DID THEY DIP?
...OR..
AN EXAMINATION INTO THE ACT OF BAPTISM
AS PRACTICED BY THE ENGLISH
AMERICAN BAPTISTS BEFORE
THE YEAR 1641.
BY
JOHN T. CHRISTIAN, M. A.,
And Author of Immersion, the Act of Baptism,"
"Close Communion; or, Baptism as a Prerequisite to the Lord's
Supper," "Americanism or Romanism, Which?" "Four
Theories of Church Government," "Heathen and Infidel Testimonies to
Jesus Christ," etc.
WITH AN
INTRODUCTION
BY
T. T. EATON,
Chapter 1 A
STATEMENT OF THE CASE
Chapter 2 THE
ANABAPTISTS OF ENGLAND
Chapter 3 IMMERSION IN ENGLAND
Chapter 4 THE
ANABAPTISTS OF THE CONTINENT
Chapter 6 THE
BAPTISTS OF 1641
Chapter 7 THE
ENGLISH BAPTISTS BEFORE 1641
Chapter 8 THE
KIFFIN MS. AND THE JESSEY CHURCH RECORDS
Chapter 11 A CHALLENGE ACCEPTED
BAPTIST BOOK CONCERN,
R. CHRISTIAN has shown a remarkable talent for gathering
and arraying authorities. For more than twenty years
he has been studying the history of immersion and has spared no time nor
expense to supply himself with original documents. I do not suppose there is a
Baptist in the land who has anything like such an array of original documents
on this subject as has Dr. Christian. In many cases he has the original
editions, while in others he has official copies made at the British museum and
elsewhere. He has examined more than forty books which. Dr. Dexter-does not
mention in his bibliography of the subject, and which, it is reasonable to
believe, Dr. Dexter never saw.
Dr. Christian is also singularly accurate in his use of
authorities. I have read this book through and have not detected a single
inaccuracy. Many of the quotations I have personally verified and have found
them correct, and though I have not verified them all, yet I have no doubt of
the absolute correctness of every one. He courts investigation, however, and he
will gladly welcome the detection of any mistake in the book. The most
unpleasant thing in connection with replying to Dr. Whitsitt's "Question
in Baptist History" is calling attention to his unauthorized use of
documents, owing largely to his misplaced confidence in Dr. Dexter. And yet
whoever replies to any book must needs call attention
to its misuse of authorities where such misuse exists. When, for example, such
great stress is laid on the supposed testimony of the "
It should be constantly borne in mind that not till the
year 1641 were the Baptists in
Then Dr. Joseph Angus, our great British scholar, has
called attention to a number of Baptist Churches in England which trace their
history to times long before 1641, e. g., Braintree, Eythorne, Sutton,
Warrington, Bridgewater, Oxford and Sadmore. All the Baptists of
Dr. Whitsitt's contention is that from 1509 to 1641 the
Anabaptists of
While before 1641 in
There are some Anabaptists at this time in
Thus it appears that both sorts of Anabaptists opposed
infant baptism and sprinkling, but the first class "only objected to
"these things, while the second class in addition to that "held many
opinions anciently condemned as heresies." Fox's Book of Martyrs has long
been an English classic; and no one has impeached its truthfulness. What motive
could Fox have had for misrepresentation; and what possible reason exists for
impeaching his testimony? . And yet his testimony has
got to be entirely set aside, or else Dr. Whitsitt's thesis falls. Ten
thousand men saying after 1641 that immersion was "new" to
them would not offset John Fox's testimony that he knew of immersion in
One great good to come from this discussion is that
Baptists will be better informed in regard to their history than ever before.
Whatever may be the final outcome of the controversy, it must be admitted that
Dr. Whitsitt has stirred up the Baptists in regard to their history as nobody
else has ever done, and as nobody else is likely ever to do. Of all people, the
Baptists are the last to be afraid of the truth on any subject.
T. T. EATON.
A STATEMENT OF THE CASE.
Dr. William H. Whitsitt wrote the follo article, which
appeared as an editorial in The Independent, New
York, September 2, 1880:
The Congregationalist speaks of "the
well-known immersion of Roger Williams by the unimmersed Ezekiel
Holliman." We are somewhat surprised that our greatly learned contemporary
should be betrayed into the assertion that Roger Williams was immersed by
Ezekiel Holliman. To be sure all the Baptists of
This was followed by another editorial from him on
The proofs which are demanded by Zion's Advocate of
our recent assertion that immersion was not practiced in England before a
period as late as 1641 are so abundant that one is embarrassed to know where to
begin. We shall mention, in the first instance, the silence of history. This is
absolute and unbroken. Tho' a number of works were written by Smyth, Helwys,
Merton and other Baptists prior to 1641, and tho' these were replied to by
opponents such as Clifton, Robinson, Ainsworth and Johnson, it is nowhere
intimated that the Baptists were then in the practice of immersion. Nay, more,
the earliest Baptist Confessions of Faith all contemplate sprinkling or pouring
as the act of baptism. We, refer, in proof of this, to the Confession of Faith,
in twenty articles, which is subscribed by John Smyth, and may be found in the
Appendix to Volume I of Evan's "Early English Baptists." We
refer also to the Helwys Confession, entitled "A Declaration of Faith
of English People Remaining at
It was not until the year 1644, three years after the
invention of immersion that any Baptist confession prescribes "dipping or
plunging the body in water as the way and manner of dispensing this
ordinance" ("
He then quotes some authors in support of his position. Of
Edward ' Barber he says:
Happily for us, however, the above assertion is confirmed
by the authority of Edward Barber, the founder of the rite of immersion among
the Baptists. In the preface to his "Treatise of Baptism, or
Dipping," London, 1641, the earliest book in the English language, to
assert that immersion is essential to baptism, Mr. Barber praises God that he,
"a poore tradesman," was raised up to restore this truth to the
world.
He then concludes the editorial as follows:
Here is the highest Baptist testimony to the effect that
there were no immersionists in
These editorials naturally caused a good deal of comment
in Baptist circles. It was taken for granted they were written by some
Pedobaptist writer, and a number of persons wrote The Independent for
the name of the author. The Independent kept well its own secret. It
was only after Dr. Whitsitt's articles appeared in Johnson's New Encyclopedia
that he revealed that he was also the author of these Independent editorials.
Among other things the Encyclopædia article says:
Some have fancied that the new title was claimed and
maintained because of the change in the form of administering baptism, which is
alleged was substituted in the place of sprinkling and pouring. If these had
been retained it would have been as impossible for them to shake off the name
of Anabaptists as it was in the case of the Anabaptists in
Dr. Whitsitt wrote three articles for the papers to defend
this position: One in The Examiner, April
23, 1896; one in the Religious Herald, May 7, and the last a Statement,
which was published in several papers. His book, "A Question in Baptist
History," was published
In view of the foregoing body of materials, I candidly
consider that my proofs are sufficient. This opinion has been confirmed and
strengthened by the renewed investigations which I have lately undertaken in
order to set forth these proofs. Whatever else may be true in history, I
believe it is beyond question that the practice of adult immersion was
introduced anew into
THE DISCOVERY.
Dr. Whitsitt appears to have frequently changed his mind as
to how much he discovered. In The Examiner he makes a wide claim, but in
his book it sinks to almost nothing at all. In The Examiner he claims
Dr. Dexter as "his learned and distinguished convert," but in the
book
THE TWO VIEWS
Dr. Whitsitt in The Examiner April 23, I896: During the autumn of 1877, shortly after I had been put
in charge of the School of Church History at the Southern Baptist Theological
Seminary, in preparing my lectures on Baptist History, I made the discovery
that, prior to the year 1641, our Baptist people in England were in the
practice of sprinkling and pouring for baptism. I kept it to myself until the
year 1880, when I had the happiness to spend my summer vacation at the * * * * Apparently Dr. Dexter was interested by my explanations
and proofs, for he shortly found his way to the British Museum where he also
convinced himself that my view was correct and my citations authentic. As a
fruit of these researches he issued, near the close of 1881, more than a
twelve month after my discovery had been declared in The Independent, the
well known volume entitled "John Smyth the Se-Baptist," wherein he
adopted my thesis, defended it by many citations, and entirely ignored my
discovery as set forth in The Independent. Naturally I was glad to gain such a learned and
distinguished convert, and took little or no care of my rights in my
discovery. * * * This discovery is my own contribution to Baptist history,
and when my brethren heap reproaches upon me it is nothing but right that I should
defend my property. Nobody can relish being sneered at as a copyist, when it
is beyond any question that he is himself the original authority and the
first discoverer. My heart is wae to be compelled to make these claims on my
own behalf, but I remember that the blessed Paul, when sneers were heaped on
him at Corinth, did not hesitate to boast that he "was not a whit behind
the very chiefest apostles," and I make bold, under the existing stress,
to imitate his example. |
Dr. Whitsitt in his book, Sept. 17, 1896: Another investigator was Rev. Henry Martyn Dexter, Numbers of the citations which I had sought out in the
year 1880, and which I still retain in manuscript form, I found reproduced in
an independent fashion by Dr. Dexter in 1881. Likewise he fell upon a good
many passages that I had not seen. |
More than two months, that is in July, 1880, before Dr.
Whitsitt wrote his articles in The Independent Dr. Dexter had written
for his paper, The Congregationalist, an editorial on "Affused
Baptists," in which he quoted many authorities; and fully took the. position that was afterwards held in his book on John Smyth,
viz.: that Baptists practiced affusion in
But neither Dr. Dexter nor Dr. Whitsitt was the
"discoverer" of this theory. So far as I am able to judge that
position belongs to Robert Barclay, an English Quaker. His book, "Inner
Life of the Religious Societies of the Commonwealth," was published in 1876,
and it contains almost all that has so far been advanced on the subject.
THE ANABAPTISTS OF
At the dawn of the Reformation there were those in
Some trace the Anabaptists to the Lollards. W. Carlos
Martyn, an eminent Pedobaptist historian, says: "The Anabaptists are an
innocent and an evangelical sect, had long been the most hunted and hated of
reformers. Not a nation in
I shall content myself with giving the words of a few
writers.
Barclay, a very strong writer and not a Baptist, says:
"As we shall afterwards show, the rise of the 'Anabaptists' took place
long prior to the foundation of the Church of England, and there are also
reasons for believing that on the Continent of Europe, small hidden societies,
who have held many of the opinions of the Anabaptists, have existed from the
times of the Apostles. In the sense of the direct transmission of divine truth
and the true nature of spiritual religion, it seems probable that these
churches have a lineage or succession more ancient than the Roman Church."
(Barclay's Inner Life of Religious Societies, P. 12).
W. J. E. Bennett, of Frome, a ritualistic Episcopalian,
says: "The historian Lingard tells us there was a sect of fanatics who
infested the north of Germany, called Puritans; Usher calls them Waldenses;
Spelman, Paulicians (the same as Waldenses). They gained ground and spread over
all
Robinson, who has long been a standard, says:
I have seen enough to convince me that the, present
English Dissenters, contending for the sufficiency of Scripture, and for
primitive Christian liberty to judge of its meaning, may be traced back in
authentic manuscripts to the Nonconformists, to the Puritans, to the Lollards,
to the Vallenses, to the Albigenses, and, I suspect, through the Paulicians and
others to the Apostles." (Robinson's Claude, Vol. II.,
p. 53).
Evans, who is a very careful writer, says:
"Dissidents from the popular church in the early ages, compelled to leave
it from the growing corruption of its doctrines and morals, were found
everywhere. Men of apostolic life and doctrine contended for the simplicity of
the church and the liberty of Christ's flock, in the midst of great danger.
What the pen failed to do, the sword of the magistrate effected.
The Novatians and Donatists, and others that followed them, are examples. They
contended for the independence of the church; they exalted the Divine Word as
the only standard of faith; they maintained the essential purity of the church,
and the necessity of a holy life springing from a renewed heart. Extinguished
by the sword, not of the Spirit—their churches broken and scattered—after years
of patient suffering from the dominant sect, the seed which they had scattered
sprang up in other lands. Truth never dies. Its vitality is imperishable. In
the wild waste and fastnesses of
The learned President Edwards says:
"In every age of this dark
time there appeared particular persons in all parts of Christendom who bore a
testimony against the corruptions and tyranny of the Church of Rome. There is no one age of Anti-Christ, even in the darkest times of all,
but ecclesiastical historians mention a great many by name who manifested an
abhorrence to the Pope and his idolatrous worship, and pleaded for the ancient
purity of doctrine and worship. God was pleased to maintain an uninterrupted
succession of witnesses through the whole time, in Germany, France, Britain and
other countries; as historians demonstrate and mention them by name, and give
an account of the testimony which they held. Many of them were private persons,
and some magistrates, and persons of great distinction. And there were numbers
in every age who were persecuted and put to death for this testimony." (Edward's Works, Vol. I., P. 460.)
The claim is distinctly made by the above writers that
there has been a succession of witnesses from the days of the Apostles to the
present day. I have, however, not undertaken to trace such a succession, but in
the space at my command, to set forth one of our peculiar principles as held by
persons or churches in
Thus before the time of the Reformation in
In 1529-1534 the Anabaptists are distinctly traceable in
Blount further says:
"In A. D. 1534, however, a royal proclamation was
issued, in which it was said that many strangers are come into this realm, who,
though they were baptized in their infancy, yet have, in contempt of the holy
sacrament of baptism, rebaptized themselves. They are ordered to depart out of
the realm in twelve days, under pain of death." (Wilkins' Council III.,
779. Dictionary of Sects, P. 26. London, 1874).
It is certain that they did not return to the Continent
and did remain in England. Cromwell left this memorandum in his pocket:
"First, touching the Anabaptists and what the king will do with
them." (Ellis' Orig. Let. II., 120).
The old chronicler Stowe, 1535, gives the following
details:
"The 25th day of May were—in St. Paul's Church,
London—examined nineteen men and six women, born in Holland, whose opinions
were: First, that in Christ is not two natures, God and man; secondly, that
Christ took neither flesh nor blood of the Virgin Mary; thirdly, that children
born of infidels may be saved; fourthly, that baptism of children is of none
effect; fifthly, that the sacrament of Christ's body is but bread only;
sixthly, that he who after baptism sinneth wittingly, sinneth deadly, and
cannot be saved. Fourteen of them were condemned; a man and a woman were burnt
in Smithfield; the other twelve of them were sent to other towns, there to be
burnt."
Froude says of them:
"The details are gone, their names are gone. Poor
Hollanders they were, and that is all. Scarcely the fact seemed worth the
mention, so shortly is it told in a passing paragraph. For them no Europe was
agitated, no courts were ordered into mourning, no Papal hearts trembled with
indignation. At their death the world looked on complacent, indifferent or
exulting. Yet here, too, out of twenty-five poor men and women were found
fourteen who by no terror of stake or torture could be tempted to say they
believed what they did not believe. History has for them no word of praise; yet
they, too, were not giving their blood in vain. Their lives might have been as
useless as the lives of the most of us. In their deaths they assisted to pay
the purchase-money for England's freedom." (Froude's History of England,
Vol. II., P. 365).
In some articles put forth in 1536 it is declared;
"That the opinions of the Anabaptists and Pelagians
are to be held for detestable heresies." (Strype's Memorials of Archbishop
Cramner, Vol. I., p. 85. Oxford Ed. 1848).
The Penny Encyclopaedia says:
"Little is known of the Baptists of England before
the sixteenth century. Their name then appears among the various sects which
were struggling for civil and religious freedom. Their opinions at this early
period were sufficiently popular to attract the notice of the national
establishment, as is evident from the fact that at a convocation held in 1536,
they were denounced as detestable heretics, to be utterly condemned.
Proclamations to banish the Baptists from the kingdom were allowed, their books
were burnt, and several individuals suffered at the stake. The last person who
was burnt in England was a Baptist." (Penny Ency., Vol. III., pp. 416,
417).
Goadby thus speaks of the reign of Henry VIII. and his
persecutions of the Baptists:
"Bitterly as he hated the Papist party, after he had
broken with Rome it was not long before he revealed a still more bitter hatred
of all Baptists, English and Continental." "But neither threats nor
cajolery prevented the spread of Baptist opinions. Like the Israelites in
Egypt, 'the more they were afflicted, the more they multiplied and grew.'"
(Goadby's Bye-Paths of Baptist History, pp. 72-74).
Strype,1538, says of the king:
"The sect of the Anabaptists did now begin to pester
this church; and would openly dispute their principles in taverns and public
places; and some of them were taken up. Many also of their books were brought
in and printed here also; which was the cause that the king now sent out a severe
proclamation against them and their books. To which he joined the
Sacramentarians, as lately with the others come into the land, declaring, 'that
he abhorred and detested their errors; and those that were apprehended he would
make examples.' Ordering that they should be detected and brought before the
king or his council; and that all that were not should in eight or ten days
depart the kingdom." (Strype's Memorials, Vol. p. 155).
After condemning their books the king decreed:
"The king declares concerning Anabaptists and other
Sacramentarians lately come into the realm, that he abhorred and detested their
errors, and intended to proceed against them that were already apprehended,
according to their merits; to the intent his subjects should take example by
their punishments not to adhere to such false and detestable opinions, but
utterly to forsake and relinquish them. And that wheresoever any of them be
known, they be detected, and his majesty and council be informed with all
convenient speed, with all manner abettors and printers of the same opinions.
And his majesty charged the same Anabaptists and Sacramentarians not
apprehended and known, that they
within eight or ten days depart out of the realm, upon pain of the loss of
their life and forfeiture of their goods." (Strype's Memorials, Vol. I.,
PP, 410-412. Collier's Eccl. Hist., Vol. IX., pp. 161, 162).
A few months later also an act of Parliament was passed
(32 Henry VIII., cap. 49), granting a general pardon to all the king's subjects
excepting those who said: "That infants ought not to be baptized, and if
they were baptized that they ought to be rebaptized when they came of lawful
age."
A Declaration of Faith was then drawn up endorsing the
action of the king in his persecutions of the Anabaptists. One section reads:
"Englishmen detest the Anabaptists, 'Sacramentaries,'
and all other heresies and errors, and
with great reverence do solemnize holy baptism, the sacrament of the blessed
body and blood of Christ, and other sacraments and sacramentalls, as they have
done in times past, with all the laudable ceremonies and daily masses; and do
the other service of God in their churches, as honorable and devoutly, paye
their tithes and offerings truely as ever they did, and as any men do in any
part of Christendom," etc., (Collier's Eccl. Hist., Vol. IX., p. 163).
Some of these were burned. (Stowe's Chronicle, p. 579).
Latimer says: "The Anabaptists that were burnt here
in divers towns in England (as I have heard of credible men, I saw them not
myself), went to their death, even intrepide, as ye will say, without any fear
in the world, cheerfully. Well let them go."(Sermons of Hugh Latimer, Vol.
pp. 143, 144).
Latimer says again:
"I should have told you here of a certain sect of
heretics that spake against their order and doctrine; they will have no
magistrates nor judges on the earth. Here I have to tell you what I have heard
of late, by the relations of a credible person and a worshipful man, of a town
of this realm of England that hath about 500 of heretics of this erroneous
opinion in it." The margin says they were Anabaptists. (Sermons, p. 151.
Parker Society, Vol. V.).
Collier says: "Some few days before, four Dutch
Anabaptists, three men and a woman, had faggots tied to their backs at Paul's
Cross, and one man and a woman, of the same sect and country, were burnt in
Smithfield. Cranmer, upon the first of October, with some others, had a
commission from the king to try some Anabaptists, which, by comparing the dates
of the commission with that of the execution, we may conclude the trial passed
upon the persons above mentioned." (Eccl. Hist. Vol. IV., P. 429).
Bishop Burnet, 1547, informs us:
"There were many Baptists in several parts of
England." (Neal's Hist. Puritans, Vol. II., pp. 354, 355).
Of the Baptists of the reign of Edward VI., 1547-1553,
Goadby says:
"In the first year of Edward's reign, Ridley and
Gardiner united together in a commission to deal with two Baptists in Kent. A
Protestant Inquisition was established, with Cranmer at its head. They were to
pull up 'the noxious weeds of heresy.' Their work was to be done with the forms
of justice and in secret. They might fine, imprison, torture, and, in all cases
of obstinate heretics, hand them over to the civil power to be burnt. Four
years later this commission was renewed, and in the same year Baptists were a
second time excluded from a general pardon. It was this inquisition that
condemned Joan Bucher and scattered, or tried to scatter, the congregations of
Baptists gathered in Kent. Still their numbers increased. Strype tells us that
their opinions were believed by many honest meaning people; and another writer
affirms that the articles of religion, issued just before the king's death,
'were principally designed to vindicate the English Reformation from that slur
and disgrace which Anabaptists' tenets had brought upon it,' a clear proof that
Baptists were, at that period, neither few nor unimportant." (Goadby's
Bye-Paths of Baptist History, pp. 74, 75).
In 1549 an act was passed against the Anabaptists by the
Parliament of Edward VI. (3 Edward VI., C. 24).
London, June 25, 1549, Bishop John Hooper in a letter to
Henry Bullinger says:
"The Anabaptists flock to the place and give me much
trouble." (Original Letters Relative to the English Reformation, Vol. I.,
p. 65. Cambridge Ed. 1846).
Bishop Vowler Short says: "Complaints had been
brought to the council of the prevalence of Anabaptists. * * * * To check the
progress of these opinions a commission was appointed." (Short's Hist.
Church of England, Vol. VI., P. 543).
Dr. Hase says:
"In general, Anabaptism required that those who came
over to it should be possessed of the strict heroic morals of the early
Christians, the same contempt for the world and its pleasures and pains, and
even its outward forms. By baptism a renunciation was made of the devil, the
world and the flesh; and a vow taken to do nothing but the will of God. Any
willful sin of an Anabaptist would not be pardoned, and entailed on its
perpetrator hopeless expulsion from the community, and a loss of the grace of
God. It was exactly on this account that the heresy was so dangerous, for the
greater part of its adherents could appeal to the sanctity of their mode of
life." (Dr. Hase's Neue Propheten. Apud Madden, Phantasmata, Vol. II., pp.
439, 440).
"An ecclesiastical Commission in the beginning of
this year was issued out for the examination of the Anabaptists and Arians,
that began now to spring up apace and show themselves more openly."
(Strype's Life of Sir Thomas Smith, p. 37).
London, June 29, 1550, Bishop John Hooper writing to Henry
Bullinger in regard to Essex and Kent says: "That district is troubled
with the frenzy of the Anabaptists more than any other part of the
kingdom." (Original Letters, Vol. I., p. 87).
Strype says:
There were such assemblies in Kent." (Memorials, Vol.
II., P. 266).
Bishop Ridley's Visitation Articles required:
"Whether any of the Anabaptists' sect, or other, use
notoriously any unlawful or private conventicles, wherein they do use doctrine
or administration of sacraments, separating themselves from the rest of the
parish?
"Whether any speak against infant baptism?"
(Cardwell's Documentary Annals of the Reformed Church of
England, Vol. I., p. 91).
Strype gives us additional information:
"In January 27th a number of persons, a sort of
Anabaptists, about sixty, met in a house on a Sunday in the parish of Bocking,
in Essex, where arose among them a great dispute, 'Whether it were necessary to
stand or kneel, bare headed or covered, at prayers? And they concluded the ceremony
not to be material, but that the heart before God was required, and nothing
else.' Such other like warm disputes there were about Scripture. There were,
likewise, such assemblies now in Kent. These were looked upon as dangerous to
church and state, and two of the company were thereof committed to the
Marshallsea, and orders were sent to apprehend the rest."(Memorials of
Cramner, Vol. I., p. 337).
The Parliament of 1551 exempted the Anabaptists from the
pardon which was granted to those who took part in the late rebellion.
During the reign of Elizabeth, 1558-1603, England was full
of Anabaptists.
Marsden, one of the calmest of the Puritan historians,
says:
"But the Anabaptists were the most numerous, and for
some time by far the most formidable opponents of the church. They are said to
have existed in England since the days of the Lollards, but their chief
strength was more abroad," etc. (Marsden, p. 144).
Marsden, further says:
In the judgment of the church party, and not a few of the
Puritans, Anabaptists were heretics of the worst kind, and those who denied the
necessity or validity of infant baptism, however orthodox on other points, are
constantly classed 'by writers of that period with Donatists, infidels, and
atheists." (Marsden, p. 65).
Bishop Cox writing to Gaulter, says:
"You must not grieve, my Gaulter, that sectaries are
showing themselves to be mischievous and wicked interpreters of your most just
opinion. For it cannot be otherwise but that tares must grow in the Lord's
field, and that in no small quantity. Of this kind are the Anabaptists,
Donatists, Arians, Papists, and all other good for nothing tribes of
sectaries." (Bishop Cox to Gaulter, Zurich Letters, 285).
Bishop Aylmer:
"The Anabaptists, with infinite other swarms of
Satanistes, do you think that every pulpit may will be able to answer them? I
pray God there may be many that can," (Bishop Aylmer's Harborough for
Faithful Subjects. Maitland, p. 216).
"And in these latter days, the old festered sores
newly broke out, as the Anabaptists, the freewillers, with infinite other
swarms of God's enemies. These "ugly monsters,' 'brodes of the devil's
brotherhood.'"(p. 205).
Dr. Barker, in declining the Archbishopric of Canterbury,
says in his letter:
"They say that the realm is full of Anabaptists,
Arians, libertines, free-will men, etc., against whom I only thought ministers
should have need to fight in unity of doctrine." (Burnet's Reformation,
Vol. II., p. 359).
Jewel, in his correspondence with the Swiss divines,
complains:
"We found, at the beginning of the reign of
Elizabeth, a large and inauspicious crop of Arians, Anabaptists, and other
pests, which, I know not how, but as mushrooms spring up in the night and in darkness, so these sprung up in that
darkness and unhappy night of the Marian times. These, I am informed, and hope
it is the fact, have retreated before the light of pure doctrines, like owls at
the light of the sun, and are nowhere to be found." (Works of Bishop
Jewel, Vol. IV., p. 1240).
Greenwood says:
"I am not an Anabaptist, thank God."
A letter was addressed to the "Dutch Church," in
London, 1573, rebuking them for sowing discord among English people. (Strype's
Annals Ref., Vol. IV., P. 520).
On Easter day a private conventicle was discovered near
Aldersgate Bar, and twenty-seven were apprehended. Four recanted; but
"eleven of them were condemned in the Consistory of the St. Paul's to be
burnt, nine of them were banished, and two suffered the extremity of the fire
in Smithfield, July 22, 1575." (Neal's Hist. Puritans, Vol. I., p. 340.
Ed. 1732. Strype's Annals Ref., Vol. III., p. 564. Ed. 1824).
Collier says: "To go back a little: On Easter day
this spring a conventicle of Dutch Baptists was discovered at a house without
the bars at Aldgate." (Collier's Eccl. Hist., Vol. VI., P. 543).
Fuller says:
"Now began the Anabaptists wonderfully to increase in
the land; and as we are sorry that any countryman should be seduced with that
opinion, so we are glad that (the) English as yet were free from that
infection. For on Easter day, April 3, was disclosed a congregation of Dutch
Anabaptists without Aldgate in London, whereof seven and twenty were taken and
imprisoned; and four, bearing faggots, at Paul's-Cross solemnly recanted their
dangerous opinions." (Fuller's Church Hist. Britain, Vol. II., p. 506).
Collier, 1589, says: "This provision was no more than
necessary; for the Dutch Anabaptists held private conventicles in London and
perverted a great many."' (Collier's Eccl. Hist., Vol. VI., P. 452).
Dr. Some admits the same fact in his reply to Barrowe. He
affirms that "there were several Anabaptisticale conventicles in London
and other places. "They were not all Dutchmen, for he further says:
"Some persons of these sentiments have been bred at our
universities."
The Baptists
of England from this date to 1641 underwent severe persecutions, but they
increased in numbers. After the abolition of the Court of High Commission and
the Court of Star Chamber in 1641, when they were able to assert themselves,
there were a surprising number of them in London and throughout England. Dexter
himself gives the names of eleven churches in England as early as 1626. (The
True Story of John Smyth, p. 42).
Herbert S. Skeats, a Pedobaptist, says:
"It has been asserted that a Baptist Church existed
in England in A. D. 1417. (Robinson's Claude, Vol. II., p. 54). There were
certainly Baptist Churches in England as early as the year 1589 (Dr. Some's
reply to Barrowe, quoted in Guiney's Hist., Vol. I., p. 109); and there could
scarcely have been several organized communities without the corresponding
opinions having been held by individuals, and some churches established for
years previous to this date."(Hist. Dissenting Churches of England, p.
22).
Neal says that in 1644 there were 54 Baptist Churches in
England. (Neal's Hist. Puritans, Vol. III., p. 175).
Baillie said in 1646:
"Hence it was that the Anabaptists made little noise
in England, till of late the Independents have corrupted and made worse
the principles of the old Separatists, proclaiming for errors a liberty both in
Church and State; under this shelter the Anabaptists have lift up their head
and increased their numbers much above all other sects of the land. (Anabaptism
the True Fountaine, ch. i.).
There is no proof whatever that these churches came from
Smyth's or Blount's, or that they ever practiced sprinkling for baptism. They
evidently were Baptist Churches.
IMMERSION
IN ENGLAND.
I have not space, nor has the busy reader time to read, a
complete history of immersion in England. It began with Christianity in
England, continued as the general practice till the seventeenth century and is
even now the theory of the Established Church. France was the first country
that tolerated sprinkling for baptism in the fourteenth century. Although the
climate, in England was cold, immersion did not give place to sprinkling till
long after. Scotland under the influence of Calvin and Knox, soon after the
Reformation, began to practice sprinkling and pouring, but it had but little
effect upon England. These facts are fully set forth by the historians, but I
shall take space for the words of but a few of them.
Dr. Wall, an Episcopalian, says:
"One would have thought that the cold countries
should have been the first that should have changed the custom from dipping to
affusion, because in cold climates the bathing of the body in water may seem
much more unnatural and dangerous to the health than in the hot ones (and it is
to be noted, by the way, that all of those countries of whose rites of baptism,
and immersion used in it, we have any account in the Scriptures or other
ancient history, are in hot climates, where frequent and common bathing both of
infants and grown persons is natural, and even necessary to the health). But by
history it appears that the cold climates held the custom of dipping as long as
any; for England, which is one of the coldest, was one of the latest that
admitted this alteration of the ordinary way." (Wall's Hist., Vol. I., p.
575).
I will let Dr. Schaff tell something of the universality
of immersion in England:
King Edward VI. and Queen Elizabeth were immersed. The
first Prayer Book of Edward VI. (1549) followed the Office of Sarum, directs
the priest to dip the child in water thrice: "first, dipping the right
side; secondly, the left side; the third time, dipping the face toward the
font." In the second Prayer Book (1652) the priest is simply directed to
dip the child discreetly and warily; and permission is given, for the first
time in Great Britain, to substitute pouring if the godfathers and godmothers
certify that the child is weak." During the reign of Elizabeth," says
Dr. Wall, "many fond ladies and gentlewomen first, and then by degrees the
common people, would obtain the favor of the priests to have their children
pass for weak children too tender to endure dipping in the water." The
same writer traces the practice of sprinkling to the period of the Long
Parliament and the Westminster Assembly. This change in England and other
Protestant countries from immersion to pouring, and from pouring to sprinkling,
was encouraged by the authority of Calvin, who declared the mode to be a matter
of no importance; and by the Westminster Assembly of Divines (1643-1652), which
decided that pouring and sprinkling are "not only lawful, but also
sufficient." The Westminster Confession declares: " Dipping of the
person into the water is not necessary; but baptism is rightly administered by
pouring or sprinkling water upon the person." (Teach., pp. 51, 52).
Sir David Brewster says:
During the persecution of Mary, many persons, most of whom
were Scotchmen, fled from England to Geneva, and there greedily imbibed the
opinions of that church. In 1556 a book was published in that place containing
"The Form of Prayer and Ministration of the Sacraments, approved by the
famous and godly learned man, John Calvin," in which the administrator is
enjoined to take water in his hand and lay it upon the child's forehead. These
Scotch exiles, who had renounced the authority of the Pope, implicitly acknowledged
the authority of Calvin; and returning to their own country, with Knox at their
head, in 1559, established sprinkling in Scotland. From Scotland this practice
made its way into England in the reign of Elizabeth, but was not authorized by
the Established Church. In the Assembly of Divines, held at Westminster in
1643, it was keenly debated whether immersion or sprinkling should be adopted:
25 voted for sprinkling and 24 for immersion; and even this small majority was
obtained at the earnest request of Dr. Lightfoot, who had acquired great
influence in that assembly. Sprinkling is therefore the general practice of
this country. Many Christians, however, especially the Baptists, reject it. The
Greek Church universally adheres to immersion. (Edin. Ency., Vol. III., p.
236).
I shall give but one other authority in this connection
and that is the scholarly Dean Stanley. He says:
We now pass to the changes in the form itself. For the
first thirteen centuries the almost universal practice of baptism was that of
which we read in the New Testament, and which is the very meaning of the word
baptize; that those who were baptized were plunged, submerged, immersed into
the water. That practice is still, as we have seen, continued in Eastern
Churches. In the Western Church it still lingers among Roman Catholics in the
solitary instance of the Cathedral of Milan; amongst Protestants in the
numerous sect of the Baptists. It lasted long into the Middle Ages. Even the
Icelanders, who at first shrank from the water of their freezing lakes, were
reconciled when they found that they could use the warm water of the geysers.
And the cold climate of Russia has not been found an obstacle to its
continuance throughout that vast empire. Even in the Church of England it is
still observed in theory. The Rubric in the public baptism for infants enjoins
that, unless for special causes, they are to be dipped not sprinkled. Edward
VI. and Elizabeth were both immersed. But since the beginning of the
seventeenth century the practice has become exceedingly rare. 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. (Christian Institutions, pp. 17, 18).
Many events of English history show how deeply imbedded in
the English mind was the idea of immersion. In the year 429 the Britons won a
great battle over the Saxons. The following events then occurred;
"The holy days of Lent were also at hand and were
rendered more religious by the presence of the priests, insomuch that the
people being instructed by daily sermons, resorted in crowds to be baptized;
for most of the army desired admission to the saving water; a church was
prepared with boughs for the feast of the resurrection of our Lord, and so
fitted up in that martial camp as it were in a city. The army advanced, still
wet with the baptismal water; the faith of the people was strengthened, and
whereas human power had before been despaired of, the Divine assistance was now
relied upon. The enemy received advice of the state of the army, and not
questioning their success against an unarmed multitude, hastened forward, but
their approach was, by the scouts, made known to the Britons, the greater part
of whose forces being just come from the font, after the celebration of Easter,
and preparing to arm and carry on the war, Germanus declared he would be their
leader." (Bede's Eccl. Hist., B. I. c. XX.).
One of the most notable events of English history was the
baptism, A. D. 596, of ten thousand Saxons in the river Swale. Fabyan, the old
chronicler, thus speaks of the success of the work of Augustine:
"He had in one day christened xm. of Saxons or Anglis
in ye west ryur, yt is called Swale." (Fabyan's Chronicle, Vol. I., p.
96).
