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As I said, just going by ability,
Stephen is a much better debater than me, but I still wouldn't
want to be in his shoes tonight. Because I've got this big advantage. All I've got to do is read Bible
verses and say, you know, they mean what they say. And then
I can just sit down. Stephen's got a much harder job.
He's got to struggle, struggle, struggle, struggle, struggle
to try to convince you that these verses don't really mean what
they say. So I've got a much easier job.
I don't envy his job, even though he's very capable. I predict
that that's what's going to happen. Now you watch and see. If it
isn't just really when it boils down to it tonight, I'm going
to give you these verses and ask you to accept what they say. And Stephen's going to say, no,
don't do that. Don't do that. Here's why they don't mean what
they seem to be saying. You see, in fact, that prediction
doesn't come true. OK, for example, a good example of what I just
said is Mark 16, verse 16. My proposition tonight is basically
that a person has to be baptized to be saved. Isn't that what
Mark 16, 16 says? He that believeth and is baptized
shall be saved, but he that believeth not shall be condemned. I think
that's simple. When my dad told us when I was
little, he that picks a bucket of weeds in the lawn and hoes
a row in the garden can go swimming, we knew we had to do both things. We knew. And if we didn't, we
went swimming without doing both things. We were going to have
a sore bottom that night. We knew. Here's another illustrative
sentence. He that eateth and digesteth
his food shall live, but he that eateth not shall die. Isn't that
easy to understand? I believe it's so easy to understand
that if I said to this audience tonight, he that comes to the
podium and shakes my hand, I'll give you a thousand dollars.
I believe every one of you would come up here and shake my hand
and get that thousand dollars. Not a single person here would
misunderstand that and say, no, all I have to do is come up there.
I don't have to shake your hand. Every one of you shake your hand and
get a thousand dollars. Yet that's what Stephen is going to say
tonight. Oh, all you have to do is believe. You don't have to be
baptized. Even though Jesus said, he that believeth and is baptized
shall be saved. He said you had to do both. Now,
why is it so hard? Why is it that if I offered you
a thousand dollars, you would understand it and come and do
both of them? But we're talking about salvation, something much
more important. You would try to get around one of the conditions
that Jesus laid forth. Terry. Now, the next passage
I want to mention is John chapter 3, verse 5, where Jesus said,
except a man be born of water and of the Spirit, he cannot
enter into the kingdom of God. Now, it doesn't make any difference
to me what the Reformed Orthodox position was, but Rick pointed
out to me in the last day or so, that on these passages, Stephen,
like John 3 and Galatians 3 and Colossians 2 Romans 6, that the
standard reform orthodox position is that all of these were talking
about water baptism. And I think you take some stock in that.
Now, I don't. But I would like to know if you claim to have
the standard reform orthodox position, why are you going to
try to claim that these passages like John 3, 5 and Romans 6,
Colossians 2 and Galatians 3 are not talking about water baptism?
Now, water baptism is the only thing I know of of spiritual
significance in the New Testament that involves water. So it looks
like to me that Jesus is saying, except a man is born of water,
that is baptized in water, he will not enter into the kingdom
of God. Now that's plain, isn't it? That proves that you have
to do this to be saved. Terry, next I would like you
to turn to Acts chapter 2 verse 38. Peter then said there, repent
and be baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ
for the remission of sins and you shall receive the gift of
the Holy Ghost. Notice Peter said they had to do two things
in order to get two things. Repent and be baptized And they
would get the remission of sins and the gift of the Holy Ghost.
Now notice, Stephen, it's repent and be baptized for the remission
of sins. The prepositional phrase for the remission of sins modifies
both repent and be baptized. Similar to Acts 3 verse 19, which
says, repent ye therefore and be converted that your sins may
be blotted out. Notice that your sins may be
blotted out is conditioned upon both commands, repenting and
being converted. It's the same in Acts 2. It's
the same. We are to be baptized Eight,
four, into the remission of sins, which implies necessarily that
until you're baptized, you don't have the remission of sins. Now,
let me point out something important here. Stephen asked me this a
few, six weeks ago. We were talking about having
this debate. We've had a number of conversations over the phone, email. Pat, do
you believe that a person that has to believe what you believe
or be baptized for that reason, for the remission of sins to
be saved? Yes. If you're here and you're a Baptist, most likely
you've been immersed. You have been baptized in that
sense. But you know, you've never been baptized for the remission
of sins. You thought you already had the
remission of sins and maybe two or three weeks later, you got
baptized. It wasn't for the remission of
sins. You really haven't ever done
what Peter said to do here, be baptized for the remission of
sins. So though you're sincere, you've never received the remission
of sins from God. You've never been saved. You
not only must be baptized, you must be baptized for the remission
of sins. That's one of the reasons I want to do this debate, to
let you know that you need to obey what Peter said for the
reason he said do it. Repent and be baptized for the
remission of sins. Now, you repented for the remission of sins, no
doubt, in order to get the remission of sins. Not because you already
had it, but in order to get it, you need to be baptized for the
remission of sins or you don't have it. All right, Terry, next
chart. Next, let's turn to Acts 22,
verse 16, where Ananias told Saul, Arise and be baptized and
wash away thy sins, calling on the name of the Lord. This word,
and, here is actually in the Greek, chi, and it indicates
dependence. It's be baptized and wash away
thy sins. In other words, the second thing,
the washing away of the sins is dependent upon the being baptized.
Like when I was young, Stephen probably did too, we cut grass
to get money. The person might say to us, cut my yard and receive
your $5 pay. To get the $5 you had to cut
the yard. James 4 verse 7, resist the devil and he will flee from
you. See, the fleeing of the devil is dependent upon us resisting.
Matthew 7, 7, ask and it shall be given. The giving from God
is dependent upon us asking. Seek and you shall find. Knock
and it shall be opened to you. And then Jesus said, In Luke
10, 28, thou hast answered right, this do, and thou shalt live.
In other words, you have to live, you're going to have to do. That's
the point. It's the same in Acts 22, 16. Be baptized and wash
away thy sins. In other words, you have to be
baptized to get your sins washed away. Now, what washes away our
sins? The book of Revelation says the blood of Christ does.
That's not an ed question. Stephen and I agree on that.
It's the blood of Christ that washes away our sins. But the
question is when? When were Paul's sins washed
away by the blood of Christ? when he was baptized or before
when he believed on the road to Damascus which was at least
three days before. No, he was still in his sins
at this point, and he needed to be baptized to have his sins
washed away. Now, on this point, turn quickly to Romans 10, verse
14. Don't think here, when it says
to be baptized and washed away by sins, calling on the name
of the Lord, that this calling on the name of the Lord is belief,
and that's when you receive the washing away of the sins. Calling
on the name of the Lord is not belief, because Romans 10, verse 14 makes
it clear that calling on the name of the Lord occurs after
you believe. How then shall they call on Him
in whom they have not believed? That's past tense in the Greek,
just like you see in English. In other words, you cannot call
upon somebody until you have believed first, past tense. If
you were to continue reading, it says, how shall they believe
in Him of whom they have not heard? In other words, you have to hear
first, and then after that comes the believing. And how shall
they hear without a preacher? How shall they preach except
it be sent? Going backwards, the preacher has to be sent first.
After that, they hear. After that, they believe. And
after that, they call. The calling in Acts 22-16 is
something done after you believe. It is, basically what it is,
is asking God to save you from your sins. But it's not in prayer.
He's already told us. You don't need to pray to be
saved. He said, the way you be saved
is you do what I said to do. Believe, repent, confess, and
be baptized. So the way you call upon God
to save you of your sins, from your sins, is by meeting those
conditions. Saul had already believed, he
had already repented, and so what he needed to do to call
upon God to forgive him of his sins, to wash away his sins based
on the blood of Christ, was to be baptized. And that's what
this is saying here. An honest examination of Acts
22-16 will show that the following three things happen together.
