Welcome to the list, Andy. James has given you most of the answer to
your question. However in the English Prayer Book of 1789 it
suggests that the minister should encourage the people to bring their
children for baptism by the first or second Sunday after the birth or
on a major Feast if one should fall between the two Sundays, i.e.
within the first ten days after birth. Baptism in the home in an
emergency was a very brief ceremony, though it is described as “lawful
and sufficient” and the prayer book states clearly that the child
should not be baptised a second time : but, if the child then
survived, it should be brought into the church, so that the minister
might certify to the congregation that he had already baptised the
child or that some other minister had done so. It was then usual for
the minister to say the rest of the prayers, which were left out
during the time of the emergency baptism.
best wishes,
Philip Steer
On 20 Jun 2012, at 11:18, <oxyandy(a)gmail.com> <oxyandy(a)gmail.com> wrote:
Hello all
my first message !
1. Hope I am doing this right.
2. I have the settings for digest, is there a way to get Single
emails ?
I was wondering, between 1750 to 1850,
How soon after a birth, did parents chirsten a child ??
Also happy to chat with anyone Regarding Malborough MADDICKS
I am a decendant of David & Mary early 1800s
Cheers all
Andy
oxyandy(a)gmail.com
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