Pope Gregory in a letter to Eulogius, Patriarch of
Alexandria, informs him of this great success of Augustine's. He says:
"More than ten thousand English, they tell us, were
baptized by the same brother, our fellow bishop, which I communicate to you to
announce to the people of Alexandria, and that you may do something in prayer
for the dwellers at the ends of the earth." (Patrol. Lat., Vol. LXXVII, p.
951).
Gregory understood this baptism to be an immersion. He
said:
"We baptize by trine immersion." (Patrol. Lat.,
Vol., LXXVII, p. 498).
Gocelyn, in his life of Augustine, says:
"He secured on all sides large numbers for Christ, so
that on the birthday of the
Lord, celebrated by the melodious anthems of all heaven, more than ten thousand
of the English were born again in the laver of holy baptism, with an infinite
number of women and children, in a river which the English call Sirarios, the
Swale, as if at one birth of the church from the womb. These persons, at the
command of the divine teacher, as if he were an angel from heaven, calling upon
them, all entered the dangerous depths of the river, two and two together, as
if it had been a solid plain; and in true faith, confessing the exalted
Trinity, they were baptized one by the other in turns, the apostolic leader blessing
the water. * * * So great a prodigy from heaven born out of the deep
whirlpool." (Patrol. Lat., Vol. LXXX, p. 79).
It is also reported that Paulinus, A. D. 629, baptized ten
thousand in the same river. Camden says the Swale was accounted sacred by the
ancient Saxons, above the ten thousand persons, besides women and children,
having received baptism in it in one day from Paulinus, Archbishop of York, on
the first conversion of the Saxons to Christianity. (Britannia, Vol. III., P.
257).
Alcuin says of King Edwin and his Northumbrians:
"Easter having come when the king had decided to be
baptized with his people under the lofty walls of York, in which by his orders,
a little house was quickly erected for God, that under its roof he might
receive the sacred water of baptism. During the sunshine of that festive and
holy day he was dedicated to Christ in the saving fountain, with his family and
nobles, and with the common people following. York remained illustrious,
distinguished with great honor, because in that sacred place King Edwin was
washed in the water." (Patrol. Lat., Vol. CI., p. 818).
Bede, referring to a period shortly following the baptism
of the king, says:
"So great was there the fervor of the faith, as is
reported, and the desire of the washing of salvation among the nations of the
Northumbrians, that Paulinus at a certain time coming with the king and queen
to the royal country seat, which is called Adgefrin, stayed with them
thirty-six days, fully occupied in catechizing and baptizing; during which
days, from morning till night, he did nothing else but instruct the people,
resorting from villages and places, in Christ's saving word; and when
instructed, he washed them with the water of absolution in the river Glen,
which is close by." (Bede's Eccl. Hist., B. II. c. xiv.).
Bede also tells us of the baptism of the Deiri:
"In that of the Deiri also, when he [Paulinus] was
wont often to be with the king, he baptized in the river Swale, which runs by
the village Cateract; for as yet oratories, or fonts, could not be made in the
early infancy of the church in these parts." (B. II. c. xiv.).
Bede says that a priest, A. D. 628, by the name of Deda
told him that one of the oldest persons had informed him, that he himself had
been baptized at noonday, by the Bishop Paulinus, in the presence of King
Edwin, with a great number of people, in the river Trent, near the city, which
is called in the English tongue Tiovulfingacestir. (B. II. c. xvi.).
Alcuin states that after the death of Penda, Osway the
king of the Mercians caused them to be washed in the consecrated river of
baptism. (Patrol. Lat., Vol. Cl., p. 824).
The Venerable Bede, A. D., 674-735, gives this testimony:
" For he truly who is baptized is seen to descend
into the fountain—he is seen to be dipped into the waters; but that which makes
the font to regenerate him can by no means be seen. The piety of the faithful
alone perceives that a sinner descends into the font, and a cleansed man
ascends; a son of death descends, but a son of the resurrection ascends; a son
of treachery descends, but a son of reconciliation ascends; a son of wrath
descends, but a son of compassion ascends; a son of the devil descends, but a
son of God ascends." (In John Evan. Ex. 3:5. Patrol. Lat., Vol. XCII., pp.
668, 669).
Alcuin tells of the baptism of Caedwalla, the king of the
West Saxons, at Rome. He says:
"Whilst the happy king was deemed worthy to be
immersed in the whirlpool of baptism." (Patrol. Lat., Vol. CL, p. 1310).
The Council of Cealchythe, held under Wulfred, A. D. 816,
says:
"Let presbyters also know, that when they administer
baptism they ought not to pour the consecrated water upon the infants' heads,
but let them always be immersed in the font; as the Son of God himself afforded
as example unto all believers, when he was three times immersed in the river
Jordan." (Hart's Eccl. Records, p. 197. Cambridge, 1846).
Collier, the English Church historian, says of this canon:
"By enjoining the priests not to sprinkle the infants
in baptism shows the great regard they had for the primitive usage; that they
did not look upon this as a dangerous rite, or at all impracticable in those
northern climates; not that they thought this circumstance essential to the
sacrament, but because it was the general practice of the primitive church,
because it was a lively instructive emblem of the death, burial and
resurrection of our Saviour; for this reason they preferred it to
sprinkling." (Collier's Eccl. Hist., Vol. I., p. 354).
Hastine, the Dane, A. D. 893, gave his two sons hostages
to Alfred, king of England, with the as understanding if "he wished he
might imbue them with the sacraments of faith and baptism," and the boys
soon afterwards were "regenerated in the sacred font." (Roger de
Wendover's Flowers of History, p. 228).
Fridegod, a monk of Canterbury, about A. D. 900, says in
his life of Wilfred:
"He showed that those to be saved should be immersed
in the clear waters."
And elsewhere he says:
Common people seeking holy baptism are immersed."
(Patrol. Lat., Vol. CXXXIII., pp. 993, 1003).
The Constitution of the Synod of Amesbury, 977, was drawn
up by Oswald and required:
"All children to be baptized in nine days after their
birth."
Collier remarks upon this canon:
"It is plain, as will be shown further, by and by,
that the English Church used the rite of immersion. It seems that they were not
at all discouraged by the coldness of the climate, nor thought the primitive
custom impracticable in the northern regions; and if an infant could be plunged
into the water at nine days old without receiving any harm, how unreasonable
must their scruples be who decline bringing their children to public baptism
for fear of danger? How unreasonable, I say, must this scruple be when
immersion is altered to sprinkling?" (Eccl. Hist., Vol. I., p. 474).
William Malmesbury, A. D. 979-1009, says of the baptism of
king Ethelred:
"When the little boy was immersed in the font of
baptism, the bishops standing round, the sacrament was marred by a sad accident
which made St. Dunstan utter an unfavorable prophecy." (Patrol. Lat., Vol.
CLXXIX., p. 1131).
Roger Wendover gives an account of Sweyn, king of the
Danes, and Anlaf, king of the Norwegians, coming against London in 994. They
were repulsed but over-ran the provinces so that king Ethelred had to pay them
a bounty. Wendover continues:
"King Ethelred dispatched at this time Elfege, Bishop
of Winchester, and Duke Athelwold to King Anlaf, whom they brought in peace to
the royal vill where King Ethelred was, and at his request dipped him in the
sacred font, after which he was confirmed by the bishop, the king adopting him
as his son and honoring him with royal presents; and the following summer he
returned to his own country in peace." (Flowers of History, p. 272).
Lanfranc, the thirty-fourth archbishop of Canterbury,
1005-1089, was born in Italy and came to England by way of Normandy. Commenting
on Philippians iii:20 he says:
"For as Christ lay three days in the sepulcher, so in
baptism let there be a trine immersion." (Patrol. Lat., Vol. CL., P. 315).
Cardinal Pullus, 1144, was born in England, became a
professor in Paris, and was highly honored of the Pope. In his book on Divinity
he says:
"Whilst the candidate for baptism in water is
immersed, the death of Christ is suggested; whilst immersed and covered with
water, the burial of Christ is shown forth; whilst he is raised from the
waters, the resurrection of Christ is proclaimed. The immersion is repeated
three times, out of reverence for the Trinity and on account of the three days'
burial of Christ. In the burial of the Lord the day follows the night three
times; in baptism also trine emersion accompanies immersion." (Patrol.
Lat., Vol. CLXXXVI., p. 843).
The Synod of Cashel, A. D. 1172, was held under Henry II.:
"It was ordained that children should be brought to
the church and baptized in clear water, being thrice dipped therein, in the
name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost." (Roger de
Wendover's Annals, p. 352).
We have an account of the baptism of Arthur, the oldest
son of Henry VII. He married Catherine of Aragon, who after his death became
the wife of Henry VIII. Leland says of the baptism of Arthur:
"The body of all the cathedral church of Westminster
was hung with cloth of arras, and in the middle, beside the font of the said
church, was ordained and prepared a solemn font in manner and form of a stage
of seven steps, square or round like, an high cross covered with red worsted,
and up in the midst a post made of iron to bear the font of silver gilt, which within side was well dressed with
fine linen cloth, and near the same on the west side was a step, like a block,
for the bishop to stand on, covered also with red saye; and over the font, of a
good height, a rich canopy with a great gilt ball, lined and fringed without
curtains. On the north side was ordained a traverse hung with cloth of arras,
and upon the one side thereof, within side, another traverse of red scarsnet.
There was fire without fumigations, ready against the prince's coming. And
without, the steps of the said font were railed with good timber. * * * And
Queen Elizabeth was in the church abiding the coming of the prince. * * *
Incontinent after the prince was put into the font the officers at-large put on
their coats, and all their torches were lighted." (Lelandi Collectanea,
Vol. IV., pp. 204-206.London, 1774).
Leland also gives a description at great length of the
baptism of Margaret, the sister of Arthur, 1490, and of Queen Elizabeth, 1533.
The royalty were all immersed.
Walker says of baptism during the reign of Edward VI.,
1537-1553:
"Dipping was at this time the more usual, but
sprinkling was sometimes used." (Doctrine of Baptism, Ch. X., p. 147.
London, 1678).
The prayer book of Edward VI. provides:
"Then the priest shall take the child in his hands
and ask the name; and naming the child shall dip it in the water thrice. First
dipping the right side; second, the left side; the third time dipping the face
toward the font; so it be wisely and discretely done; saying, I baptize,
&c. And if the child be weak, it shall suffice to pour upon it, saying the
words." (Collier's Eccl. Hist., Vol. II., P. 256).
The Sarum or Saulsbury Liturgy, 1541, according to
Collier, provides:
"Upon Saturday, Easter-even, is hallowed the font,
which as it were vestigium, or a remembrance of baptism, that was used
in the primitive church; at which time, and Pentecost, there was used in the
church two solemn baptizings, and much concourse of people came into the same.
"The first was at Easter, because the mystery of
baptism agrees well to the time. For like as Christ died and was buried, and
rose again the third day, so by putting into the water is signified our death
to sin, and the immersion betokens our burial and mortification to the same;
and the rising again out of the water declares us to be risen to a new life,
according to the doctrine of St. Paul. (Rom. vi.)
"And the second solemn baptizing, i. e., at
Pentecost, was because there is celebrated the feast of the Holy Ghost, which
is the worker of that spiritual regeneration we have in baptism. And therefore
the churches used to hallow the font also at that time." (Eccl. Hist.,
Vol. II., p. 196).
We select a part of the ceremony omitting the
explanations:
"Then follow the questions to the godfathers and
godmothers, as representatives of the child. Forsakest thou the devil? Ans. I
forsake him. All his works? Ans. I forsake them. And all his pomps
and vanities? Ans. I forsake them. Satisfied with these, the minister
then anoints the child with holy oil upon breast and betwixt the shoulders. Questions
to ascertain the orthodoxy of the child- are propounded. Then follows another
series: For example, to the child the minister says: What asketh thou? Ans.
Baptism. Wilt thou be baptized? Ans. I will. Satisfied with these
replies the minister calling the child by name, baptizes it in the name of the
Father, Son and Holy Ghost (putting it into the water of the font and taking it
out again, or else pouring water upon it.) Hist., Vol. II., Pp. 192, 193. Note
A.).
In 1553 instructions were given to the archdeacons as
follows:
"Whether there be any who will not suffer the priest
to dip the child three times in the font, being yet strong and able to abide
and suffer it in the judgment and opinion of discreet and expert persons, but
will needs have the child in the clothes, and only be sprinkled with a few
drops of water." (Hart's Eccl. Records, p. 87).
Watson, Bishop of Lincoln, 1558, says:
"Though the old and ancient tradition of the Church
hath from the beginning to dip the child three times, etc., yet that is not
such necessity; but if he be once dipped in the water, it is sufficient. Yea,
and in times of great peril and necessity, if the water be poured on his head,
it will suffice." (Holsome and Catholic Doctrine Concerning the
Seven-Sacraments, Pp. 22, 23. London, 1558).
The baptism of James I., King of England was by immersion.
He was born in the Castle of Edinburgh, 1556. Of his baptism it is said:
"At convenient time you are to present her the font
of gold, which we send with you. You may pleasantly say that it was made as
soon as we heard of the prince's birth, and then it was big enough for him; but
now he being grown, he is too big for it. Therefore it may be better used for
the next child, provided it be christened before it outgrow the font." (Turner,
Vol. IV., P. 86, note).
James refers to "the font wherein I was
christened." (Works, London, 1616).
Bishop Horn, of England, in writing to Henry Bullinger, of
Zurich, in 1575, says of baptism in England:
"The minister examines them concerning their faith,
and afterwards dips the infant in the water." (Zurich Letters, Second
Series, Parker Society, P. 356).
The Greek lexicons used in England in the first half of
the seventeenth century were Scapula, Stephens, Mincaeus, Pasor and Leigh.
These all define baptizo as dipping or submerging.
Dr. Joseph Mede, 1586-1638, was a very learned English
divine. He says:
"There was no such thing as sprinkling or rantism
used in baptism in the Apostles' days, nor many ages after them."
(Diatribe on Titus iii.2).
Henry Greenwood in 1628 published "A Joyful Tract of
the most blessed Baptism that ever was solemnized." It is printed in black
letter. When I first read it I was led to think that it was by an Anabaptist
preacher, but after further examination I found that he was of the Episcopal
Church. He says of the baptism of Jesus :
"The place where he baptized Christ was in the River
Jordan * * * A duplicate River, so-called, because it was composed of two
Fountains, the one called Jor, the other Dan, and therefore the
river hath this name Jordan: In which River Naaman was washed and cleansed from
his leprosy 2 Kings, 5.14; which River Elijah and Elisha divided with their
cloak, 2 Kings, 2:8,13. In this Jordan did John baptize our Lord and Saviour
Jesus Christ." (pp. 7, 8.)
Daniel Rogers, 1633, published A Treatise of the two
Sacraments of the Gospel Baptism and the Supper of the Lord. He was an
Episcopalian. He says:
"Touching what I have said of Sacramental dipping to
explain myself a little about it; I would not be understood as if
schismatically I would instill a distaste of the Church into any weak minds, by
the act of sprinkling water only. But this (under correction) I say: That it
ought to be the churches part to cleave to the Institution, especially it being
not left arbitrary by our Church to the discretion of the minister, but
required to dip or dive the Infant more or less (except in cases of weakness),
for which allowance in the church we have cause to be thankful; and suitably to
consider that he betrays the Church (whose officer he is) to a disordered
error, if he cleaves not to the institution; To dip the infant in water. And
this I do so aver as thinking it exceeding material to the ordinance, and no
slight thing: yea, which both Antiquity (though with some addition of a
threefold dipping: for the preserving of the doctrine of the impugned Trinity
entire) constantly and without exception of countries hot or cold, witnesseth
unto: and especially the constant word of the Holy Ghost, first and last,
approveth: as a learned Critique upon chap.3, verse ii, hath
noted, that the Greek tongue wants not words to express any other act as well
as dipping, if the institution could bear it." (p. 77. London, 1633).
It is a very significant fact that Daniel Rogers was
quoted by the Baptists of 1641 as having upheld their opinion. This could not
have been if the Baptists of that period had been in the practice of
sprinkling.
Stephen Denson, 1634, says:
"Bee Baptized. The word translated baptizing
doth most properly signify dipping over head and ears, and indeed
this was the most usual manner of baptizing in the primitive Church: especially
in hot countries, and after this manner was Christ himself baptized by John.
Mat. 3:16.For there is said of him, that when he was baptized he went
out of the water; Which doth imply that in his baptizing he went under the
water, and thus all those that were baptized in rivers they were not sprinkled
but dipped." (The Doctrine of Both Sacraments, pp. 39, 40. London, 1634).
Edward Elton, 1637, says:
"First, in sign and sacrament only, for the dipping
of the party baptized in the water, and abiding under the water for a time,
doth represent and seal unto us the burial of Christ, and his abiding in the
grave; and of this all are partakers sacramentally." (An Exposition of the
Epistle of Saint Paul to the Colossians, p. 293. London, 1637),
John Selden, 1584-1654, was regarded as the most learned
Englishman of his time. He says: "The Jews took the baptism wherein the
whole body was not baptized to be void." (De Jure Nat., C. 2).
Bishop Taylor, 1613-1677 says:
"If you would attend to the proper signification of
the word, baptism signifies plunging into water, or dipping with washing."
(Rule of Conscience, I., 3, c. 4).
The Rev. Thomas Blake, who lived in Tamworth,
Staffordshire, A. D. 1644, says:
"I have been an eye witness of many infants dipped,
and I know it to have been the constant practice of many ministers in their
places for many years together." (The Birth Privilege, p. 33. London,
1644).
Alexander Balfour says:
"Baptizing infants by dipping them in fonts was
practiced in the Church of England (except in cases of sickness or weakness)
until the Directory came out in the year 1644, which forbade the carrying of
children to the font." (Anti-PedoBaptism Baptism Unveiled, p. 240. London,
1827).
Wall is even more definite. He says of the Westminster
Assembly of Divines:
"So (parallel to the rest of their reformations) they
reformed the font into a basin. This learned Assembly could not remember that
fonts to baptize in had been always used by the primitive Christians, long
before the beginning of popery, and ever since churches were built; but that
sprinkling as the common use of baptizing was really introduced (in France
first, and then in other popish countries) in times of popery." (Hist.
Inst. Bapt., Vol. II., p. 403). And in another place he remarks: "And for
sprinkling, properly called, it seems that it was at 1645 just then beginning,
and used by very few. It must have begun in the disorderly times of 1641."
(Hist. Inst. Bapt., Vol. II., p. 403).
Sir John Floyer, one of the most careful writers, says:
"I have now given what testimony I could find in our
English authors, to prove the practice of immersion from the time the Britons
and Saxons were baptized till King James' days; when the people grew peevish
with all ancient ceremonies and through the love of novelty and the niceness of
parents, and the pretense of modesty, they laid aside immersion, which never
was abrogated by any canon, but is still recommended by the present rubric of
our church, which orders the child to be dipped discreetly and warily." (History of Cold
Bathing, p. 61).
But dipping was not then left off, for Floyer further
says:
"That I may further convince all of my countrymen that
Immersion in Baptism was very lately left off in England, I
will assure them that there are yet Persons living who were so immersed;
for I am so informed by Mr. Berisford, minister of Stutton
in Derbyshire, that his parents Immersed not only him but the
rest of his family at his Baptism." (P. 182 London, 1722).
Walter Cardiac preached a sermon before the House of
Commons at St. Margaret's, July 21, 1646. Among other things he said:
"There is now among good people a great deal of
strife about baptism; as for divers things, so for the point of dipping, though
in some places in England they dip altogether." (P. 100).
From the testimony introduced above we reach the
conclusion from the introduction of Christianity in Britain to 1650 immersion
was common in England, and was the prevailing practice among all Christian
denominations. It is manifest that dipping was the prescribed order of
The Catholics. The Catholic ritual in use in England in 1641
was not opposed to immersion. In fact, the Roman Church never has been
opposed to immersion.
The Episcopalians. The Episcopal prayer book and ritual
prescribed immersion as the ordinary act of baptism then as now. But there was
the difference that immersion was often administered in the Episcopal Church of
that day, as is not the case now.
The Presbyterians. We have already seen that sprinkling,
or rather pouring, was introduced in Scotland by John Knox and his followers
from Calvin. But it did not prevail in England among Presbyterians until the
Westminster Assembly excluded immersion by a vote of 25 to 24, Dr.
Lightfoot, the president, casting the deciding vote. This was only done after
the most heated debate. Dr. Lightfoot himself gives this. account:
Then we fell upon the work of the day, which was about
baptizing "of the child, whether to dip him or to sprinkle." And this
proposition, "It is lawful and sufficient to besprinkle the child,"
had been canvassed before our adjourning, and was ready now to vote; but I
spoke against it, as being very unfit to vote; that it is lawful to sprinkle
when every one grants it. Whereupon it was fallen upon, sprinkling being
granted, whether dipping should be tolerated with it. And here fell we upon a
large and long discourse, whether dipping were essential, or used in the first
institution, or in the Jews' custom. Mr. Coleman went about, in a large
discourse, to prove tbilh to be dipping overhead. Which I answered at
large. After a long dispute it was at last put to the question, whether the
Directory should run thus, "The minister shall take water, and sprinkle or
pour it with his hand upon the face or forehead of the child;" and it was
voted so indifferently, that we were glad to count names twice; for so many
were so unwilling to have dipping excluded that the votes came to an equality
within one; for the one side were 24, the other 25, the 24 for the reserving of
dipping and the 25 against it; and there grew a great heat upon it, and when we
had done all, we concluded upon nothing in it, but the business was
recommitted.
Aug. 8th. But as to the dispute itself about dipping, it
was thought safe and most fit to let it alone, and to express it thus in our
Directory: "He is to baptize the child with water, which, for the manner
of doing is not only lawful, but also sufficient, and most expedient to be by
pouring or sprinkling of water on the face of the child, without any other
ceremony." But this lost a great deal of time about the wording of it.
(Works, Vol. XIII., p. 299. London 1824).
Sir David Brewster is regarded as high authority. He says:
"In the Assembly of Divines, held at Westminster in 1643, it was
keenly debated whether immersion or sprinkling should be adopted: 25 voted for
sprinkling, and 24 for immersion; and even that small majority was obtained at
the earnest request of Dr. Lightfoot, who had acquired great influence in that
assembly." (Edinburgh Ency., Vol. III., p. 236).
All this took place three years after the alleged
"invention"of immersion by the Baptists.
4. The Baptists. In this connection I only wish to say
that if the Baptists between 1509 and 1641, in England, were not in the
practice of immersion, they hold the world's record for dissent. Here are all
denominations who recognize and practice immersion and the Baptists alone
standing out against them all. As soon as the other denominations adopt
sprinkling as their custom, all of a sudden, the Baptists change their practice
from sprinkling to immersion. There is no reason for all of this. For my part I
do not believe any such charge, and, I think, the following pages will
demonstrate, that they did no such thing.
THE ANABAPTISTS OF THE CONTINENT.
Dr. Whitsitt makes the broadest claims that all of the
Anabaptists of Germany and Holland practiced sprinkling. His words are:
"But none of the Anabaptists of Holland, or of the
adjacent sections of Germany, were immersionists. So far as any account of them
has come to light, they were uniformly in the practice of pouring or sprinkling
for baptism, excepting the Collegiants, who, at Rhynsburg, began to immerse in
1620." (Page 35).
Again:
"The Anabaptists of Holland appear to have been,
without exception, engaged in the practice of pouring and sprinkling."
(Page 42).
Here is the affirmation of a universal negative, which
would require omniscience to prove. He would be compelled to know every
circumstance of every baptism which took place among many thousands of persons
scattered over many countries for more than one hundred years. If just one
Anabaptist was immersed, his thesis falls to the ground. Beyond the impossibility
of sustaining such a position, two considerations will answer all that Dr.
Whitsitt has said in regard to the Anabaptists of Holland and Germany
practicing sprinkling:
1. All who were called Anabaptists were not Anabaptists.
It was a general name for many classes of people, and the true Anabaptists had
to suffer much for the sins of others. Many who went under this name, were
Lutherans and other Pedobaptists, who had embraced certain fanatical opinions,
and were denounced as Anabaptists. In reality they never embraced the
Anabaptist faith at all. Fuslin very properly remarks:
"There was a great difference between Anabaptists and
Anabaptists. There were those among them who held strange doctrines; but this
cannot be said of the whole sect. If we should attribute to every sect whatever
senseless doctrines two or three fanciful fellows have taught, there is not one
in the world to which we could not ascribe the most abominable errors."
Beytrage Vol. II).
It is certain, that many persons who were called
Anabaptists were never such in reality; and it is also certain that many such
practiced sprinkling.
2. It must be remembered that this was a time of
revolution. Men were constantly changing their minds. The opinion of a man
yesterday would not be the opinion of the same man today. On no point was this
more true than on the subject of baptism. The ranks of the Anabaptists were
constantly augmented from the ranks of the Catholic and Reformed Churches. The
investigation of the word of God was a new thing, and some arrived at the truth
slowly. This was eminently true of the act of baptism. Men came out of the
Reformed Churches and for a time held on to sprinkling and pouring, and they
were termed Anabaptists, but this was not Anabaptist doctrine, any more than it
is Baptist doctrine today. This may be illustrated by Grebel, one of the most
noted Anabaptist preachers of his day. It is said of Mantz, to whom Dr.
Whitsitt refers that "he fell upon his knees, and Grebel baptized
him." (Cornelius, Geschichte des Munsterischen Aufrouhrs, Leipsig, 1860.
Vol. II., s. 26, 27). And yet shortly after that Grebel became a full
Anabaptist and only practiced immersion. This will explain some apparent cases
where sprinkling seemed to be practiced among the Anabaptists. The normal mode
of baptism among the early Anabaptists was immersion, and I shall point out an
abundance of testimony to confirm this proposition.
Dr. Henry S. Burrage, very beautifully says on this point:
"The Bible was read, its divine lessons were earnestly
and tenderly unfolded, and sinners were urged to flee from the wrath to come.
It was a new gospel to thousands, and multitudes with tears of repentance asked
the privilege of confessing faith in Christ, retiring to some mountain stream
to exclaim with the Eunuch, 'See here is water; what doth hinder me to be
baptized?' The solemn ordinance was administered, and coming forth from the
water both the convert and the bearer of the glad tidings 'went on their way
rejoicing."' (The Anabaptists of Switzerland, p. 108, Philadelphia, 1882).
We are not at all shut up to a negative view of this
question. Fortunately we have much positive evidence that the Anabaptists did
practice dipping. Luther was a firm believer in dipping, and understood the
Anabaptists to be dippers. Indeed some charge that the Anabaptists took the cue
for their immersions from Luther himself. Robinson says:
"Luther bore the Zuinglians dogmatizing; but he could
not brook a further reformation in the hands of the dippers. What renders the
great man's conduct the more surprising is, that he had himself, seven years
before, taught the doctrine of dipping. * * * The Catholics tax Luther as being
the father of the German dippers, some of the first expressly declare, they
received their first ideas from him, and the fact seems undeniable, but the
article of reforming without him he could not bear. This is the crime objected
against them, as it had been against Carolostadt. This exasperated him to the
last degree, and he became their enemy, and notwithstanding all he had said in
favor of dipping, persecuted them under the title of re-dippers, re-baptizers,
or Anabaptists. It. is not an improbable conjecture, that Luther at first
conformed to his own principles, and dipped infants in baptism." (Ecclesiastical
Researches, pp. 542, 543. Cambridge, 1792).
The translator of Luther's Controversial Works, speaking
of Luther's sermon on baptism says: "The sermon and letters are directed
principally against the Anabaptists, a fanatical sect of reformers who contended
that baptism should be administered to adults only, not by sprinkling, but by
dipping."
Zuingle, 1527, entitles his great work against the
Anabaptists, Elenchus contra Catabaptistas. (Zuinglii Operum, Vol. II., pp.
1-42. Ed. 580).8o). He gives an early Confession of Faith of the Anabaptists.
He upbraids his opponents as having published these articles, but declares that
there is scarcely any one of them that has not a written copy of these laws
which have been so well concealed. The articles are in all seven. In reality it
is the Schleitham Confession of Faith. The first, which we give in full,
relates to baptism:
"Baptism ought to be given to all who have been
taught repentance and change of life, and who in truth believe that through
Christ their sins are blotted out, and the sins of all who are willing to walk
in the resurrection of Jesus Christ, and who are willing to be buried with him
into death, that they may rise
again with him. To all, therefore, who in this manner seek baptism, and of
themselves ask us, we will give it. By this rule are excluded all baptism of
infants, the great abomination of the Roman pontiff. For this article we have
the strength and testimony of Scripture; we have also the practice of the
apostles; which things we simply and also steadfastly will observe, for we are
assured of them."
Zuingle makes all manner of fun of the Anabaptists, calling them " immersionists, dying people,
re-dying them, plunging them into the darkness of water to unite them to a
church of darkness, they mersed," etc.
In 1525 Zuingle calls the Anabaptists "bath (I should
have said) Baptist, companions." (Zuingle's Works, Vol. II., s. 240).
It will be seen from the above that not only does Zuingle
declare the Anabaptists to be dippers, but he calls them Catabaptists. This
term will be found in many places in this book, and so I wish to have a
definition of the term. My first witness as to the meaning of the word
Catabaptist shall be Dr. Whitsitt. When Dr. Whitsitt is writing under
constraint and trying to establish a case, Catabaptist means "against
baptism," but when he was writing without constraint the word meant
"a dipper."
Dr. Whitsitt in The Independent, 1880: The ceremony referred to was anabaptism, rebaptism by
sprinkling and not "catabaptism," or baptism by immersion. |
Dr. Whitsitt in his book, 1896: It used to be said that the word Kata baptist, so often
applied to Anabaptists by their opponents during the Reformation period,
contained indisputable proof that they were immersionists. The preposition kata,
in its primary or local usage, means down, and so, it was argued,
Katabaptist must have been one who baptized downwards, that is, immersed. But
just as ana, meaning primarily up,came to be used in the sense of again,so
kata, in several technical terms, means against. |
Which statement of Dr. Whitsitt shall we believe? The
first of course, for that is in accord with all scholarship. Liddell and Scott,
the great Greek lexicographers, in their seventh edition, say:
Katabaptizo to dip under water,
to drown.
Katabaptistas, one who drowns.
Dr. K. R. Hagenbach says of the Anabaptists:
"'Since,' says Bullinger, 'kindness was of no avail
with them, they were put into the high tower in the lower town, the one called
the Witches' or New Tower. There were fourteen men and seven women of them.
There they were fed on bread and water, to see whether it was possible to turn
them from their error.' The threat of drowning was even administered in
barbarous irony, for 'he who dips,' it was declared, 'shall himself be dipped."'
(History of the Reformation in Germany and Switzerland, Vol. II., p. 33).
That the Anabaptists, or Mennonites, of Holland immersed
we have many proofs. One of Dr. Whitsitt's principal witnesses is Baillie, and
I show, in the chapter on English Baptists, that he admits that the Mennonites
were dippers. Another one of Dr. Whitsitt's witnesses is Robinson. He is clear
enough on this point. Robinson says:
"Menno, the father of the Dutch Baptists, says,
'after we have searched ever so diligently, we shall find no other baptism
beside dipping in water (doopsel inder water) which is acceptable to God
and maintained in his word.' (Mennonis Simonis, Opera, 1539, page 24).
Menno was dipped himself, and he baptized others by dipping; but some of his
followers introduced pouring, as they imagined through necessity, in prison,
and now the practice generally prevails." (History of Baptism, pp. 694,
695. Nashville, 1860).
I now introduce an authoritative witness. It is Gerard
Brandt, the brilliant historian of the Low Countries. This work was first
published in 1671. He says:
"The Reformation exclusive of Infant-baptism, was set
on foot in Switzerland about the year 1522, by the zeal of Conrad Grebel and Felix Mans, both men of
learning, who fell out with Zuinglius, about the said opinion. Upon-account of
this difference was the first Edict against Anabaptists published at Zurich; in
which there was a Penalty of a Silver Park (or two Guilders, Dutch money) set
upon all such as should suffer themselves to be Re-baptized, or should withhold
Baptism from their Children. And it was further declared, That those who openly
opposed this Order, should be yet more severely treated. Accordingly the said
Felix was drowned in Zurich upon the sentence pronounced by Zuinglius, in these
four words: *Qui iterum mergit, mergatur; that is, he that rebaptizes with
water, let him be drowned in the water. This happened in the year 1526; but
about the same time, and since, there were more of them put to death: A
procedure which appeared very strange to some: The Zuinglians, they said, were
scarce got out of the reach of Persecution themselves, and saw those fires in
which their fellow-believers were burnt, still daily smooking most of them
condemned the putting hereticks to death, where it came home to themselves,
where they were uppermost. Thus doing to others what they would not have done
to them. Others abused fire, they water. Those who knew better things ought to
have done better. Neither
*Those who immerse
again, shall be immersed.
were they acted by a good spirit, they could lead the
Wanderer into the ditch, instead of setting him in the right way; they could
drown the infected instead of washing and cleansing him; or burn the Blind
instead of restoring him to the light.
"The first Anabaptists so far as I can gather from
their own Writings, that were put to death for their persuasions in Holland,
during the reign of Popery, were John Wadon, and two of his fraternity of
Waterlandt; and all of these three were, with a slow fire, rather roasted than
burnt to death in the Hague, in the year 1527. At Brussels the Dean of Louvain,
Inquisitor of Brabrant, Holland, and the neighboring Counties, condemned partly
and partly received as Penitents, about sixty persons. At the same time the
Provost of the Regular Canons of Typres was Inquisitor in Flanders, and the
parts adjacent, and the Provost of the Scholars of Mons in Hainault, was
Inquisitor in that district." (The History of the Reformation in the Low
Countries, Vol. I., P. 57. London, 1720).
Two things are evident from the above quotation from
Brandt: First, the Anabaptists were dippers, and secondly the Anabaptists were
of the same "persuasion in Holland."
On November 19, 1526, the Council of Zurich confirmed the
edict of March 7, that Anabaptism should be punished by drowning, and that the
man should be delivered to the executioner, who should bind his hands, place
him in a boat and throw him
bound into the water, there to die. (Fusslin, Beytrage, I., s. 271. Engli,
Actensammlung, 5 14, Nr. 107). Mantz, who had become an immersionist, received
this sentence January 5, 1527. It was carried into execution. Bullinger says:
"As he came down from the Wellenberg to the fish market and was led
through the shambles to the boat, he praised God that he was about to die for
his truth; for Anabaptism was right and founded upon the word of God, and
Christ had foretold that his followers would suffer for the truth's sake. And
the like discourse he urged much, discussing with the preacher who attended
him. On the way his mother and brother came to him and exhorted him to be
steadfast, and he persevered in his folly even to the end. When he was bound
upon the hurdle and was about to be thrown into the stream by the executioner,
he sang with a loud voice: In manus tuas, Domine, commendo spiritum meum. 'Into
thy hands, 0 Lord, I commend my spirit;' and herewith was drawn into the water
by the executioner and drowned." (Reformationsgeschchte, II., s. 382.
Frauenfeld, 1838).
