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Sacred Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith
INSTRUCTION ON INFANT BAPTISM
Pastoralis actio
Introduction
1. Pastoral work with regard to infant Baptism was greatly assisted by the
promulgation of the new Ritual, prepared in accordance with the directives of
the Second Vatican Council.[1] The pace of change in society, however, is making
it difficult for the young to be brought up in the Faith and to persevere in it,
and the resulting problems encountered by Christian parents and pastors have not
been completely eliminated.
2. Many parents are distressed to see their children abandoning the Faith and no
longer receiving the sacraments, in spite of their own efforts to give them a
Christian upbringing, and some pastors are asking themselves whether they should
not be stricter before admitting infants to Baptism. Some think it better to
delay the Baptism of children until the completion of a catechumenate of greater
or less duration, while others are asking for a re-examination of the teaching
on the necessity of Baptism, at least for infants, and wish the celebration of
the sacrament to be put off until such an age when an individual can make a
personal commitment, perhaps even until the beginning of adult life.
However, this questioning of traditional sacramental pastoral practice cannot
fail to raise in the Church justified fears of jeopardizing so essential a
doctrine as that of the necessity of Baptism. In particular, many parents are
scandalized at finding Baptism refused or delayed when, with full awareness of
their duty, they request it for their children.
3. In view of this situation and in response to the many petitions received, the
Sacred Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, in consultation with various
Episcopal Conferences, has prepared the present Instruction. The purpose of the
document is to recall the principal points of doctrine in this field which
justify the Church's constant practice down the centuries and demonstrate its
permanent value in spite of the difficulties raised today. The document will
then indicate some general guidelines for pastoral action.
Part One
Traditional Doctrine On Infant Baptism
Immemorial Practice
4. Both in the East and in the West the practice of baptizing infants is
considered a rule of immemorial tradition. Origen, and later St. Augustine,
considered it a "tradition received from the Apostles."[2] When the first direct
evidence of infant Baptism appears in the second century, it is never presented
as an innovation. St. Irenaeus, in particular, considers it a matter of course
that the baptized should include "infants and small children" as well as
adolescents, young adults and older people.[3] The oldest known ritual,
describing at the start of the third century the Apostolic Tradition, contains
the following rule: "First baptize the children. Those of them who can speak for
themselves should do so. The parents or someone of their family should speak for
the others."[4] At a Synod of African Bishops, St. Cyprian stated that "God's
mercy and grace should not be refused to anyone born," and the Synod, recalling
that "all human beings" are "equal," whatever be "their size or age," declared
it lawful to baptize children "by the second or third day after their birth."[5]
5. Admittedly there was a certain decline in the practice of infant Baptism
during the fourth century. At that time even adults postponed their Christian
initiation out of apprehension about future sins and fear of public penance, and
many parents put off the Baptism of their children for the same reasons. But it
must also be noted that Fathers and Doctors such as Basil, Gregory of Nyssa,
Ambrose, John Chrysostom, Jerome and Augustine, who were themselves baptized as
adults on account of this state of affairs, vigorously reacted against such
negligence and begged adults not to postpone Baptism since it is necessary for
salvation.[6] Several of them insisted that Baptism should be administered to
infants.[7]
The Teaching of the Magisterium
6. Popes and Councils also often intervened to remind Christians of their duty
to have their children baptized.
At the close of the fourth century the ancient custom of baptizing children as
well as adults "for the forgiveness of sins" was used against the teachings of
Peladius. As Origen and St. Cyprian had noted, before St. Augustine,[8] this
custom confirmed the Church's belief in original sin, and this in turn showed
still more clearly the necessity of infant Baptism. There were interventions on
these lines by Pope Siricius[9] and Pope Innocent I.[10] Later, the Council of
Carthage in 418 condemned "whoever says that newborn infants should not be
baptized," and it taught that, on account of the Church's "rule of faith"
concerning original sin, "even babies, who are yet unable to commit any sin
personally, are truly baptized for the forgiveness of sins, for the purpose of
cleansing by rebirth what they have received by birth."[11]