Baptism, the washing away of thy sins, and calling on the
name of the Lord. That's what we need to do, and
that's clear. Now, you can go ahead and put up the next chart,
Terry, but before we go to Galatians 3, I want you to briefly look
at Romans 6, because Romans 6 and Galatians 3 and Colossians 2
would have a connection. Romans 6, verse 3 says, "...know
ye not that so many of us as were baptized into Jesus Christ
were baptized into His death?" Again, it's baptized ace into
Jesus Christ, into a fellowship with Christ, into a saved relationship
with Christ. We're baptized into His death.
That means we're baptized into the benefits of His death. How
do you get there? Baptism. Now, Stephen and I have
talked on the phone, and he agrees with me that Romans 6, 3 and
following is a good passage to use with the Methodists when
you're trying to show them that water baptism is emerging. Because
if you notice from a verse like verse 5, it says, For we have
been planted together in the likeness of his death, we shall
be also in the likeness of his resurrection. We could use the
word picture or likeness. The baptism here is a picture
or the likeness of the death, burial, and resurrection of Christ.
The Holy Spirit doesn't fit that. Holy Spirit baptism is not a
likeness of the death, burial, and resurrection of Christ. But
water baptism is. You go down into the water and you come up
up. Come up out of the water. That's just like Christ going
down into the grave and coming back up. Stephen agreed with
me that this was an effective passage to use to prove to a
Methodist that sprinkling just would not cut it. In other words,
Romans 6 is talking about water baptism, and it says that we're
baptized into Christ, that is, into a saved relationship with
Christ, and we're baptized into His death, that is, the benefits
of His death. You cannot be saved without being baptized in water,
according to this passage. Now turn to Galatians 3, 26 and
27. Now again, Stephen and I agree
tonight and tomorrow night that a person is saved by grace through
faith. So we're saved by faith. We're
saved through faith. Notice Galatians 3.26 says, "...for
you are all the children of God by faith in Christ Jesus." We're
agreed on that point. The part we're not agreed on
is the very next verse. It says, "...for as many of you
as have been baptized into Christ have put on Christ." This little
word, for, here in the English that begins verse 27 means to
introduce the reason. In other words, the reason you're
a child of God by faith is because you've been baptized into Christ. Again, into a saved relationship
with Christ. And when you've done that, you have put on Christ.
You become a Christian. Do you see that? The way you
become a child of God by faith is not by faith only. Or at the
point of faith, the way you become a child of God by faith, according
to Paul, is you become baptized into Christ. Now again, this
is talking about water baptism. How do I know that? Because it's
baptism into Christ. That's the same as Romans 6,
3, baptism into Christ, which we know is talking about water
baptism because Stephen agrees with me that's an effective passage
to use to show that sprinkling is not valid water baptism. Romans 6 is talking about water
baptism. Galatians 3 is talking about
water baptism because they're both talking about baptism into
Christ. And Galatians 3 is saying that you have to be baptized
into Christ, that's water baptism, in order to be a child of God
by faith. Now, the next verse I would like
you to look at is 1 Corinthians 1, verses 12-13. Now, I want
you to hang with me here and look at this carefully because
a lot of people haven't actually considered this passage in this
light before. They have considered these other
passages, but hang with me here on 1 Corinthians 1, 12 and 13.
Now, what's going on here, as most of you already know, is
a bunch of division. People were saying in verse 12, I am of Paul,
I'm of Apollos, I'm of Cephas, I guess that would be Peter,
and I'm of Christ. It was like they were saying
I'm a follower of Paul or I'm a follower of Apollos. Paul is
trying to counteract this division among the Corinthian brethren.
And what he does was, he argues a couple of facts that should
prove to them that they could not be of Paul. See, some of
them are claiming to be of Paul, but he says in verse 13, is Christ
divided? Was Paul crucified for you? Or
were you baptized in the name of Paul? Now, if I understand
the English language, what that is saying is that Paul is making
this argument. You cannot be of Paul unless
Paul was crucified for you and you were baptized in the name
of Paul. But since neither of those are true, then you cannot
rightfully say you were of Paul. Do you follow? That's Paul's
argument. Now, here's the extension of that argument, what would
have to be true. If to be of Paul you'd have to be baptized
in the name of Paul, then it would have to be true that to
be of Christ, you'd have to be baptized in the name of Christ.
Do you see that? Now that's Paul's argument. It
can't be that you're of Paul because you haven't been baptized
in the name of Paul. Well, then this would be true if that's
his argument, and it is his argument. This would be true. To be of
Christ, that is to be a Christian, you would have to be baptized
in the name of Christ. And again, Stephen would agree
with me, this is called that water baptism. He would. You
have to be baptized in the name of Christ, that is, be baptized
in water to be of Christ, to be a Christian. You can't be
saved without it. That's an inescapable conclusion from Paul's argument
here. Now, in Colossians 2, I want us to read verses 11 through
13 together. Now, remember, before we read
that, I want you to notice this is talking about being buried
with Christ, verse 12, buried with Christ in baptism. Now that's
basically saying the same thing as Romans 6, which we've just
been over. In other words, it's talking about water baptism here.
Buried with Christ in baptism. It uses that same terminology
in Romans 6. It's trying to let us know that water baptism is
a picture of the death, burial, and resurrection of Christ. Now
that won't fit Holy Spirit baptism, but it does fit water baptism.
Now let's look at verses 11 through 13. 11 says, "...in whom also you are
circumcised with a circumcision made without hands." We have
an analogy here, an analogy to Old Testament circumcision here.
He says, "...in putting off the body of the sins of the flesh
by the circumcision of Christ." Here's the analogy. In the Old
Testament, the physical circumcision was the cutting off of the foreskin.
Now here, don't get it wrong, you're close, but you're wrong
if you say baptism is the New Testament circumcision. No, this
circumcision is done without hands. It's not baptism, it is
the putting off of the sins of the flesh by the circumcision
of Christ. The cutting off of sins. Old Testament, cutting
off the foreskin. New Testament, cutting off of the sins. You
follow me? Alright. Now if you look down
at verse 13, it says, And you, being dead in your sins, and
the uncircumcision of your flesh, hath the quicken, that is made
alive or forgiven, having quickened together with him, having forgiven
you all trespasses." So New Testament circumcision is the cutting off
of our sins in the mind of God, the forgiveness of sins. Now
the question is, when does that occur? Paul is talking about
the forgiveness or the cutting off of sins in verse 11. Paul
is talking about the circumcision, the cutting off of the forgiveness
of sins in verse 13. And what's right back in the
middle of those two concepts? buried with him in baptism, wherein
you are also risen with him through the faith of the operation of
God who hath raised him from the dead." He's talking about
the forgiveness of sins in verse 11, verse 13, and he tells us
when that takes place in verse 12. Again, that should prove
to you that baptism is necessary to salvation. Baptism is not
New Testament circumcision, but New Testament circumcision is
the cutting off of our sins. It occurs when you're baptized,
not before you're baptized, as the Baptists teach. But when
you're baptized, that's the point of that passage. Terry, next
I would like you to turn to 1 Peter 3, verse 21. Five minutes. In 1 Peter 3, verse 21, I believe
what I have on the screen is the New American Standard version
of that. It says, and corresponding to that, baptism now saves you,
not the removal of dirt from the flesh, but an appeal to God
for a good conscience through the resurrection of Jesus Christ.
Now, possibly I should have verse 20 on that chart also. It helps
you to read verse 20 in introducing verse 21. It says, "...which
sometime were disobedient, when once the long-suffering of God
waited in the days of Noah, while the ark was a-preparing, wherein
few, that is, eight souls, were saved by water." Underline that
word, water. There was a physical salvation
during that time of eight souls. And the Bible says, by water.
