Are There Two
Baptisms?
"And he said unto them, Go ye into all the world, and preach the
gospel to every creature. He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved; but he that
believeth not shall be damned." (Mk.16:15-16)
"...baptism doth also now save us..."
(1Pet.3:21)
Christians everywhere practice TWO baptisms. One is water baptism, which
Christian ministers encourage their followers to do as "an inward sign of what has
happened in their hearts". The other is "Spirit baptism"... which is the baptism of the
holy Ghost, with the initial evidence of speaking in other tongues.
From these scriptures, and others like them, we see that salvation will be given only to
those who have been baptized! Let this unshakable biblical truth echo in the corridors
of your spirit and mind. Without baptism, there is no hope of salvation.
"...baptism doth also now save us..." (1Pet.3:21) With that revelation
from the Apostle Peter, one is confronted with an obvious question: Is the baptism
which we must receive a baptism with water or is it the baptism of the holy Spirit?
The earliest congregation, being exclusively Jewish, practiced two baptisms. They baptized
with John the Baptist's baptism of water, telling those who humbled themselves to this
divinely ordained baptism to expect to receive Jesus' baptism of the Spirit. They
followed the pattern set by John, who told those whom he baptized, "I indeed
baptize you with water; but one mightier than I cometh, the latchet of whose shoes I am
not worthy to unloose. He shall baptize you with the holy Ghost and with fire" (Lk.3:16).
These two baptisms, John's and Jesus', are the only two baptisms which God
has ever ordained.
John's baptism was not simply a baptism in water. Without John's message of a
mightier One coming with a mightier baptism, water baptism is nothing more than a
useless soaking. John's baptism always included an exhortation to receive the holy Ghost
baptism; his message and his baptism were two parts of one act. Twelve men in Ephesus
thought they had received John's baptism, but because they had not heard about the holy
Ghost, the apostle Paul disagreed. He explained to those misinformed disciples that
"John verily baptized with the baptism of repentance, SAYING..." (Acts 19:4).
So we, with Paul, must conclude that even though they had been baptized
with water, they had not really received John's baptism, for they had not been told to
expect the holy Ghost baptism. John's message about the holy Ghost was as much a part
of his baptism as was the water.
Another overlooked truth concerning John's baptism was that it had to be earned.
John was not a spiritual harlot, taking in anyone who wanted to join his cause.
Receiving his baptism was an honor; it was not something that a person could receive
simply by deciding that he wanted it. One had to repent of the evil he had done; he had
to confess and turn from his evil ways. Only then would John baptize him. When some
unrepentant souls dared to come to John to be baptized, the man of God was harsh:
"O generation of vipers, who hath warned you to flee from the wrath to come?
Bring forth therefore fruits worthy of repentance... (Lk.3:7-8; Mt.3:7-8). However, when
sincere souls asked what to do so that he would baptize them, "He answered and said
unto them, `He that hath two coats, let him impart to him that hath none. And he that
hath meat, let him do likewise.' Then came also the publicans to be baptized, and said
unto him, `Master, what shall we do?' And he said unto them, `Exact no more than
that which is appointed you.' And the soldiers likewise demanded of him, saying, `And
what shall we do?' And he said unto them, `Do violence to no man, neither accuse any
falsely, and be content with your wages'" (Lk.3:7-14).
The third truth concerning John's baptism which must be seen, if one would rightly
understand baptism, is that no one but Jews were allowed to receive it. John, like Jesus,
was sent only to the house of Israel. Concerning his commission from God, John said,
when Jesus came to him at the Jordan River, "This is he of whom I said, `After
me cometh a man which is preferred before me', for he was before me. And I knew him
not. But that he should be made manifest to Israel, therefore am I come baptizing with
water" (Jn.1:30-31).
These then are the three indispensable elements of John's baptism:
- It was for the circumcised [Jews] only.
- It was given only to Jews who truly repented.
- It was given with a message of Jesus' baptism of the Spirit which should follow.
If any one of these three elements is changed or missing, John's baptism is not being
administered.
The Apostle Paul's revelation cut against the grain of two baptisms. God did not send
him to baptize in water (1Cor.1:17), and as far as salvation was concerned, Paul said
there is "one Lord, one faith, one baptism" (Eph.4:5). The only
baptism which Paul practiced or preached was the baptism of the holy Ghost. He
baptized in water a few Corinthian believers, and he regretted that he had done so
(1Cor.1:14-16), for it gave rise to quarrels and made room for proud boasting concerning
who was baptized by which man, whether by Paul, or Peter, or Apollos, etc.
To understand God's reason for sending Paul to preach only the baptism of Christ,
while Peter continued to preach both John's and Jesus' baptisms, one must first notice
that these two mighty men of faith were sent to different groups of people. Paul
explained to the saints in Galatia that "the gospel of the uncircumcision
[Gentiles] was committed unto me, as the gospel of the circumcision [Jews] was unto
Peter" (Gal.2:7). Water baptism was a part of the gospel to the Jews but not
to the Gentiles. At Cornelius' house in Acts 10, God demonstrated to Peter and to his
amazed Jewish companions that He would no longer require the Gentiles to become
Jews and be baptized in water in order to qualify for the baptism of the Spirit.