7. This teaching was constantly reaffirmed and defended during the Middle Ages.
In particular, the Council of Vienna in 1312 stressed that the sacrament of
Baptism has for its effect, in the case of infants, not just the forgiveness of
sins but also the granting of grace and the virtues.[12] The Council of Florence
in 1442 rebuked those who wanted Baptism postponed and declared that infants
should receive "as soon as is convenient" (quam primum commode) the
sacrament "through which they are rescued from the devil's power and adopted as
God's children."[13]
The Council of Trent repeated the Council of Carthage's condemnation,[14] and,
referring to the words of Jesus to Nicodemus, it declared that "since the
promulgation of the Gospel" nobody can be justified "without being washed for
rebirth or wishing to be."[15] One of the errors anathematized by the Council is
the Anabaptist view that "it is better that the Baptism (of children) be omitted
than to baptize in the faith of the Church alone those who do not believe by
their own act."[16]
8. The various regional councils and synods held after the Council of Trent
taught with equal firmness the necessity of baptizing children. Pope Paul VI
also solemnly recalled the centuries-old teaching on this matter, declaring that
"Baptism should be conferred even on infants who are yet unable to commit any
sin personally, in order that, having been born without supernatural grace, they
may be born again of water and the Holy Spirit to divine life in Christ
Jesus."[17]
9. The texts of the Magisterium quoted above were chiefly concerned with
refuting errors. They are far from exhausting the riches of the doctrine on
Baptism expressed in the New Testament, the catechesis of the Fathers, and the
teaching of the Doctors of the Church: Baptism is a manifestation of the
Father's prevenient love, a sharing in the Son's Paschal Mystery, and a
communication of new life in the Spirit; it brings people into the inheritance
of God and joins them to the Body of Christ, the Church.
10. In view of this, Christ's warning in St. John's Gospel, "unless one is born
of water and the Spirit, he cannot enter the kingdom of God,"[18] must be taken
as an invitation of universal and limitless love, the words of a Father calling
all His children and wishing them to have the greatest of blessings. This
pressing and irrevocable call cannot leave us indifferent or neutral, since its
acceptance is a condition for achieving our destiny.
The Church's Mission
11. The Church must respond to the mission that Christ gave to the Apostles
after His resurrection. St. Matthew's Gospel reports it in a particularly solemn
form: "All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me. Go therefore
and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and
of the Son and of the Holy Spirit."[19] Transmitting the faith and administering
Baptism are closely linked in this command of the Lord, and they are an integral
part of the Church's mission, which is universal and cannot cease to be
universal.
12. This is how the Church has understood her mission from the beginning, and
not only with regard to adults. She has always understood the words of Jesus to
Nicodemus to mean that "children should not be deprived of Baptism."[20] Jesus'
words are so universal and absolute in form that the Fathers employed them to
establish the necessity of Baptism, and the Magisterium applied them expressly
to infants[21]; the sacrament is for them, too, entry into the People of God[22]
and the gateway to personal salvation.
13. The Church has thus shown by her teaching and practice that she knows no
other way apart from Baptism for ensuring children's entry into eternal
happiness. Accordingly, she takes care not to neglect the mission that the Lord
has given her of providing rebirth "of water and the Spirit" for all those who
can be baptized. As for children who die without Baptism, the Church can only
entrust them to God's mercy, as she does in the funeral rite provided for
them.[23]
14. The fact that infants cannot yet profess personal faith does not prevent the
Church from conferring this sacrament on them, since in reality it is in her own
faith that she baptizes them. This point of doctrine was clearly defined by
Saint Augustine: "When children are presented to be given spiritual grace," he
wrote, "it is not so much those holding them in their arms who present
them—although, if these people are good Christians, they are included among
those who present the children—as the whole company of saints and faithful
Christians.... It is done by the whole of Mother Church which is in the saints,
since it is as a whole that she gives birth to each and every one of them."[24]
This teaching is repeated by St. Thomas Aquinas and all the theologians after
him: the child who is baptized believes not on its own account, by a personal
act, but through others, "through the Church's faith communicated to it."[25]
This same teaching is also expressed in the new Rite of Baptism, when the
celebrant asks the parents and godparents to profess the Faith of the Church,
the Faith in which the children are baptized.[26]
15. Although the Church is truly aware of the efficacy of her faith operating in
the Baptism of children, and aware of the validity of the sacrament that she
confers on them, she recognizes limits to her practice, since, apart from cases
of danger of death, she does not admit a child to Baptism without its parents'
consent and a serious assurance that after Baptism it will be given a Catholic
upbringing.[27] This is because she is concerned both for the natural rights of
the parents and for the requirements of the development of faith in the child.
