Scott
Puritan Board Graduate
- They are Federally Holy. (DPW)
- They have been set apart from the world. (WCF 27-1)
- As covenant members they have a right to training, discipline and care from the church.
- They are members of visible church, the historical administration of the administration of the COG. (WCF 25-2)
-That baptism is means of grace for our covenant children who receive it in personal faith (WCF 28-6)
- That personal faith is not tied to the moment of administration. (WCF 28-6)
Ok, I agree with these things too. How should the above views make the treatment of covenant children differ from that of parents or church officers holding non-covenantal perspective (dispensational, baptisitic, or whatever)?
Your earlier posts indicated no difference at all, with the exception of using baptism as an evangelistic "call" (as opposed to a seal). I am thinking of this quote:
Their baptism itself functions as a powerful call to faith and God certainly delights to work through families. Our children are set apart in the covenant community, live in homes where the ordinary means God (faith comes by hearing) uses to bring people to faith should be saturating their lives. They have fathers, mothers and elders seeking for their salvation.
The fundamental benefit is that the child is in a better position to be evangelized. I think dispensationalists and baptists would agree with this.
Thanks
[Edited on 12-3-2004 by Scott]