+ In the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost. Amen.
I attended a meeting last week with several clergy and lay leaders, both Episcopalian and Lutheran, last week, and one Lutheran pastor present—at whose parish we were meeting—had to excuse himself for a bit to meet with a woman in her nineties whom he said was having “a baptismal crisis.” It turns out that she was uncertain whether or not she had actually been baptized and was worried about what this meant for her eternal destination. Fortunately for her peace of mind, the church secretary found the recording of her baptism from the nineteen thirties. Thank goodness for church records. I always find it amusing when I read again the opening chapter of Paul’s First Epistle to the Corinthians, as we did at Morning Prayer on Monday, where the Apostle writes the following:
I thank God that I baptized none of you, but Chrispus and Gaius; lest any should think I had baptized in my own name. And I baptized also the household of Stephanas: besides I know not whether I baptized any other.
The church in Corinth could have clearly used better record keeping and a good church secretary.
Two quick asides. First, there is always the possibility (at least in our tradition) of something called a “conditional baptism” which is intended for things like this anxious nonagenarian’s situation. When the big moment comes, you just say “if you are not already baptized, I baptize you in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Amen.” I have had occasion to do this. Secondly, and more importantly, I don’t personally believe that God deals in “moral luck”, so I personally reject the idea that somebody could be condemned because he or she believed himself or herself to have been baptized but hadn’t been. That said, the pastoral response in such circumstances would not be to argue that point but to try to find the baptismal record and to do a conditional baptism if called for.
Anyway, all of this raises the question of assurance. How can we be sure we are among the elect?
Nineteenth century hymn writer Fanny Crosby seemed to have worked it out. You might have heard her words before if you grew up in a different Christian tradition (it’s sadly never been in our hymnal tradition):
Blessed assurance, Jesus is mine!
O what a foretaste of glory divine!
Heir of salvation, purchase of God,
Born of His Spirit, washed in His blood.
Perfect submission, perfect delight!
Visions of rapture now burst on my sight;
Angels descending bring from above
Echoes of mercy, whispers of love.
Ms. Crosby might have worked it out, but the man who started her own flavor of Christianity, John Wesley, could not. While he taught that humans could have some level of assurance, he—who though not having Crosby’s visions of rapture and of angels descending, had felt his heart strangely warmed in a moment of conversion—could not ultimately confirm that he was certain he had been saved. Perhaps he had backslid back into his high church Anglicanism.
Puritans had similar concerns. While you’re not likely to hear it preached down at First Presbyterian (as our reformed brothers and sisters have lately tended to deëmphasize the theology of Calvin), those of the reformed tradition—Puritans and more moderate Presbyterians alike—believed that one couldn’t have perfect assurance of salvation, but only clues (signs of election) based on things like domestic tranquility and personal wealth–blessings from God which suggested to them that they were favored and thus saved. The result was the development of the Protestant work ethic (you’d work hard to evince these signs of election for your own surety and the recognition of your coreligionists) which works out well if you’re trying to establish a peaceable and productive society, but you also might get a bunch of people worried that they are sinners in the hands of an angry God.
Likewise, a case can be made that the Protestant Reformation itself began less because of Roman Catholic abuses (selling indulgences and the like, as important as that was as a tipping point) and more because good old Martin Luther was so terrified at the church’s ambivalence on the matter of salvation that he needed to find a system which provided more certainty to the believer that he or she was heaven-bound rather than damned.
Folks, I’ve got some good news for you. You don’t have to worry yourself to death; or maybe put better, the fact that you may be worried might ironically be the best evidence that you needn’t worry that you’re going to Hell. You have been been saved by Christ’s one sufficient sacrifice, oblation, and satisfaction on the Cross. you have been saved in the regenerative waters of Baptism. You are being saved as you continue to receive the Grace of Christ’s Body and Blood and as good fruit is borne through your faith by the work of the Holy Spirit, even if your own participation that is simply sincerely saying “God, work through me though I am too weak to do your will.”
