Daniel Baker
Log College Press
Hardback
85 pages
Who should be baptized - professing believers only, or professing believers and their non-professing children? In what way should they be baptized - by being dipped under water, or by having water put on them by pouring or sprinkling? As the gospel of Jesus Christ spread across the American frontier in the 19th century, these questions were much disputed - as they are today. Daniel Baker, a Presbyterian evangelist in the 19th century, was used mightily by God to draw many of His elect to Himself. In this short work he offers succinct and clear answers in a straight-forward, simple, and eminently Scriptural manner. Readers of A Plain and Scriptural View of Baptism will gain a better understanding of the doctrine of baptism, specifically why the baptism of infants and baptism by modes other than immersion are in accord with Gods word.
"Many know Daniel Baker as the pioneering evangelist of the nineteenth-century American frontier. But many do not know that Baker was also a careful theologian who labored to see the biblical doctrines of the Westminster Standards embraced within the Church. A Plain and Scriptural View of Baptism is a master class in explaining the Scriptures teaching on baptism plainly, practically, and profoundly. Whether you are looking to learn more about what the Bible says about baptism or to find a resource to help you explain that teaching to others, this reprint merits a place on your shelf." - Guy Prentiss Waters, Ph.D.