My take on water baptism...

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Locoponydirtman

Guest
#22


For those interested you can find a short study on baptism in water Here
I use my phone for this and it very hard to read the study that way. I am interested in what it says because what I cod read of it was interesting. Is there another format that I could access it?
I'm not to tech savvy either so I hope you understand my meaning.
 
Mar 28, 2016
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#23
Its exactly what it is a work . We are not saved or reckoned as saved by the things we do.

Why do you think the question came up in John 3:25?

Its not a new testament foundation .Its used in the new but the foundation is in the old under the Leviticus law .It applies today if a person has a desire to become a member of the priesthood .No outward sign to confirm a person is a believer. Again no such thing as sign gift in that way .I did it that confirms.
 

jb

Senior Member
Feb 27, 2010
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#24
I use my phone for this and it very hard to read the study that way. I am interested in what it says because what I cod read of it was interesting. Is there another format that I could access it?
I'm not to tech savvy either so I hope you understand my meaning.
There is a Word doc format which is in the link "Microsoft Word" in a zip file which may display better on a phone, the pdf file will be far easier to read on a tablet, laptop or desktop if you have one...
 
Jun 15, 2020
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#25
You teach a lie and rob men of the command of Jesus. You contort the word to make your own doctrine. You ignore the word, you ignore what the first century church actually did, you ignore the command of Christ, and teach others to do the same .
Now I know how Jesus felt. Talking to you is like talking to a Pharisees.
 
Jun 15, 2020
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#27
Gaslighting ain't gonna work here
There's no gaslighting here. You don't just say I disagree or I believe different. You say I'm a false teacher. Others on here and maybe you too say I have a devil and attack me personally. Some say I'm a heretic. The only thing I have not yet been called here is a bastard child. Yeah that's Pharisees style stuff.
 
Aug 14, 2019
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#28
Water baptism -- in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost -- has been a Christian practice at all times since Pentecost. It does not replace Spirit baptism, but it CONFIRMS Spirit baptism.
That's a fact. Historically if someone claims their spiritual experience is from God but refuses to be Baptized then their spiritual experience is considered to not be from God. The desire for Baptism as you said confirms that person's spiritual experience is from God.
 

posthuman

Senior Member
Jul 31, 2013
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#30
So what happen if a new believer decline water baptism? Is he still saved?

. . . but others save with fear, pulling them out of the fire, hating even the garment defiled by the flesh.
(Jude 1:23)
;)


Capture.JPG
 

posthuman

Senior Member
Jul 31, 2013
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#31
It applies today if a person has a desire to become a member of the priesthood
'but ye are a chosen generation, a royal priesthood . .'
nobody chooses to be a priest under Moses. God assigned priesthood to Levi and his posterity, and service in the temple was decided by casting lots: i.e. God is the one who chooses.
 
Jan 12, 2019
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#32
That's a fact. Historically if someone claims their spiritual experience is from God but refuses to be Baptized then their spiritual experience is considered to not be from God. The desire for Baptism as you said confirms that person's spiritual experience is from God.
So you are saying water baptism is necessary for salvation?
 

posthuman

Senior Member
Jul 31, 2013
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#33
So you are saying water baptism is necessary for salvation?
i think if someone refuses baptism then the status of their salvation/condemnation has a lot more to do with why they are refusing baptism than it does the actual lack of baptism.

like a lot of things, the crux is in the heart, not the hands & feet
 

Lanolin

Well-known member
Dec 15, 2018
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#34
ok admit it you just dont wanna get wet. Maybe its hydrophobia or something. If Jesus got dunked in the Jordan even though John the baptist wasnt that keen on baptising him, whats to stop us?

I propose everyone brings water bombs to church on Sunday. Even the newly converted eunuch was saying heres water, can any man forbid baptism? He already had the holy spirit. see acts 10:47
 

Nehemiah6

Senior Member
Jul 18, 2017
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#35
Christ baptized no one with H2O -- John 4:2
But His disciples did, as the same verse tells you. Not sure what your point was, but Christ would baptize with the Holy Ghost, not with water. And that could not happen until He had ascended on high and poured out the Holy Spirit on the day of Pentecost.

It is significant that when Peter preached the Gospel on that day, he made it clear that anyone who repented and believed must be baptized immediately. Thus those 3,000 people who were saved were also baptized by immersion the same day. And that was the apostolic pattern throughout the book of Acts. Again when Peter preached the Gospel in the household of Cornelius, those who received the baptism WITH the Holy Ghost (indeed all who believed) were baptized immediately. In fact Peter COMMANDED that they be baptized, and he was simply following the commandment of the Lord (Matthew 28:19; Mark 16:15,16).

The commandment for believers to be baptized has never been rescinded, but Peterlag (who started this thread) is now trying to promote that false teaching. There are also many Hyper- or Ultra-Dispensationalists who claim that Christian baptism is no longer necessary, since Spirit baptism is all that is required. But that is FALSE DOCTRINE.

Water baptism is not an option, but a commandment. It does not wash away sins, but it produces a good conscience toward God. That the believer has immediately obeyed Christ, and this is his or her first act of obedience. There is of course, much more to believer's baptism as taught by Paul.
 
Jan 12, 2019
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#36
i think if someone refuses baptism then the status of their salvation/condemnation has a lot more to do with why they are refusing baptism than it does the actual lack of baptism.

like a lot of things, the crux is in the heart, not the hands & feet
Because they don't want their assurance of their salvation, to be based on that work?
 

Nehemiah6

Senior Member
Jul 18, 2017
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#37
Because they don't want their assurance of their salvation, to be based on that work?
I'm not sure what your point is but salvation means total obedience to Christ. And since water baptism is His commandment, it must be obeyed accordingly. So if a person refuses or rejects Christian baptism, it is more than likely that he or she is not even saved. No one in the book of Acts ever refused to be baptized.
 

Grandpa

Senior Member
Jun 24, 2011
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#38
Baptism is definitely a public way of saying that you stand for Christ. And if you publicly stand for Christ then He said He will privately stand for you before the Father.

But also, baptism signifies the way Gods People were delivered from Egypt, from slavery. They walked through the Red Sea. Our baptism in water signifies our spiritual deliverance from Egypt and slavery to sin.

This water baptism doesn't have the actual power to deliver us from our slavery to sin, but it is our own public proclamation that this has happened, is happening, or our desire for it to happen.
 

posthuman

Senior Member
Jul 31, 2013
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#39
Because they don't want their assurance of their salvation, to be based on that work?
wow, if i thought that way, wouldn't i prevent myself from doing any good thing?

but i don't think that being foolish rescinds salvation. if it did, no one could be saved - or remain saved - could they?
 

posthuman

Senior Member
Jul 31, 2013
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#40
But His disciples did, as the same verse tells you. Not sure what your point was, but Christ would baptize with the Holy Ghost, not with water.
yes -- my point was to garee, who had remarked about this person from Judah baptizing, what does it mean?
because it wasn't Christ who was immersing anyone in water.

i think garee's point was that to the Jews, immersion in water was associated with ritual cleaning, so, associated with the priesthood, by extension Levi -- so to have someone doing this who was not of Levi may have been a strange thing to the Jews, even offensive.
i'm not sure whether it's only Levites who immersed people -- or only Levites who were immersed. would have to look that up..? but as you point out, that the disciples were baptizing, would equally well serve garee's remark, because they were not Levite either.

there is certainly a thread of the new covenant & new priesthood running through this topic, to be followed. i didn't mean to discount completely garee's observation, just to point out Christ wasn't doing the baptizing with H2O -- His kingdom, and His priesthood, is a spiritual one, and He baptizes with spirit & fire :)