How Young Is Too Young: Some Thoughts on Baptizing Young Children

Baptism Pool (A Holy Hot Tub)
source: Jared Cherup

Sometimes I’m grateful that when I was very young, we were Methodists.

I joke sometimes that I’ve been baptized both ways – as an infant and by choice, as a feverishly religious 10-year-old.

But why, you ask, would I be grateful for that? Well, I didn’t have the chance or the pressure to “ask Jesus into my heart” as a very small child. We moved to Virginia when I was 8, where we visited every single Methodist church in a 20-mile radius. My parents didn’t like any of them, and that is how we ended up Southern Baptist, attending a church a few miles down the windy road.

I fully believe in “adult” baptism – that is, baptism that is a symbol of a choice made in a person’s heart to accept Jesus’s crucifixion, resurrection, and saving grace. We have our children dedicated as infants to show our commitment to raising them to know Jesus, but not sprinkled as some denominations do.

So let me tell you a story.

impactgirls

I was a camp counselor the summer after my freshman year of college, along with three other precious and equally insane girls my age. We led worship at weeklong mission camps, where the students participated in home renovation projects for those in need. In between weeks of camp, we also worked at a traditional cabin-in-the-woods kid camp, re-cooperated at a sketchy, ancient church in downtown Richmond, or were allowed a few days at home.

But the endcap to our summer was assisting at the Youth Evangelism Conference, a statewide event for middle and high-school students. It consisted of a few nights of revival-type services – only with rockin’ Christian music instead of the Gaithers – and a day at an amusement park with a big-name concert at the end. (I think that year it was Audio Adrenaline.)

I’d been to the conference as a youth but never experienced quite the flavor of preacher as they had those few nights. “Repeat after me,” he would instruct. “Friends … don’t let friends … go to hell.” That’s all fine and dandy, but he also insinuated that no one in the room was actually saved because they were probably so young when they asked Jesus into their hearts they didn’t mean it. The counseling rooms flooded with students, and I was left to talk to kids who had all the sudden been forced to doubt their salvation. It sucked.

I didn’t know what to tell those kids then, and I’m not sure I would know what to say today. I’m glad I was an older kid at 10 when I was baptized after a very clear calling from my Heavenly Father. No, I didn’t know all the minutiae of the Bible – who does? – but I had a firm idea of Jesus and His sacrifice.

Fast forward 12 years and yes, I still think that pastor was way too aggressive. He scared me and had me doubting my own salvation at the time. I had to shake my head of the hoopla and examine my heart. But I do get a little bit what he was conveying.

It made sense for me when I read Katie Orr’s post today at Inspired to Action. She writes,

Our kids want to please us, so desperately. If we talk about becoming a Christian enough, most children will ultimately come out and say that they want to be one. I’ve witnessed many parents put a ton of stock in the fact that they prayed with their child once, but this is the only “evidence” they have of their salvation.

 

Salvation is and isn’t a one-time deal. Once the “deal is done,” the Holy Spirit is sealed inside you. But there’s also the continual growing. As parents we are responsible for the spiritual education of our kids – not the schools, not the church. And teaching your kids about God doesn’t stop when they accept Christ. That’s the beginning!

Maybe all these youth who flooded the conference rooms of the amphitheater in Richmond, Virginia, circa 2001, had parents who were doing nightly Bible studies with them, praying for them ceaselessly, showed interest in their spiritual well-doing. But I think maybe, like in a lot of things, it’s easy for parents to get lazy when the going looks good. (Hello, preaching to the choir.)

I don’t want my kids doubting their salvation at 12, 16, 30. I want to provide them with a background so they know how desperately Jesus loves them and pursues them, but I can’t make their decisions for them. I pray fervently that they will know the height and depth of God’s love, but I can’t make them believe it. And I pray that I won’t pressure them into anything they aren’t ready for – even baptism.

Speaking of Jesus by Carl Medearis: A Review

I’ve never felt like a good Baptist.

