That Confirming Spirit
By Harry J. Fielding,
The deep red glow of the sun setting over the city of Suva was reflected in
the dark brown eyes of my Fijian friend as he gazed earnestly into my eyes. “But
Brother Harry,” he implored, “why do I need to be baptized and confirmed again?
I’ve already made my covenant with the Lord Jesus.”
The question stabbed at my heart, for I had no easy answer. I had been given
the task to plant the church among the indigenous people of the Fiji Islands.
The church had been established in Fiji for a number of years and had an active
congregation composed of members of Indian descent. This young Fijian man had
previously had a powerful experience of baptism and confirmation in another
denomination in which he had felt the outpouring of the Spirit in great
abundance. It now appeared to him that what I was asking him to do would demean
and invalidate his previous experience.
Why am I telling you this story? Because I have struggled with (and continue
to struggle with) the place of baptism and confirmation in the life of the
church. We are moving into an increasingly relational age and need to interpret
and administer the sacraments of the church within this framework. Twenty years
ago, I wrote these words in an article published in Restoration Studies III
(“The Church and the Sacraments: Toward a Functional Interpretation,” 1986,
p. 29):
The challenge before the church today is to build relational ministry in
today’s cultures. We must guard against the tendency to attach permanence to
the church’s forms of expression. Today’s church should release the resources
which allow persons to enjoy a contemporary experience—indeed a contemporary
lifestyle—empowered by the living presence of the Holy Spirit.
We are born into a world of spirit, even though we often fail to recognize
this. Contemporary science assures us that the nature of all being is based on
energy. At the center and extremities of life is a dynamic, flowing energy that
holds everything together in relationship. The “Holy Spirit” is a term and a
concept that Christians have coined to explain this relationship. Sacramental
acts, such as confirmation, do not somehow “endow us from on high” but are
rather acts of response to the creative and empowering Spirit that is at the
core of our being. In them we both symbolize and participate in the continuing
presence of the Holy Spirit.
The book of Acts (chapter 2) records a powerful group experience with the
Holy Spirit. The day of Pentecost has become a model for understanding the
expression and endowment of that Spirit. Yet most of those who participated in
the endowment of the Spirit that day had not yet been baptized—hence Peter’s
admonition in verse 38 for them to “repent and be baptized.” In a sense, this
natural act of response “confirms” that innate presence of the Divine within us,
and the sacrament of confirmation marks our willingness to live in the power of
the Spirit.
The warm tropical rain was beginning to fall as I quietly told my young
Fijian friend that I could find no theological reason why he needed to be
rebaptized and reconfirmed. “But if you want to be a member of this church and
this community,” I said, “then the only way to do that is to be rebaptized and
reconfirmed.” As his own warm rain began to flow down his cheeks, my friend
responded, “Brother Harry, I want to serve my Lord Jesus, and I want to do it in
this church. Will you baptize and confirm me?”
What do you think I said?
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