Does Jesus’ Baptism Condemn You?
Does
baptism matter? Most Americans have come
to the conclusion that it does not, a person can be saved and go to heaven
baptized or not. It is such a settled
conviction with most that they are not willing to give the study of the topic
the time of day. It is ridiculous to
even consider it as they see it. Only
the spiritually blinded, only the cult faction, could think otherwise from
their point of view.
It seems to
me this is taking the same attitude the Pharisees took back in the first
century. They had their settled law and
there was no point in thinking there was any possibility that they might be in
error. When Jesus came along and started
questioning some of their beliefs and practices there was nothing to do but
crucify him for there was no possibility in their mind that they could be wrong
in their religion. What he had to say
had to be heresy.
A man ought
to be cautious in reaching conclusions in spiritual matters for once this life
is over and the next one has begun there is no going back a second time and
getting it right. There are no second
chances and eternity is a long, long time.
I would like to look at baptism and want to start with an account that
is often overlooked - the baptism of Jesus when John baptized him.
It is
certainly true that the baptism of John differs from that which the Lord
commanded in the great commission as given in Matthew 28 and Mark 16. If I was to be baptized with the baptism of
John today it would not do me an ounce of good for its time has long since come
and gone. Nevertheless, that was not the
case when Jesus came to John to be baptized approximately 2,000 years ago.
Mark tells
us (Mark 1:4 NKJV), “John came baptizing in the
wilderness and preaching a baptism of repentance for the remission of
sins.” We know that Jesus never sinned
and when Jesus comes to John to be baptized John is hesitant. In Matthew
Now note
carefully how Jesus responds. “But Jesus
answered and said to him, ‘Permit it to be so now, for thus it is fitting for
us to fulfill all righteousness.’ Then
he allowed Him.” (Matt.
Why was
Jesus baptized? To fulfill all righteousness
for that is what he says. What did he
mean by that? The answer is found in
Psalms 119:172, “My tongue shall speak of Your word,
For all Your commandments are righteousness.”
Jesus was baptized because it was the righteous thing to do for God had
commanded it and all of God’s commandments are righteousness.
In Matt. 21
Jesus is being confronted by the chief priests and the elders who want to know
by what authority he is doing the things he is doing. The Bible says, (Matt.
Jesus is
saying John’s baptism has to be either from God or from man, which was it? Jesus believed (knew) it was from God and was
baptized. The Pharisees did not believe
it was from God and thus were not baptized.
In Jesus’ case belief led to obedience, in the Pharisee’s case disbelief
led to disobedience.
In Luke 7
Jesus has been talking about John the Baptist and the Bible says, beginning in
verse 29, “And when all the people heard Him (Jesus – DS), even the tax
collectors justified God, having been baptized with the baptism of John. But the Pharisees and lawyers rejected the counsel
of God for themselves, not having been baptized by him.” (NKJV) This provides further proof that John’s
baptism was from or of God.
The counsel
of God was that men receive John’s message and be baptized. John’s message was that men repent and be
baptized, a baptism of repentance for the remission of sins.
The Good News Bible translates Mark
1:4 as follows: “So John appeared in the
desert, baptizing and preaching. ‘Turn away from your sins and be baptized,’ he
told the people, ‘and God will forgive your sins.’" This was the message of God for the people
that was rejected by the Pharisees, lawyers, chief priests, and elders.
But, the Bible says “even the tax
collectors justified God, have been baptized with the baptism of John.” (Luke
Part of John’s message was that
there was to be wrath to come and the way of escape was to repent and be
baptized for the remission of sins. When
men obeyed John’s preaching
they were in affect saying by their actions that God was just in bringing this wrath upon them
unless they did repent and obey and that it was just of him to demand their
repentance and baptism.
Now what does all
of this have to do with you and me today, with men and women in general? There is a direct application and an argument I think no one can reject save at their own
peril.
Jesus asked the question where did John’s baptism come from, from God or man. Here is the question for you and me today,
where did the baptism Jesus commanded come from, from God or man?
