BAPTISM
IN THE CHRISTIAN LIFE
Dr. W.
A. Criswell
Acts
8:26-39
8-28-77
10:50 a.m.
In our preaching through the Book of Acts, we are
in chapter 8, and we are now coming to the conclusion of that chapter. And the
reading of the text is this; Acts, chapter 8, beginning at verse 34, “And the
eunuch answered Phillip, and said, I pray thee, of whom speaketh the prophet
this? of himself or of some other man?” Reading the fifty-third chapter of
Isaiah, "All we like sheep have gone astray; . . . the Lord hath laid on
Him the iniquity of us all. He was led as a sheep to the slaughter and like a
lamb dumb before His shearers so opened He not His mouth. . .“ [Isaiah 53:6, 7]
Of whom
speaketh the prophet this? of himself or some other man?
Then
Phillip opened his mouth, and began at the same Scripture, and preached unto
him Jesus.
And as
they went on their way, they came to a certain water: and the eunuch said, See,
here is water; what doth hinder me to be baptized?
And
Phillip said, If thou believest with all thine heart, thou mayest. And he
answered and said, I believe that Jesus Christ is the Son of God.
And he
commanded the chariot to stand still: and they went down both into the water,
both Phillip and the eunuch; and he baptized him.
And when
they were come up out of the water, the Spirit of the Lord caught away Phillip,
that the eunuch saw him no more: and he went on his way—praise God, Hallelujah,
bless His name—and he went on his way rejoicing
[Acts 8:34-39]
There is a corollary here, a deduction that is
very, very plain, "beginning at the same scripture, he preached unto him
Jesus. And as they went on their way, seeing this water the eunuch said, “Look,
here is water, what doth hinder me to be baptized?" Evidently, and
clearly, and plainly, and reasonably, and rightly, when we deliver the gospel
message, it carries with it the ordinance of baptism. You could not preach Jesus,
and not preach that holy and initial ordinance. As the gospels present the
message of Christ, it begins with John the Baptist baptizing his converts in
the Jordan River; had to have lots of water, so he was down there in the river,
baptizing his converts, preaching the baptism of repentance for the remission
of sins.
And in those days Jesus walked sixty miles from
Galilee to the Jordan to be baptized of John. And there did He begin His anointed
and Messianic ministry then, following through the life of our Lord in the
third chapter of the Gospel of John, the witness of the great Baptist to the
Messiah of God:
There
arose a disputation between the disciples of John and the disciples of Jesus
over baptism.
And they
went to John concerning the confrontation.
And John
said, "He that has the bride is the bridegroom. And the friend of the
bridegroom rejoices to hear His voice. . . .
He must
increase, but I must decrease
[John 3:29, 30]
Following through the story of our Lord, preaching
Jesus, finally to the Great and last Commission, “All authority is given unto
Me in heaven and in earth. Go ye therefore, and matheteuo—not only euaggelizo,
but matheteuo, “make disciples”—of all of the people—like Bob George is
doing—“baptizing them in the name of the Father, of the Son, and the Holy
Spirit,” In the name of the triune God. We know Him as the one great God, as
our Father, and as our Savior, and as the Holy Spirit of comfort, and keeping
within us:
Baptizing
them in the name of the triune God,
Teaching
them to observe all things whatsoever I have commanded you:
And lo,
I will be with you to the end of the age
[Matthew 28:18-20]
When we faithfully follow that command, God has
promised to be with us to the end of the age. So as he preached unto him
Jesus, he made a part of that gospel message—an inevitable part, a constituent
part, an enwoven, an integral part—he made of it, that ordinance of baptism.
And while he was preaching Jesus, they came unto this certain water and the
eunuch broke in and said, "Look, here is water, what doth hinder me to be
baptized? I want to be baptized." And in keeping with the commandment of
the Lord, the ordinance was faithfully observed by this believing treasurer and
statesman of Ethiopia. So with the whole recounting of the Word of God, the
ordinance is always followed by those who accept Christ as their Savior.
The New Testament knows no such thing as an
unbaptized believer, it is nonexistent. There are ten instances in the Book of
Acts, among all of the rest of the propagation of the gospel in that first
Christian century, and there is no exception; there is no such thing as a
believer not being baptized. In fact, that is the first thing that a believer
has in his heart. "I have accepted the Lord. I want to be saved. I want
to be baptized. I have been saved." Like Psalms 119:60, "I made
haste, and delayed not to keep thy commandments." And when one has
accepted Christ as his Savior, immediately—immediately he wants to be baptized,
“Here is water, I want to be baptized. What hinders me from being baptized?”
