GRACE THE SACRAMENTS ORIGINAL SIN BAPTISM ITS NECESSITY ITS EFFECTS MANNER
OF BAPTIZING.
The grace of God is that supernatural
assistance which He imparts to us, through the merits
of Jesus Christ, for our salvation. It is called
supernatural, because no one by his own natural
ability can acquire it.
Without Divine grace we can neither
conceive nor accomplish anything for the sanctification
of our souls. “Not that we are sufficient,”
says the Apostle, “to think anything of ourselves,
as of ourselves; but our sufficiency is from God."2
“For it is God who worketh in you, both to will
and to accomplish"2 anything conducive to your
salvation. “Without Me,” says our
Lord, “you can do nothing."2 But in order
that Divine grace may effectually aid us we must co-operate
with it, or at least we must not resist it.
The grace of God is obtained chiefly
by prayer and the Sacraments.
A Sacrament is a visible sign instituted
by Christ by which grace is conveyed to our souls.
Three things are necessary to constitute a Sacrament,
viz. a visible sign, invisible grace
and the institution by our Lord Jesus Christ.
Thus, in the Sacrament of Baptism,
there is the outward sign, which consists in the pouring
of water and in the formula of words which are then
pronounced; the interior grace or sanctification which
is imparted to the soul: “Be baptized,
... and you shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost;"2
and the ordinance of Jesus Christ, who said: “Teach
all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father,
and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost."2
Our Savior instituted seven Sacraments,
namely, Baptism, Confirmation, Eucharist, Penance,
Extreme Unction, Orders and Matrimony, which I shall
explain separately.
According to the teachings of Holy
Writ, man was created in a state of innocence and
holiness, and after having spent on this earth his
allotted terms of years he was destined, without tasting
death, to be translated to the perpetual society of
God in heave But in consequence of his disobedience
he fell from his high estate of righteousness; his
soul was defiled by sin; he became subject to death
and to various ills of body and soul and forfeited
his heavenly inheritance.
Adam’s transgression was not
confined to himself, but was transmitted, with its
long train of dire consequences, to all his posterity.
It is called original sin because it is derived
from our original progenitor. “Wherefore,”
says St. Paul, “as by one man sin entered into
this world, and by sin death, and so death passed
unto all men, in whom all have sinned."3 And elsewhere
he tells us that “we were by nature children
of wrath."3
“Who,” says Job, “can
make him clean that is conceived of unclean seed,”
or, as the Septuagint version expresses it: “There
is no one free from stain, not even though his life
be of one day."3 As an infant one day old cannot
commit an actual sin, the stain must come from
the original offense of Adam. “Behold,”
says David, “I was conceived in iniquities, and
in sins did my mother conceive me."3 The Scripture
also tells us that Jeremiah and John the Baptist were
sanctified before their birth, or purified from sin,
and, of course, at that period of their existence they
were incapable of actual sin. They were cleansed,
therefore, from the original taint.
These passages clearly show that we
have all inherited the transgression of our first
parents, and that we are born enemies of God.
And it is equally plain that these texts apply to
every member of the human family to the
infant of a day old as well as to the adult.
Indeed, even without the light of
Holy Scripture, we have only to look into ourselves
to be convinced that our nature has undergone a rude
shock. How else can we account for the miseries
and infirmities of our bodies, the blindness of our
understanding, the perversity of our will inclined
always to evil rather than to good the violence
of our passions, which are constantly waging war in
our hearts? How well does the Catholic doctrine
explain this abnormal state. Hence, Paschal truly
says that man is a greater mystery to himself without
original sin than is the mystery itself.
The Church, however, declares that
the Blessed Virgin Mary was exempted from the stain
of original sin by the merits of our Savior Jesus Christ;
and that, consequently, she was never for an instant
subject to the dominion of Satan.
This is what is meant by the doctrine
of the Immaculate Conception.
