Hi all,
Have any of you researchedthe origins of the practice of baptism? As far as I can determine, there's no mention of it, much less as a requirement, in the Torah or any of the Old Testament.
Unless I'm missing something, it appears suddenly with John the Baptist (oh, excuse me, WT lurkers, John the Baptiser).
So then, if all of this is as it appears, then it's fair to conclude that the practice is of extra-Biblical (as in ``pagan'' or ``heathen'') origins.
If true, then we have a fascinating example of how John, then Jesus, appropriated a pagan custom because of its suitability as a symbol; in this case, of dying to a former life course and awakening to another. Much as the WT acquiesces to the use of a wedding ring, despite its pagan origins, right?
So is it then fair to condemn the Catholics, indeed all of Christendom, for having ``sanctified by adoption'' so many of their customs and tradtions because of their utility as fitting symbols? In the matter of baptism at least, it would seem we have a precedent in this matter set by none less than Jesus our exemplar.
So then why lose sleep agonizing over the alleged ``pagan origins'' of some otherwise innocuous practice or custom?
What say you?