Why? Because I don’t think knocking on people’s doors and leading them through the Roman Road and pressuring them to pray “the prayer” is an effective way to make followers of Christ.

There. I said it. If you want to leave now, I understand.

I’ll never forget a lunchtime Bible study in college that filled me with hope. Our campus minister drew a circle. He talked about how the general method of evangelists was to get people inside the circle – and then leave them there while they go find more people to herd inside.

What if, he conjectured, it was more like there was a big point in the middle, labeled Jesus? And we were trying to help people get closer to that point?

In his book Speaking of Jesus: The Art of Not-Evangelism, Carl Medearis uses pretty much the same illustration. Medearis speaks of an evangelism that is simply leading people into conversation about Jesus and letting the Holy Spirit truly do the work.

The year before Libbie was born, I went on a “mission trip” to Brazil with a few others. It was an amazing two weeks; I loved meeting the students from the seminary, having dinner with the local imam, going to a service at a mosque, and touring the breathtaking area we were in. I loved talking with the missionary couple and the two of their three children that still lived at home. I loved taking a Lebanese cooking class.

What I did not love was trying to approach people cold turkey to talk about the Gospel.

Why? It always seems like such immense pressure. Like I had to defend every aspect of what I believed to be the Christian faith. Apologetics. History. A lot of stuff I didn’t know nor understand.

Having lived and ministered in the Middle East and around the globe, Medearis makes one thing clear: people are turned off by Christianity but long to hear more about Jesus.

I honestly cried at the end of this book because I felt such a wave of relief. Maybe I don’t have to defend Christianity, Christianese, and why Elisha would let a bear kill some kids for making fun of him. Maybe I can just share the relationship I’ve cultivated with Jesus myself. Maybe I can just do what He did: love people. Especially the people we’re not “supposed” to love.

If you, like me, have always felt like the “get your butt into heaven” method of evangelism is just not quite right … you need to read this book. You probably won’t agree with everything Medearis says, but it’s well worth the few hours of reading.

And if you ever want to talk about Jesus – I’m here.

What Do You Do When All Your Plans Fail?

259 - 17 September: The start of a long day!
source: darrenkw

There are times when I’m pretty sure the verse in Isaiah that says, “Make a plan and it will fail” was meant especially for me.

Short term and small things, like our Easter Week activities and this German food bonanza, both ruined by my own sickness. I seem to have a bad track record with Vacation Bible School: the first year we were here, I was struck with the mysterious gallstone or whatever it was. This year, strep throat.

And then there are the big things. Hey, let’s buy a house! Hmm, maybe that wasn’t the best idea we ever had. And in the meanwhile, let’s rent a house from a missionary … who has no idea about renter’s rights and brings me to full-out confrontation over some shrubbery. I was sure the second year Mr. V was at this school we would live on campus – we didn’t. It didn’t look at all promising for the third year – and then, a few days before school started, there we were, moving like crazy people.

We tried to have a baby, and that plan didn’t work for awhile. I wasn’t quite sure about having a second, and bam, there he was.

I’m not even sure why I make any plans anymore. I don’t, really. I mean yes, the day-to-day swimming lessons and coloring pages and trips to the zoo. But long-term? We’re saving money for a down payment. I half expect that economic collapse to really happen and to lose all the money we have. Cynical? Realistic? Pattern? I don’t know.

What I do know is that God’s timing has been right in every situation. I firmly believe we went through foreclosure so we can minister to others who have hit really hard times. I think David needed to be a little older when Libbie hit 3, so I could take care of her aggressive need for attention sometimes. Not to mention, I need those precious, early-toddler giggles, kisses, and belly laughs when I’m having a rough day.

I might regret making certain choices, but I try not to dwell on them, knowing that we can’t change what is in the past. We can only hold on to God’s promises for the future and forge ahead. Maybe every plan I make will fail. But it’s OK … because His won’t.

