I just don’t understand Pentecostal beliefs on baptism. As a catholic we are born into sin but as a baby we are baptized. When we are born, we are born into a catholic family who raise us to know right from wrong. We are raised to accept Jesus christ as our savior. But as Pentecostals they are born agains? Are they not raised believing in Jesus christ? So does this mean they can do whatever they want until there saved and all there sins are washed away? How many times are they born?
I’m a lifelong Pentecostal, born and raised. Perhaps I can clear things up for you.
I was born in 1989. While still an infant my parents dedicated me back to God in front of our entire church. From the time I was born I was raised in a Christian home by Christian parents. I remember fondly being read children’s versions of Bible stories at bedtime by my father. There was never a time as a child when I wasn’t in church. We were in church Sunday mornings 9AM to 1 PM and then on Sunday evenings from 7PM to God knows when. If we had a knock down drag out service it could be midnight before we got home. The same for Wednesday nights. As a Pentecostal child, you get used to sleeping under the pews. We had Sunday schools, Bible schools, etc. I was saturated with the Christian religion as a child.
It was my parent’s greatest hope that I and my siblings would come to a saving knowledge of Jesus Christ. I did when I was 10 years old and knelt at the altar and made Jesus lord and savior of my life. It wasn’t like i didn’t believe in God before then. I did, but that Sunday in church, Jesus became real to me. I awakened to the realization of what my parents, family, and church had been teaching me all my life. That day, I put my faith in Christ. I was born again and a new creation.
I was water baptized when I was like 19 or 20. It was such an amazing experience that I can’t even describe it. But that wasn’t when I was born again, that was an outward sign of an inward change that had already taken place in my life years ago when I was a little 10 year old boy kneeling at an altar.
Pentecostals believe that if we confess our sins, God is faithful to forgive us. When I was born again, I confessed that I was a sinner and I asked Jesus to forgive me of my sins. He did, but that didn’t mean I could just do whatever I wanted after that. I’m in my 20s now and I still go to God daily confessing my sins and asking for his forgiveness.
Pentecostals also believe in an experience of empowerment called baptism with the Holy Spirit. We believe that this experience (which is received by asking Christ for it in faith) is the same experience that the disciples received on the day of Pentecost. We believe this equips us for the work and ministry that Christ has called all within his church to accomplish.
The baptism with the Holy Spirit is separate from both the born again experience and water baptism, but they can happen simultaneously. So it is possible that a person is born again, receives the Spirit baptism, and is water baptized all in the same day. Many times, however, the 3 experiences will occur at different times.
We believe that no one should be water baptized who has not made a confession of faith in Christ. This rules out infant baptism. We also believe that for one to receive Spirit baptism, they must already be born again. Spirit baptism is being filled with the Spirit, but for that to happen, the Spirit must already be dwelling inside the believer. Thus being born again is the starting point for the spiritual life of the Pentecostal.