Now remember the word, water. And so in verse 21, New American
Standard Version says, and corresponding to that, baptism doth now save,
excuse me, I'm getting the King James, let me read it in the
King James this time. The like figure wherein to even baptism
doth also now save us. Not the putting away the filth
of the flesh, but the answer of a good conscience toward God
by the resurrection of Jesus Christ. Now let me read it out
of the New American Standard Version. And corresponding to that, baptism
now saves you. Not the removal of dirt from
the flesh, but an appeal to God for a good conscience through
the resurrection of Jesus Christ. There's a type and an anti-type
here, a figure and a real. Just as in almost every case
or every case I know about, the figure is the Old Testament.
Okay, in the old, like the animal sacrifices was the figure, the
death of Christ was the real. Here we have the eight souls
being saved by water, Noah and his wife, three sons, their three
wives. That's the figure. That's the
type. The real or the anti-type is
baptism to also now save us. Now, how can one correspond to
the other? How? There are two things that
correspond. Both of them involve water. And
both of them involve a salvation. In the Old Testament, it was
a physical salvation, and the New Testament is a spiritual
salvation. How do I know that? He explains it. It's not the
removal of dirt from the flesh. It's not a physical cleansing,
but it's a spiritual cleansing. So, the bottom line on this verse
is, if you don't get all of that, just remember the Bible says,
baptism, death also now save you, and that's enough. Like
I said, if you'll just accept what the Bible says, that's enough.
That proves beyond any shadow of a doubt that you have to be
baptized. That doesn't mean that baptism earns your salvation.
Far from it. The death, the blood of Christ
does that. It just means it's a condition. Water baptism is
a condition you have to meet in order to receive the forgiveness
provided for by the blood of Christ. Now, I want to go through
the verses one more time briefly and again appeal to you to look
at these simply and just accept what they say. Jesus said, He
that believeth and is baptized shall be saved. Isn't that easy
and clear? He that believeth and is baptized
shall be saved. John 3, 5, Except a man be born of water and of
the Spirit, he cannot enter into the kingdom of God. Acts 2, 38,
Repent and be baptized, every one of you, in the name of Jesus
Christ, for the remission of sins. They told him to repent
and be baptized, both of those, and he told them the reason.
In order to get the forgiveness or the remission of sins. Ananias
told Saul, Arise and be baptized and wash away thy sins. In other
words, he had to be baptized so that God would wash away his
sins. Galatians 3, for you're all the children of God by faith
in Christ Jesus, for as many of you as have been baptized
into Christ have put on Christ. The way you become a child of
God by faith is by being baptized into Christ. Colossians 2, we're
buried with Him in baptism, having forgiven you all trespasses.
And 1 Peter 3, 21, baptism doth also now save us. Now, it looks
like to me it's an open and shut case. It's just a matter of whether
or not you love God more than a system of a theology that you
might have. OK? You may have this system of theology
that you may have some allegiance to. Please don't. Have your allegiance
to what Jesus actually said plainly and clearly. Thank you very much
and I encourage you to listen with all attention that you can
muster to Stephen. Some of these things are hard
to follow along and to keep up. And I know that you've come here,
most of you, to engage your mind and your hearts with the discussions. I, like Pat, am very appreciative
for the friendship that we have and the interaction that we have
with one another. And I'm very thankful to see such a good showing
tonight on an issue, which I certainly believe is very important. Let's give just a moment here.
Yes, go ahead. Yes, come in. If any of you perhaps
can squeeze together a little bit, or we can make some seatings
for some folks who are needing to come in a little bit late.
No, that's all right. We're glad to have you all. Let
me say, as one of the elders of the Reformed Baptist Church
of Nashville as well, we're very glad to be able to host this
one. The Hillview Church of Christ was able to host the previous
one, and it's our privilege to host this one. And we're very,
very glad that you're all able to make it here tonight. Well, let me take just a few
minutes, if I may, to discuss what it is we are not debating
and what it is I believe that we are debating tonight. First
of all, we are not debating the issue of whether baptism is commanded
in the New Testament. We're not debating whether it
is under the New Covenant each child of God, everyone who claims
to be a disciple of Jesus Christ, to be one who follows the Lord
in baptism. And to not do so, I believe,
as a Baptist, is disobedient. So we're not here debating whether
it's commanded as the appropriate response to the reception and
belief of the Gospel. Secondly, we're not debating
tonight whether baptism is by immersion. Again, I am a Baptist,
and therefore I do believe in baptism by immersion. Nor tonight
are we debating the issue of whether it's paedo-baptism or
believer's baptism. Again, I'm a Baptist. I believe
in credo or believer's baptism. Now, I, like Pat, believe this
is a very important subject. And I, like Pat, though he may
not believe this, want to believe what the Bible says. But even
beyond that, I want to look at what the Bible means. Because
there are a lot of things, aren't there, in the Bible that if you
look at in what they say, we have to ask the question, what
do they mean in the context of the rest of Scripture? And that's
what I'm going to seek to do tonight. I appreciate Pat, as
well as his friends who want to take a very simple reading
of Scripture. I appreciate that. And that's the way to read the
Bible, to look at it, to see what it says, to accept it in
simplicity, if you will. But I think there's a difference
between being simple and simplistic. That we have to continue to look
at the Scripture, to continue to hone our minds and see all
of what God says in these things. Pat has somewhat embraced you
to tell you that if I say these don't say what they mean, then
I just don't believe the Bible. And I don't want you to believe
the Bible. But that's not at all the case. I want to see not
only what these passages say, but exactly what they say and
what they mean. I hope it's not going to be too
tedious tonight as we look and consider even some of the Greek
of these passages. I believe that the original inspired
scriptures was found in the Greek, not in the English. The English
are good Bibles. We've got good translations.
We can have confidence in them. But when it comes down to matters
of doctrinal distinctives, it's important to be able to look
at the Greek, because that's the original language, and sometimes
the English does not properly convey that. So I want to take
some time tonight to look at, in a simple way, the Greek of
these passages, and the original language which God inspired them,
and ask, is what Pat is saying about it exactly what the Holy
Spirit said in those passages? Now my primary argument tonight,
or for what I'm denying tonight, is all of tomorrow night. Justification
by faith alone in Christ alone is what I'm going to be defending
tomorrow night. And if I could, I would take all of that three
hour debate tomorrow and put it and insert it right here and
play it fast forward and let you listen to it all. But I don't
have that luxury. I'll just have to say, if you can't make it
tomorrow night, get to that and listen to it. That is my primary
argument because of what the rest of the scripture says, justification
by faith alone in Christ alone. But let me begin tonight by making
several observations about what we know for sure about baptism
in the New Testament. First, not all baptisms spoken
of in the New Testament are water baptisms. And I know that Pat
would agree with this. Not all baptisms spoken of are
water baptisms. The essential idea in baptism
has nothing to do with water. It means to be dipped, to be
covered, to be overwhelmed with, to be covered with something.