The reason for this punishment by drowning was that the
penalty might be according to the offense. This is fully explained by many
writers. The Anabaptists were immersionists therefore they should be drowned.
The senate of Zurich decreed that any one immersing a
candidate in baptism—qui merserit baptismo—should be drowned is a significant
hint. (Zuingli, Opera, III., s. 364).
John Stumpf, who during the period under survey, lived in
the vicinity of Zurich and was familiar with the Anabaptist movement, says that
generally the early Anabaptists of Switzerland were "rebaptized in rivers
and streams." (Gemeiner Loblicher Eydgenossenschaft).
Gastins, sarcastically, used to say, as he ordered the
Anabaptists drowned: "They like immersion so much let us immerse
them."
In Appenzell, 1525, the Anabaptists had three places where
meetings were held. The largest was Teufen, with a second at Herrisau, and the
third at Brunnen. In all of these places the services were under the open sky,
while the converts were baptized in the neighboring brooks and streams. (Burrage,
p. 119).
Sender, an old historian of Augsburg, says of the
Anabaptists of 1525-30:
"The hated sect in 1527 met in the gardens of houses,
men and women, rich and poor, more than 1,100 in all, who were rebaptized. They
put on peculiar clothes in which to be baptized, for in their houses where
their baptisteries were, there were a number of garments always prepared."
Wagenseil, a later historian of Augsburg, says:
"In 1527 the Anabaptists baptized none who did not
believe with them; and the candidates were not merely sprinkled with water but
wholly submerged."
In the Bekenntniss von beiden Sacramenten, which at
Minster, October 22, 1533, was subscribed by Rothman, Klopriss, Staprade,
Vienne, and Stralen, and was made public on the 8th of November following,
occurs this statement:
"Baptism is an immersion in water, which the
candidate requests and receives as a true sign that, dead to sin, buried with
Christ, he rises to a new life, henceforth to walk, not in the lusts of the
flesh, but obedient to the will of God."
We have many instances of immersion at St. Gall's. It is
said that Kessler, the pastor of the church in St. Gall, in 1523, was
expounding the book of Romans. When he reached the sixth chapter, and was
considering the significance of the ordinance of baptism, Hochrutiner
interrupted him, saying, "I infer from your words that you are of the
opinion that children may be baptized." "Why not?" asked
Kessler. Hochrutiner appealed to Mark 16:16, "He that believeth and is
baptized shall be saved," and added that to baptize a child was the same
as dipping in water any irrational creature. (Burrage, pp. 116, 117. Kessler,
Sabatta, s. 264).
In March, 1525, Grebel baptized Ulimann by immersion. The
account of the baptism is taken from Kessler, who says:
"Wolfgang Ulimann, on the journey to Schaffhausen,
met Conrad Grebel, who instructed him so highly in the knowledge of Anabaptism
that he would not be sprinkled out of a dish, but was drawn under and covered
over with the waters of the Rhine." (Sabbata, Vol. I., s. 266). It is
plain that immersion is here declared to be a distinctive view of the
Anabaptists. He was "instructed" in Anabaptism, therefore he would
not be sprinkled but was dipped.
"Wolfgang Ullmann, on his return to St. Gall, after
his baptism at Shaffhausen by Grebel, gave a new impulse to the Anabaptist
movement. Grebel soon followed—probably late in March, 1525—and on Palm Sunday,
April 9, he baptized a large number in the Sitter river. The St. Gall
Anabaptists now withdrew from the churches, leaving them almost empty, and
holding religious services in private houses, and in open fields. In a short
time the Anabaptist Church numbered eight hundred members." (Burrage, pp.
117, 118. Kessler, Sabbata, s. 267).
Dr. Howard Osgood, who was at St. Gall in 1867,says:
"A mountain stream, sufficient for all sprinkling
purposes, flows through the city; but in no place is it deep enough for the
immersion of a person, while the Sitter river is between two and three miles
away, and is gained by a difficult road. The only solution of this choice was,
that Grebel sought the river, in order to immerse candidates."
Kessler tells us that at St. Gall's the Anabaptists had a
(Taufhaus), or baptistery. (Sabbata, s. 270).
Sicher, a Roman Catholic eye-witness, says: "The number
of the converted (at St. Gall) increased so that the baptistery could not
contain the crowd, and they were compelled to use the streams and the Sitter
River." (Arx, Geschichte d. Stadt, St. Gallen, II., s. 500.
August Naef, secretary of the Council of St. Gall, in a
work published in 1850, on p. 1021 says, speaking of the Anabaptists of 1525:
"They baptized those who believed with them in rivers
and lakes, and in a great wooden cask in the butchers' square before a great
crowd."
Dr. Burrage gives a resume of the subject in these words:
"Now we know that immersion was practiced among the
Swiss Anabaptists two years before. How do we know? Not from the controversial
writings of the period, but from the diary of John Kessler, the ZwInglian
pastor at St. Gall, who, fortunately, one day recorded the immersion of
Wolfgang Uliman by Conrad Grebel in the Rhine, at Schaffhausen, in April, 1525,
and of others a little later, in the Sitter River, near St. Gall. And so the
fact has come to us. Were it not for that diary, inasmuch as Zwingle did not
publish his ‘Contra- Catabaptists' until 1527, and inasmuch as the decree of
the Council of Zurich against the Anabaptists, in which occur the words qui iterum
mergat mergatur, was not issued until 1527, the Independent might
claim that the Baptists of Switzerland did not practice immersion before
1627." (Early English and American Baptists, by Henry S. Burrage, Independent,
October 21, 1880).
It was claimed by the Baptists of the sixteenth century in
most all of their controversies that the Dutch translation of the New Testament
rendered the word baptizo by doop, which meant to dip. Many
instances were given of the use of this word doop. I could well nigh fill a
book with citations from Baptist authors on this point. I shall give a letter
written to Dr. William Russell to this effect. He had made this statement in a
public debate, and he presents this letter in confirmation of his statement.
The letter reads:
"Sir, I have read your narrative of the Portsmouth
Disputation with some ministers of the Presbyterians, and have also seen
another book published by your adversaries intitled An Impartial
Account of the Portsmouth Disputation by Samuel Chandler, William Leigh,
Benjamine Robinson, wherein I find such unchristian reflections and wrong
done you that suites not with the Profession they make of true Religion, but
greatly demonstrates the badness of their cause. And I wonder at their
Impudence in putting so plain a cheat upon the World as I find in pag. 79, in
these words, viz., whether he might not have spared all his Dutch? Seeing
Doop in that language signifies only to wash, and is used when they only pour
on water. That this account of the word Doop is notoriously false appears from
the common use of the word, and the account of it which is given in their
Dictionaries. One I have by me, which I believe is the largest and best in that
Tongue, it being a double Dictionary of Dutch and English, and English
and Dutch, with Grammars to each of them: by Hendrick Hexham and
Daniel Manly and printed at Rotterdam, 1675 and 1678, wherein the
English word Dip is render'd Doop: as, to dip in a sauce, Doopen in een
sausse; to dip to the bottom, Doopen tot den grondt Zoe: Dipped Gedoopt;
a dipping, een doopinge; and Doop, Doopfel Baptism; Doopen
to baptize, Dooper, baptizer, Doop dagh the day of Baptism; Doopen
onder her water, to duck or dive under water. I also find that to wash or
rinse is in Dutch, wasschen ofte sprolen; to sprinkle, stroyen
spreyden sprencken; and also Besprengen is to sprinkle, besprinkle
or to strow: to pour is in, Dutch Gietenor spocten; poured upon, Opgegoten
ofte op Gestort. Now seeing that there is nothing of truth in what
thae say in contradiction to you of the word Doop, but that it undeniably
appears from the Dutch Dictionary to signify to dip, to duck or dive,
and that it has nothing in its signification on either to sprinkle or wash by
pouring water, which things are render'd by other Dutch words: I know
not how they can clear themselves from the guilt of a wilful Lie to cheat the
People of the true form of gospel Baptism which, in my opinion, is a greater
sin than to cheat them of their money, and its greatly to be lamented that any
professing Godliness should so grossly stain their Religion for the sake of Infant-sprinkling,
a meer human Tradition, which has neither Command nor Example for it in the
holy Scriptures. Sir, I was willing to communicate this unto you, that if you
need the- Evidence of this Dictionary and have not already met with it, you may
have recourse unto it, and so heartily wishing you the increase of true wisdom
and Christian courage for the defence of the truth of Christ, which you are
engaged in, I rest your loving Christian Friend and Brother.
Leominster, Nov. 17, 1699.
"ISAAC MARLOW."
This claim was urged as late as early in the eighteenth
century. Thomas Davye says:
"And the Dutch Translators almost everywhere
translate the Words Baptize and Baptism, to dip or
dipping.Mat. 3-1. 'John the dipper.' And v. 6. 'Dipp'd in Jordan.'
And v. 16. 'Jesus being dipp'd (climb'd or) came up out of Ike
Water.' And Mat. 28. 19. 'Instruct all People, dipping them in the Name
of the Father, etc. And Acts 8:36. 'What hinders me to be
dipped?' And V. 38. 'And he dipp'd him.' And v. 12. 'They were
dipp'd both Men and Women.' And Rom. 6.3. 'Know ye not that so many of us as
were dipp'd into Christ Jesus were dipp'd into His death.' (The Baptism of
Adult Believers, p. 113. London, 1719).
If the Anabaptists of Holland sprinkled it is strange that
the Baptists of England knew nothing of it. Joseph Hooke, who wrote an able
book on baptism, says:
"What Mr. Erratt hath placed in the margin
concerning the Anabaptists so-called in Holland, I cannot credit; I
never heard that they only pour water upon, or dip the head as he affirms, yet
I was well acquainted with a Baptist Preacher that lived some years there, who
never gave me an account of any such thing. Besides a credible author signifies
that some tender persons of his acquaintance, being desirous to be rightly Baptized,
have had water warmed for that use in the Netherlands." (A Necessary
Apology for the Baptized Believers, pp. T12, 113. London, 1701).
I shall now introduce some general historians and writers
Who have examined the subject, and they are unanimous in their opinion that the
true Anabaptists were dippers.
Blackburn says:
"The Anabaptists (rebaptizers, generally by
immersion) were of almost every sort, from the wildest fanatics to the later
and more sober Christians, who came to be called Baptists, the Mennonites from
the second race of Anabaptists." (History of the Christian Church, p. 4
16).
Gieseler says:
"They naturally disowned the name of Anabaptists, as
they declared infant baptism invalid, they rather called themselves
Catabaptists. (Fussli III., 229)." (A Compendium of Eccl. Hist., Vol. V.,
pp. 355, 356,).
William Robertson, Principal of the University of
Edinburgh, says:
"The most remarkable of their religious tenets
related to the sacrament of baptism, which, as they contended, ought to be
administered only to persons grown up to years of understanding, and should be
performed not by sprinkling them with water, but by dipping them in it; for
this reason they condemned the baptism of infants and rebaptizing all whom they
admitted into their society, the sect came to be distinguished by the name of
Anabaptists. To this peculiar notion concerning baptism, which has the
appearance of being founded on the practice of the church in the apostolic age,
and contains nothing inconsistent with the peace and order of human society,
they added other principles of a most enthusiastic as well as dangerous
nature." (The History of the Reign of the Emperor Charles V., p. 246. New
York, 1829).
Gregory and Ruter say:
They first made their appearance in the provinces of upper
Germany where the severity of the magistrates kept them under control. But in
the Netherlands and Westphalia they obtained admittance into several towns, and
spread their principles. The most remarkable of their religious tenets related
to the sacrament of baptism, which, as they contended, ought to be administered
only to persons grown up to years of understanding, and should be performed,
not by sprinkling them with water, but by dipping them in it. For this reason
they condemned the baptism of Infants, and rebaptizing all whom they admitted
into their society, the sect came to be distinguished by the name of
Anabaptists."(A Concise History of the Christian Church, p. 345. New York,
1834).
Schaff very fully discusses the act of baptism among the
Anabaptists. He says:
"The Anabaptist leaders, Hubmaier, Denck, Hatzer,
Hut, likewise appeared in Augsburg and gathered a congregation of eleven
hundred members. They held a general synod in 1527. They baptized by
immersion."
Schaff makes it very clear that these Anabaptists, or
Catabaptists, or dippers, were the same in Germany, Holland, and Switzerland,
and were gathered by the same leaders. He says:
"All the Reformers retained the custom of infant
baptism, and opposed rebaptism (Wiedertaufe) as a heresy. So far they
agreed with the Catholics against the Anabaptists, or Catabaptists, as they
were called, although they rejected the name, because in their view the baptism
of infants was no baptism at all.
"The Anabaptists, or Baptists (as distinct from
Pedobaptists), sprang up in Germany, Holland, Switzerland, and organized
independent congregations. Their leaders were Hubmaier, Denck, Hatzer, and
Grebel. They thought that the Reformers stopped half way, and did not go to the
root of the evil. They broke with the historical tradition, and constructed a
new church of believers on the voluntary principle. Their fundamental doctrine
was, that baptism is a voluntary act, and requires personal repentance and
faith in Christ. They rejected infant baptism as an anti-scriptural invention.
They could find no trace of it in the New Testament, the only authority in
matters of faith. They were cruelly persecuted in Protestant as well as Roman
Catholic countries. We must carefully distinguish the better class of Baptists
and the Mennonites from the restless revolutionary radicals and fanatics, like
Carlstadt, Munzer and the leaders of the Munster tragedy.
The mode of baptism was not an article of controversy at
that time; for the Reformers either preferred immersion (Luther'), or held the
mode to be a matter of indifference (Calvin).
"Luther agreed substantially with the Roman Catholic
doctrine of baptism. His Taufbuchlein of 1523 is a translation of the
Latin Baptismal service, including the formula of exorcism, the sign of the
cross and the dipping." (History of the Christian Church, Vol. VI., pp.
578, 607, 608).
Dr. William R. Williams, one of our very best Baptist
historians, very closely connects the Baptists of the Continent, and especially
those of Holland, with the Baptists of England. He had no doubt that the
Anabaptists of Holland and the Baptists of England practiced immersion. He
says:
"But there were Anabaptists and Anabaptist martyrs in
Holland before Menno himself had yet left the Roman communion. That some of
these professed and practiced immersion, we infer from the fact that their
persecutors, who delighted in fitting the penalty, as they cruelly judged it,
to the fault, put many of them to death by full immersion, swathing the
sufferers in large sacks with confined arms and feet, and then huddling the
sacks with their living contents into huge puncheons, where the victims were
drowned. So the Swiss Anabaptists, some of them at least, immersed in rivers.
This appears from the work Sabbata of Knertz, a contemporary Lutheran. The
Dunkers, too, on our shores, who were driven from a Swiss or a German source,
are immersionists in their own fashion.
"A small, but in its day a very distinguished, branch
of the Mennonites, too, were on principle immersionists. These were the
Collegiants, or Rhynsburgers. * * *
"In times later than these, in the following century, this same community of Holland immer-sionists received the accession
of Wagenaar, one of the historians of Holland, whose work, in numerous volumes,
is still consulted. The body has nearly ceased to exist. Some funds for orphans
that it possesses are still applied by the other branch of the Mennonites to
youths, who have the choice of baptism by the method of the Collegiants or that
of the Mennonites.
"Thus in people so distinct in some periods of their
history, and so clearly allied at other eras, as the nations of Holland and
Britain, it has been seen that God's free Bible, in the hands of a free church,
has not been without its approximating effects in the judgments to which it has
led its students." (Lectures on Baptist History, pp. 246-248).
Dr. J. B. Thomas, Newton Theological Seminary, says:
"Usually they insisted upon immersion as the only
baptism."
In a recent and very ably written book, William E.
Griffis, says:
"The Nederlanders who first claimed the right of free
reading and interpretation of the Bible demanded the separation of the church
and state, and filled their country full of ideas hostile to all state
churches, were called the Anabaptists, or rebaptizers, because they believed in
the baptism of adults only, and usually by immersion." (Brave Little
Holland, p, 135. Boston, 1894).
This question, however, only incidentally con-cerns the
Baptists of England. It has never been shown that all of the English Baptists
received their baptism from Holland. It is absolutely certain that the English
Baptists did not all originate with John Smyth, and according to Dr. Whitsitt's
theory John Smyth baptized himself. His baptism was not therefore from Holland.
And his contention is that Richard Blount's baptism was by immersion. Neither
has it been shown that all of the English Baptists of the sixteenth century
came from Holland, for we know from many sources that many of them were natives
of England. And there is not a line of proof that the Dutch Baptists who did
conic practiced sprinkling. Dr. Whitsitt is not only under obligation to prove
that some Dutch Baptists were sprinkled, but that every one who came to England
had been sprinkled. He has assumed a universal negative, and the best he has
attempted is to show that some persons who were called Anabaptists, were
sprinkled, and I have shown that some of these afterwards became immersionists.
JOHN SMYTH.
I can but feel that entirely too much importance has been
given to the so-called se-baptism of John Smyth. It is a matter of little
moment whether he dipped himself or was baptized by another. Crosby says that
his 'baptism did not affect the baptism of the Baptist Churches of England. His
words are:
"If he were guilty of what they charge him with, 'tis
no blemish on the English Baptists; who neither approved of any such method,
nor did they receive their baptism from him." (Hist. English Baptists,
Vol. I., pp. 99, 100).
It is sufficient to say of the personal history of John
Smyth that he was a clergyman of the Episcopal Church, that he was born some
time in the sixteenth century and died in 1611. There are two theories of his
baptism. 1. Dr. Dexter's theory, the one followed by Dr. Whitsitt, and the one
generally followed by Pedobaptists, is that he was baptized in 1608. (The true
story of John Smyth, p. 10). After a long dissertation, in which Dr. Dexter
tries to prove that sprinkling was the general form of baptism apparently from
the earliest days of the church, he says of Smyth:
"Thus gathered together, after quietly waiting until
all with one consent had laid the duty of beginning upon himself, I conceive of
Mr. Smyth—disrobed sufficiently to allow of the easy washing of the upper
portion of his body by himself—as walking into the stream, lifting handsful of
water and pouring them liberally upon his own head, shoulders and chest, until
clean and white they glistened under the purifying streams, solemnly repeating
as he did so that formula which the Saviour bequeathed to his people to the end
of time. Then turning, I imagine as receiving his associates, Helwys, Murton,
Pygott, Seamer, Overton, Bromhead, Jessop, Hodgkins, Bywater, Grindal, Halton,
and the others, not forgetting Mary Smyth, Ann Bromhead, Ursula Bywater, the
Dickens sisters, and the rest, and, one by one, after the same manner,
reinitiated each into the earthly kingdom of God. And I have ventured here to
introduce, as possibly with considerable exactitude pictorially representing
the service performed by Mr. Smyth upon himself, a tracing from an ancient
engraving representing the selfbaptism in earlier days of a
'Hermobaptist."' (pp. 30, 31 ).
This description is manifestly absurd. Nobody but an enemy
of the Baptists ever presented a baptism in this manner. If the nude picture
given by Dr. Dexter teaches anything, it is that John Smyth was immersed. And
there is not one whit of testimony presented by Dr. Dexter himself to prove
that Smyth was sprinkled. It is purely "from fancy which may be truth
"(p. 31), from which he draws his conclusions. The fact is that the whole
account as given by Dr. Dexter is full of guesses, uncertainties, and nowhere
is there a definite statement that John Smyth did actually baptize himself.
Every one of his witnesses may be explained away without difficulty. No one who
was an eye-witness has described the baptism according to this account, and we
are left to conjecture as to whether it was by Smyth baptizing himself or by
some one else baptizing him. Dr. Whitsitt gives no authorities which are not
found in Dexter, and not one of them intimates that Smyth was sprinkled.
Barclay, who holds to the affusion view, was compelled to
admit that "the question of the manner of baptism does not come up."
(Inner Life of the Religious Societies, p. 70).
Thomas Price, D. D., one of the very best writers on this
subject, gives us some very important data. We must remember that Smyth's
enemies are responsible for this history, and that Is not always trustworthy.
Dr. Price says:
"Much has been said about Mr. Smith having baptized
himself. Ainsworth, Jessop, and some others of his opponents charge him with
having done so, and make use of the alleged fact to awaken the ridicule of
their readers, or to invalidate his administration of the ordinance. I confess
that the matter does not appear to me to be of so much importance as some
Baptist authors deeem it; nor do I think it so easy to determine the truth or
falsity of the statement as the writers on both sides conclude it to be. The mere
fact that such a statement was made by the contemporaries of Smith, and that no
direct denial of it has come down to us, gives it some appearance of truth.
But, on the other hand, it must be remembered that the parties making the
statement were angry controversialists, who spared no invective or abuse, but
seemed to think that every epithet appropriate and every assertion lawful, by
which they could injure the reputation, or render ridiculous the proceedings of
their opponent. Mr. Smith's defenses of himself are not known. His enemies
adduce long quotations from his writings, but no one of them admits the fact
with which he was charged, or attempts to justify it. He doubtless must have
referred to it, and had he, in doing so, made the slightest admission, they
would readily have retailed his language. It is a further confirmation of this
view of the case that contemporaneous writers, referring to the baptismal
controversy amongst the Brownists, and that with no friendly design, make no
reference to such a fact." (The History of Protestant Nonconformity, Vol.,
p. 497).
It will be worth while to note that Jessop, a backslider
and renegade, and Ainsworth both wrote books to sustain infant baptism and to
overthrow the position of believers-baptism as held by Smyth. A close reading
of these books would easily convince any one that they had no love for Smyth
nor the doctrines that he held.
Wilson says:
"His principles and conduct soon drew upon him an
host of opponents, the chief of whom were Johnson, Ainsworth, Robinson, Jessop
and Clifton. The controversy began in 1606, about the time Smyth settled in
Amsterdam. Soon afterwards he removed with his followers to Leyden, where he
continued to publish various books in defence of his opinions, till his death
in the year 1610." (The History and Antiquities of Dissenting Churches,
Vol. I., p. 30).
I will further refresh the memory of the reader by
reminding him that this company which persecuted Smyth were those who settled
in New England. They fled from persecution in England and Holland, and were
hardly settled in New England until they were burning witches and whipping
Anabaptists. I do not think that Smyth and his opinions met with much justice
at their hands.
2. There is another account given in certain church
records of the Baptist Churches of Epworth and Crowle in the Isle of Axholme,
Lincolnshire, England. The church Covenant, dated January 4, 1599, is recorded
in these words:
We, this church of Christ, meeting at Epworth, Crowle and
West Butterwick, in the county of Lincolnshire, whose names are underwritten,
give up ourselves to the Lord and one to another according to the will of God.
We do promise and covenant in the presence of Christ, to walk together in the
laws and ordinances of baptized believers according to the rules of the Gospel
through Jesus Christ, so helping us. James Rayner, John Morton, Henry Helwise,
William Brewster, William Bradford, elders of ye church.
There are appended thirty-two names, some with the X. It
is further stated that William Bradford was "baptized in the old river Don
below Epworth town at midnight, 1595." There is also a record that the
church desired to leave for Holland, "where we hear there is freedom for
all men."
It is further recorded:
4. It affirms that John Smith, vicar of Gainsborough
enquired about baptism in February 4, 1604, was convinced of its truth May 7th
and "at midnight on the 24th of March, 1606, he was baptized by Elder John
Morton in the river Don, and walked to Epworth, a distance of two miles, in his
wet clothes."
And the document also records that "John Smith, John
Morton (who immersed him), Henry Helwise and others held a meeting in regard to
removing the church to Holland." This was the 4th of April, 1609.
The authenticity of these records has been violently assailed
by Dr. Whitsitt. He says:
A generation has passed away since 1862, and yet the only
English production in Baptist history that has come to the attention of the
general public has been the fraud at Epworth, Crowle and West Butterwick, that
brings blushes to the cheeks of intelligent Baptist people in all parts of the
world. (p. 15).
On pp. 62, 63, Dr. Whitsitt uses many words of censure on
these documents. He calls them "a fabulous statement,"
"fabrication," "no sadder humiliation has ever been inflicted
upon our Baptist name and cause," "fill up the cup of our
mortification," etc. Dr. Whitsitt is very severe against Dr. Clifford who
published these records. Dr. Whitsitt always praises those who praise him. He
cannot say enough of Prof. Hoop Scheffer, of Amsterdam, who complimented him
and agrees with him (p. 17). But Dr. Clifford and the English Baptist
historians generally, who ought to know something of this subject, all differ
with Dr. Whitsitt, and so their investigations reflect "a painful light
upon the condition of studies among Baptists in England." (p. 63).
My position holds good that John Smyth was immersed
irrespective of these records, but it is absolutely essential for Dr. Whitsitt
to prove that these records are false.
I would also suggest that both of these theories might be
true. It might be true that Smyth was baptized in the Don river and afterwards
baptized himself. The Baptists of that generation were much disturbed on the
subject of a proper administrator of baptism, and were often rebaptized. If
Smyth was the visionary man that Dexter declares him to be, nothing would be
more probable than that he should do this very thing.
It is a strong fact that cannot be overcome that the
historians declare that Smyth was immersed. The array of writers who affirm
this is a very formidable one, I shall give some of them.
Joseph A. Adshead, Manchester, says:
"Mr. Smyth (who had been a Brownist) and his
followers settled in Amsterdam in 1608. He was led to RENOUNCE. INFANT
SPRINKLING and came to the conclusion that immersion was the true and proper
manner of baptism; and that it should be administered only to those who are
capable OF PROFESSING FAITH IN CHRIST." (The Progress of Religious
Sentiment, p. xix. London, 1852).
George Punchard says:
"Mr. Smyth proceeded first to rebaptize himself, by
immersion, and then to immerse Mr. Helwise, his associate, and several others,
his followers." (The History of Congregationalism, p. 319. Salem, 1841).
W. M. Blackburn, D. D., Methodist, says:
"Among the English Separatists in Holland was Rev.
John Smyth, who, probably immersed himself, felt so adverse to liturgies that
he thought that the Bible ought not to be read publicly in churches, nor psalms
sung from a printed page, gave an Arminian shape to his vague theology and at
Amsterdam (1608-9) gathered a flock of English Baptists, who began to be more
clearly distinguished from the Anabaptists." (History of the Christian
Church, p. 553. Cincinnati, 1879).
Ivimey, the Baptist historian, says:
"Upon a further consideration of the subject, he saw
reason to conclude that immersion was the true and proper meaning of the word
baptism and that it should be administered to those only who were capable of
professing faith in Christ." (A History of the English Baptists, Vol. I.,
p. 114).
David Masson, M. A., LL. D., Professor of English
Literature in the University of Edinburgh, spent a great deal of time in the
British Museum gathering material for his great life of Milton. He gives an
interesting account of his work. He says:
Of the multiplicity and extent of the researches that were
required, any general account would be tedious. Perhaps, however, I may allude
specially to my obligations to the State Paper Office in London, where there
were printed calendars of the State papers; the task of consulting them is
easy. Unfortunately, when I began my readings in the great national repository,
the domestic papers of the period of most interest to me—from 1640 to 1643—were
utterly uncalendared. They had, therefore, to be brought to me in bundles and
inspected carefully, lest anything useful should be skipped. In this way I had
to persevere at a slow rate in my readings and note papers; but I believe I can
now say for much the greatest part of the time embraced in the present volume
(III— 1640 to 1643—there is not a single domestic document extant of those that
used to be in the "State Paper Office," which has not passed through
my hands and been scrutinized. (Preface to Vol. Ill.).
Masson said:
Now Smyth, adhering to the tenet, had pushed it to a
logical consequence not ventured on by the Separatists before him. If the
ordination of the Church of England were rejected, so that her ministers had to
be reordained when they became pastors and teachers of Separatist
congregations, why was the baptism of the Church. of England accounted valid;
why were not members of the Church rebaptized when they became Separatists?
Through the prosecution of this query, aided by other investigations, Smyth had
developed his Separatism into the form known as Anabaptism, not only requiring
the rebaptism of members of the Church of England, but rejecting the baptism of
infants altogether, and insisting on immersion as the proper Scriptural form of
the rite." (The Life of John Milton, Vol. II., p. 540. London, 1871).
Daniel Neal, M. A., the standard Puritan historian, says:
He was for refining upon the Brownist scheme, and
at last declared for the Principles of the Baptists; upon this he left
Amsterdam, and settled with his disciples at Leyden,where, being at a
loss for aproper administrator of the Ordinance of Baptism, he plunged himself,
and then performed the ceremony upon others, which gained him the name of
Se-Baptist." (The History of the Puritans, Vol. II., p. 29. London, 1732).
Thomas Price says:
"But his views on the subject of baptism were still
more obnoxious, and awakened an angry and fierce controversy, in which the
sacredness of character and the charity of the gospel were alike disregarded.
His sentiments on this latter point were substantially as those now held by the
English Baptists; and the mode in which he arrived at them was as follows,
etc." (The History of Protestant Nonconformity in England, Vol. I., p.
495).
Taylor, the historian of the General Baptists of England,
says;
In reviewing the subject of separation, Mr. Smyth
discovered that lie and his friends acted inconsistently in rejecting the
ordination received from the Church of England, because they esteemed her a
false church, and yet retained her baptism as true baptism. This led him to
examine the nature and ground of baptism and he perceived, that neither infant
baptism nor sprinkling had any foundation in Scripture. With his usual
frankness he was no sooner convinced of this important truth than he openly
professed and defended his sentiments. He urged the inconsistency of their
practice on his former associates so clearly that the bishop before mentioned
tells Mr. Robinson, 'There is no remedy; you must go forward to anabaptism or
come back to us; all of your Rabbins cannot answer the charge of your
rebaptized brother (Mr. Smyth). If we be a true church, you must return; if we
be not (as a false church is no church of God), you must rebaptize. If our
baptism be good, then is our ordination good. He tells you true: your station
is unsafe; either you must forward to him or back to us."(Hall's Works,
Vol. IX., pp. 384,400. The History of the English General Baptists, Vol. I., p.
68).
Walter Wilson, who is one of the best of the Puritan
historians, says:
Upon a further consideration of the subject he saw grounds
to consider immersion as the true and only meaning of the word baptism, and
that it should be administered to those alone who were capable of professing
their faith in Christ." (The History and Antiquities of Dissenting Churches,
Vol. I., p. 29).
Thomas Wall, 1691, was a very bitter opponent of the
Baptists. In explaining the immersion of John Smyth he says:
"A third Devise these People have found to Deprive
Infants of their Rights to Water Baptism, perswading People of years they were
not Baptized at all, if not Dip'd or Plung'd in Water." (Baptism
Anatomized, p. 107. London, 1691).
Giles Shute, in writing against the Baptists in 1606, was
very bitter. He says:
"Now let the wise judge in what abominable disorder
they retain their Baptisme ever since from Mr. Smyth; and whether it stinketh
not in the nostrils of the Lord ever since as the ministry of Corah and
his company did. In his Table of particulars wherein this passage is directed
to it, is querqed, who began Baptisme by way of Dipping among English People
that call themselves Baptists? The answer is, John Smith, who Baptized himself.
Thus you may see upon what a rotten foundation the Principles of the
Anabaptists is built and at what Door that Anticovenant Doctrine came in among
us in England; therefore it is of the Earth, and but a Human Innovation, ought
to be abhor'd and detested by all Christian People." (A General Challenge
to all Antipedobaptists).
I think that we may easily reach the conclusion, which
ever of these two theories we hold, that John Smyth was immersed. I know not a
line of original testimony which teaches the contrary. The very best in favor
of sprinkling is some strained inferences. The historians are unanimous in
favor of immersion, and as I have shown from Pedobaptist writers of the
seventeenth century, it was the concurrent opinion of that century.
Dr. Whitsitt makes a labored argument to prove that John
Smyth baptized himself (p. 64) but he does not produce a line of proof that the
baptism was performed by sprinkling. He only infers that the Mennonites
practiced sprinkling, therefore Smyth was sprinkled. But Smyth's baptism was in
no wise connected with the Mennonites. It is possible that Smyth received his
views in regard to immersion from the New Testament. I am sure there is no
proof that Smyth was an affusionist.
Smyth appears to have remained pastor of this congregation
till his death in 1611 "when he was succeeded by a Thomas Helwisse, one of
the oldest members, a plain man, of pragmatic notions, .and quite self
taught." (Masson's Life of Milton, Vol. II, p. 540). But Masson does not
leave us in doubt as to the views of this new pastor. He says:
"Now, this Helwisse, returning to England shortly
after 1611, drew around him, as we saw, the first congregation of
General or Arminian Baptists in London; and this obscure Baptist
congregation seems to have become the depositary for all England of the
absolute principle of Liberty of Conscience expressed in the Amsterdam
Confession as distinct from the more stinted principle advocated by the general
body of the Independents. Not only did Helwisse's folk differ from the
Independents generally on the subject of Infant Baptism and Dipping; they
differed also on the power of the magistrate in matters of belief and conscience."
(Life of John Milton, Vol. II., p. 544).
Leonard Busher appears to have been a noted member of this
congregation of Helwise's. "It was," says Masson, "in short,
from their little dingy meeting house, somewhere in Old London, that there
flashed out, first in England, the absolute doctrine of religious liberty. 'Religious
Peace: or, a Plea for Liberty of Conscience,' is the title of a little
tract first printed in 1614, and presented to King James and the English
Parliament, by 'Leonard Busher, citizen of London.' This Leonard Busher, there
is reason to believe, was a member of Helwisse's congregation and we learn from
the tract itself that he was a poor man, laboring for his subsistence, who had
his share of persecution. He had probably been one of Smyth's Amsterdam flock
who had returned with Helwisse. The tract is certainly the earliest known
English publication in which full liberty of conscience is openly advocated. It
cannot be read now without a throb. The style is simple and rather helpless,
but one comes on some touching passages." Masson's Life of Milton, Vol.
III., p. 102). His testimony on the subject of dipping is clear and
concisive, Busher says:
"And therefore Christ commanded his disciples to
teach all nations, and baptize them; that is, to preach the word of salvation
to every creature of all sorts of nations that are worthy and willing to
receive it. And such as shall willingly and gladly receive, He has commanded to
be baptized in the water; that is, dipped for dead in the water." - (Plea
for Liberty of Conscience, p. 50).
From this tract it is certain that Busher held three
distinctive Baptist doctrines: 1. Liberty of conscience; 2. Immersion or
dipping, and 3. Believers' baptism. In order to break the force of this clear
and unequivocal testimony Dr. Whitsitt makes the surprising declaration that
there is no proof that Busher was a Baptist.
Mr. Leonard Busher, a citizen of London, published in 1614
the well known "Plea for Liberty of Conscience." He may have been a
Baptist, but there is no proof of it. He believed in immersion, which the
Baptists had not then revived, and describes it as "being dipped for dead
in the water;" but it has not been shown that he ever put this tenet into
practice. If he did the Baptists of 1641 had never been informed of it. (Religious
Herald, May 7, 1896).
