I’m going to tell you a story about how my wife and I tried to plan our daughter’s baptism and how snow and family travel plans and a broken baptistery met with resolve of a young girl to be baptized in the place where her church worships and nowhere else.
The details might bore you, but they are told to show a different way of baptizing our children that includes advanced planning for presence of family members and friends and celebrating with words of blessing. If you want to skip the story and read the baptism ceremony plans, those are at the end.
We’d been planning for several months to baptize our thirteen-year-old daughter December 1. In the 48 hours before that day, Tulsa was snowed in with a record storm. Jill’s parents were to fly in and my parents were to drive down from Bartlesville, Oklahoma. Flight was postponed to Friday and my parents couldn’t even get out of their driveway. We got stuck in the airport parking lot picking up Jill’s parents.
Meanwhile, the aging baptistery at Garnett Church of Christ had no working heater, filter, and it leaked. This baptistery was laid in before the 2,400 seat auditorium was built. It’s like a small pool. So plans had also been made to start work on this same weekend to cut out the old fiberglass and replace the baptistery with a newer, more efficient, smaller one. The decision was made Wednesday, before the storm, to allow a crew to try and rip out the old baptistery and put the new one in before Ashley’s baptism. Then the storm hit and the complicated (it took two huge semi-truck-sized dumpsters to dispose of mildewed old staging, planters, and baptistery) work took longer than expected, and my parents still couldn’t get out of their driveway, and we were faced with a decision to move the baptism to Sunday, December 3. Ice was still bad, and church was cancelled. We moved the baptism to December 10.
Jill’s parents would not be able to witness the baptism, but they gave Ashley a necklace, a card, and verbally blessed her and prayed over her before they flew back out after the weekend.
Our desire to plan and have grandparents travel to bless Ashley, to plan a celebration with communion and cake that one grandma would bake and engraved lockets and balloons and planned prayers and blessings, was thwarted by weather and a baptistery transition.
At various suggestions and jokes that we baptize her in another church or in pool or pond (break the ice), or in a snow drift, or by sprinkling, Ashley said, “I want to be baptized at my church.”
Ashley read the following ceremony plans and suggested that it’s too formal, and it is for us and it won’t be followed verbatim but with feeling and heart-felt remarks and skipped parts and choked up tears and thoughts from several people who are witnessing.
Note: I wrote the following after reading back over a section in Down in the River to Pray that I adapted from a Mennonite baptism ceremony. I realized that even in the book, it wasn’t done directly but more like a report of what Mennonites do. This is more of a direct ceremony plan, and you are welcome to use and adapt it for your purposes. Please send me adaptations if you like. I’ll be happy to continue to make this better. The key, I think, is to personalize it and bring the community directly in, and connect everyone to Father, Son, Holy Spirit who together make the whole moment real and living and beautiful.
Baptism Celebration
Repentance
Leader: “Those gathered here with you have pledged to renounce Satan and our sin of self-centered living and to bind ourselves under the authority of Jesus Christ to live in God’s holy community, the Church, according to Christ’s rule and kingdom.”Confession
Leader: “Do you join with these believers gathered to witness your baptism into Christ’s body in pledging to renounce Evil and your sin of self-centered living and to bind yourself under the authority of Jesus Christ to live in God’s holy community, the Church, according to Christ’s rule and kingdom?”Disciple: I do.
Lord’s Prayer
All: Our Father . . .Uniting with Jesus
Just as Jesus was baptized and the Spirit came down on Jesus like the presence of a dove, and God the Father said, “This is my son, in whom I am very pleased,” so I say to you, my child, I am very pleased with you, your mother, brother and sister, grandparents and other family members and Christian family are pleased with you, but we also call you into a different kind of life, one united with Christ. It’s time to put on new clothes of Christ, to wash away your old life and begin anew, to be transformed and receive God’s Spirit.We now baptize you in the same way as Jesus was baptized, with the presence and the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit with you, that you may receive forgiveness of sins and continual washing by the gift of Jesus’ sacrifice for us, that you may receive life everlasting.
After baptism
Welcome circle (Pops)Song: I have decided to follow Jesus
Blessings (Nammy, Mimi, Pawpaw, others)
Place hands and pray (Jill and Greg lead and all gather around)
“Arise, shine, for the light of the Lord is upon you.” (Ashley’s friends, Anna, Jacob)
All together: “We make a covenant with you as we renew our own covenant with our Lord: to bear one another’s burdens, to share in the experience of forgiveness, to share in the abundance of this world’s goods, to assist each other in times of need, to share our joys and our sorrows, and in all things to work for the common good, thus manifesting God’s presence among us to His glory. As we unite with each other now, may we all be joined with Christ our Lord.”
