| 
     
	Other texts on baptism--by that we mean the 
	abundance of teaching in the New Testament besides Mark 16:16 and 
	Acts 2:38. If sectarian debaters were able to prove that Mark 16 is 
	spurious (which they are not) and that Acts 2:38 means because of 
	(which they cannot) they would yet be confronted with a formidable array of 
	"other texts, which, indeed, are just as decisive as the two against which 
	all denominational genius has for generations been concentrated. Having 
	followed the subject through the Acts of Apostles in previous article we now 
	advance to other texts in the apostolic epistles.  
	
	The Roman Christians had "died to sin" and 
	should no longer live therein." To impress this lesson upon them Paul said: 
	"know ye not, that so many of us as were baptized into Jesus Christ were 
	baptized into his death." Therefore, we are buried with him by baptism into 
	death; that like as Christ was raised up from the dead by the glory of the 
	Father, even so we also should walk in newness of life. For if we have been 
	planted together in the likeness of his death, we shall be also in the 
	likeness of his resurrection: knowing this, that our old man is crucified 
	with him, that the body of Sin might, be destroyed, that henceforth we 
	should not serve sin: For he that is dead is freed from sin.  
	
	The subject "we"--"we are buried with him by 
	baptism"-includes Paul; hence, the baptism of this passage is linked with 
	Saul's baptism of Acts 22:16, They are, in fact, twin passages. Whatever 
	Saul was baptized for--the Romans were baptized for also. And the form of 
	the Romans' baptism was the form of Saul's baptism.  
	
	Taking the two passages together, therefore, by 
	Paul's own words; we have both the how and the what of baptism definitely 
	settled. Ananias told Saul to "arise and be baptized and wash away thy 
	sins"--that is the what of it as to design. "We are (R. V. were) buried with 
	him by baptism" --that is the how of it as to its form.  
	
	Observe further that the text says very plainly 
	what baptism does: "So many of us as were baptized into Jesus Christ were 
	baptized, into his death:" Baptism puts one into Christ, and in so doing it 
	puts one into his death The word into, is a preposition that denotes motion, 
	out of one state into another--from without to within. Baptized into 
	Christ,...previous to baptism one is out of Christ, after baptism is in 
	Christ, by baptism he is brought from without to within. And there are no 
	degrees in a state; one is either in or out of Christ, just as he is either 
	married or unmarried, or as he is either a citizen or an alien. Hence, to 
	the Galatians (Chap. 3:26,27), Paul again says: "For ye are all the children 
	of God by faith in Christ Jesus. For as many of you as have been baptized 
	into Christ have put on Christ." Thus baptism preceded by faith is God's 
	appointed way of bringing men into Christ.  
	
	Still not satisfied with the emphasis, the 
	apostle further says that we are baptized "into his death." Baptism stands 
	between the sinner and the death of Christ--it stands , between the sinner 
	and the blood of Christ, the merits and the benefits of his atoning death. 
	Baptism is the recapitulation of the death of Christ; there the sinner being 
	buried with Christ into death is made in the likeness of his death, his 
	burial and his resurrection; there in death with Christ,'' and in Christ; he 
	loses his sins, for "the old man is crucified with him" and "he that is dead 
	is freed from sin." No stronger figure could be employed by which to set the 
	design, form and benefits of baptism. It is the reenactment of Calvary.  
	
	But the capstone of the argument is yet found in 
	the clause, "like as Christ was raised up from the dead by the glory of the 
	Father, even so we also should walk in newness of life." Baptism stands 
	between the sinner and newness of life.  
	
