The Obedience of Faith
- The Great Comission command by Jesus in Matthew 28:19:
“Go…make disciples…baptizing them…”
- The command is not temporary, Matthew 28:20 “...to the end of the age”
- End of this present evil age until the age to come at the parousia (Matt. 24:3)
- Therefore: Baptism is part of disciple-making until his coming;
- Baptism is not optional, something to be questioned, let alone part of some old dispensation!
- Faith is not merely intellectual but active, "to bring about the obedience of faith": Romans 1:5
- Baptism is a concrete act of submission to the gospel: The God-ordained response to the Kingdom message
- It defines what is a Christian and marks your membership into the one body of Jesus, the church: 1 Corinthians 12:13
"For in one spirit we were all baptized into one body, whether Jews or Gentiles, slaves or free; we all were made to drink of one spirit."
AB footnote:
This is not a “second level” of conversion but the common initiation of every true believer into the Church. There is no noun phrase “baptism of the holy spirit” in the NT, but being immersed in spirit is the common experience of all NT believers. It is the essential mark of becoming a believer. Water baptism was the required public sign of joining the body of Messiah.
Christian SOP
- John and Jesus, Mark 1; John 3-4.
- Baptism Saves, Mark 16:16 “Whoever believes and is baptized will be saved”
- Acts 2:38 “Repent and be baptized…for forgiveness of sins”
- Acts 22:16 “Be baptized and wash away your sins”
- Pattern: Hear the Gospel → Believe/Understand → Repent → Get baptized
Christian Living
- Romans 6:3-4 Baptism = identification with Jesus’ death and resurrection
- Galatians 3:27 “All who were baptized into Christ have clothed yourselves with Christ”
Exceptions Not the Rule
- Cases like “the thief on the cross” are: Exceptional, not normative
- The Great Commission sets the rule: Make disciples → baptize them
- Doctrine is built on: Clear commands + consistent NT pattern; Not hypothetical “what if” scenarios
Rebaptism
- Was I baptized as a repentant believer in the Gospel about the Kingdom of God and the name of Jesus (Acts 8:12)?
- If not, then being baptized again is not “repeating baptism" but receiving Christian baptism for the first time.
- The NT shows that when someone’s first baptism was based on an incomplete or defective understanding they should get baptized again, Acts 19.
Takeaways
- From Jesus’ command (Matt. 28:19–20) until the end of the age, baptism remains:
- A commanded response to the gospel;
- A defining moment of Christian conversion;
- An expression of "the obedience of faith."
Addendum
- I was recently asked if I was teaching that baptism is required for salvation?
- The concern was that I seemed to be saying you're not a Christian unless you're baptized.
- 1 Peter 3:21 makes baptism part of the biblical response to salvation — your obedience of faith.
- But not because water itself has some kind of magical, mystical quality.
- Peter says, baptism is an appeal or "pledge of a good conscience to God through the resurrection of Jesus Messiah."
- This fits the NT pattern to:
“Repent and be baptized…for the forgiveness of your sins” (Acts 2:38);
- Those who believed the Gospel of the Kingdom and the name of Jesus were baptized (Acts 8:12);
- Cornelius’ household, though having received the spirit, was still commanded to be baptized (Acts 10:47-48);
- In Acts 22 Jesus asked Paul: What are you waiting for? Get up, be baptized, and have your sins washed away"!
- Paul then goes on to link baptism with Messiah’s death and resurrection to mark the born again experience (Rom. 6:3-4; Gal. 3:27).
Last Word
- Baptism is the commanded public response of faith, repentance, and allegiance to Jesus.
- In the NT, a Christian is normally a baptized believer.
- To question or knowingly refuse baptism, while calling yourself a Christian or clain church membership, is simply foreign to the teachings of Jesus and his apostles.