It is to be buried in something that when you see the word baptism
and you immediately import the word water, you're making an
exegetical mistake. Okay, so that is the first point
here, that not all baptisms spoken of are water baptisms. The idea
of water is not essential to the word baptism, though we often
simply associate that. Notice several examples. Luke
3.16. The prophet John the Baptist said, saying to all, I indeed
baptize you with water, and there is water baptism, but one mightier
than I is coming, whose sandal strap I am not worthy to loose,
he will baptize you with the Holy Spirit and fire. So there
is at least one example of a baptism that is not by water, in contrast,
but by or with the Holy Spirit. Secondly, there's the baptism
of fire found also in this passage, Luke 3.16. The baptism of fire,
I think in the context of Luke there, as well as other passages,
that that's a baptism of judgment. It is an immersion of the world
into a final judgment. And then likewise, number three,
there's a baptism of suffering, found in Mark 10, 38 and 39,
where Jesus said, you do not know what you ask. Are you able
to drink the cup that I drink and be baptized with the baptism
that I am baptized with? We are able. And he said, you
will indeed drink of the cup that I drink, and with the baptism
I am baptized with, that you will be baptized. And then Luke
12, 50, I have a baptism to be baptized with, and how distressed
I am. He's not going to be water baptized
again. It is a baptism of suffering and of trial as he goes to the
cross so that simply to make the point that when you see the
word baptism it's a mistake to automatically assume it's water
and physical baptism. That's just by way of observation.
So in this being the case we need to be very careful when
we see the word baptism not to import that. Now the second thing
I want us to consider is that baptism is a term used to demonstrate
a commitment to be a follower or a disciple particularly of
a prophet. that one of the essential meanings
of being baptized is to identify yourself with a prophet. Notice
1 Corinthians 10 and verse 2. All were baptized into Moses
in the cloud and in the sea. Now, they were somehow baptized?
Were they literally baptized? No. But it was through the sea
that they went through, and that identified them, that they believed
Moses was the true prophet, that they identified themselves with
him, and they said, we are going to follow this prophet wherever
he goes. So there it's seen that baptism,
Paul even uses New Testament terminology to describe something
that wasn't even found in the Old Testament. Why? Because in
Paul's mind, baptism identifies somebody with a prophet. Notice
secondly with John the Baptist, Luke 5.33. Then they said to
him, Why do the disciples of John fast often and make prayers? Why were they disciples of John?
Because they had been baptized by John. Because they had become
followers of John as a prophet, as a forerunner of Jesus Christ.
And therefore they were of John. Does that mean John was crucified
for them? No. But they were disciples of John. Now, the third thing I want us
to see then is, of course, Jesus as the great and final prophet.
The final name in which somebody is baptized. John 3, 26. They
came to John and said to him, Rabbi, who is with you beyond
the Jordan to whom you have testified, behold, he is baptizing and all
are coming to him. They say, John, aren't you jealous?
Because they're becoming followers of him as a greater prophet.
And John says, you guys got it all wrong. That's exactly what's
supposed to happen. They're following after Him and
becoming disciples of Messiah, and that's what should be, because
He's the greatest and the final prophet. So we see here, secondly,
baptism is a demonstration, if we could say, faith in the prophet. That the prophet is the one that
they are following. In the case of Moses, in the case of John
the Baptist, in the case of Jesus, that it identifies someone as
saying, I, being baptized in the name of that prophet, or
following that prophet, identify myself and follow them as the
true teacher. This explains 1 Corinthians 1.15.
In neither of these cases, with Moses nor John, does it imply
what Pat assumes here in 1 Corinthians 1.15 that it means somebody was
crucified for them or died for them. It means I identify myself
as a disciple of this prophet and ultimately I identify myself
as a follower and in the name of Jesus Christ. Now third, and
finally here by way of introduction, baptism is a public confession
of one's sinfulness and repentance. That's what the Bible says baptism
is. Notice Mark 1.14. John came baptizing in the wilderness
and preaching, and notice again the construction of the words
here, a baptism of repentance. It's a baptism of repentance,
and what is it? for the remission of sins. Now
here, even in the English language, it can be seen that the for the
remission of sins is not tied with baptism, it's tied to repentance.
And we'll see that's exactly what Peter says in Acts 2.38.
It's a baptism of repentance, but it's repentance for the remission
of sins. So when they were doing that, they were saying, I have
repented of my sins, therefore I have remission, and I confess
publicly that I'm a sinner, and by God's grace I'm being saved.
Notice in Acts 13.24. Acts 13-24. After John had first
preached before his coming, the baptism of repentance. They drop
out the phrase at this point for the remission of sins. It
shows that baptism of repentance is essentially what he's speaking
of here. What John is preaching is not baptism that brings about
forgiveness of sins, but baptism as a public testimony of true
repentance. It is the confession. Notice
again in Acts 19.4, Paul said, John indeed baptized with a baptism
notice of repentance, saying to people that they should believe
on him who would come after him, that is on Christ. And in Matthew
3, they were baptized by him in the Jordan, not washing away
their sins, confessing. their sins. That's what the Bible
says about those verses. This is seen even more clearly
in John's perplexity at Jesus coming and he says, why would
I baptize you? You're not a sinner. And he says,
to fulfill all righteousness. John understood it. It was a
public confession of sinfulness. And he says, I shouldn't be baptizing
you. So that's my way of introduction.
I want us to see those things in overall theology from the
New Testament about baptism. Not all baptisms are water baptisms. Baptism is a term to demonstrate
one's faith or commitment to follow after a prophet, particularly
now the prophet, the great prophet, the Messiah, the Lord Jesus Christ,
to identify myself with Christ. That's an expression of faith.
And then thirdly, baptism is a public confession of one's
sinfulness. It is a confession of one's repentance. And there
we're going to see again and again tonight, tomorrow night,
it is an expression of repentance and of faith. Now, let's get
to the several texts that, and I won't be able to get to them
all in this section. My time is already half over. But I want
to spend a bit of time with, I think, four frontline soldiers
that Pat has brought up before us. And the first is Mark 16,
16. It is correct. He said to them,
go into all the world and preach the gospel to every creature.
He who believes and is baptized will be saved, and he who does
not believe will be condemned. And I want you to believe exactly
what this verse says. I want you to believe exactly,
but I don't want you to go beyond what the verse says. Okay? There's
a difference there. I don't want you to make false
inferences from the passage, but I do want you to believe
exactly what the passage says. He lays out two possibilities
for the reception of the gospel. What happens when people hear
the gospel? The first is someone believes they're baptized and
the result is salvation. The second is someone does not
believe and is not condemned. And I believe that's exactly
what the Bible teaches throughout. That if you believe and are baptized,
you will be saved. That is an absolutely true statement.
Now, the first thing I want us to see under this is this verse,
as it stands in the Bible in plain English and in the Greek,
is a factual, not a conditional statement. Now, Pat will say,
well, sometimes conditional statements like his dad telling him to do
this and to do this and so on, that's true. It could be a conditional
statement. But to him, salvation on it when
it doesn't say if, and the Greek has a perfectly good way of expressing
that. The Greek has a very perfect
way of saying if and then a conditional statement. It is a factual statement
and I believe if you believe and if you are baptized you will
be saved. I also believe if you do not
believe you will be condemned in the gospel of Jesus Christ. Now the second thing I want us
to see about the verse is that it's not a comprehensive verse
about salvation. In other words, it doesn't cover
every possible issue. For instance, I believe Pat would
agree. This does not say he who believes
and is baptized, even if he stops believing later, will be saved.
There's a condition there that Jesus does not even cover. There
are those who believed, it appeared for a time, and then fell away.
And do we believe that they're saved? No. Jesus doesn't cover
that. He doesn't deal with that group.
It is a necessary inference that if someone is not baptized, or
does not believe, they will not be saved, because Jesus explicitly
states it. Now let me look thirdly, very
quickly here, and I'll explain what I mean by that more under
this point. That grammatically nor logically does this verse
have to say what Pat says. It may say what Pat says. I'll
grant that. But let's grant for a minute
that it is conditional statement. He used again the two, do this,
do this, and therefore this will happen. That's true. But in conditional
statements, in plain English, there are some conditions that
are essential. There are others that what we
would call accessory. There are some that are absolutely
essential, basic or indispensable. There are some that are accessory
that are not essential to the outcome. Let me give you a very
simple syllogism or simple statements here. He who enrolls at UT and
lives in the dorms will be a UT student, right? That's a true
statement. That's absolutely true. Statement
number two, he who does not enroll at UT will not be a UT student.
