"Baptists hold that baptism is for believers only, but most of them downgrade it into being only a symbol. By careful scrutiny of past writings in England, America, and Canada, Mark McKim demonstrates that the early Particular Baptists, while rejecting any idea of baptismal regeneration, saw it as a distinct means of grace. Individual scripture passages and an overall biblical understanding, he concludes, vindicate their view of baptism as a place where God is powerfully at work."
--David Bebbington, emeritus professor of history, University of Stirling
"This extensive, and indeed well-nigh exhaustive, study of baptism--its meaning and practice--in Scripture and in the Anglo-American Baptist world is a superb study of this initiatory rite. It should be required reading, in my opinion, for all who give leadership in Baptist churches and centers of theological education."
--Michael A. G. Azad Haykin, professor of church history, The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary