The Origins of Infant Baptism
Infant baptism was not a late theological invention but a widespread practice dating back to at least the 2nd century, likely emerging from shared Greco-Roman and Jewish cultural assumptions about family-based religious initiation.
Understanding the historical development of baptism clarifies the shift from adult-only initiation to infant-based tradition, bridging the gap between New Testament accounts and later sacramental theology.
Section summaries
Modern Context and Differences
optionalIntroductory remarks on modern Catholic vs. Protestant differences.
Jewish Origins and Mikvahs
watchEssential background on how John the Baptist and the Essenes influenced Christian water rituals.
The 'Adult-First' Scholarly View
watchExplains Everett Ferguson's influential model and the link to Augustine.
Patristic Evidence (Tertullian/Cyprian/Origen)
watchCritical historical evidence that infants were baptized long before Augustine.
The Argument from Silence
watchPersonalized analysis of why the New Testament might not mention children specifically.
Archaeology of Baptismal Fonts
optionalDetailed look at font sizes; important for liturgical history but secondary to the core theological argument.
Sponsor / Nebula Promo
skipPromotional content for the streaming platform and other documentaries.
Key points
- The Silence of the New Testament — While the New Testament focuses on adult converts, the 'silence' regarding children may reflect a shared cultural assumption that families were initiated together (household baptisms) rather than a rejection of infant participation.
- Pre-Augustinian Evidence — Church fathers like Tertullian (c. 200 CE) and Origen describe infant baptism as an established custom long before Augustine systematized the doctrine of Original Sin.
- Archaeological Challenge to Immersion — Many early baptismal fonts (3rd-5th centuries) are too shallow (45-75 cm) for full adult submersion, suggesting partial immersion or pouring (affusion) were common methods alongside dunking.
- Baptism as Mercy vs. Sin Remission — Early defenders like Cyprian of Carthage (c. 250 CE) viewed infant baptism as an act of divine mercy and protection against death rather than a response to personal sin.
“Let them be made Christians when they are able to know Christ. Why should the innocent one rush to the remission of sins?” — Tertullian
“According to the usage of the church, baptism is given even to infants.” — Origen
AI-generated from the transcript. May contain errors.
A few miles east of Jericho, there's a
spot on the Jordan River traditionally
identified as the very place where Jesus
was baptized by John the Baptist. And if
you visit there today, chances are
you'll see groups of Christians
gathering there, dressed in white robes,
standing barefoot in the shallows,
waiting their turn to be baptized. But
if you know a thing or two about
Christianity, you'll know that baptism
often doesn't look like this. For the
majority of Christians today, especially
in Catholic, Orthodox, and some
Protestant traditions, baptism usually
involves baptizing infants. Sometimes
baptism involves just a few drops of
water sprinkled or poured over the
baby's head and others it's full
immersion. Infants are dunked three
times in a baptismal font. No matter the
method though, it's a far cry from the
image of a grown adult being immersed in
a flowing river. These two scenarios
show how the central initiation ritual
of Christianity looks different
depending on the church tradition and
cultural context. And one of the most
significant differences is the age of
the one being baptized. And this is not
just a minor theological footnote. It's
been a source of intense debate in
Christian history. For example, in early
modern Europe, a group called the
Anabaptists rejected infant baptism
altogether, insisting that only adults
who could make a personal confession of
faith should be baptized. For that
belief, many of them were arrested,
exiled, or even executed. So, if
baptizing Jesus as an adult is the most
recognizable symbol of this initiation
ritual, where did the practice of
baptizing babies come from in the first
place? In the earliest decades of
Christianity, Christians modeled baptism
after ancient Jewish purification
practices, particularly those of John
the Baptist. The word baptism itself
comes from the Greek baptizo, meaning to
be immersed or plunge. It can also mean
to dip, as in dipping a sponge into
water or a blacksmith dipping a heated
metal rod into water. Though in ritual
context, the term often refers to ritual
washing. Ancient Judaism included a
range of water-based cleansing rituals,
including washing your hands before
eating, the Jewish high priest bathing
his body before entering the Holy of
