Re: Since Acts 2:38 teaches that the baptism commanded is "for the remission of sins,
Baptism is not only being immersed in water. If it was like that, then all swimmers would get baptized when they enter a water. Baptism is believing in Jesus Christ and is also a visible mean to enter in God's covenant as a new creature.
Baptism is not just about getting wet. Baptism signifies that we believe in Jesus and is the visible picture of being buried with Christ and rising to new life. We believe in Jesus before, during and after getting water baptized. We become new creatures in Christ when we believe in Jesus and receive Spirit baptism prior to receiving water baptism (Acts 10:43-47; 11:17,18).
I think I understand but I am not sure where do you want to go with this.
Baptism would have no meaning without Christ’s death, burial and resurrection but Christ’s death, burial and resurrection would still have meaning, even if there were no baptism. In other words, Christ’s death, burial and resurrection is the substance and baptism is the symbol. Without the substance there would be no symbol. Water baptism put it in it's proper place,
subsequent to saving faith in Christ as all rites and works must be. Baptism is for believers, and believers are saved the moment they believe in Christ for salvation (Acts 10:43), and not by rites or good works. This does not remove water baptism and other good works from the Christian life, it just puts them in their proper place,
subsequent to regeneration and justification.
Also, when you put on a soldier uniform you don't unite with your superiors, but in baptism, you do unite yourself with Jesus Christ.
A soldier is in allegiance to their superiors, just as Christians are in allegiance to Christ.
One does not put on a uniform in order to become a soldier. Simply putting on a soldier's uniform does not make one become a soldier. Once one is made a soldier one is then able to put on and wear the uniform that distinguishes or marks them as a soldier. So too with being water baptized, the Christian puts on clothes for which they has previously been qualified to wear. The putting on of Christ in water baptism is not what makes one become a Christian, but which becomes a token of it.
In baptism you receive a charism. The "clothing" you receive in baptism is not a symbol, but real divine light and energy. You receive power from God. You can stain the cloth if you are a negligent christian, but the Church of Christ provides you with means to wash again the stains from your cloth (not through a new baptism because that would be denying the power of the Holy Spirit, but through confession and repentance).
Christians
put on Christ in baptism, Christians
put on the Lord Jesus Christ and make no provisions for the flesh to fulfill it's lusts, Christians
put on the whole armor of God. Grace is God's unmerited, enabling power. We have access by
faith into grace.. (Romans 5:2). John 13:10 Jesus answered,
"A person who has had a bath needs only to wash his feet; his whole body is clean. And you are clean, though not every one of you."
That's true. But we must be faithful in all things, right? Even in those which seem (for some people) of little importance.
How many of us are faithful in all things 100% of the time? We are not sinless and perfect. So you understand the difference between an "expression" of faith and the "essence" of faith? There is a big difference.
The baptism of John the Baptist is one thing. We are talking here about the baptism that belongs to the Christian Church, a baptism that is distinct, obviously, from the baptism of John.
John's baptism looked forward to the Messiah. John's baptism was still baptism in water, just as Christian baptism is still baptism in water, which is distinct from Spirit baptism (Acts 10:43-47).
Acts 10 is about gentiles who received the Holy Spirit just as the Jews did at Pentecost. Why refuse to gentiles the water baptism since they too were called by God?
These Gentiles
believed in the Lord Jesus Christ (also see Acts 16:31),
received the gift of the Holy Spirit and were saved BEFORE water baptism (Acts 10:43-47; 11:17,18; 15:8,9).
You can call it two baptisms, but the Church today only operates with one baptism, that of water AND Holy Spirit.
Water baptism and Spirit baptism are not the same baptism. I already explained water and Spirit to you in post #376. John 3:5 does not teach baptismal regeneration. Ephesians 4:5 does not mean that only water baptism or only Spirit baptism is in effect today but not the other or that they are the same baptism. They are both in effect today and are
two distinct baptisms, yet there is only
one baptism that places us into the body of Christ and that is
Spirit baptism, not water baptism.
Ephesians 4:5 - One Lord, one faith,
one baptism..
1 Corinthians 12:13 - For by
one Spirit we were all baptized into
one body--whether Jews or Greeks, whether slaves or free--and have all been made to drink into
one Spirit.
Yet, that's how the Christian Church understood it. Born of water means born of water baptism.
