Zecryphon
Well-Known Member
- Aug 14, 2006
- 8,987
- 2,005
- 53
- Faith
- Lutheran
- Marital Status
- Married
- Politics
- US-Constitution
No, you misunderstand what I meant.
If it is indeed the act of being baptized that saves as one person said, then there is no need to preach repentance. There is no need to witness. just go out and baptize people in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit and they'll be saved.
Baptism is a means of grace that God uses to deliver all the benefits of Christ's life, death and resurrection to the faithful. But for the benefits of Christ to take hold in the person being baptized, faith needs to be present first. That faith is a gift from God that people respond to with repentance. It's not the result of a choice people make when they ask Jesus into their hearts or when they ask Jesus to be their savior.
When someone repents of their sin, because they have heard the law and gospel of God preached to them by an evangelist, and have been convicted of their sin by the power of the Holy Spirit, they have already been given the gift of faith by God. That's why you need to go out into the world and proclaim the good news. After that is done, then we baptize the faithful.
This is what the LCMS teaches regarding Baptism. From Article IX of the Augsburg Confession as found in the Book of Concord: The Lutheran Confessions.
Note: The Bible teaches that Baptism is a gift of God's grace by which He applies the benefits of Christ's life, death, and resurrection to us personally. Because all people are conceived and born in sin, we all need salvation. Because Baptism is God's way of bringing salvation, infants should also be baptized. During the Reformation, as now, some Christian groups turned Baptism from God's saving activity into an act of Christian obedience. This view of Baptism arises from the denial of original sin and a semi-Pelagian view of salvation, whereby faith becomes the good work we contribute. This article concentrates on what God gives in this Sacrament.
1. Concerning Baptism, our churches teach that Baptism is necessary for salvation (Mark 16:16) and that God's grace is offered
2. through Baptism (Titus 3:4-7). They teach that children are to be baptized (Acts 2:38-39). Being offered to God through Baptism, they are received into God's grace.
3. Our churches condemn the Anabaptists, who reject the Baptism of children, and say that children are saved without Baptism.
The way Baptism is usually presented by Protestants as we've seen in this very thread, is as a symbolic act we do of our own free will that shows we belong to God. But if it's symbolic and not an actual Sacrament of God, meaning there is no supernatural element present in the Baptism, like the word of Christ present in and with the water, then any forgiveness that people think they receive during their Baptism, must also be symbolic. If the whole thing is symbolic and there is no forgiveness of sins, then why do it at all? As a work to show others? We are warned in scripture not to do our works before others so that they may see and marvel at us. The only thing I can see a person being left with then is a Baptism that is nothing more than an empty tradition.
And since when is "baptism" restricted to the priests?
Are we not "a royal priesthood"?
That means you and I.
If you're going to go that route, how many people have you baptized? And do you do it right after you witness to them? I don't know about you, but every baptism I've had and every baptism I've seen performed was performed by a man of the cloth.
If the great commission applied to the disciples, and it is our duty to carry on that commission, is baptism not included also?
God Bless
Till all are one.
What do you mean "if the Great Commission applied to the disciples?" Is this in dispute? My point was that to fully follow the command of Christ, we should be baptizing people along with witnessing to them. All the Christians I know, with the aforementioned exception, do not baptize, they just witness to people. That's why I said we're only participating in the Great Commission half-way. If we want to be faithful to the actual command, we would be baptizing people as well.
Upvote
0