Holies in the Jerusalem temple, and
bathing after entering a state of ritual
impurity for a variety of reasons. Many
synagogues and private homes during the
lifetime of John the Baptist were even
equipped with a mikvah, a ritual bath
designed for full body immersion for
ritual cleansing. What you're looking at
here is an example from the town of
Magdala on the shores of the Sea of
Galilee, an ancient mikvah roughly
contemporaneous with the lifetime of
Jesus. We see an early variation of
these customs in the practice of John
the Baptist who called people to repent
from sin to prepare them for the coming
kingdom of God. Those who responded to
his message were immersed in water, not
to cleanse themselves after entering a
state of ritual impurity, but because
they wanted to signal their response to
his call. John's practice diverged from
earlier Jewish purification rituals in
two key ways. First, it was administered
by someone else, unlike most Jewish
purification rituals which were
self-administered. Second, it was
apparently performed only once, a single
decisive transformative act that signals
entry into a religious community rather
than a ritual that's meant to be
repeated regularly to maintain ritual
purity. Now, John the Baptist wasn't the
only Jew in the first century innovating
new communal water rituals that signal
moral transformation. Around the same
time, another Jewish group was
developing its own purification rituals,
living in a desert settlement near the
Dead Sea at a site called Kuman. This
group is associated with the Dead Sea
Scrolls, which were discovered nearby,
along with evidence of a highly
organized Jewish sect. Many scholars
associate the Kuman community with a
Jewish sect called the Essins, described
by the first century Jewish historian
Josephus as a group deeply concerned
with purity, piety, and separation from
broader society. According to Josephus,
new members of the Essins had to undergo
a ritual bath in cold water before they
were allowed to participate in the
community's meals. And one of the
scrolls discovered at Kuman called the
community rule seems to have been their
community handbook. And it offers a
parallel description of how new
initiates were spiritually and ritually
purified. For it is through the spirit
of true counsel concerning the ways of
man that all his sins shall be
expedated. And when his flesh is
sprinkled with purifying waters and
sanctified by cleansing water, it shall
be made clean by the humble submission
of his soul to all the precepts of God.
Like John's baptism, these practices
framed water purification as a symbol of
moral renewal and readiness to join a
holy community. The Kuman settlement
also included multiple stepped pools,
likely used for various ritual
immersions. So John wasn't innovating
out of nowhere. Like the Essins at
Kuman, he was reworking existing Jewish
ideas about water and purity. But his
version did set the stage for Christian
baptism as a one-time publicly performed
initiation into a community. But where
do the babies come in? According to most
scholarly treatments of this issue,
Christians originally baptized new
members as adults and most often with
full immersion. And when we look at the
earliest Christian writings, we do see
that the people being baptized are
adults. A key example is the story of
the Ethiopian unic in Acts chapter 8. In
that story, one of the earliest
Christian evangelists, Philip,
encounters an Ethiopian court official
traveling home from Jerusalem. The man
is reading from the book of Isaiah and
seems puzzled by what he's reading.
Philip joins him in the chariot,
explains how the passage relates to
Jesus, and then preaches the gospel to
him. Moved by the message, the unic then
points to a body of water and says,
"Look, here is water. What is to prevent
me from being baptized?" And so, Philip
baptizes him on the spot. There's no
mention of family members or children,
just one adult convert dunked. The
scholar Everett Ferguson advocates for
this view, arguing that adult baptism
was the original norm with infant
baptism a later development. According
to him, infant or childhood baptism
arose later only as an emergency measure
when an infant or young child was facing
imminent death. According to Ferguson's
model, a major shift occurred in late
antiquity because of influential
thinkers like Augustine of Hippo, who
helped to popularize the doctrine of
original sin. the idea that all human
beings, even newborns, inherit the guilt
of Adam and Eve. Ferguson writes, "With
the victory of Augustine's arguments,
original sin became the reason for
infant baptism in the Western church.
And once this idea took hold, the logic
behind baptism shifted. Baptizing babies
wasn't just about precaution anymore. It
became a theological necessity.