That's how certain fallible men understood it, but the Bible does not say born of baptism. Jesus connects living water with the Holy Spirit and eternal life (John 4:10,14; 7:37-39) but Jesus NEVER once said that whoever is not water baptized will be condemned. I would be careful to study the Bible for yourself and not just listen to whatever the Roman Catholic church teaches you.
Jesus Chris is the living water, yes. No denial in that. Do you not believe that He is also mysteriously present in baptism?
The Holy Spirit is the source of living water that cleanses our hearts (John 7:38-39). Plain ordinary H20 has no power to do that. Matthew 18:20 - For where two or three are gathered together in My name, I am there in the midst of them. I don't see baptism as some mystical experience where Jesus is literally present in baptism. I also don't believe that Jesus is literally present in the Eucharist (transubstantiation) but that's a whole other topic.
The Church is the Body of Christ, the New Israel, the New Creation, the Kingdom of God.
The True Church is the Body of Christ which is made up of all born again Christians and is not a building with a name stamped on it.
Believers who get baptized do so because they want to become part of Christ' Body, along with the other Christians. And because they want to participate in the life of the Church, in the new way of existence.
Believers are already part of Christ's Body through Spirit baptism (1 Corinthians 12:13) prior to receiving water baptism (Acts 10:43-47; 11:17,18).
That doesn't make it less important, does it?
I'm not saying that water baptism is unimportant, but I'm also not elevating it to the level of being the actual means of our salvation either. It was very important to me. I couldn't wait to get water baptized after I received Christ through faith, but my faith is in Christ for salvation and not in water baptism. Christ is the all-sufficient means of my salvation. No supplements needed.
I have a question for you: do you believe that through baptism you unite yourself with Christ, yes or no?
Symbolically, yes but a symbol (water baptism) is not the reality (Spirit baptism), but the picture of the reality. Baptism as a picture of death and burial symbolizes our likeness to Christ in his death. We shall be also united in the likeness of his resurrection.
When I got baptized, the priest read prayers of exorcism, asked me if I denied Satan and if I united with Christ. This happened in the part of the church that is closest to the outside door. After I denied Satan and his works and agreed to unite with Christ, the priest lead me in front of the altar (not inside the altar) and baptized me. The altar is the holiest place in Church. The part of the church where I denied Satan is called "pro-naos" and it represents the liturgical space of repentance; it is the part where you pre-taste the goodies of the kingdom of God; a sort of anti-chamber of heaven.
Prayers of exorcism? I don't find that in the Bible, but I've heard certain church fathers teach that. It may come as a surprise to Catholics that they do not follow the practice of certain church fathers in the administration of baptism. For example it was common practice that the candidate was immersed three times, whereas the modern Catholic rite consists of pouring water on the head (the Bible nowhere teaches infant baptism). Before baptism, the candidate was anointed with "oil of exorcism" while the presbyter prayed, "Let all spirits flee far away from you." Apart from the fact that there is no scriptural warrant for this anointing, they were also mistaken in their belief that this oil served for the remission of sins even before baptism:
Now this is blessed by the high priest for the remission of sins, and the first preparation for baptism. For he calls thus upon the unbegotten God, the Father of Christ, the King of all sensible and intelligible natures, that He would sanctify the oil in the name of the Lord Jesus, and impart to it spiritual grace and efficacious strength, the remission of sins, and the first preparation for the confession of baptism, that so the candidate for baptism, when he is anointed may be freed from all ungodliness, and may become worthy of initiation, according to the command of the Only-begotten (Apostolic Constitutions, XLII)
During baptism, the candidates had to remove their clothing and stand naked in the water. The newly baptized was not allowed to take a bath for a whole week. We should not feel obliged to follow these fathers in their unscriptural inventions, changing the simple ordinance of Christ into a superstition, not to mention their disregard for public decency. (See Tertullian, The Crown; St Hippolytus of Rome, The Apostolic Tradition).
I felt the need to share my baptism because I feel that you are diminishing its importance and I believe you are very wrong in doing so. Baptism is very very important because it irrigates the seed of faith for growth in Jesus Christ. It is not the only mean, but it is a basic and important step for every believer.
I believe that water baptism is an important step for every believer, but I refuse to elevate water baptism to the level of saving sacrament, which it is not. Salvation is by grace through faith and is not by works (Ephesians 2:8,9; Titus 3:5; 2 Timothy 1:9). Unfortunately, too many churches teach salvation by works (including water baptism) and have led their congregations astray.
God bless you