[Bertha and Her Baptism by Nehemiah Adams]@TWC D-Link bookBertha and Her Baptism CHAPTER Second 10/50
What seal had your covenanting with God about your child? _Mrs.Ford._ I see it now clearer than ever.
As we stood with this child in our arms, we both said, afterwards, we made a public profession of religion anew; and, when the minister said those sacred names over her, I felt more than before that I was having transactions with God about the child.
But people used to say to me, "Why not wait and let Janette be baptized when she is old enough to understand it ?" How little they knew about it! Just as though, I told them, if I had money to put into the savings-bank for Janette, I would wait and let her put it in herself (it is so pleasant to put it in when you know all about it!), instead of laying it up for her in the funds, and let it count up while she is growing. _Pastor._ Those friends who advised you so, think, perhaps, too much of the ceremony itself, and not so much of what it signifies.
Now the pleasure of being baptized is nothing compared with having God enter into a covenant in your behalf when you knew nothing about it. _Mrs.Ford._ They said to me, also, "What right have you to do it, instead of letting her have the choice and privilege of doing it herself hereafter ?" I told them that, if we acted on that principle, in the treatment of our children, there would be a long list of useful things, which we do for them, to be postponed. _Pastor._ We can benefit another without his consent.
The question is, whether it is a benefit to a child for God and its natural guardians to make a covenant together in its behalf. _Mr.Benson._ It surely is so, if God truly is a party to such a covenant.
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