T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1271.1 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Every knee shall bow | Fri Aug 30 1996 17:18 | 17 |
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This allegedly took place at Anchor Baptist Church in Woburn, MA. I
have the article somewhere and I'll try to post it later. I am familiar
with this church, as is my pastor, and without divulging any details
there is a great deal of exaggeration in the press accounts.
And, I know of no Independant Baptist Churches that believe Baptism is
necessary for salvation (this church is an independant baptist church) or
which would forcibly baptise kids.
Jim
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1271.2 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Every knee shall bow | Fri Aug 30 1996 17:20 | 92 |
|
D.A. Looking Into Complaints of Group Baptism
By RICHARD LORANT, Associated Press, 08/27/96
WOBURN, Mass. (AP) - A Baptist church used
promises of pizza and basketball games to attract
hundreds of children, then gave them full-body
baptisms into a faith that is foreign to many of
them, parents charge.
Prosecutors and police in five communities are
investigating the complaints against Anchor
Baptist Church.
Parents say the church enticed teen-agers and
younger children onto buses on at least two
occasions in July. Instead of getting pizza, the
children allegedly were taken to the church in
Woburn, made to sit through a long service, then
told to undress and put on robes. Those who
complied were quickly dunked into a tank of water,
parents say.
Many of the children from Woburn, Medford,
Stoneham, Cambridge and Somerville are Roman
Catholic. At least one family involved is
Buddhist.
``They didn't tell us about Mass or anything,''
said Rosa Vazquez, 14, a Catholic who attended a
service with a friend but wouldn't go through the
baptism. ``They just told us about the good
stuff.''
No one responded by phone or in person at the
white wooden church. Calls to its pastor, the Rev.
Chris Pledger, were not returned.
Pledger, who has described his congregation as
independent, defended his recruiting practices in
an interview last month with the Woburn Advocate.
``Jesus told us to go into the world and preach
the gospel. Baptism is doing more than just
hearing what the man said and if it's in the
Bible, who am I to say what is right?'' he told
the newspaper.
The state Department of Social Services has said
an 8-year-old boy was emotionally harmed in one of
the incidents. The agency wouldn't elaborate.
Most of the children are from public housing
projects.
``Families around here are lucky to get pizza once
a month, so if they offer it to kids, they go,''
said Lisa Amorin, who said her 3-year-old son,
Steven, has been repeatedly approached by church
members.
Twelve-year-old Hieu Nguyen, whose family
practices Buddhism, said he didn't understand what
was happening when he and his 9-year-old brother,
Qui, were baptized. He said he went along because
other children did.
``We had to go into this bathroom. We had to take
off all our clothes and put on this plastic
thing,'' he said. ``Then we had to go into this
room and they held our nose and put us in the
water.''
It is unclear how many children were baptized, and
whether some parents had signed permission slips,
police said.
The Middlesex District Attorney is reviewing
allegations from three of the communities to
determine whether any laws were broken,
spokeswoman Jill Reilly said Tuesday.
Other Baptists are troubled by the complaints.
``We're all being painted with the same brush
because Baptist is in the name,'' said the Rev.
Carol Boutwell of First Baptist Church in Woburn.
``That is not common to our church at all.''
AP-DS-08-27-96 2107EDT
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1271.3 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | Cleaver...YOU'RE FIRED!!! | Fri Aug 30 1996 17:23 | 8 |
| Z Of course, tlike many other things, there are two views. The ardent
Z christian might see the action as saving souls,
This of course was an exercise in futility. Not only does baptism not
save an individual, it was coerced upon children who had no idea what
they were taking part in.
-Jack
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1271.4 | | THOLIN::TBAKER | Flawed To Perfection | Fri Aug 30 1996 17:30 | 8 |
| > This of course was an exercise in futility.
Goodness! We agree!
Gee... And I was getting all excited about having another
argument :*)
Tom
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1271.5 | | SMARTT::DGAUTHIER | | Fri Aug 30 1996 17:41 | 10 |
| Well, isn't it supposed to be a necessary piece in being saved? At
least in the views of some christian churches?
