sparrowdown: These people aren't slow they're smart, putting off baptism puts off accountability.
haha! It's always been like that.
In later Roman times, after the Emperor Constantine made early Christianity legal, it was quite the fashion for people to wait to be baptised until late in life, or even just before their death. They were likely emulating the Emperor himself, who although taking strong stands on some church issues, like the Arian/Athanasius controversy, as illustrated by this sketch
He also called Church councils and attended, and financed an enormous church construction program. But did all that without ever being baptised.
The Wikipedia entry regarding his baptism, fits within the generally accepted scholastic view of Constantine's late baptism:
"Constantine had known death would soon come. Within the Church of the Holy Apostles, Constantine had secretly prepared a final resting-place for himself.[250] It came sooner than he had expected. Soon after the Feast of Easter 337, Constantine fell seriously ill.[251] He left Constantinople for the hot baths near his mother's city of Helenopolis (Altinova), on the southern shores of the Gulf of İzmit. There, in a church his mother built in honor of Lucian the Apostle, he prayed, and there he realized that he was dying. Seeking purification, he became a catechumen, and attempted a return to Constantinople, making it only as far as a suburb of Nicomedia.[252] He summoned the bishops, and told them of his hope to be baptized in the River Jordan, where Christ was written to have been baptized. He requested the baptism right away, promising to live a more Christian life should he live through his illness. The bishops, Eusebius records, "performed the sacred ceremonies according to custom".[253] He chose the Arianizing bishop Eusebius of Nicomedia, bishop of the city where he lay dying, as his baptizer.[254] In postponing his baptism, he followed one custom at the time which postponed baptism until after infancy.[255] It has been thought that Constantine put off baptism as long as he did so as to be absolved from as much of his sin as possible*.[256] Constantine died soon after at a suburban villa called Achyron, on the last day of the fifty-day festival of Pentecost directly following Pascha (or Easter), on 22 May 337.[257]
Note, that I've left the footnote reference numbers in the text, so that anyone interested can check the sources for themselves.
Link: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Constantine_the_Great
* In reference to his "sins," while supposedly a "Christian Emperor," we can note that he had both his son Crispus and his wife Fausta murdered. I guess that may weigh on one's conscience a little.
Christianity is such a big con. trick.