But God, in passing sentence of condemnation
on Adam, consoled him by the promise of a Redeemer
to come. “I will put enmities,” saith
the Lord, “between thee and the woman, and thy
seed and her seed; she shall crush thy head."3
Jesus, the seed of Mary, is the chosen one who was
destined to crush the head of the infernal serpent.
And “when the fulness of time was come God sent
His Son, made of a woman, ... that He might redeem
them that were under the law, that we might receive
the adoption of sons."3
Jesus Christ, our Redeemer, came to
wash away the defilement from our souls and to restore
us to that Divine friendship which we had lost by the
sin of Adam. He is the second Adam, who came to
repair the iniquity of the first. It was our
Savior’s privilege to prescribe the conditions
on which our reconciliation with God was to be effected.
Now He tells us in His Gospel that
Baptism is the essential means established for washing
away the stain of original sin and the door by which
we find admittance into His Church, which may be called
the second Eden. We must all submit to a new
birth, or regeneration, before we can enter the kingdom
of heaven. Water is the appropriate instrument
of this new birth, as it indicates the interior cleansing
of the soul; and the Holy Ghost, the Giver of spiritual
life, is its Author.
The Church teaches that Baptism is
necessary for all, for infants as well as adults,
and her doctrine rests on the following grounds:
Our Lord says to Nicodemus: “Amen,
amen, I say to thee, unless a man be born again of
water and the Holy Ghost he cannot enter into the kingdom
of God."3 These words embrace the whole human
family, without regard to age or sex, as is evident
from the original Greek text, for {~GREEK SMALL LETTER
TAU~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER IOTA~}{~GREEK SMALL LETTER
FINAL SIGMA~}, which is rendered man in our
English translation, means any one mankind
in its broadest acceptation.
The Acts of the Apostles and the Epistles
of St. Paul, although containing only a fragmentary
account of the ministry of the Apostles, plainly insinuate
that the Apostles baptized children as well as grown
persons. We are told, for instance, that Lydia
“was baptized, and her household,"3 by St.
Paul; and that the jailer “was baptized, and
all his family."3 The same Apostle baptized also
“the household of Stephanas."4 Although
it is not expressly stated that there were children
among these baptized families, the presumption is
strongly in favor of the supposition that there were.
But if any doubt exists regarding the Apostolic practice
of baptizing infants it is easily removed by referring
to the writings of the primitive Fathers of the Church,
who, as they were the immediate successors of the
Apostles, ought to be the best interpreters of their
doctrines and practice.
St. Irenaeus, a disciple of Polycarp,
who was a disciple of St. John the Evangelist, says:
“Christ came to save all through Himself; all,
I say, who are born anew (or baptized) through
Him infants and little ones, boys and youths,
and aged persons."4
Origen, who lived a few years later,
writes: “The Church received the tradition
from the Apostles, to give baptism even to infants."4
The early church of Africa bears triumphant
testimony in vindication of infant baptism. St.
Cyprian and sixty-six suffragan Prelates held a council
in the metropolitan city of Carthage, in the year 253.
While the Council is in session a Prelate named Fidus
writes to the Fathers, asking them whether infants
ought to be baptized before the eighth day succeeding
their birth, or on the eighth day, in accordance with
the practice of circumcision. The Bishops unanimously
subscribe to the following reply: “As to
what regards the baptism of infants, ... we all judged
that the mercy and grace of God should be denied to
no human being from the moment of his birth.
If even to the greatest delinquents the remission of
sins is granted, how much less should the infant be
repelled, who, being recently born according to Adam,
has contracted at his first birth the contagion of
the ancient death."4 The African Council asserts
here two prominent facts the universal
contagion of the human race through Adam’s fall,
and the universal necessity of Baptism without distinction
of age.
