Recovering the Evangelical Sacrament
Baptisma Semper Reformandum
Foreword by John E. Colwell
Imprint: Pickwick Publications
The subject of baptism continues to be of considerable interest--though it frequently appears within broader studies of sacraments, liturgy, worship, and ecumenical studies, and within confessional bounds: credobaptist or paedobaptist--yet it is rarely discussed by Evangelicals. This book, however, is neither an apologetic for credobaptism nor paedobaptism; rather Cross believes that, as practiced today, both forms are a departure from New Testament baptism, which, he maintains, was an integral part of becoming a Christian and part of the proclaimed gospel. He argues that the "one baptism" of Ephesians 4:5 is conversion-baptism and that the baptism referred to in the various New Testament strata refers to this "one baptism" (of Spirit and water). The study sets out the case for this interpretation and contends that in key passages "baptism" is an example of synecdoche. The case is then made for a sacramental interpretation of baptism from a thoroughgoing Evangelical perspective. Cross concludes with reflections on the necessity of baptismal reform and the relevance of a return to conversion-baptism for the contemporary church in a post-Christian, post-Christendom, mission setting.
Anthony R. Cross has written extensively on the subject of baptism, most recently in his Recovering the Evangelical Sacrament: Baptisma Semper Reformandum (Pickwick Publications, 2013). He has also written on the issues of the place of theology in Baptist ministerial preparation, and the factors which led to English Baptist acceptance of the Evangelical Revival in the eighteenth century. He was an Adjunct Supervisor at The International Baptist Theological Seminary Centre, Amsterdam, having previously served as a Baptist minister, and taught church history and theology at the Universities of Surrey, Roehampton, and Oxford.
"The challenge of this thesis . . . is essentially simple: we are called and challenged to accord the significance to baptism that it is accorded in the New Testament."
--John E. Cowell, Senior Research Fellow, Spurgeon's College
"This is a remarkably detailed, biblically focused, and ecumenically sensitive book on the sacrament of baptism. Like Beasley-Murray in his classic study on baptism, Anthony R. Cross brings new insight to the indispensable role of Christian initiation both in personal faith and the life of the church. Highly recommended!"
--Timothy George, Founding Dean, Beeson Divinity School
"This richly theological work on such a significant subject is a gift to the whole church. It is full of good scholarship, wise in judgment, and practical in its insights. We are given a timely contribution to the meaning of Christian identity, inviting us all to reflect again on the biblical teaching, our doctrinal affirmations, our sacramental understanding, and what amounts to faithful practice in the church of Christ."
--Brian Haymes, President, Baptist Union of Great Britain
"Carefully using an impressive range of biblical, theological, and historical scholarship, Anthony R. Cross argues that baptism lost the importance it had in the New Testament and pre-Nicene church; but in post-Christendom, baptism's significance is re-emerging. When it embodies New Testament themes of conversion, faith, community, and ethics, baptism once again emerges as a sacrament of untold potential, enriching discipleship and empowering mission. This mature fruit of 'Baptist sacramentalism' offers gifts to Christians of all traditions. I recommend it enthusiastically."
--Alan Kreider, Professor of Church History and Mission (retired), Mennonite Biblical Seminary
"Anthony R. Cross makes a compelling case both for the inseparability of faith and baptism, and water and Spirit baptism. The evangelical insistence on justification by faith alone, he contends, should and must make room for baptism as a biblical term encompassing all three: faith, water baptism, and Spirit baptism. Arguably the most important book on baptism since George Beasley-Murray's Baptism in the New Testament, extending and enriching the argument of that seminal work."
--J. Ramsey Michaels, Emeritus Professor of Religious Studies, Missouri State University