Is that true? Oh, yeah, that's true. They're
both absolutely true. Now, is it a true inference or
a false inference that if you don't live in the dorms? That
you can't be a student. Because one part of it is essential,
the other is accessory, it's a statement. Is it not true he
enrolls and lives in the dorms of a UT student? Yes. But is
it a conditional statement to say, if both of those things,
absolutely, otherwise you can't be? No. That is called the fallacy
of false inference. That is not logically nor grammatically
what this passage says. We've already seen he doesn't
cover all the bases. What about he who believes and is baptized
and later doesn't believe? Pat will admit it doesn't cover
that issue. He won't be saved. Pat would admit that. You've
got to continue to believe. By that, he admits that it's
not comprehensive. It doesn't cover every base.
And I'm saying that one of the bases not covered here is what
happens if the person believes and then is not baptized. Do
I believe you ought to be baptized? Absolutely. Do I believe it's
disobedience to not be baptized? Absolutely. Does that mean if
somebody physically and possibly can't do so, they are beyond
God's grace? I don't think so. Any more than
Romans 10 that says, if you confess with your mouth, neither do I
believe that a person who cannot speak is beyond God's grace.
Those are the normal expressions and they ought to be done. And
if that's not done, there's disobedience. Does that mean that a person
who cannot is beyond God's grace? I don't believe so. Now, the larger issue here with
Mark 16, since, and I hope Pat will be able to agree with this,
this conditional statement, even if we grant a conditional, does
not seal the case. It's not as confident and sure,
I think, as he presented it here. With basic logic and grammar
of the text, it can say more than what it just simply says
here. I hope Pat will agree with that. And I hope if he doesn't,
you see through that, that it's a false inference. It's not what's
stated in the passage. Now, let's come quickly to Acts
chapter 2. Acts chapter 2. Did I say you shouldn't believe
Mark 16? No. I'm saying you ought to believe
exactly what it says, but don't go beyond what the passage says.
That's what I'm saying. Acts chapter 2. It is true there
are two commands here. The first is to repent. To change
your mind. The first command is what's known
as a second-person plural. It's like me saying, you all
baptize or repent. The second command in the passage
is, be baptized. But in the Greek, it's different.
It's not, be baptized you all, but be baptized every single
one of you. It is a third-person singular. Now, I've tried to diagram up
here very simply. Where you have the for the remission
of your sins, yours, the pronoun, is second person plural. Now
you see how I have it diagrammed here? In the Greek, one of the
great things about Greek is you can almost chop up a sentence
and scramble it and still put it back together because of the
cases. It's got nominative and genitive and accusative because
of the various prepositions. You can almost put it back together.
Well here we have repent all of you, second person plural,
be baptized every single one of you, but it's baptism or repent
for the remission of your all sins. Now very simply, second
person plural, which one do you think it goes with grammatically?
I want you to believe exactly what Acts 2.38 says. Exactly! And it says, repent. every one of you, and be baptized
in the name of Jesus Christ for the remission of your sins."
If being baptized was connected for the remission of sins, you
know what that would mean grammatically? That if any one of you are baptized
for the remission of your sins, then the sins of all of you are
washed away, because that's second-person plural, their diagram. I want
you to see that exactly. I know that's a hard argument
to follow, but we have to be that particular when we address
the Greek. Now, when we consider other parallel
passages throughout the Gospel of Luke, which Luke also wrote,
and the Book of Acts, notice these several passages. Luke
3, 3. He went into all the region around the Jordan preaching a
baptism of repentance for the remission of sins. That's what
I've just said with this previous illustration, with the previous
diagram. It's repentance for the remission
of sins. That's exactly what Peter says. Notice in Acts 3,
19. Repent therefore and be converted
that your sins may be blotted out. What is essential? Repentance.
He doesn't mention baptism. Third, him God exalted to his
right hand to be Prince and Savior to give repentance to Israel
and forgiveness of sins. Acts 1043, to him all the prophets
witnessed that through his name whoever believes in him will
receive remission of sins. It's repeated over and over again
and never is it again repeated in that same way as Pat is suggesting. You'll see Acts 13.38, everyone
who believes is justified from all things, from which you could
not be justified by the law of Moses. Acts 26.18, Paul's call
to turn them from darkness to light. I don't have time to get
into it. I've only got about 18 seconds
left. But I hope you see how careful I'm trying to be with
these texts. I don't want to just gloss over them and just...
Acts 2.38 as well as Mark 16 are not conclusively what Pat
has said. I hope we can see that and wait
to deal with some of the other text in the next section. Appreciate
the very good job Stephen is doing. I'm glad he's here to
defend his position. He began by talking about that
the idea of water is not essential in the word baptism. That's right.
Baptism just means immersion. But I want you to notice something
I think you'll agree with this point. I asked him in a question
over email, do you agree that words or phrases in the Bible
are to be understood with their primary, normal, and literal
meaning unless the context or some other verse demands that
we take them in a secondary, unusual, and or figurative sense?
And he basically said a few things and he said very simply, yes.
And that's kind of the question I have at the top. And I want
you to notice, first of all, as we go on in this discussion,
is that when you read about baptism in the New Testament, yes, sometimes
you'll read about Holy Spirit baptism, which is a figurative
use of baptism, not literal. Water baptism is a literal immersion. I believe what we have up here
is about 68 times over here on the left that Stephen and I would
agree where the word baptism is mentioned 68 times is referring
to water baptism. He would agree it's water. Then
there are six times over here that where the word baptism is
mentioned that both he and I would agree with Holy Spirit baptism.
Now right up in here are the ones we disagree on. So let's
just throw those out. He would probably say Holy Spirit
on those and I would say water. Let's throw those out. So 68
times we would agree it's water baptism and 6 times Holy Spirit
baptism. Yes, baptism can refer to Holy Spirit baptism, but he's
already admitted in this question that you should take, unless
something dictates otherwise, the normal or the literal meaning,
unless something dictates otherwise. So since we're looking at Galatians
3 and Colossians 2, And the other one was Romans 6, where we would
dispute. The first thing I'd like you
to think about is what is the normal, literal meaning, because
that's the one that we should take unless you could prove otherwise. Okay? Put it at number 7. And
then he mentioned Luke 5, 33, for example, that these people
were disciples in the name of John, but they weren't baptized
in the name of John. That's right. Paul's argument,
and my argument, is not that every time in the history of
the world somebody was a disciple of another, that they had to
be baptized in the name of that person. For example, Confucius
or somebody like that. If you were a disciple of him,
you wouldn't have to be baptized in the name of Confucius. That's
not Paul's argument. But Paul's argument was That's
his argument, now, Stephen. Remember, not my argument. His
argument was that to be of Paul, you'd have to be baptized in
the name of Paul. Now, he's not talking about disciple of just
anybody, but he says to be of Paul, disciple of Paul, you'd
have to be baptized in the name of Paul. Why is that true? Because
he has in mind trying to get these people to quit being a
follower of Paul and to start being a follower of Christ. And
so the implication is that to be a follower of Christ, to be
of Christ, you'd have to be baptized in the name of Christ. knowing
the truth that to be of Christ, you have to be baptized in the
name of Christ. That's why Paul can make the argument. You're
not of Paul because you weren't baptized in the name of Paul.
That's Paul's argument, Stephen, not my argument. In this case,
his argument is either valid or invalid. That's not necessarily
valid about any disciple of anybody, but it's valid in this case,
and he has in mind being of Christ. After all, that is the goal there,
right? For these people to be of Christ. And so the argument
still stands, Paul's argument, not mine, that to be of Paul,
you'd have to be baptized in the name of Paul. That's what
he said. And the conclusion would be, since the goal is to be of
Christ, you'd have to be baptized in the name of Christ. That is
clear, a valid argument, a true argument, an indisputable argument.
