Verified Claim · The Sacraments
Baptismal regeneration — the teaching that Baptism actually effects the new birth — was the universal teaching of the early Church without a single dissenting voice.
The Protestant doctrine that Baptism is an outward sign of an inward grace already received is not found anywhere in the patristic period. Every early Christian writer who addressed Baptism taught that it actually does what it signifies: it washes away sin, effects rebirth, and incorporates the recipient into the Body of Christ.
This was not a point of controversy. It was the baseline assumption of Christian initiation from the New Testament through Augustine. The question was never whether Baptism regenerates — that was assumed. The controversies were about infant Baptism, emergency Baptism, and the Baptism of heretics. The regenerative effect itself was never in question.
6 dateable primary sources spanning AD 50–415. Tap any dot to expand.
The Donatists were schismatics who rejected the Catholic Church. Their entire controversy with Augustine was about which Baptisms were valid — theirs or the Catholics'. Neither side questioned whether Baptism regenerates. Both assumed it. Even the Church's enemies agreed on what Baptism does. They only disputed who could validly administer it.
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