---
schema_version: "1.0.0"
id: "ddf-church-blueprint:en:chapter-20"
work_id: "urn:systemstheology:book:ddf-church-blueprint:chapter:chapter-20"
book_id: "ddf-church-blueprint"
chapter_id: "18-baptism-and-the-lord-s-table"
chapter_slug: "chapter-20"
title: "18. Baptism and the Lord's Table"
book_title: "DDF Church Blueprint"
language: "en"
source_language: "en"
translation_status: "source"
authors: ["Systems Theology"]
editorial_owner: "Systems Theology"
editors: []
review_status: "not_specified"
reviewers: []
content_version: "content-19e50ceb081c"
content_hash_sha256: "19e50ceb081caae349bb72ea4b039ad0a6408738bd36c9eef578e75453bb70a3"
published_at: "2026-07-15T21:14:45.000Z"
modified_at: "2026-07-15T23:50:19.254Z"
canonical_url: "https://systemstheology.com/library/ddf-church-blueprint/chapter-20/"
markdown_url: "https://systemstheology.com/research/books/ddf-church-blueprint/en/chapter-20.md"
license: "All rights reserved; research use subject to the Use Policy"
license_url: "https://systemstheology.com/use-policy/"
correction_url: "https://systemstheology.com/library/ddf-church-blueprint/chapter-20/#chapter-comments"
---

# 18. Baptism and the Lord's Table

<a id="18-baptism-and-the-lord-s-table"></a>

Baptism and Eucharist are not launch aesthetics. They are Christ-given, embodied practices through which the Church receives and enacts his promise according to its confession. Romans 6 joins baptism to Christ's death and resurrection. First Corinthians 10 joins the cup and bread to participation in Christ and the one body. First Corinthians 11 refuses a Table that rehearses Christ's self-giving while humiliating weaker members.

Christian traditions disagree about baptismal subjects and mode, regeneration, sacramental efficacy, admission to the Table, frequency, presence, presidency, and relation to church membership. A plant must not use generic language to conceal decisions it will make in practice. State the tradition, the scriptural and doctrinal rationale, who has authority to administer, how other baptisms are recognized, who is invited to the Table, and how questions are handled.

<a id="baptismal-path"></a>

## Baptismal Path

Create a complete path from inquiry to lifelong remembrance:

- gospel and baptismal catechesis appropriate to age and capacity;
- discernment of profession, sponsors or parents where the tradition uses them, and any pastoral or discipline questions;
- consent, accessibility, water safety, clothing, privacy, assistance, emergency planning, and photography choice;
- authorized administration with the Trinitarian name and the tradition's received form;
- an accurate certificate or register with controlled access;
- welcome into the local body and clear next formation; and
- repeated congregational practices that return members to baptismal identity without turning baptism into nostalgia.

Never delay baptism merely to improve a public event. Never pressure a person to narrate trauma or a spectacular conversion. Testimony should witness to Christ and may be simple.

<a id="the-lord-s-table"></a>

## The Lord's Table

Write the theological and practical order together: frequency; elements; preparation; presidency; prayer; distribution; admission; children; disability; allergy, substance, or medical concerns; home or hospital communion; discipline; leftovers; records if any; and relation to the wider church or denomination.

The congregation should be able to hear what is being received and how to participate. Visitors should not be surprised at the moment of distribution by an unexplained boundary. Those who cannot receive should not be publicly marked or shamed. Practical alternatives must not silently change the church's sacramental confession; deliberate with the proper authority.

First Corinthians requires a body audit. Are some eating while others remain hungry? Do wealth, schedule, disability, race, status, language, or leadership access contradict the communion enacted? The Table is not a reward for strong religious feeling. It also cannot be used to announce peace where serious harm is being hidden.

<a id="sacramental-records-and-conflict"></a>

## Sacramental Records and Conflict

Name which records have ecclesial or civil significance, who holds them, how corrections occur, and how they transfer. When traditions disagree over a baptism or Table practice, state the local judgment without pretending all other Christians deny Christ. Ecumenical hospitality requires both conviction and truth about limits.

Before you move on. Baptismal and Eucharistic policies joined to catechesis, authorized roles, access and safety plans, records, visitor communication, and ongoing formation.