And then Stephen mentioned that John the Baptist's baptism was
not for the remission of sins. Now I don't agree, but I'm going
to ignore the point because I don't think it's essential to this
discussion. And the reason is, if you read Acts 19 verses 3
through 5, you'll see some people that were baptized by John's
baptism, yet to be saved, they had to be rebaptized in the name
of Christ. So John's baptism and Jesus'
baptism are two different things. So we're not discussing John's
baptism. It could have been baptism in grape juice, but it wouldn't
matter. Jesus' baptism was in water for
the remission of sins, regardless of what John's baptism was. Put
up number 14. Then Stephen got to Mark 16.16,
so I'd like you to turn back there. First, Stephen said that the
first part of Mark 16.16 is factual, not conditional. That's not true.
You don't have to have an if word to be conditional. He that
believeth and is baptized shall be saved is of a grammatical
form where it is conditional. And I gave you some examples
before. Now, let me give you either those
examples again or to give them to you in more detail. For example,
he that eateth and digesteth his food shall live, but he that
eateth not shall die. Is that just factual, he's saying,
or is it conditional? It's conditional, isn't it? Both
he eateth and digesteth are absolutely necessary. He that eateth not
shall die does not comment upon whether or not digestion is necessary.
So Mark 16, 16b actually does not comment upon whether or not
baptism is necessary. All it does is say that if you
don't believe, you won't be saved. Here's another one. He that plants
and picks corn will have corn to eat, but he that doesn't plant
will not have corn. Both planting and picking are
absolutely necessary to getting corn to eat. It is not necessary
to say, and doesn't pick, in the second clause of the sentence.
If a man doesn't plant any seed, there isn't any reason for saying,
and doesn't pick. For a person to be scripturally baptized,
he has to believe first. Acts 8, verse 36. And so the
reason, verse 16b, it doesn't have to mention baptism again,
because if a person doesn't believe, baptism isn't even applicable
anymore. If you don't plant the corn, you don't have to talk
about picking it. It's not going to be there. He that believeth and
is baptized shall be saved. That's what you have to do to
be saved. He that believeth not shall be condemned. If you don't
believe, you don't need to talk about baptism. It wouldn't even
be applicable. He that plays Major League Baseball and bats
for the highest average will win the batting title, but he
that doesn't play will certainly not win. Is that just factual
or is it also conditional? Everybody here can see it's conditional.
Both playing and batting for the highest average are necessary
to winning the batting title. It isn't necessary to say he
does not bat with the highest average in the B part of the
sentence. If a man doesn't play the game, his batting average
isn't applicable. Put up number 17. Now, Stephen says, well,
suppose it is conditional. Well, it is. He says the second
part is not necessarily essential. Sure it is. Stephen gives an
illustration. I want you to notice the illustration
carefully. He that enrolls at UT, University of Tennessee,
and lives in the dorm will be a UT student. Now it is true
that living in the dorm is not necessary to being a UT student.
That's true. But the sentence itself is illogical. If you came
up to me and said that, I would immediately say that's not true.
You don't have to live in the dorm to be a UT student. All
of you Baptists here. If Steven came up to you and
said, he that enrolls at UT and lives in the dorm will be a UT
student, wouldn't you immediately stand up and say, Steven, you're
wrong. You don't have to live in the dorm to be a UT student.
That is what we call a false sentence. He's got the words
right, and he's right the second part is not essential, but he's
wrong. He's implying that you have to
live in the dorm to be a UT student, and that is absolutely not true.
Let me give you something that Roy Deaver, how he responded
to this same argument. Now, the way this argument usually
goes, and here's a good illustration that you could have used, Stephen.
He that getteth on the train and is seated shall go to Dallas.
It's like Stephen's thing. Well, the seated part is obviously
not absolutely essential to getting to Dallas. Now, here's how Roy
Deaver responded to that, and he's right. In English class,
it is often pointed out that we must be careful to see to
it that our sentences are true sentences. There are true sentences,
Stephen, and there are false sentences. If the blessings or
benefits contemplated in the sentence can be had without one's
meeting the conditions specified in the sentence, then the sentence
is a false statement. And that's what's going on here.
You don't have to be seated to get to Dallas. That sentence is false.
And if somebody said that at the train station, I would jump
immediately up and I would say, no, that's wrong. You don't have
to sit down to get to Dallas. You could stand up in the train
to get to Dallas anyway. That sentence is just wrong. But you
know, Jesus didn't say things that were wrong. He didn't say
false sentences. He that getteth on the train and is seated shall
go to Dallas. And if, in fact, one can get on the train and
go to Dallas without being seated, then the sentence is a false
sentence. The Lord gave no false sentences. Every condition that
He mentioned is necessary to the receiving of the promised
blessing. Mark 16, 16, condition salvation upon belief in baptism.
Both conditions must be met. It is that simple. Now, let me
give you a couple of other illustrations. Just see how logical they are.
Think of this. This is really what Stephen did. Listen to this
sentence. He that buys a ticket and gets on the train and stays
with the relatives in Atlanta shall make it to Atlanta. Is
that illogical? No, it's true that that last
condition isn't necessarily the result. That's why it's illogical.
Everybody here knows you don't have to stay with your relatives
in Atlanta to make it to Atlanta, even though that sentence tries
to imply that you do. Isn't it illogical? Can't you
see it? Tell me if this sentence is logical or not. He that, talking
about the presidential race, he that enters the race and gets
the most votes and lives in the White House shall be elected
president. That sentence doesn't make any sense, does it? What
doesn't make sense about it? Because it does, Stephen, imply
that you have to live in the White House to be elected president,
and that's not true. So the sentence does necessarily
imply something that's not true. And your sentence does too. Your
sentence, he that enrolls at UT and lives in the dorm at UT
will become a UT student, is a sentence that implies something
that's not true, so it's a false sentence. Everybody here can
see that. Everybody here can know that Stephen's sentence
is false. It's illogical. Everybody could have just jumped
up right when Stephen said that and said, no Stephen, you don't
have to live in the dorm to be a UT student, yet your sentence
implied that you do. Now, let's go back to my original
prediction. Mark 16, 16, He that believeth and is baptized shall
be saved. Didn't I just ask you to accept the plain meaning of
that? And didn't Stephen struggle, struggle, struggle, struggle
to try to get you to accept something that wasn't the plain meaning
of that sentence? Isn't that really what happened? I think
that it was. Next, he went to Acts 2, verse
38. Put up number 41. Stephen, had a diagram of that sentence.
Unfortunately, the diagram is wrong. It's not a correct diagram,
and your English teacher would have corrected you if you'd have
brought that to us. Here's the way that Dr. DiSeggio at MTSU,
who taught there for 40 years, here's how he diagrammed the
sentence. Peter said unto them, and watch this, If every one
of you shall repent, for the remission of sins goes with repent,
and for the remission of sins goes with be baptized. Not either
or. The way that it's diagrammed
by a Ph.D. at the universities is that for
the remission of sins goes with both. Do you see that? Repent
for the remission of sins. Be baptized for the remission
of sins. Now I had diagramming sentences in the 8th grade and
that's the way they would have taught me to diagram that sentence.
Now put up number 36. Stephen's argument here is that
repent is second person plural and that be baptized is third
person singular. And that for the remission of sins is third
person singular, so it, excuse me, it's second person plural,
so it has to go with repent, cannot go with be baptized. That argument won't work. First of all, let me say this.
