You're still not getting it. You obviously still really do not know what John's baptism was for. The water of John's baptism is for repentance.
I'm amazed that you, a 'baptism for salvation' adherent, can not bring himself to acknowledge what someone with your belief should know--baptism is for REPENTANCE--and agree with wholeheartedly with when pointed out to you. But instead you blindly resist what you really should be very prepared to agree with.
You must like the feeling of superiority you get from saying "you just don't get it". After you accused me of not getting it in the last post, you wrote:
A person must have BOTH to see the kingdom. It isn't enough to turn to God in repentance and now start thinking and doing lawful things. Those lawful things must be accompanied by faith, that repentance being the result of faith, and not just an attempt to 'earn' a place in the kingdom.
To which, I replied "
AGREE". Instead of moving on you continue to harp on your (purposeful?) misunderstanding of my position.
Let's discuss the "baptism of repentance for the forgiveness of sins". Here is my position, as clear as I can make it.
You must come to baptism repentant. Let me say that again. To be baptized, a person MUST BE REPENTANT. This is what baptism is.
And Peter said to them, "
Repent, and be baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ for the forgiveness of your sins; and you shall receive the gift of the Holy Spirit. 39 For the promise is to you and to your children and to all that are far off, every one whom the Lord our God calls to him." (Acts 2)
A person must repent AND be baptized, not just repent. Baptism is the operative means of "washing away" sins.
And he said, `The God of our fathers appointed you to know his will, to see the Just One and to hear a voice from his mouth; 15 for you will be a witness for him to all men of what you have seen and heard. 16 And now why do you wait?
Rise and be baptized, and wash away your sins, calling on his name.' (Acts 22)
Where we differ is on whether or not you HAVE to repent via water baptism to be saved. I say, 'no'. The repentance itself is what brought forgiveness of sins for everyone who came to John to be water baptized "for the forgiveness of sin".
If you realize this fact about my view, why do you keep complaining that I "don't get it"? So, a person repents of his sins, then he MUST be baptized for those sins to be "washed away". The difference between us is that you look at "repent and be baptized" as two things, I look at them as one single operation. This is HOW a person's sins are washed away and they are put right with God. According to Scripture, repentance and baptism TOGETHER is the means of washing sins away, that's what "
baptism of repentance for the forgiveness of sins" means.
But somehow after the resurrection, water baptism is now a legalistic ritual that ushers one into the forgiveness of sin and salvation.
Let me get this straight. during APOSTOLIC TIMES AND UNDER THE DIRECT GUIDANCE OF THE HOLY SPIRIT, baptism became, in your opinion, a legalistic ritual? This can't be your position.
It's ridiculous and extreme to you because you are locked into the thinking that water baptism is a legalistic ritual that turns on salvation for a person, like a light switch.
Me and the Apostles, apparently. Your view that "water" in John 3 is "baptism into Moses", and this "baptism into Moses" represents repentance, is ridiculous. There is no Scriptural evidence to back this up. "Baptism into Moses" is a one-time idiom of Paul and is NEVER tied to repentance. It has nothing to do with my view on baptism, or being "locked into" any other kind of thinking. It just simply doesn't make sense.
It's impossible for you to see that water baptism is representative of what does save a person--repentance.
This is what you need to PROVE Scripturally. Where does Scripture call baptism "symbolic" or "representative of" ANYTHING?
Do you even know what repentance is? Every time I mention it you resist any connection it has with the law, "do not steal, do not covet...", etc. But I guess that's not surprising in a church that thinks we turn to God in faith and then don't uphold any requirements of the law in any way shape or form.
Repentance is turning from sin, changing your life around. Certainly keeping the commandments is part of it, but that's not where it ends. God wants it all. My point is you are trying to tie the MOSAIC LAW to Nicodemus' question and assume Jesus' answer includes "the Law" WITHOUT ANY EVIDENCE. Why can't the word "water" simply mean water?
The water is not literally the Red Sea.
I never accused you of this.
Just as a nation was 'born' and 'baptized' through the Red Sea to become the nation and kingdom of God's people set apart to obey the commandments of God, so water baptism is a birth and baptism of a people set apart for God for obedience to the commands of God. The parallels are unmistakable.
And, in your opinion, THIS is what Jesus meant by "born of water", and Nicodemus understood what He was getting at? Where would Jesus or Nicodemus get this "parallel" from? In other words, where is the Jewish people's crossing the Red Sea called, or even loosely alluded to, as being "born of water"?
You can say you don't get it because it seems ridiculous and irrational in order to try to undermine it, but I'm confident that I've made the point very clearly, reasonably, and rationally.
