“If you want to identify
yourself with Christ’s people
and
expect them to identify with you, you need to first identify yourself with
Christ, which
is the purpose of baptism.” Jonathan
Leeman
Have
you heard of Brother Andrew? A few years ago in an Islamic country where
Christians are persecuted, Brother Andrew baptized twelve men who had converted
from Islam. One elderly man who’d suffered a stroke six months earlier emerged
from the water and waved his right hand. Two years later this same man was
martyred by extremists because he wouldn’t stop testifying about how Jesus had
changed his life. Many of our fellow Christians around the world risk their
lives to obey the Lord in this matter of believer’s immersion. What a powerful testimony
that no threat, no law, and no terror can stifle the Holy Spirit!
One
of the sad ironies of church history is that a subject that should unite all believers
has caused great division. Paul wrote (Eph. 4:5) that there is “one Lord, one
faith, one baptism.” Sincere and godly believers differ over many aspects of
that one baptism! Some denominations believe that baptism effects the new
birth. As they administer baptism to an infant, they believe that when they
sprinkle water on a baby, that child is regenerated. Examine the Bible for yourself.
Scripture is clear that baptism is to follow conversion. There’s no merit in
being “baptized” prior to salvation. Tragically and unbiblically, many churches
who practice infant baptism also believe that unbaptized aborted babies are
sentenced to hell because they have not been baptized. It’s not only heartless
but heretical. So, why do we believe
that baptism is so important?
We
believe that baptism is an act of obedience. Some of the last
words Jesus spoke to His disciples were the threefold instruction: make disciples, baptize those who believe,
and teach them His commands (Matt. 28:19-20). If for no other reason, we
baptize because Jesus told us to.
Obedience
is a characteristic of followers of Christ. Jesus instructed us to teach new
believers “to observe everything I have commanded you.” Baptism is simply an
act of obedience both for the new believer and the church. We baptize because
we are seeking to obey Christ’s command.
We
believe that baptism is an opportunity to be a witness. Both the New
Testament and church history indicate that baptism served as the initial
profession of faith of early believers. After Philip shared Jesus with the
Ethiopian, this new believer’s initial request was to be baptized (Acts 8).
When the Philippian jailer responded to the preaching of Paul and Silas, he and
the believing members of his family were baptized (Acts 16). The same is true of
Lydia (Acts16), Cornelius (Acts 10), the Corinthians (Acts 18), and others. Baptism
was a silent witness, an outward expression, of their new found faith and new
way of life.
How
is baptism a witnessing opportunity for us? According to Romans 6:1-4
our baptism is a witness to the saving work of Christ - His death, burial, and
resurrection. As a symbol, baptism visually reenacts His burial in the grave
and His resurrection to life. When we see a new believer enter the water, go under
the water and come up from the water, we’re seeing what Jesus did to save us. Baptism
is a dramatic representation of Christ’s work of atonement (1 Cor. 15:1-4). It’s
a witness of what takes place immediately at salvation. Romans 6:3 declares
that in salvation we’ve been “baptized
into Christ Jesus” and “into His
death.”
Baptism
symbolizes that as Christ died, was buried, and rose again, so the believer has
died, been buried to self and now has new life in Christ. It symbolizes that he
or she is a new creature in Christ. Being a new creature in Christ is reflected
even in the term baptism. The Greek
term baptizo was commonly used in the
1st century to describe dipping cloth into dye. The cloth came out
of the dye vat looking very different than when it went in. Being a new
creature in Christ means our lives have changed. As we adopt a Christlike
character, the change becomes evident to those with whom we associate. Baptism
symbolizes that change in the new follower of Christ.
New
believers often ask friends and relatives, some of whom may be nonbelievers, to
come to their baptism. Questions naturally arise in those who are unfamiliar
with this ordinance. A child may ask, “Why are they putting her under the
water?” Others wonder about or even hear for the first time of the significance
of baptism. The Holy Spirit can use the act of baptism as the initial entry
point into the lives of those who will come to faith in Christ. The very act of
baptism serves as a powerful witness of the saving work of Christ and the
salvation experience of the believer.
We
believe that baptism is an open door into the local church. The early
church took very seriously the concept of church membership for those who were
born again. Acts 2:47 tells us that “the Lord added to their number daily those
who were being saved.” Peter's preaching in Acts 2 resulted in that those who repented
and received Christ were then baptized. The early church was made up of those
who had been saved and were then baptized. In spite of some obvious cultural
and social differences between the 1st-century church and today’s
church, the requirement for congregational inclusion should still be believer’s
baptism.
At
baptism the new believer is making a commitment not only to Christ but to the
local church family by identifying publicly with a particular congregation. The
body at this point also is assuming a responsibility for the new believer.
There is now a new member in the family. Being
part of that local church means the church family has a responsibility to
include the new Christ follower, to encourage him/her in a personal pilgrimage
of faith, and to support the new believer as a brother or sister and as a friend.
If you’ve trusted Christ as your Savior but have not confessed your faith
publicly through baptism, I urge you to be baptized as soon as possible! If
you’ve never trusted in Christ as Savior, do not think that because you were
baptized or even that if you get baptized, it will get you into heaven. Eternal
life is the free gift God offers based upon Christ’s death for our sins. You
can only receive it by faith in Jesus Christ. Yet, to confess your faith in
obedience to Christ’s command, be baptized!
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