"The Waltons" The Baptism (TV Episode 1976) Poster

(TV Series)

(1976)

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John is so right!
mitchrmp19 August 2011
John Walton made an important comment at the end of this episode: he did not see what being screamed at and dunked in water was going to do for him...Without accepting Jesus as your personal savior, it does not good!!! Since they are Baptist, I can say these things...I've been baptist my whole life, and I'll assure you that we do not believe being "dunked" in water sends you to Heaven. We also believe that being a good person will not get you into Heaven. Based on the Bible, we all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God..." I did NOT like this reverend's method of saving souls. He screamed at people and pointed people out. I believe Mary Ellen's salvation experience may have been real, but Ben did it out of pure guilt and then just to please his mother. John may very well be a Christian. He believed in God and admitted to worshiping Him in his own way. He was a God-fearing man and raised his family as such...Olivia makes me so MAD at times insisting her family get baptized so she knows their souls are saved.

Like John said, it's just being dunked into water...Baptism is meant as a public confession of your faith...nothing more!
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5/10
Cast not the first stone
brueggemanntami25 April 2022
Olivia behaved terribly in this one. I am happy for people who have religion. I can see that they find comfort in their faith. However it is just that, their faith. Their belief. Their religion. Personally I believe cramming religion down someone else's throat is a sin. It is not welcomed. In fact, the harder you push the more likely you are to turn that person farther away. The bible thumping preacher proved that. I most certainly would have walked away from such a man screaming in my face.

Each person's relationship in whatever power they choose to believe in is a personal one. Something that has to come from within. It cannot be forced or nagged into their soul. It's private. An individual matter which should be respected.
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5/10
Not the Best Effort
juanruiz-6567921 April 2022
Overall, I thought the series as a whole was one of the best on at the time. And most of the episodes still hold up pretty well decades over.

That is why I'm going to cut this one some slack, believing the parts were better than the whole. The religious Liv, worried about the spiritual state of her family, was convincing. John's insistence on individual decision made a nice counterpoint. Even Jim-Bob and the peacock made for a nice side story.

About all one say about the evangelist is that the writer was trying to capture the temper of the times. The US was going through a revival movement throughout the 20s and the 30s. It's when AA was formed and attributed alcoholism to moral defects which only a god could remedy. Some believed the Great Depression was Divine punishment, and the characterization of the traveling preacher, although over the top, did reflect those of the times. Watch early films of Oral Roberts, who was later, and you'll see that same attempt at "charisma".
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4/10
Four Stars For John Walton's Face
janet-conant17 February 2022
Warning: Spoilers
I would have given this episode 10 stars for Ralph Waite's acting but that hysterical, raving fanatic stopped me. How could the church goers listen to such pulp coming from such a crazy man. Way back when Rev. Fordwick practiced his preaching in the yard about debauchery and sinning John wouldn't stand for such talk around his children. I'm surprised he let them stay listening to Henshaw. Let's not forget how Fordwick got drunk and passed out before his first sermon. He should judge no one.

Anyway it really bothered me how Henshaw bellowed and these people got up to save their souls. Poor MaryEllen had to surrender, I'm sure she loved that. So anyone who hung out at the Dew Drop Inn was sinful? Watching John Walton's face is worth the whole viewing as he was the only thinking man. John getting hit by lightning was bizarre like God was chastising him. Olivia was wrong indeed to expect her children to get baptized. How contrived to watch Yancy outside the church during the revival in the downpour. You knew he was going to kneel at the feet of Henshaw out of fear like Ben.

Just glad they showed Henshaw for what he was an out of control lunatic and John Walton a man of conviction and integrity.
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1/10
Walton Episode of Evangelist
hhh-081725 July 2017
John Boy's comments at the end of the movie indicated "his father was never baptized but was recognized to be the most Godly man in Walton's Mountain". While it is true that one does not have to be baptized to receive salvation, baptism does follow the example set by Christ himself and in the Great Commission we are told to "go forth to all nations to make disciples and baptize ....". While preaching fire and brimstone is not the approach we appreciate today warning people about the cost of sin (eternal damnation) is very serious. How did Christ react when encountering wrongful acts (money changers) in the Temple? We (including father Walton) all want teachers who make us feel good (laugh, entertain, etc.) but let one convict us by teaching the Word and we are "not comfortable". The episode portrays father Walton as a "good man" and therefore "Godly" but scripture is clear that being a good man will not get anyone into heaven. If father Walton was a man of faith he should have set the example of following Christ's example in all things to include baptism? He had the opportunity to follow Christ's example to his family and community and to set the example but he failed to do so because of his feelings. It is tough to put our feelings aside and do what is right. Christ struggled with His feelings in the Garden of Gethsemane but out of love for us He denied His feelings and paid the price for our sin.
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Over-the-top representation of the preacher
roberta_young18 September 2018
I'm not a Baptist or a Pentecostal so I haven't ever been to the Revival type meetings portrayed in the show, let alone in the era depicted in the show. But I have been to some Catholic charismatic prayer meetings. I do understand how people can be inspired and have a religious experience, even if I didn't experience that particular type of religious experience (too introverted or something I guess). I doubt the director or actor had any religious leanings at all, so the preacher just comes across as a screaming maniac. I understand Olivia's feelings. My mother must have felt the same way, seeing most of her children become agnostics.
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1/10
Bloody awful episode
davidcooney-0172413 November 2023
I'm two thirds of the way through this episode and it's bloody awful. I'm a Christian but even i felt i was being screamed at and preached to through my tv screen by the Rev. Ezekiel L. Henshaw and paused the video to come here and down vote this horrible episode. These Waltons and Prairie were good shows from the 70's but no, episodes like this don't belong on a tv screen where one might wonder if the producers were trying to get their messages/faith across to the public through tv.

A famous revival preacher (John Karlen) is coming to town, and Esther and Olivia hope that John and Ben will be converted and baptized. John is almost struck by lightning during a storm, which some see as an omen. A peacock wanders onto the home place and is adopted by Jim-Bob who nicknames him "Rover"
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