If you say so, but the above was not written before. This was:
"I think what was understood at the time was a birth and baptism into the kingdom through repentance according to Moses--a baptism into Moses, as Paul says. Which was traditionally accomplished through John's water baptism."
This is what I was responding to, even though both takes are untenable, but for different reasons. The "Red Sea" take, because you made it up and it couldn't have been known by either Jesus or Nicodemus, and your "baptism into Moses" take because you made it up, and it has NOTHING to do with your main point, that the "water" is symbolic (or representative) of repentance.
But the water part is NOT what Nicodemus misunderstood.
He understood something you made up?
This is the point I'm trying to make. Water MEANS repentance. How could there be a single Jew alive during John the Baptist's ministry that didn't understand water baptism was for repentance?
Jesus said you must be "born again". This analogy was what Nicodemus misunderstood. He was confused, so Jesus clarified saying "You must be born of water and Spirit". Here it comes again. Although REPENTANCE IS NECESSARY for baptism and salvation, JESUS DOESN'T MAKES THIS CONNECTION HERE, IN JOHN 3. Please re-read that last sentence. Jesus doesn't make the connection that YOU are making. You are assuming that when Jesus said "born of water..." that Nicodemus would think of "John's baptism", then think "He probably only meant repentance and didn't literally mean the pouring of water,
because the baptism of John is merely symbolic of repentance." Please. Of course Jesus was talking of baptism, the difference STILL remains, you hold that it's "representative" of what REALLY saves, repentance, and I hold it IS what saves. Which one of our views is actually taught in Scripture?
I suspect you can't get it because you've been trained to think of baptism as a salvation on/off switch instead of what it is--the way a person repents, and not the repentance itself; the repentance bringing the forgiving of sins, not the act itself.
Sorry, again Scripture disagrees with you.
"
Rise and be baptized, and wash away your sins, calling on his name."
""
Repent, and be baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ for the forgiveness of your sins".
The 'Spirit' part is what Nicodemus did not get. Read the passage.
LOL...He seems to misunderstand the ENTIRE "part". Where do you see in the passage that Nicodemus "gets" that Jesus means "repentance"? That's your mistake, you are dividing "water" and "Spirit", as you divide "repent" and "be baptized". They are both one, single operation.
"And so John came, baptizing in the desert region and preaching a baptism of repentance for the forgiveness of sins." (Mark 1:4 NIV1984)
John's baptism was a baptism of repentance for the forgiveness of sins. How does water give you repentance? Repentance is from YOU, not the water, or the act of going into the water. Baptism does not forgive sins. Repentance does. But the 'baptism saves' crowd only thinks of the 'forgiveness of sins' part when they think of water baptism and conclude we are saved through the act of water baptism, not realizing it is the repentance that solicits the forgiveness of sins. Baptism is a metonymy for repentance.
"Baptism of repentance for the forgiveness of sins" is the same as "Repent and be baptized for the forgiveness of sins". The baptism and the repentance can't be separated, and BOTH are NECESSARY for salvation. To separate them is un-biblical.
Repentance is what you can not be saved without. Water baptism represents repentance...the repentance that solicits the actual forgiveness of sins.
Scripture, please.
You can be offended if you want to be, but the truth is you simply do not know the definition of 'to be justified'. Justification is a legal declaration of right standing, perfection, in regard to sin guilt in the eyes of God. Knowing that, you can see we get that in a single moment of faith and trust in the sacrifice of the blood of Christ that removes sin guilt to make us righteous (justified) before God. And, you can see it's IMPOSSIBLE for a human to stand righteous and perfect with no sin guilt before God (justified) by merit of what they do.
Legal, huh? And you complain about my view of baptism as being "legalistic"? OK...I never made this claim, yet you have. I guess it's OK to be legalistic now...or no, wait, it's not...I'm lost...
So, what about sin? What happens to your legalistic view of justification when a person sins and the "guilt" is regained? I have posted these verses before and they have, of course, been ignored. I'll try again:
Justification (salvation) is a PROCESS, not a one time event:
"For the word of the cross is folly to those who are perishing, but to us who
are being saved it is the power of God." (1 Cor. 1:18)
"For we are the aroma of Christ to God among those who
are being saved and among those who are perishing, to one a fragrance from death to death, to the other a fragrance from life to life." (2 Cor. 2:15)
"Therefore, my beloved, as you have always obeyed, so now, not only as in my presence but much more in my absence,
work out your own salvation with fear and trembling; 13 for God is at work in you, both to will and to work for his good pleasure." (Phil. 2:12)
Continued...