I guess most are baptized as infants (at least I was) and wouldn't be
congnizant of what was going on anyway. I don;t believe it's necessary
for the "baptizee" to know what's going on. In the catholic church,
there is a surrogate set of "God Parents" which are supposed to be
aware "for" the child.
-dave
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1271.6 | | CSC32::M_EVANS | watch this space | Fri Aug 30 1996 17:46 | 10 |
| We had this happen last year in C Springs, by another independant
Baptist church. There was no criminal action, but some parents are
seeking legal recourse.
Same sort of thing. Bus came through asking kids if they wanted to go
to a pizza party. Kids were encouraged to be baptized and several
were, apparently without knowing the rest of the commitment that should
go with baptism.
meg
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1271.7 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Every knee shall bow | Fri Aug 30 1996 17:47 | 22 |
|
Baptism is an act of obedience that follows salvation, but it is not
required. My church is a Baptist church, quite similar to this one,
and it is a well understood rule that we will baptise no children without
parental knowledge and permission. In addition, we do not transport kids
on our busses without parental permission.
I suspect that this church was holding their Vacation Bible School program
and was out bringing in kids for that. We did something similar this summer,
where we bussed the kids in 5 nights, they viewed a couple skits that continued
each night, then were taken to classes for there age groups and they
worked on crafts, etc. They also had the opportunity to hear the gospel.
And each instance of Baptism that takes place in the Bible, of which I
am aware, is done right after someone was saved, and they understood why.
Jim
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1271.8 | Only Jesus saves | PHXSS1::HEISER | maranatha! | Fri Aug 30 1996 18:32 | 3 |
| Re: Jack & Jim
Amen!
|
1271.9 | | SMARTT::DGAUTHIER | | Tue Sep 03 1996 09:55 | 6 |
| Re .7 (Jim)
But isn't it customary, in some christian churces anyway, to baptize
infants? How can baptism follow salvation in this case?
-dave
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1271.10 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Every knee shall bow | Tue Sep 03 1996 10:10 | 13 |
|
> But isn't it customary, in some christian churces anyway, to baptize
> infants? How can baptism follow salvation in this case?
That's a rathole down which I'd rather not go. However, there are
few Protestant churches, that I know of, that practice infant baptism.
Jim
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1271.11 | Infant Baptism | DELNI::MCCAULEY | | Tue Sep 03 1996 10:36 | 34 |
| Most Protestant churches that I am familiar with practice infant
Baptism. i.e. United Church of Christ, United Methodist,
Episcopal(Do Episcopal Churches consider themself Protestant).
Infant Baptism is a welcoming of the infant into the Community of
Faith. The parents, God Parents, and the Faith Community all affirm
their responsibility for the bringing up of the child as part of the
Christian community.
During adolescents, the children go thru a second ceremony, called
confirmation in some churches, called joining the church in others.
(called coming of age ceremony in the UU church). At this time the
adolescent themselves, recommittment themselves to the Faith.
The Gospels and the Pauline Letters, tell the story of first generation
Christians. Christianity was not the established church and people
were welcomed into Christianity from other religions. The prophecy of
the imminent end of the world did not come true, and Christianity
became an established religion. The process of accepting and welcoming
children into the faith, was not directly a part of biblical faith,
although the Words of Jesus himself imply that Children are very much a
part of the faith, and even more likely candidates for salvation than
adults. In two poignant passages, he welcomed the children as the
elders were trying to spare him the distraction and he said, unless we
become as little children, we will not inherit the kingdom of God.
The ceremony of welcoming the infant into the community of Faith and
asking for the affirmation of the parents, God Parents and Faith
Community of their support for the child is a compelling and good
ceremony. It is also good that the child herself, once she reaches
adolescents has the opportunity to recommit to the Faith she inherited
from her parents and faith community.
Patricia
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1271.12 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | Cleaver...YOU'RE FIRED!!! | Tue Sep 03 1996 10:47 | 36 |
| Z But isn't it customary, in some christian churces anyway, to baptize
Z infants? How can baptism follow salvation in this case?
There are two ways of looking at Baptism.
The first is the one I subscribe to at this time. Baptism in the
context of the New Testament is in the greek, "Baptizo" which means to
immerse of to placed into. The significance is that when we are
submerged into the water we identify with Christ's death and burial.