Part Two
Answers To Difficulties Being Raised Today
16. It is in the light of the teaching recalled above that we must judge certain
views which are expressed today about infant Baptism and which question its
legitimacy as a general rule.
Link Between Baptism and Act of Faith
17. Noting that in the New Testament writings Baptism follows the preaching of
the Gospel, presupposes conversion and goes with a profession of faith, and
furthermore that the effects of grace (forgiveness of sins, justification,
rebirth and sharing in divine life) are generally linked with faith rather than
with the sacrament,[28] some people propose that the order "preaching, faith,
sacrament" should become the rule. Apart from cases of danger of death, they
would apply this rule to children, and would institute an obligatory
catechumenate for them.
18. It is beyond doubt that the preaching of the Apostles was normally directed
to adults, and the first to be baptized were people converted to the Christian
Faith. As these facts are related in the books of the New Testament, they could
give rise to the opinion that it is only the faith of adults that is considered
in these texts. However, as was mentioned above, the practice of baptizing
children rests on an immemorial tradition originating from the Apostles, the
importance of which cannot be ignored; besides, Baptism is never administered
without faith: in the case of infants, it is the faith of the Church.
Furthermore, in accordance with the teaching of the Council of Trent on the
sacraments, Baptism is not just a sign of faith but also a cause of faith.[29]
It produces in the baptized "interior enlightenment," and so the Byzantine
liturgy is right to call it the sacrament of enlightenment, or simply
enlightenment, meaning that the faith received pervades the soul and causes the
veil of blindness to fall before the brightness of Christ.[30]
Harmony Between Baptism and Personal Reception of Grace
19. It is also said that, since every grace is intended for a person, it should
be consciously accepted and appropriated by the person who receives it,
something that an infant is quite incapable of doing.
20. But in reality the child is a person long before it can show it by acts of
consciousness and freedom. As a person, the child is already capable of
becoming, through the sacrament of Baptism, a child of God and a coheir with
Christ. Later, when consciousness and freedom awake, these will have at their
disposal the powers placed in the child's soul by the grace of Baptism.
Harmony Between Baptism and the Child's Freedom
21. Some people also object that baptizing infants is a restriction of their
freedom. They say that it is contrary to the dignity of the children as persons
to impose on them future religious obligations that they may perhaps later be
led to reject. In this view it would be better to confer the sacrament only at
an age when free commitment has become possible; until then parents and teachers
should restrain themselves and avoid exercising any pressure.
22. Such an attitude is simply an illusion: there is no such thing as pure human
freedom, immune from being influenced in any way. Even on the natural level,
parents make choices for their child that are essential for its life and for its
orientation towards true values. A so-called neutral attitude on the part of the
family with regard to the child's religious life would in fact be a negative
choice that would deprive the child of an essential good.
Above all, those who claim that the sacrament of Baptism compromises a child's
freedom forget that every individual, baptized or not, is, as a creature, bound
by indefeasible duties to God, duties which Baptism ratifies and ennobles
through the adoption as a child of God. They also forget that the New Testament
presents entry into the Christian life not as a form of slavery or constraint
but as admittance to true freedom.[31]
It can happen that, when a child grows up, it will reject the obligations
derived from its Baptism. Although its parents may be hurt as a result, they
should not reproach themselves for having had the child baptized and giving it a
Christian upbringing as was their right and their duty.[32] In spite of
appearances, the seeds of faith sown in the child's soul may one day come to
life again, and the parents will contribute to this by their patience and love,
by their prayers and by the authentic witness of their own faith.
