Baptism Is By Immersion
By
Shelby G. Floyd
June 11, 2006
First Mention of Baptism in the English Bible
In the
English Bible the word baptism occurs the first time in Matthew chapter three.
It is used in connection with the preaching of John the Baptist. The people
from Jerusalem, Judaea, and the entire region round about Jordan, were baptized
of John in the Jordan River, confessing their sins. (Matthew 3: 6.) The
baptism of John was for the remission of sins. (Mark 1: 4.) It was a baptism
founded upon repentance, and unto a life of repentance. (Mark 1: 4; Matthew
3:11.) Many of the Sadducees and Pharisees, who came to be baptized, were told
by John to bring forth fruits worthy of repentance. Some of them rejected the
baptism of John, and in so doing, they rejected the counsel of God against themselves.
(Luke 7: 29-30.)
Jesus Christ Was Immersed
In this
same chapter we read of Jesus, the Son of God, leaving his home in Galilee, and
coming down to Jordan to be baptized of John. When Jesus asked for baptism,
John at first refused, and told him that he needed to be baptized of him. Jesus
told him to make an exception for it was becoming unto them to fulfill the
righteousness of God. Whereupon, John baptized Jesus; and after his baptism he
“went up straightway out of the water.” (Matthew 3: 13-16.) John baptized
“for the remission of sins,” but this was an exception to that general rule.
Jesus was without sin; but still he wanted to be baptized to fulfill the
righteousness of God.
Three Different Actions
Some
persons have tried to see in this account of the baptism of Jesus evidence of
sprinkling or pouring, but they are greatly mistaken. When Jesus was baptized,
he went up straightway out of the water. This within itself is evidence that
Jesus was immersed or buried in his baptism. There is no way that he could have
come up straightway out of the water until he had first gone down into the
water. The word baptism always means immersion, and never pouring or
sprinkling. There are three different words in the Hebrew, Greek and. English
languages for the three different acts of pouring, sprinkling and dipping.
Moses in connection with the work of the priest under the Old Testament used
these three words, and made a distinction between each one. “And the priest
shall take some of the log of oil, and pour it into the palm of
his own left hand: and the priest shall dip his right finger in
the oil that is in his left hand, and shall sprinkle of the oil
with his finger seven times before the Lord.” (Leviticus 14:15-16.) Approximately
280 years before Christ, the Hebrew Old Testament was translated into the Greek
language in Alexandria, Egypt. When the words in Leviticus 14:15-16, were
translated, pour was represented by the word keo, dip
by the word baptidzo and sprinkle by the word. rantidzo.
When baptism is mentioned in the New Testament the word baptidzo
is used, and never the words that mean to sprinkle or pour. Therefore, the Holy
Spirit had in mind the action of dipping, when he commanded baptism in the name
of Jesus Christ.
New Testament Sprinkling is of the
Conscience
There is
a sprinkling mentioned in the New Testament, but it is the sprinkling of the
blood of Jesus
Baptism Does Also Now Save Us
In the
later part of his life, the apostle Peter mentioned the days of Noah, and the
preparation of the ark; and then he declared that only eight souls were saved
in the ark, but it was “by water.” The water that brought about the cleansing
of the earth, and the destruction of the unbelieving world, was the same water
that saved Noah and his family. They believed God’s word and did what he said,
and were saved by the water. The salvation of Noah and his family by water was
an apt figure of how baptism saves us. Peter said, “The like figure
whereunto even baptism doth also now save us (not the putting away of the filth
of the flesh, but the answer of a good conscience toward God,) by the resurrection
of Jesus Christ.” (I Peter 3: 20.) Baptism saves us: and when baptism saves
us, then we have an answer of a good conscience before God, realizing that our
sins have been forgiven.
Clinical Baptism Not Valid
There is
no mention in the New Testament of baptism being used in connection with
sprinkling or pouring. The first mention of pouring for baptism is found in an
uninspired work of the second century called, The Didache. The
author is unknown; and since it is uninspired, it does not carry the authority
of God with it. About 251 to 253 A.D, a man by the name of Novatian
had water poured all over him in his bed. This was not accepted as genuine
baptism during that time. Novatian was not allowed to be an
officer in the church, because his baptism was questionable. This is definite
proof that as late as the middle of the third century, immersion was still the
only accepted act for baptism. But according to the teaching of the New
Testament, baptism is by immersion.
Baptism is a Burial
The
apostle Paul wrote to the Romans and said,
“Know ye not, that so many of us as were baptized into
Jesus Christ were baptized into his death? Therefore, we are buried with him by
baptism into death: that like as Christ was raised up from the dead by the
glory of the Father, even so we also should walk in newness of life.” (Romans
6: 3-4.)
Baptism then is a burial; and is a likeness of the death, burial and.
resurrection of Jesus Christ. If a person has not been buried with Christ, he
has not been baptized according to the teaching of the Bible. Copyright © 2006 All Rights Reserved