M
Melchior
Guest
I am glad Jesus is your Lord and Savior. He is mine too. I am not a Catholic for clarity sake. But i must ask where does scripture teach that Baptism is an act of obedience?I was born again in the spirit when I was chosen a few years ago, after repenting and dedicating my life to my Lord and Savior. After being born again in the spirit, I wanted to be born again by water as an act of obedience to my Savior. However, this does not mean that I believe that a person is saved through an act of the flesh.
I too was baptized a secind time after being born again. But I wish I wasn’t there was nothing wrong with my original. God has kept all His promises He made to me in baptism. As the Apostle says “there is one baptism…” Particulalry if you only believe it to be a symbol then how can the original symbol be invalidated. Either you were baptized or you weren’t. If you were immeresed in water or it was poured over you in the name of the Trinity you have been baptized, whether you consented to it or not.I have not held that infant baptism is a bad thing throughout this thread. I was as an infant. I am godfather to two catholic kids. My kids were baptized at something like 6 and 8 years old purely as a matter of happenstance from the backslidden, or at least non-Church going, parent I had been.
Well consider the nature of the New Testament. It records the events of the *first generation *of believers. Think of the significance in relation to this topic. It would be impossible to see many infant baptisms since it records the conversions of the first generaitonof adult believers, the babies would be the second generation. The household baptisms should be convincing enough with a proper understanding of how God always operates through covenants and has always graciously made convanent with families, not just individuals. You need to see the entire, covenantal flow of the dcriptures form Old Testament to new. Further you need to look at intertestamental baptisms that converst to Judiasm went through which were alway heads of households that brought their whole family along in the washing ritual. There is a context for baptism in the OT and in the broader culture of the time. You cannot read a naked text without some cultural context. No Jewish man would ever exclude his child from the covenant, effectively declaring him a pagan, unless there was explicit instruction to do so. Peter never gives it. Not does Paul.But did this tradition in the Church prevent some from being baptized as I was? We know about adult baptism in Scripture. Only speculation has been presented in this thread in regard to infant baptism, and weak at best, and contradictory at worst.
In fact, in the Great Commission Jesus instructs the apostles to make disciples by baptizing… and teaching…
Disciples are made by baptizing. Since we Christians instruct our children from the earliest age possible are they not disciples? If they are disciples they must be baptized. Someone not a visible memebr of the Church via baptism is outside the church, in an objective sense. So to disciple one who is not baptized is a violation of the Great Commission.Go therefore and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all that I have commanded you. And behold, I am with you always, to the end of the age.”
I did the same thing at 18. We can be sincere and sincerely wrong. But I don’t doubt that God blesses good intentions in such circumstances. I don’t fault the man either. But he was already baptized the second baptism was for his benefit, but it was not a real baptism since you cannot be baptized twice any more than you can enter your mothers womb a second time and be born naturally twice.I know an elderly gentleman, Christian all his life, that had come to feel that he needed to be baptized in his 80s. He had been baptized as a child. Far be it from me to fault him for it. I believe it was the Lord’s lead.
AgreedWe are all on our own paths and if we walk humbly with the Lord and follow His lead He will continue to bless us with direction as to how we can best serve Him.
(cont.)