Is baptism essential to the Christian life? Should people be rebaptized if they change churches or denominations? Is it essential to be baptized in a specific way, such as sprinkling, pouring or immersion?
We can begin to answer such questions by asking: What is the example of the New Testament for those who accepted Jesus Christ as Lord and Savior? The answer is that they were baptized in water.
On the first Pentecost after Jesus' resurrection, when the Holy Spirit was made available, Peter stood up and exhorted his listeners: "Repent and be baptized, every one of you, in the name of Jesus Christ for the forgiveness of your sins. And you will receive the gift of the Holy Spirit. The promise is for you and your children and for all who are far off — for all whom the Lord our God will call" (Acts 2:38-39).
We are among those who are "far off," and we can share in the grace of God as well as those who heard Peter speak almost 2,000 years ago. Please note how the people responded to Peter's call after he finished his sermon. The record of Acts says that about 3,000 accepted Christ that day, and they were baptized (Acts 2:41). Baptism became a public testimony of these people, that they had accepted Jesus.
Baptism is important because it is a public statement that we have committed our lives to God, a statement expressed in symbolic action as a message to ourselves, to the Christian community and to God. By being baptized, we acknowledge that God is the source of our life and the reason we exist, and that Christ is our Lord and Savior.
In that sense, baptism is the most important landmark and turning point in our lives. It has much in common with another ceremony that marks a milestone in many people's lives — marriage. We know how important a marriage ceremony is to the couple in love, as well as to their families and their friends. It is a public statement of their life-long commitment to each other.
Of course, a wedding ceremony does not make a man and woman married in a real sense, though it may do this legally. Neither the ceremony itself nor its component parts — such as the vows, the pronouncement of the minister and the exchange of rings — creates the marriage. The commitment and carrying out of that vow to be faithful to each other is what really makes the marriage. Nonetheless, the marriage ceremony is the public statement of the couple's agreement to commit to each other, to say "I do" to each other. For that reason, it is important.
Baptism pictures the drama of our "I do" decision for Jesus Christ and all that he is in the plan of salvation. It is a symbolic act that reminds us we have made a life-long commitment to Christ, believing that he is our Savior. Baptism is our public statement that we will follow wherever he may lead us. Those who request baptism are saying they want to be associated with Jesus Christ in a personal and intimate way — to belong to Christ, to share in the benefits of his death, to share in the benefits of his life. That's what it means to be baptized "in the name of Jesus Christ."
Believers share in the life of Christ. As Christ died, so do the believers. As they share in Jesus' death, they also have a part in his resurrection and eternal life. In being baptized, believers publicly dramatize their acceptance of God's gracious offer of salvation, and they promise to do his will.
The apostle Paul explained this to the Romans: "All of us who were baptized into Christ Jesus were baptized into his death. We were therefore buried with him through baptism into death in order that, just as Christ was raised from the dead through the glory of the Father, we too may live a new life. If we have been united with him like this in death, we will certainly also be united with him in his resurrection" (Romans 6:3-4).
Baptism symbolizes our decision to accept what it means to be united with Jesus. Going down into the water pictures the death of the self and the rising up out of the water pictures the resurrection of the self to a new life now, and eternal life in the future.
Of course, baptism is not magic. The act of baptism does not mechanically bring the Holy Spirit to us, nor does it cause our spiritual renewal and salvation. Baptism is a ritual, a metaphor that symbolizes that we have died to our former life and have been reborn to a new life in Christ.
To keep us from thinking about baptism in a magical way, we can examine some examples in Scripture. First, an example where the Holy Spirit did not come immediately to individuals who had been baptized. We read about this in Acts 8:14-17. Many people in Samaria had believed the gospel and accepted Jesus as Savior. They had also been baptized, but they had not received the Spirit. In this case, Peter and John had to place their hands on these individuals and pray for them to be born from above by the indwelling Holy Spirit.
In the case of the centurion Cornelius and his family and friends, the Holy Spirit came before baptism (Acts 10:44-48). They were baptized after receiving the Spirit, but there was no laying on of hands. Both these examples teach us that while baptism is an important public statement of our intentions toward God and Christ, it is symbolic. (Let us not forget the case of the repentant "thief on the cross" who could not be baptized at all, yet was saved.)
This brings up the matter of the method of baptism. Different churches baptize in different ways. If we understand that baptism is primarily a symbolic public statement of our entrance into the community of believers, the church, then we can see that the mode is not critical. The fact of our baptism is the meaningful act.
The Worldwide Church of God follows what appears to be the biblical example of baptism by full immersion. Our church also uses the formula of Matthew 28:19, baptizing candidates into the trinitarian fellowship of God. The minister will conclude the baptism prayer with words to the candidate such as the following: "Having repented of your sins, and having accepted Jesus Christ as your personal Savior, I now baptize you — not into any denomination or church — but into the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit."
When individuals who were once baptized in another church enter the fellowship of the Worldwide Church of God, they sometimes wonder if they should be rebaptized. If they feel they understood what baptism symbolized when originally baptized, and they had committed to Jesus Christ with understanding and faith, then there is no need to be rebaptized. (The mode of their previous baptism would not be an issue.) Naturally, if a new member feels that understanding was previously lacking, then he or she certainly can be baptized again.
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