De Jager
Puritan Board Junior
In my opinion these arguments are pointless because immersion is not the only valid mode of baptism.
The biblical data shows that the word transliterated from the Greek does not necessarily mean to immerse.
It is a religious word, not a technical word. It is not a word used by engineers, it is a word used in a religious context.
Consider Mark 1:8
"I indeed baptized you with water, but He will baptize you with the Holy Spirit"
Note what is happening here. The Holy Spirit is being "applied" to a person here. The person is not being applied "into" the Spirit.
But, now consider Galatians 3:27
"For as many of as you as have been baptized into Christ have put on Christ"
Here, we have a person being applied "into" Christ.
There are arguments that go both ways. An immersion-only advocate can find verses to support his position and a sprinkling/pouring advocate can find verses to support his position. I am not saying this makes both right, but what I am saying is that if it is not clear and obvious then perhaps we can conclude that God doesn't care that much how we baptize with water, but mainly that we do.
I do not believe that our consciences need to be bound to a particular mode of baptism.
Signing off,
Izaak
The biblical data shows that the word transliterated from the Greek does not necessarily mean to immerse.
It is a religious word, not a technical word. It is not a word used by engineers, it is a word used in a religious context.
Consider Mark 1:8
"I indeed baptized you with water, but He will baptize you with the Holy Spirit"
Note what is happening here. The Holy Spirit is being "applied" to a person here. The person is not being applied "into" the Spirit.
But, now consider Galatians 3:27
"For as many of as you as have been baptized into Christ have put on Christ"
Here, we have a person being applied "into" Christ.
There are arguments that go both ways. An immersion-only advocate can find verses to support his position and a sprinkling/pouring advocate can find verses to support his position. I am not saying this makes both right, but what I am saying is that if it is not clear and obvious then perhaps we can conclude that God doesn't care that much how we baptize with water, but mainly that we do.
I do not believe that our consciences need to be bound to a particular mode of baptism.
Signing off,
Izaak