But in his book (pp. 69, 70) Dr. Whitsitt changes his mind
and Busher is declared to be an Anabaptist. But with the declaration of Busher
before him that dipping was baptism Dr. Whitsitt says:
It is sometimes too confidently assumed that this passage
proves Mr. Busher to have been an immersionist in practice as well as in
principle, but we know too little regarding him to venture distinct assertions
on that point. * * * The act of baptism observed by him would in that case
become a question for Dutch archaeologists. But either Dutch or English
archaeologists, founding on the mere fact that he was an immersionist in
principle, must jump a long distance to the conclusion that he was also an
inimersionist in practice. In brief words, Mr. Busher is a shadowy figure, and
it is entirely uncertain whether be spent his last years in England or Holland.
Therefore we are not entitled, for the present at least, to establish any
definite conclusions regarding him or his people, except that if he had
practiced immersion at Amsterdam in 1611 we should have been likely to hear a
good deal more about him than has been brought to light hither to. * * * The
most that can be safely claimed for Mr. Busher is that he was an advance herald
of genuine Baptist principles in Holland, that were shortly to be reduced to
practice in England.
We have the surprising declarations that Busher was an
Anabaptist, was a believer in, and advocate of immersion, and yet that he did
not practice it. This is only on a line with much of the rest of this
remarkable book. . Every effort is made to discredit all who practice immersion
and to explain away the facts, and a like effort is made to exalt all who
practice sprinkling and to magnify the number of such examples among
Anabaptists.
I know of no Pedobaptist author who denies that Busher was
a Baptist; and with the exception of Dr. Whitsitt, there is no difference of
opinion on this subject among Baptist authors. I give the testimony of a few
Pedobaptist writers:
Barclay says:
"In 1614, Leonard Busher, who is believed to have
been a member of Helwys' and Morton's church, presented to King James and the
Parliament his petition for liberty of conscience, which was published in
1614." (The Inner Life of Religious Societies, p. 98).
Rev. A. H. Drysdale, M. A., a Presbyterian historian,
says:
"Unquestionably it was the Baptists who first
repudiated, clearly and strongly, all coercive power whatever in religion. (see
especially Leonard Busher's Religious Peace; or, a Plea for Liberty of
Conscience, 1614); and they were constant to this principle
throughout." (History of the Presbyterians in England, p. 353, note).
John Stoughton says:
The Baptists were foremost in the advocacy of religious
freedom, and perhaps to one of them, Leonard Busher, citizen of London, belongs
the honor of presenting in this country the first distinct and broad plea for
liberty of conscience. It is dated 1614, and is prefaced by an epistle to the
Presbyterian reader; and a very remarkable epistle it is, deserving a renown
which it has never acquired." (Ecclesiastical History of England, p. 231).
Hanbury says:
"'Religious Peace; or, a Plea for Liberty of
Conscience,' by Leonard Busher, a citizen of London, and a Baptist, 1614."
(Memorials, Vol. I., p. 224, note).
The Baptists have been equally as explicit as the
Pedobaptists in declaring that Leonard Busher was a Baptist. B. Evans, (Early
English Baptists, Vol. I., pp. 229-231); Richard B. Cook, (The Story of the
Baptists, pp. 86, 87); George B. Taylor, (Religious Freedom, p. 32); and
Armitage, (History of the Baptists, PP. 440, 441), all so affirm. I shall quote
some words from Prof. Vedder, of Crozer Seminary, whom Dr. Whitsitt claims
sustains his position. He has made two declarations on the subject. The first
(Baptists and Liberty of Conscience, p. 18. Cincinnati, 1884) was before this
controversy began, and the second in The Examiner, May 21, 1896. I quote
from the latter. Prof. Vedder says:
"That honor belongs, as far as known, to Leonard
Busher, who wrote a tract in favor of liberty of conscience in 1614, called Religion's
Peace. Dr. Whitsitt indeed says that there is no proof that he was a
Baptist. I can only mildly express my surprise that it takes so much Proof
to convince the good doctor of some things, and so little to convince him of
others. It seems to me that nobody who reads the book of Busher can be in
any real doubt as to who and what he was. If Edward Barber was a Baptist,
Leonard Busher was a Baptist; and the latter wrote: 'And such as gladly receive
it [the Gospel] he hath commanded to be baptized in water; that is, dipped for
dead in the water.' We do not find such a sentiment, outside Baptist
literature, in the first half of the seventeenth century."
It does not seem to me that anything could be clearer than
that Busher was a Baptist. No man save a Baptist, in the early part of the
seventeenth century, held such views on liberty of conscience and baptism. If
we had no other authority, this statement of Busher's alone ought to settle the
question of dipping among the English Baptists.
THE BAPTISTS OF 1641.
Dr. Whitsitt says:
I have often declared it to be my opinion that the
immersion of adult believers was a lost art in England, from the year 1509, the
accession of Henry VIII., to the year 1641, following the imprisonment of
Archbishop Laud. Western Recorder, July 9, 1896).
This statement is neither true in reference to the
Episcopalians nor the Baptists. In regard to the Episcopalians we have direct
testimony. The Catechism of Edward VI., A. D. 1553, has:
"Master: Tell me (my son) how these two
sacraments be ministered: baptism, and that which Paul calleth the supper of
the Lord.
"Scholar: Him that believeth
in Christ; professeth the articles of the Christian Religion; and mindeth to be
baptized (I speak now of them that be grown to ripe years of discression, sith
for young babes their parents' or the Church's profession sufficeth), the
minister dippeth in or washeth with pure and clear water only, in the name of
the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost; and then commendeth him by
prayer to God, into whose Church he is now openly as it were enrolled that it
may please God to grant him his grace whereby he may answer in belief and life
agreeably to his profession." (P. 516, The Two Liturgies, 1549 and 1552.
Parker Society, Cambridge, I844).
I shall give a more extended statement of the Baptists.
The Baptists of this period had been greatly persecuted. They seldom dared to
write anything, and to keep church records would only endanger their lives.
They were banished, imprisoned and burned. For an account of the Anabaptists we
must for the most part look to their enemies, and we must remember the bitter
malignity of these enemies. The persecutions Of Laud were scarcely more severe
than those which went before. Laud had almost absolute authority. He was
suspected of trying to restore Romanism, and there is no doubt that he
possessed the Roman Catholic spirit of persecution. In order to carry out his
designs he was compelled to silence all opposers. William Lee says of him:
"The fact now referred to is of itself sufficient;
and it is hardly necessary to go into the question, how, under Laud's rule, the
repression of the nonconformists was carried out. He is said to have preferred
persuasion to force; but it is not denied that, when necessary, the most
horrible severities were employed under his sanction to enforce conformity. The
cases of Leighton, Prynnes, Bostwick and Burton are well known, with hundreds
of cases of dissenters, who, if not shockingly mutilated and condemned to
perpetual imprisonment, were silenced and compelled to seek liberty of
conscience beyond seas, or, worse than all, to violate their own sense of duty,
and lose their spiritual, in seeking to save their bodily, life and well-being.
Nor is it disputed that of the Star Chamber and Court of High Commission, by
which these men were condemned, Laud was the moving spirit; nay, that if, in
these courts, any voice was for more than ordinarily severe measures, it was
sure to be his. (Gardiner: Personal History, I., 6). But perhaps the worst
charge against Laud in this connection is the alleged fact, that to gain the
power of suppressing the nonconformists and otherwise securing the restoration
of a pure and catholic church according to his own ideal, Laud did not hesitate
to encourage in the king those absolute principles, which, if he had prevailed,
instead of the Parliament, would have been fatal to the liberties of the
English people." (Schaff-Herzog Encyclopedia, Vol. II., pp. 1284, 1285).
Under such conditions the Baptists, the most despised of
all the people of England, could not be expected to preserve records.
Their doctrines were misrepresented and maligned. Here is
a sample:
"To these doctrines you may join their practice. The
seditious pamphlets, the tumultuous rising of rude multitudes threatening blood
and destruction; the preaching of the cobblers, feltmakers, tailors, grooms and
women; the choosing of any place for God's service but the church; the night
meetings of naked men and women; the licentiousness of spiritual marriages
without legal form; these things if they be not looked into will bring us in
time to community of wives, community of goods, and destruction of all."
(A Short History of the Anabaptists of High and Low Germany, pp. 55,56. London,
1642).
It is to be observed, however, that very soon after there
was liberty of conscience, or rather toleration, some Calvinistic Baptist
Churches of London adopted one of the most famous Confessions of Faith in the
world. It stands only second to the Westminster Confession in importance among
the Dissenting Churches of England. Formulas of like those contained in this
confession are matters of growth. The presumption is that these doctrines had
long lived in the hearts of these people before they were expressed in this
formal manner. There is no indication from this confession and its history of
any change of mind on the subject of baptism. There is not a trace of
information, from friend or foe, that during the adoption of this confession
there was any discussion on the subject of dipping. We know that the
Presbyterians, in their assembly, were badly divided on the subject of dipping.
But if there were such dissensions among the Baptists it is passing strange
that we have no intimation of them, nor were there any protests. These seven
churches presented this as their unanimous opinion to Parliament, and published
it broadcast to the world. The presumption is altogether in favor of the
supposition that the Baptists had long been immersionists, and that this was
the honest expression of their sentiments, and it will take powerful arguments,
which have not been presented, to set aside these convictions.
I give the XL. Article of the "Confession of Faith of
those Churches which are commonly (though falsely) called Anabaptists:"
"That the way and manner of dispensing this ordinance is dipping or plunging the
body under water; it being a signe, must answer the thing signified, which is,
that interest the Saints have in the death, burial and resurrection of Christ:
and that as certainly as the body is buried under water, and rises again, so
certainly shall the bodies of the Saints be raised by the power of Christ in
the day of the resurrection, to reigne with Christ." (P.20).
There is a note appended, as follows:
"The word Baptizo signifies to dip or plunge yet so
as convenient garments be both upon the administrator and subject, with all
modesty."
It is necessary for Dr. Whitsitt to prove that these eight
Baptist Churches of London that signed the confession of 1644 and the 54
Baptist Churches in England that Neal and other authors mention all originated
with John Smyth or with the Jessey Church. This has never been proved, and Dr.
Whitsitt attempts no proof. If the Jessey records are a forgery, as I think,
and if John Smyth was immersed, there is absolutely no foundation for this
theory, If I should admit the authenticity of the Jessey Church records, which
I do not, and that John Smyth was sprinkled, of which there is not a line of
proof, even then Dr. Whitsitt's case is in no wise made out. He must prove that
every one of these churches originated from one or the other of these sources.
The one which did not so originate might have practiced immersion, and as Dr.
Whitsitt has affirmed a universal negative this would be fatal to his argument.
As a matter of fact, he has not proved that even one of the London churches had
such an origin, much less any of the other churches of England.
But we have positive testimony against this theory.
William Kiffin, who certainly knew declared: "IT IS WELL KNOWN TO MANY,
AND ESPECIALLY TO OURSELVES, THAT OUR CONGREGATIONS WERE ERECTED AND FRAMED
ACCORDING TO THE RULE OF CHRIST, BEFORE WE HEARD OF ANY REFORMATION." As
this was Written in 1645, no one can doubt that Kiffin was an immersionist, and
this statement puts the question forever at rest.
As far back as 1589 Some, who wrote at that date, declares
there were Anabaptist Churches in London. They doubtless had existed long
before this. The words of Some are:
"To preach without an external calling, is
Anabaptisticall. The consequents of such preaching are the deprauing of the
holy scriptures, abusing of the Auditors, disturbing both of Church and
commonwealth. The Anabaptisticall conventicles in London, and other places, are
sufficient proof of this." (Chapter 7).
These Anabaptists of whom Some was writing were not Dutch
or Germans, but native born. Some says:
"If any shall reply, that many Papists, Anabaptists,
etc., haue bene bredde in our Universities: my answere is, that the goodliest
gardens haue some weedes in them. Cham was in Noahs arke, as well as Sem;
Ismael in Abrahams house, as wel as Isaac: Judas in Christes companye as well
as Peter: and yet Noahs arke, Abrahams house, and Christes companie were
singularlie to bee accounted of. The wheate field may not be destroyed, because
of the tares: Nor the vine, because of a few wilde grapes; nor the garden,
because of the weedes. The tares, wilde grapes, and weedes, are wisely to be
remoued by the husbandman and gardener," etc.
But I have still other testimony as to the origin of these
churches. Hanserd Knollys knew all about the origin of these London churches.
He was intimately connected with the Baptists, or Anabaptists.
I have before me a book, which seems to have escaped the
eye of all other writers on this subject. It knows nothing about Blount nor
Blacklock, nor the trip to Holland, nor the introduction of immersion. It tells
in simple language the story of the planting of these London Baptist Churches
in the days of persecution before 1641. The title of this book is: 'A Moderate
Answer Unto Dr. Bastwick's Book Called 'Independency Not God's Ordinance.'
Wherein is declared the manner how some Churches in this city were gathered,
and upon what tearmes their members were admitted; that so both the Dr. and the
Reader may judge how near some Believers who Walk together in the Fellowship of
the Gospell do come in their practice to the Apostolicall rules which are
propounded by the Dr. as God's Method in gathering Churches and Admitting
Members. By Hanserd Knollys. London, 1645." Of course, such a book is
authoritative and worth a thousand guesses. Knollys says:
"I shall now take the liberty to declare, what I know by mine own experience to be the
practice of some Churches of God in this City. That so far both the Dr. and the
Reader may judge how near the Saints, who walk in the fellowship of the
Gospell, do come to their practice, to these Apostolicall rules and practice
propounded by the Dr. as God's method in gathering churches, and admitting
Members, I say that I know by mine own experience (having walked with them),
that they were thus gathered, viz.: Some godly and learned men of
approved, gifts and abilities for the Ministrie, being driven out of the
Countries where they lived by the persecution of the Prelates, came to sojourn
in this great City, and preached the word of God both publikely and from house
to house, and daily in the Temple, and in every house they ceased not to teach
and preach Jesus Christ: and some of them have dwelt in their own hired houses,
and received all that name in unto them, preaching the Kingdom of God, and
teaching those things which concern the Lord Jesus Christ. And when many sinners
were converted by their preaching of the Gospell, some of them believers,
consorted with them, and of professors a great many, and of the chief women not
a few. And the condition which those Preachers, both publikely and privately
propounded to the people, unto whom they preached, upon which they were to be
admitted into the Church was Faith, Repentance, and Baptism, and none other.
And whosoever (poor as well as rich, bond as well as free, servants as well as
Masters), did make a profession of their Faith in Christ Jesus, and would be
baptized with water, in the Name of the Father, Sonne, and Holy Spirit, were
admitted Members of the Church; but such as did not believe, and would not be
baptized, they would not admit into Church communion. This hath been the
practice of some Churches of God in this City, without urging or making any
particular covenant with Members upon admittance, which I desire may be
examined by the Scripture cited in the Margent, and then compared with the
Doctor's three conclusions from the same Scriptures, whereby it may appear to
the judicious Reader, how near the Churches some of them come to the practice
of the Apostles rule, and practice of the primitive churches, both in gathering
and admitting members." (Pp. 24, 25).
Nothing can be plainer than that these London churches
were not organized on the plan indicated by Dr. Whitsitt.
As to the practice of dipping among the Anabaptists of
England there has been no difference of opinion among historians, till of late,
a few controversial writers have affirmed that they practiced sprinkling. I
will let the historians speak for themselves.
Neal, in whose hands the Baptists placed their gathered
material for a history, says:
"Their confession consisted of 52 articles and is
strictly Calvinistical in the doctrinal part, and according to the independent
discipline, it confines the subjects of baptism to grown Christians and the
mode to immersion. The advocates of this doctrine were for the most part of the
meanest of the people; the preachers were generally illiterate and went about
the country making proselytes of all who would submit to immersion.
The people of this persuasion were most exposed to the
public resentments, because they would hold communion with none but such as had
been dipped. All must pass under the cloud before they could be received into
their churches; and the same narrow spirit prevails too generally among them to
this day." (History of the Puritans, Vol. III., pp. 174-176).
Prof. Vedder says:
"Furthermore, though this Confession is the first to
define baptism in explicit terms as immersion, this was not a novel idea among
the Baptists. Indeed the practice of immersion had not yet died out of the
English Church, though it was rapidly becoming uncommon." (Short History
of the Baptists, p. 116).
And again he says:
"Dr. Whitsitt, as I pointed out in my article in the Examiner
some weeks ago, seemed to me to make a broader inference than his facts
warranted when he said in effect that no English Baptists immersed before 1641.
I think he will see that he must modify that statement." (Western
Recorder, Sept. 24, 1896).
The Rev. W. H. Pinnock, LL. D., an Episcopalian, in
speaking of the English Anabaptists of this whole period, says:
"They rebaptized their disciples, whence their name;
and taught that the baptism of infants was invalid; they also rejected
aspersion, holding immersion to be the only valid form of baptism. From these
sprang shortly after the sect of the Baptists." (History of the
Reformation of the English Church, p. 153. London, 1857).
Henry M. Mason, M. A., says:
"The Baptists of England were derived from, and
originally adopted the doctrine of, the German and Dutch Anabaptists. They
declined, however, in process of time, from the principles of their ancestors,
and hold, in common with them, only the administration of baptism by immersion
and the refusal of that rite to any but adults." (A Compend of
Ecclesiastical History, P. 337).
J. B. Marsden, M. A., says:
"Baptists, or Anabaptists, so called (from Gr. ana,
again, and baptizo, to wash or plunge) because they again baptize those
adults who, in their infancy, have once received baptism. But they deny the
validity of infant baptism (on which account they are also termed, sometimes,
Antipaedo-Baptists).and, therefore, reject the charge of anabaptism, and
consider the word itself reproachful. By the older writers they are
occasionally designated Cata-Baptists, an epithet of nearly similar import.
They themselves adopt the name of Baptists.
"They differ from other Christian Churches upon two
points: First, as to the mode in which baptism ought to be administered; and,
secondly, as to the persons who are qualified for the reception of the rite. Of
these, however, the second is by far the most important question." (History
of the Christian Churches and Sects from the Earliest Ages of Christianity,
Vol. I., p. 77).
Robert Howard, M. A., says:
"In point of church polity, the Baptists remained
Independents. But they held that they were justified in forming themselves into
a separate communion on these grounds: First, for the stricter maintenance of
Calvinistic doctrines; secondly, for the exercise of a stricter discipline;
and, thirdly, for the practice of a mode of baptism in stricter accordance with
the words of Scripture and the practice of the Apostolic age." (The Church
of England and Other Religious Communions, P. 42).
David Bogue, D. D., and James Bennett, D. D., say:
"It is sufficiently manifest by their name, that this
denomination of Dissenters differ from others on the subject of baptism. They
believe, that the original word, which the New Testament employs to express
this rite, conveys the idea of immersion, or plunging the whole body under
water: hence they conclude that sprinkling, affusion, or pouring of water, is not
baptizing. To this distinguishing sentiment and practice concerning the mode,
they add one which relates to the proper subjects of baptism." (The
History of Dissenters, Vol. I., p. 183).
W. J. E. Bennett, vicar of Froome-Selwood, says:
"Wherein then, proceeding from this, do the
Anabaptists raise their cry of objection to the Church, and separate from her?
They raise it upon this ground, that it is not lawful in any case to baptize
otherwise than by immersion. The Anabaptists say, all persons ought to be
immersed. The Church says the same; but the Church goes on to say, but in case
of children being weak, it shall suffice to pour the water. No, rejoin the
Anabaptists; it does not suffice. Both agree upon the principle. But the one
separates from the other on the ground of permitting a certain exception. The
whole question then narrows itself into this: Is it permissible to baptize by
pouring water, or does such an act invalidate baptism altogether? In other
word, it is as much the essence of the baptism, that it should be performed by
immersion, as it is that the water should be used at all?" (The Church's
Broken Unity. Anabaptism, Vol. II., p. 63).
Mr. Bennett devotes large space to a general discussion of
the Anabaptists, going very fully into their history and doctrines, but he
nowhere intimates that any of them ever practiced sprinkling.
Masson says:
"In spite of much persecution, continued even after
the Long Parliament met, the Baptists of these congregations, propagated their
opinions with such zeal that by 1644 the sect had attained considerably larger
dimensions. In that year they counted seven leading congregations in London,
and forty-seven in the rest of England, besides which they had many adherents
in the army. Although all sorts of impieties were attributed to them on
hearsay, they differed in reality from the Independents mainly on the subject
of baptism. They objected to the baptism of infants, and they thought immersion
or dipping under water the proper mode of baptism; except in these points and
what they might involve they were substantially at one with the
Congregationalists. This they made clear by the publication, in 1644, of a
Confession of their Faith in 52 Articles, a document which, by its orthodoxy in
all essential matters, seems to have shamed the more candid of their
opponents." (Life of John Milton, Vol. II., p. 585).
W. M. Blackburne, D. D., Methodist, says:
"The Baptists were differentiated
from the Dissenters early in the seventeenth century by holding that immersion
is essential to baptism, and that believers and not infants are the proper
subjects of it. They rebaptized believers who had not been immersed."
(History of the Christian Church, p. 622).
Alexander Balfour, Edinburgh, gives a very full account of
the Baptists and Anabaptists of England. He says:
"The Particular Baptists are those who entertain no
more of the tenets of the ancient Anabaptists than the administration of the
ordinance of baptism by immersion and the refusal of it to infants; in
everything else they resemble the religion of other Calvinists."
(Anti-Pedobaptism Unveiled; or, An Inquiry into the Origin and Progress of the
Baptists, p. 87).
Dr. W. H. King, London, who has made a very extensive
investigation of the pamphlets in the King George collection, says:
"In connection with this, controversy I have
carefully examined the titles of the pamphlets in the first three volumes of
this catalogue, more than 7,000 in number, and have read every pamphlet which
has seemed by its title to refer to the subject of baptism, or the opinions and
practices of Baptists, with this result: that I can affirm, with the most
unhesitating confidence, that in these volumes there is not a sentence or a
hint from which it can be inferred that the Baptists generally, or any section
of them, or even any individual Baptist, held any other opinion than that
immersion is the only true and Scriptural method of baptism, either before the
year 1641 or after it. It must be remembered that these are the earliest
pamphlets, and cover the period from the year 1640 to 1646." (The
Western Recorder, June 4, 1896).
Dr. Schaff says:
"The mode of baptism was no point of dispute
between Anabaptists and Pedobaptists in the sixteenth century. The Roman Church
provides for immersion and pouring as equally valid. Luther preferred immersion
and prescribed it in his baptismal service. In England immersion was the normal
mode down to the middle of the seventeenth century. It was adopted by the
English and American Baptists as the only mode." (History of the Christian
Church, Vol. VII., p. 79).
He then goes on to discuss the Anabaptists of the
Continent, to which we refer in another place.
J. Rawson Lumby says:
"The first notice of the Anabaptists (afterwards
known as Baptists) as a distinct communion is about the time of Luther. The
sect had its origin in Germany, and, as its name implies, differed from the
other reformed churches in the opinions held by its members on the subject of
baptism. The Anabaptists maintained that only those who personally professed their
faith in Christ were proper recipients of that sacrament, and they also
considered that baptism should be administered not by sprinkling, but by
immersion. In most of the other points of their teaching the Anabaptists were
exactly at one with the Independents, but they did not make Independency the
most prominent feature of their doctrines." (Compendium of English Church
History, p. 16).
Mosheim, one of the oldest and most reliable historians,
has much to say of the Anabaptists. He says:
"The origin of the sect, which, from their repetition
of the baptism received in other communities, are called Anabaptists but
who are also denominated Mennonites, from the celebrated man to
whom they owe a large share of their present prosperity, is involved in much obscurity."
He calls them "Catabaptists" or "incurable heretics." He then goes on to say of the
English Baptists: "They have almost nothing in common with the other
Anabaptists except they baptize only adults and immerse totally in the water
whenever they administer the ordinance." (Institutes of Ecclesiastical
History, Vol. Ill., pp. 198-221).
E. T. Hiscox, D. D., the scholarly Baptist author, says:
"It is precisely as I had supposed and had said and
publicly stated, namely, that Dr. Whitsitt was mistaken as to his sources of
information in the famous pamphlets. It is no sin to be mistaken; but this
mistake will doubtless somewhat shake public confidence in Dr. Whitsitt's
reliability as a student of history. And the peculiar and unaccountable way in
which the Doctor has reached this point through an Encyclopædia and a
Pedobaptist journal, rather than through Baptist channels, and without
conference with Baptist brethren, makes his friends marvel, and is yet to be
explained." (Western Recorder, June 18, 1896).
Prof. T. Harwood Pattison, Rochester Theological Seminary,
says: "There is in the article a good deal more of this conjectural
history. Dr. Whitsitt seems sometimes to be indebted to his imagination for his
facts." (The London Freeman, April 17, 1896).
Dr. George C. Lorimer, who has given much attention to
Baptist history, said in an address Sept. 14, 1896, before the students of
Newton Theological Institution:
"I insist that it is due our Baptist Churches that
their action on the world's progress should not be ignored. As a rule, they do
not receive the recognition they deserve. Dr. Dexter in his "True Story of
John Smythe" has, let us believe unintentionally, put them in an entirely
false light; and his representation that Edward Barber originated the practice
of immersion in England, and that before the publication of his book (1641) the
Baptists poured and sprinkled, is, to put it mildly, incorrect. I have just
returned from the British Museum where I went over the documents which are
supposed to substantiate such a view, and I solemnly declare that no such
evidence exists. It cannot be made out from the pamphlets of Edward Barber,
Praise-God Barebones, Dr. Featly, or of those signed A. R., or by Thomas
Killcops. In the title page of the first we have the design of the treatise
thus announced: "Of Baptism or dipping, wherein is clearly shewed that the
Lord Christ ordained dipping for those only that profess repentance and
faith." Here is the key to the whole controversy, and to the misapprehensions
that exist. These writers were either assailing or defending infant baptism,
and the newness of the ordinance to Englishmen was not the mode but the
subject; though Dexter observes this by introducing into of the citations the
word "dipping which is not in the original. Dr. Featly, in his rancorous
pamphlet in which he reports a controversy with the Anabaptists held at
Southwark in 1642, admits that they immerse, and writes about it not as
something new, and declares that they have been showing their "shining
head and speckled skin" near his residence for more than twenty years.
I accuse no man of misrepresentation, but I am sure many
rush to a conclusion and pain multitudes of good people by their garbled
quotations. I, at least, may be allowed to express my dissent: The Baptists
of England did immerse before 1641, even as they did on the Continent. This
I claim on the authority of the George III. pamphlets in the British Museum,
arid from the fact that even the Church of England, in young King Edward's
time, directed that babes should be dipped. These humble people deserve to be
faithfully dealt with, for they have been history makers of no mean importance.
They dared the face of kings and taught the world the right of men to worship
God according to the dictates of conscience; they turned their face against
oppression of every kind, and were the harbingers of this age.
Dr. Joseph Angus, President of Regents Park College,
London, England, a very scholarly Baptist, says:
During this period, it is objected, very little is said
about immersion, and the silence of the writers on the mode is said to be
deeply significant. But it is overlooked that in that age immersion was the
generally accepted mode of baptism in England. The Prayer Book has all along
ordered the child "to be dipped warily" in the water. The practice of
dipping was familiar in the days of Henry VIII., and both Edward VI. and Queen
Elizabeth were dipped in their childhood. In that century it was not necessary
to lecture on the meaning of the word, or to insist on the mode of baptizing,
which is still described in the English service as "dipping." I
remember a clergyman who resolved to carry out the instructions of the Rubric.
The child was stripped and dipped. "I did it once," he reported,
"but I resolved never to do it again!" Once change a positive
institution in one particular, and the whole may be robbed of its force and
beauty.
That there was no such delay in forming Baptist Churches
as our, American friends have supposed, is proved by the dates of the formation
of a number of them. Churches were formed, chapels built and doctrines defined
long before 1641, and others, down to the end of that century, owed nothing
probably to the discussions of that year.
The following churches formed in the years mentioned still
remain Braintree, Eythorne, Sutton, all in 1550; Warrington, 1522; Crowle and
Epworth, both 1,597; Bridgewater, Oxford, and Sadmore, 1600; Bristol
(Broadmead), 1640; King, Stanley, Newcastle, Kilmington (Devon), Bedford,
Sutton, Cirencester, Commercial-street (London), Lincoln, Dorchester, and
Hamsterley, 1633; Lyme Regis, Chipping Sodbury, Upottery, Boston, etc , 1650 to
1658.
Many others that belong to similar dates have since become
extinct through change of population and other causes. Most of these churches
hold the common faith, and most of them have received it without special
reference to the creed of 1641. Dates and particulars of more churches may be
seen in any recent number of the Baptist Handbook, published by the
Baptist Union.
But there is another kind of evidence even more decisive,
showing that "the immersion of believers" was the common faith and
practice of our fathers. I refer to the books published by them and against
them in the century to which 1641 belongs.
The unanimous testimony of these historians is a powerful
argument for dipping. Commencing with the earlier portion of the seventeenth
century, and to some extent during the sixteenth century, a great controversy
sprung up in England on the subject of baptism. For the most part, infant
baptism was the question involved. Beginning with 1641 to the end of the
century, I suppose fifty times more was written on the subject of infant
baptism than there was on the subject of dipping. Frequently whole books were
written on baptism, and dipping was not mentioned, and often in these books on
infant baptism dipping was taken for granted. Usually when the act of baptism
was discussed it had reference to infant sprinkling as an innovation. Waiving
at present, for special discussion, some of the strongest statements in favor
of immersion, I shall refer to certain writers who lived in those times, in
proof that dipping was received among the Baptists as the act of baptism. This
will appear from the writings of both Baptists and Pedobaptists.
The first book I quote is "An Anabaptist Sermon which
was preached at the Re-baptizing of a Brother at the new or holy Jordan, as
they call it, near Bow, or Hackney River; together with the manner how they
used to perform their Anabaptisticall Ceremonies. London, 1643." It is
worth while to note that this report was written by an enemy, who refers to the
Anabaptists as "they." It will also be noted that it describes a past
event, and that the baptism was at some considerable time before 1643, for the
writer says that it was "the manner they use to perform their
Anabaptisticall ceremonies." This baptism by dipping was not a new thing,
according to this enemy, for it was their' "manner" or custom.
Indeed, he mentions former persecutions which undoubtedly took place before
1641. The account says:
"Some say our Religion is cleane contrary to the
Protestant profession, but such are cleane out of the way, but if we should be
persecuted againe by bishops as formerly we have bin, and would run cleane out
of England unto Amsterdam, but we are all cleane people, full of purity of the
Spirit; our sins are but motes in God's eyes, but our brothers sinnes are beams
that have so put out the sight of his Divine justice, that He cannot or will
not see our small iniquities."
He takes dipping as a matter of course. He says:
"For it is impossible to wash them white or cleane;
but wee that are brethren of the elect; we may wash ourselves in a River from
the spots of our Carnality in every River, as Bow River, Hackney River, and other
Rivers are to us a cleane Jordan, wherein we may baptize one another as we
meane to do this day our late lost brother." (P. 2).
We have a book before us, "The Summe of a Conference
at Terling in Essex. Januarie ii.1643," which was held between three "ministers
"and two "Catabaptists." This book is edited by John Stalham,
one of the ministers. He says of the Anabaptists:
"The Catabaptists excuses, that the chiefe Respondent
was too weake, for such an encounter. * * * Secondly then, my request is: That the
practice of Antiquitie may fully be cleared, and laid before them: what it was,
touching this subject of Baptisme, and what therein was agreeable to the rule
of the Scripture, what not, for they have boasted much; as if they had all
Antiquitie on their side." (Pp. 4-7).
The Baptists were called in this one-sided discussion
Catabaptists, or dippers; and it is clear that this dipping was not regarded as a novelty, because it is nowhere
so designated, and the Anabaptists "boasted" that "they had all
Antiquitie on their side."
John Ollyffe, Rector of Almer, 1644, says:
"Thus I hope I have made out that there is no
necessity of baptizing by Dipping to be proved by Scripture. And nobody
pretends, as I know, the Necessity of any particular determinate." (A Brief
Defence of Infant Baptism, with an Appendix, wherein is shewed that it is not
necessary that Baptism should be administered by Dipping. P. 67).
Then he gives a number of "inferences" why he
thinks sprinkling may be sustained against the Anabaptists, but not one to the
effect that dipping is "a new invention."
Ch. Blackwood, 1644, was a Baptist. He says:
"I prove the proposition that the Baptisme of Christ
is dipping, three waies:
"1. From the Greek lexicon.
"2. From the difference twixt Baptizing and Sprinkling
in Scripture.
"3. That Baptisme signifies no other thing than
Dipping, appeares from the proportion and lively resemblance twixt dipping into
the water and rising up again; Dipping signifieth death, and Buriall with
Christ, and rising up above the water, Resurrection with Christ. Rom. vi, 3,
4." (The Storming of Antichrist, pp. 1, 2).,
Blackwood had never heard of dipping as a new thing.
Thomas Edwards, 1645, published some very scandalous books
against the Baptists. They are full of bitterness. While some of the statements
are infamous they demonstrate that the Baptists were dippers. I could quote
many places from his books in proof of this declaration, but one is sufficient.
Edwards says:
"I here declare myself, that I could wish with all my
heart there were a publike Disputation, even in the point of Pedobaptism and of
Dipping, between some of the Anabaptists and some of our Ministers; and had I
an interest in the Houses to prevaile to obtaine it (which I speak not as to
presume of any such power, being so meane and weak a man), it should be one of
the first Petitions I would put up to the Honorable Houses for a publike
Disputation, as was at Zurich, namely, that both Houses would give leave to the
Anabaptists to chuse for themselves such a number of their ablest men, and the
Assembly leave to chuse an equall number for them, and that by Authority of
Parliament publike Notaries sworne, might be appointed to write down all, some
members of both Houses present to see to the Peace kept, and to be judges of
the faire play and liberty given the Anabaptists, and that there might be
severall dayes of Disputation leave to the utmost given the Anabaptists to say
what they could, and upon such faire and free debates it should be found the
Anabaptists to be in the Truth, then the Parliament not only to Tolerate them,
but to Establish and settle their way throughout the whole Kingdome, but if
upon Disputation and debate, the Anabaptists should be found in an Error (as I
am confident they would.) that then the Parliament should forbid all Dipping,
and take some severe course with all Dippers, as the Senate of Zurich
did after the ten severall Disputations allowed the Anabaptists." (The
Third Part of Gangraena, p. 177).
Here is the double admission that the Anabaptists of
Zurich and of England were dippers.
John Brinsley, 1645, violently opposed "that
spreading Gangrene of Anabaptism, which, unless timely prevented, may prove
fatall to the whole body both of the Church and State." (The Doctrine and
Practice of Pedobaptism Asserted and Vindicated, preface). Their dipping was a
matter of course. He says of them:
"The maine businesse we have to deale with, and that
which I chiefly aimed at, when I fell upon this subject, is touching the Baptisme
of Infants; whether they, or, any of them, may be baptized. Here the Anabaptists
and we are at variance. We allow it to some; they deny it to all. Whence it
is that they are called by the name both of Anabaptists and Catabaptists;
because they oppose the Baptisme of all Infants, as a thing not onely
inconvenient, but unlawfull; and in case any of them bee baptized in their
infancie, they looke upon that Baptisme as a nullity, and so impose upon them a
Rebaptization when they come to yeares of discression." (P. 9).
Fredericke Spanhenius, 1646, wrote a history of the
Anabaptists from 1521 to the date of his book. It was written in English for
the English people. His testimony on dipping is conclusive. He says:
"And I shall consider this division, not their
opinions alone, which all the Anabaptists or Catabaptists have
anciently maintained, or which all of them doe maintaine at this day; but those
also which many of them, or at least some of them, have anciently, or do at
present defend; that so the partition may be the more perfect, and that I may
present the Reader with the whole body of their Errors, which they have also
erred, and yet do erre." (P. 27).
Mr. Richardson, 1647, in his reply to Featley, says:
"We confess that when any one is to be rebaptized at
the water's side the administrator goeth to prayer suitable to the occasion,
and after both go into the water and useth the words, Matt .28, part of the
19th verse; and coming forth again they go to prayer, and also return thanks to
God." (Some Brief Considerations, P. 4).
John Tombes, B. D., one of the best posted men of his day,
says:
"But now instead of it [believer's baptism], there is
used the corrupt innovation of infant sprinkling, a fruitless or rather
pernicious rite to the souls of many who are hardened in deadly presumption, as
thereby sufficiently made Christians, and of all influence on the Church of
God, by taking ignorant and unclean persons, even the dregs of a nation, to be
church members. * * * The most eminent opposition to the work of restoring the
right use of water baptism, necessary to the orderly forming of Christian
Churches, hath been by their learned men, who maintain still by their agency,
and colabored pretenses, still the corrupt innovations of infant baptism."
(Anti-Pedobaptism, The Introduction).
Richard Baxter wrote a great number of controversial.
books. After having looked over the most that he has written on the subject of
baptism, I find that he was violently opposed to the Anabaptists; that he
opposed their dipping in many ways; that he declared that it was a breach of
the commandments; but he does not say that it was a new thing. He says:
"My sixth argument shall be against the usual manner
of their baptizing, as it is by dipping over head in a river or other cold
water. This is known to be the ordinary way of the Anabaptists." (Plain
Scripture Proofs, pp. 134-137).
Richard Carpenter, 1653, wrote "The Anabaptist Washt
and Washt, and Shrunk in the Washing," in which he says:
Because God looked upon the End in every practicall
touch of his Power, which End is the chiefein all the course,
and the first intentionally though executively the last: and Grace,
the Gift of God, is an attendant upon the Thing signified And
therefore, Baptism given with a threefold Emmersion, doth not more justify,
than Baptism conferred by one Immersion or Inspersion: and
yet the first is more expresse and visible signe of Sacramentall
Grace; because it washeth more perfectly; and furthermore, adumbrates the
most blessed Trinity, in whose most blessed Name the Baptisme is given."
(Page 80).
He not only does not say that baptism by dipping was a new
thing, that the former Anabaptists were sprinklers, but he goes so far as to
admit their baptism to be most impressive.
John Reading, B. D., 1655, in his book "Anabaptism
Routed," says:
Anabaptists not only deny
believers' children baptism, as the Pelagians and Donatists did of old, but
affirm, That dipping the whole body under water is so necessary, that without
it none are truly baptized (as hath been said)." (Pp. 171, 172).
John Cragge, 1656, gives an account of a discussion
between Henry Vaughn, M. A., and John Tombes. Tombes boldly claimed sprinkling
an innovation and this was admitted by his opponent. I read:
"T. Here Mr. Tombes interrupted me, and desired
the people to take notice of my ingenious confession, that baptism was then
practiced by plunging. He read also a passage out of Casaubons Annot. on the
New Test. where he saith that baptizein denoteth a plunging of the whole body,
etc. Had he read out the passage he might have found how that great scholar
affirmes this to be a slender Argument against such as only sprinkle at
Baptisme: for, saith he, the vertue and efficacie of Baptisme consistes not in
that, meaning the manner of washing.
"V. I shall satisfie the audetours herein anon; in
the meantime I desire Answer to my Argument, the Analogie between circumcision
and baptism being so evident in this place; but receiving none, I addressed
myself to the people, according to promise, saving, that indeed it seemed to me
that for some centuries of years that baptism was practiced by plunging. For
sprinkling was first brought in use by occasion of the Clinicks (as Cyprian
Epist. a Magnum states), being men which deferred their baptism till some
extremitie of sickness, who then in such case were only sprinkled with water
lest the plunging of their bodies might over offend them in that feeble
desperate condition.
"T. Here take notice that sprinkling
took its rise from a corrupt custom.
"V. Though plunging be confessed the most ancient way,
yet is this no ground for this overuncharitable speech of yours, in your sermon
yesterday: That our baptism, meaning of infants, and by sprinkling, was but a
nullitie, and mockery, which concludes ourselves, and all our Ancestours, even
all in the Western Church for 1,500 years, under damnation.
"For the Church hath power upon the sight of any
inconvenience, and for order and decencies sake, to alter the circumstances and
externalls of any ordinance." (The Arraignment and Conviction of
Anabaptism, pp. 5, 6).
If immersion had been so recent a novelty such a
discussion could hardly have taken place without some mention of it.
Denne said in a discussion in 1656, with Mr. Gunning:
Dipping of infants was not only commanded by the Church of
England, but also generally practiced in the Church of England till the year
1600; yea, in some places it was practiced until the year 1641 until the
fashion altered, * * * I can show Mr. Baxter an old man in London who has
labored in the Lord's pool many years; converted by his ministry more men and
women than Mr. Baxter hath in his parish; yea, when he hath labored a great
part of the day in preaching and reasoning, his reflection hath been (not a
sackporrit or a candle), but to go into the water and baptize converts."
(A, Contention for Truth. P. 40).
Here are fourteen writers who were all alive in 1641, and,
for many years before, who wrote in fifteen years and less of that date, some
of them only a year or two away, all of them engaged in the controversy and
wrote books or tracts. Some of them were friends and some of them were enemies.
They were thoroughly posted on the subject and several of them engaged in
public debates on the subject. It is certain that if immersion had been an
invention of recent date some of those men would have made a powerful point
against their opponents on this subject. And it is equally certain that we
would have found some defense in the writings of these Baptists. These
opponents did bring serious charges against dipping; they said it was opposed
to the sixth and seventh commandments, but never that it was a new invention.
This is a strong argument when we remember that these men were eye witnesses
and participants in the discussion of baptism.
There is not a line, which I have discovered in English
literature, written before 1641, which will go to prove that the English
Anabaptists ever practiced sprinkling. The literature is not very abundant, but
what there is of it is all on one side. I will present the testimony at hand
and the reader may judge for himself. This will be the subject of the next
chapter.
THE ENGLISH BAPTISTS BEFORE 1641.
We have already seen that the Baptists before 1641, while
numerous, suffered greatly from persecutions. They did not leave much
literature, and so we must largely depend upon their enemies for references to
them. We have enough proof, however, to show that they practiced dipping.
A book was published in 1523 by the Anabaptists in
Holland, and translated and widely circulated in England, called the Sum of the
Holy Scriptures. On baptism the author says:
"So we are dipped under as a sign that we are, as it
were, dead and buried, as Paul writes, Rom. 6 and Col. 2. The life of man is a
battle upon the earth, and in baptism we promise to strive like men. The pledge
is given when we are plunged under the water. It is the same to God whether you
are eighty years old when you are baptized, or twenty; for God does not
consider how old you are, but with what purpose you receive baptism. He does
not mind whether you are Jew or heathen, man or woman, nobleman or citizen,
bishop or layman, but only he who with perfect faith and confidence comes to
God, and struggles for eternal life, attains it as God has promised in the
Gospel." (Armitage's History of the Baptists, P. 409).
The old English Church Historian Fuller, telling of
November 24, 1538, declares the Anabaptists to be dippers. He says:
"A match being now made up, by the Lord Cromwell's
contrivance, betwixt King Henry and Lady Anne of Cleves, Dutchmen flocked
faster than formerly into England. Many of them had active souls; so that,
whilst their hands were busied about their manufactures, their heads were also
beating about points of divinity. Hereof they had many rude notions, too
ignorant to manage themselves and too proud to crave the direction of others.
Their minds had a byestream of activity more than what sufficed to drive on
their vocation; and this waste of their souls they employed in needless
speculations, and soon after began to broach their strange opinions, being
branded with the general name of Anabaptists. These Anabaptists, for the main,
are but 'Donatists new dipped'; and this year their name first appears in our
English Chronicles; for I read that four Anabaptists, three men and one woman, all
Dutch, bare faggots at St. Paul's Cross, Nov. 24th, and three days after a man
and a woman of their sect were burned in Smithfield." (Church History of
Britain, Vol. II., p. 97).
In 1551 William Turner, "Doctor of Physick,"
devysed" "A Preservative or triacle, agaynst the poyson of Pelagius,
lately renued, & Styrred up agayn, by the furious secte of the
Anabaptistes." This book undoubtedly settles the question that the
Anabaptists of England practiced immersion. He repeatedly calls them Catabaptists.
(See pp. 19, 27, 28, 49). The Anabaptist in making his argument for believers'
immersion is represented as saying:
"That such a lyke costome was once in our most holye
relygyon, as was in colleges and in orders of relygyon, wher as none were
admitted, before they had a year of probation, wher unto ye put this that they
that came to be baptized, demanded, and desyred to be received to fellow ship
of the Christians after dewe proofe of unfayned repentance and thereby were
called competentes. Yonge men, and wymen requyrynge baptysme: and then were
taught the principles of the Christian faith and were fyrst called Catechumeni.
And after those principles learned, were upon certayne solemne dayes, at two
tymes of the yeare approved, therefore baptysed: which was upon Easter even,
and Whit Sunday even: promysyng for themselves the observance of Gods law, with
the renouncyng of the devell and the worlde in theys owne person without
God-father or God-mother, seven score yeares longe: tyll Ignius, Byshop of Rome
ordered to baptyse an infante, a god-father and god-mother answeryng for hym.
"Where as ye say the lyke maner was in our most holy
religion, as the scolers and religious men had: that none should be admitted,
until they had been proved a yeare, and first called competentes, and then
catechumeni. I marvayl what religion ye meane of: whether ye meane of the Popes
religion, or Christes religion, or of the Catabaptistes relygion, which is your
religion indede." (Pp. 6, 7).
There are two very significant statements in these
passages; (I)The Anabaptist quotes against his opponent the well known practice
of immersing on the two days of Easter and Whit Sunday. (Schaff's Hist.
Christian Church, Vol. II., p. 252). And (2) he says of the Anabaptist "of
the Catabaptistes [dippers] religion, which is your religion indede." This
shows that they were certainly dippers,
The following is conclusive:
"And because baptism is a passive sacrament, & no
man can baptise himselfe, but is baptised of another: & childes may be as
wel dipped in to the water in ye name of Christ (which is the outward baptysm
and as myche as one man can gyve another) even as olde folke: and when as they
have the promise of salvation, as well as olde folkes & can receive the
signe of the same as wel: there is no cause why that the baptyme of childes
should be differed." (Pp. 39, 40).
Here he says that the "olde folke" that the
Anabaptist baptized are dipped. This is certainly sufficient.
The Rev. John Fox, the distinguished author of the Book of
Martyrs, was born in England, A. D. 1517, and died April 15, 1587. The first
complete English edition appeared in 1563. There is no doubt as to his
testimony. He says:
"There were some Anabaptists at this time in England,
who came from Germany. Of these there were two sorts; the first only objected
to the baptizing of children, and to the manner of it, by sprinkling instead of
dipping. The other held many opinions, anciently condemned as heresies; they
had raised a war in Germany, and had set up a new king at Munster; but all
these were called Anabaptists, from their opposition to infant baptism, though
it was one of the mildest opinions they held." (Alden Edition, P. 338).
John Penry, who was well known in England, became a
Baptist preacher, in 1586.and had been a very acceptable preacher before this
in both of the Colleges, at Cambridge and Oxford. The Welsh historian says of
him:
He was noted for piety, ministerial gifts, and zeal for
the welfare of his countrymen. He was a native of Brecknockshire, and the first
who publicly preached the gospel among the Baptists in Wales, after the
reformation; which implied that the gospel was, more or less privately preached
among the Baptists, on the Welsh mountains, during the whole reign of popery.
He also wrote and published two books. Mr. Anthony Wood, an Episcopalian
Minister, says that John Penry was the worst enemy the Church of England had
through the whole reign of Queen Elizabeth." (J. Davis' History of the
Welsh Baptists, pp. 25, 26).
David Davies makes this statement:
"The religious condition of Wales at this time was
deplorable. The light which John Penry, the young Apostle of Wales in the
sixteenth century, also a Baptist, who had been hanged like a criminal at
Thomas-a-Watering, old Kent Road, on May 29th, 1593 at the early age of thirty-
four, twenty-four years before the birth of Powell, had been almost
extinguished, although traditions of his heroism lived on, as indeed they do to
this day." (Vavasor Powell, The Baptist Evangelist of Wales in the
seventeenth century, by David Davies, p. 14. London, 1896).
Davies continues in a foot note:
"Of John Penry the Rev. Joshua Thomas writes:
'Possibly he was the first that preached believers' baptism openly and publicly
to his countrymen since the Reformation. I am strongly inclined to think that
he was the first that administered that ordinance by immersion upon a
profession of faith in and about Olchon.' He also adds: 'A word in Ath. Oxon. *
* * speaks out plainly that Penry was a notorious Anabaptist, of which party he
was the Corypheus. * * * Strype owns that Mr. Penry expressed a great concern
for his native country, and yet charged him with Anabaptistry.'" (History
of the Baptist Churches in Wales, p. 43, MS. copy in the Library of the Baptist
College at Bristol).
But this is not all the information we have in regard to
Penry, though this would be sufficient for our purposes. Robert Some, 1589,
says of him:
"Master Penry, jumpeth with the Anabaptistical
recusants in this Argument; his words are these. Where there is no true Christ
whereunto men can be engraffed by Baptisme, there true Baptisme as touching the
substance, cannot be gotten: for what baptisme is that, which is not ingraffing
into the true Christ? but in Poperie there is no true Christ, whereunto men may
be ingraffed, &c. I haue answered this and such like Arguments of Master
Penries, Chap. 23 of my last Treatise: I rest in those answeres." (Chapter
12).
Some goes on with details of the Anabaptists, of their
churches in London, and of their connection with the universities.
When we consider together this testimony it is strong and
striking. There were in 1589 Anabaptist English speaking churches, with
graduates from the Universities of Oxford and Cambridge, with many members, in
London and elsewhere. All of these details are associated with John Penry, who
was an immersionist, and there is nothing to indicate any difference of opinon
on this subject between the churches and Penry; indeed, the proof all points to
their practicing immersion.
John Smyth was associated with John Norcott on the subject
of baptism on March 24th, 1609. This baptism was certainly by immersion, for we
find Norcott writing a book to substantiate dipping. This book of Norcott was
edited and reprinted by Chas. H. Spurgeon. I give a portion of Chapter IV.:
"1. The Greek word Baptizo means to plunge,
to overwhelm. Thus Christ was plunged in water, Matt. 3. 16.
Thus he was plunged or overwhelmed in his sufferings, Luke 12. 50. 'I have
a baptism to be baptized with; and how am I straightened till it be accomplished.'
"2. The Dutch Translation reads, In those
days came John the Dipper, Matt. 3. 1. And in John 3. 23, that
version reads, John was dipping in AEnon because there was much water there.
What need much water were it not for dipping?
3. They did baptize in rivers. They came to John, and
were baptized in Jordan, Matt. 3, 6. John was baptizing in AEnon because
there was much water there, John 3. 23. Why need it be in a river, and
where there was much water? Would not a little water in a Bason serve to
Sprinkle the Face?
"4. Baptism signifies the Burial of Christ. Therefore
we are buried with him by baptism into death, Rom. 6. 4. Buried with him
in Baptism, Col. 2. 12. Now we do not recon a man buried when a little
earth is sprinkled on his Face, but he is buried when covered; thus
you are buried in Baptism.
"5. Christ's sufferings are called a Baptism, Luke
12. 50. I have a Baptism to be baptized with; and how am I
straightened till it be accomplished! When Christ suffered he was plunged
into pains. Did his sufferings lie only on his Head or on his Forehead? No, no;
there was not one part free; he was from head to foot in pain; his head was
crowned with piercing Thorns, his hands and feet were nailed to the Cross; and
his whole person was so stretched out on the Cross that a man might have told
all his bones, Ps. 22. 17. There was not one part free. Man hath sinned,
Body, Soul and Spirit, and therefore the whole Christ must suffer for sin.
Christ was baptized into pain, plunged into sorrow, not any part free: this he
called his Baptism. Thus one baptized is plunged under water, to show how
Christ was plunged into sorrow for our sakes.
"6. Baptism is a putting on Christ. As many
of you as have been baptized into Christ have put on Christ, Gal, 3. 27.
The text means that as a servant wears his Lord's Livery, a Garment which
demonstrates him to be a Servant to such a great Personage, so in Baptism we
put on our Lord's Livery, and he himself clothes us from head to foot. It is
thus that by Baptism we put on Christ.
"7. When Christ was baptized, he came up out of
the Water, Matt. 3. 16. Was his baptism performed by having a little
Water thrown on his Face? Then he had not been in the Water, and
could not have come out of it; but because he was baptized in the Water,
therefore being baptized he came up out of the Water. Philip and the Eunuch went
down both into the Water, (and being there in the Water) Philip baptized
the Eunuch. Both of them came up out of the Water, Acts 8. 39; but
to what End had they gone down if Philip did merely Sprinkle the Eunuch, or
Pour water upon his head ?
"Thus you see the place where these various
persons were baptized was a River, or a certain water; their Action was
on this wise—they went down into the Water, then, being in the Water, they
were baptized. This was done in places where there was much water. The end was
to show forth Christ's Burial; now if there be not a Burial under water to show
Christ's Burial, the great end of the Ordinance is lost: but Burial is well set
forth by Dipping under Water." (Baptism Discovered Plainly and Faithfully,
according to the Word of God. Pp. 28-31.London, 1885).
Then there follow some questions and answers to show that
sprinkling is "strange fire "on the altar of God.
Edmond Jessop had been an Anabaptist, and had departed
from the faith. In 1623 he published "A Discovery of the Errors of the
English Anabaptists." This book was on infant baptism, but in referring to
the position of the Anabaptists he mentions their use of Rom. 6. While dipping
is not mentioned it is plain that Jessop assumes it in relation to the
Anabaptists. Jessop says:
"In which words (I say) he setteth downe expresly
that the baptisme which saueth, the baptisme whereby we put on Christ, the
baptisme whereby our hearts are purged and sanctified, and the sinnes of our
flesh done away, whereby we are buried with Christ, and doe rise with him, euen
that which is through the faith and operation of the Spirit, is one and the
same, with the circumcision of the heart, which he therefore calleth, the
circumcision made withou thands, the circumcision of Christ, whereby also
it appeareth clearly, and beyond all contradiction, that the circumcision, or
the cutting of the foreskin of the flesh, was a signe and a true representation
of the doing away of their sinnes, of the cleansing of the heart by faith (as
the now doing away of the filth of the flesh with the baptism of water is); for
which vse and end, it was also given to Abraham at the first, as this
Apostle also declareth in another place," etc. (P. 62).
Vavasor Powell is a brilliant instance of a man baptized
by immersion upon a profession of his faith before 1641. Davis says of him:
"He was inclined to suffer affliction with the people
of God rather than to proceed in the ways of sin and folly. Soon afterwards he
was baptized on a profession of his faith, and became a very popular preacher
among the Baptists in Wales in the year of our Lord in 1636. He was one of the
most zealous and useful preachers in the Principality. He often preached throughout
Wales and in many parts of England. Being a man of liberal education, he was
remarkably fluent in both languages." (History of the Welsh Baptists, p.
28. Pittsburg, 1835).
Powell himself is very clear upon the act of baptism. He
says:
"Water baptism is a solemn, significant dipping into,
or washing with water the body in (or into) the name of the Father, &c.
(Matt. 28, 19). It signifies the death, the burial and resurrection of Christ,
also the spiritual cleansing and washing of justification and regeneration or
sanctification." (Life, Pp. 35-41).
Edward Barber refers to the Independents in these words:
"Again, others who pretend to come neerest in that
way in separating, yet hold the baptisme they there received though on no
ground; for if they were truly baptised into that Church I conceive with
submission to better judgments, they ought to continue, and to separate for
corruptions, as is clearly proved by B. Hall, in his Apology against the
Brownists, shewing that either they must goe forward to baptisme, or come backe
again to the Bishops and Church." (A Small Treatise of Baptisme, Preface,
sec. 6. London, 1641).
The work of Bishop Hall to which reference is here made is
called: "A common apologie of the Church of England against the unjust
challenges of the over just sect commonly called Brownists." The title
page shows that this book was written in 1610. Barber always understood baptism
to be an immersion, and quotes Bishop Hall in support of his position that the
Brownists must go back to Episcopacy or forward to baptism. Barber would not
have quoted Hall as sustaining his immersion views unless he had strong reasons
for so doing. This reference will carry the practice of immersion back among
Baptists till 1610, at any rate. Indeed, there is no doubt about the concession
of Bishop Hall, for I find in the work of A. R., 1642, the first part of
"The Vanity of Childish Baptism," P. 34, a very striking passage from
Bishop Hall. The Bishop called the Anabaptists Catabaptists, or dippers. I
quote from A. R.:
"Yea and much lesse in the judgment of Bishop Hall,
who in this point expresses himselfe in these words (viz) I am for my heart so
confident of the Divine Institution of the majority of Bishops above
Presbyters, that I dare boldly say, that there are weighty points of faith
which have not so strong evidence in holy Scripture, (and there be instanceth
in two particulars). The power by sacred orders given to the ministers alone
for the Consecration and distribution of the holy Eucharist, and the receiving
of Infants to holy Baptisme, which (saith he) is a matter of so high
consequence, that we justly brand the Catabaptists with heresie for denying it,
yet let me with good assurance, say, that the evidences of this truth come
farre short of that which the Scriptures have afforded us for the superiority
of some Church Governor even those who otherwise indeed, in a sole respect of
their Ministerial Function, are equall; and then he shuts up the point in these
very words (viz) He therefore that would upon pretence of want of Scripture
quarrell at the Divine institution of Bishops might with much better colour
cavill at these blessed Ordinances of God." (P. 35).
Here is undoubted contemporaneous evidence in 1610 that
the Baptists were immersionists.
THE KIFFIN MS. AND THE JESSEY CHURCH RECORDS.
The foundation upon which Dr. Whitsitt builds his entire
superstructure is the so-called Kiffin manuscript. The authority, authenticity
and clearness of the application of this document to the Baptists must be put
beyond question. He must have "irrefragable proofs "to sustain this
manuscript. There must be no mistake or doubt on a vital point like this. It is
upon this manuscript that he gets his date of 1641. It is from this manuscript
that he establishes immersion from the Dutch through Blount. It is from this
manuscript that he traces his line of succession, and indeed it is from this
manuscript that he gets all the details of his theory. It is the only Baptist
document that he quotes that is at all vital to his position. What we demand of
Dr. Whitsitt just here is clear, certain and unequivocal proof. At this vital
point he fails and the testimony is against him.
After quoting from Hutchinson, Crosby says:
"This agrees with an account given of the matter in
an ancient manuscript, said to be written by Mr. William Kiffin, who lived in
those times, and was a leader among those of that persuasion:
"This relates that several sober and pious persons
belonging to the Congregations of dissenters about London were
convinced that believers were the only proper subjects of baptism and
that it ought only to be administered by immersion or dipping the whole
body into water in resemblance of burial and resurrection according
to 2 Colos. ii. 12, and Rom. vi. 4. That they often met together to pray and
confer about this matter and consult what methods they should take to enjoy the
ordinance in its primitive purity. That they could not be satisfied about any administrator
in England to begin this practice, because though some in this nation
rejected the baptism of infants yet they had not as they knew of revived
the ancient custom of immersion. But hearing that some in the Netherlands
practiced it, they sent over one Hr. Richard Blount, who understood
the Dutch language; That he went accordingly, carrying letters of
recommendation with him, and was kindly received both by the church there and
by Mr. John Batte, their teacher; That on his return he baptized Mr. Samuel
Blacklock, a minister; and those two baptized the rest of the company,
whose names are in the manuscript, to the number of fifty-three."(Crosby
I., 101-2).
Dr. Whitsitt was led to see that this testimony from the
so-called Kiffin manuscript was not conclusive, so he cast around to find
something to sustain it. He virtually confesses that the Kiffin manuscript is
not authoritative p. 83). He thinks he finds this confirmation in the Rev.
George Gould's account of the Norwich Chapel case in England. The book is
entitled "Open Communion and the Baptists of Norwich," by Rev. George
Gould, and was published in 1860. This new evidence that Dr. Whitsitt discovers
is called the "Jessey Church Records." He says of them:
These singularly valuable records, which must be still in
existence since Gould had them in his possession in 1860 (Open Communion,
Introduction, p. cxxiii), ought by all means to be published in fac-simile, and
whoever accomplishes that task will render an important service to Baptist
history. Mr. Gould prints only "certain entries" found in them
(Introduction, p. cxxii), and these do not quite cover all the ground occupied
by the so-called Kiffin manuscript. To facilitate comparison both documents
will be found printed in parallel columns below, the one under the title of
"Jessey Church Records "and the other as the so-called Kiffin
manuscript (P. 81).
He devotes a whole chapter to these "Genuine Ancient
Records." And throughout the remainder of the book he makes the greatest
use of them, referring to them no less than 28 times. He quotes them on all
important occasions, and indeed without the "Jessey Church Records"
his case goes to the wall. They are the keystone in the arch. Here is where he
gets his 1641, and this is the extent of his discovery. Here are Dr. Whitsitt's
parallel columns:
JESSEY CHURCH RECORDS. 1633. There having been much discussing, These denying
Truth of ye Parish Churches, and ye Church being now become so large yt it
might be prejudicial, These following desired dismission, that they might
become an Entire Church, and (2) further ye Communion of those Churches in
Order amongst themselves, wch at last was granted to them, and performed
Sept. 12, 1633, viz.: HenryParker & wife. Jo. Milburn. Widd. Fearne. Arnold. [Green] Hatmaker. Mr. Wilson. Mark Luker. Tho. Allen. Mary Milburn. To These Joyned Rich. Blunt, Tho. Hubert, Rich Tredwell,
and his Wife Kath., John Trimber Wm. Jennings and Sam Eaton, Mary Greenway,
(3) Mr. Eaton with some others receiving a further baptism. Others Joyned to them. 1638. These also being of ye same judgment with Sam
Eaton, and desiring to depart and not be censured, our intrest in them was
remitted, with Prayer made in their behalf, June 8, 1638. They haveing first
forsaken Us, and Joyned with Mr. Spilsbury, viz. Mr. Peti Ferrer, Wm. Batty, Hen. Pen, Mrs. Allen (died 1639), Tho. Wilson, Mr. Norwood. Gould, Open Communion and the Baptists of Norwich, Intro.,
p. cxxii. 1640. 3d Mo. [May]. The Church [whereof Mr. Jacob and
Mr. John Latborp had been Pastors], became two by mutual consent, just half
being with Mr. P. Barebone, and ye other halfe with Mr. H. Jessey. (8.) Mr.
Richd. Blunt wth him, being convinced of Baptism, yt also it ought to be by
diping ye Body into ye Water, resembling Burial and riseing again. (Col. ii.,
12; Rom. vi., 4): had sober Conferance about it in ye Church, and and then
with some of the forenamed, who also were so convinced: And after Prayer
and Conferance about their so enjoying it, none having then so Practiced
in England to Professed Believers, and hearing that some in the Nether
Lands had so practiced, they agreed and sent over Mr. Rich'd Blunt (who
understood Dutch), with Letters of Comendation, who was kindly accepted
there, and Returned with Letters from them, Jo. Batten a Teacher there, and
from that Church to such as sent him. 1641. They proceed on therein, viz.: Those persons yt
ware perswaded Baptism should be by dipping ye Body, had mett in (9) two
Companies, and did intend so to meet after this: all these agreed to proceed
alike together: and then Manifesting (not by any formal Words) a Covenant
(wch Word was Scrupled by some of them), but by mutual desires and agreement
each testified: These two Cornpanyes did set apart one to Baptize the rest,
so it was Solemnly performed by them. Mr. Blunt baptized Mr. Blacklock, yt was a Teacher amongst
them, and Mr. Blunt being baptized, he and Mr. Blacklock Baptized ye rest of
their friends yt ware so minded, and many being added to them they increased
much. Gould, Open Communion and the Baptists of Norwich, Intro.,
pp. cxxiii, cxxiv. |
SO-CALLED KIFFIN MANUSCRIPT. There was a congregation of Protestant Dissenters of the
independent Persuasion in London, gathered in the year 1616, whereof Mr.
Henry Jacob was the first pastor; and after him succeeded Mr. John Lathorp,
who was their minister at this time. In this society several persons finding
that the congregations kept not to their first principles of separation, and
being also convinced that (1) baptism was not to be administered to infants,
but such only as professed faith in Christ, desired that they might be
dismissed from that communion, and allowed to form a distinct congregation in
such order as was most agreeable to their own Sentiments. The church
considering that they were now grown very numerous, and so more than could in
these times of persecution meet together, and believing also that those
persons acted from a principle of conscience, and not obstinacy, agreed to
allow them the liberty they desired, and that they should be constituted a
distinct church, which was performed the 12th of September, 1633. And as they
believed that baptism was not rightly administered to infants, so they looked
upon the baptism they had received in that age as invalid; whereupon most or
all of them received a new baptism. (5) Their minister was Mr. John Spilsbury.
What number they were is uncertain, because in the mentioning of the names of
about twenty men and women it is added, with divers others. In the year 1638 Mr. William (6) Kiffin, Mr. Thomas
Wilson, and others being of the same judgment, were upon their request,
dismissed to the said Mr. Spilsbury's congregation. (7) In the year 1639 another congregation of Baptists
was formed, whose place of meeting was in Crutched—Fryars; the chief
promoters of which were Mr. Green, Mr. Paul Hobson and Captain Spencer. Crosby, Vol. I., pp. 148-9. For in the year 1640, this church became two by consent;
just half, says the manuscript, being with Mr. P. Barebone, and the other
half with Mr. Henry Jessey. Crosby, Vol. III, p. 41. Several sober and pious persons belonging to the
Congregations of the dissenters about London were convinced that believers
were the only proper subjects of baptism, and that it ought to be
administered by immersion or dipping the whole body into the water, in
resemblance of a burial and resurrection according to Colos. 11., 12, and
Rom. VI, 4. That they often met together to pray and confer about this
matter, and to consult what methods they should take to enjoy this ordinance
in its primitive purity: That they could not be satisfyed about any administrator
in England to begin this practice; because tho' some in this nation rejected
the baptism of infants, yet they had not as they knew of revived the
ancient custom of immersion: But hearing that some in the Netherlands
practiced it, they agreed to send over one Mr. Richard Blunt, who understood
the Dutch lanuage; that he went accordingly, carrying letters of
recommendation with him and was kindly received both by the church there and
Mr. John Batten, their teacher. That upon his return he baptized Mr. Samuel Blacklock, a
minister, and these two baptized the rest of their company [whose names are
in the manuscript to the number of fifty-three.] Crosby, Vol. I., pp. 101-2. |
Dr. Whitsitt divides these "Jessey Church
Records" into two parts. The first part contains the two paragraphs under
"Jessey Church Records," under the dates of 1633 and 1638. These two
paragraphs contain nothing on the subject of baptism and are of no importance
in this discussion. These "Jessey Church Records" are introduced by
Gould with these words:
"Amongst the MSS. of H. Jessey, who in 1637 became
pastor of the Church from which these persons had seceded, are 'The Records of
an Antient Congregation of Dissenters from Wch many of ye Independent and
Baptist Churches in London took their rise,' and there I find these
entries:"
Then follows all that is found above under the dates of
1633 and 1638.
The second part is under the dates of 1640 and 1641. Of
this second division Dr. Whitsitt says:
The second division of the Jessey Church Records,
beginning with the disruption of Jessey's church in 1640, is perhaps the most
important. (P. 85).
This contains all that is said on the subject of baptism.
In it is found the quotation he has made so many times in the body of the book,
"none having then so practiced in England to professed believers. "If
this is overthrown all is gone. His book is gone, for this is the keystone of
the whole superstructure. I now assert on the authority of Gould himself, from
whom Dr. Whitsitt quotes, that there is nothing of this sort in the
"Jessey Church Records" at all. The records make no such reference to
the years 1640 and 1641. No such words are found in them. How Dr. Whitsitt came
to place these two paragraphs in the "Jessey Church Records" I cannot
attempt to explain. It is sufficient to say that they are not there. And Gould,
from whom he quotes, does not place them there. So all of this ado about the
"Jessey Church Records" goes into thin air.
From whence, then, did Dr. Whitsitt get these two
Paragraphs? They have no connection with the Jessey Church Records whatever,
but are another version of the Kiffin Manuscript, and Gould so quotes them.
Gould widely separates these paragraphs from the Jessey Records and distinctly
says that these paragraphs are from the Kiffin Manuscript. His words are:
"Crosby appeals for confirmation of Hutchinson's
account to 'an antient manuscript by Mr. William Kiffin,' and of which he
proceeds to give the substance. As I have the same document lying before me, I
shall allow the writer to tell his own tale." (Open Communion and the
Baptists of Norwich, p. cxxiii). And then he proceeds to give the words Dr.
Whitsitt put under the "Jessey Church Records" dated 1640 and 1641.
Here, then, Dr. Whitsitt has placed in the Jessey Church Records things which
are contained in the Kiffin Manuscript. This not only destroys all reference to
the Jessey Church Records as authority, but likewise weakens the Kiffin
Manuscript. Which one of these versions are we to believe? Crosby gives one and
Gould gives another. If Dr. Whitsitt had read even Armitage he would have found
that Armitage gives this exact quotation and properly ascribes it to Kiffin.
(Armitage's History of the Baptists, P. 441).
But in order that I may be perfectly clear on this point,
at the risk of repeating somewhat, I give the entire statement of Gould. A
comparison of Gould with the statement of Dr. Whitsitt is all that is necessary
to prove that Dr. Whitsitt has placed words in the Jessey Church Records which
belong to the Kiffin Manuscript. Gould says:
AMONG THE MSS. OF MR. H. JESSEY, WHO IN 1637 BECAME PASTOR
OF THE CHURCH FROM WHICH THESE PERSONS HAD SECEDED, ARE "THE RECORDS OF AN
ANTIENT CONGREGATION OF DISSENTERS, FROM WCH MANY OF YE INDEPENDENT AND BAPTIST
CHURCHES IN LONDON TOOK THEIR FIRST RISE," AND THERE I FIND THESE
ENTRIES:* *Capitals mine.-C.
1633. There having been much discussing. These denying
Truth of ye Parish Churches, and ye Church being now become so large yt it
might be prejudicial. These following desired dismission, that they might
become an Entire Church, and further ye Communion of those Churches in Order
amongst themselves, wch at last was granted to them, and performed Sept.