Baptism in the Present Sociological Situation
23. In view of the link between the person and society, some people hold that
infant Baptism is still suitable in the homogeneous type of society, in which
values, judgments and customs form a coherent system; but they hold that it is
inappropriate in today's societies, which are characterized by instability of
values and conflicts of ideas. In the present situation, they say Baptism should
be delayed until the candidate's personality has sufficiently matured.
24. The Church is well aware that she must take the social reality into account.
But the criteria of homogeneity and pluralism are merely pointers and cannot be
set up as normative principles; they are inadequate for settling a strictly
religious question, which by its nature is a matter for the Church and the
Christian family.
While the criterion of the homogeneous society would legitimate infant Baptism
if the society is Christian, it would also lead one to consider it as
illegitimate when Christian families are in a minority, whether within an ethnic
group that is still predominantly pagan or in a militantly atheistic regime.
This obviously cannot be admitted.
The criterion of the pluralistic society is no more valid than the preceding
criterion, since in this type of society the family and the Church can act
freely and accordingly provide a Christian education.
Besides, a study of history clearly shows that if these "sociological" criteria
had been applied in the first centuries of the Church they would have paralyzed
all her missionary expansion. It is worth adding that all too often pluralism is
being invoked in a paradoxical way, in order to impose on the faithful behavior
patterns that in reality are an obstacle to the exercise of their Christian
freedom.
In a society whose mentality, customs and laws are no longer inspired by the
Gospel it is therefore of great importance that in questions connected with
infant Baptism the Church's own nature and mission should be taken into
consideration before all else.
In spite of being intermingled with human society and in spite of being made up
of different nationalities and cultures, the People of God has its own identity,
characterized by unity of faith and sacraments. Animated as it is by a single
spirit and a single hope, it is an organic whole, capable of producing within
the various groups of humanity the structures necessary for its growth. It is in
this context that the Church's sacramental pastoral practice, in particular with
regard to infant Baptism, must be placed; her practice must not depend only on
criteria borrowed from the human sciences.
Infant Baptism and Sacramental Pastoral Practice
25. A final criticism of infant Baptism would have it that the practice comes
from a pastoral usage lacking missionary impetus and concerned more with
administering a sacrament than with stirring up faith and fostering commitment
to spreading the Gospel. It is asserted that, by retaining infant Baptism, the
Church is yielding to the temptation of numbers and social establishment, and
that she is encouraging the maintenance of a magical concept of the sacraments,
while she really ought to engage in missionary activity, bring the faith of
Christians to maturity, foster their free conscious commitment, and consequently
admit a number of stages in her sacramental pastoral practice.
26. Undoubtedly, the Church's apostolate should aim at stirring up lively faith
and fostering a truly Christian life; but the requirements of pastoral practice
with regard to administering the sacraments to adults cannot be applied
unchanged to children who, as mentioned above, are baptized "in the faith of the
Church." Besides, we must not treat lightly the necessity of the sacrament: it
is a necessity that has lost none of its importance and urgency, especially when
what is at stake is ensuring that the child receives the infinite blessing of
eternal life.
With regard to preoccupation with numbers, if this preoccupation is properly
understood it is not a temptation or an evil for the Church but a duty and a
blessing. The Church, described by St. Paul as Christ's "body" and His
"fullness,"[33] is the visible sacrament of Christ in the world, with the
mission of extending to everyone the sacramental link between her and her
glorified Savior. Accordingly, she cannot fail to wish to give to everyone,
children no less than adults, the first and basic sacrament of Baptism.
