1st 80 pages or so were quite boring. after that Brownson had a few very decent observations so in the end I'm glad we have read it, although this book is definitely not a 'stand alone' kind of a book you want on baptism from the Reformed perspective, far from it. His greatest strength was pastoral theology - he was quite shallow in the area of systematic theology and exegesis, and there was nothing from biblical theology angle. there were some questions to discuss after each chapter, some of them were quite stimulating but some were just tendentious. I guess I was expecting too much from a seminary professor.