The commission according to Luke commanded the
apostles to preach remission of sins in the name of Christ to all
nations--beginning at Jerusalem. Under this deputation four things were to
be done: 1. Remission of sins should be preached; 2. It should be preached
in the name of Christ; 3. It should begin at Jerusalem; 4. The same things
should be preached to all nations. The disciples appointed to the task were
ordered "not to depart from Jerusalem" until plenary power as divine
delegates had been received. The Lord said: "Ye shall receive power when the
Holy spirit in come upon you" (Acts 1:8) Pentecost came. The twelve
were together in one place" waiting. With startling suddenness in the
eventful moment the room resounded with the divine presence and overwhelmed
the apostles and filled them. Bearing the credentials of heaven, the
inspired commissioners were ready in obedience to the divine fiat to begin
preaching remission of sins in the name of Jesus Christ.
How did the remission of sins begin to be
preached at Jerusalem? Upon this question hangs the entire new Testament
story; for the apostles either preached the same thing everywhere they went
or they disobeyed the commission. The second chapter of Acts is the answer.
The keynote gospel address on Pentecost, by the man authorized by Christ and
qualified by the Holy Spirit to announce and bind the terms of remission
commands sinners to "repent and be baptized every one of you in the name of
Jesus Christ for the remission of sins." This being the design of baptism
and the terms of remission as defined by inspiration, the came design and
terms must be understood in all other places where they are not specifically
mentioned being informed in one place of the design of the Lord's Supper,
everywhere it is mentioned afterward it carries the same design--if not
expressed, that design must be understood. So when remission of sins and the
design of baptism were defined in the beginning, when and wherever
thereafter the people received remission we know the terms upon which it was
received; and when people were baptized we know why they were baptized.
Philip in Samaria-Acts-8
"And Philip went down unto the city of Samaria,
and proclaimed unto them the Christ--but when they believed Philip preaching
the good tidings concerning the kingdom of God and the name of Jesus Christ.
"they were baptized, both men and women" (Acts 1:8). The case of
Philip and the Samaritans shows plainly that wherever Christ was preached,
baptism was preached. Since the commission commanded that remission of sins
should be preached in the name of Christ, "beginning at Jerusalem," when
Philip preached the name of Christ, and salvation through it, he either
preached the same thing in Samaria that was preached in Jerusalem or he
disobeyed the commission. Hence the people of Samaria were baptized for the
same purpose, and received remission of sins on the same terms, as on the
day of Pentecost. The proposition stands that the design of baptism being
defined on Pentecost (Acts 2:38), its design must be understood in
all other places where baptism occurs though the design be not specifically
mentioned.
Immediately following the great gospel meetings
in Samaria, an angel of the Lord directed Philip southward into the desert
region between Jerusalem and Gaza. Hereis recorded the most simple narrative
of conversion in all the chronicles of conversion. An honest sinner and an
inspired preacher meet. The result is a gospel sermon and prompt obedience
to it. The gist of the sermon was put in one sentence: "and he preached unto
him Jesus." The scope of the sermon was indicated by the question of the
hearer: "Behold, here is water; what doth hinder me to--be baptized?" Why
this bid for baptism as they approached the place where there was water,
seeing that Philip had preached nothing but Jesus? Simply because preaching
Jesus included all that the apostles were commanded to preach "in Jerusalem,
and in all Judea, and Samaria, and unto the uttermost part of the earth."
The proposition stands, that wherever Christ was preached, baptism was
preached; and wherever baptism is stated without the design expressed the
design must be understood, having been defined at Jerusalem in the
beginning. So when "they both went down into the water, both Philip and the
eunuch: and he baptized him," the eunuch's baptism was the same as defined
in Acts 2:38 on Pentecost. It is a significant statement that after
they came up out of the water (not before they went down into it) the eunuch
rejoiced. He had no experience of grace to relate before baptism; he had no
confession of pardon received before baptism: remission was beyond baptism,
and that is why, after baptism, he went on his way rejoicing.
Cornelius-Acts 10, 11
Sectarians cling tenaciously to the case of
Cornelius as an example of salvation before baptism. They assert that
Cornelius received the Holy Spirit before baptism and must therefore have
been saved before he was baptized. That proves too much. According to
Peter's account of the case in 11, the Holy Spirit fell on house of
Cornelius before he believed. It should by observed that there are two
records of the events connected with this conversion-the record of Luke in
Acts 10 And the record of Peter himself in Acts 11. Luke does not claim that
his account was given in the order of events but he does say that Peter
"expounded the matter unto them in order" (Acts 11:4). Hence, Peter's
own account of the happenings "to those of the circumcision" at Jerusalem
represents the order of occurrence. In the order of occurrence Peter said
that the Holy Spirit fell on Cornelius before he believed. Does that prove
that he was saved before he believed? No denominationalist will allow that
it does; hence, their argument is lost. The fact is that the outpouring of
the Holy Spirit on the house of Cornelius did not effect his salvation nor
affect the issues involved in it.
The elements entering the conversion of
Cornelius are set forth in three passages in the record. First, the angel
said to Cornelius: "Send to Joppa, and fetch Simon, Whose surname is Peter;
who shall speak unto thee words whereby thou shalt be saved" (Acts 11:14).