If it is understood in this way, the practice of infant Baptism is truly
evangelical, since it has the force of witness, manifesting God's initiative and
the gratuitous character of the love with which He surrounds our lives: "not
that we loved God but that he loved us.... We love, because he first loved
us."[34] Even in the case of adults, the demands that the reception of Baptism
involves[35] should not make us forget that "he saved us, not because of deeds
done by us in righteousness, but in virtue of his own mercy, by the washing of
regeneration and renewal in the Holy Spirit."[36]
Part Three
Some Pastoral Directives
27. While certain suggestions being put forward today cannot be
accepted—suggestions such as the definitive abandonment of infant Baptism and
freedom to choose, whatever the reasons, between immediate Baptism and deferred
Baptism—one cannot deny the need for a pastoral effort pursued in greater depth
and renewed in certain aspects. It is appropriate to indicate the principles and
fundamental guidelines at this point.
The Principles of This Pastoral Practice
28. In the first place, it is important to recall that the Baptism of infants
must be considered a serious duty. The questions which it poses to pastors can
be settled only by faithful attention to the teaching and constant practice of
the Church.
Concretely, pastoral practice regarding infant Baptism must be governed by two
great principles, the second of which is subordinate to the first.
1) Baptism, which is necessary for salvation, is the sign and the means of God's
prevenient love, which frees us from original sin and communicates to us a share
in divine life. Considered in itself, the gift of these blessings to infants
must not be delayed.
2) Assurances must be given that the gift thus granted can grow by an authentic
education in the faith and Christian life, in order to fulfill the true meaning
of the sacrament.[37] As a rule, these assurances are to be given by the parents
or close relatives, although various substitutions are possible within the
Christian community. But if these assurances are not really serious there can be
grounds for delaying the sacrament; and if they are certainly non-existent the
sacrament should even be refused.
Dialogue Between Pastors and Believing Families
29. On the basis of these two principles, concrete cases will be examined in a
pastoral dialogue between the priest and the family. The rules for dialogue with
parents who are practicing Christians are given in the Introduction to the
Ritual. It is sufficient to recall here two of the more significant points.
In the first place, much importance is given to the presence and active
participation of the parents in the celebration. The parents now have priority
over the godparents, although the presence of the latter continues to be
required, since their assistance in the child's education is valuable and can
sometimes be essential.
Secondly, preparation for the Baptism has an important place. The parents must
give thought to the Baptism; they should inform their pastors of the coming
birth and prepare themselves spiritually. The pastors, for their part, will
visit the families or gather them together and give them catechesis and
appropriate advice. They will also urge the families to pray for the children
that they are expecting.[38]
As for the time of the actual celebration, the indications in the Ritual should
be followed: "The first consideration is the welfare of the child, that it may
not be deprived of the benefit of the sacrament; then the health of the mother
must be considered, so that, as far as possible she too may be present. Then, as
long as they do not interfere with the greater good of the child, there are
pastoral considerations such as allowing sufficient time to prepare the parents
and for planning the actual celebration to bring out its paschal character."
Accordingly, "if the child is in danger of death, it is to be baptized without
delay"; otherwise, as a rule "an infant should be baptized within the first
weeks after birth."[39]
Dialogue Between Pastors and Families With Little Faith or Non-Christian
Families
30. It sometimes happens that pastors are approached by parents who have little
faith and practice their religion only occasionally, or even by non-Christian
parents who request Baptism for their children for reasons that deserve
consideration.
In this case the pastor will endeavor by means of a clear-sighted and
understanding dialogue to arouse the parents' interest in the sacrament they are
requesting and make them aware of the responsibility that they are assuming.
In fact the Church can only accede to the desire of these parents if they give
an assurance that, once the child is baptized, it will be given the benefit of
the Christian upbringing required by the sacrament. The Church must have a
well-founded hope that the Baptism will bear fruit.[40]
If the assurances given—for example, the choice of godparents who will take
sincere care of the child, or the support of the community of the faithful—are
sufficient, the priest cannot refuse to celebrate the sacrament without delay,
as in the case of children of Christian families. If on the other hand they are
insufficient, it will be prudent to delay Baptism. However the pastors should
keep in contact with the parents so as to secure, if possible, the conditions
required on their part for the celebration of the sacrament. If even this
solution fails, it can be suggested, as a last recourse, that the child be
enrolled in a catechumenate to be given when the child reaches school age.
