Luther's Sermon on Infant Baptism - Page 8


© Dr. Martin Luther, Th.D., Reformer, sinner and child of God
Page 8

38. But since they stick so fast in reason, we must assail them with their own wisdom. Tell me, why do you baptize a man when he has come to the age of reason? You answer: He hears God's Word and believes. I ask: "How do you know that?" You answer: "He professes it with his mouth." "What shall I say? How, if he lies and deceives? You cannot see his heart." "Very well, then you baptize for no other reason than for what the man shows himself to be externally, and you are uncertain of his faith, and must believe that if he has not more within in his heart than you perceive without, neither his hearing, nor his profession, nor his faith will help him; for it may all be a delusion and no true faith." "Who then are you, that you say external hearing and profession are necessary to baptism; where these are wanting one must not baptize? You yourself must confess that such hearing and profession are uncertain, and not enough for one to receive baptism. Now upon what do you baptize? How will you justify your actions when you thus bungle baptism and bring it into doubt? Is it not the fact that you must come and say that it is not becoming for you to know or do more than that he whom you are to baptize be brought to you and ask baptism from you; and you must believe or commit the matter to God, whether he inwardly truly believes or not? In this way you are excused and baptize aright. Why then will you not do the same for the children, whom Christ commands to be brought to him and promises to bless? But you wish first to have the outward hearing and profession, which you yourself acknowledge is uncertain and not sufficient for baptism on the part of the one to be baptized. And you let go the sure word of Christ in which he bids the little children to be brought unto him, on account of your uncertain external hearing."

39. Moreover tell me, where is the reason of a Christian while he is asleep, since his faith and the grace of God never leave him? If faith can thus continue without the aid of reason, so that the latter is not conscious of it, why should it not also begin in children before reason knows anything about it? In the same way I would like to say of every hour in which a Christian lives and is busy and occupied, that he is not conscious of his faith and reason, and yet his faith does not on that

   

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Here's the follow-up discussion on this article: View all related messages

7.   Aug 20, 1999 6:16 AM
I picked up a book, which came with a CD, called "Mary Did You Know?" A small book, set up as a gift for Christmas, with blurbs from different Christian writers about Christmas (I was disappointed tha ...

-- posted by H2O


6.   Aug 17, 1999 4:19 AM
the laughter and ease with which I converse with most Protestants today over our differences.

The joy of salvation is important to me.

I wish someone would do an "Essential Luther" with the extr ...


-- posted by StCatherine


5.   Aug 16, 1999 8:05 AM
Would that we had more today who spoke with such straightforwardness. We must also remember that words have changed meanings a great deal in the past 450+ years.

I seem to recall that Jesus tended ...


-- posted by ears4u


4.   Aug 16, 1999 6:25 AM
One of the weaknesses of Luther (and we all need to keep in mind Luther was a sinful human being just like we all are, and he was also justified through the blood of Christ just like we all are) is hi ...

-- posted by H2O


3.   Aug 14, 1999 5:37 AM
My post should have started with a "You know . . ." That's what I was thinking. No a "You." Just a "you" sounds cross, doesn't it? I did not mean to convey "grouchiness." Sorry, about not proofre ...

-- posted by StCatherine





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