Again, Jesus said, “Whoever believes and is Baptized will be saved”
In order for you to interpret the way you do, you have to make this statement to have nothing to do with water Baptism. But we only receive one Baptism, and it is for the forgiveness of sins. The Creed states this. I’m not convinced you agree.
Salvation is by Faith alone not faith and anything else
Grace is 100% by God and from God: man 's cooperation is irrelevant.
When man is filled with the Holy Spirit (aka regenerated, born again , baptized by the Spirit) that is when they are saved. for ever
Baptism by immersion is a command to believers.
Refusal to obey a direct command from the King is reason to suspect that person is truly a subject of the King
regrading the verse:
Those who try to use Mark 16:16 to teach that baptism is necessary for salvation commit a common but serious mistake that is sometimes called the** Negative Inference Fallacy. **This is the rule to follow: “If a statement is true, we cannot assume that all negations (or opposites) of that statement are also true." For example, the statement “a dog with brown spots is an animal” is true; however, the negative, “if a dog does not have brown spots, it is not an animal” is false. In the same way, “he who believes and is baptized will be saved” is true; however, the statement “he who believes but is not baptized will not be saved” is an unwarranted assumption. Yet this is exactly the assumption made by those who support baptismal regeneration.
Consider this example: “Whoever believes and lives in Kansas will be saved, but those that do not believe are condemned.” This statement is strictly true; Kansans who believe in Jesus will be saved. However, to say that only those believers who live in Kansas are saved is an illogical and false assumption.
The statement does not say a believer must live in Kansas in order to go to heaven.
Similarly, Mark 16:16 does not say a believer must be baptized.
The verse states a fact about baptized believers (they will be saved), but it says exactly nothing about believers who have not been baptized.
There may be believers who do not dwell in Kansas, yet they are still saved; and there may be believers who have not been baptized, yet they, too, are still saved.
-gotquestionsdotorg