|
Editor’s
note: Dr. Bob Palmer is the coordinator of church relations for
CE&P. He conducts training seminars for adults on how to
understand and reach the millennial generation. This article is
closely tied to that training.
It
is the kingdom of God exhibited both within and without the church
that does so much to bring the transforming message of God’s
covenant to fulfillment. This is why, if covenantal baptism means
anything, it means the bringing of the church’s children under
the rule of King Jesus. Scripture teaches these children are set
apart for kingdom purposes. It’s a message meant to impact not
only their spiritual alienation from God but also the totality of
their lives.
It all
begins with their baptism, because in administering this sacrament
covenant children are being identified visibly as belonging to
people of God. As such they are becoming part of “a royal
priesthood, a holy nation, a people for His own possession.”
Unlike other communities on earth, members of this gathering have
been called of God to “proclaim the excellencies of Him who
called you out of darkness into His marvelous light” (I Peter
2:9). It is indeed a high and holy calling.
But what
happens when this called out community fails to turn their focus
away from earthly ambitions and toward their ministry as God’s
royal priesthood? What happens is this: Kingdom people bring
discredit to their King and disgrace to themselves.
That is
precisely what is pictured in Jeremiah 22. God’s prophet
describes a sad situation. Jerusalem is in ruins. There is chaos
everywhere. Inevitably it leads to people from many nations,
passing by the city of Jerusalem, asking one another, ‘Why has
the Lord dealt thus with this great city?’ It’s a sad
spectacle, and we’re told why it happened. The answer comes in
the form of a strong accusation from the prophet. It is “because
they forsook the covenant of the Lord their God and worshipped
other gods and served them” (Jer. 22:8, 9).
The
reason for this sorry scene had nothing to do with such important
matters as the offering of appropriate sacrifices. It had nothing
to do with the fact that the people of God had been unfaithful in
carrying out their many religious observances.
What the prophet DOES describe is kingdom responsibilities
that had not been carried out! His message is blunt. “Thus saith
the Lord: Do justices, and righteousness, and deliver from the
hand of the oppressor him who has been robbed. And do no wrong or
violence to the resident alien, the fatherless, and the widow, nor
shed innocent blood in this place” (Jer. 22:3).
The
people obviously were not doing these things, and God was angry.
Later in the chapter, God’s displeasure is sternly defined:
“Woe to him who builds his house by unrighteousness and his
upper rooms by injustice, who makes his neighbor serve him for
nothing and does not give him his wages” (Jer. 22:13).
It is a
message God’s people don’t expect to hear. It is also
something they do not want to hear. God is saying there is a
critical contradiction in their lives. The professions they make
with their lips are not being matched by the actions of their
lives. And that must change! They are a people who have been
rescued by God in order to lift up “ . . . good works which God
prepared beforehand that (they) should walk in them” (Eph.
2:10). To this very day, this whole issue of “good works” or
“kingdom works” is a fundamental principle touching every
aspect of the believer’s life, including what is testified to in
the sacrament of baptism.
When the
church’s children receive the sacramental sign and seal of
identification with God’s earthly people, the covenant community
is expressing both a longing and a commitment. First, they are
saying they eagerly anticipate the day when this covenant child
testifies to having experienced the blessing of forgiveness and
reconciliation with God. Second, they are anticipating that they
will be called upon to do to whatever they can to prepare this
child to actively participate in carrying out God’s Kingdom
work.
In other
words, it’s a longing and a commitment relating to both aspects
of the great commandment. First, Jesus said, “You shall love the
Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with
all your mind.” And then He added this: “You shall love your
neighbor as yourself (Matt. 22:37, 39).
In the
sacrament of baptism, God’s people are promising to make
themselves available to do whatever needs to be done in order to
see this child live out the totality of kingdom concerns. They are
expressing a commitment to see the child trained to do battle with
the power structures of this world that proclaim false gospels and
false messiahs. They are the very structures that would encourage
God’s creatures to live lives with little meaning, little hope,
and little value.
Members
of the church community are testifying that they will do
everything in their power to equip this newly baptized member of
the community to “show forth the praises of Him who has called
us out of darkness into His marvelous light.” They will help
prepare this child to live as God’s “salt and light” before
such a world. They will encourage this child to emulate the
merciful model of their Savior. “When He saw the crowds, He had
compassion for them because they were harassed and helpless, like
sheep without a shepherd” (Matt. 9:36).
