There seems to be a lot of confusion concerning faith and baptism around here. Many seem to think faith is one thing and baptism another thing and these two are mutually exclusive concepts. They are not.
If you were terminally sick with cancer and a man came to you and said, "There is a great physician who has the cure for your cancer. You can be saved from your disease. Believe the good news. Believe in him to be saved from your disease," what would you expect yourself to do?
On this board people seem to think faith is simply believing the idea to be true. So all you would have to do is believe the message contained in the concept is true and you would be cured of cancer. Absurd. What is expected is that you go to this physician and let him do his work on you and to trust and follow his instructions for renewed health.
And this is how it is with faith and baptism. To believe in Jesus is not simply believing ideas about Jesus to be true. It means going to him for your operation, baptism. And it means trusting his instructions to you to get better from your disease. When Jesus says, "Believe in me," he means the same thing a doctor would mean if he said, "Believe in me." That doctor would mean, "Trust me. When I operate on you it will go well with you. And trust me when I tell you what to do after the operation so you will get better and improve your life." He does not mean "believe the idea that I can cure you and you will be saved." By analogy, the relationship between faith and baptism is exactly the same.
So as you can see, faith and baptism are not two mutually exclusive things. Baptism IS how we go about putting faith in Jesus for salvation.
So when you say "faith not baptism saves" or something to that effect, you are creating a false dilemma.