Dunster Grave Site
He counted the cost
1657 – Henry Dunster, on this day was forced to resign as President of Cambridge College (now Harvard), for refusing to have his son christened (sprinkled). He was then arraigned before the Middlesex court and not allowed to speak on his own behalf but the court stated his position with these words, “The subjects of baptism were visible penitent believers and they only.”
Dunster had publically declared that christening “was not according to the institution of Christ” or the mind of Christ. He also said that the covenant of Abraham was not the ground for baptism. It was the bloody back of Obadiah Holmes and the persecution of others that had caused Dunster to take the strong stand that he did though he was one of the most influential men in New England and Massachusetts Colony at that time. But it was these seeds of trials that were sown and nourished before the first Baptist church could be planted in Massachusetts Bay proper.
What a debt we owe these stalwart soldiers of the cross. And yet in this age of instant everything we are prone to quit if God doesn’t do something immediately when we begin to serve Him in the endeavor that He has called us.
We forget the words of our Lord, For the earth bringeth forth fruit of herself; first the blade, then the ear, after that the full corn in the ear. Rather, we expect the harvest as soon as we put in the seed and then when we don’t see a crop immediately we get upset and leave our field of service.
Dr. Greg J. Dixon, from: This Day in Baptist History Vol. I: Cummins/Thompson /, pp. 141.