Now this is dangerous information to give out. It’s dangerous information, because people who are afraid of Hell can sometimes behave a lot better than those who aren’t. Geneva, when Calvin was more-or-less in charge was one of the most peaceful, prosperous, democratic places in the world.
And as much as I hate to admit it (and as I implied just a moment ago) the Puritan history of our own country’s early years had much the same effect. While our Anglican forebears on this continent were growing fat and lazy and treating trading slaves in the Southern Colonies, the Puritans up in New England were creating communities of mutual responsibility and laying the foundations for a country that could get on without a king, because they were so darned law-abiding and committed to equality (at least relative to others in the Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries. And, contrary to popular fiction, they even killed fewer purported witches than Anglicans at the time did. Unfortunately, they were so good at obeying law and setting up the foundations of modern civil society because they were afraid that if they didn’t they’d literally go to hell. One takes the bad with the good, I guess.
The theological truth is socially dangerous, because people realize that they’re not going to burn just because they’re bad. We’re all pretty bad by nature thanks to the fall and only good by the grace of God. I’m not sure how I feel about that. Actually I do, but thank God I’m not God. I’m certainly not as loving and gracious and forgiving as God. In today’s Epistle, we get a pretty broad, generous view of salvation. We are all children of Abraham, and God has reckoned us all worthy of Salvation because of the Blood of Christ. In his conversation with Nicodemus, the only litmus test Jesus gives is that we be “born again” or “born from above” as some modern translations put it. He says we must be born of water and of the Spirit, which is to say (at least as I read it, though there are alternative interpretations) that we must both be born physically and then receive the New Birth of Baptism. Most of us (myself included) received that new birth when we’re too young to understand its nature, and we are merely passive recipients of God’s Grace. But that I think is ideal; infant baptism being normative just means that we’re being honest about the nature of the Sacrament and of Salvation, because even baptism of those of riper years, as older prayerbooks put it, is essentially a passive reception of God’s Grace, which we can only will partially and imperfectly to be recipients of.
So the good news is that we don’t have to worry. We’ve been saved. God’s promise is irrevocable. The difficult news, though, is that we’re not off the hook.
Okay, you’re not going to hell. So what? For about the last half millennium we’ve been obsessed with the question of justification and its mechanics. Who’s saved? Who’s not? How does it happen? What if I’m not saved?
I don’t mean to be flippant, but this is not really the question we who are not systematic theologians need to spend all our time and energy sorting out. God has saved us through the blood of His only Son. We didn’t deserve it. We’ll never earn it. We got it anyway. The precise mechanics of how it works are interesting, and I love being a part of those discussions as an academic exercise. I’m in a group reading through the Decades of Heinrich Bullinger, a seminal Swiss reformer, and just had a long conversation via video conference yesterday about what he had to say about justification by faith. But the God’s honest truth is that you don’t have to read Sixteenth Century theologians or even listen to Fr. John’s occasional expositions on Greek verbs to get saved.
So, as one theologian said (I think it was Archbishop of Canterbury Michael Ramsey, but I can’t track down the citation), “I was saved, I am being saved, I will be saved.” We have that assurance. The really interesting stuff is what comes after that realization. God loves you. You are baptized into Christ’s Body. You have been born anew, born from above, born again whether you knew it or not. You have a mission. Faith without works is dead, says St. James. That doesn’t mean your or my inadequacy in doing as many good works as we might will send us to Hell. So what?
The reality of being saved and not doing anything about it seems worse to me, somehow. It means you’ve been given something and haven’t done anything with it. And it’s so simple to take that gift and use it. You’ve just got to love your neighbor. As I’ve said before, that means a lot more than having warm feelings for them. You don’t even need John Wesley’s strangely warmed heart. There are people I deal with in life who don’t get the cockles of my heart very warm. But I love them. Or at least I try to do. And that’s what we’ve all got to do. To be loving. To return the gift of Grace which we’ve been given. As absolutely wretched as we may be, as much as we may spurn or resent God or take Him for granted, He still loves us, so we ought to do the same for our sisters and brothers.
+In the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost. Amen.