When we come out of the water we are raised unto a new life...a new
creation. Baptism is an outward sign to the world of our new life...
it is symbolic...it has no regenerative power whatsoever. Every
example of scriptural baptism was given by an adult who was baptized of
their own free volition.
The other belief, infant baptism, ties in with the sign of the
covenant. In the Old Testament, circumcision on the eighth day after
birth was an outward sign (so to speak) of identification with God's
people. It was to be performed on all male infants on the eighth day
after birth. If one joined the Israelites as an adult, they were still
circumcised (what a life!! :-)), and thereby identified with God's
people. Baptism is the same concept. It is an identification and
acknowledgement of the new covenant...and since infants were identified
in the old, and it was the choice of the parents, then it stands to
reason that baptism can act in like manner.
The holes with this thinking I need to clear is that first, lack of
circumcision resulted in being cut off (no pun intended), from their
people. Baptism doesn't offer the same consequence. Secondly, baptism
is gender neutral whereas circumcision was obviously to make male ONLY
children a cut above the rest, (sorry...I'm on a role! :-)).
You can slice it either way....it's really up to you!
-Jack
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1271.13 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | Cleaver...YOU'RE FIRED!!! | Tue Sep 03 1996 10:51 | 9 |
| Z The prophecy of
Z the imminent end of the world did not come true, and Christianity
Z became an established religion.
Patricia, could you please qualify this? Are you speaking of Jesus
saying, "truly I say unto you, this generation will not pass unto all
these things have come to pass."?
-Jack
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1271.14 | awaiting more details | DELNI::MCCAULEY | | Tue Sep 03 1996 10:56 | 5 |
| Jim,
I hope that at some time you can provide more of the details about this
incident. I too find it hard to believe that the church did what the
Globe implied the church did in kidnapping these children.
|
1271.15 | | SMARTT::DGAUTHIER | | Tue Sep 03 1996 11:13 | 15 |
| You sound giddy this morning Jack :-)
Well, it was my understanding that some believe(d) that it was
essential for salvation. In the past, newborn infants were rushed to the
church within hours after they were born (infant mortality being what
it was). Since the mother was not in any physical condition to be
making what would sometimes be a long journey to the church, relatives
or friends would act as surrogates, thus the birth of God Parents.
What prompted this sort of behaviour? There must be some compelling
biblical rationale for their actions, and those of the Anchor church.
-dave
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1271.16 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Every knee shall bow | Tue Sep 03 1996 11:15 | 17 |
|
> Jim,
> I hope that at some time you can provide more of the details about this
> incident. I too find it hard to believe that the church did what the
> Globe implied the church did in kidnapping these children.
This is now a matter involving the DA, and I don't think it wise to
comment. However, I believe it is safe to say that the article
was exaggerated.
Jim
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1271.17 | | MKOTS3::JMARTIN | Cleaver...YOU'RE FIRED!!! | Tue Sep 03 1996 11:18 | 13 |
| Z What prompted this sort of behaviour? There must be some compelling
Z biblical rationale for their actions, and those of the Anchor
Z church.
There are some who prescribe to the teaching of baptismal regeneration.
I don't know exactly where the teaching began. I do know the verses
used for example, by the Boston Church of Christ, to endorse such a
belief are taken very much out of context. In fact, they use Acts
2:38, Romans 6, and a small passage from 2nd Peter 3 to affirm this
belief. It is not taken in context with the theme of the whole New
Testament.
-Jack
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1271.18 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Every knee shall bow | Tue Sep 03 1996 11:39 | 16 |
|
> What prompted this sort of behaviour? There must be some compelling
> biblical rationale for their actions, and those of the Anchor church.
All that is publically known about the actions of Anchor Baptist Church
is what has been printed in the newspapers. We all know that not all
that is printed in the newspapers is accurate.
Jim
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1271.19 | | SMARTT::DGAUTHIER | | Tue Sep 03 1996 11:54 | 10 |
| >We all know that not all
> that is printed in the newspapers is accurate.
Agreed. There'll probably be hearings and some sort of testimony, at
which time more accurate info may be available.
-dave
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