Fragrant Offerings

I confess I find it the easiest to count God’s gifts on quiet afternoons, when everyone is asleep but me and I can hear Him, smell Him, taste Him in my little home.

It’s Saturday, nearly 6 o’clock, and the kids and I are at my sister’s apartment in Memphis. Wine-drizzled chicken tenders seasoned with garlic powder and Italian seasoning are fragrant in the oven. Rice simmers gently on the stovetop. Libbie curls on the couch, her posture defying her insistence that she was not tired, no way.

We spent four hours at the Memphis Zoo, soaking up sunshine and sweating in the 80-degree weather while we viewed chimps and pandas and bats. David tried to talk to a lion. Libbie marveled at tigers, jumped back from a too-close monkey, and – well – whined through a few exhibits of grizzly bears and wolves.

On an afternoon like this at home, I would feel the need to right all the things in wrong places, to scrub the counter and launder the laundry. But here, I just think, quiet only interrupted by beeping microwave timers and the hum of the air conditioning.

I need gift-collecting time like this; but this is not life for me right now.

Having two toddlers means dirty dishes, crumbs on the floor, mislaid crayons, towers of tiny t-shirts and towels shaped like frogs. Having a three-year-old means near-constant corrections, being climbed upon when I’d rather be reading, tears in the bathtub, and hearing “no” more times in a day than I ever could have imagined.

I love this quote from Lysa TerKeurst in her book What Happens When Women Say Yes to God:

How selfish of me to call our home “my house.” How ungrateful I must have seemed to God. I could have a near and tidy house where things never got lost, misplaced, or broken if there were no others living there but me. But my heart never wanted just a house. My heart longs for a home full of people who I love.

I would almost certainly still manage to lose and break things if I were alone, but that’s another story. Still, Lysa makes the perfect point. My heart longed for a home full of children, and that is what I have. It’s not going to make the pages of Better Homes and Gardens anytime soon … but I will use it to its purpose: the service of my families and others. The spreading of love and hugs. The cooking of food for us and for sharing.

The gifts are simple to count in the quiet … but they are just as present in the chaos.

Gift-remembering:

  • Nana and Libbie dancing in tutu
  • Shopping with my mom without kids – a very rare treat!
  • David’s face and giggles at “I’m coming to get you!”
  • Praise from a mentor
  • The smell of chicken cooking in wine
  • An auntie painting her niece’s toenails and fingernails
  • Libbie’s look as the airplane lifts off at the Memphis children’s museum
  • David “vrooooming” a toy bulldozer
  • Cooking in silence
  • Happy squeals at seeing Daddy
  • Unexpected DVD that feeds my musical-love (Sarah Brightman with 5 Phantoms? Oh yes, please!)

Saturday Linky Love

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Has it really been three weeks since I did a Linky Love post? April has flown right by. I can’t believe it’s practically May. Also known as THE MONTH I SHALL MAKE AN UPROAR ABOUT TURNING THIRTY.

Here’s what I’ve read lately that I think you should read, too.

I would love if you’d go read my guest post for this month at ParentLife. It’s about how parenting prepares you to do other scary things.

Did you read or write anything great lately? Leave the link in the comments!

Added to Saturday Stumbles at Simply Staci.

Canceling the Contingency Plan

It’s been bubbling up inside me for a while now: a new little dream percolating like rich coffee, waiting for me to add cream and sugar and maybe even a dollop of ice cream and some sprinkles.

The more I speak it out loud, the more true it sounds, the more it seems like something I could actually do.

I want to write a devotional book.

The specifics, I don’t know. Do you? I spoke to author and (in)courage founder Holley Gerth this weekend and somehow this spilled forth from me, brown coffee stains on my shirt and a burnt lip. I told her what I know: being a mom of little ones, frazzled and on my face in front of God, not even being able to voice a prayer some days.

