Bible Baptism
The Bible principle of all obedience is understanding. "He
that heareth the word and understandeth it" - - Matt.
13:23. "Go preach the gospel - - he that believeth (the
gospel) and is baptized shall be saved" - - Mark 16:15-16.
Believing that Jesus Christ is the Son of God is not all that
must be understood in rendering obedience in baptism - - there
are other essential principles of a gospel faith.
Institutions with design carry the necessity of understanding
the design. Example: The Lord's Supper - - "Do this in
memory of me." No man can observe the Lord's Supper "in
memory" of Christ without knowing it. The preposition "for" in
Acts 2:38 is "EIS" in the original. No man can take
the Lord's Supper in order to, unto or into the memory of Christ
if he does not know it; and for the same reason no man can
be baptized in order to, unto or into the remission of sins
or salvation, if he does not know it. One cannot accidentally
obey God.
If it is not necessary to understand the purpose of baptism,
why is it in every case emphasized from the preaching of John
to the last verse on the subject in the New Testament? If it
is not to be understood, then, that part of the subject is
non-essential and when we preach the design of baptism we are
preaching something not necessary to be believed, therefore,
preaching a non-essential. Why debate with a Baptist preacher
on the design of baptism if its design does not have to be
believed or understood? Why debate on a non-essential?
Is there a single case in all the New Testament where the
person baptized did not understand the purpose of the act?
It is sometimes said that the purpose is not a part of the
command. Let us see:
Acts 22:16 - - "Arise and be baptized and wash away thy
sins." the subject understood is you with the triple predicate
- - and fully rendered with each part supplied it reads: You
arise and you be baptized and you wash away your sins. Arise
is part of the command; be baptized is a part of the command;
wash away your sins is a part of the command. No man can do
that who believes his sins have already been washed away.
It is said that "to obey God" is the main purpose
of baptism. Then why is that purpose never stated? Is it not
singular that the New Testament failed to mention the main
purpose in connection with the command, but on the other hand
emphasized the non-essential purpose, or the purpose not necessary
to be believed? "Remission of sins," "into Christ," "shall
be saved," "newness of life," and all other
expressions are just one design stated in different ways. Baptism
has only one design. Alexander Campbell established this premise,
and lays it down in that very proposition in his book on "Baptism." I
mention this because so many refer to Campbell on the subject.
We are sometimes asked: If it is necessary to believe that
baptism is for the remission of sins then should we not make
it a part of the confession and ask every one, "Do you
believe that Jesus Christ is the Son of God and do you also
believe that baptism is for the remission of sins?" This
is dodging the issue. Try it on the other contention. If the
main purpose is "to obey God," then, the argument
would require that it also be made a part of the confession: "Do
you believe that Jesus Christ is the Son of God and are you
being baptized to obey God?" It's a poor rule that will
not work both ways. As a matter of fact, all sincere people
in religion perform every act of religious service with the
general motive to obey God. Baptism has a very specific purpose
- - just as does the Lord's Supper - - and the general idea
that it is a command, but not essential to salvation or that
it is a duty but the duty of one already saved is a perversion
of bible teaching. If one can be scripturally baptized with
such a belief, then all our preaching on the subject is inconsistent.
To say that a man can believe that he is saved before he is
baptized, and then be baptized to be saved, is to argue that
what a man believes has nothing to do with what he does.
It is frequently said that if one is satisfied we have no
right to question them. Why should we hold an inquest? Paul
evidently "held an inquest" over the twelve in Acts
19. True, the same thing may not be wrong in the case before
us - - but something was wrong there and something else just
as vital may be wrong now. Satisfaction is not salvation. Apply
the argument to other things people believe and do in religion
and where would it lead to? If it can be applied to baptism,
why not to everything else?
It takes more than the right act to constitute valid baptism.
The right act based on the right belief: Error preached, error
heard, error believed, is error obeyed. Truth preached, truth
heard, truth believed, is truth obeyed.
Jesus said, "Ye shall know the truth and the truth shall
make you free." This cannot be made to mean, "You
may believe error but if in your error your aim is to obey
God, then your error will make you free anyway." such
apologizing for denominational error cannot advance the truth.
It is much easier to teach people to obey the gospel than to
defend them in their error.
Foy E. Wallace, Jr. (1896-1979) From Bible Banner (Vol. 10,
No.5, May 1948)