	This statement is embellished in the Colossian 
	passage (Chap. 2:12), "Buried with him in baptism, wherein also ye are risen 
	with him through the faith of the operation of God, who hath raised him from 
	the dead." In baptism there is a burial and a resurrection with Christ 
	through faith in the operation (working) of God. In baptism God performs an 
	operation. The comparison begins with verse 11. Circumcision was a physical 
	operation, made with hands; the circumcision of Christ is a spiritual 
	operation, without hands. One was the putting off of the flesh; the other is 
	the putting off of sins. In baptism God performs an operation--the putting 
	away of sin by the power of God. And the same power that God exerted in 
	raising Christ from the dead is the power that is exerted when in baptism we 
	raised up with Christ--"wherein ye also are raised up"--and the one baptized 
	is baptized through" faith in the operation of God. But if one believes he 
	is saved before baptism, hence, has already had the operation-- how could 
	he, be baptized through faith in the operation here required? It is mighty 
	strong indication of the faith that qualifies baptism. But having been 
	buried and raised, concluding his effort to edify the Colossians on the 
	subject of baptism, the apostle adds: "If ye then be risen with Christ, seek 
	those things which are above, where Christ sitteth on the right hand of God" 
	(Col. 3:1). Baptism thus stands between Christian and the risen life with 
	Christ.  
	
	Returning to the Roman letter, there is yet 
	another reference to baptism in the sixth chapter, following, closely upon 
	the declaration that "we are buried with him by baptism." It is verse 17: 
	But God be thanked, that ye were the servants of sin, but ye have obeyed 
	from the heart that form of doctrine which was delivered you. Being then 
	made free from sin, ye became the servants of righteousness." Obedience to 
	the form of doctrine stands between the sinner and freedom from sin. But 
	baptism is the form of death, burial and resurrection, which Paul says is 
	the doctrine delivered (1 Cor. 15:1-4). Being baptized then is obeying the 
	form of the doctrine--and Paul says, being then made free from sin. When do 
	you say? Paul says then, and then means when, and that means freedom from 
	sin comes when one is baptized.  
	
	The One Baptism--Eph. 4:5  
	
	One frequently hears the expression "modes of 
	baptism". There is no such thing. As well talk about shades of white! White 
	has no shades and baptism has no modes.  
	
	Baptism being a noun, stands for one thing; and 
	baptize, being a verb of action, cannot denote several actions. 
	Grammatically, it is impossible for the noun "baptism" and the verb, 
	"'baptize" to denote several things and actions. But Paul settles the 
	argument scripturally when he says: "One Lord, one faith, one baptism." That 
	cannot mean two in kind (Holy Spirit and water) nor three in form 
	(sprinkling, pouring and immersion). As to the form there being but one, if 
	sprinkling is baptism, pouring is not, if pouring is baptism sprinkling is 
	not; and if either is baptism, immersion is not and if immersion is baptism 
	neither sprinkling nor pouring is. The process of elimination will decide 
	the point, since all the world has admitted that immersion is baptism. Paul, 
	knowing the how and the what of it all, said: "We are buried with him by 
	baptism."  
	
	It is often argued that these passages on 
	baptism. in the epistles refer to Holy Spirit baptism. This is done in an 
	effort to escape the apostolic teaching on the design of baptism--that it 
	puts one into Christ. If that be true, the antecedent admission is the 
	elimination of water baptism, for Paul says there is one baptism (which 
	cannot mean two) and if Holy Spirit baptism prevails, there is no such thing 
	as water baptism, and all such has been but a wet, meaningless ceremony, 
	without New Testament authority or sanction. But most of those who preach 
	Holy Spirit baptism, practice water baptism also. We wonder why. When water 
	baptism is established, Holy Spirit baptism is eliminated--Paul being the 
	witness.  
	
	It should not require a tedious or devious 
	argument to arrive at the right conclusion. If the Great Commission is now 
	in force--water baptism is in force. Jesus commanded the apostles to teach 
	and baptize men (Matt. 28:19). The apostles could not administer Holy Spirit 
	baptism. Paul preached to the Corinthians and they were baptized (Acts 
	18:8). Paul baptized some of them, and other men baptized the others (1 Cor. 
	1:14-16). So the Corinthians were baptized by men; but men cannot baptize 
	with the Holy Spirit; therefore, the baptism of Corinthians was not Holy 
	Spirit baptism. Hence, when Paul said to the Corinthians, "For by one Spirit 
	are (R. V. were) we all baptized into one body," the Spirit was the agent 
	and not the element. By one Spirit, by the authority of, as commanded by 
	Christ in the Commission.  
	