I can’t even stick to a Bible reading plan and I think I can help other women? It’s a lie from the Devil, that I have no willpower, no self-control. I can do all through Him – all and even more.

“Whatever God has promised gets stamped with the Yes of Jesus. In him, this is what we preach and pray, the great Amen, God’s Yes and our Yes together, gloriously evident. God affirms us, making us a sure thing in Christ, putting his Yes within us. By his Spirit he has stamped us with his eternal pledge—a sure beginning of what he is destined to complete.” 2 Corinthians 1:20-22, The Message

With every ounce of me, I know I am a writer. I know God’s gift to me is words to paper, Times New Roman to computer screen. My heart burns to share Him through words.

So hold me to it, won’t you? Walk with me. Be my Jiminy Cricket and remind me when the words are held back and children scream and nothing seems right, that I am stamped with the Yes.

[This weekend at Blissdom, Jeff Goins encouraged us to write something dangerous and link it up at his page. This is it. You can read others' dangerous words there, too. Linked up with Elizabeth Esther at the Saturday Evening Blog Post, too.]

Stuff Jessie Likes

It was so awesome to get to hear Jon Acuff speak at Blissdom this morning. He is truly hilarious, and his talk about deep-vee-syndrome had everyone cracked up and Tweeting one-liners.

But the more serious and impassioned part of his talk was about his job-hopping because he thought the next job would be more fulfilling, they would appreciate him, or he would find what he loved. And of course, he knew what he loved – blogging, writing, traveling, being funny.

It’s difficult to throw yourself wholeheartedly into what you love. There’s always something else. Minutiae, family, details, work. Somewhere back there, though, we have a dream. Acuff called it the “but” phenomenon; everyone says, “I’m a ________, but I want to be a __________.”

Which is why it strikes me as so amazing that I can say I am exactly what I want to be. I’ve always wanted to be a writer and a mother. And how crazy blessed am I that those two things are what I do? I certainly don’t have everything figured out, and I always long for more. (Who doesn’t? Our hearts aren’t made for this world.) But on earth, I believe God has gifted me with the talent to write. I just need to figure out how to glorify Him using that talent.

And this blog, writing for magazines, working on a ministry newsletter – those things seem like the right place to start. Through the pain and confusion of the last three years, God has blessed me beyond belief in the area of my writing, opening doors without me trying to shove them open – and then figuring out that the sign said “pull.” Giving our future, our home, our kids to Him has enabled me to lift up my hands and say, “Hey, Lord, just do what You want with me. Cause You’re going to anyway, so it’s way better if I just give in.”

What is your “but”? What is it you really want to do? And what’s stopping you?

 

Grief, In More Ways Than One

I’m feeling sad today. And it’s my 2-year-anniversary. Not sad about that, just about the human condition.

Am I the only person alive about the age of 12 who still thinks some things are inappropriate? I get uncomfortable at nudity in movies! Especially when it is just crude, like Wedding Crashers. I am alarmed by people who think Wedding Crashers was a good movie.

I like to think of myself as an artist type–I am a writer, at least in my head. I love art and writing and music and the like. But I watched the movie Frida this weekend and was fairly scandalized by the nudity, sex scenes, including homosexual ones. I think that’s a good thing, unlike what people might tell me. Being a Christian, I think I should still be offended by things that offend God. I don’t want to be judgmental, but I do want to walk in light!

Thought 2, I am kind of starting phase 1 of South Beach today (again). Except I had 3 dark chocolate Hershey kisses. But not like 3 Hershey bars or anything. They were sitting there melting all over everything in my purse including my nice new cell phone.

Everyone at work is at a funeral today for the son of a guy who works in this department. The boy was just going to be a senior in high school. Football player, played in the church’s worship band, good student, witnessed to friends. Makes it very confusing to know what God is thinking sometime, but I know I am not one to try to compare my thinking to God’s. In my heart, I know that He knows best and I am ridiculous to think I might know better. He has a plan.

J

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