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Beleiver's Baptism Book Review

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Liberty Baptist Theological Seminary

Book Critique: Believer’s Baptism: Sign of the New Covenant in Christ

A Paper
Submitted to Professor Larry McDonald
In Partial Fulfillment
Of the Requirements for the Course
Ecclesiology
Theo 620

By
Matt Dover

September 8, 2012

Bibliography

Believer’s Baptism: Sign of the New Covenant in Christ. Thomas R. Schreiner & Shawn
D. Wright. Nashville: B & H, 2007. 359 pages. Reviewed by Matt B. Dover

Authorship
Thomas R. Schreiner is the professor of New Testament Interpretation and the Associate Dean of Scripture and Interpretation at the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary. Prior to this he served for 11 years at Bethel Theological Seminary, and he also taught New Testament at Azusa Pacific Seminary. Schreiner is the author of numerous books and articles. He is also the pastor of Clifton Baptist Church in Louisville, Kentucky. Shawn D. Wright is the Assistant Professor of Church History at the Southern Baptist Theological Seminary. Prior to this he served the Southern Baptist churches in New England. Wright also serves as the pastor at Clifton Baptist Church alongside Schreiner. He is also noted for writing various articles and journals. He also serves as a member of the Evangelical Theological Society. Thesis Statement
The goal of this book is to recover and maintain an adequate and proper view on the role of baptism in the believer’s life and the church. It also seeks to serve as a guide to those who wish to defend the doctrine of the believer’s baptism by immersion, especially in defense against infant or paedo baptism.

Critique In chapters one through three there is a clear and present exegetical understanding of the passages within the gospels that address the topic of baptism. Chapter one begins with Andreas J.

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...            Schreiner and Wright set out to dispel the practice of paedobaptisim in the Reformed tradition. In order to accomplish this, they enlist the help of ten scholars to investigate baptism from a scriptural, historical and theological perspective. What results is a book that fairly documents the biblical background, fairly quotes the Reformation fathers Calvin, Marcel, and Murray and ends with a chapter on practical application of baptism in the modern church.   SUMMARY             Schreiner and Wright open their book by stating, “Baptism … is the initiation rite into the Christian church. Those who label it minor are imposing their own categories onto the Scriptures instead of listening to the Scriptures…. Baptism is important precisely because it is tied to the gospel, to the saving work that Christ accomplished in his death and resurrection.”[1] What the authors do is to survey both the scriptures and church history in their inquiry into the paedobaptistism (infant baptism) and credobaptism (“baptism should be reserved for believers in the Lord Jesus Christ”[2]) debate. The particular form of paedobaptism that the authors are seeking to correct is “…primarily in the Reformed tradition, who baptize infants not because they believe that baptism regenerates … but because they believe that baptism brings the child into the covenant community.”[3] All the authors are both razor sharp in their focus, and fair in their treatment of paedobaptist positions. Each chapter is thoroughly...

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