"You are quite a little theologian," said the Doctor with a smile. "May I ask my young theologian a question? How do you manage to swallow the Baptist doctrine of close communion?"
"They do not seem close in their communion," promptly replied Dorothy, "not any closer than you Presbyterians."
"You surely are a valiant defender. How do you prove that?"
"You believe, do you not, Doctor, that no one ought to come to your communion table who has not first been baptized?"
"Yes, that is our rule. I certainly would not advise one who has not been baptized to come to the table."
"The Baptists believe that, too."
"But the Baptists do not think I ought to come with them, and yet I have been baptized."
"Yes, but you have not been Scripturally baptized—so the Baptists think."
"But what have they to do with my baptism? I am satisfied with it. I believe it is Scriptural. I thought the Baptists contended for individual freedom in interpreting the Bible. I follow my conscience with my Bible and decide that I must be sprinkled, and now you say the Baptists say I ought not to commune because I have not been baptized the way they prefer. In other words, the Baptists want me to interpret the Bible not as my conscience decides, but as their conscience decides. If I have followed my conscience about baptism, what more could you ask of me as to my baptism, and why should the Baptists therefore refuse me a place at their table?"
"Doctor, I don't think they refuse anybody a place at their table. I expect that is where so many people get the wrong idea about the close communion of the Baptists. Mr. Walton says that they keep no policeman at their table to keep people away. I think that is very important to remember. They believe that everybody must interpret the Bible according to his own conscience, but that does not mean that they think that everybody that does this will interpret the Bible as was originally intended. But they do leave it to every man's conscience."