Communion and cake and celebration
We, too, had a planned baptism recently. Nothing fancy, no formal liturgy. What was important to us was that our 12-year-old daughter be surrounded by a community of family and friends. The difficulty in planning was that we are marginalized Christians living in Searcy so we have no strong ties to a local congregation and our community of friends is quite small. When we learned that our former ministry partners would be visiting with us the weekend before Thanksgiving we knew that their presence would really bless us and our daughter. So the time was determined, but the location was a little more tricky. Rather than sending our daughter up onto a stage and into the cold, impersonal baptistry of one of the local congregations, we surrounded her with love as she was immersed in the fountain in front of the Benson Auditorium. Being the weekend before Thanksgiving, campus was quite and we were a little band of about 20 who gathered to celebrate with Becca (and to cover here with blankets as she came up into the chilly air out of the cooold water). The baptism was followed by a hot shower, hot pizza, and gallons of hot chocolate!
Do you believe that the bible commands us to be baptized for the remission of our sins and is necessary for salvation? If your daughter was ready, why on earth would you risk her salvation for the man-made “ceremony” that you decided was needed? Why would you encourage someone to put off obeying the Lord?
That’s great. We’ve been discussing a strong need to rethink our practice of baptism at RCC–I’m going to share this with Patrick and others.
I love the determination and single-mindedness of your daughter
Oh yeah..don’t go for JoAnn’s bait–she’s looking for a fight not a discussion.
Josh-
How unfortunate that this is what you think. I asked him a question from the heart. That is sad that you would feel a need to judge my thoughts and motives without knowing who I am. I left RCC because of Patrick and your influence to lead people away from biblical truth. I pray that you would return to the bible one day.
GT, thanks for the story and for the ceremony of the baptism celebration. What I believe this does is take family, faith, and family of faith and decompartmentalize them without overly institutionalizing them.
Baptisms, even those with the words spoken, “for the remission of sins,” can get so rote, so robotic, so “right” that they are thoughtless. Meaning can be drained from the act such that bapstism reduced to merely that – an act.
Especially in restoration churches, a place where baptism has always been central, finding wa to make baptism meaningful insted of just saying it is meaningful because it is baptism is a difficult challenge.
Thanks for taking on the challenge.
Dear JoAnn,
My wife and I know our daughter better than anyone on earth. We believe God has given us wisdom to handle this, and I was sharing this story to show the beauty of my daughter’s obedience to Christ. We’ve called our daughter and our other two children to daily obedience, love of God and neighbor. We never waited one day to call our daughter to obedience.
If indeed your heart is pure and you are concerned, thank you. In either case, I’m not planning to write responses other than this. If you’d like to know more about my beliefs on questions about which you wrote, please get my book, “Down in the River to Pray” and read it. May the Lord bless your search for truth.
Please tell Ashley how proud we are of her. Baptism is such an important event in a Christian’s life. I grew up in a country church where most of our baptisms were held in a nearby creek and sometimes that water was pretty cold. We also had a routine baptism ceremony although I’m sure many of the church members would have objected to the “ceremony” verbiage. I love the celebratory attitude that has started to emerge, especially among young people, as they are baptised in Christ. The presence of the Holy Spirit, parents, grandparents and friends adds such a special glow to such a humble and otherwise quiet moment. It is not unlike the birth of a child when those special folks come to congratulate, assist, pray and yes … celebrate the arrival of new life. One can only imagine the angels as they danced when Ashley emerged from the water.
JoAnn,
First. I apologize. I didn’t realize how condescending I sounded in my response. That was an unwise comment.
Second. I wish I would’ve had to the chance to discuss the things being taught “that were not biblical.”
Please forgive me for any wrongdoing I’m responsible for. I do not have a way to contact you, so I’m left to leave this on Greg’s blog 🙂
Peace.
Josh
Greg, thanks for sharing this wonderful event with the rest of us! Give Ashley my love, and a big hug.
In HIM,
DU
Greg and Josh,
I appreciate the kindhearted responses left by both of you. My question was genuinely asked in a spirit of love. I would imagine that both of you love the Lord and desire to seek His will. I do too. May the Lord bless all of us as we humbly attempt to follow Him.
JoAnn
Blessings to you & Jill as you celebrate the baptism of your sweet daughter. I am daily blessed by your words.