Nathan
Member
What you say is true.
The problem being far too many people on this forum judge negatively, it makes one wonder if they stand alone sometimes.
To go along with the post above yours, I honestly think that when a person judges negatively - there is a serious lack of understanding in regards to sin. All to often we look at Christ dying for our sin, and even dying for the sins of others - but when it comes to sins that others commit against us.........that's a different story.
That eventually spills out to view others sins against other people, then eventually ends up with looking at others sins against God. In reality, its all sin against God, but we compartmentalize it.
This actually all ties back into baptism.
"Water" baptism is said to be intertwined with what takes place on the inside. Not that baptism in Christ cannot take place without water - it can - but the act of being immersed in water has a significance being the humans we are.
Just like marriage. Does a piece of paper, or a 'day' you had a ceremony, mean true marriage? Legally yes, but a couple goes through those things because they have decided to be united to each other already. If pictures of that day were to burn along with the piece of paper your license is written on - would that negate what took place or what is still taking place?
Peter said it this way;
1Pe 3:21
Baptism, which corresponds to this, now saves you, not as a removal of dirt from the body but as an appeal to God for a good conscience, through the resurrection of Jesus Christ,
Its about a clean conscience. We are made up of heart, mind, and soul (inside our body). God does a work in our hearts with faith. It goes into our minds in belief, and then our soul - our conscience - expresses this with baptism in water. Peter said it is an "appeal" - literally an answer - but in depth, its an 'earnest seeking'.
What it really was meant for was a kind of pathway of faith to grow. It was never meant for just a ritual. It was a response to the call of God in our life, and a response that says, "I hear you, I want more". That's what water baptism is about.
Somewhere along the line it turned into a ritual, just like everything else, and people see it as a 'work' they do(even if they don't admit they think of it that way).