12,1633, viz.:
Henry Parker and wife, Jo. Milburn,
Widd. Fearne, Arnold,
(Green) Hatmaker, Mr. Wilson,
Mark Luker, Tho. Allen,
Mary Milburn.
To These Joyned Rich. Blunt, Tho. Hubert, Rich. Tredwell,
and his wife Kath., John Timber, Wm. Jennings and Sam Eaton, Mary Greenway. Mr.
Eaton with some others receiving a further baptism.
Others Joyned to them.
1638. These also being of ye same judgment with Sam Eaton,
and desiring to depart and not be censured, our interest in them was remitted,
with Prayer made in their behalf, June 8, 1638. They having first forsaken Us,
and Joyned with Mr. Spilsbury, viz.:
Mr. Peti Ferrer, Wm. Batty,
Hen Pen, Mrs. Allen (died 1639),
Tho. Wilson, Mr. Norwood.
From these minutes I infer that Mr. Spilsbury, believing
that baptizedness is not essential to the administrator," felt no
difficultie in administering the rite of baptism to "Sam Eaton with some
others." This would account for his vindication of such a course in the
following terms as quoted by Crosby:
"And because some make it such an error, and so far
from any rule or example for a man to baptize others, who is himself
unbaptized, and so think thereby to shut up the ordinance of God in such
a Strait, that none can come by it but thro' the authority of the Popedom of
Rome; let the reader consider who baptized John the Baptist, before
he baptized others, and if no man did, then whether he did not baptize others,
he being himself unbaptized. We are taught by this what to do upon like
occasions.
"Further, says he, I fear that men put more than is
of right due to it, that so prefer it above the church, and all other ordinances
besides; take in and cast out members, elect and ordain officers,
and administer the supper, and all anew, without any looking after
succession, any further than the Scriptures. But as for baptism, they must have
that successfully from the Apostles, though it comes thro' the hands of Pope
Joan. What is the cause of this, that men can do all from the Word but only
baptism?"
It is evident, therefore, that some persons scrupled the
correctness of Mr. Spilsbury's conduct. Edward Hutchinson, in his
"Treatise concerning the Covenant and Baptism," incidentally confirms
this conclusion, for he says that, when several persons resolved to practice
the baptism of believers according to their light:
"The great objection was the want of an administrator,
which, as I have heard, was removed by sending certain messengers to Holland,
whence they were supplied."
Crosby applies for confirmation of Hutchinson's account to
"an ancient manuscript, said to have been written by Mr. William
Kiffin," of which he proceeds to give the substance. AS I HAVE THE SAME
DOCUMENT NOW LYING BEFORE ME, I SHALL ALLOW THE WRITER TO TELL HIS OWN TALE:* *Capitals
mine.-C.
"1640, 3d Mo. (May). The Church [whereof Mr. Jacob
and Mr. John Lathrop had been Pastors], became two by mutual consent, just half
being with Air. P. Barebone and ye other halfe with Mr. H. Jessey. Mr. Rich'd
Blunt with him being convinced of Baptism, yt also it ought to be by dipping ye
Body into ye Water, resembling Burial and riseing again, Col. II., 12; Rom. VI.,
4; had sober Conference about it in ye Church, and, then with some of the
forenamed, who also were so convinced: And after Prayer and Conference
about their so enjoying it, none having then so Practiced in England to
Professed Believers, and hearing that some in the Nether Lands had so
practiced, they agreed and sent over Mr. Rich'd Blunt (who understood Dutch)
with Letters of Commendation, who was kindly accepted there, and returned with
Letters from them, Jo Batten a Teacher there, and from that Church to such as
sent him.
"1641. They proceed on therein, viz.: Those persons
yt ware perswaded Baptism should be by dipping ye Body, had mett in two
Companies, and did intend so to meet after this; all these agreed to proceed
alike together; and then Manifesting (not by any formal words) a Covenant (Word
wch was Scrupled by some of them) but by mutual desires and agreement each
testified: These two Companyes did set apart one to Baptize the rest, so it was
Solemnly performed by them.
"Mr. Blunt baptized Mr. Blacklock, yt was a Teacher
among them, and Mr. Blunt being baptized, he and Mr. Blacklock baptized ye rest
of their friends yt ware so minded, and many being added to them they increased
much."
But there is another consideration which I have not as yet
mentioned. Are the Jessey Church Records a forgery? Dr. Henry S. Burrage is
constrained to admit:
"It will be noticed that in our reference above to
the Jessey Church Records, we say 'if they are authentic.' We have not
forgotten the 'Crowle and Epworth' records. These made their appearance about
the same time as the Jessey Church Records, and it is now known that they are
clumsy forgeries. The Jessey Church Records may be genuine, but their
genuineness has not yet been established." (Zion's Advocate, Sept.
30, 1896).
We have no external proof of the genuineness of these
Records. They stand wholly unauthenticated. Before we accept them we must have
undoubted proof of their genuineness. Outside of the fact that we have not one
iota of external evidence that these Records are genuine, the internal evidence
is all against them. Examine the title "The Records of an antient
Congregation of Dissenters from wch many of ye Independent and Baptist Churches
took their rise." This title is enough to forever condemn these Records as
a forgery. Allow me to point out a few considerations:
1. This was not, in 1640,. an ancient congregation.
At that time this church had been organized less than twenty-five years, and in
that land of ancient churches no man would have called this Jessey Church an
"antient Congregation."
2. In 1640 "many of ye Independent Churches
" had not taken "their rise" from it.
3. In 1640 it was not the Mother of
"many" Baptist Churches.
4. The name "Baptist Churches "was not then in
use, and conclusively proves these Records a fraud. The term
"Baptist" was not used till some years after this period.
Thus Dr. Whitsitt's principal authority has no existence
in fact. His whole book is founded upon this error. As much has been said about
the so-called Kiffin Manuscript, I will now proceed to review it. It is
scarcely worth while, after this remarkable exploit with the Jessey Church
Records, but I desire to give a complete review of the subject.
This theory, as presented from the so-called Kiffin
Manuscript, presents insuperable difficulties:
1. Dr. Whitsitt presents no proof, and none has been
found, that Kiffin wrote this Manuscript. Crosby, who wrote his history about
one hundred years after this event, is said to have happened, ventured to say:
"This agrees with an account of the matter in an
ancient manuscript said to have been written by Mr. Wm. Kiffin, who lived in
those times." (Crosby, Vol. I, p. 100).
Cathcart, a Baptist writer, says this transaction of
Blount's may have happened, but he further remarks:
"We would not bear heavily on the testimony
adduced by these good men." (Baptist Encyclopedia, Vol. I, p. 572).
2. There is no proof that the Manuscript was written by
anyone near the year 1641. Dexter, upon whom Dr. Whitsitt has constantly
relied, gives up this Manuscript. He says:
"Crosby says he derived his information from an
'antient manuscript said to be written by Mr. William Kiffin, who lived
in those times, and was a leader among those of that persuasion.' Conceding the
genuineness of this manuscript, and its value in testimony—both of which might
be open to question—let us note its exact words as to the point before
us." (The True Story of John Smyth, P. 43).
Again:
"On the other hand, had not Kiffin—as it is
supposed—in made the statement, it would be suspicious for its vagueness, and
for the fact that none of the historians, not even Wilson, Calamy, Brook, or
Neal, know anything about either Blount or Blacklock, beyond what is here
stated." (P. 54).
Armitage says of the entire transaction:
"A feeble but strained attempt has been made to show
that none of the English Baptists practiced immersion prior to 1641, from the
document mentioned by Crosby in 1733, Of which he remarks that it was 'said to
be written by Mr. William Kiffin.' Although this manuscript is signed by
fifty-three persons, it is evident that its authorship was only guessed at from
the beginning, it may or may not have been written by Kiffin." (History of
the Baptists, P. 440).
3. No authoritative copy of this manuscript is known to be
in existence and no Baptist historian, unless we may call Gould such, appears
to have ever seen it. Crosby does not quote it, nor does he say he ever saw it,
but he only makes general statements from it without quoting the exact words.
Dr. Whitsitt makes no claim of having seen this manuscript. His reference is to
Crosby.
4. The statements in the quotation are vague and
uncertain. It only speaks of "several sober and pious persons belonging to
the Congregations of the dissenters about London." There is nothing to
prove that these persons ever organized a Baptist Church. There is no proof
that Blount or Blacklock were Baptist preachers. Their names are not appended
to the Confession of Faith of 1644, which almost certainly would have been the
case had they organized the first Baptist Church of England and introduced
immersion among them. No record of such an event was kept, and the only
reference I have found in the century to it is in the words of Hutchinson,
1676, or thirty-one years later, who reports on hearsay that "certain
messengers went to Holland." The dates are as conflicting as the so-called
facts. Barclay, who was the first to discover the "invention" of
immersion among the Baptists, says Blount went to Holland in 1633. Newman puts
the date 1640 and Dr Whitsitt 1641.
Evans says :
"This statement is vague. We have no date and cannot
tell whether the fact refers to the Separatists under Mr. Spilsbury or to
others." (History Early English Baptists, Vol. II., p. 78).
Dr. A. H. Newman, who has been so industriously quoted,
says:
"A few remarks seem called for by the obscurity of
some of the statements quoted above. It is not possible out of the material
that has thus far come to the light to trace in detail the evolution of the
seven churches that signed the confession of 1644. The statement quoted from
the so-called 'Kiffin Manuscript' with reference to the division of 1640
involves a number of difficulties. P. Barebone, with whom half of the church
withdrew, has commonly been regarded by Baptist writers as a Baptist. Yet in
1642 he published 'A Discourse tending to prove the Baptism in, or under, the
Defection of Antichrist to be the Ordinance of Jesus Christ, as also that the
Baptism of Infants or Children is Warrantable and Agreeable to the Word of God,'
and in 1643 and 1644 he published other polemical tracts against
Antipedobaptism. If in 1641 he was the leader of the Antipedobaptists and
immersionist half of the divided congregation he must soon after have abandoned
his position. This is, of course, possible. From the construction of the
sentence Jessey might be taken to be the leader of the Baptist half, but it
appears that Jessey did not become a Baptist till five years later. This
difficulty seems inexplicable without further material." (A History of the
Baptist Churches in the United States, pp. 52, 53).
It is altogether possible that these
"dissenters" may not have known that there were immersionists in
London, and that such persons may have lived on the same square with them.
Under the persecutions of the Court of High Commission and the Court of Star
Chamber it was not safe for one to announce himself a Baptist.
6. The account that Hutchinson gives is very different
from the so-called Kiffin Manuscript. He makes no mention of dipping, but
declares that the trouble was in regard to an administrator. The edition of
Hutchinson from which I quote bears date, London, 1676. He says:
"When the professors of these nations had been a long
time wearied with the yoke of superstitions, ceremonies,
traditions of men, and corrupt mixtures in the worship and service of God, it
pleased the Lord to break these yokes, and by a very strong impulse of his
Spirit upon the hearts of his people, to convince them of the necessity of
Reformation. Divers pious, and very gracious people, having often sought the
Lord by fasting and prayer, that he would show them the pattern of his house,
the goings-out and comings-in thereof, &c. Resolved (by the grace of God), not
to receive or practice any piece of positive worship which had not precept or
example from the word of God. Infant baptism coming of course under
consideration, after long search and many debates, it was found to have no
footing in the Scriptures (the only rule and standard to try doctrines by);
but on the contrary a mere innovation, yea, the profanation of an ordinance
of God. And though it was proposed to be laid aside, yet what fears,
tremblings, and temptations did attend them, lest they should be mistaken,
considering how many learned and godly men were of an opposite persuasion. How
gladly would they have had the rest of their brethren gone along with them. But
when there was no hopes, they concluded that a Christian's faith must not
stand in the wisdom of men; and that every one must give an account of himself to
God; and so resolved to practice according to their light. The great
objection was, the want of an administrator; which, as I have heard, was
remov'd by sending certain messengers to Holland, whence they were
supplied." (A Treatise Concerning the Covenant and Baptism Dialogue-wise.
Epistle to the Reader. London, 1676).
There is no question about the authenticity of this work
of Hutchinson and the question of "dipping does not come upon the
boards." The whole question hinged upon the lawfulness of infant baptism
and a proper administrator.
7. There is nothing in this manuscript to prove that there
were not other Baptists in England who had nothing to do with this transaction.
We have shown that there were many such churches. Crosby says:
"But the greatest number of English Baptists looked
upon all of this as needless trouble, and what proceeded from the old Popish
Doctrine of right to administer sacraments by an uninterrupted succession which
neither the Church of Rome, nor the Church of England, much less the modern
Dissenters, could prove to be with them." (Vol. I., P. 103).
The voice of Kiffin himself is against any such
interpretation of this manuscript, for he would not have contradicted himself.
Kiffin certainly said: "IT IS WELL KNONW TO MANY, ESPECIALLY TO OURSELVES,
THAT OUR CONGREGATIONS WERE ERECTED AND FRAMED ACCORDING TO THE RULE OF CHRIST,
BEFORE WE HEARD OF ANY REFORMATION." (A Brief Remonstrance, p. 11).
I do not think it possible with an unauthenticated, vague
statement like the one contained in this manuscript to revolutionize Baptist
history. Neither is there anything new in all this, for it was recorded long
ago by Crosby, and has been before the Baptists more than two hundred years.
Dr. Whitsitt is the only man who has drawn from it such startling conclusions.
SOME WITNESSES.
Of Mr. Praise-God Barebones, Dr. Whitsitt makes great use.
He wrote, if indeed he is the author, two books, under the initials P. B.,
which appeared in 1642-3. Dr. Whitsitt claims that while he was not a Baptist,
as some other writers supposed, he was very friendly to them. He says:
It is true that The Bapitist Encyclopaedia has
blundered in claiming Mr. Barebone as a Baptist minister, yet it was not a very
great blunder. There was some reason for this conclusion, for he was closely
connected with the Baptists, having been a member of the Jessey Church prior to
the year 1640. (P. 102).
Dr. Whitsitt further says that he was answered by R. B.,
whom he claims to be Richard Blunt, of which, however, there is no proof. After
reading this eulogy of P. B., I turned to his book called "A Reply to the
Frivolous and impertinent Ansvver of R. B., to the discourse of P. B.,"
and I did not find it friendly to the Baptists. It was altogether hostile. I
can only give a few of his phrases: "Boaster," "liar,"
"bray a fool," "evil dealing," "willing to
deceive," "he deals as the Divell dealt with the Lord, keeps back a
mayne part, and so the shewing the mind to smother the truth and keep it in
unrighteousness," etc., etc. These are only samples that are found all
through this abusive writer. And yet this enemy is one of Dr. Whitsitt's
principal witnesses.
I charged, through The Western Recorder, that Dr.
Whitsitt copied from Dexter his quotation from P. B., as found in The
Religious Herald, May 7, 1896. This is admitted, for in the book he uses an
entirely different form of the quotation, as follows:
"But now very lately some are mightily taken as
having found out a new defect in the Baptisme under the defection, which maketh
such a nullitie of Baptisme in their conceit that it is none at all, and it is
concerning the manner of Baptizing wherein they have espyed such default as it
maketh an absolute nullity of all person's Baptisme but such as have been so
Baptized according to their new discovery; and so partly as before in regard of
the subject and partly in regard of so great default in the manner: They not
only conclude as is before sayd a nullity of their present Baptisme, And so but
addresse themselves to be Baptized a third time after the true way and manner
they have found out, which they account a precious truth. The particular of
their opinion and practice is to Dip, and that persons are to be Dipped, all
and every part to be under the water, for if all the whole person be not under
the water then they hold they are not Baptized with the Baptisme of Christ. As
for sprinkling or pouring water on the face it is nothing at all as they
account, and so measuring themselves by these new thoughts as unbaptized they
addresse themselves to take it up after the manner of Dipping: but truly they
want [lack] a Dipper that hath authority from heaven, as had John whom they
please to call a Dipper, of whom it is sayd that it might be manifested his
Baptisme was from heaven. A man can receive nothing, that is, lawful authority
or power to Baptize, unlesse it be given from heaven, which I desire they would
be pleased to mind and they will easily see their third baptism is from the
earth and not from heaven, as John's was. And if this case be further
considered it will appeare at the most to be but a defect in the manner and a
coming short in the quantity of the Element. It is a wonderful thing that a
nullity should thereof follow forthwith, of which more may be seen in the same
case before. Againe that the substance of an Ordinance of so high a nature and
great concernment should be founded in the criticknesse of a word and in the
quantity of an element is no lesse marveilous, to say no more. Oh, but
Baptismeisa is a Buriall as it is written, We are buried with him in Baptisme,
etc., and we are raised up also to newness of life. This Buriall and
resurrection only Dipping can import and hold forth . . . But inasmuch as this
is a very new way, and the full growth of it and settling is not yet known, if
it be to themselves, yet not to me and others: I will forbeare to say further
to it." (Pp. 12, 13, 15).
The extract taken from Dexter had been terribly garbled.
Sentences had been taken from different parts of the book and pieced together,
and sometimes the sentences did not even stop with a comma. The exact form of
the quotation as given above may be found in The Independent, Oct. 7,
1880. The article appeared as an editorial, and the author's name does not
appear; but Dr. Whitsitt very closely follows the line of proof and quotations
in that editorial and some dozen others which may be found in The
Independent from June 24, 1880, to Dec. 13, I883. But this quotation does
not sustain Dr. Whitsitt's contention, for P. B. was not discussing the newness
of dipping, but a proper administrator and rebaptism. And he taunts his
opponent in "A Reply, To the Reader," London, 1643, with:
"A man that had a minde to come to R. B. in his third
Baptisme, before a yeare or two spent in the serious weighing of the matter,
would find happily that R. B. had left his third Baptisme, and taken up a
church."
But P. B. did not think dipping was a new thing. In the
quotation as given are found some dots. Those dots indicate the omission of a
significant statement. P. B. there declares that dipping was not a new thing.
He says:
"The Romanists, some of them, and some of the poor
ignorant Welsh do use dipping."
And in A Reply he asks whether they learned dipping from
the Romanists or the Welsh?
1. I do not regard this anonymous author, P. B., as of any
weight. One of the officials of the British Museum wrote me: "The book is
not considered here as of any particular value, only an ordinary controversial
pamphlet." His name, Praise-God Barebones, is enough to condemn him. It is
said his two brothers assumed the names, respectively, of "Christ came
into the World to save Barebones" and "If Christ had not Died Thou
hadst been Damned Barebones." I am surprised that any one would quote such
an author as decisive on any point. Yet this man is one of Dr. Whitsitt's chief
witnesses.
2. It is perfectly apparent that the words of. P. B. have
been wofully misused. It leads us to suspect that all the authors that Dr.
Whitsitt has quoted need further light thrown on them. Even as quoted by Dexter,
P. B. does not sustain Dr. Whitsitt's theory; and the original is certainly
against him.
3. "Praise-God Barebones" defended sprinkling,
but he nowhere says dipping was a new thing. That it was practiced in the days
of the apostles, that it was used in hot countries, that "the Romanists,
some of them, and some of the poor ignorant Welsh do use dipping." He was
a Pedobaptist, and believed in sprinkling, and so tried to refute the opinion
of the Anabaptists on dipping; but he does not declare that dipping or a denial
of infant baptism to be a new thing. "The new way of Baptizing," or
as it is called here "the new dipping," because the act had been
repeated, over and over again, in his book he declares to be rebaptizing, or
denying the perpetuity of the Roman Catholic Church.
Thomas Kilcop, a Baptist, 1642, who wrote a book called
"A Short Treatise on Baptisme," does not think so highly of
"Praise-God Barebones" as Dr. Whitsitt does. He says he spoke
"evil of us," and his "sin was open." Dr. Dexter is surprised
that Kilcop in replying to P. B. "makes no allusion whatever to Barbon's
charge of the newness of the dipping way." (True Story of John Smyth, P.
48). To me there is nothing strange in this, for .the simple reason
"Barbon," or P. B., had made no such charge. This position of
Kilcop's is in full confirmation of the position that I took in regard to P.
B., that the discussion was in regard to the authority of the baptism of Rome.
But Dr. Whitsitt is very brave and says:
One of our moderns would have denied out of hand that
adult immersion had ever become extinct in England; but Mr. Kilcop knew more
about the matter. He conceded that point without any question, and argued that
even though immersion had become extinct the Baptists had as much right 'to erect
baptisme' as the Independents had 'to erect a church state.' It would be
impossible for a man to urge an argument like this, who took immersion for
granted; on the contrary, that was the very thing he did not take for granted.
(P. 121).
The only reference that Dr. Whitsitt gives is out of
Dexter, and after reading this statement of Dr. Whitsitt I have not only
examined Dexter but have read Kilcop's book through, and I find nothing like
such conclusions. As a matter of fact, the first thing Kilcop does after
announcing his text is to declare that "Baptisme is a Greek
word and most properly signifies dipping in English; and
therefore the parties baptised are said to be baptised not at, but in, Jordan.
Then note, that the baptizing or dipping in water belongs to Christ's disciples
and none else." (P. 1).
And there is not another word that I have found about
dipping in the book. Certainly this is taking dipping for granted, and
certainly there is nothing that would intimate that dipping was a new thing.
The testimony of Edward Barber, 1641, to immersion is
clear and decisive. Throughout this discussion Barber takes dipping for granted
and gives reasons why infant baptism should not prevail. The full title of his
book is: *"A small treatise of baptisme, or dipping, wherein is cleerely
shewed that the Lord Christ ordained dipping for those only that profess
repentance and faith. 1. Proved by scriptures. 2. By arguments. 3. A paralell
betwixt circumcision and dipping. 4. An answere to some objections by P. B. Psal.
119, 130. By Edward Barber. Printed in the yeare 1641."
I give a few extracts from Barber, and many more might be
added:
"The thesis that Christ ordained dipping for those
only that profess repentance and faith' is mentioned under four heads; viz.:
'1. Proved by Scriptures. 2. By Arguments. 3. A Parallel betwixt circumcision
and Dipping. 4. An Answere to some objections by P. B. Psal. 119. 130.'"
* I quote from the original, but a reprint may be had from
the Baptist Book Concern, Louisville. Ky., for 10 cents.
"But the dipping of beleevers is that good old way of
Christ, and infants is not." (P. 14). "But for infants' dipping there
is no expresse description of the persons, condition, time, whereas true
dipping, which is that one dipping Ephes. 4. 5., which is the dipping of
repentance for remission of sinnes, Mark 1. 4. it is most evidently and
faithfully set down for persons, conditions and times, viz.," etc. (P.
15).
"Thus for true dipping there is a certain time
appointed as was for circumcision, Acts 8. 37. yea commanded, Acts 10.
48." (P. 16).
So that this covenant standeth between God and man,
manifested by Holy Writ is: That as there is but one Lord; one Faith; and one
Dipping, Eph. 4. 5. which is the Dipping of Repentance for Remission of sinnes,
Mark 1. 4. so there is but one way of entrance into the Covenant under the
Gospel," etc. (P. 18).
"Quest. 5. But what is the true ordinance of the
dipping of Christ, and wherein doth it differ from childrens Dipping, which is
the best way to show the truth; and what benefit doth Beleevers receive by
it." (P. 19).
"Eighthly, that the Beleever may in that day roll
away all the reproach of Egypt, or Antichristianisme, renouncing the marke of
the Beast in our right hands, by holding or fighting for him, or in our
forehead. Revel. 13. 14, by dipping of Infants, that false Constitution of Rome
to beget grece, thus it is cleere: who are the true subjects of Dipping, And
who are not." (P. 21).
"In short, all these holy ends that God aimed at in
true dipping, are wholly made voide, and of no effect in the dipping of
Infants, which the Lord Christ commanded not. Jere. 7.3. 1. Revel. 22.
18. Matth. 28. 19. 20. nor came into his heart." (P. 22).
"6. If the dipping of Infants be God's Ordinance,
Christ was not so faithfull over his House a sonne, as Moses a servant
was; For Moses made and set out all things, according to the patterne,
Heb. 8. 5. but if Christ received any patterne for dipping infants, he
hath left no rule for it, by precept, or example."(P. 23).
"But the dipping of Infants was never heard of in all
the Institutions of Christ, or preachings of the Apostles," etc. (P. 30).
The book nowhere intimates that there were ever any
Baptists who practiced sprinkling, or that the immersion of believers was a new
thing. Dr. Whitsitt makes the following quotation from Barber:
Beloved Reader, it may seem strange that in these times
when such abundance of Knowledge of the Gospell is professed in the World, that
there should notwithstanding be generally such ignorance, especially in and
amongst those that professe themselves Ministers thereof, of that glorious
principle True Baptisme or Dipping, Ephe. 4, 5, Instituted by the
Lord Jesus Christ, which all that look for life and salvation by him ought to
be partakers of; it being that onely which was received by the Apostles and
Primitive Churches, and for a long time unviolably kept and practiced by the
Ministerie of the Gospel in the planting of the first Churches, and that the
Lord should raise up mee a poore Tradesman to devulge this glorious Truth, to
the World's Censuring. (Pp. 112, 113). ,
Even if Barber had said that believers' immersion was a
new thing in England that would not have made it so. Prof. Vedder makes answer
to this point:
"But a thing is not necessarily true because Barber
says it; he was—as he frankly confesses, and his treatise attests it—an
unlearned man, and was not acquainted with the history or literature of his own
people. We positively know that he was not the first to 'devulge this glorious
truth."'
But I can reply more directly in two ways:
1. The word devulge does not mean to make known a
thing for the first time. It does not mean that Barber was a discoverer. The
word means only to publish a thing, according to Webster, and it may or may not
have been known before. Henry Denne, who was baptized in 1643, and had been
since that date a preacher, was sent on a special mission, by the Baptist
Church at Fenstanton, October 28, 1653, and it is said of him:
"On that day he was chosen and ordained, by imposition
of hands, a messenger to divulge the Gospel of Jesus Christ." (Adam
Taylor's History General Baptists, Vol. I., p. 150).
No one would fail to know that the word meant in this
passage simply to proclaim.
2. The thing that Barber was to divulge, and his whole
treaty shows it, was not dipping, but believers' baptism. He had been
imprisoned for denying infant baptism and his release gave him an opportunity
for affirming believers' baptism. His words are:
By Edward Barber, Citizen, and Merckant- Taylor of London;
late Prisoner, for denying the sprinkling of Infants, and requiring tithes now
under the Gospel to be Gods Ordinance."
There is not a word in this entire book which could by any
possible construction be forced to mean that immersion was a new thing. Indeed,
in the very passage that Dr. Whitsitt quotes Barber claims:
"Instituted by the Lord Jesus Christ, which all that
look for life and Salvation by him ought to be partakers of, it being that
onely which was received by the Apostles and Primitive Churches, and for a long
time unviolably kept and practiced by the ministerie of the Gospel in the
planting of the first Churches."
But what about Barber himself? Crosby declares that he was
baptized long before 1641, and thus we have another witness to immersion before
1641. Crosby says:
"Mr. Edward Barber, a gentleman of great learning,
was first a minister in the established church, and embraced the principles of
the Baptists, long before the breaking out of the civil wars. He was the means
of convincing many that infant baptism had no foundation in Scripture, and soon
gathered a numerous congregation."(Vol. III., p. 3).
A very scholarly Baptist of those times was A. R., 1642,
who wrote two books on the Vanity and Childishness of Infants Baptisme. The
first book was against infant baptism as held in the Episcopal Church and the
second as held by Dissenters. A. R. readily refers to the Greek language. In
the first part, in the beginning, there is a discussion of dipping. There is no
intimation that it is a new thing. Indeed, every argument presented by A. R.
might be profitably used by a Baptist author of today. But Dr. Whitsitt makes a
characteristic mistake. He says:
The work of A. R., which comes under notice in this place,
is entitled: The Second Part of the Vanity and Childishness of Infants
Baptisme, London, 1642. On Page 29 of this Second Part Dr. Dexter
has found the following quotation, which demonstrates that A. R. did not take
immersion for granted. (p. 119).
Dr. Whitsitt here copies Dexter, mistake and all, and
without any apparent effort to verify the passage. There is no such quotation
in "the second part" of A. R.'s book. This so-called quotation is
found in the first part. This goes to show that Drs. Dexter and Whitsitt are
not accurate, and that they cannot
be depended upon. But as a matter of fact words have been placed in this
quotation which change the meaning of the author.
Dr. Whitsitt's
version, 1896: If any shall thinke it strange and unlikely that all the
godliest Divines and best churches should be thus deceived on this point of
baptisme for so many yeares together [i. e., as never before to know that
true baptism is dipping and dipping alone true baptism); let them consider
that all Cristendome (except here and there one, or some few, Or no considerable
number) was swallowed up in grosse Popery for many hundred yeares before
Luther's time, which was not until about 100 yeares agone. (Dexter, True
Story, p. 49). |
A. R.'s Words, 1642: And if any shall think it strange and unlikely that all
the godliest Divines and best churches should be thus deceived on this point
of baptism for so many yeares together, let him consider that all
Christendome (except here and there one, or some few, or no considerable
number) was swallowed up in grosse Popery for many hundred yeares before
Luther's time, which was not until about 100 yeares agone. |
You will notice that the words have been added: ["i.
e., as never before to know that true baptism is dipping and dipping alone true
baptism."] There is not a word about dipping in this quotation from A. R.
nor for pages near it. The author has been made to say things he did not say.
A. R. is singularly clear on dipping, but he did not have dipping under
discussion at this time. This is manufactured testimony.
A. R. met with a very bitter opponent by the name of
William Cooke; Although he called his book a "Learned and Full Answer to a
Treatise Intitled; the Vanity of ChiIdish Baptisme" it is very certain he
knew little of the Baptists and that he was a very bitter enemy, I give in full
his third and fourth reasons against dipping as practiced by the Baptists:
"Thirdly, this dousing over head, and under water
that A. R. pleads for, as essential to baptisme, seems directly against the
Sixth Commandment, and exposeth the person baptized to the danger of death. For
first, suppose the party be fit for baptism (as they account) in the sharpe
Winter as now beleeving, professing, &c. He must immediately be taken to
the river (as his tenet seems to hold) and there plunged in over head and
eares, though he came forth covered with yce. But if he escaped perishing with
cold; how can he escape being choaked and stiffled with the water, to signifie
his buriall: and, thirdly, be taken up, as this Disputer seems to reason? But
whatsoever be the danger of freezing, or suffocation; it seems this he holds
the onely baptisme, and must not therefore be swerved from."
Then follows the fourth reason which Dr. Whitsitt partly
quotes; but he omits matters which are necessary to a complete understanding of
this fourth reason. I will place side by side the original and Dr. Whitsitt's
version.
William Cooke's words, 1644 : Fourthly, will not this their new manner of dipping be
found also against the Seventh Commandment in the Decalogue? For I would know
with these new. dippers, whether the parties to be dowsed and dipped, may be
baptized in a garment or no? If they may, then happily the garment may keep,
the water from some part of the body, and then they are not rightly baptized;
for the whole man, say they, must be dipped. Againe, I would aske what
warrant they have for dipping, or baptizing garments, more than the Papists
have for baptizing Bells? Therefore belike the parties must be naked, and
multitudes present as at John's baptisme, and the parties men and women of
ripe yeares, as being able to make confession of their faith and repentance:
yet though they both sinne against the Sixth Commandment, indangering life,
and against all common honestie and civilitie, and Christian modestie
required in the Seventh Commandment, they must have this way observed,
because they fancie it the onely baptisme. Shall we thinke this way the
baptisme of John, Christ and his Apostles?" (Pp. 21, 292). |
Dr. Whitsitt's version, 1896: Fourthly, will not this their manner of dipping be found
also against the Seventh Commandment in the Decalogue? For I would know with
these new dippers whether the parties to be dowsed and dipped may be baptized
in a garment or no? If they may then happily the garment may keep the water
from some part of the body, and then they are not rightly baptized; for the
whole man, say they, must be dipped. Againe, I would aske what warrant they
have for dipping or baptizing garments, more than the Paptists have for
baptizing Bells? Therefore belike the parties must be naked and multitudes
present as at John's baptisme, and the parties men and women of ripe yeares,
as being able to make a confession of their faith and repentance,"etc.
(Pp. 21, 22). |
And this is the witness? An enemy, a man who must sustain his
position by slander, and manifestly betrays ignorance. If his information had
been equal to his knowledge his testimony would have been conclusive. Any one
would know that these slanderous statements are justified by no facts. And even
this witness does not sustain Dr. Whitsitt. He says nothing about 1641, and
while he calls dipping new he likewise makes the assertion that the Scriptures
teach sprinkling. This is the only date he mentions. Does he mean that dipping
is "new," since it was not taught in the Scriptures? And then dipping
might have been "new" to him, and with his knowledge of the Baptists
it may have been practiced among them for a long time. He manifestly was
ignorant of their rites and ceremonies.
The Baptists in 1641 had a resolute and violent opponent
in the person of Daniel Featley. He was born in 1582, and died in 1645. He was
long the determined opponent of the Baptists. In 1642 he held a discussion with
four Baptists in Southwark. His account of the discussion is to be found in "The
Dippers Dipt; or, the Anabaptists Duckt and Plunged Over Head and Ears at a
Disputation at Southwark." I have examined the first three and the sixth
editions of this work. He was so bitter that he declared: "I could hardly
dip my pen in any thing but gall." He nowhere intimates that the Baptists
or dipping were novelties. In the Epistle Dedicatory, Featly says:
"Now, of all Hereticks and Schismaticks, the
Anabaptist in three regards ought to bee most carefully looked ' into, and
severely punished, if not utterly extermmated and banished out of the Church
and Kingdom."
His reasons are as follows:
"First. In regard of their affinity with many other
damnable Heretiques, both Ancient and Later, for they are allyed unto, and may claim kindred with."
And then he gives a catalogue of all manner of heretics:
"Secondly. In regard of their audacious attempts upon
Church and State, and their insolent acts committed in the face of the Sun, and
in the eye of the high Court of Parliament."
Under this second heading Featley says:
"They preach, and print, and practise their
Hereticall impieties openly, and hold their Conventicles weekly in our chief
Cities, and Suburbs thereof, and there prophesie by turnes; and (that I may use
the phrase of Tertullian) aedificantur in
ruinam, they build one another in the faith of their Sect, to the ruine of
their souls; they flock in great multitudes to their Jordans, and both
Sexes enter into the River, and are dipt after their manner, with a kind of
spell containing the head of their erroneous Tenets, and their eugageing
themselves in their Scismaticall Covenants, and (if I may so speake)
combination of separation. And as they defile our Rivers with their impure
washings, and our Pulpits with their false Prophecies, and Phanaticall Enthusiasmes,
so the Presses sweat and groane under the load of their blasphemies. For they
print not only Anabaptisme, from whence they take their name; but many other
most damnable doctrines, tending to carnall liberty, Familisme, and a medley
and hodge-podge of all Religions.
"Thirdly. In regard to the peculiar malignity this
heresie hath to magistracy," etc.
He then proceeds to say that "with these Hereticks I
enter into Lists in the ensuing Tractate." He then proceeds to tell us
that he has known these "new upstart sectaries" for twenty years near
his own home. His words are:
"As Solinus writeth,
that in Sardinia where there is a venemous serpent called Solifuga, (whose
biting is present death) there is also at hand a fountain, in which they who
wash themselves after they are bit, are presently, cured. This venemous serpent
(vere Solifuga) flying from, and shunning the light of Gods Word, is the
Anabaptist, who in these later times first shewed his shining head and speckled
skin, and thrust out his sting near the place of my residence for more than
twenty yeers."