Upon this decision, I will make two
observations: First Fidus did not
inquire about the necessity of infant baptism, which
he already admitted, but about the propriety of conferring
it on the eighth day, in imitation of the Jewish law
of circumcision. Second The Bishops
assembled in that Council were as numerous as the
whole Episcopate of the United States, which contains
about five thousand Priests and upwards of six millions
of Catholics. We may therefore reasonably conclude
that the judgment of the African Council represented
the faith of several thousand Priests and several
millions of Catholics.
St. Augustine, commenting on this
decision, justly observes that St. Cyprian and his
colleagues made no new decree, but maintained most
firmly the faith of the Church. And this is the
unanimous sentiment of tradition from the days of
the Apostles to our own times.
Is it not ludicrous as well as impious
to see a few German fanatics, in the sixteenth century,
raising their feeble voice against the thunder tones
of all Christendom, by decrying a practice which was
universally held as sacred and essential? In
judging between the teachings of Apostolical
antiquity on the one hand and of the Anabaptists on
the other, it is not hard to determine on which side
lies the truth; for, what becomes of the Christian
Church, if it has erred on so vital a point as that
of Baptism during the entire period of its existence?
Original sin, as St. Paul has told
us, is universal. Every child is, therefore,
defiled at its birth with the taint of Adam’s
disobedience. Now, the Scripture says that nothing
defiled can enter the kingdom of heave Hence
Baptism, which washes away original sin, is as essential
for the infant as for the full grown man, in order
to attain the kingdom of heaven.
I said that regeneration is necessary
for all. But it is important to observe that
if a man is heartily sorry for his sins, if he loves
God with his whole heart, if he desires to comply
with all the Divine ordinances, including Baptism,
but has no opportunity of receiving it, or is not
sufficiently instructed as to its necessity, God, in
this case, accepts the will for the deed. Should
this man die in these dispositions, he is saved by
the baptism of _ desire_, as happened to the
Emperor Valentinian who died a Catechuman: “I
lost him whom I was about to regenerate,” says
St. Ambrose, “but he did not lose that grace
he sought for.” Or, if an unbaptized person
lays down his life for Christ, his death is accepted
as more than an equivalent for baptism; for he dies
not only sanctified, but he will wear a martyr’s
crown. He is baptized in his own blood.
But is not that a cruel and heartless
doctrine which excludes from heaven so many harmless
babes that have never committed any actual fault?
To this I reply: Has not God declared that Baptism
is necessary for all? And is not God the supreme
Wisdom and Justice and Mercy? I am sure, then,
that there can be nothing cruel or unjust in God’s
decrees. The province of reason consists in ascertaining
that God has spoken. When we know that He has
spoken, then our investigation ceases, and faith and
obedience begin. Instead of impiously criticising
the Divine decree, we should exclaim with the Apostle:
“O! the depth of the riches of the wisdom and
knowledge of God! how incomprehensible are His judgments,
and how unsearchable His ways! For, who hath
known the mind of the Lord? or who hath been His counsellor?"4
Let us remember that heaven is a place
to which none of us has any inherent right or natural
claim, but that it is promised to us by the pure favor
of God. He can reject and adopt whom He pleases,
and can, without injustice, prescribe His own conditions
for accepting His proffered boon. If your child
is deprived of heaven by being deprived of Baptism,
God does it no wrong because He infringes no right
to which your child had any inalienable title.
If your child obtains the grace of Baptism be thankful
for the gift.
It is proper here to state briefly
what the Church actually teaches regarding the future
state of unbaptized infants. Though the Church,
in obedience to God’s Word, declares that unbaptized
infants are excluded from the kingdom of heaven, it
should not hence be concluded that they are consigned
to the place of the reprobate. None are condemned
to the torments of the damned but such as merit Divine
vengeance by their personal sins.
All that the Church holds on this
point is that unregenerate children are deprived of
the beatific vision, or the possession of God, which
constitutes the essential happiness of the blessed.
Now, between the supreme bliss of
heaven and the torments of the reprobate, there is
a very wide margin.