Stephen, if that argument were so, what would be the big deal? Because we've already been over
Romans 6 verse 3 that says you're baptized into Christ. And that's
the same word as for the remission of sins, ace, remission of sins.
What's the difference when baptism, ace, Christ, and baptism for
the remission of sins? There is no difference. So this
is taught elsewhere the same thing. But what is the rule of
grammar, Stephen, that says that a prepositional phrase that has
second person plural in it cannot modify the phrase be baptized
which is third person singular? We have not found any rule of
grammar that says that. Now, everybody look at the verse.
Did you notice, Stephen, in Acts 2, verse 38, in the audience,
I want to invite you to look at the verse. It says, Repent
and be baptized, every one of you. Did you notice that was
second-person plural? So when we get to the remission
of sins, for the remission of sins, going backwards, what is
the last second-person plural we have? Remember, he says, for
the remission of sins, because it says, for the remission of
your sins, second-person plural can't go with be baptized. But
the last second-person plural we have going backwards is not
repent, it's be baptized every one of you, second-person plural. Do you all understand that? For
the remission of sins, second-person plural. Going backwards, what's
the last second-person plural? It's in the phrase be baptized
every one of you, second-person plural. So why would you make
for the remission of sins, go back and modify repent, but not
be baptized every one of you when you have second-person plural
In that phrase, be baptized every one of you, second person plural,
for the remission of sins, second person plural. Now everybody
look at Haggai 1 verse 9. Now I want you to notice this,
Stephen, the audience, raise it up. This has similar to construction
to Acts 2.38, Stephen, and this is, I'm mainly making these points
from the Septuagint, but you can see it from the English.
So it's from the Greek, Stephen. Haggai 1.9 says you run, second
person plural, unto, and there's your word ace, unto his own house. Unto his own house, that's third-person
singular. Now remember, Stephen's reasoning
was you can't have that prepositional phrase if it's second-person
plural going with the third-person singular verb. Well, here we
have the verb, second-person plural, we have the prepositional
phrase, third-person singular. According to Stephen's reasoning,
unto his own house cannot modify ye run. And so when it says ye
run, we have no idea where they're running to. Because one is second-person
plural, the other is third-person singular. So the second cannot
modify the first, so according to Stephen's logic, we don't
know where they were running to because unto his own house
cannot modify ye run, because they're a different person and
number. No, we can see right through that. Can't we all see
that? That even though second-person, ye run is second-person plural
and unto his own house is third-person singular, unto his own house
modifies ye run, and it's telling exactly where they ran to, unto
their own house. It doesn't matter that one is
second-person plural and one is third-person singular because
there is no rule of Greek grammar that says third-person singular
prepositional phrase cannot modify second-person plural verb. And
there is no rule of grammar that says for the remission of sin
second-person plural prepositional phrase cannot modify the verb
be baptized every one of you because it's third-person singular.
Now I don't have time but the next two charts I will show you
the Greek scholars that say not only does for the remission of
sins can go with be baptized, but that it does. Thank you very
much. Before I go on to some of the other passages such as
Acts 22, let me just go back and make a couple brief comments.
I stand on the things that I said previously, which doesn't mean
that I don't think they could be defended again, but I don't
want to waste your time. I think it's very plain to see that when
I make the statement, he who is a UT student and stays in
the dorms, or he who enrolls at UT and stays in the dorms
is a student, that's a statement of fact that you would not jump
up and go, wait a minute, that's false. Did any of you do that? Did any of you go, wow, man,
that was so false, how could you make a statement? Of course
not. Because it's not a conditional statement, it's a statement of
fact. And Pat is right. It could be a conditional. I
tried to grant that as a possible conditional statement. But that
doesn't necessarily make it a conditional statement. Again, I was trying
to prove from that passage. And he used a lot of examples
that I simply didn't use. But if I say to you, he who enrolls
and stays in the dorms is a UT student, that is not illogical.
Pat with great fervency said that that's false. That's not
a false statement. Isn't that a true statement?
If I said, only those who stay in the dorms, then that would
be a false statement. Okay, so I hope that's understood
clearly. Acts chapter 2, it's the normal
usage of grammar that the pronoun and the verb agree. I don't have
to quote a bunch of Greek scholars to prove that. Most of you know
that. Haggai 1.9, all of you all run into each of your houses. What he's not saying is, all
of you all run into all of all of your all's houses, of course,
and there's no problem with the grammar there. But it is a problem
to say, each one of you be baptized for all of your all's sins. That's
a horrible theological problem. If so, Pat's already done it
for me. Right? If he can be baptized individually
for the remission of all of our sins, then it's by proxy. Actually, had a fellow, well,
I won't get into that, but that's just not a problem. OK, that's
the normal usage of the grammar. I don't want to waste your time.
I urge you to go and listen to those arguments. Think about
what Pat is saying. And if it's worthy, then listen
to it. Otherwise, I just stand where I stand. I don't want to
waste a lot of time on that. Acts 22, verse 16, another key
passage in Pat's understanding. And again, I want you to believe
exactly what the passage says. and what it means. Acts 22 16.
Why are you waiting? Ananias speaking to Paul, arise
and be baptized and wash away your sins, calling on the name
of the Lord. Yes, it's true you can have two things on the opposite
sides of ands and both of them be connected. There's no question.
All the examples he used, that's perfectly fine. But the question
is, is that what Paul says here? Through the inspiration of the
Holy Spirit, what Luke writes, is this what is written? I agree
with all of his examples, but does the example apply to this
particular passage grammatically? Now, first of all, in most of
the English translations that I've consulted, it looks like
there are three commands. There are not three commands
in this verse. There are two what are known as imperatives.
There are two commands. The first is, be baptized. That's the first
command of what Ananias tells Paul. Saul at this time. The
second is, wash away your sins. And those two commands are separated
in the middle by an. In the Greek, it is, be baptized
as one imperative to Paul, and secondly, wash away your sins.
Now, if you could view these two verbs on each side of the
an. The an's in the middle, here
are these two verbs. At the opposite ends in the sentence are participles.
Participles, when they stand next to verbs, modify the verbs
nearest to them. So literally, if you'll show
the next one, Gary, please. It's literally, arising, be baptized. That's the command. How am I
to be baptized? Well, he says, by arising. You
can't do it here. You've got to go find some water, of course. The
participle, which modifies baptized, at this end of the sentence,
it's arising, be baptized, chi, and there's the conjunction.
Secondly, here's the second thing you do. The second command is,
wash away your sins. Then the next participle, modifying,
wash away your sins. How are the sins washed away?
The participle is not being baptized. The participle is calling on
the name of the Lord. So the grammar of the passage
itself is simply what that says. Arising, be baptized. And then
the second thing you need to do, Paul, is wash away your sins,
calling on the name of the Lord. The grammar is very simple. The
grammar is very clear. Now, we find that this agrees
with the rest of the Bible because the Bible speaks in harmony.
When you look at Psalm 86.5, for you, O Lord, are good and
ready to forgive and abundant mercy to all those who call upon
you. Joel 2.32, whoever calls on the name of the Lord shall
be saved. It's quoted again in Acts chapter 2. And it shall
come to pass that whoever calls on the name of the Lord shall
be saved. Romans 10.9, if you confess with your mouth the Lord
Jesus, believe in your heart that God is raised from the dead,
you will be saved. that is calling upon the name of the Lord. Romans
10, 12-13, there's no distinction between Jew and Greek for the
same Lord. Overall, it's rich to all those who call upon Him.
For whoever calls on the name of the Lord shall be saved. Paul
does not, or Ananias does not add another condition for salvation
here. It agrees with the rest of the scripture. Paul, get up
and be baptized and wash away your sins. How? Calling on the
name of the Lord. I think it's simple grammar.