"And they of the circumcision which believed were astonished, as many as came with
Peter, because that on the Gentiles also was poured out the gift of the holy
Ghost."
What an unthinkable event! Gentiles, whom Jesus himself called "dogs", received the
Spirit of the God of Israel! Neither Peter nor the saints had a doctrine which would
accommodate such an experience. It was contrary to all that they understood and
taught. These Gentiles had experienced something from God that the congregation never
expected to happen, yet could not deny. Had it been possible somehow to deny
Cornelius' baptism into the family of God, the congregation would have done so, but Peter and
his companions were reliable witnesses whose testimony could not have been questioned.
The fact that Peter baptized these Gentiles in water after they were converted does not
alter the fact that they received the Spirit without first becoming Jews [by circumcision]
and being baptized in water. Clearly, the congregation needed another doctrine to explain
what God had done.
Paul was the man who was ordained to preach among the Gentiles the new doctrine
which would explain God's new work. This new doctrine would not make void Peter's
gospel to the Jews; however, it would show that Peter's gospel was limited to the Jews.
Paul taught that God did not require the Gentiles to observe the ceremonies of the Law
of Moses, and that it was evil for the congregation to require it of them. The Jews were
obligated by conscience and by faith to keep the whole Law (Gal.5:3), but according to
the revelation given to Paul, the Law had no claim on the Gentiles' lives (Rom.3:19).
Paul was not understood by many in the congregation of his time. His most bitter sufferings
were caused by believers who could not grasp what Paul was saying. It seemed so
contrary to so much of what they had always understood to be the way of God. After
all, every holy man from Moses' time, including Jesus, was obedient to the Law. Jesus
himself refused to preach to Gentiles (Mt.15:21-28) and forbade his disciples to go to
them when he sent them out to preach (Mt.10:5-6). And now Paul, the former
persecutor of the saints, claimed to have received a commission from Jesus to go to the
Gentiles with a new gospel, one which agreed with Peter's in demanding holy living, but
one that excluded the need for symbolic, ceremonial works of the Law, including water
baptismal rites. It was as radical a doctrine for his time as one can imagine, but it was of
God. And it would prevail.
The controversy sparked by Paul's gospel to the Gentiles was the greatest doctrinal
issue in the early congregation. But Paul stood firm against stiff opposition, refusing "no, not
for an hour" to compromise the gospel of liberty from the works of the Law. Paul taught
the unheard-of doctrine that circumcision of the heart by the Spirit was the only
circumcision that counted with God. "The real Jew is not the man who is one
outwardly, and real circumcision is not something physical and external. The real Jew is
the man who is one inwardly, and real circumcision is a matter of the heart, a spiritual,
not a literal, thing" (Rom.2:28-29). We could say the same about any of the
other ceremonial works of the Law. Of John's baptism, we could say that "real baptism
is not something physical and external. Real baptism is a matter of the heart, a spiritual,
not a physical, thing."
Paul's gospel glorified Christ beyond what the congregation in his time understood, for he
declared that only what Jesus Christ does for a man will save him. Only if Christ
baptizes a man does God consider him baptized, and only if Christ circumcises a man
does God consider him circumcised (a Jew). Paul's position was, if Jesus died for us to
have it, then it is necessary that we receive it. Therefore, we conclude that if Jesus died
for an unnecessary baptism, then Jesus died unnecessarily.
Paul's gospel of liberty from the works of the Law is perhaps more misunderstood now
than when it was first preached. How many are still practicing TWO baptisms? They
ignorantly baptizing in water, and performing other dead ceremonial works, without
knowing that by doing so they are denying the sufficiency of Christ! Israel's symbolic
ways of worship, including John's baptism, were needful, holy instruments of God in their
time. They served their divinely ordained purpose by pointing to the Messiah. But
Christ has come now, and by his sacrificial death made a "new and living way" for us to
approach the Father: the way of life in the holy Spirit. If the baptism you preach is one
which those without the Spirit can practice, it has no part in the kingdom of God. To
worship God now in a way which was possible before the Spirit was given is to worship
God in vain. Only what Jesus suffered and died to make possible is any longer
acceptable with the Almighty.
There are no longer two bodies of people who belong to God: Israel and the body of Christ.
No longer two Lords: Israel's High Priest and Jesus. No longer two faiths: Israel's
worship in symbols, and worship in spirit and truth. No longer two hopes: the
restoration of Israel as a world power, and the return of Jesus. No longer two baptisms:
John's and Jesus'. But "there is one body, and one Spirit, even as ye are called
in one hope of your calling, one Lord, one faith, one baptism, one God and Father of
all..." (Eph.4:4-6). In other words, there are no longer two gospels. The
time for Peter's message to the Jews has passed.
Now, my friend, do you now know which baptism we must have if we hope to be
saved? Do you know to which baptism Paul was referring when he wrote that we are
"Buried with him in baptism, wherein also ye are risen with him..."
(Col.2:12)? The answer you give to this question, I can assure you, will be
one of eternal consequence.
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