All admit that the condition of unbaptized
infants is better than non-existence. There are
some Catholic writers of distinction who even assert
that unbaptized infants enjoy a certain degree of natural
beatitude that is, a happiness which is
based on the natural knowledge and love of God.
From what has been said you may well
judge how reprehensible is the conduct of Catholic
parents who neglect to have their children baptized
at the earliest possible moment, thereby risking their
own souls, as well as the souls of their innocent
offspring. How different was the practice of
the early Christians, who, as St. Augustine testifies,
hastened with their new-born babes to the baptismal
font that they might not be deprived of the grace
of regeneration.
If an infant is sick, no expense is
spared that its life may be preserved. The physician
is called in, medicine is given to it, and the mother
will spend sleepless nights watching every movement
of the infant; she will sacrifice her repose, her
health; nay, she will expose even her own life that
the life of her offspring may be saved. And yet
the supernatural happiness of the child is too often
imperiled without remorse by the criminal postponement
of Baptism.
But if they are to be censured who
are slow in having their children baptized, what are
we to think of that large body of professing Christians
who, on principle, deny Baptism to little ones till
they come to the age of discretion? What are
we to think of those who set their private opinions
above Scripture, the early Fathers of the Church and
the universal practice of Christendom?
We may smile indeed at a theological
opinion, no matter how novel or erroneous it may be,
so long as it does not involve any dangerous consequences.
But when it is given in a case of life and death, how
terrible is the responsibility of those who propagate
doctrines so erroneous!
The opposite practice of the Catholic
and the Baptist churches, in their treatment of the
newborn infant, may be well compared to the conduct
of the true and the false mother who both claimed
the child at the tribunal of Solomon. The king
exclaimed: “Divide the living child in two,
and give half to the one and half to the other.”
The pretended mother consented, saying: Let it
be neither mine nor thine, but divide it. “But
the woman whose child was alive, said to the king
(for her bowels were moved upon her child): I
beseech thee, my lord, give her the child alive, and
do not kill it.” While the Baptist church
is willing that the child should die a spiritual death,
the true mother, the Catholic Church, cries out:
Keep the child, provided its spiritual life is saved,
even at your hands. Let it be clothed with the
robe of innocence even by a stranger. Let it be
nursed at the breasts even of a step-mother.
Better it should live without me than perish before
my face. I will still be its mother, though it
know me not.
Ah! my Baptist friend, you think that
Baptism is not necessary for your child’s salvation.
The old Church teaches the contrary. You admit
that you may be wrong, and it is a question of life
and death. Take the safe side. Give your
child the benefit of the doubt. Let it be baptized.
Baptism washes away original sin,
and also actual sins from the adult who may have
contracted them. The cleansing efficacy of Baptism
was clearly foreshadowed by the prophet Ezechiel in
these words: “I will pour upon you clean
water, and you shall be cleansed from all your filthiness.
And I will give you a new heart and will put a new
spirit within you."4
When the Jews asked St. Peter what
they should do to be saved the Apostle replied:
“Repent, and let everyone of you be baptized
in the name of Jesus Christ for the remission of your
sins."4
And Ananias said to Saul, after his
conversion: “Rise up and be baptized, and
wash away thy sins."4
“We were by nature,” says
St. Paul, “children of wrath,” but by our
regeneration, or new birth in Baptism, we become Christians
and children of God. “For, ye are all
the children of God by faith in Christ Jesus.
For as many of you as have been baptized in Christ
have put on Christ."4 We are adopted into the
same family with Jesus Christ. What He is by
nature we are by grace children of God,
and consequently brethren of Christ. Nay, our
union with Jesus is still more close. We become
true members of His mystical body, which is His Church,
and His Divine image is stamped upon our soul.
Baptism also clothes us with the garment
of sanctity, so that our soul becomes a fit dwelling-place
for the Holy Ghost. The Apostle, after giving
a fearful catalogue of the vices of the Pagans, says
to the Corinthians: “And such some of you
were; but ye are washed, but ye are sanctified, but
ye are justified in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ,
and in the Spirit of God."5
Baptism, in fine, makes us heirs
of heaven and co-heirs with Jesus Christ.