According to Ferguson, by the fifth and
sixth centuries, infant baptism had
become the standard practice throughout
much of the Christian world, and it
would remain the norm throughout the
Middle Ages and beyond until the
Protestant Reformation sparked a major
revolution. Like I mentioned at the
start, reformed groups like the
Anabaptists rejected infant baptism
altogether, insisting that true baptism
required personal belief. They claimed
that this was a return to the original
model of the early church, and this
resulted in the diversity of baptismal
practices we see today. So we can call
this the adult full immersion with
exceptions model. Now Ferguson doesn't
deny there were exceptions. For example,
he acknowledges that the early Christian
text called the dedicay mentions how you
can practice baptism either through
immersion or pouring. But for him, adult
full immersion baptism was clearly the
norm. But in recent years, scholars have
started to think that those so-called
exceptions were actually more common
than we thought. In a direct response to
Ferguson, the scholar of early Christian
art and architecture, Robin Jensen,
cautions against the idea that there was
ever a normative way that early
Christians practice baptism. Our
earliest evidence, whether textual,
artistic, or archaeological, just
doesn't support that kind of neat
narrative. The evidence from the 2nd to
7th centuries paints a picture of
diversity of how people were baptized
and who was being baptized. So, for
example, it seems that a lot of babies
were being baptized long before
Augustine and not only in emergency
cases. Explicit references to infant
baptism show up as early as the late 2nd
or early 3rd century CE in the writings
of Tertullian, one of the earliest Latin
theologians of Christianity. In his
treatise on baptism, Tertulan does not
introduce infant baptism as some sort of
new innovation. Instead, he complains
that it's already a common practice, and
he's concerned that children are being
baptized before they are able to know
Christ. This is a problem for Tertullan
because he worries that someone being
baptized too early might later fall into
sin and jeopardize their salvation.
Baptism, after all, is meant to be a
one-time unrepable cleansing. So,
sinning after baptism could have serious
spiritual consequences. His advice,
well, delay baptism until a child is old
enough to understand the faith and live
it out. He writes, "So let them come
when they are nearer maturity, when they
are learning, when they are being taught
what is that they are coming to. Let
them be made Christians when they are
able to know Christ. Why should the
innocent one rush to the remission of
sins?" Now, Tertullian clearly opposes
infant baptism, but the very fact that
he argues against it tells us something
important. He references the baptism of
little children and mentions sponsors
giving promision or binding guarantees
on behalf of the child's future conduct.
That not only shows that the practice
was already well established in North
Africa by his lifetime, but it also
shows that it was not in response to the
child's imminent death. There's not much
use making a binding guarantee of the
child's future conduct if you're
expecting the child to die soon. So, it
seems that Tertullan was not responding
to a new or fringe idea. He was pushing
back against something that many
Christians around him were already
doing, and that bothered him. Other
early Christian theologians around this
time such as Cyprien, origin of
Alexandria and the writer of the
lurggical text called the apostolic
tradition also describe infant baptism.
And in the case of Cyprien, he expresses
clear support for it. Writing to a
fellow bishop named Fidus in the 250 CE,
Cyprien responded to a concern. Fedus
had questioned whether it was
appropriate to baptize infants before
the 8th day after birth, drawing on the
biblical precedent of circumcision,
which was traditionally done on the
eighth day. Cyprien rejected this
comparison, saying that baptism was not
bound to that timeline and should not be
delayed. In fact, he argued that a
newborn should be baptized immediately.
For Cyprien, divine grace and the gift
of the Holy Spirit are not measured by
age. So, in his view, delaying baptism
would just be denying a newborn access
to God's mercy. He writes, "And
therefore, dearest brother, this was our
opinion and counsel. No one ought to be
hindered from baptism and from the grace
of God which we think is to be even more
observed in respect of infants and newly
born persons who on this very account
deserve more from our help and from the
divine mercy. In other words, Cyprien
saw baptism not as something to postpone
until a child could understand it but as
an act of mercy. For him, even the
youngest newborns were in need of divine
grace and withholding baptism even just
for a few days meant withholding the
very means of divine mercy. Also writing
in the 200s, the theologian origin
writes, "In the church, baptism is given
for the remission of sins and according
to the usage of the church, baptism is
given even to infants." In his
commentary on the book of Romans, he
even claims infant baptism was a
practice received from the apostles
themselves. And finally, the apostolic
traditions, which may also date to the
3rd century CE, explicitly says that
little children are to be baptized even
before they're able to speak. And they
shall baptize the little children first.
