As we read the Bible we note that God loves role-plays. Passover is a wonderful example – year after year, the children of Israel play out what happened at Passover; the whole wilderness journey is expressed in the play at the feast of Sukkoth. In other cases, people have played out a role in their life – take Hosea for example, who demonstrated the sinfulness of Israel in a real-life role-play.
Baptism also has been instituted to remind us of many deep and important values, but in essence it is a symbol with two sides. For the one being baptised it is an announcement to those around her, that she is indeed a child of God: a new creation, the old having been done away, replaced by a new life, in obedience to Christ, and of course, aided by the Spirit of God. On the other hand, it demonstrates that salvation arises from the death, burial and resurrection of Christ in whom a child of Christ rests.
So what is Baptism?
The Apostle Paul in the letter to the church in Ephesus says there is one Baptism – as there is only one God and Father of all. It was also the Apostle Paul that sets out the doctrine of Baptism when writing to the Romans: He says in chapter 6:
Do you not know that as many of us as were baptized into Christ Jesus were baptized into His death? Therefore we were buried with Him through baptism into death, that just as Christ was raised from the dead by the glory of the Father, even so we also should walk in newness of life.
So baptism is of the individual, done once. Baptism is done unto the significance of the death of Jesus Christ. Baptism does not confer salvation – indeed it cannot save. Also it does not, nor cannot, confer membership of the church.
Overall baptism highlights three elements of the doctrine of Salvation.
Therefore we note there is no effort on the part of the one being baptized – it is the effort of the baptizer that creates the symbol, which underscores that being saved is an act of faith upon God, not upon one's own goodness, for we all have none (see Ephesians 2).
And what is one Baptised unto: As Jesus said to Nicodemus – only by being born again can one enter the kingdom of heaven – baptism symbolizes that the old is buried, and we are to walk from that day forth in the "newness of life". Again, the Apostle Paul:
Therefore we were buried with Him through baptism into death, that just as Christ was raised from the dead by the glory of the Father, even so we also should walk in newness of life.
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