Your thoughts are well paved with good blocks but leading to a wrong ending.
Thanks, but I would have to say the same thing about your conclusions, as well.
Of course there is and old and new covenant, and Christ fullfilled the 3,4 OT covenants. But as even others have noted, the new did not begin until some say the Supper or Calvary or Pentecost. It certainly had not begun when the Lord spoke to Nicodemus. Jesus spoke to Nicodemus as a leader, that he (Nicodemus) was to know the idea of being born in the spirit, and not just in the flesh. He was to know about regeneration, being born again because it was an OT reality. Do you really think no one in the OT was born in the spirit ? Were they all spiritually dead ? Jesus was not being prophetic, and if He was he would not take the attitude towards Nicodemus as if he was to know this new idea. Read it again and see this is something Nicodemus should have known, as an OT leader.
I said the New Covenant began after Jesus died on the cross, but it technically began at the Last Supper. My point was that the Old Covenant was being fulfilled by Him, so the Old Law would no longer be valid for the salvation of the Jews. Nicodemus was a Jew, so his heart had to be converted and follow Jesus if he wanted to be saved. His circumcision and following of Jewish law could no longer save him. I never said he didn’t know anything about the Old Law. But, he didn’t fully understand that Jesus was the true Messiah at the time. He was confused, that’s why was sincerely asking Jesus what He meant. Notice that Jesus made the comment about, “men loved darkness rather than the light”. Nicodemus first came to Jesus at night, because he was afraid to be seen by the other Jews, talking with Jesus. He was seriously considering what Jesus was teaching.
John did not baptismaly regenerate people. His baptism was one of preparing, of purification, much like how we prepare with advent and lent for the big event(s). That is why in John 3 they discussed the baptisms as “purifications”, not for new spiritual life but for a focused, sober, ready, expectant spirit.
So, you don’t think those who were baptized by John became reborn in Christ (Christian/adopted sons of God)? John was the one who prepared the way for Jesus by baptizing. But, his baptisms were certainly effectual to impart spiritual grace from God, as well as to wash away the stains of sin from their souls. If there was no real spiritual action on the soul, why would he do it? The pouring of water was the outward sign (not symbol) of an actual spiritual action in the soul of the person being baptized. Baptism is a ‘purification’ because it washes away the stains of sin from the soul, but, it also does much more than that. It’s nothing like the preparations made during lent or advent. Because, Baptism is a true
Sacrament, while those other things you mentioned are only forms of focused prayer, to prepare our souls for the Great Feasts of Easter and Christmas.
There is a difference between making and sealing a covenant. It is like we are first made (born again) to seal (confess, live out) the deal . We are not made only after the sealing. It is at least symbolic, but not a gesture, and not only “mere” as some suggest.
I would say that, first comes conversion of our heart towards God, which leads us to have faith in Him. We are then Baptized to wash away our sins and confirm (seal) our commitment to Him, then He recognizes us as His lawfully adopted child by that action. There’s a great deal of spiritual action happening at the very moment we are Baptized. It’s far from being a mere symbol of what has already taken place, but the true action that actually ‘seals the deal’.
Remember, that whatever early folks believed, baptism could put them out to ridicule, and persecution even death. So gesture or mere symbol fail the truth of it.
Have you ever read anything about the earliest Martyrs of the Church? I don’t think the possibility of suffering ridicule or persecution were much of a factor if they truly believed in Jesus.
I do not believe it has regeneration effectualness because the new birth has already happened as evidenced by faith in Christ . Sorry, the old man (unregenerated) is at enmity with God and is incapable of saving faith. Nobody gets baptized unless they believe first. We baptize then to seal the deal, for if we confess with our mouth the heart of faith is expressed. Confess Him before man, and He will confess you to the Father. I think that is why people who quickened by the spirit, were regenerated by the word, almost immediately were also water baptized. The two almost became synonomous because of proximity of occurrence, and not technical theology. Not like later times when people believed and waited, were catechumined for a long time. If you didn’t fully believe you were not baptized. So I don’t mind some saying it is a type of initiation rite, but the main thing is the conversion, the repentance from not believing and the expressing of one’s faith in deed and action. In fact again, I would not baptize anyone if they did not show those signs already that God has initiated, jumpstarted, regenerated them already. “Who could refuse them water ?”
Faith in Jesus might be the first sign of our conversion of heart, but that still doesn’t make us sons and daughters of God until we make a
full commitment to Him, and are reborn of the Spirit, through Baptism.