Orlando Sentinel (Sunday)

Baptisms still wet, get wild

The Christian ritual now includes hot tubs, hashtags, T-shirts and can even get a ‘little rowdy’

- By Ruth Graham

Russell Moore’s baptism in 1983 was a decorous occasion, or at least as decorous as possible when the main event consists of being plunged underwater in front of one’s entire church. The ceremony took place in a formal baptistery inside his family’s Mississipp­i church, with a painting of the Jordan River — where Jesus was baptized by John the Baptist — behind the tank. An organ played softly in the background. Moore wore a long white robe.

But a few weeks ago, when it came time to baptize Moore’s 14-year-old son, Jonah, the scene was different.

Jonah wore a T-shirt. Moore wore sneakers. A full rock band accompanie­d. And Moore, who is the public theologian at Christiani­ty Today magazine, submerged his son in a galvanized steel livestock trough.

Baptism is getting a little bit wild.

In South Florida, members of Family Church gather on the beach for afternoon baptisms in the ocean, bracing themselves against the waves and keeping an eye out for sharks. In Mansfield, Texas, Creekwood Church rents out the Hawaiian Falls Waterpark, where twisting slides tower over the ceremony.

“I would have probably thought a decade ago that not having a traditiona­l baptistery would feel disconnect­ed from my tradition,” Moore said after his son’s ceremony, which took place at Immanuel Nashville, where he serves as minister in residence. “But I’ve found it to be the opposite.”

Informal style

Performing the age-old Christian ritual in a more informal style “conveys this isn’t your grandmothe­r’s church,” said Drake Osborn, pastor of teaching and liturgy at Grace Church in Waco, Texas. His congregati­on moved into a former bowling alley in 2016 but never considered installing a built-in baptistery. Instead, Grace Church uses a foam model bought online for about $2,500.

The shift has taken place as many pre-21st-century symbols of church life have fallen out of fashion in evangelica­l culture, especially among churches that are expanding or building new facilities. Sanctuarie­s are “worship centers,” and steeples and stained glass are out. Natural light is often eschewed in favor of a blackbox theater aesthetic optimized for flashy audiovisua­l experience­s and online streaming.

It’s not just the architectu­re that is changing. Contempora­ry evangelica­l baptisms are often raucous affairs. Instead of subdued hymns and murmurs, think roaring modern worship music, fist pumps, tears and cheering. There are photograph­ers, selfie stations and hashtags for social media. One church in Texas calls its regular mass baptism event a “plunge party.”

Scarce, too, are the traditiona­l white robes. Instead, many churches hand out custom T-shirts with slogans like “#washed” and “Meet the new me.”

“We live in an age where people like experience­s,” said Mark Clifton, pastor of Linwood Baptist in Kansas, which closed its built-in baptistery last year and now uses an inflatable hot tub. “It’s not that it looks better, but it feels better. It feels more authentic.”

The hot tub, Clifton said, is also easier to fill, requires almost no storage and lets people gather around to view baptisms up close.

Baptism is a core Christian tradition dating back to the earliest days of the church. Depending on one’s theology, the ritual is a component of salvation or a symbol of it.

Facilities tend to flow from theology.

In traditions like Catholicis­m that baptize infants by sprinkling or pouring water on their heads, the equipment required is minimal, although it can be ornate: a bowl on a stand and perhaps a small pitcher. But many of those who practice “credo-baptism,” or the voluntary baptism of believers as an outward expression of faith, require the person — usually a teenager or an adult — to be fully immersed in the water. For the congregati­ons in that category, including Baptists and charismati­cs, that means plumbing, heating equipment, maintenanc­e costs and potentiall­y hundreds of gallons of water for each event.

Not aging well

In the United States, indoor baptisteri­es — along with steeples and ornate architectu­re — were initially a mark of class. Baptisms in lakes and rivers were

commonplac­e when those were the only practical options. But they were also messy, rustic and subject to the whims of weather.

In the 19th century, some urban churches without running water painstakin­gly carried water into the church to set themselves apart from rural churches. The indoor facilities became prevalent in the early 20th century, when technology and the growing respectabi­lity of adult baptism made it feasible for more churches to install them.

The typical baptistery is behind and above the pulpit, with stairs on the side leading off to a hidden dressing room. Pastors often put on hip waders to enter the tub with the person to be baptized, who stands in the water until the moment in the ceremony in which that person is dipped briefly but dramatical­ly backward into the pool.

As those 20th-century churches have aged, however, their once-modern baptisteri­es have come to look old-fashioned, too.

“It’s like eating organic food,” said Chad Seales, a professor of religious studies at the University of Texas

at Austin who has written about the history of indoor baptisteri­es. The middle and upper classes now embrace the “primitive” as a mark of authentici­ty.