Here we have the explicit testimony of Featley that the
Baptists were dippers as far back as 1620. Prof. Vedder very truthfully says:
"These words of Dr. Featley are specially
significant. He professes to speak of Baptists from personal knowlege, and
though he was bitterly prejudiced, there is no reason why he should exaggerate
in such a particular. Since he wrote in 1644, his 'twenty years,' however
carelessly he used the phrase, evidently carry the date of immersion far back
of 1641."
There is also a conclusive passage in The Preface to the
Reader. By leaving off some sentences Dr. Whitsitt makes Featley give a date to
the introduction of immersion in England which Featley does not give. Featley
begins with the Anabaptists in Germany in the time of Stock; that he was a
blockhead and kindled a fire out of the chips from this block, that this fire
was in England in the time of Elizabeth and other sovereigns, and that lately
it has burned very brightly. This is a very different thing from what Dr.
Whitsitt makes Featley say. I give the two versions in parallel columns.
Featley's words, 1644: Of whom we may say, as Irenaeus sometime spake of the Heretick Ebon, the Father
of the Ebonites, his name in the Hebrew signifyeth silly, or simple,
and such God wat was he: So we may say, the name of the father of the
Anabaptists signifieth in English a senselesse piece of wood or block
and a very blockhead was he: Yet out of this block were cut those chips
that kindled such a fire in Germany, Halsatia, and Suevia that
could not be fully quenched, no not with the bloud of 150,000. of them killed
in war, or put to death in severall places by Magistrates. This fire in the reigns of Q. Elizabeth and K. James and our gracious Sovereign, till
now, was covered in England under the ashes; or if it brake out at any time,
by the care of the Ecclesiasticall and Civil Maglistrate, it was soon put
out. But of late since the unhappy distractions which our sins have brought
upon us, the Temporall Sword being other ways employed, and the Spirituall
locked up fast in the scabberd, this sect, amon others, hath so far
Presumed upon the Patience of the State that it hath held weekly
Conventicles, re-bapitized hundreds of men and women together in the twilight
in Rivilets, and some arms of the Thames and elsewhere, dipping them over
head and ears. It hath printed divers pamphlets in defense of their heresie,
yea and challenged some of our Preachers to disputation. Now although my bent
hath been hitherto against the most dangerous enemy of our Church and State,
the Jesuit, to extinguish such balls of wildfire as they have cast in
the bosome of our Church, yet seeing this strange fire kindled in the
neighbouring parishes, and many Nadabs and Abihu's offering it
on God's Altar, l thought it my duty to cast the waters of Siloam upon
it to extinguish it. |
Dr. Whitsitt's version, 1896: But of late, he says, since the unhappy
distractions which our sins have brought upon us, the Temporall Sword being,
other ways employed and the Spirituall locked up fast in the Scabbard,
this sect among others hath so far presumed upon the patience of the
State that it hath held weekly Conventicles rebaptized hundreds of men and
women together in the twilight, in Rivelets and some arms of the Thames and
Elsewhere, dipping them over head and ears. |
There is still another proof from Featley that the
Baptists dipped and that dipping was the practice of the Anabaptists on the
Continent and in England from the time of Henry VIII. Featley was answering a
tract, which we quote in another place, written by A. R. The title of this book
was the Vanity of Childrens Baptisme, in which the author declares dipping to
be the only act of baptism. Featley does not deny that this was the way the
Anabaptists performed this act nor does he say that it was a new thing, but
rather affirms what the author says and goes on to declare that the Anabaptists
always dipped. You will remember that A. R. wrote in the year 1642, and here is
the answer that Featley makes to this English Baptist:
"At Zurick after many disputations between Zuinglius
and the Anabaptists, the Senate made an Act, that if any presumed to
rebaptize those that were baptized before, they should be drowned.
At Vienna many Anabaptists were so tyed together in
chains, that one drew the other after him into the river, wherein they were all
suffocated. (Vide Supra, p. 61).
"Here you may see the hand of God in punishing these
sectaries some way answerable to their sin according to the observation of the
wise man (Gastius, p. 18), quo quis peccat eo puniatur, they who drew
others into the whirl-pool of errour, by constraint draw one another into the
river to be drowned; and they who prophaned baptisme by a second dipping, rue
it by a third immersion. But the punishment of these Catabaptists we
leave to them that have the Legislative power in their hands, who though by
present connivence they may seem to give them line: yet, no doubt, it is
that they more entangle themselves and more easily bee caught. For my part, I
seek not the confusion of their persons, but the confusion of
their errours, two whereof A. R. undertaketh strenuously to
defend." (P. 73).
The two "errours" which A. R. "strenuously
defended" were immersion and believers' baptism. Featley declares that
these were the common errors of the Anabaptists in England and elsewhere.
Featley in another place, after quoting the law as given above, says:
"Let the punishment bear upon it the print of the
sin: for as these sectaries drew one
another into their errors, so also into the gulfe; and as they drowned men
spiritually by re-baptizing, and so prophaning the holy sacrament, so also they
were drowned corporally. In the year of our Lord, 1539, two Anabaptists were
burned beyond Southwark, in Newington; and a little before them,
five Dutch Anabaptists were burned in Smithfield." (P. 57).
Here is a direct admission that the Anabaptists of
England, as early as 1539, were dippers.
Dr. Featley quotes the article on dipping, which is given
elsewhere, from the Confession of 1644 and then says:
"This Article is wholly sowred with the new leaven of
Anabaptisme: I say new leaven, for it cannot be proved that any of the
antient Anabaptists maintained any such position, there being three wayes of
baptizing, either by dipping, or washing, or sprinkling, to which the
Scriptures alludeth in sundry places: the Sacrament is rightly administered by
any of the three; and whatsoever is
here alleged for dipping, we
approve of, so farre as it excludeth not the other two." (P. 182).
Dr. Whitsitt quotes this passage with evident delight.
Unhappily for Dr. Whitsitt, and "happily for
us," the passage is perfectly clear when we consult Featley, and know
exactly what he did say. It is very evident from this passage that there were
two classes of Anabaptists, the "antient" and the "new."
Featley divided the Anabaptists into three classes, two ancient and one
"new." He says:
"The first broached their Doctrine about the year
250, which was this: That all those who had been baptized by Novatus, or
any other hereticks, ought to be rebaptized by the orthodox Pastors of the Church.
"The second broached theirs about the year 380, which
was this: That none were rightly baplized but those that held with Donatus,
and consequently, that all others who had received Baptisme in the Catholic
Church, by any other save those of his party, ought to be rebaptized.
"The third broached theirs in the year 1525, which
was this: That Baptisme ought to be administered by none, but such as can
give a good account of their Faith; and in case any have been baptized in their
Infancy, that they ought to be rebaptized after they come to years of
discression, before they are to be admitted to the Church of Christ." (P.
28).
Now it is clear that Featley regards the "new as
dating back to 1525, or 126 years before 1641. And in giving an account of the
tenets of these Anabaptists since the Reformation he says the first tenet,
which is "peculiar to their sect," is "that none
are rightly baptized but those who are dipped."(P. 36).
OTHER WITNESSES.
In 1644 an anonymous author wrote a tract called the
Loyall Convert. Of this tract Dr. Whitsitt says:
The first of these belongs to the year 1644 and is
entitled "The New Distemper,' written by the author of the "Loyal
Convert." Dr. Dexter, who appears to be the only person that has examined
this pamphlet, reports that the whole book takes its name as an attack upon the
'prophanations' of these dippers." ("True Story," page 50, with
note). Dipping being for the author a "new distemper,' it is manifest that
he did not take it for granted, but was perfectly aware of the change from
pouring or sprinkling to immersion, which took place in the year 1641. (Pp.
134, 135).
I did not have this tract in hand, so I wrote to the
British Museum in regard to it. The reply was: "There is nothing in this
tract, either on dipping or infant baptism or rebaptism. It is simply on the
subject of church government and reforming the Liturgie."
1. Knutton wrote a book, 1644, against the Baptists called
Seven Qvestions abovt the Controversie betweene the Chvrch of England and the
Separatists and Anabaptists. Dr. Whitsitt thus refers to him:
"In that place (p. 23) Mr. Knutton had said, 'this
opinion [of rebaptizing by dipping] being but new and upstart, there is good
reason they should disclaim it and be humbled for it.' (Dexter, True Story, p.
50). No finer opportunity was ever presented to deny a charge with indignation
if it had been untrue." (P. 123).
Knutton said no such thing. Here are his words in answer
to query 5.: "Whether it is lawful to be baptized or no? When they heard
this they were baptized in the name of the Lord Jesus, and when Paul laid his
hands upon them the Holy Ghost came on them and they spake with tongues and
prophesied. So that there is no ground for rebaptization. Wherefore Separatist
does very ill opposing our baptizing of infants, as, proved before Lydia with
all her household were baptized; likewise we find no negative precept against
paedobaptism. Then such as oppose it do ill; for they follow those pestilent
heretics called Anabaptists in Germany, who sprang up there (when the light of
the gospel began to shine) not very long since, being but new and upstart,
there is good reason they should disclaim it and be humbled for it."
There is not a word in regard to dipping in this
quotation. And the words "new and upstart" have reference to
"Luther's time," and not to 1641.
Ephraim Pagett, 1645, is Dr. Whitsitt's next witness. He
declares there were fourteen kinds of Anabaptists, and following his method of
enumeration he could have numbered a thousand kinds just as well. John
Stoughton in his Ecclesiastical History of England, From the opening of the
Long Parliament to the death of Oliver Cromwell, says of Pagett:
"Certain parties under the Commonwealth had the
habit, and the fashion still exists, of exagger-ating the number of religious
denominations. Ephraim Pagitt in his 'Heresiography,' published in 1654, gives
a list of between forty and fifty the historical worth of which enumeration we
may estimate, when we observe that he distinguishes between Anabaptists and
plunged Anabaptists, between Separatists and Semi-Separatists, between
Brownists and Barrowists and then proceeds to specify three orders of
Familists." (P. 365).
It is very certain that Stoughton has no very high regard
for the authority of "Old Ephraim," as Pagett was contemptuously
called.
Masson's description of "Old Father Ephraim" is
rich. He says:
"A well-known personage in London, of humbler
pretensions than Featley was a certain Ephraim Pagett (or Pagit), commonly
called 'Old Father Ephraim,' who had been parson of the church of St. Edmund,
in Lombard Street, since 1601, and might therefore have seen and been seen by
Shakespeare. Besides other trifles, he had published in 1635 a book called
'Christianographia,' or a descriptive enumeration of the various sorts of
Christians in the world out of the pale of the Roman Catholic Church. Perhaps
because he had thus acquired a fondness for the statistics of religious
denominations, it occurred to him to write, by way of sequel, a 'Heresiography;
or a Description of the Heretics and Sectaries of these later times.' It
was published in 1645, soon after Featley's book, from which it borrows hints
and phrases. There is an Epistle Dedicatory to the Lord Mayor and aldermen of
the city of London very similar in its syntax and punctuation, and containing
this touching appeal: 'I have lived among you almost a jubilee, and seen your
great care and provision to keep the city free from infection, in the shutting
up of the sick and in carrying them to your pest houses, in setting warders to
keep the whole from the sick, in making of fires and in perfuming the streets,
in resorting to your churches, in pouring out your prayers to Almighty God,
with fasting and alms, to be propitious to you. The plague of heresy is
greater, and you are now in more danger than when you buried five thousand a
week.' Then after an epistle to the reader, signed 'Old Ephraim Pagit,' there
follows the body of the treatise in about 160 pages. The Anabaptists are taken
first and occupy 55 pages; but a great many other sects are subsequently
described, some in a few pages, some in a single paragraph. There is an
engraved title page to the volume, containing small caricatures of six of the
chief sort of sectaries, Anabaptism being represented by one plump, naked
fellow dipping another, much plumper, who is reluctantly stooping down on
all-fours. The book, like Featley's, seems to have sold rapidly. In the third
edition, published in 1646, there is a postscript in which the poor old man
tells us that it had cost him much trouble. The Sectaries among his own
parishioners had quarreled with him on account of it, and refused to pay him his
tithes; nay, as he walked in the streets he was hooted at and reviled, and
somebody had actually affirmed 'Doctor Featley's devil to be transmitted into
Old Ephraim Paqet.' This seems to have cut him to the quick, though he avows
his sense of inferiority in learning to the great Doctor. In short, we can see
Father Ephraim as a good old silly body, of whom people make fun." (Life
of John Milton, Vol. III., p. 139).
This picture is not overdrawn. My edition, 1647, in the
Postscript, tells plainly that the "Sectaries," even of his own
congregation, would not pay tithes because, they said, he had slandered them.
Here is a book confessedly repudiated by the Anabaptists, and yet this very
book is one of Dr. Whitsitt's principal testimonies. Surely we are not to believe
the enemies of the Anabaptists when they directly say that they are slandered.
Certainly we would not expect this from a Baptist!
Dr. Whitsitt makes this quotation under Pagett:
Yea at this day they have a new crochet come into
their heads, that all that have not been plunged nor dipt under water, are not
truly baptized, and these also they rebaptize: And this their error ariseth
from ignorance of the Greek word Baptize, which signifieth no more then washing
or ablution, as Hesychus, Stephanus, Scapulae, Budeus, great masters of the
Greek tongue, make good by many instances and allegations out of many authors.
(P. 30).
But this quotation, as it stands, out of its connection,
does not properly reflect the mind of Pagett. He had been discussing fourteen
kinds of Anabaptists, and declared they were constantly changing their minds.
He now comes to the Anabaptists who originated in the times of Luther, and
these Anabaptists had taken up this "new crotchet." He then proceeded
to argue that sprinkling was permitted in the Scriptures and sometimes it had
been permitted in practice. But he declares that both dipping and sprinkling
were allowed in his church. His words are:
"And both are allowed by our church; and sprinkling
hath been rather used among us, by reason of the coldness of our climate, and
the tenderness of our infants." (P. 31).
He emphatically declares that dipping was then in
practice, and that it was not a new thing. The trouble with the Anabaptists is
that they would not recognize sprinkling. That was the contention of Pagett. He
mentions no date and says nothing about 1641. He contends that "true
baptism to be as well by sprinkling as by dipping." (P. 31). But the
Anabaptists did not think,: so, and so Pagett proceeds to say:
Of their manner of rebaptizing, and other rites. They
flock in great multitudes to their Jordans, and both Sexes enter into
the River and are dipt after their manner with a kind of spell, containing the
heads of their erroneous Tenets, and their ingaging themselves schismaticall
Covenants and combination of separation. In the Thames and Rivers, the Baptizer
and the party baptized goe both into the Rivers, and the parties to be baptized
are dipt or plunged under water." (Pp. 32, 33).
The careful reader will at once recognize these as the
words of Dr. Featley. Such was Ephraim Pagett.
Dr. Whitsitt introduces as a witness Robert Baillie, 1646,
a violently prejudiced Scotchman. He had some opportunities for observation,
and had he been less prejudiced and more honest his testimony would have some
weight. He says in the margin: "The pressing of dipping and the exploding
of sprinkling is but an yesterday conceit of the English Anabaptists."
And his statement in the body of the book is:
Among the new inventions of the late Anabaptists, there is
none which with greater animosity they set on foot, then the necessity of
dipping over head and cars, then the nullity of affusion and sprinkling in the
administration of baptisme. Among the old Anabaptists, or those over the sea to
this day so farre as I can learn, by their writs or any relation that yet has
come to my ears, the question of dipping and sprinkling came never upon the
table. As I take it, they dip none, but all whom they baptize they sprinkle in
the same manner as is our custome. The question about the necessity of dipping
seems to be taken up only the other year by the Anabaptists in England, as a
point which alone they conceive is able to carry their desire of exterminating
infant baptisme; for they know that parents upon no consideration will be
content to hazard the life of their tender infants by plunging them over
headand ears in a cold river. Let us, therefore, consider if this sparkle of
new light have any derivation from the lamp of the Sanctuary, or the Sun of
righteousnesse, if it be according to Scripturall truth or any good
reason." (Anabaptism, the True Fountaine of Independency, &c., p. 163.
London, 1646).
Upon these words Dr. Whitsitt puts forward this argument:
Baillie in the above passage expressly declares that dipping
was "a new invention of the late Anabaptists," "an yesterday
conceit of the English Anabaptists,' "taken up onely the other year,"
'a sparkle of new light." He does not indicate the precise year in
which it was introduced, but these expressions agree to a nicety with the
position that this event took place only about five years before he published
his book. Every word of his testimony confirms the deliverance of the Jessey
Church Records to the effect that prior to the year 1640 "none had so practiced
in England to professed believers," while he in the year 1641 the change
from pouring and sprinkling to immersion was duly inaugurated.
But Baillie's testimony and Dr. Whitsitt's claims are open
to several very serious drawbacks, viz.:
1. Baillie nowhere says the Baptists began dipping in
1641. It might have been an hundred years before this, for the word
"new," as we have seen, is a very flexible one on the pen of this
class of controversialists.
2. Baillie is very guarded in his language. He does not
speak positively, for he only says that seems to be taken up," "so
far as I can learn," that has come to my ears," "as I take
it," etc. He does not say that dipping is a new thing, but the pressing
of dipping and the exploding of sprinkling is a yesterday conceit.
Yet it is upon these evasive statements that Dr. Whitsitt founds one of his
principal arguments.
3. Baillie distinctly holds and maintains with the same
process of guarded words that infant sprinkling is taught in the Word of God.
Indeed, this very passage says that dipping is not recent "but a sparkle
of new light," because it is not Scriptural. Baillie says:
Consider farther, that we doe not oppose the lawfulnesse
of dipping in some cases, but the necessity of it in all cases: Neither do they
impugn the expediency of sprinkling in some cases, but the lawfulnesse, of it
in any case. So both their doctrine and practice makes the state of the
question to be this; Whether in Baptisme it be necessary to put the whole
baptized person over head and ears in the water or if it be lawfull and
sufficient, at least in some cases, to poure o r sprinkle the water upon the
head of the person baptized? For the lawfulnesse of the sprinkling and against
the necessity of dipping. I reason thus. First, that action which the Spirit of
God in divers Scriptures expresses formally by the name of baptisme is lawfull
and expedient to be used in baptism. But sprinkling and pouring out of water
upon the party baptized without any dipping is by the Spirit of God in divers
Scriptures formally expressed by the name of baptisme." (P. 164).
4. Baillie on this very point of dipping among the
Anabaptists contradicts himself. Baillie here says that it is "a yesterday
conceit," and that it is the "new invention of the late
Anabaptists." But elsewhere in this book he declares that the Anabaptists
practiced dipping. In Chapter I. he says:
"Who are pleased to read the late little accusate and
learned treatise of Clopenburgh may perceive that the Mennonist dippers
do oppose the truth of Christ's human nature."
Here is a direct refutation, from Dr. Whitsitt's principal
witness, of the position that he has taken that Mennonites practiced
sprinkling.
In Chapter II. Baillie says:
"For the stricter ingagement of the Saints and godly
party their adherents, and for the clearer distinction of them from the
prophane multitude of all other congregations they thought meet to put upon
them the mark and character of a new Baptisme, making them renounce their old
as null, because received in their infancy, and in a false church. At the
beginning this rebaptization was but a secondary and less principall doctrine
among them, for Muncer himself was never rebaptized, neither in his own person
did he re-baptize any, yet, thereafter it became a more essential note of a
member of their church, and the crying down of infants baptism came to be a
most principall and distinctive doctrine of all in their way. Unto their new
gathered churches of rebaptized and dipped saints they did ascribe very
ample privileges," etc. (P. 32).
In Chapter IV. Baillie says of the Anabaptists:
"Sixthly, they esteem sprinkling no baptism at all;
they will have the whole body to be plunged over head and ears in the water;
this circumstance of plunging they account so necessary and essential to baptism,
that the change thereof into sprinkling makes the baptism to be null." (P.
91).
And in Chapter V. he says:
"Although many of the Tenets mentioned in the former
chapter may be dissembled and denied by divers of this sect, yet all of them
will acknowledge as their own, whatever almost is practiced either by the
Independents or Brownists, and besides, two Tenets more, Antipedobaptism and
Dipping. All who carry the name of Anabaptisme, though, through ignorance, they
know not; or through better instruction they dissent from many positions of
their brethren, yet will avowedly, and oft with passion, professe their mind
against the sprinkling of infants, pedorantisme, to all of them I ever heard of
is an abomination." (Page 137)
Here in the same book, by the same author, are found a
passage which declared the Anabaptists practiced sprinkling and four which say
they practiced dipping. I am not responsible for this contradiction. Yet this
is Dr. Whitsitt's witness.
5. We can prove by the Baptist Confession of Faith of 1644
that Baillie was guilty of slander. That Confession declared:
"The word baptizo signifies to dip or plunge (yet so
as convenient garments be both upon the Administrator and subject, with all
modesty)."
This same declaration was made by other Baptists. Mr.
Richardson, a very able Baptist, whom Baillie quotes in his book, is pleased to
say of nude baptism, as charged by Dr. Featley:
"But saith the Doctor, they goe men and women
together stark naked into their Jordans (Pp. 36 and 203). Wee answer, wee abhor
it, and deny that ever any of us did so, and challenge him to prove it, against
us, if he can; and if he cannot, it is fit, he should be known for a slanderer,
if he deserve no punishment for it." (Some Brief Considerations, p. 11.
London, Feby. 25, 1645).
In the face of these denials Baillie affirms:
"As for chastity, must it not be a great scandall, in
the face of all the Congregation where alone, Sacraments can be duly
celebrated, for men and women to stand up naked, as they were born; and naked
men to go into the water with naked women, holding them in their arms till they
have plunged them into the water? " (Ch. VII).
Here Baillie manifestly bore false witness against the
Anabaptists. If we do not believe Baillie in this matter, why should we in the
other?
6. Baillie attacked the motives of the Anabaptists, and
called them liars. In the margin of the chapter from which Dr. Whitsitt takes
his quotation are these words: "The lying spirit of Anabaptisme."
(Page 163). If you will notice the extract which Dr. Whitsitt gives, you will
see that Baillie attacks the motives of the Anabaptists. He says:
"The question about the necessity of dipping seems to
be taken up only the other year by the Anabaptists in England, as a point which
alone, as they conceive, is able to carry their desire of exterminating infant
baptism; for they know that parents, upon no consideration, will be content to
hazard the life of their tender infants by plunging them over head and ears in
a cold river." How did Baillie know, that the Anabaptists were not honest
in the belief that they were following the Scriptures, and that their only
motive in dipping was to "exterminate infant baptism? "
Baillie goes further, and charges the Baptists with
hypocrisy, and that they did not believe the Confession of 1644, and that it
was only put forth to mislead. His words are:
"Their ways as yet are not well known; but a little
time it seems will discover them, for their singular zeal to propagate their
way will not permit them long to lurk; only the Confession of faith, which the
other year seven of their Congregations did put forth, and late again in a
second corrected Edition, have set out with a bold preface to both the Houses,
of Parl.; may no more be taken for the measure of this faith, then that
Confession, which the Elder brethren in Holland did not long ago in the
name of all their company."
Surely no one will endorse this prejudiced onslaught and
slander of Baillie's; and yet this is the man whom we are asked to follow.
7. Baillie was the bitter enemy of the Anabaptists and
desired their destruction. The passages which I have taken from his writings to
this effect are so numerous that I cannot give them all. A few selections must
suffice. He says:
"We have ended our directorie for baptism. Thomas
Goodwin one day was exceedinglie confounded. He, has undertaken a publicke
lecture against the Anabaptists; it was said, under pretence of refuting them,
he betrayed our cause to them; that if the Corinthians, our chief ground for
the baptisme of infants, 'Your children are holy,' he expounded of reall
holiness, and preached down our ordinarie and necessare distinction of reall
and foederall holiness. Being passed hereupon he could no wayes cleare
himselfe, and no man took his part. God permits these gracious men to be many
wayes unhappie instruments; as yet their pride continues; but we are hopefull
the Parliament will not own their way so much as to tolerate it, if once they
found themselves masters. For the time they are loath to cast them off, and to
put their partie, lest they desert them." (The Letters and journals of
Robert Baillie. 1637-1662, Vol. II., p. 218).
"Our next worke, to give our advyce what to doe for
the suppressing of the Anabaptists, Antinomians, and other sectaries. This will
be a hard work; yet so much as concerns us will be quicklie dispatched, I hope
in one session." (P. 224).
"We spent a number of sessions on some propositions
of advyce to the Parliament, for suppressing Antinomians, Anabaptists, and
these who preaches a libertie for all religions. Even in these our good
Independents found in great difficultie; and, when we had carried our advyces
against their minds, they offered to give in contrare reasons to the
Parliament." (P. 228).
"Many of them preach and some print, a libertie of
conscience, at least the great equitie of a toleration for all religions; that
every man should be. permitted, without any feare so much as of discountenance
from the magistrate, to professe publicklie his conscience, were he ever so
erroneous, and also live according thereunto if he trouble not the public peace
by any seditious or wicked practice." (.P. 254).
Professor Vedder, after giving a number of quotations to
this effect from Baillie, remarks:
But enough, and more than enough, of quotations like
these. Surely, no scholar who has an atom of reputation to lose will venture to
deny, in the face of the proofs that have been produced, that the Scotch
Presbyterians, at least, advocated persecuting principles of the plainest kind.
Were it worth the while equally satisfactory proofs might be produced that
these principles were carried out into appropriate action." (Baptist
Quarterly Review, January-July, 1884).
A man who would not tolerate free speech and liberty of
conscience among the Anabaptists, and worked for severe legislative enactments
against them, could not be expected to be impartial in his statements about
them. Such a man was Robert Baillie.
8. Baillie was a Scotchman, and he thought that Anabaptism
would be contrary to the peace of Scotland, and therefore he did all in his
power to cast reproach upon them. Hanbury, one of the foremost writers on
Congregational matters, after referring to this book on "Anabaptism,"
feels called upon to apologize for it. His words are:
"The object of the author being to deal particularly
with the Baptists, so called, we feel it difficult, or invidious rather, to set
out his positions in any way which shall not involve the present
representatives of that denomination in some of the odium which he shows attaches
to it. That the descendants have rolled away the reproach thus laid on their
forefathers, is the shortest and most efficient answer to Baillie's
representation, where he writes, 'The errors of the Anabaptists, and their
divisions among themselves, are so many that to set them down distinctly and in
good order, is a task which I dare not undertake; much less can I give
assurance what is common to them all, and what proper to their several sects.'
(P. 29). It will help to expose the political ground of his hostility by his
nationality, thus: 'This immoderate love of licentiousness * * * puts them upon
a high degree of hatred and indignation against the Solemn League and Covenant,
against the Scottish nation whence it came; as two great impediments to their
quiet enjoying of that self-destroying and God-provoking liberty which, so
passionately, they lust after. Though for fear and other base respects, many of
them have swallowed down the Covenant in such equivocal senses as are evidently
contrary both to the express words and known intentions of the States which
enjoin it; yet since the time their strength and hopes are increased, these of
them who pretend to ingenuity and courage do not only with bitterness reject
it, but it is now become the object of their public invectives as the most
unhappy plague that did ever come to England. (P. 57).'" (Historical
Memorials, Vol. III., p. 223).
Thus Hanbury continues at some length. When we consider
this mixture of political hatred and religious intolerance I do not think from
the writings of Robert Baillie that we would be justified in reaching the
conclusion that dipping was an "invention" among the Baptists about
1641.
Another authority quoted by Dr. Whitsitt is J. Saltmarsh.
He was a Quaker, and opposed to all baptism. Dr. Whitsitt says:
Dr. Dexter also brings forward the performance of J.
SaItmarsh, entitled, "The Smoke in the Temple, Wherein is a Design for
Peace and Reconciliation of Believers of the several Opinions of these Times
about Ordinances, to a Forbearance each other in Love, and Meeknesse, and
Humility," etc. London, 1645. Mr. Saltmarsh here pp. 15,16, speaks of
"the dipping them in the water . . . . as the new baptism." (True
Story, p. 50), showing that he was entirely aware of the recent change, from
pouring and sprinkling, to immersion. (Page 135).
I am amazed at this quotation. I give parallel columns:
John Saltmarsh,
1646: 5. That the form by which they baptize, viz.: I
baptize thee in the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, is a form of
man's devising—a tradition of man, a new consequence drawn from
supposition and probability—and not a form left by Christ, to
say over them at the dipping them in the water: If Christ had said,
when you baptize them, say this over them, I baptize thee in the name of
the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost; and unless Jesus Christ had left this form
thus made up to their hands, they practice a thing made up by them
selves, and drawn or forced out of Jesus Christ's words, in Matt. 28,18. (Pp.
15,16). |
Dr. Whitsitt's version, 1896: "the dipping them in the water, . . . as the new
baptism." |
One-half of the sentence used by Dr. Whitsitt from
Saltmarsh I was able to find; but I read diligently for the phrase, "as
the new baptism." If it is in Saltmarsh's book, it is certainly nowhere
near the other words, "the dipping them in the water." This is
marvelous in my eyes.
I have been somewhat more successful with the next
authority of Dr. Whitsitt, viz.: J. Parnell, 1655. I parallel Dr. Whitsitt's
quotation with the author's words:
The words of J. Parnell, 1655: Now within these late yeers the Light of Christ,
beginning to stir peoples hearts, so that they come to see themselves in much
darkness and ignorance of these things which they read of in the scripture,
and also the corrupted of the Priests and Teachers, and what at Reprobates
they were concerning the faith, and that they profited not the people at all,
but they had heard them so long, and still minds not being directed to the
light, which showed them this, and should have led them out of this
condition, upon which they should have waited for direction to have found the
way of truth, but they run without to the Letter in their own wils and
wisdome, and so would find out a way by their own wisdome and imagination,
and so went out to search the scripture, but with a wrong eye, giving their
own meanings upon the scripture, and one cries this is my judgment, and thus
they are confounded and divided into their several judgments and opinions,
yet all still in one life and one nature, but onely confounded and divided in
their judgments of what the Prophets meant, and Christ meant, and which the
Apostles meant, but it is as a Book sealed, both to the learned and the
unlearned, and none is found worthy to open the seals, who is the light
wherein lies the ministrie; as this is the cause why they whose mindes are
from the light, are so divided and scattered in their judgments and opinions,
and one sets up a forme in his imagination, and another sets up a forme in
his imagination and one runs abroad into the world with his wisdome, and he
will go preach up his form and judgment to be the truth, and another he will
cry down that form for delusion, and preach up his form for a truth, and so
many deceivers and false spirits, are entered into the world, and one cries,
lo here is Christ if you can believe and be baptized you shall be saved; so
they that can say that is the way, and that they believe Christ dyed for
them, then they must be dipped in the water, and that they call baptizing of them,
and then they are of their church, and they call themselves Saints, though
they are still in the old nature. (Pp. 16, 17). |
Dr. Whitsitt's version, 1896: "Now within these late yeares . . . . . . they (the Anabaptists) say . . . . . they must be dipped
in the water, and that they call baptizing." (True Story, p. 51). |
From the above it will appear that I have been able to
find the first phrase now within these late yeers," and the last phrase
they must be dipped in the water, and that they call baptizing," but the
middle phrase "they (the Anabaptists) say" does not appear. Did
anyone ever see such garbling? And when we really find what the author did say
there is nothing about 1641 or dipping being a new thing. This garbling
was done by Dr. Dexter from whom Dr. Whitsitt took the quotation, without ever
reading the original. These are but samples of many other cases that could be
cited.
A CHALLENGE ACCEPTED.
The challenge has been put forth to name three individual believers
who were dipped before 1641. I accept the challenge and answer it in
three ways:
1. There existed in England whole churches of baptized
believers before 1641. I refer to another chapter for the existence and
number of Baptist churches in England before 1641. In this connection I
mention the names of only three churches. Goadby, who has written an able
Baptist history, and the facts of which, so far as I know, have never been
disputed, says:
"But the three churches we have mentioned—Hill
Cliffe, Eythorne and Bocking—deservedly rank as the most ancient Baptist
churches in England." (Goadby's Bye-Paths in Baptist History, p. 28. London,
1871).
In regard to the Hill Cliffe Church, Rev. D. 0. Davies,
Rochdale, England, who attended the sessions of the Southern Baptist
Convention, at Birmingham, gives an interesting account. He says:
"The oldest Baptist church in the country is Hill
Cliffe, in Cheshire, but on the borders of Lancashire. The old church was built
in a secluded spot, far removed from public roads and enclosed by a thick wood,
Tradition declares that the church is five hundred years old. A tombstone was
recently discovered in the burial ground of the place, bearing date 1357. In
digging the foundation to enlarge the old chapel, a large baptistery was
discovered which was made of stone and well cemented. The baptistery must have
belonged to a previous chapel. Oliver Cromwell worshipped at this church, and
one of his officers occupied the pulpit. It is one of the pre historic
churches, and a regular Baptist church." (Shackleford's Compendium of
Baptist History, P. 274. Louisville, 1892).
Here are some of the statements that I take from Goadby in
reference to this church:
"We have reliable evidence that a Separatist, and
probably a Baptist church, has existed for several centuries in a secluded spot
of Cheshire, on the borders of Lancashire, about a mile and a half from
Warrington. No spot could be better chosen for concealment than the site on
which this ancient chapel stood. Removed from all public roads, enclosed by a
dense wood, affording ready access into two counties, Hill Cliffe was admirably
suited for the erection of a 'conventicula illicita,' an illegal
conventicle. The ancient chapel built on this spot was so constructed that the
surprised worshippers had half a dozen secret ways of escaping from it, and
long proved a meeting place suited to the varying fortunes of a hated and
hunted people. Owing to the many changes inseparable from the eventful history
of the church at Hill Cliffe, the earliest records have been lost. But two or
three facts point to the very early existence of the community itself. In 1841
the then old chapel was enlarged and modernized; and in digging for the
foundation, a large baptistery of stone, well cemented, was discovered. How
long this had been covered up, and at what period it was erected, it is
impossible to state; but as some of the tombstones in the graveyard adjoining
the chapel were erected in the early part of the sixteenth century, there is
some probability for the tradition that the chapel itself was built by the
Lollards who held Baptist opinions. One of the dates on the tombstones is 1357,
the time when Wickliffe was still a fellow at Merton College, Oxford; but the
dates most numerous begin at the period when Europe had just been startled by
Luther's valiant onslaught upon the papacy. Many of these tombstones, and
especially the oldest, as we can testify from a personal examination, look as
clear and as fresh as if they were engraved only a century ago. * * * * Hill
Cliffe is undoubtedly one of the oldest Baptist churches in England. * * * *
The earliest deeds of the property have been irrecoverably lost, but the extant
deeds, which go back considerably over two hundred years, described the
property as being for the Anabaptists."' (Goadby's Bye Paths, pp. 21 23).
These facts are also confirmed by Cramp.