From the
youngest to the oldest, God’s people are promising to give
themselves to a lifestyle characterized by self-emptying. Wherever
they see people crying out for justice, for mercy, and for
demonstrations of incarnational love, they will respond. And they
will do this because they recognize this is what kingdom
compassion is all about!
It may be
costly to serve the least and the lost, but a kingdom lifestyle
calls for nothing less. “The greatest among you,” said Jesus,
must “become as the youngest, and the leader as one who
serves” (Luke 22: 26).
All of
this has a direct bearing on covenantal baptism. Because it does,
the parents of the child about to be baptized will take some
family inventory. They will be asking questions such as: “What
effect do kingdom mandates make on relationships between persons
in our family? What differences do these mandates make in the way
we use our time together as a family?”
A kingdom
lifestyle most assuredly will demonstrate a disciplined use of
time. Why? Because it is not possible to lead chaotic,
unstructured, and undisciplined lives and still achieve kingdom
goals. For good reasons, Scripture commands, “Look carefully
then how you walk, not as unwise but as wise, making the best use
of the time, because the days are evil” (Eph. 5:15, 16).
There is
the question of how these parents and how this family will use
their time. However, they also will be asking: “What difference
will kingdom mandates make in the budgeting and spending of our
family income? What difference will it make in discerning those
family needs that are valid?” They are not easy questions to
answer, but covenant families cannot afford to be cavalier or
careless when it comes to money matters. There is too much at
stake.
The way
they spend their family income matters to the poor whose well
being may hinge on the generosity of God’s covenant people. And
it matters to the corporate body of God’s people whose kingdom
objectives either will be thwarted or facilitated by the giving of
God’s people. Without a commitment to Biblical stewardship
covenant families will not be able to nurture that depth of
spiritual maturity and responsibility within the church’s
children that is necessary to carry out kingdom concerns.
The
church’s children will learn how to handle money from watching
adults within the covenant community. They cannot help but be
impacted for good as they observe daily demonstrations of adults
who “honor the Lord with (their) wealth and with the first
fruits of all (their) produce” (Prov. 3:9). They cannot help but
be impressed when they observe the stewardship principles of Jesus
being lived out in the lives of those they look up to. “Give and
it will be given to you. Good measure, pressed down, shaken
together, running over, will be put into your lap. For with the
measure you use, it will be measured back to you” (Luke 6:38).
And what
about the exercise of kingdom stewardship in the way in which
covenant families make use of their homes? When presenting their
child for baptism, parents will want to ask: “What is it that
we’re doing to carry out kingdom considerations with respect to
this place where we live? To what use do we put our homes in
ministering to others? Do we welcome strangers to the comfort of
our homes?” A kingdom consciousness dictates that covenant
families not hold back. It demands that they not withdraw
themselves from the world.
So then,
a kingdom mindset of serving others can be measured in so many
practical ways. No matter how it is measured, it will always
reflect that God’s called-out people model what it means to
cultivate compassion. Always they will “open (their) mouth for
the mute, for the rights of all who are destitute.” And always,
they will “judge righteously, defend the rights of the poor and
the needy” (Prov. 31:8, 9). Always they will be like the
virtuous woman of Proverbs 31, who “opens her hand to the poor
and reaches out her hands to the needy” (Prov. 31:20).
Ultimately
they will do this because all of Scripture lifts up one consistent
message: Kingdom living is so much more than words. It is even
more than words addressed to God. It is more than people praying,
“Thy kingdom come, Thy will be done on earth as it is in
heaven.” It is people who consistently practice what they
profess. It is people who reflect kingdom values in the
compassionate care they demonstrate.
And that is why
when they present their covenant children for baptism, they will
pause to ponder: To what extent will this child witness parents’
hearts that are broken by the things that break the heart of God?
Bottom line, it
all comes down to this: It takes the Kingdom of God being
exhibited both within and without the church to bring the
transforming message of God’s covenant to fulfillment. It all
comes down to this: If covenantal baptism means anything, it means
the bringing of the church’s children under the rule of King
Jesus.
Probe questions:
- Why
is covenant baptism so extremely important in the life of the
church community?
- What
is really happening during the administration of the sacrament
of baptism?
- The
article explains how the people of God are involved in the
sacrament. Explain their involvement.
- What
is the role of the immediate family in the infant’s covenant
baptism?
- The
article refers to the family using its time, energies, and
resources—how does that connect with baptism?
- As
leaders and teachers, how do the people in your church view or
understand infant baptism?
Back
to Equip Page
|