31. These rules have already been made, and are already in force,[41] but they
require some clarifications.
In the first place it must be clear that the refusal of Baptism is not a means
of exercising pressure. Nor can one speak of refusal, still less of
discrimination, but rather of educational delay, according to individual cases,
aimed at helping the family to grow in faith or to become more aware of its
responsibilities.
With regard to the assurances, any pledge giving a well-founded hope for the
Christian upbringing of the children deserves to be considered as sufficient.
Enrollment for a future catechumenate should not be accompanied by a specially
created rite which would easily be taken as an equivalent of the sacrament
itself. It should also be clear that this enrollment is not admittance to the
catechumenate and that the infants cannot be considered catechumenates with all
the prerogatives attached to being such. They must be presented later on for a
catechumenate suited to their age. In this regard, it must be stated clearly
that the existence in the Rite of Christian Initiation of Adults of a Rite of
Initiation for Children of Catechetical Age[42] in no way means that the Church
considers it preferable or normal to delay Baptism until that age.
Finally, in areas where families of little faith or non-Christian families make
up the majority, so as to justify the local setting up by the Bishops'
Conference of a joint pastoral plan which provides for postponing Baptism beyond
the time fixed by the general law,[43] Christian families living in these areas
retain the full right to have their children baptized earlier. The sacrament is
therefore to be administered in accordance with the Church's will and as the
faith and generosity of these families deserve.
The Role of the Family and of the Parish Community
32. The pastoral effort brought into play on the occasion of the Baptism of
infants should be part of a broader activity extending to the families and to
the whole of the Christian community.
From this viewpoint it is important to intensify pastoral care of engaged
couples at meetings in preparations for marriage, and likewise the pastoral care
of young couples. The whole ecclesial community must be called upon as
circumstances demand, especially teachers, married couples, family action
movements, religious congregations and secular institutions. Priests must give
this apostolate an important place in their ministry. In particular, they will
remind parents of their responsibilities in awakening their children's faith and
educating it. It is in fact for parents to begin the religious initiation of the
child, to teach it to love Christ as a close friend and to form its conscience.
This task will be all the more fruitful and easy if it builds on the grace of
Baptism present in the child's heart.
33. As is clearly indicated in the Ritual, the parish community, especially the
group of Christians that constitute the family's human environment, should play
a part in the pastoral practice regarding Baptism. "Christian instruction and
the preparation for Baptism are a vital concern of God's people, the Church,
which hands on and nourishes the faith it has received from the Apostles."[44]
This active participation by the Christian people, which has already come into
use in the case of adults, is also required for the Baptism of infants, in which
"the People of God, that is the Church, made present in the local community, has
an important part to play."[45] In addition, the community itself will as a rule
draw great profit, both spiritual and apostolic, from the Baptism ceremony.
Finally, the community's work will continue, after the liturgical celebration,
through the contribution of the adults to the education of the young in faith,
both by the witness of their own Christian lives and by their participation in
various catechetical activities.
Conclusion
34. In addressing the Bishops, the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith is
fully confident that, as part of the mission that they have received from the
Lord, they will take care to recall the Church's teaching on the necessity of
infant Baptism, promote an appropriate pastoral practice, and bring back to the
traditional practice those who, perhaps under the pressure of comprehensible
pastoral concerns, have departed from it. The Congregation also hopes that the
teaching and guidelines contained in this Instruction will reach all pastors,
Christian parents and the ecclesial community, so that all will become aware of
their responsibilities and make their contribution, through the Baptism of
children and their Christian education, to the growth of the Church, the Body of
Christ.
This Instruction was adopted at an Ordinary Meeting of the Sacred Congregation
for the Doctrine of the Faith and was approved at an Audience granted to the
undersigned Cardinal Prefect by His Holiness, Pope John Paul II, who ordered its
publication.
Rome, at the Sacred Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, October 20,
1980.
Franjo Cardinal Seper Prefect
Fr. Jerome Hamer, O.P. Titular Archbishop of Lorium Secretary
Endnotes
1. Ordo baptismi parvulorum, ed. typica, Romae, May 16, 1969.
2. Origen, In Romanis, V, 9; PG 14, 1047; cf. St. Augustine, De Genesi ad
litteram, X, 23, 39: PL 34, 426; De peccatorum meritis et remissione et de
baptismo parvulorum ad Marcellinum, I, 26, 39: PL 44, 131. In fact, three passages of the Acts of the Apostles (16:15, 16:33, 18:8) speak
of the baptism of a whole household or family.
3. Adv. Haereses II, 22, 4: PG 7, 784; Harvey I, 330. Many inscriptions from as
early as the second century give little children the title of "children of God,"
a title give only to the baptized, or explicitly mention that they were
baptized: cf., for example, Corpus Inscriptionum Graecarum, 9727, 9801, 9817; E.
Diehl, Inscriptiones Latinae Christianae Veteres (Berlin 1961), nos. 1523(3),
4429A.
4. La Tradition apostolique de Saint Hippolyte, edited and translated by B.
Botte, Munster, Aschendorff, 1963 (Liturgiewissenschafliche Quellen und
Forschungen 39), p. 44.
5. Epist. LXIV, Cyprianus et coeteri collegae, qui in concilio adfuerunt
numero LXVI. Fido fratri: PL 3, 1013-1019; ed. Hartel, (CSEL 3), pp. 717-721. This practice
was particularly strong in the Church in Africa, in spite of the position taken
by Tertullian, who advised that baptism of children should be delayed in view of
the innocence associated with their age and the fear of possible lapses in young
adulthood. Cf. De baptismo, XVIII, 3-XIX, 1: PL 1, 1220-1222; De anima, 39-41:
PL 2, 719ff.
6. Cf. St. Basil, Homilia XIII exhortatoria ad sanctum baptisma: PG 424- 436;
St. Gregory of Nyssa, Adversus eos qui differunt baptismum oratio: PG 46, 424;
St. Augustine, In Ioannem Tractatus XIII, 7: PL 35, 1496; CCL 36, p. 134.
7. Cf. St. Ambrose, De Abraham, II, 11, 81-84: PL 14, 495-497: CSEL 32, 1, pp.
632-635; St. John Chrysostom, Catechesis, III, 5-6, ed. A. Wenger, SC 50, pp.
153-154; St. Jerome, Epist. 107, 6; PL 22, 873, ed. J. Labourt (Bude), vol. 5,
pp. 151-152. However, while Gregory of Nazianzus urged mothers to have their
children baptized at the earliest possible age, he was content to fix that age
as the first three years; cf. Oratio XL in sanctum baptisma, 17 and 28: PL 380
and 399.
8. Origen, In Leviticum hom. VIII, 3: PG 12, 496; In Lucam hom. XIV, 5: PG 13, 1835; St. Cyprian, Epist. 64, 5: PL 3, 1018; ed. Hartel, CSEL p.
720; St. Augustine, De peccatorum meritis et remissione et de baptismo
parvulorum, I, XVII-XIX, 22-24: PL 44, 121-122; De gratia Christi et de peccato
originali, I, XXXII, 35; ibid., 377; De praedestinatione sanctorum, XIII, 25:
ibid., 978; Opus imperfectum contra Iulianum, V, 9: PL 45, 1439.
9. Epist. "Directa ad decessorem" ad Himerium episc. Tarraconensem, 10 Feb. i.
385, 2: DS (Denzinger-Schoenmetzer, Enchiridion symbolorum, definitonum et
declarationum de rebus fidei et morum, Herder 1965) 184.
10. Epist. "Inter ceteras Ecclesiae Romanae" ad Silvanum et ceteros Synodi
Milevitanae Patres, 27 ian. 417, 5: DS 219.
