What is the purpose or theology behind the practice of infant baptism? 
               
            In 
              the early years of the Christian movement, only adults were baptized, 
              and then only after extensive preparations lasting as long as three 
              years. Those baptized were literally taking on a new life. As time 
              went on, the age of baptism became younger and younger. When superstition 
              and high infant mortality raised fears of eternal damnation, it 
              became the norm to baptize infants as soon as possible after birth. 
               
            One 
              feature of the Protestant Reformation was to move away from infant 
              baptism, on the theory that baptism only made sense if the person 
              comprehended what was happening. Some Protestant traditions, however, 
              continued infant baptism, believing that baptism isn't an intellectual 
              or spiritual accomplishment, but a new state that one spends an 
              entire life living into.  
            My 
              tradition, the Episcopal Church, affirms infant baptism. My belief 
              is that baptism can occur at any age, that God's love is a given, 
              not a prize, and that self-awareness as a Christian matures and 
              changes as we mature and change. 
              
            —Tom 
              Ehrich  
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