And if they can answer for themselves,
let them answer. But if they cannot let
their parents or someone from their
family answer for them. So those are
among the earliest explicit mentions of
infant baptism with Tertullan probably
being the oldest mention. But the
practice may reach back even earlier
than figures like Tertullan or Cyprien
perhaps as far back as the 2nd century
or even the first century. The
theologian Irenaeus writing the late 2nd
century approvingly mentions infants and
small children who are born again in
God. Now, it's a brief and ambiguous
statement, but many scholars interpret
that phrase born again in God as a
reference to infant baptism. We also
find tantalizing hints in the New
Testament book of Acts, our earliest
extended narrative of Christian baptisms
dating to the late 1st or early 2nd
century CE. Acts describes the baptism
of entire households. Now, whether that
included babies or children is left
unsaid. Now, some scholars have argued
that the silence of early Christian
sources on infant baptism is evidence
that it didn't yet exist. But scholars
have pointed out that early Christian
texts are actually pretty silent on
baptismal details in general. For
example, the sources generally reference
new converts being baptized. But we
don't have any specific descriptions of
baptizing teenagers or adults that were
born into a Christian family, though it
almost certainly was happening. So, the
absence of detailed commentary on infant
baptism doesn't necessarily mean it was
not practiced. It just means that much
of everyday life in Christian
communities just wasn't written down.
One thoughtprovoking interpretation of
the silence comes from the scholar
Steven Nicolleti. In a 2015 article,
Nicoleti doesn't try to force the early
Christian sources to say more than they
actually say. The book of Acts simply
says families. We can try to read
between the lines and say that probably
includes babies and kids, too. But it's
hard to squeeze more data out of that
simple sentence. Rather than asking why
the New Testament doesn't mention infant
baptism, he asks what that silence might
actually tell us. Nicolleti suggests
that the reason early Christian texts
don't mention infant baptism might
actually be pretty simple. Nobody
thought it was a question worth asking.
In the Greco Roman world in the first
century, it was completely normal to
assume that children would be initiated
into their parents' religion. It was not
something people debated or explained.
It just was. And when a speaker and
listener share a certain set of
assumptions, those assumptions don't
need to be stated. To illustrate the
point, Nicolleti compares it to the US
Declaration of Independence. It famously
declares that all men are created equal
and yet says nothing about slavery, even
though slavery was deeply entrenched in
the colonies that wrote and signed the
document. To us today, this seems like a
contradiction. But at the time, the
document's authors and readers shared a
set of unspoken presuppositions, namely
that enslaved people didn't count among
those equal men. So to a historian, the
silence on slavery is not evidence of
confusion at the time or that slavery
didn't exist. It's evidence of shared
consensus. In the same way, Nicolleti
argues that the silence on infant
baptism in the New Testament may not
reflect uncertainty or disagreement or
that no one was doing it, but rather a
shared presupposition. Children would
obviously be brought into the Christian
community along with their parents using
the Christian initiation ritual of
choice, baptism. He backs up his
argument by looking at the cultural
context of initiation rituals during the
first century CE. In Judaism, Jewish
boys were circumcised on the eighth day
after birth as a mark of entry into the
covenant. There was no later ritual to
bring them officially into the faith.
They were simply in. Girls, while not
circumcised, were likewise considered
full members of the religious community
by virtue of being born to Jewish
parents. Passages from the compendium of
Jewish law called the Mishna say that
kids were expected to participate in
temple festivals in Jerusalem as soon as
they could walk. Nicolleti argues that
because baptism quickly became the
Christian right of initiation,
functioning as the moment when someone
entered the church and the Christian
life, it would have made sense for
Jewish converts to extend that right to
their kids. The same logic applies from
converts from Greco Roman backgrounds.
In the Roman Empire during the first
century CE, infants were often ritually
initiated into civic and social life
through a naming ceremony called the da
celestrius held around the 8th or 9th
day after birth. It involved naming the
child purification rights and formally
incorporating them into the household
which was functionally a religious
institution at the time. Kids took part
in state rituals. They sang in festivals
and they helped with the household
cultic activities. In other words,
religious activity was something
children grew up participating in as
part of their family and civic identity.
So when Greek and Roman parents
converted to Christianity, they also
probably expected their kids to be
included in the same way. Ultimately,
Nicolleti asks a simple question. What
were they doing with the babies? The
church had to do something with the kids
of converts. Throughout the first
century, Christianity began expanding
rapidly through both Jewish and
non-Jewish converts. And as we've seen,
converts brought their entire households
into the faith. What happened to the
babies? Were they left uninitiated,
delayed until adolescence? We don't know
because we don't get any debate about
this in the earliest Christian sources.
