Church of Scotland discusses online baptism

The Church of Scotland has dismissed claims it will allow online baptisms, reports Christian Today.

The claims circulated after the Church's Legal Questions Committee's report referred to the possibility of online membership and possibly allowing access to the sacraments without being physically present. In a statement the Church dismissed reports of "online baptisms" as "the most extreme interpretation of what may be discussed" at the upcoming General Assembly, which will consider the report. The committee's Blue Book report discussed how to build "greater interaction with the Church through online access and social media".

Rev George Cowie, head of the committee, said online baptisms would be a "very radical departure from the current church practice". Cowie was quick to insist that although online engagement offered "fresh opportunities", the Church needed to give "careful consideration, determining the parameters of what can properly be done".

"We've found an increasing number of our congregations are developing an online component. They are streaming their services and reaching out to growing numbers of people, and these people already feel part of the Church. We are now preparing a theological report which will address this question of what it actually means to be part of this online church community," said Rev Norman Smith, vice convener of the mission and discipleship council.

Read also

ROCOR Priest Reflects on Trip to Capitol Hill

Archpriest Victor Boldewskul participated in the Society of St. John of Shanghai and San Francisco's Day of Action to raise awareness about the persecution of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church.

Hundreds of Chinese Christians Arrested in Pre-Christmas Crackdown

Hundreds of Chinese Christians face spending Christmas in detention after authorities launched a sweeping pre-holiday crackdown on churches under Beijing’s campaign to control religious life.

Ukraine Adviser: UOC Not Banned, but Offered a 'Choice' of Jurisdictions

A Ukrainian presidential adviser said the UOC is not banned but pressured to choose between joining the OCU, submitting to Constantinople, or remaining unregistered, while dismissing international concerns as propaganda.

Indiana Reports 98% Drop in Abortions Under Stricter Law

Indiana’s latest health report shows a 98% drop in reported abortions under stricter laws, though dozens still occurred under legal exceptions and concerns persist about unreported pill abortions.

Armenian Apostolic Church Pushes Back on Political Encroachment

The Armenian Apostolic Church plans to appeal to international bodies to resist government interference and defend its clergy and sacred relics.

Attempted Takeover at Armenian Etchmiadzin Cathedral Thwarted by Faithful

Supporters of Armenian PM Pashinyan attempted to storm Etchmiadzin Cathedral amid calls for the Catholicos’s resignation but were blocked by parishioners and security.