An African understanding of baptism in the Methodist Church with special reference to the stillborn
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University of Pretoria
Abstract
This thesis deals with an African understanding of baptism, regarding the
baptism of stillborn babies. There are many instances of stillbirth where
ministers, pastors or priests are confronted with grieving parents asking
clergy to baptise a stillborn baby. It is often a request or decision of a family
before the child could be buried. Furthermore, the burial of unbaptised
foetuses and infants, as seen or experienced, reveals the tension between
the official doctrine of the Church and the views of congregants, especially
in the understanding of God’s saving grace.
Parents are often worried that an unbaptised child will not find rest with the
Creator God. Even a bigger issue among Africans is the place of the
unbaptised stillborn child’s place with the ancestors. For many African
Christians, baptism must be ministered before a child is to be buried to meet
his or her departed forbearers in the world of the living.
In situations like these, the pastor is faced with tension and conflict between
theological and doctrinal integrity and pastoral care to the grieving parents.
Despite continuous education on original sin, salvation, grace and baptism,
people still insist on the baptism of the dead. There is now a change in the
approach and language in that a minister performs "christening" on a
stillborn when baptism is rejected. This ‘christening’ is regarded as way of
introducing the child to the Christian faith and not necessarily dedicating the
child to Jesus Christ. Subscribers to this notion cannot motivate or give
theological meaning in what they are doing. In this way, pastors try to get
past the conflict between the official doctrine on baptism and the
expectations of congregants.
The sacrament of baptism, within the Methodist family, has always been
understood as an outward sign of the new life that God offers to the living
through the work of Christ and marks the entry of the person baptised into God’s family, the Church. Therefore, baptism proclaims God’s grace and
looks forward to life-long growth into Christ in the fellowship of the Church.
It calls for the response of faith that is also a life-long process. Christianity
has always held that, belonging to a Christian community is an integral
expression of our faith, and thus we expect at least one parent to belong to
our community.
In the Methodist Church of Southern Africa (MCSA), there are no guidelines
on how to deal with this kind of request. The doctrinal understanding is very
clear, i.e. baptism of the dead is not allowed. However, when one is faced
with grieving parents and families, a different approach to the situation
needs to be applied, bearing in mind the psychosocial space the parents
are at. Stillbirth baptism is not an option, as this rite of passage is meant for
the living. Christians publicly acknowledge one's confession of faith and
belief in the gospel message. How would a dead person respond in faith?
Furthermore, when a person is baptised, this act is meant for those who will
be members of the community of faith, the Church. It is evident even from
Scripture that, neither Jesus Christ nor his disciples baptised the dead. Our
salvation is not determined by us having to receive this sacred ritual.
Baptism therefore, a sign and seal of our salvation as it ensures entrance
into the community of faith, the church.
It has already been paid (Jn. 3:16). We do not have to do anything for God
to acknowledge us as God’s. God’s acknowledgement of us is not
concerned with what we do or say because God is about our hearts. Proxy
baptism, as practised by some, does not have any meaning or does it have
any effect on the dead person.
We are reassured of God’s grace in our journey of faith that gives us a new
life that is not condemned by God. Through grace, we are pardoned,
resulting in the renewal of our minds and hearts. John Wesley calls this kind of grace, prevenient grace, that which goes before us. Unbaptised are also
covered in the underserved love of God, called grace. Even though Jesus
commanded that we baptise, God’s forgiveness does not depend on our
earthly rituals. God freely loves us unconditionally. The purpose of
sacramental rituals is to build up the Christian community, and each
individual Christian within it, in a way that will make the Church as a whole
and all Christians more and more powerful and effective witnesses and
heralds of God's love for all people and of God's desire to give everlasting
life to all human beings.
This thesis concludes that baptism of stillborn children is not following
Church doctrine, but at the same time, the loss of a baby requires intense
pastoral intervention and some form of rite or ceremony. Although the ritual
or ceremony does not offer any divine intervention but rather, for Africans,
the ritual plays a pivotal role in communicating and appeasing ancestors. A
liturgy and ceremony for stillborn children is proposed.
Description
Thesis (PhD)--University of Pretoria, 2022.
Keywords
UCTD, African understanding of baptism, Creator God, Christian faith, Sacrament of baptism, Methodist Church of Southern Africa (MCSA)
Sustainable Development Goals
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