“We ourselves also,” says St. Paul, “were
sometimes unwise, incredulous, erring, slaves to divers
desires and pleasures, living in malice and envy,
hateful, and hating one another. But when the
goodness and kindness of God our Savior appeared,
... He saved us by the laver of regeneration
and renovation of the Holy Ghost, whom He hath poured
forth abundantly upon us, through Jesus Christ our
Savior, that being justified by His grace, we may
be heirs, according to the hope of life everlasting."5
Here we plainly see that the forgiveness
of sin, the adoption into the family of God, the sanctification
of the soul and the pledge of eternal life are ascribed
to the due reception of Baptism not, indeed,
that water or the words of the minister have any intrinsic
virtue to heal the soul, but because Jesus Christ,
whose word is creative power, is pleased to attach
to this rite its wonderful efficacy of healing the
soul, as He imparted to the pool of Bethsaida the
power of healing the bod
From what has been said, I ask you
candidly what are you to think of the decision rendered
in 1872 by the Bishops of the Protestant Episcopal
Church, who, in their convention in Baltimore, declared
that by the word regeneration we are not to
understand a moral change. If no moral
change is effected by Baptism, then there is no change
at all; for certainly Baptism produces no physical
change in the soul.
Is it no change to pass from sin to
virtue, from a “child of wrath” to be
a “child of God;” from corruption to sanctification;
from the condition of heirs of death to the inheritance
of heaven? If all this implies no moral change,
then these words have lost their meaning.
Modes of baptizing. The Baptists
err in asserting that Baptism by immersion is the
only valid mode. Baptism may be validly administered
in either of three ways, viz: by immersion,
or by plunging the candidate into the water; by infusion,
or by pouring the water; and by aspersion,
or sprinkling.
As our Lord nowhere prescribes any
special form of administering the Sacrament, the Church
exercises her discretion in adopting the most convenient
mode, according to the circumstances of time and place.
For several centuries after the establishment
of Christianity Baptism was usually conferred
by immersion; but since the twelfth century the practice
of baptising by infusion has prevailed in the Catholic
Church, as this manner is attended with less inconvenience
than Baptism by immersion.
To prove that Baptism by infusion
or by sprinkling is as legitimate as by immersion,
it is only necessary to observe that, though immersion
was the more common practice in the Primitive Church,
the Sacrament was frequently administered even then
by infusion and aspersion.
After St. Peter’s first discourse
three thousand persons were baptize It is not
likely that so many could have been immersed in one
day, especially when we consider the time occupied
in instructing the candidates.
On reading the account of the Baptism
of St. Paul and the jailer the context leaves a strong
impression on the mind that both received the Sacrament
by aspersion or by infusion.
Early ecclesiastical history records
a great many instances in which Baptism was administered
to sick persons in their beds, to prisoners
in their cells, and to persons on shipboard.
The Fathers of the Church never called in question
the validity or the legitimacy of such Baptisms.
Now, it is almost impossible to believe that candidates
in such situations could receive the rite by immersion.
We have seen, moreover, that Baptism
has always been declared necessary for salvation.
It is reasonable, hence, to believe that our Lord would
have afforded the greatest facility for the reception
of so essential a Sacrament.
But if Baptism by immersion only is
valid, how many sick and delicate persons, how many
prisoners and seafaring people, how many thousands
living in the frigid zone, or even in the temperate
zone, in the depth of an inclement winter, though
craving the grace of regeneration, would be deprived
of God’s seal, or would receive it at the risk
of their lives! Surely God does not ordinarily
impose His ordinances upon us under such a penalty.
Moreover, if immersion is the only
valid form of Baptism, what has become of the millions
of souls who, in every age and country, have been
regenerated by the infusion or the aspersion of water
in the Christian Church?