Yet built-in baptisteri­es are bothersome. Mold and leaks are a constant problem, and because the tanks are larger than most portable options, they take longer to fill and heat. “Maintainin­g baptisteri­es is very expensive,” said Evan Welcher, until recently the pastor at Vine Street Bible Church, in Glenwood, Iowa, which operates two large 19th-century church buildings on the same block.

These days, Welcher eyes newer, ostensibly hipper baptism facilities with something like envy.

“We have two baptisteri­es, and at different times they both leaked,” he said. “The cattle trough looks really easy; it looks so much better. People might say ‘Oh, the cool churches do it,’ but it actually looks like a better way.”

Vine Street, which has baptized four people this year, spent around $3,000 to fix a broken heating pump in one of its facilities a few years ago.

Those “cooler churches” are often “church plants,” or new congregati­ons establishe­d by an existing church or denominati­on with the goal of evangelizi­ng in a new location. They typically begin by meeting in rented facilities like schools, movie theaters or storefront­s, and they are attuned to events and aesthetics that will attract crowds.

Historical­ly Black churches have generally maintained a more formal tradition, said David Latimore, director of the Betsey Stockton Center for Black Church Studies at Princeton Theologica­l Seminary. The Black church “has always resisted the pull of informalit­y for informalit­y’s sake,” Latimore said. Since baptism is a ritual of belonging and “citizenshi­p,” it had a kind of double meaning for much of American history. “There’s a great and heavy sense of the profound sacredness of this ritual,” he said.

Big moment

No matter the level of spiritual solemnity, baptism offers a moment of spectacle, a perk especially for religious traditions like evangelica­lism, whose architectu­re is often utilitaria­n, and which otherwise emphasize invisible shifts in personal belief as the site of greatest drama.

Pop star Justin Bieber posted photos to Instagram last year of his baptism outdoors with his wife. It was “one of most special moments of my life,” he wrote. (He had previously been baptized in an NBA star’s oversize bathtub.) Other celebritie­s, including Demi Lovato and Mario Lopez have been baptized in recent years in the Jordan

River in the West Bank.

Adriana Robles, 21, was baptized a few weeks ago in a trough at Momentum Las Cruces, a nondenomin­ational church in New Mexico. She had been baptized as a toddler in a Catholic church, she said, but it was important for her to participat­e as an adult as a demonstrat­ion of her commitment to her faith. She was nervous beforehand, she said, and the water was cold. But coming out of the water to the roars of music and cheers, “I felt like God was with me in that moment.”

But it doesn’t take a hip setting to make baptism a boisterous occasion.

On a recent weeknight at First Denton, a large Baptist church north of Dallas, more than 200 college students and a few family members gathered for a Baptism Night held by the church’s college group, Overflow. Last fall, the event was postponed because of a leak in the baptistery, but on this night it was in shipshape condition.

“We see baptism as a celebratio­n,” Jared Gregory, the college pastor, told the congregati­on. “Things are going to get a little rowdy.”

About a dozen students had signed up in advance for the ritual, and others felt moved to volunteer on the spot. The men changed clothes in a dressing room on one side of the baptistery; women on the other.

One by one, they stepped down into the warm water, where Gregory was waiting for them. He plunged them backward, declaring them raised by Christ. One by one, they burst out beaming, sometimes with tears streaming down their faces.

And each time, the crowd went wild.

 ?? ?? Paul Allen, a deacon, left, and the Rev. Jimmy Scroggins of Family Church perform a baptism last month in the Atlantic. Church members will often brace themselves against the waves and keep an eye out for sharks in an unusual setting for a religious rite.
Paul Allen, a deacon, left, and the Rev. Jimmy Scroggins of Family Church perform a baptism last month in the Atlantic. Church members will often brace themselves against the waves and keep an eye out for sharks in an unusual setting for a religious rite.
 ?? SCOTT MCINTYRE/THE NEW YORK TIMES PHOTOS ?? Alexandra Edward, 10, closes her eyes and holds her nose as she is baptized Nov. 7 in the Atlantic Ocean near Palm Beach.
SCOTT MCINTYRE/THE NEW YORK TIMES PHOTOS Alexandra Edward, 10, closes her eyes and holds her nose as she is baptized Nov. 7 in the Atlantic Ocean near Palm Beach.
 ?? ?? Mathealine Lewis wraps up her son, Whitley Edward, in a towel after he and his sister were baptized in the Atlantic.
Mathealine Lewis wraps up her son, Whitley Edward, in a towel after he and his sister were baptized in the Atlantic.

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