A baptist theology of the child

Baptists, who have traditionally emphasised the authority of Scripture, agree strongly that New Testament teaching and practice allows them to baptize only believers upon profession of ~aith. There are, however, many remaining questions concerning the relation of children to God and the place o...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Miller, Gordon Goldsbury
Other Authors: König, Adrio
Language:en
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:Miller, Gordon Goldsbury (1992) A baptist theology of the child, University of South Africa, Pretoria, <http://hdl.handle.net/10500/17460>
http://hdl.handle.net/10500/17460
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-unisa-oai-uir.unisa.ac.za-10500-174602018-11-19T17:14:38Z A baptist theology of the child Miller, Gordon Goldsbury König, Adrio 230.6 Children -- Religious life Salvation Baptists -- Doctrines Children in the Bible Baptism -- Baptists Baptists, who have traditionally emphasised the authority of Scripture, agree strongly that New Testament teaching and practice allows them to baptize only believers upon profession of ~aith. There are, however, many remaining questions concerning the relation of children to God and the place of children in the church which are not as straightforwardly answered in Scripture; here Baptists often display little consensus. Although the principles of corporate solidarity and of individual responsibility operate in both Testaments, the development of individual responsibility, already apparent within later Old Testament history, is carried further in the New Testament where there is evidence of some breakdown in family solidarity and of division on the basis of individual allegiance to Jesus. Discussion of the place of the child in the early church to the fourth century centres around questions of original sin, the 'innocence' of children, the rise of infant baptism and the catachumenate. The historical survey also investigates the development of Anabaptist, early Baptist and modern Baptist views of childhood from the sixteenth to the twentieth centuries. Baptist perspectives in relation to four current issues in the theology of the child are considered: original sin and the 'age of accountability', infant salvation, 'faith development' and child evangelism. The South African situation is analysed by identifying amd interpreting areas of agreement and areas of uncertainty indicated by the results of a detailed questionnaire distributed amongst Baptists during 1990-1991. Baptists need to recognize that children of believers, although not necessarily saved, are in a creative relationship with the church, somewhat similar to that of the catechumenate in the early church. Two particularly problematic areas are the question of the appropriate age for baptism, church membership and communion of children. This is partly because although linked with faith rather than with ~ pastoral wisdom is needed to assess the evidence for true faith in particular cases. In spite of the difficulties to be faced, Baptist congregations and all Christians and churches have much to gain from a careful consideration of the theological issues related to the place of the child in the church. Philosophy, Practical and Systematic Theology D. Th. (Systematic Theology) 2015-01-23T04:23:52Z 2015-01-23T04:23:52Z 1992-11 Thesis Miller, Gordon Goldsbury (1992) A baptist theology of the child, University of South Africa, Pretoria, <http://hdl.handle.net/10500/17460> http://hdl.handle.net/10500/17460 en
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic 230.6
Children -- Religious life
Salvation
Baptists -- Doctrines
Children in the Bible
Baptism -- Baptists
spellingShingle 230.6
Children -- Religious life
Salvation
Baptists -- Doctrines
Children in the Bible
Baptism -- Baptists
Miller, Gordon Goldsbury
A baptist theology of the child
description Baptists, who have traditionally emphasised the authority of Scripture, agree strongly that New Testament teaching and practice allows them to baptize only believers upon profession of ~aith. There are, however, many remaining questions concerning the relation of children to God and the place of children in the church which are not as straightforwardly answered in Scripture; here Baptists often display little consensus. Although the principles of corporate solidarity and of individual responsibility operate in both Testaments, the development of individual responsibility, already apparent within later Old Testament history, is carried further in the New Testament where there is evidence of some breakdown in family solidarity and of division on the basis of individual allegiance to Jesus. Discussion of the place of the child in the early church to the fourth century centres around questions of original sin, the 'innocence' of children, the rise of infant baptism and the catachumenate. The historical survey also investigates the development of Anabaptist, early Baptist and modern Baptist views of childhood from the sixteenth to the twentieth centuries. Baptist perspectives in relation to four current issues in the theology of the child are considered: original sin and the 'age of accountability', infant salvation, 'faith development' and child evangelism. The South African situation is analysed by identifying amd interpreting areas of agreement and areas of uncertainty indicated by the results of a detailed questionnaire distributed amongst Baptists during 1990-1991. Baptists need to recognize that children of believers, although not necessarily saved, are in a creative relationship with the church, somewhat similar to that of the catechumenate in the early church. Two particularly problematic areas are the question of the appropriate age for baptism, church membership and communion of children. This is partly because although linked with faith rather than with ~ pastoral wisdom is needed to assess the evidence for true faith in particular cases. In spite of the difficulties to be faced, Baptist congregations and all Christians and churches have much to gain from a careful consideration of the theological issues related to the place of the child in the church. === Philosophy, Practical and Systematic Theology === D. Th. (Systematic Theology)
author2 König, Adrio
author_facet König, Adrio
Miller, Gordon Goldsbury
author Miller, Gordon Goldsbury
author_sort Miller, Gordon Goldsbury
title A baptist theology of the child
title_short A baptist theology of the child
title_full A baptist theology of the child
title_fullStr A baptist theology of the child
title_full_unstemmed A baptist theology of the child
title_sort baptist theology of the child
publishDate 2015
url Miller, Gordon Goldsbury (1992) A baptist theology of the child, University of South Africa, Pretoria, <http://hdl.handle.net/10500/17460>
http://hdl.handle.net/10500/17460
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