions, "Qo ye, therefore, and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them," etc , we will have no trouble about the baptism of cattle or babies either. We will preach the gospel and baptize all who receive it gladly. (See Acts 2:41.) Mr. Wilkinson tells us that in the Syriac version of the New Testa- ment, which, he reminds us, is very ancient and very reliable, it is said that Lydia "and her children" were baptized; and ho says, "That version settles the matter." It does, eh 1 Well, that version contains the last part of Mark's gospel, including the commission; does it settle that n»atter too? But what if Lydia did have children? I know a man who has three children, and the youngest one is not lt>HS than thirty-five years old. I have not either of the Syriac versions here, but I have the original Greek, and the very word which the man of God used; the word (which is properly rendered "household" in our common version) is oikoa; it is rendered "household" also in the revised version. Its primary meaning is "house." In defining 'it, Greene, Groves, Bass and lexicographers generally use such words as house, dwelling-place, abode, city, citadel, temple, palace, court, apart- ment; and then, as secondary meanings, they give household, family, lineage. Mr. Wilkinson is welcome to all the comfort that he can get out of Lydia's household in favor of infant baptism. " Will he tell us what people require when they grow up to be sinners before baptism ? " asks Mr. Wilkinson Certainly I will ; they require faith ; one must believe with the heart in the Lord Jesus Christ. The commission teaches this, so does Paul's course with the jailer, and so do many other passages of Scripture. " Will he tell us in what way faith fits us for baptism ? " he asks then. Certainly ; baptism is an act of obedience. (" Behold, to obey is better than sacrifice, and to hearken than the fat of rams. For rebellion is as the sin of witchcraft, and stubbornness is as iniquity and idolatry." 1 Samuel 15:22, 23.) But without faith it is impos- sible to obey ; without it, it is impossible to please God. (See Heb. 11 : 6.) Baptism is an expression of faith in the death, burial, and resurrection of Jesus Christ ; and, as we have seen, no man was ever baptized by the authority of the Lord who did not have this faith in his heart. Unless it is the expression of such a faith, it is nothing but a mere empty, meaningless ceremony in which water, and nothing but water, is given. Mr. Wilkinson dwelt at considerable length on the Church, the temple of God, in which, he correctly tells us, the Spirit of God 400 • •• .' RKPORT OV PRUATK (Iwf'llH. This tfimpln ia huilt up of living stonei, each Chiistian being a itoiie. A« the temple ig the dwelling place for God'a Hpirit, when we learn who receive the Spirit we settle tlie question as to who are built as living stones into the building — or, in other words, who are nunnbers of Ohrist's Church on f>arth. The following paHsagcs dourly instruct us as to who receive the Hpirit. " In the last day, that great day of the feast, Jesus stood and cried, saying, If any man thirst, let him come unto Mo, and drink. He that believeth on Mo, as the Scripture hath said, out of His belly ahull ilow rivers of living water. (But this spake He of the Spirit, which they that l>t>liovo ou Him should rweive; for the Holy Ghost was not yet given ; because that Jesus was not yet glorified)." John 7 : 37-39. This passage shows that the Spirit was not given, to dwell within men, till after the glorification of Christ ; and that it was then given to believers. *' And we are His witnesses of these things ; and so is also the Holy Ghost, whom God hath given to them that obey Him." Acts 6 : 32. This verse shows that God gave the Spirit to believers who obeyed Him. " If a man love Me, he will keep My words ; and My Father will love him, and we will come unto him, and make our abode with him." John 14:23. But God abides in us through the Spirit. (See Eph. 2 : 22.) Hence this lost verse shows that they who love and obey Jesus receive the Spirit. "Then Peter said unto ther , Repent, and be baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ for the remission of sins, and ye shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost." Acts 2 : 38. Here repentance (implying faith) and baptism are placed in natural and logical order before pardon and the reception of the Spirit. Don't forget the gospel rule, which gives us this order: (1) Faith (including Repentance), (2) Baptism, (3) Pardon, and (4) The gift of the Spirit. To this rule there is one, and only one, apparent excep- tion, viz., the peculiar case of Cornelius and his friends, in which there was a miraculous outpouring of the Spirit before baptism. In all other cases the order is as given here. I invited Mr. Wilkinson lo discuss this question before you (that is, the question of the Spirit's work), but he wisely declined to accept the invitation. So, with the suggestions and Scriptural quotations already given, I shall leave the matter with you. Mr. McDairmid must have made a very deep impression upon Mr. Wilkinson in the debate which they had at Acton. Mr. Wilkinson cannot forget him; he is continually telling us what the "office ON THK MODK AND SUDJRCTH OF nAPTIbU. 401 editor" said and did. When I meet my old college friend again, 1 will t(!ll him that the sting of his thrusts has not ceased in Mr. Wil- kiiiHon to this day, for he oontinuos to sneer and snarl at every remembranre of him. In conclusion, I desire to sum up a number of facts that have been brought before you during the progress of the discussion — facts that settle the questioti beyond the possibility of a reasonable duubt. 1. God prophesied through Jeremiah that lie would make "a new covenant with the house of Israel and with the house of Judah : that it should not be according to the covenant which He made with their fathers wlum Ho led them out of the land of Kgypt ; " that He would put iris laws in their minds, and write them in their hearts ; that all under this covenant would know Him, and hence would not teach one anoth