To show how deep seated is the conviction among English
Baptists that this Church reaches into great antiquity I give an extract from The
Baptist, London, June 5, 1896. The writer says:
"One fact, however, and one of some importance, seems
to stand out with sufficient clearness, viz.: that so far as England
is concerned the Church at Hill Cliffe is the link—not, of course that
there are no others, for these there are, as Mr. Compton's article shows, but
this is a material and tangible link of historic continuity between the Baptist
Churches of the present and those of the Pre-Reformation period. Here, at any
rate, we get away from the miserable and truculent negatives, 'Nonconformity'
and 'Dissent,' and reach an altitude where our position is not weighed and
measured by its relation to a 'Church' which, however imposing politically and
socially, is one to which we owe no kind of allegiance whatever, and with which
we have nothing to do."
I will now turn to the Church at Eythorne, Kent. If the
reader will turn to a former chapter he will find much in regard to the
Baptists in Kent. Without repeating these statements I shall relate some
additional facts as given by Goadby. He says:
"The Church at Eythorne, Kent, owes its origin to
some Dutch Baptists, who settled in this country in the time of Henry the
Eighth. They were, doubtless, tempted to make England their home by the brisk
trade that sprang up between this country and Holland, soon after the marriage
of Henry with Anne of Cleves (1540). * * * In the Calendar of State Papers
(Domestic Series, 1547-1580), under the date of October 28th, 1552, we have
this entry: 'Northumberland, to Sir William Cecill. Wishes the King would
appoint Mr. Knox to the Bishopric of Rochester. He would be a whetstone to the
Archbishop of Canterbury, and a confounder of the Anabaptists lately sprung up
in Kent.' * * * One singular fact, perhaps without a parallel, in the history
of this ancient General Baptist Church at Eythorne, deserves to be mentioned;
the names of the pastors, from the close of the Sixteenth Century to the last
quarter of the Seventeenth Century, were John Knott. The first John Knott
became the pastor of Eythorne somewhere between 1590 and 1600, and the last
John Knott removed to Chatham in 1780." (Bye Paths in Baptist History, pp.
23-26)
Dr. Howard Osgood, the eminent Baptist scholar, makes this
comment:
"If we would make the first Baptist church to appear
under Helwise, in 1614, then we must deny the historical evidence of the
conventicles of Baptists in the previous century. If we make the church founded
in London in 1633 the first Calvinistic Baptist Church in England, we assume
that all the Baptists and Baptist churches of the sixteenth century were
Arminian in their views, which has never been shown, and is contrary to all
probability. Baptists were found in the north and west but principally in the
east of England. Under the dreadful persecution of the Tudors, the churches
knew little of each other, unless they were situated near together. We hear
more of the Calvinistic church formed in 1633, because it was situated in
London and performed an important work in the following years. Joan Bucher, who
was a member of the Baptist church in Eythorne, Kent, burned by order of Henry
VI., held this doctrine." (The Standard, 1875, Chicago).
Goadby is equally confident of the history of the church
at Bocking and Braintree, Essex. He says:
"In Strype's Ecclesiastical Memorials we find
these words, under date 1550: 'Sectaries appeared now in Essex and Kent,
sheltering themselves under the profession of the Gospel, of whom complaint was
made to the Council. These were the first that made separation from the Church
of England, having gathered congregations of their own.' They were the first,
that is, of which Strype had heard. The congregation in Essex was mentioned to
be at Bocking; that at Kent was at Faversham, as I learnt from an old register.
From whence I also collect that they held the opinions of the Anabaptists and
the Pelagians; that there were contributions among them for the better
maintaining of their congregations; that the members of the congregation in
Kent went over with the congregation in Essex, to instruct and join with them;
and that they had their meetings in Kent, and in divers places besides
Faversham.' In other words, the Kent churches at Eythorne, Faversham, Sandwich,
Canterbury, perhaps, and other places, helped to build up, if they did not
actually originate, the church at Bocking.'
"Bocking and Braintree are two parishes divided by
the main road, and the whole is now known as Braintree. The 'complaints' by
whomsoever made, against the Baptists at Bocking, led to their being watched,
and about sixty persons were in the house when the sheriff interrupted their
assembly. They confessed to the Council that they had met to talk the
Scriptures, and that they had not communed at the parish church for two years.
Some were fined and set at liberty, others were imprisoned, and remained until
Queen Mary came to the throne, when they were released, only to be taken into
custody, and by and by to the stake. * * *
"The Bocking Braintree church book, still in
existence, carries back the authentic records of the church for more than two
hundred years; but there is no question that the origin of the church itself
dates back to the days of Edward the Sixth." (Bye Paths in Baptist
History, pp. 26-28).
Here is an answer that is sufficient, if we had no other.
We present not three believers but three Baptist churches which had existed
long before 1641.
2. I mention as three believers who were immersed before
1641, William Kiffin, Hanserd Knollys, and John Canne.
William Kiffin seceded from the Independents in 1638. Of
this Goadby says:
Five years after the above date (1638), a further
secession from the original church strengthened their hands. Among the seceders
were William Kiffin and Thomas Wilson. Kiffin, to whose pen we are indebted for
the account of the origin of the first Calvinistic Baptist church in England,
thus speaks of the reasons which led him to join Mr. Spilsbury:—'I used all of
my endeavours, by converse with such as were able, also by diligently searching
the Scriptures, with earnest desires to God that I might be directed in a right
way of worship; and, after some time, concluded that the safest way was to
follow the footsteps of the flock, namely, that order laid down by Christ and
his Apostles, and practiced by the primitive Christians in their time, which I
found to be, after conversion they were baptized, added to the church, and
continued in the Apostles' doctrine and fellowship, and breaking of bread, and
prayers."' (Bye-Paths in Baptist History, p. 351).
This Independent church to which Mr. Kiffin belonged was
organized in 1616. Mr. Henry Jacob was its first pastor and Mr. John Lathrop
was the second. In 1633, during the pastorate of Mr. Lathrop, there was a
division on the subject of immersion and a Baptist church was organized under
the leadership of Mr. Spilsbury. Lathrop in 1634 removed to America with part
of his church, where he still had trouble with his church on the subject of
immersion. Dean, who was a very able historian and editor of a number of the
works of the Massachusetts Historical Society, says: "Controversy
respecting the mode of baptism had been agitated in Mr. Lathrop's church before
he left England, and a part had separated from him and established the first
Baptist (Calvinistic) church in England in 1633. Those that came seem not all
to have been settled on this point, and they found others in Scituate ready to
sympathize with them."
It was to this church that Kiffin united. Indeed so
greatly was Kiffin in favor of immersion that he soon left Spilsbury's church
because they occasionally admitted ministers to preach for them who had not
been immersed. Crosby says:
"He was first of an Independent congregation,
and called to the ministry among them; was one of them who were concerned in
the conferences held in the congregation of Mr. Henry Jessey; by which
Mr. Jessey and the greatest part of the congregation became proselyted
to the opinion of the Baptists. He joined himself to the church of Mr. John
Spilsbury, but a difference arising about permitting persons to preach
amongst them that had not been baptized by immersion, they parted by
consent." (History of the Baptists, Vol. III., p. 3-4).
All of this took place before 1641. Ivimey's History of
the Baptists, Vol. II., p. 297). This settles the fact Kiffin was baptized
before 1641.
I now refer to Hanserd Knollys. M'Clintock and Strong say:
"A few years before (1635), though unknown to Williams, a Baptist preacher
of England, Hanserd Knollys, had settled in New Hampshire and taken charge of a
church in Dover; but he resigned in 1639 and returned to England."
(Encyclopædia Biblical Theology and Ecclesiastical Literature, Vol. I., p,
654). To confirm this statement we have contemporaneous evidence. Cotton Mather
mentions a number of Baptists among the first planters of New England, and that
some ministers of that persuasion came over He says of Hanserd Knollys:
"Of them there were some godly Anabaptists; as
namely, Mr. Hanserd Knollys (whom one of his adversaries called absurd
Knowles), of Dover, who afterwards moved back to London, lately died there,
a good man, in a good old age." (Magnalia Christi Americana, Vol. I., p.
243. Hartford, 1855).
He wrote an autobiography of himself, which was edited and
completed by William Kiffin. Knollys died September 19, 1691, and from the
words of Kiffin it is probable that he became a Baptist as early as 1631.
Kiffin's words are:
"The author of these ensuing experiences was that
ancient and faithful servant of God, Mr. Hanserd Knollys, who departed this
life in the ninety third year of his age, having been employed in the works and
service of Christ, as a faithful minister, for above sixty years; in which time
he labored without fainting under all the discouragement that attended him,
being contented in all conditions, though never so poor in this world; under all
persecutions and sufferings, so that he might therein serve his blessed Lord
and Saviour. I have myself known him for above fifty-four years, and can
witness to the truth of many things left by him under his own hand."(Life
and Death of Hanserd Knollys, p. 47. London, 1812).
The Rev. George P. Gould, M. A., a learned Baptist scholar
of England, is now editing and bringing out a series of Baptist Manuals,
historical and biographical. In 1895 he published one on Hanserd Knollys by
James Culross, M. A., D. D., president of Bristol Baptist College. After
stating that Hanserd Knollys became a sectary, probably in 1631, he declares:
"Had Baptists thought anything depended on it, they
might have traced their pedigree back to New Testament times, and claimed apostolic
succession. The channel of succession was certainly purer, if humbler, than
through the apostate church of Rome. But they were content to rest on Scripture
alone, and, as they found only believers' baptism there, they adhered to that.
(P. 39, note).
The Rev. John Canne, author of the marginal references of
the Bible was an eminent minister of those times. When he became a Baptist is
uncertain but it was certainly before 1640. He was found in Bristol in 1640,
preaching in "public places" and was declared to be a "baptized
man," or an immersed man as that phrase was used. I give a conclusive
statement from the Broadmead Records. These Records say:
"Anno, 1640. And thus the Lord led them by His Spirit
in a way and path that they knew not, having called them out of darkness
into his marvelous light by Jesus Christ our Lord. So that in the
year of our ever blessed Redeemer, the Lord Jesus (1640), one thousand six
hundred and forty, those five persons, namely, Goodman Atkins, of Stapleton,
Goodman Cole, a butcher of Lawford's Gate, Richard Moone, a farrier in Wine
street, and Mr. Bacon, a young minister, with Mrs. Hazzard, at Mrs. Hazzard's
house, at the upper end of Broad street, in Bristol, they met together, and
came to a holy resolution to separate from the worship of the world and times
they lived in, and that they would go no more to it. And with godly purpose of
heart (they) joined themselves in the Lord, only thus covenanting, that they
would in the strength and assistance of the Lord come forth of the world, and
worship the Lord more purely, persevering therein, to their end."
(Broadmead Records, pp., 17, 18).
The Records continue:
"At this juncture of time the providence of God
brought to this city one Mr. Canne, a baptized man; it was that Mr. Canne that
made notes and references upon the Bible. He was a man very eminent in his day
for godliness, and for reformation in religion, having great understanding in
the way of the Lord."
Mrs. Hazzard, who was the wife of the parish priest, found
him and fetched him to her home. Then the Records say:
"He taught the way of the Lord more perfectly, and
settled them in church order, and showed them the difference betwixt the church
of Christ and anti-Christ, and left with them a printed book treating of the
same; and divers printed papers to that purpose. So that by this instrument Mr.
Canne, the Lord did confirm and settle them; showing them how they should join
together, and take in members." (Pp. 18, 19).
Mr. Canne then attempted to preach in a suburb of the city
and a wealthy woman placed some obstructions in his way. The Records say:
"The obstruction was by a very godly great woman,
that dwelt in that place, who was somewhat severe in the profession of what she
knew, hearing that he was a baptized man, by them called Anabaptists, which was
to some sufficient cause of prejudice, because the truth of believers baptism
had been for a long time buried, yea, for a long time by popish inventions, and
their sprinkling brought in room thereof. And (this prejudice existed) by
reason (that) persons in the practice of that truth by baptism were by some
rendered very obnoxious; because, about one hundred years before, some beyond
the sea, in Germany, that held that truth of believers baptism, did, as some
say, did some very singular actions; of whom we can have no true account what
they were but by their enemies; for none but such in any history have made any
relation or narrative of them." (P. 19, 20).
"For good measure " I will also mention Paul
Hobson. Ivimey says of him:
"He is mentioned among the rejected ministers. Dr.
Calamy supposes that he was chaplain of Eaton College, and that he had a place
of command in the army; but observes, that if he had conformed afterwards it
would have made some atonement, as was the case in other instances. In addition
to these circumstances, We find that he was engaged as early as 1639, as one of
the chief promoters of founding a Baptist church in London. He was one of the
pastors who signed the Confession of faith of the seven churches in London in
1644." (History of the English Baptists, Vol. I., p. 88).
This statement of Ivimey that Paul Hobson was a preacher
is confirmed by Edwards. Edwards who was a contemporary says that he had been
an Anabaptist preacher "a long time." This was written in 1645, and
an Anabaptist in the mouth of Edwards was always a "dipper." Edwards'
words are:
"There is one Paul Hobson a taylor, who comes
out of Buckinghamshire and is now a Captain, having been in the Armies,
who hath been a Preacher a great while. This man when he was in the Army, where
ever he came he would Preach publikely in the Churches, where he could get
pulpits, and privately to the Souldiers; the subject matter of his Sermons was
much against Duties, and of Revelations, what God had revealed to him; he was a
means to corrupt some precious hopeful young men who went out of London; and
preaching one time against Holy Duties (as an understanding man who heard him,
related to me and other company), he spake thus. "Then this further
statement is volunteered: This Paul Hobson is one of those whose hand is
subscribed to the Confession of Faith of the Anabaptists, set forth last
Winter." (Gangraena, p. 33. London, 1645)
Here is positive contemporaneous proof that Paul Hobson
was an immersionist in 1639, for he was engaged in forming a Baptist church,
and the inference is that he had been a Baptist many years before this.
The Reader will also call to mind that in the chapter
"On the Baptists before 1641 "I give an account of a number of
persons who were dipped before 1641 in England.
3. The proof is positive that noted Baptists after 1641,
who were certainly dippers, positively state that Baptist Churches, as they
were then organized, had long existed in England.
The first witness is William Kiffin. He makes this
declaration in a book called "A Briefe Remonstrance of the Reasons and
Grounds of those people commonly called Anabaptists, for their
separation," etc. A Mr. Poole had addressed to him certain Queries for an
answer. The second Query was:
"By what Scripture Warrant doe you take upon you to
erect new framed congregations, separated to the disturbance of the great Worke
of Reformation now in hand?
To this Kiffin replied:
"Ans. This querie hath in it these two parts.
1. That we erect new framed separate congregations. 2. Wee
do by this disturbe the great Worke of Reformation now in hand."
He then says:
"To the first, it is well knowne to many, especially
to ourselves; that our congregations were erected and framed according to the
rule of Christ, before wee heard of any Reformation, even at that time when
Episcopacie was in the height of its vanishing glory."
He further states:
"And for the second part of your querie That we
disturb the great Worke of Reformation now in hand; I know not what you
meane by this charge, unless it be to discover your prejudice against us, in
Reforming ourselves before you, for as yet we have not in our understanding,
neither can we conceive anything of that we shall see reformed by you according
to truth, but that through mercie wee enjoy the practice of the same already;
tis strange this should be a disturbance to the ingenious faithful Reformer; it
should bee (one would think) a furtherance rather than a disturbance, and
whereas you tell us of the work of Reformation now in hand, no reasonable men
will force us to desist from the practice of that which we are perswaded is
according to Truth, and waite for that which we knowe not what it will be; and
in the meantime practice that which you your selves say must be reformed."
(Pp. 12 14. London, 1645).
Here is a declaration by one of the most intelligent
Baptists of the times, whose sources of information were of the best, who
declares inside of four years of 1641 "that our congregations were erected
and framed according to the rule of Christ, before we heard of any
Reformation;" and then he goes on to defend at length that these
congregations possessed the whole Truth. I do not see how a statement could be
more conclusive.
We are not shut up to this statement. Daniel King, 1650,
only nine years after 1641, wrote a treatise called "A Way to Zion, Sought
Out, and Found, for Believers to Walk In." This startling proposition in
the first part is proved,
"1. That God hath had a people on earth, ever
since the coming of Christ in the flesh, throughout the darkest times of
Popery, which he hath owned as Saints and as his people."
The third part
"Proveth that Outward Ordinances, and amongst the
rest the Ordinance of Baptism, is to continue in the Church, and
this Truth cleared up from intricate turnings and windings, clouds and mists
that make the way doubtful and dark."
Certainly that would be a very arrogant claim if the
Baptists of England only began in 1641. And what is more, this book of King's
is indorsed by Thomas Patient, John Spilsbury, William Kiffin, and John
Pearson. These men declared that the assertion that "there are no true
churches in the world" and "no true ministers" has been of
"singular use in hands of the devil." I quote a portion of their
words:
"The devil hath mustered up all his forces of late to
blind and pester the minds of good people, to keep them from the clear
knowledge and practice of the way of God, either in possessing people still
with old corrupt principles; or if they have been taken of them, then to perswade
with them that there are no Churches in the world, and that persons cannot come
to the practice of Ordinances, there being no true ministry in the world; and
others they run in another desperate extreme, holding Christ to be a shadow,
and all his Gospel and Ordinances like himself, fleshy and carnall. This
generation of people have been of singular use in the hand of the Devil to
advance his kingdom, and to make war against the kingdom of our Lord Jesus. Now
none have been more painfull than these have been of late, to poison the City,
the Country, the Army, so far as they could; inasmuch as it lay upon some of
our spirits as a duty to put out our weak ability for the discovering of these
grosse errors and mistakes; but it hath pleased God to stir up the spirit of
our Brother, Daniel King, whom we judge a faithfull and painfull
minister of Jesus Christ, to take this work in hand before us; and we judge he
hath been much assisted of God in the work in which he hath been very painfull.
We shall not need to say much of the Treatise; only in brief, it is his method
to follow the Apostles' rule, prove everything by the evidence of Scripture
light, expounding Scripture by Scripture, and God hath helped him in this
discourse, we judge beyond any who hath dealt upon this subject that is extant,
in proving the truth of Churches, against all such that have gone under the
name of Seekers, and hath very well, and with great evidence of Scripture light
answered to all, or most of their Objections of might, as also those above, or
beyond Ordinances."
Henry D'Anvers was one of the most influential and best
informed Baptists of the seventeenth century. He was a distinguished colonel in
the Parliamentary army and Governor of Stafford. He wrote the most powerful
book of the century on baptism. He makes the most positive claims of the long
continuance of Baptists in England, and that the Baptists had continued in
"the good old way." I quote two paragraphs:
"In the sixteenth year of King James, 1618,
that excellent Dutch piece, called A very plain and well grounded
Treatise concerning Baptism, that with so much authority both from
Scripture and Antiquity, proves the baptizing of Believers and disproves that
of Infants, was printed in English.
"Since when (especially in the last thirty or forty
years) many have been the conferencesthat have past, and many the Treatises
that have been written pro and con upon the subject, and many have been the
sufferings both in old and new England, that people of that perswasion
have undergone, whereby such light hath broken forth therein that not only very
many learned men have been convinced thereof, but very many congregations of Baptists
have been, and are daily gathered in that good old way of the Lord that
hath so long lain under so much obloquy and reproach, and been buried under so
much Antichristian rubbish in these nations." (A Treatise on Baptism, p.
308. London, 1674).
Thomas Grantham was one of the greatest Baptist writers of
the seventeenth century. Under date of 1678 he wrote:
"That many of the learned have much abused this age,
in telling them that the Anabaptists (i. e. the Baptized Churches) are
of a late edition, a new sect, etc., when from their own writings the clean
contrary is so evident." (Christianismus Primitivus, pp. 92, 93. London,
1678).
I shall give the words of a Baptist, who closed the
century with a book on baptism. He speaks with no uncertain sound. Joseph Hooke
had read largely on the subject, and his book shows that he was scholarly. He
claims a succession from the days of the apostles. Mr. Hooke says:
"Thus having shewed negatively, when this sect called
Ana-Baptists did not begin: we shall shew in the next place
affirmatively, when it did begin; for a beginning it had, and it concerns us to
enquire for the Fountain Head of this Sect; for if I was sure that it
were no older than the Munster-Fight that Mr. Erratt puts in mind of, I
would Resolve to forsake it, and would persuade others to do so too.
"That religion that is not as old as Christ and his
apostles, is too new for me.
"But secondly, affirmatively, we are fully perswaded,
and therefore do boldly, tho' humbly, assert, that this Sect is the very same
sort of People that were first called Christians in Antioch, Acts 11,
26. But sometimes called Nazarenes, Acts 24, 5. And as they are
every where spoken against now, even so they were in the Primitive Times. Acts
28, 22." (A Necessary Apology for the Baptists, London, 1701, p. 19).
ROGER WILLIAMS.
I have read, and re-read, Dr. Whitsitt's chapter upon
"The Baptism of Roger Williams" with increasing surprise. He argues
at great length in favor of sprinkling and then ends the chapter with this
remarkable concession:
In the present state of information it would be unwise to
pronounce with certainty any conclusion regarding this question. However,
within the limits of the uncertainty which is freely acknowledged, the weight
of evidence apears to incline very clearly towards the view that Roger Williams
was sprinkled and not immersed at Providence in 1639. (P. 164).
Dr. Whitsitt nowhere intimates that there is an author who
States that Williams was sprinkled. His argument rests wholly upon inferences
and those inferences are not well grounded. His inferences are: 1. That the
Baptists of England were in the practice of sprinkling, and therefore Roger
Williams was sprinkled. His words are:
Is there any a priori reason for supposing that he
was in advance of them in this regard? It has been suggested that he was a
person of unusual independence of mind, but has any proof ever been given to
show that his independence was employed in this particular direction? (P. 150).
We demand proof for the very thing he takes for granted. I
have already shown that this inference is false, and that the Baptists of
England were not in the practice of sprinkling. And 2. Williams was not
dominated by the English Baptists. Williams was an independent man, and appears
to have been controlled by his own impressions of the teachings of the New
Testament.
Dr. Whitsitt has declared that it was "probable"
that William's was sprinkled. All the world has believed, and still believes,
that he was immersed. The burden of proof rests upon Dr. Whitsitt. He must
present proof to establish his position. This he has utterly failed to do. All
that he has attempted is to explain away the force of certain authors, and to
quibble over the meaning of the word wash. Then he admits that he does 41 not
positively settle the question regarding the act employed." (P.
151).
I invite attention to some of the evidence in favor of
immersion. Every contemporary who mentions his baptism, Williams himself
included, and all the later writers, declare that the act was an immersion.
I shall first give some side lights on the subject. Dr.
Whitsitt dismisses the fact of Mr. Chauncy practicing immersion with this,
remark:
But nobody has shown that Mr. Williams regarded the view
of Chauncy with any sort of favor at the time when it was advanced. For aught
we know to the contrary he may have felt a prejudice both against the man and
his contention. (P. 149).
But Mr. Chauncy cannot be dismissed so lightly. There is a
clear connection between the immersions of Mr. Chauncy and the Providence men.
I shall give the explicit testimony of Governor Bradford, then governor of Plymouth
Colony. He shows not only that Chauncy was an immersionist but that the whole
of New England was agitated on the subject of immersion. He says:
I had forgotten to inserte in its place how ye church here
had invited and sent for Mr. Charles Chansey, a reverend, godly and very larned
man, intending upon triall to chose him pastor of ye church hear, for ye more
comfortable performance of ye ministers with Mr. John Reinor, the teacher of ye
same. But ther fell out some difference aboute baptising, he holding that it
ought only to be by dipping, and putting ye whole body under water, and that
sprinkling was unlawfull. The church yeelded that immersion, or dipping, was
lawfull, but in this could countrie not so conveniente. But they could not nor
durst not yeeld to him in this, that sprinkling (which all ye churches of
Christ doe for ye most parte at this day) was unlawfull & an humane
invention, as ye same was prest; but they were willing to yeeld to him as far
as yey could, & to ye utmost; and were contented to suffer him to practise
as he was perswaded; and when he came to minister that ordnance he might so doe
it to any yt did desire it in yt way, provided he could peacably suffer Mr.
Reinor, and such as desired to have theirs otherwise baptized by him, by
sprinkling or powering onof water upon them; so as ther might be no disturbance
in ye church hereaboute. But he said he could not yeeld hereunto. Upon which
the church procured some other ministers to dispute ye pointe with him
publikly; as Mr. Ralfe Patrick, of Duxberie, allso some other ministers within
this governmente. But he was not satisfied; so ye church sent to many other
churches to crave their help and advise in this matter, and, with his will
& consente, sent them his arguments wiitten under his owne hand. They sente
them to ye church at Boston in ye Bay of Massachusetts, to be communicated with
other churches ther. Also they sent the same to ye churches of Conightecutt and
New Haven, with sundrie others; and received very able & sufficient answers,
as they conceived, from them and their larned ministers, who all concluded
against him. But him selfe was not satisfied therwth. Their answers are too
large hear to relate. They conceived ye church had done what was meete in ye
things, so Mr. Chansey having been ye most parte of 3 years here, removed
himself to Sityate, wher he now remaines a minister to ye church ther. (Of
Plimoth Plantation by William Bradford, pp. 382, 384).
These extracts show that the whole of New England was
agitated on the subject of immersion before the baptism of Roger Williams. The
churches took action on the matter. We learn from Keyne's MS. that the Boston
Church returned answer to the Plymouth Church, June 21, to "whether it be
lawful to use sprinkling in baptism, or rather dipping; Mr. Chauncy being of
the mind, that it is a violation of an ordinance to use sprinkling instead of
dipping." (Bradford's Hist. N. E., Vol. I., p. 331, note). But as much as
Chauncy was admired at Plymouth the church did not employ him, on account of
his views on the subject of immersion. This is set forth by Hooker in a letter
to his son-in-law, Shepherd, November 2, 1640. He says:
I have of late had intelligence from Plymouth. Mr. Chauncy
and the church are to part, he to provide for himself, and they for themselves.
At the day of fast, when a full conclusion of the business should have been
made, he openly professed he did as verily believe the truth of his opinion as
that there was a God in heaven, and that he was as settled in it as that the earth
was upon the center. If ever such confidence find success I miss my mark. Mr.
Humphrey, I hear, invites him to Providence, and the coast is most meet for his
opinions and practice. (Felt's Eccl. Hist., Vol. I., p. 443).
It will be seen from this letter of Hooker that Mr.
Chauncy was invited on his leaving Plymouth to go to Providence, for "that
coast is most meet for his opinions and practice." That is to say, they
believed in immersion at Providence. It cannot mean anything else, for Chauncy
still held to infant baptism. This is perfectly plain, for Felt says of
Chauncy, July 7, 1642:
Chauncy at Scituate still adheres to his practice of
immersion. He bad baptized two of his own children in this way. A woman of his
congregation who had a child of three years old, and wished it to receive such
an ordinance, was fearful that it might be too much frightened by being dipped
as some had been. She desired a letter from him, recommending her to the Boston
Church, so that she might have the child sprinkled. He complied and the rite
was accordingly administered. (Felt's Eccl. Hist., Vol. I., P. 497).
So there is no difference between Chauncy and the
Providence men on the act of baptism.
This will also turn light on the banishment of
Roger Williams in 1633 from Plymouth. He held Anabaptist
opinions, which meant that he rejected infant baptism and believed in
immersion. The more you look into this the more probable it becomes. I can only
briefly present the facts. In 1633 he was "already inclined to the opinions
of the Anabaptists." (Publications of the Narragansett Club, Vol. I., p.
14). For on requesting his dismissal back to Salem in the autumn of 1633, we
find the elder, Mr. Brewster, persuading the Plymouth Church to relinquish
communion with him, lest he should "run the same course of rigid
Separation and Anabaptistery which Mr. John Smith, the Se Baptist of Amstersdam
had done." (Pub. Nar. Club, Vol. I., p. 17).
Win. Gammel, after stating that Williams was immersed,
says very truthfully:
The very mention of the name of Anabaptism called up a
train of phantoms, that never failed to excite the apprehensions of the early
Puritans. Hence it was when Mr. Brewster suggested even the remotest
association of Roger Williams with this heresy, the church at Plymouth were easily
induced to grant his dismission which he requested. A considerable number of
its members, however, who had become attached to his ministry, were also
dismissed at the same time and removed with him to Salem. (Gammel's Life of
Roger Williams, p. 27).
Thus we are duly prepared for the statement of Governor
Winthrop, March 16, 1639:
At Providence things grew worse; for a sister of Mrs.
Hutchinson, the wife of one Scott, being infected with Anabaptistery, and going
last year to live at Providence, Mr. Williams was taken (or rather emboldened)
by her to make open profession thereof, and accordingly was rebaptized by one
Holliman, a poor man late of Salem. Then Mr. Williams rebaptized him and some
ten more. They also denied the baptizing of infants, and would have no
magistrates. (Winthrop's Hist. N. E., Vol. I., p. 293).
Putting all of these facts and side lights together, it
would prove that the Providence men practiced immersion and that Roger Williams
was immersed.
We are not shut up to side lights but we have positive
testimony. We have just given the statement of Governor Winthrop.
The argument of Dr. Guild, the learned Librarian of Brown
University, upon this statement of Winthrop's is conclusive. He says:
"Perhaps Prof. Whitsitt makes the point that re-baptism
was not immersion. It has always been so regarded in these parts from the
beginning. Williams himself has placed himself on record as a believer in
dipping." This argument cannot be overturned by mere suppositions, and
nothing has yet been offered to upset it.
Coddington, who appears to have been an eye witness, is
conclusive. Coddington was governor of Rhode Island and had an opportunity to
know what he was stating. He says:
"I have known him about fifty years; a mere weather
cock, constant only in inconsistency. * * * One time for water baptism, men and
women must be plunged into the water, and then threw it all down again."
(Letter to Scott, 1677).
Prof. A. H. Newman, D. D., LL. D., says of Coddington's
testimony:
"It seems highly probable that Roger Williams was
immersed, though I once was of the contrary opinion; Coddington, who seems to
have witnessed the ceremony, described it some time afterward as
immersion."
Prof. Vedder after giving the testimony of Williams and
Coddington remarks:
"I quite agree with my friend, Dr. Newman, that this
cannot be explained as other than a reference to the baptism of Williams and
others by Ezekiel Holliman, nor do I see how Coddington's knowledge of the
facts can be successfully questioned. Taken in connection with the negative
testimony of silence—that we have, in all the contemporary literature, not the
slightest hint of any change of method among American Baptists—this seems to me
virtually to settle the question in favor of immersion in the case of Roger Williams.
While I would not affirm positively that he was immersed, I feel that the
balance of probability is decidedly on that side. In fine, anybody who asserts
that anything but immersion has been practiced from the beginning among
American Baptists assumes the burden of proof; and ingenious guesses about
Mark Lukar and things of that sort are not proofs. They may satisfy the
guesser, but he cannot fairly ask that anybody else should be satisfied with
them." (The Examiner, May 21, 1896).
Richard Scott, who appears to have been an eye witness of
this baptism, for a time a Baptist himself, and afterwards a Quaker, writing
against Williams thirty eight years afterwards, says:
"I walked with him in the Baptists' way about three
or four months * * * in which time he broke from his society and declared at
large the ground and reason for it; that their baptism could not be right
because it was not administered by an apostle. After that he set upon a way of
seeking, with two or three of them that had dissented with him, by way of
preaching and praying; and then he continued a year or two till two of them
left him. * * * After his society and he in a church way had parted he went to
England." (Appendix to Fox's Firebrand Quenched, p. 247).
Scott makes no mention of a change of opinion of the
Baptists on the subject of dipping, for it is very certain that the Baptists at
the time Scott wrote this practiced dipping.
Williams' own opinion on the subject of baptism was always
singularly clear. He declares that it is immersion. In a tract which was
supposed for a long time to be lost, but which is now in the British Museum,
called "Christenings Make not Christians," 1645, he says:
"Thirdly, for our New England parts, I can speake
uprightly and confidently, I know it to have been easie for my selfe, long ere
this, to have brought many thousands of these Nations, yea the whole country,
to a far greater Antichristian conversion then was ever yet heard of in
America. I have reported something in their Chapter of their Religion, how readily
I could have brought the whole Country to have observed one day in seven; I
adde to have received a Baptisme (or washing) though it were in Rivers
(as the first Christians and the Lord Jesus himself did) to have come to a stated
Church meeting, &c." (P. 11).
In a letter which we find among the Winthrop papers, dated
Narragansett, 9, 10, 1649, Williams says:
"At Seekonk a great many have lately concurred with
Mr. John Clarke and our Providence men about the point of a new baptisme, and
the manner by dipping, and Mr. John Clarke hath been there lately, and Mr.
Lucar, and hath dipped them. I believe their practice comes nearer the first
practice of our great founder Christ Jesus than any other practices of religion
do." (Massachusetts Historical Collections, Fourth Series, Vol. VI., p.
274).
There is absolutely no proof that Williams thought
anything but immersion was baptism.
All writers and authorities, till recently, have taken the
ground that Williams was immersed. I shall add a few of these witnesses.
John Callender, 1706-1738, says:
"But to take things in their order, Mr. R. Williams
is said, in a few years after his sitting in Providence, to have embraced the
opinions of the people called (by way of reproach) Anabaptists in respect to
the subject and mode of baptism; and to have formed a church there, in that
way, with the help of one Ezekiel Holliman."(Historical Discourse on Rhode
Island, pp. 109, 110).
Felt says:
"Williams as stated by Winthrop, was lately
immersed." (Eccl. Hist., Vol. I., p. 402).
Dr. A. H. Newman says:
"Contemporary testimony is unanimous in favor of the
view that immersion was practiced by Williams. As this fact is generally
conceded, it does not seem worth while to quote the evidence."
Dr. George P. Fisher, Professor of Church History, Yale
University, says:
"Roger Williams was baptized by immersion."
(History of the Christian Church, p. 472).
Bishop John F. Hurst, Methodist, says:
"Williams was immersed." (Short History of
Christian Church, p. 516).
The Watchman, Boston, May 14, 1896, says:
"When he affirms that the re-baptism of Roger
Williams was by sprinkling, he states what has not been proved by historical
evidence, and the presumptions are altogether against such a statement."
Dr. Newman says of Dr. Dexter:
"Knowing that Dr. Dexter was master of the literature
pertaining to Roger Williams, and supposing that his inclination would be
wholly in favor of the non-immersion view, I sought his opinion on the
question. His answer was entirely in accord with my own conclusion. He
expressed the opinion that, in the absence of contemporary evidence against
immersion, Coddington's statement must be accepted as probably correct. In
matters of this kind an ounce of fact is worth a ton of conjecture." (The
Examiner, May 21, 1896).
Schaff says:
"In 1638 he became a Baptist; he was immersed by
Ezekiel Holliman and in turn immersed Holliman and ten others." (Creeds of
Christendom, Vol. I., p. 851).
Against the inferences of Dr. Whitsitt that Williams was
sprinkled, I put the solid facts that he was immersed. "An ounce of fact
is worth a ton of conjecture." Thus goes to pieces the last proof of Dr.
Whitsitt's theory.