11. Canon 2: Mansi, III, 811-814 and IV, 327 A-B: DS 233.
12. Council of Vienne: Mansi, XXV, 411 C-D: DS 903-904.
13. Council of Florence, sessio XI: DS 1349.
14. Sessio V, can. 4: DS 1514; cf. the 418 Council of Carthage, note 11 above.
15. Sessio VI, cap. IV: DS 1524.
16. Sessio VII, can. 13: DS 1626.
17. Sollemnis Professio Fidei, 18: AAS 60, 1968, p. 440.
18. Jn. 3:5.
19. Mt. 28:19; cf. Mk. 16:15-16.
20. Ordo baptismi parvulorum, Praenotanda, no. 2, p. 15.
21. Cf. note 8 above for the patristic texts, and notes 9 to 13 for the
Councils. Another text is the Profession of Faith of Patriarch Dositheus of
Jerusalem in 1672: Mansi XXXIV, 1746.
22. "What is done when children are baptized," wrote St. Augustine, "is to
incorporate them into the Church, that is to say to associate them with Christ's
body and members" (De peccatorum meritis et remissione et de baptismo parvulorum
III, 4, 7: PL 44, 189; cf. I, 26, 39: ibid., 131.
23. Ordo exsequiarum, ed. typica, Romae, August 15, 1969, nos. 82, 231- 237.
24. Epist. 98, 5: PL 33, 362; cf. Sermo 176, 2, 2: PL 38, 950.
25. Summa Theologica, IIIa, q. 69, a. 5, ad 3, cf. q. 68, a. 9, ad 3.
26. Ordo baptismi parvulorum, Parenotanda, no. 2: cf. no. 56.
27. There is a long-standing tradition, appealed to by St. Thomas Aquinas (Summa
Theologica, IIa-IIIae, q. 10, a. 12, in c.) and Pope Benedict XIV (Instruction
Postremo Mense of February 28, 1747, 4-5: DS 2552- 2553), against baptizing a
child of unbelieving or Jewish parents, except in danger of death (CIC, can.
750, par. 2) against the parents' wishes, that is unless the parents ask for it
and give guarantees.
28. Cf. Mt. 28:19; Mk. 16:16; Acts 2:37-41, 8:35-38; Rom. 3:22, 26; Gal. 3:26.
29. Council of Trent, sessio VII, Decr. de sacramentis, can. 6: DS 1606.
30. Cf. 2 Cor. 3:15-16.
31. Jn. 8:36; Rom. 6:17-22, 8:21; Gal. 4:31, 5:1, 13; 1 Pt. 2:16, etc.
32. This right and duty, specified in detail by the Second Vatican Council in
the Declaration Dignitatis humanae, 5, has been given international recognition
in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, art. 26(3).
33. Eph. 1:23.
34. 1 Jn. 4:10, 19.
35. Cf. Council of Trent, sessio VI, De iustificatione, capp. 506, can. 4 and 9: DS 1525-1526, 1554, 1559.
36. Ti. 3:5.
37. Cf. Ordo baptismi parvulorum, Praenotanda, no. 3, p. 15.
38. Cf. ibid., no. 8, par. 2, p. 17, no. 5, pars. 1 and 5, p. 16.
39. Ibid., 8, par. 1, p. 17.
40. Cf. ibid., no. 3, p. 15.
41. These rules were first given in a Letter of the Congregation for the
Doctrine of the Faith replying to a request by the Most Reverend Barthelmy
Hanrion, Bishop of Dapango, Togo, and they were published, together with the
Bishop's request, in Notitiae No. 61 (volume 7, year 1971), pp. 64-70.
42. Cf. Ordo initiationis christinae adultorum, ed. typica, Romae, Jan. 6, 1972,
cap. 5, pp. 125-149.
43. Cf. Ordo baptismi parvulorum Praenotanda, no. 8, pars. 3-4, p. 17.
44. Ibid., De Initiatione christiana, Praenotanda generalia, no. 7, p. 9.
45. Ibid., Parenotanda, no. 4, p. 15.
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