Category Archives: Baptism

Bound to God

This baptismal meditation was given at King’s Cross Church on November 6, AD 2022.

In this sacrament of baptism God covenantally binds Himself to us and we to Him. 

Here this morning God is claiming these children as His, marking them with the waters of baptism that are a sign and seal of the inner cleansing work of His Spirit. God is promising Himself to them, to be what He is already to their parents and siblings, a good and faithful Father. 

Likewise, upon baptism these children are now bound to God, to live in accordance with His Word, to walk in step with His Spirit, to maintain allegiance to Him and His kingdom all the days of their lives.

And the magnificent thing about these covenant obligations is that it is all of grace. For it is God who works in us, both to will and to work for His good pleasure. And He promises never to depart. Amen. 

A Covenantal World

In God’s good design for this world, there is a covenantal relationship between parents and their children, in which the decisions of parents automatically affect the children.

Children, while individuals, are not merely individuals, but members of a family, a people, a nation, and so on. This is how we should see our world of relationships, for it is how God sees the world. 

As the Princeton theologian A.A. Hodge once wrote, “God has in all respects made the standing of a child depend upon that of the parent. The sin of the parent carries away the infant from God; likewise, so the faith of the parent brings the infant near to God.”

This is simply how it is. Even parents today who militate against this, who wickedly desire for their young children to somehow independently “choose their own identities,” are still teaching and applying their own ideologies to their children. It is inescapable. 

And so here this morning, we are baptizing our little brother James, acknowledging that we live in a covenantal world, and that by God’s grace he has been born into a Christian family. He is a Kramer, and by this baptism, he is received into the church as a Christian.

And so we pray that the faith of his parents, his family, and this church, will bring him nearer and nearer to God, all the days of his life. Amen.

Baptism

Introduction

The first sacrament to consider is baptism, for through baptism men, women, and children enter into the church. Baptism is not only what admits an individual into the church, but is also “a sign and seal of the covenant of grace, of his ingrafting into Christ, of regeneration, of remission of sins, and of his giving up unto God through Jesus Christ, to walk in newness of life” (WCF 28.1). In baptism, individuals are washed with water in the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, as was commanded and instituted by Christ in the Great Commission (Mt. 28:19).

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