I think everybody here can see that. And if you don't know Greek
or you don't trust me, go look it up, take a little bit of Greek
and look at the text itself and you'll see that's exactly then
what it says. Now, the last passage I would
like to look at in some detail is 1 Peter chapter 3. 1 Peter
chapter 3, I admit, is a difficult passage. And Pat would say, well,
it's not difficult if you just take it for what it says. But
it's difficult in a couple of ways. One is the overarching
context of 1 Peter 3 and how it deals with Jesus and how He
went either by the Spirit back to the days of Moses or did it
while He was dead. The commentators, you've got
to know, are just not all agreed in exactly what that means. It's
just not nailed down. At least the commentators that
I've read and been exposed to, it's a difficult passage to look
at the context. There's disagreement between
good, solid commentators on what this passage actually says. So
the context makes it somewhat difficult. Another thing that
makes the passage difficult is there's at least one hypoxilogomena,
which means a Greek word that is used one time in the New Testament
and nowhere else. And the word that's used here
and nowhere else in the New Testament is what Peter writes here as
the answer of a good conscience toward God. Some of the lexicographers,
those who write Greek dictionaries, they say that it means something
like an answer or even a demand of a good conscience. Others
say that it is a pledge, but quite frankly, it's a toss-up
because there's no other example in the New Testament where this
word is used. It makes that part of the text
difficult to understand. Then the other word that is used
only one other time in the New Testament is the antitype. And
most, again, of the lexicographers and the commentators that I've
read admit that the way the writer to the Hebrews uses the word
antitype is different from the way that Peter uses it here.
So it makes the passage difficult, even grammatically. That's just
one of the basic rules. You can't just make up meanings
for words or pick and choose one. So when it's ambiguous,
it's a hard text to look at. So now here is the antitype,
which is clearly baptism. Now here's what I want you to
consider. And that is, what is baptism now doing? And he writes
to New Testament Christians who are presently believing that
it is now saving you. Or some of the textual variants
say, now saving us. And I asked Pat at one point,
how is your baptism now saving you? And I think that's a key
issue. It doesn't say that one time
saved us or one time and now has benefits for us, but in some
way the baptism Peter is speaking of is now, and it's a present
active verb, is now saving you. And that's, I think, a very important
issue. It is now saving you. The question
is, it is now saving you in what way? Does it mean justification?
Does it mean salvation? Does it mean forgiveness of sins?
Does it mean, as it says in Matthew, he will save his people from
their sins? Does it mean salvation from the perverse generation
in which we are in? That's where I lean with the
passage. that even as the Noah, the Noahic and the flood and
all that happened was a salvation through temporal judgment and
the sins of the world, that did not mean Noah and his sons were
saved. but it was an illustration of how they were saved through
temporal judgment. In the same way, I can just say
to a Christian that your baptism is now saving you. In what way?
Well, notice again what it says here. How it is doing it? Negatively,
the baptism is not that which is physical, the removal of the
filth of the flesh. He doesn't want them to misunderstand.
Well, does that mean the baptism, the water baptism, the physical
baptism? And Pat doesn't believe that it's actually the washing
of the way of the sins in any way. He doesn't believe that.
That's a straw man. I don't want to use that against
him. But I think Peter is making the point, it's not physical.
It's not the removal of the filth from the flesh, but it is, secondly,
positively, it has something spiritual to do, which is either
an answer of a good conscience toward God, or I prefer, a pledge
of a good conscience toward God. So here's basically the construct.
that by baptism, when somebody commits themselves and pledges
to the Lord, I will walk with a good conscience before you.
I am dead to myself through my baptism. I'm demonstrating to
other believers and other unbelievers that I am dead to myself and
I'm raised in the newness of Christ, I will walk according
to His ways, that that baptism continues to save because it
is the reminder of the pledge I've made to keep a good conscience.
Paul says in Acts chapter 26 that I do always strive to keep
a good conscience before God and before man. There are a number
of times that this good conscience is tied not to water, but to
faith. 1st Timothy 1.5, now the purpose
of the commandment is love from a pure heart, from a good conscience,
and from sincere faith. I don't think I have this one,
Gary, so I'll just read these passages. Thank you. 1st Timothy 1.19,
having faith and a good conscience, which some having rejected concerning
the faith have suffered shipwreck. 1st Timothy 3.9, holding the
mystery of the faith with a pure conscience. And then Hebrews
10.22, let us draw near with a true heart and full assurance
of faith, having our hearts sprinkled from an evil conscience and our
bodies washed with pure water. There, it's obviously in that
connection, physical, or not physical things, but spiritual
things, and the conscience is not a physical thing, it is a
spiritual, it is the issue of what God gives us in order to
walk with Him according to His words. Let me go on, as I've addressed
some of those major texts, let me go on and deal with some secondary
things. One of the concerns that I have
with Pat's view of baptism, and I've asked him this before and
I believe it's still the case, that he believes baptism is essential
to the gospel. Well, the problem I have with
that is that I don't believe the gospel is changing. For instance,
there's the problem of baptism not being essential to the unchanging
gospel because the gospel was preached in the Old Testament
and there was no baptism. Notice in Galatians 3 and verse
8, the scripture foreseeing that God would justify the Gentiles
by faith preached the gospel to Abraham before. Now, if baptism
is essential to the unchanging gospel, he had to have preached
baptism to him as well. If not, it's not the, in logical
terms, sine qua non, that without which you can't have. That without
which, if it is essential to the gospel, we either have a
gospel that is changing, and I hope that Pat's not going to
say that, but if we have the same gospel preached to Abraham
as preached to us, then the essence is the person and work of Jesus
Christ, not baptism. Also in Hebrews chapter 4 it
tells us that the gospel was preached, verse 2, was preached
to us as well as to them, speaking of the people of Israel. I believe
the gospel was preached both to Abraham and to the people
of Israel. And was baptism a part of that? Of course not. It was
not the sine qua non. It was not that without which
you couldn't have. So we either have an evolving kind of gospel
that you can add and take away things from, or if it's not essential
to the gospel, under the old covenant, it's certainly not
under the new covenant. Paul's description of his own
call in 1 Corinthians 1.17, For Christ did not send me to baptize,
but to preach the gospel. There he separates the two. Mark
16, 16, Jesus says, preach the gospel, he who believes and is
baptized. Baptism is a response to the
gospel. It's not a part of the gospel. It's proper obedience
to the gospel. To put baptism into the essential
nature of what must be believed to be saved is making baptism
an object of our faith. Pat will say, you must not only
believe in that when you're baptized, but be baptized for the remission
of sins. If you're sincere, you look back, the sincere disciple
of Jesus Christ who doesn't understand Pat's particular view, which
is by way, by far the minority view in church history, which
that doesn't account for a lot in some of your views, but that's
just a simple fact, But there's a problem with faith and baptism.
I would challenge Pat to show me a passage that says you must
believe in baptism in this way. Now if the scripture reveals
it, surely you must believe it. But in the way he's defining
it, it makes it the object of faith, not Christ and his person
and work, which is part of the unchanging gospel, Abraham through
Israel under the new covenant. Galatians 1 warns us against
somebody bringing another gospel. And I would ask Pat, is the baptism
essential to the gospel? If so, do you have a changing
gospel between the Old and the New Covenant? I believe that
there is only one baptism that is salvific. And is the baptism
spoken of in the book of Ephesians 4 and verse 5? There's one body,
one spirit, just as you were called in one hope of your calling,
one Lord, one faith, one baptism. There's one saving baptism, which
Paul describes in 1 Corinthians 12, 13 as baptism by one spirit
into one body, both of which are spiritual.
Part 1
Series Baptism Debate
| Sermon ID | 32804203321 |
| Duration | 1:11:29 |
| Date | |
| Category | Debate |
| Language | English |
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