	To the Ephesians in chapter four, Paul said: 
	"There is one baptism." But in chapter five, he said: "Husbands, love your 
	wives, even as Christ also loved the church, and gave himself for it; that 
	he might sanctify and cleanse with the washing of water by the word." 
	Surely, Paul would not tell the Ephesians that there is but one baptism 
	chapter four (if it refers to the Holy Spirit) and then enjoin water baptism 
	in chapter five! The one baptism of chapter four, therefore, is the water 
	baptism of chapter five. This baptism is said to be "by the word" in Eph. 
	5:25 and "by the Spirit" in 1 Cor. 12:13. The word is not the element of 
	baptism in Eph. 5 and the Spirit is not the element of baptism in Cor: 12. 
	It is "by" the word and "by" the Spirit that men are baptized with the 
	washing of water." This being the one baptism in Ephesians, it is the one 
	baptism in all the book besides. Holy Spirit baptism was special, never 
	general; its purpose was inspiration, never obedience. No man was ever 
	commanded to be baptized with the Holy Spirit. But the Bible commands men to 
	be baptized; and there is but one baptism; it follows, therefore, that Holy 
	Spirit baptism does not prevail today.  
	
	Then, is the one baptism essential or 
	nonessential? Read Ephesians 4:4-6 and pick out the non-essentials: "There 
	is one body, and one Spirit, even as ye are called in one hope of your 
	calling on the Lord, one faith, one baptism, one God and Father of all, who 
	is above all, and through all, and in you all." Out of these seven things, 
	is there but one non-essential? This ought to expose the weak and feeble 
	claim of denominationalists that baptism is nonessential.  
	
	The Like Figure, Baptism 1 Peter 3:21  
	
	As Paul in 1 Corinthians 10 compared our baptism 
	into Christ with Israel's passing through the sea, so Peter com-pares our 
	salvation by baptism with the deliverance of Noah's family by water. He 
	said: "Wherein (the ark) few, that is eight souls were saved by water. The 
	like figure whereunto even baptism doth also now save us (not the putting 
	away of the filth of the flesh, but the answer of a good conscience toward 
	God) by the resurrection of Jesus Christ." Leaving out the parenthetical 
	clause, the passage simply states that "baptism doth now also save us by the 
	--resurrection of Jesus Christ." That should be plain enough.  
	
	First, it is argued that baptism is just a 
	figure, because Peter said "the like figure." But when Paul referred to 
	Israel passing through the sea as a figure of our baptism into Christ, and 
	the drinking of the rock in the wilderness as a type of Christ, "and the 
	Rock was Christ"--does that make Christ figurative? The text says that 
	"baptism doth now also save us by the resurrection of Christ." The salvation 
	is actual, and the resurrection of Christ is actual--why not baptism? The 
	comparison is that God used water to deliver Noah and his family from the 
	old world, its corruption, and environment; and God uses water, even 
	baptism, to save us, to deliver us from sin. The figure is in the 
	comparison--not in the thing done. The meaning of the passage must be 
	evident--that as water delivered Noah, so baptism saves us--and any 
	explanation that says baptism does not save is not an explanation, but a 
	contradiction.  
	
	But we are told that Noah was saved by staying 
	out of the water! Then, if that be the point of comparison, the ante-deluvians 
	were lost, by getting into the water. That sinks the Baptist church, 
	preachers and all, for no one can be a Baptist and stay out of the water! 
	According to such sophistry the Great Commission should read, He that 
	believeth and is baptized shall be damned--like the ante-deluvians! And 
	Peter was wrong--for baptism damns, instead, of saves, per the conclusion of 
	the objector. Such objections serve only to reveal and to expose a class of 
	arch-perverters of the word of God. 
	
	Bible Banner – March 1942  |