Why would it be wrong to reject
John’s baptism in its time but right to reject Jesus’ baptism in our time? Jesus made it clear that to reject John’s
baptism in its time was to reject the counsel of God against themselves. Are we not doing the same thing today,
rejecting God’s counsel against ourselves, when we refuse to be baptized with
Jesus’ baptism, the baptism of the great commission. If not why not?
One cannot reason his way out of
this dilemma but it gets even worse for those who want to reject baptism. Please note it was a salvation issue with
Jesus concerning John’s baptism. Are you
going to say it is not a salvation issue today with Jesus’ baptism?
How much difference is there in the
meaning of the words, “a baptism of repentance for the remission of sins” (Mark
1:4 NKJV) spoken concerning John’s baptism and the words “repent, and let every
one of you be baptized in the name of Jesus Christ for the remission of sins”
(Acts 2:38 NKJV) spoken concerning the baptism Jesus requires in our own
time? The words sound very similar to
me.
Am I saying that both baptisms were
identical? No, but the difference lay
not in the end to be achieved. John’s
baptism ultimately would have done no good had Jesus not died on the
cross. In that sense it looked forward
and was a promise. We have this in our
everyday lives all of the time. If I do
this then I am promised that even though that may be down the road a ways. Paychecks are like that. We work trusting by faith the promise that we
will be paid. This was John’s baptism.
Does this mean their actual
forgiveness lay down the road somewhere in the future and was not immediate? No, for it was a certainty, not just a
promise, that Jesus would die on the cross.
The deed was as good as done the day it was first prophesied. When Moses and Elijah met Jesus on the Mount
of Transfiguration Jesus had not yet died on the cross. Was their salvation hanging in the balance
until he did die? To ask is to
answer. So it was with those who obeyed
John’s teaching. Their sins were
forgiven then and there or else John misled them for he said it was for the
forgiveness of sins.
The baptism Jesus gave man by way of
the great commission was based on the fact that Jesus had already died and shed
his blood for the remission of sins and the salvation of man. Man has to believe the gospel, the death,
burial, and resurrection of Jesus (1 Cor. 15:1-4). In short, for a man to receive the baptism of
Jesus he must believe in the historical Jesus, the Savior of the world.
If a man today refuses to obey the
command to be baptized he refuses to do what Jesus said he was doing when he
said, “it is fitting for us to fulfill all righteousness.” (Matt.
Does Jesus' baptism condemn
you? It well could for when all is said
and done you will either make camp with the Pharisees and other unbelievers who
could not take God’s word at face value, believe and obey it, or you will camp
with those who did believe and did obey.
You will either reject the counsel of God against yourself refusing to
be baptized or else you will accept it, believe and obey it. Make no mistake about it, for there are way
too many passages that teach it, God has commanded baptism for you and me today thus it becomes a matter of either we will or we
won’t. We will either accept his counsel
or we will reject it.
I am sometimes taken aback by how
people can just blow off baptism as being an insignificant thing unworthy of
time or trouble. It is a reflection on
God. Really is that not what Jesus was
saying way back when – you don’t believe God?
So many want to be saved by faith today apart from baptism and cannot
see, as though blinded, that baptism is a part of faith, a part of the faith
that saves. You are either going to
believe God or you are not going to believe him when he speaks of baptism in
his word. Why is it we can see this when
Jesus addresses the subject of John’s baptism but cannot see the direct
application to our own response in our time to Jesus’ baptism?
I doubt any of us can fully grasp
the power that tradition exerts on us when it comes to how we see things and
how we think. Add to that the influence
of friends and family and the desire for it to be the way we want it to be
often because of family. All that be as it may God’s word stands and so what are we going to
do about it becomes the question. Many
have answered “I am not going to believe it” as did the Pharisees. They did not believe it because they did not
want to believe it. We pretty much end
up believing what we want to believe instead of what we ought to believe.
I close this now just adding one
final thought. The decision is yours.