We don't get letters from Paul to the
churches fretting over what to do with
the toddlers. That silence, he argues,
probably means there was no dispute,
just a broadly shared assumption that
the kids of Christian parents were
included in the community from the
start, which is what we see when we
consider other initiation rituals of the
time, both in Judaism and in traditional
Greco Roman families. Of course,
Nicollet's argument isn't without its
problems. Arguments from silence can cut
both ways. Maybe the early sources don't
mention infant baptism simply because it
wasn't practiced and no one thought to
note its absence. So no, he doesn't
solve the debate over infant baptism in
the apostolic age once and for all. But
he does offer a pretty simple reframing
of the silence in our sources. In the
first century world, baptizing babies
would not have been weird. Across Jewish
and Greco Roman cultures, kids were
routinely initiated into their family's
religion from birth using an initiation
ritual. So if early Christians did not
baptize their kids, that would have
surprised at least some segments of
society and likely would have sparked
debate. But we don't see that, just
silence. And for Nicolleti, that silence
might reflect quiet agreement. So some
scholars argue it's plausible that
infant baptism was a fairly common
practice by the second century if
Irenaeus is indeed referencing it and
maybe even earlier in the first century
if entire families were indeed being
baptized at once, kids and all. Though
at the very least, the practice was
apparently widespread enough by around
200 CE to be referenced by Tertullan,
Cyprien, and origin. Now, to be fair to
Ferguson, he's not entirely wrong. The
earliest baptismal practices we know of,
those of John the Baptist, involved
adult participants. The dedicay, one of
the earliest Christian texts, instructs
both the one being baptized and the
baptizer to fast beforehand, something
babies can't exactly do. And in the
first few centuries of Christianity, the
movement was still expanding primarily
through adult conversions, which
naturally meant that most baptisms were
of adults. Really, the entire debate
comes down to this murky roughly 150year
gap in our evidence between John the
Baptist and Tertullan. Trying to
pinpoint when infant baptism first
emerged and more importantly when it
became routine enough to be recognizable
as a widespread practice. By the time of
Tertullan in the early 3rd century, it
clearly wasn't the majority practice we
see today. But it also wasn't exactly
new either. Tertulan, Cyprien and origin
were reacting to the baptism of infants
and young kids, not introducing it.
Tertullan criticizes it. Cyprien defends
it and origin describes it as not
particularly out of the ordinary. Their
testimony suggests that the practice was
at least familiar, perhaps even routine
in some Christian communities and not
only in the case of emergencies. Origin
Tertullian and the apostolic tradition
don't frame it like that. Tertulan does
not mention emergency at all. In fact,
he assumes that children are being
baptized in ordinary circumstances and
his concern is precisely that it's
happening too casually. Also, origin
refers to the baptism of infants as a
general usage of the church without
suggesting that it was only reserved for
dire circumstances. In both cases, the
tone suggests a level of regularity
rather than exception, which complicates
the idea that early infant baptism was
solely a response to crisis. Now, while
we lack definitive evidence for
widespread infant baptism before these
writers, as I mentioned, there are
suggestive earlier hints like the
baptism of entire households in the book
of Acts and 1 Corinthians or Irenaeus's
reference to infants being born again in
God, which may reflect first century
family-based baptismal practices that
included babies and kids. At the very
least, the evidence points to a more
diverse and regionally varied baptismal
landscape than Ferguson's model allows.
Instead of one norm with rare
exceptions, the early Christian world
may have always contained a spectrum of
baptismal practices shaped by theology,
pastoral concerns, and the messy
realities of lived religion on the
ground. The archaeological evidence of
baptismal fonts also points to a
diversity of practice. Baptismal fonts
being the basins or receptacles for
baptismal water. In a modern Baptist
church, a baptismal font may look like a
full-sized bathtub or small pool
designed for adult immersion. In a
Catholic or Orthodox church, you're more
likely to see a smaller ornate basin.
Ferguson argues that fonts became
smaller in the 500 CE as Christian
communities shifted toward baptizing
infants rather than adults. In his view,
earlier, larger fonts with steps and
deeper basins were designed for adult
full immersion, while smaller, more
shallow fonts reflect a ritual now
centered on sprinkling or pouring water
over babies. But this interpretation
raises some problems. For one, it
assumes that large fonts can't be used
for infants and smaller fonts can't
accommodate adults, which is not
necessarily true. The logic only holds
if you assume that full immersion of
adults was the standard mode of practice
across the board. But as we've seen, the
evidence suggests a wider range of
practice from the beginning. In other
words, a baby could be dunked in a
larger basin and an adult could be
sprinkled standing or kneeling in a
smaller one. Surviving fonds from the
300s and early 400s tend to range from
about 1 to 3 m wide and around 1 m deep.
