Nathan
Member
Baptism in regards to dying is a good analogy. If you go and look through old Greek literature you realize that the word "baptize" is a direct translation to English. In other words, its not like the word "love" or "word" or many other words.
Reason being is that it carries a very distinct definition. We have to know that Jesus did not use the word itself - it was a word used by the one writing down the words of Jesus. So, we know that Jesus was being very specific in what He was telling His disciples to do. And the person who was writing down understood what Jesus was saying - and used this word to describe it.
What we have to do is come to a conclusion. Was there any indication that Jesus was speaking about doing something for 'identification'? Or, was His command to the disciples something that we can see as being serious and real?
He told them to make disciples. Is this just figuratively or serious?
He told them to teach. Is this just figuratively or serious?
So when He tells them to baptize, we would have to say it falls in line with the other two points right?
Does being baptized in water do something serious? No. I could go take an atheist off the street, pay him some cash, and baptize him in water. I could do it saying one thing, or another, or even nothing at all - and the result would be the same. We see this all the time in churches. I have been water baptized at least 3 times - maybe 4(memory is a little fuzzy). The act of me doing it was obedience for sure, but it did not 'do' anything to me. In other words, it did not change me. Discipleship changes a person, teaching changes a person, so we have to say that the "baptism" Jesus speaks about would be about changing a person.
Why do we think Jesus was inserting a ritual act in the middle of some serious points? Unless we think He was speaking about discipleship as ritual, or teaching as ritual........ He wasn't, He was speaking of a baptizing of disciples they make, that would transform the disciple - which in turn would setup the person to be able to understand the teaching they would then receive.
Notice how Jesus told them to baptize? He did not say "tell the disciples you make to be baptized", He told His disciples that they were to baptize. Yet now, we view it as the other way around - furthermore, we made it such a ritual act that only a 'select' few are 'capable' of it.
Reason being is that it carries a very distinct definition. We have to know that Jesus did not use the word itself - it was a word used by the one writing down the words of Jesus. So, we know that Jesus was being very specific in what He was telling His disciples to do. And the person who was writing down understood what Jesus was saying - and used this word to describe it.
What we have to do is come to a conclusion. Was there any indication that Jesus was speaking about doing something for 'identification'? Or, was His command to the disciples something that we can see as being serious and real?
He told them to make disciples. Is this just figuratively or serious?
He told them to teach. Is this just figuratively or serious?
So when He tells them to baptize, we would have to say it falls in line with the other two points right?
Does being baptized in water do something serious? No. I could go take an atheist off the street, pay him some cash, and baptize him in water. I could do it saying one thing, or another, or even nothing at all - and the result would be the same. We see this all the time in churches. I have been water baptized at least 3 times - maybe 4(memory is a little fuzzy). The act of me doing it was obedience for sure, but it did not 'do' anything to me. In other words, it did not change me. Discipleship changes a person, teaching changes a person, so we have to say that the "baptism" Jesus speaks about would be about changing a person.
Why do we think Jesus was inserting a ritual act in the middle of some serious points? Unless we think He was speaking about discipleship as ritual, or teaching as ritual........ He wasn't, He was speaking of a baptizing of disciples they make, that would transform the disciple - which in turn would setup the person to be able to understand the teaching they would then receive.
Notice how Jesus told them to baptize? He did not say "tell the disciples you make to be baptized", He told His disciples that they were to baptize. Yet now, we view it as the other way around - furthermore, we made it such a ritual act that only a 'select' few are 'capable' of it.