As the Church continues to try to clarify the meaning of baptism, well-known liturgical scholar Kenneth Stevenson provides important insights into the historical issues with which we still wrestle. Is baptism a private or a public act? Is the Symbolism of the rite still appropriate? Does the language of the baptismal service remain meaningful in a secular age? In order to answer these and other pressing questions, we must understand the thinking of those who have come before us. Stevenson looks at the writings of such seventeenth-century Anglican divines as Lancelot Andrewes, George Herbert, Richard Hooker, Richard Baxter, Jeremy Taylor, and others, all of whom have a vital and prophetic significance for our undrstanding and practice of baptism.