But in her research, Dr. Jensen notes
that a lot of the earliest baptismal
fonts found in the archaeological record
are very small, complicating the idea
that full body immersion of adults was
really all that widespread. Jensen
argues that the material evidence
suggests a wider range of baptismal
practices were already in use by the 3rd
century, including baptism by pouring
and the baptism of babies. The oldest
surviving baptismal font ever discovered
comes from Duro Europus, a Roman
frontier town in modern-day Syria, dated
to the mid-3rd century CE.
Contemporaneous with the lifetimes of
origin in Cyprian. The baptistry
includes a painted chamber and a
built-in basin measuring approximately 1
and 1/2 m long, 1 m wide, and just under
1 m deep, about the depth of a modern
standard bathtub. While this size would
have allowed a person to step in and
kneel or crouch, it likely was not large
enough to permit full body immersion by
reclining or laying flat unless you were
a particularly small person. A pair of
4th century baptismal fonts from the
site of Balalis Mayor in Tunisia are
also tiny. One less than 50 cm deep and
the other about 75 cm deep. Consider
also this example from Milan and this
one from Naples dating to the 300s and
400s respectively. They're very shallow,
barely deep enough to cover someone's
knees, let alone immerse an entire
adult. The Milan basin is 55 cm deep,
and the Naples one is only 45 cm deep.
And even for the fonts that were deeper,
they were designed with steps and narrow
basins, making it hard to imagine
someone being fully submerged without
some serious gymnastics. Believe me,
I've tried. This is the baptismal font
in St. John's Basilica in Ephesus,
likely from the 400s or 500 CE. And I
can't really see how I could be fully
immersed based on some experimental
archaeology using my adult human body as
a test case. Even if we account for the
fact that people in late antiquity may
have been shorter on average than today,
many of these fonts would not have been
deep enough to fully submerge an adult
without effort. The deeper ones would
have been about hip deep and may have
required crouching down and curling up
to achieve anything close to full
immersion. And even then, with
difficulty depending on the steps and
the width of the basin. All of this
leads Dr. Jensen to conclude both
archaeological remains and iconography
from the early church indicate that
baptismal immersion was probably less
common than documents indicate. Scholars
now suggest that in many cases early
Christians may have been practicing
partial immersion, standing or kneeling
in a baptismal font while water was
poured over them, which is how the
baptism of Jesus is sometimes depicted
in early Christian art. Moreover, the
archaeological record doesn't show a
clean chronological break as Ferguson
suggested when baptismal fonts
supposedly were getting smaller to
accommodate babies. As we've seen, small
fonts existed well before Augustine, and
large adult-sized fonts continue to be
built after his lifetime. The font at
Boleria, in Tunisia, for example, is
about 1.5 m deep, and the font at
Calibia, in Tunisia, measures over 1 m
deep. The same design is seen in other
fonts from this period like this
enormous basin near Pompei which spans
5.5 m across. So Jensen concludes thus
the size or depth of fonts cannot offer
reliable evidence for a general
transition to infant baptism across the
board in the fifth or sixth century any
more than it can preclude or prove that
baptism was always administered either
by submersion or ausion. The
archaeological record reinforces what we
see in the textual sources. Early
Christian baptismal practice was not
uniform. Full immersion or partial
immersion, sprinkling or pouring,
crouching or kneeling, natural flowing
water outside or baptismal font inside,
infant baptism or adult baptism. They
all seem to have coexisted on some level
at least from the 3rd century to the 6th
century and possibly earlier. Which
brings us back to the doctrine of
original sin. For Ferguson and other
scholars, this has been viewed as a
watershed moment. But we've seen from
figures like Tortullon and Origin that
Christians were baptizing infants in
non-emergency situations centuries
before Augustine's lifetime. This has
led some scholars to question just how
decisive Augustine really was in the
story of infant baptism. Maybe original
sin was not the initial reason for the
popularity of the practice. Some
Christian parents, for example, seem to
have explicitly rejected the doctrine
entirely. In a fifth century epitap from
southern France, the parents of their
deceased child identify him as sinless
and worthy of eternal bliss. Worthy
child, innocent, undarkened by the filth
of sin, little Thudosius, whose parents,
impurity of mind, intended to bury him
in the holy baptismal font, was snatched
away by shameless death. Yet the ruler
of High Olympus will give rest to any
member lying beneath the noble sign of
the cross, and the child will be heir to
Christ. These parents acknowledge their
desire for their child to be baptized,
but they apparently rejected the logic
that such baptism was necessary for the
child's salvation. Now, to be fair,
Cyprien, who was writing back in the
250s, does seem to lay early groundwork
for the logic that Augustine would later
systematize. In the same letter we
quoted earlier, he defends baptizing
babies, saying they've contracted the
contagion of the ancient death at birth.
But is this original sin theology? Well,
not quite. What's being inherited here
is death, not sin. And in the same
letter, Cyprien indicates that infants
themselves remain innocent. But the
scholar Maxwell Johnson does say we see
the beginnings of a theological
justification for infant baptism based
on the inherited consequences of Adam's
sin. Regardless, the latest studies of
early Christian baptism emphasize that
the shift to infant baptism as the
dominant mode of initiation in
Christianity was a gradual evolution,
not necessarily spurred by any
particular theological change. So why
did infant baptism first emerge and grow
so popular? The truth is we just don't
know. The earliest centuries of
Christian practice are murky and the
motivations behind any particular ritual
like infant baptism are not clearly
spelled out. But based on the available
evidence, scholars have proposed a few
plausible explanations. One theory is
that infant baptism might have
functioned as a replacement for Jewish
circumcision. Remember that this analogy
shows up in that letter of Cyprien. The
bishop he was writing to apparently
argued that baptism should be delayed
into the eighth day to match the timing
of circumcision. Cyprien rejected that
timeline, but the fact that Fedus made
that comparison at all suggests that
some early Christians saw infant baptism
as a parallel practice or maybe even a
replacement practice. There were also
probably personal and social
motivations, too. Parents may have
wanted their children to be officially
initiated into the church regardless of
any specific belief about sin. Baptism
could simply mark a child's inclusion in
Christian life, a sign that they
belonged. In this sense, the practice
was not driven by theological doctrine.
It was shaped by family tradition and
communal identity. And then there's the
reality of high infant mortality in the
ancient world. Baptism may have offered
reassurance to grieving parents.
Whatever one believed about the
sinfulness of the baby. Again, this
seems to be Cyprien's motivation in his
letter. He's not really concerned about
sin. He's concerned about death. So, the
act of baptism may have been seen as a
kind of protection, reflecting a broader
cultural anxiety about death, the
afterlife, and making sure one's kid was
properly cared for in this world and the
next. Now, if you want to go deeper into
early Christian history, I recently sat
down for an in-depth interview with Dr.
Tom Schmidt. He wrote a new book,
Josephus and Jesus, that's making waves
in my corner of religious studies. See,
in a famous passage, the Jewish
historian, Josephus mentions Jesus of
Nazareth, but most scholars think the
passage has been tampered with or
outright forged by later Christians. But
Dr. Schmidt makes the case that it's
authentic, and he even argues that
Josephus may have had direct access to
eyewitnesses of Jesus's trial and
execution. We get into all of it.
Ancient sources, Christian reception
history, and what it means for our
understanding of the historical Jesus.
And that interview is already available
early on Nebula. Nebula is a streaming
platform built by creators for creators.
It's a home for smart, ambitious, and
exclusive content you won't find
anywhere else. And if you're already
heading over there, check out a couple
of my personal favorites, like our new
featurelength documentary, 17 pages. On
April 25th, 1986, a paper was published
in one of the most prestigious
scientific journals, Cell. And over the
next decade, that 17-page paper sparked
one of the most bitter and high-profile
controversies in modern science. How did
a routine co-authored study turn into a
congressional investigation, a career on
the brink of being blown up, and a
battle over the very definition of
scientific truth? If you're drawn to
real world drama at the intersection of
science and politics, I think you'll
really like this. To watch it right now,
head on over to nebula.tv/religion
for breakfast. With my link, you'll get
40% off an annual subscription, which
works out to be just $36 a year or $3 a
month. Or if you don't want to think
about subscribing ever again, you can
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full interview with Dr. Tom Schmidt and
dive into some of the most creative,
thoughtful content online. Thanks,
everyone.
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