What does it mean to be
Reformed in our current
American context? In a
land where the needs of consumers
make the market run, what
would it mean to base our faith
around God as the central actor in
salvation? How should Reformed
pastors minister to congregations
that have little orientation to the
Reformed tradition?
These are key questions for
the Reformed tradition in America
today. Christian messages pulsate
on the airwaves and the Internet,
catechizing our parishioners into
an "American type" of Christianity.
This
catechism teaches something like the
following: since Christian faith requires
commitment and effort, I should try hard
to maintain my faith and a godly lifestyle;
when I face challenges, I can go to God to
overcome these challenges; when I need a
stable place for my family, the church is a
place to go; when I feel discouraged, I can
know that God is on my side.
Though this catechism has some
positive elements, it also has assumptions
that Reformed Christian should find
troubling. Who is at the center? Me, my
spiritual life, my decisions, my choices.
God is important, but mainly as a God
who responds to what I decide and to how
I act. Is Christ really necessary? In this
functional theology, Christ is necessary
to open our access to God but there is
usually not much of a sense that our life
is united to the very person of Christ in
his death and resurrection. What about
the Holy Spirit? The Holy Spirit proclaimed
on the airwaves tends to be connected
with particular moments of spontaneity
or insight. The idea of the Spirit
as a day-to-day help in living our lives as
united to Christ and Christ's body, the
Church, is a more foreign one.
Issues such as these give urgency
to the message of James V. Brownson's
book, The Promise of Baptism. Brownson,
a professor of New Testament at Western
Theological Seminary in Holland, Michigan,
presents a God-centered vision of
the Christian life. To Brownson, our individual
stories must be taken up into
God's story if we are to live into the gospel
message. The most important thing
in the universe is not me, my decisions,
my choices. Rather, salvation is a matter
of union with Christ in his death and
resurrection, and a daily empowerment
by the Spirit to live into this new life in
Christ and God's mission for the Church.
In this view, a properly contextualized
Christianity in America must critique
aspects of American culture, including
its individualism and its anthropocentricism.
These are bold claims to make.
But it is a territory that one cannot avoid
if one is to discuss baptism in the Reformed
tradition.
Brownson divides his book into six
sections--the first of which deals with many of the "basic questions" of baptism:
what does it mean to be a Christian?
What is the Church? Each of the
thirty chapters in the book is organized
around a pointedly framed question like
these. Brownson begins by explaining the
question, along with its biblical and theological
background. He then presents his
constructive case on the issue. Each chapter
ends with bullet points of summary,
discussion questions for the chapter, and
a resource listed for further study.
After exploring these basic questions
Brownson moves to sections on "The
Core Meanings of Baptism," "Baptism,
Faith, and Salvation," "The Case for Infant
Baptism," "Disputes and Questions
Surrounding Infant Baptism," and "Pastoral
Decisions Surrounding Infant Baptism."
Each of these sections fills a different
function for the reader. The opening
sections are essential in setting forth the
key features of a biblical and Reformed
theology of baptism. The later sections
deal with special issues, problems, and
challenges to a Reformed theology and
practice of baptism.
The book often contrasts a Reformed
covenantal theology of baptism (that includes
the baptism of infants) with the
theology that supports believer-only baptism.
In places it would have been helpful
to give a fuller account of this latter
theology, though in truth this can be notoriously
difficult to specify as most baptistic
churches are nonconfessional and
independent in character. In addition,
Brownson's concentration on comparing
the Reformed and baptistic approaches
sometimes underemphasizes the fact that
the Reformed tradition walks a "middle
way" on the issue of baptism. In contrast
to Roman Catholic, Anglican, and Lutheran
traditions, the Reformed tradition
does not affirm baptismal regeneration.
Yet, in contrast to baptistic approaches,
the Reformed tradition does not think
that the "signified" of baptism is the faith
commitment of the believer, but God's own
promise of union with Christ, cleansing
from sin, the gift of the Spirit, and new
life. Brownson affirms that the Reformed
tradition fills this middle place, but his
focus on the baptistic challenges to the
Reformed position may not always keep
the "centrist" character of the Reformed
account in view.
Overall, Brownson's provides a superb
resource for pastors, church leaders,
and seminary students for how a Reformed
theology and practice of baptism
moves us deeper into the gospel of Jesus
Christ. The simple practice of baptism is
complex precisely because it is so important
and fecund. Baptism points to the
wild and gracious and wonderful reality
of life in Christ, life in the Spirit, cleansing
and newness. If, with many American
Christians, we push baptism to the
sidelines of the Christian faith, we risk
turning our eyes from the great gift and
promise of God who brings us into a gospel
story that shatters our chains of selfserving,
self-focused religion.
J. Todd Billings is assistant professor of Reformed
theology at Western Theological Seminary in Holland,
Michigan.