Participating Witness. Anthony G. Siegrist

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Participating Witness - Anthony G. Siegrist Princeton Theological Monograph Series

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Conference list water baptism alongside communion, washing of feet, anointing the sick, laying on of hands, and marriage as “ceremonies and symbols of the Christian faith.”44 The specific language that the Conservative Conference uses to describe baptism depicts it as an “external symbol of internal spiritual baptism.” It symbolizes being buried with Christ and joined in his resurrection, being cleansed by God from sin and guilt. In addition, the Conservative Conference describes baptism as a “public confession of faith,” and it is linked to membership in a local congregation.

      To strengthen the analysis of the theology of baptism presented in these documents it is important to consider the practice within a broader dogmatic context. For this we must pay special attention to the doctrines of God and the church. I am particularly interested in how these texts describe the church’s relationship to God and how they describe the present work of Jesus. We begin with the Conservative Conference’s doctrinal description of the church, which outlines several common Anabaptist themes:

      The church of Jesus Christ is the universal body of redeemed believers committed to Jesus Christ as Lord, and finds expression in the local church in worship, fellowship, holiness, discipline, teaching and preaching the Word, prayer, spiritual gifts, and the New Testament ordinances. The church is called out from and is separate from the world, but reaches out to the world with the Gospel and the “cup of cold water”. The church, as the body of Christ, is the visible representation of God on earth and is ready to suffer and serve as required by Christ and His Word.

      A key feature of this statement, which it shares with most other contemporary Anabaptist doctrinal statements, is the theological distance it maintains between the church and God. The language used here of “representation” is the closest most Anabaptist statements come to equating the presence or work of the church with that of God. The way in which the body of Christ motif is understood in representational terms is evidence of this. The Conservative Conference’s “Statement of Theology” explains that Jesus’ present work is that of intercession. Representation and intercession imply absence and distance.

      The Mennonite Brethren describe the church as “the people called by God through Jesus Christ.” The church “makes Christ visible in the world.” Like the Conservative Conference, the Mennonite Brethren describe the ongoing work of Christ as “intercession” and “advocacy.” In addition, they say that Jesus also “calls [believers] to be his witnesses.” At this point we can begin to observe a formal parallel in the way that the church represents God just as baptism represents God’s work. Though the Spirit is said to unite the church and is described as the presence of God, the Mennonite Brethren statement does not elucidate how the Spirit’s presence or work actually involve the church.

      In describing new life in Christ the Brethren in Christ believe “Persons thus justified by grace through faith enjoy peace with God, are adopted into God’s family, become part of the church, and receive the assurance of eternal life. We become new creatures in Christ, regenerated by the Holy Spirit.” Notice that in this statement becoming part of the church happens alongside enjoying peace with God, being adopted into God’s family, and receiving the assurance of eternal life. These are all listed as effects of justification by grace through faith, yet there is no clear role for the church in bringing about these realities. The “Articles of Faith and Doctrine” of the Brethren in Christ describe Jesus as the head of the church and the one who established it. The Lordship of Jesus is deemed a current reality; though, like other Anabaptist statements, Jesus’ primary ongoing role is said to be intercession. Nevertheless, the body of Christ motif has a prominent role in the Brethren in Christ description of the church. Its invocation, though, is highly metaphorical.

      The “Confession of Faith” used by the two relatively large denominations in the United States and Canada describes the church as “the assembly of those who have accepted God’s offer of salvation through faith in Jesus Christ.” It is “the assembly of those who voluntarily commit themselves to follow Christ.” Recognizing the popularity of the body of Christ motif among Anabaptists, this confession stresses it as well: “We believe that the church as the body of Christ is the visible manifestation of Jesus Christ. The church is called to live and minister as Christ lived and ministered in the world.” In the present tense this document describes Jesus as “the model human being” and “the image of the invisible God.” Jesus is further affirmed as “our Lord and the not-yet-recognized Lord of the world.”

      The “Confession of Faith” of these Mennonite denominations is theologically ambiguous at two key points. In various ways the other documents share these features as well. The first point of ambiguity can be seen in this statement: “Baptism by water is a sign that a person has repented, received forgiveness, renounced evil, and died to sin, through the grace of God in Christ Jesus. Thus cleansed, believers are incorporated into Christ’s body on earth, the church.” While reference to the church being Christ’s body is noticeably less abstract than in some of the other statements, the relationship of the sign of water baptism to either cleansing or incorporation is not clear. It is unclear what “thus cleansed” refers to. Does baptism participate in this? Does baptism have anything to do with the subsequent incorporation

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