Second, Peter said to Cornelius: "To him bear all the prophets witness, that
through his name every one that believeth on him shall receive remission of
sins" (Acts 10:45). Third, Peter "commanded them to be baptized in
the name of Jesus Christ" (Acts 10:48). The casual reader cannot fail
to observe that remission of sins was promised to Cornelius in the name of
Christ; and that he was commanded to be baptized in the name of Christ, and
that remission of sins in the name of Christ began at Jerusalem as defined
in Acts 2:38; and that the same thing that began at Jerusalem should
be preached to all the nations--all of which means, because it must mean,
that Cornelius received the same remission in the same name, and on the same
terms as stated in Acts 2:38 on Pentecost. Since baptism in the name
of Christ is for the remission of sins (Acts 2:38) and Cornelius was
commanded to be baptized in the name of Christ (Acts 10:48) it
follows that Cornelius was baptized for the remission of sins. Indeed,
remission of sins in the name of Christ, and baptism in the name of Christ
for remission of sins, represent one process.
The Phillipian Jailor-Acts
16
The question "What must I do to be saved?" asked
by the jailor, and the answer "Believe on the Lord Jesus, and thou shalt be
saved," given by Paul and Silas, has been the chief stock in trade of
sectarian revivalists--from the frothing holiness and shouting Methodists on
up the scale through the unconventional Billy Sunday type of evangelists to
the frocked and formal dignitary--who fervidly exhorts supplicants for
salvation to "only believe." They aver that Acts 16:31 is the
answer--the one and only answer to the question what to do to be saved.
True, they have not explained why Peter, Ananias, and others equally
inspired gave other answers, but they cannot be bothered with troublesome
explanations. "Believe on the Lord Jesus and thou shalt be saved"--that, and
that alone, we are told, is all that is necessary to the sinners salvation.
When reminded that this answer does not mention repentance, with a slight
hitch we are assured that repentance must be included. Believing on the Lord
Jesus can be stretched to include repentance, which is not named in the
connection, but its elasticity gives out before it gets to baptism, which is
named in the immediate connection!
When Paul and Silas told the jailor to "believe
on the Lord Jesus," without even a break in the story the narrator states
that "they preached unto him the word of the Lord." He evidently had not
believed upon merely being told to; He must be told what to believe--or, in
what believing on the Lord Jesus consisted. Having heard the word preached,
the jailor washed their stripes (repentance, change of attitude), was
baptized the same hour, and rejoiced with his house, "having believed in
God." When had he believed in God? When he had done all that the gospel
narrative tells, including his baptism, then he had "believed in God." So
baptism in the case of the jailor has the same.
Saul of Tarsus-Acts 9, 22
The sixteenth verse of the twenty-second chapter
of Acts is Paul's own statement of his baptism in Damascus. And now why
tarriest thou? Arise and be baptized and wash away thy sins, calling on his
name." This was Ananias' answer to Saul's question, "What shall I do, Lord?
and to which the Lord replied: "Arise, and go into the city and it shall be
told thee what thou must do" (Acts 9). But with some people the word
"must" appears to have degrees in meaning. The word in Heb. 11:6,
"must believe;" means that faith is essential. But in Acts 22:16.
when Ananias tells Saul what he "must do" commands him to be baptized--the
word loses most of its must, and deprived of its absoluteness it degrades
into a meaningless, empty, vacant nonessential.
When was Saul saved? If he was saved before
Ananias came to him, he was a miserable saved man--blind, fasting, shut-up,
praying-a miserable saved man, indeed! If he was saved when Ananias laid
hands on him, he was saved before he was told what to do to be saved. If he
was saved before he was baptized, he was saved before his sins were washed
away, for he was commanded to "arise and be baptized and wash away thy
sins." In short, if he was saved in the flash of the light on the road, as
the sectarian preachers dogmatize, then he was saved when he did not know
it, for he asked what to do; and he was saved when Ananias did not know it.
Who came to tell him what to do; and he was saved when the Lord did not
know, for the Lord sent him unto Damascus to be told what to do; and if he
was saved then, he was saved contrary to all the so called experiences of
grace required by these preachers themselves, before peace came to his soul,
and while yet in his misery. What a strange conversion and a peculiar
salvation the preachers make of it!
In the precept of Ananias three commands are,
joined together by the copulative "and"--Arise and be baptized and wash away
thy sins. No matter in what sense the word "wash" is used, the fact stands
out that baptism stands squarely between the sinner and the washing away of
sins. The question of efficacy does not change it. If it be urged that water
cannot literally wash away sins, neither can blood literally wash away sins.
Whatever washing away of sins may be, or wherever it takes place, the
passage plainly puts baptism before the washing away of sins.
In a final effort to escape the plain statement
of the passage some objections are resorted to. It is said that Ananias
addressed Saul as a brother--"Brother Saul" hence, he must have been saved
when so addressed. But Peter addressed the murderers of Christ in Acts
3:19 as "brethren" when he told them to repent. Were they saved at the
time they were so addressed? Saul, like those whom Peter addressed, was a
brother Jew, according to the flesh--that is all. Again it is urged that
Saul received the Spirit before be was baptized. But the text does not say
it--it does not mention the time of the Spirit's reception at all--but
merely states that he would receive it. Whether before or after baptism the
passage does not state. Granting the miracle of the Spirit's reception,
however, still would not change or alter, the command. It would only make
the miraculous part of it special, having no bearing on the thing commanded.
Still further, it is claimed that "the scales fell from his eyes" before he
was baptized as evidence that he received salvation before baptism. But the
scales fell from his eyes--not his heart. That affected only his
blindness--not his salvation. '
When was Saul saved? There is only one answer,
"Arise and be baptized and wash away thy sins, calling on his name." When
did a sectarian preacher, under any circumstance, give this answer to any
candidate for salvation? Yet it is written down in the eternal record of
conversion.
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