Skip to content
Believer's BaptismAnabaptistFill-in Template~12 minClaude Opus 4.6

The Pledge of Discipleship: Anabaptist Believer's Baptism

Romans 6:3-11Acts 2:38

Believer's baptism as covenant with the community — a voluntary pledge of discipleship, nonconformity to the world, and membership in the peace church

Anabaptist / Peace Church

Radical discipleship, peace, and community

This template has fill-in placeholders

Look for [BRACKETED TEXT] throughout the sermon. Replace these with your specific details to personalize the message.

[CANDIDATE_NAME] e.g., Sarah, Brother Marcus[TESTIMONY_MOMENT] e.g., felt God calling during a difficult season, encountered Christ through a friend
Tradition vocabulary:voluntary covenantdiscipleship pledgepeace churchnonviolencecounterculturalMartyrs Mirror

Voluntary Covenant: The Church Is Not a State

In 1525, Conrad Grebel, Felix Manz, and a small group of believers baptized one another in Zurich — the first adult baptisms of the Reformation. It was an act of radical conviction and enormous danger. The authorities called them "rebaptizers" — Anabaptists — and some were executed for it. What drove them was a simple but revolutionary conviction: the church must be a voluntary community of committed disciples, not a society of everyone born within its borders. Infant baptism, they argued, had created a Christendom where everyone was "baptized" but few were disciples. The church had become coextensive with the state, and the result was corruption, compromise, and violence done in the name of Christ. Belliever's baptism is the Anabaptist insistence on the distinction between the church and the world. [CANDIDATE_NAME] enters the water voluntarily — no one is coercing them, no culture compels them, no state requires them. This is a free choice, a covenant freely made, a membership freely embraced. That voluntariness is theologically essential.
Acts 2:38Matthew 28:19Romans 6:3-4

The Signature

Contracts are signed by those who understand what they are agreeing to and choose to agree. You cannot sign a contract for an infant — the agreement requires a consenting party. Anabaptist baptism is the signature on the covenant of discipleship. [CANDIDATE_NAME] has read the terms — follow Jesus, love enemies, live simply, serve the community — and they are signing. This is not casual.

Source: Harold Bender, "The Anabaptist Vision" — discipleship as the center of the Reformation

Discipleship Pledge: What Baptism Commits You To

The Anabaptist tradition has always insisted that baptism is not merely about forgiveness — it is about discipleship. The Schleitheim Confession of 1527 tied baptism directly to the life of the community: "Baptism shall be given to all those who have learned repentance and amendment of life... and who walk in the resurrection... namely, all those who wish to be buried in death with regard to the flesh and to be known as resurrected with Him." "Walk in the resurrection." This is not passive. It is a whole-life commitment to live as Jesus lived — in simplicity, in service, in nonviolence, in love of enemy. The church community, gathered around baptism, holds each other accountable to that life. For [CANDIDATE_NAME]: this water is a pledge of discipleship. You are not merely joining a congregation — you are committing to a way of life. The Anabaptist tradition will ask you: are you following Jesus in the Sermon on the Mount? Are you loving your enemies? Are you living simply? Are you practicing community? The water makes those questions permanently relevant.
Matthew 5:43-48Romans 6:5-8Luke 9:23

The Peace Church Witness: Nonviolence as Baptismal Commitment

One of the most distinctive features of Anabaptist baptism is its connection to the peace testimony. From the beginning, Anabaptists refused military service, rejected violence, and sought to embody the Sermon on the Mount literally. This was not a political position but a theological one: those who are baptized into Christ's death cannot take human life in war. The one who died for enemies cannot baptize His followers to kill enemies. This witness has cost Anabaptists dearly across five centuries — persecution, martyrdom, exile. But it has also produced one of the most consistent and coherent peace testimonies in Christian history. The Martyrs Mirror documents thousands of those who bore witness with their lives. Baptism in the Anabaptist tradition includes this commitment: "I will not resolve conflict with violence. I will seek peace and pursue it. I will love my enemies and pray for those who persecute me." This is not naivety — it is the costly obedience of those who have taken Jesus at His word.
Matthew 5:9Matthew 5:38-45Romans 12:18-21

Applications

  • 1Mean what you said in the water — discipleship is costly, and the community around you is there to hold you to it.
  • 2Study the Sermon on the Mount as your baptismal charter — these are the terms you have signed.
  • 3Commit to the practice of nonviolence — in your home, your relationships, your politics, your speech.
  • 4Let the community of believers be your accountability — share your struggles, receive correction, practice mutual aid.

Prayer Suggestions

  • Lord, [CANDIDATE_NAME] has stepped into the river that the first Anabaptists died for the right to enter. We do not take that lightly.
  • May the pledge they have made today be kept — not in their own strength, but in the power of Your Spirit and the support of this community.
  • May their life be a peace witness — a sign of the Kingdom that does not depend on violence, does not accumulate power, and does not conform to the world. May they be recognizably different, in the best way. Amen.

Preaching Toolkit

Movie Analogy

Silence (2016)

The hidden Christians of Japan baptized one another at enormous risk — because faith, once real, demands to be expressed, whatever the cost. The Anabaptists knew that cost from the beginning. Believer's baptism is the line in the sand: on this side, the world; on that side, the way of Jesus. [CANDIDATE_NAME] has chosen which side they stand on.

3 Voices

Powered by LensLines™ — one-liners from every TheoLens™ tradition

Classic

Anabaptist believer's baptism is the voluntary covenant of a committed disciple — a pledge to follow Jesus in the way of the cross, live as a member of the peace church community, and practice nonviolent, countercultural discipleship.

Pastoral

The first Anabaptists were rebaptized at the cost of their lives. What [CANDIDATE_NAME] does today in safety was done in blood by those who came before. The water you enter is not shallow — it runs five hundred years deep.

Edgy

Anabaptist baptism is not a spiritual transaction. It is a political act. You are declaring that your ultimate loyalty is to Jesus and His Kingdom — not to the state, not to the market, not to any earthly power. That has consequences.

More Titles

The Pledge of Discipleship: An Anabaptist Baptism SermonVoluntary Covenant: Mennonite Believer's Baptism TheologyThe Peace Church Begins at the Font: Anabaptist BaptismBorn Again to Follow Jesus: An Anabaptist Baptism MessageFive Hundred Years of the River: Anabaptist Baptism Today
Try our Title Generator

Frequently Asked Questions

Why do Anabaptists reject infant baptism so strongly?

Because baptism, for Anabaptists, is the voluntary pledge of a committed disciple — it requires understanding, consent, and commitment. An infant cannot be a disciple; therefore infant baptism misrepresents what baptism is.

What is the connection between Anabaptist baptism and pacifism?

Anabaptists see baptism as a comprehensive pledge of discipleship — including the commitment to nonviolence. Those baptized into Christ's death cannot kill in war; the peace testimony is part of the baptismal commitment.