adrift;13255745] Never said that it wasn’t logical that if Jesus came up He had to go into first that wasn’t what was stated however. It was stated that Scripture stated that He went down into the water. Scripture I would say assumes it but does not state it. As you have stated it doesn’t matter.
Yes, that is correct on all points.
One of the rules that mariners have to obey is:-
“Assumptions should not be made on the basis of scanty information”,
however, I can safely state here that the information in the case in question was not scanty. It should have been stated by me 'though, that “Scripture **inferred **that Jesus went down into the water”. Never-the-less I thank you for correcting me.
“As you have stated it doesn’t matter”
The thing that “doesn’t matter” (to me at any rate), is the method of baptism. However, deriving as it probably did, from the ritual washing of Judaism, total immersion would have been the method employed. Also, if sprinkling, or pouring had been the method in general use it would have made no sense for Paul to write the following to the Romans:-
“Therefore we are buried with him by baptism into death: that like as Christ was raised up from the dead by the glory of the Father, even so we also should walk in newness of life.” Romans 6:4
As John Gill (theologian) puts it:-
"…Therefore we are buried with him by baptism into death,… The nature and end of baptism are here expressed; the nature of it, it is a “burial”; and when the apostle so calls it, he manifestly refers to the ancient and only way of administering this ordinance, by immersion; when a person is covered, and as it were buried in water, as a corpse is when laid the earth, and covered with it: and it is a burial with Christ; it is a representation of the burial of Christ, and of our burial with him as our head and representative, and that “into death”;
So, when I say that the action is more important than the method, I am saying that baptism is a public declaration of your faith in Christ, and your total acceptance of His sacrifice as full payment for the sins of the whole world. What more positive display of faith could there be than a public dunking - especially if the person being baptised is a non-swimmer with a morbid fear of deep water - if you catch my drift (pun intended!)
It is just an artistic rendition.
For the fun of it I searched to see if shell were available and found that in one residence they found murex shells. An interesting article that pertains to this discussion in more than one way.
Yes, it would be an interesting article I am sure, however were “murex shells” found only in **one **residence?
"It is just an artistic rendition "
Maybe so, but you are using that “scanty information” to cast doubt on my assertion that total immersion was the method of baptism employed by John the Baptist are you not?
I hope you would agree with me that John’s was a different baptism.
Yes I do, as is illustrated by the fact that I supplied a descriptive paragraph to that effect.
Protector: John baptised in the River Jordan because there was much water …
We are not told, but if it can be accepted that immersion was the method employed then your question is answered in the affirmative. However, as before debating about the method detracts from the act. Can you imagine with what awe John would have been struck when baptising the Lamb of God?
“The next day John seeth Jesus coming unto him, and saith, Behold the Lamb of God, which taketh away the sin of the world.” John 1:29
Something further to my stating that baptism by immersion was probably derived from the ritual washing of Judaism (mikvah) the following from
travelujah.com
Jordan river represented a perfect mikvah of continuously running water.
Protector.