For all of the years of his ministry here, the
editor of the Baptist Standard, Dr. David M. Gardiner, was a fellow elder in
our dear church. He wrote an editorial on the fourteenth day of February in
1946. And then it was re-published—this editorial by Dr. Gardiner—on November
11, 1964. May I read from it?
According
to the records of the First Baptist Church of New York City, John Gano, who was
the first pastor of the church had served as chaplain through the war period.
John Gano and General George Washington were close personal friends. And Gano
was his chaplain, right by the side of George Washington through all of the
Revolutionary period. When the war was over and the peace treaty had been
signed, George Washington was with his troops in camp at Newburgh on the Hudson
River. Chaplin Gano was preaching and expounding the truths of the gospel to
the soldiers, General Washington was there and heard him. And though he was a
member of the Anglican Church and had been sprinkled in infancy, Washington
began to search the Scriptures and was convinced that he had never been
baptized. He approached the chaplain, John Gano, and requested baptism-quote-“as
taught and practiced in the Scriptures.” According to the records of the First
Baptist Church of New York, General Washington was baptized in the Hudson River
in the presence of forty-two witnesses.
Then the editorial
continues:
The baptism
was not beneath the dignity of this great general, who was not too proud to
acknowledge his rightful Master. Among men he was an upstanding giant; before
God, a kneeling child.
That is in the heart of every true believer in the
Lord Jesus Christ. “I have been saved, I have been born again! I have
confessed my sins to God and for Jesus' sake, He has forgiven me. I want to be
baptized.” Is it not in the Book? “As they went on their way, they came unto
a certain water. And the eunuch said, Look, here is water; what doth hinder me
to be baptized?” [Acts 8:36] I want to
be baptized! And in every believer's heart will that arise, "I want to be
baptized."
We now come to a discussion from the Book of who
is to be baptized. Phillip said, "If thou believest with all thine heart,
thou mayest" [Acts 8:17]. There is
one and only one prerequisite—one condition to our being baptized—and that is
that we purposely, and we volitionally, and choosedly, openly, unashamedly
confess our faith in Jesus as the Son of God, our Savior. There is no other
condition. But that condition, when it is met, is always followed by being
baptized.
Now let us take it both ways. As in the New
Testament, there is no such thing as an unbaptized believer. Now, the other
side of it—so in the New Testament, there is no such thing as a baptized
unbeliever; it is unknown to the Word and revelation of the Word of God. I
spoke a moment ago of ten instances in the Book of Acts alone. And in each one
of those ten instances of baptism, always carefully, and plainly,
significantly, meaningfully, is it presented to us that these first believed;
they confessed their faith in the Lord and then they were baptized. In the
second chapter of the Book of Acts, the great Pentecostal response in
Jerusalem: “and they that gladly received his word, were baptized: and the
same day God added to his company of saints three thousand souls” [Acts 2:41]. Here in the eighth chapter of the
Book of Acts, there are three instances of that faith and baptism. In the
Samaritan revival, they believed and they were baptized. Simon the Magus
believed and he was baptized, and the third instance here in the Book of Acts, our
text, "If thou believest with all thine heart, thou mayest." And he
said, "I believe." And they went down into the water and he was
baptized.
Turn the page in the ninth chapter of the Book of
Acts, Saul of Tarsus is wonderfully converted and immediately on his confession
of faith, he is baptized. Turn the page in the tenth chapter of the Book of
Acts, we have there of the story of the Gentile Caesarean Pentecost with the
Cornelius, the Roman centurion. And upon their believing, Simon Peter asks, "Who
can forbid water that these should not be baptized the same as we?" [Acts 10:47] Turn the page and we come to the
sixteenth chapter of the Book of Acts and there are two baptisms. Lydia
believes—this seller of purple from Thyatira—Lydia believes and she is
baptized. And in that same chapter, the Philippian jailer accepts the Lord as
his Savior and that night, immediately he is baptized. Turn the page; in the
eighteenth chapter of the Book of Acts, the great revival under Paul in
Corinth, Crispus—the head of the synagogue—the ruler of the synagogue is
converted and he is baptized. Turn the page in the nineteenth chapter of the
Book of Acts and those twelve mistaken disciples of John are taught the Word of
the Lord perfectly and they are immediately baptized. There is no exception to
that revelation of the Word of God. First, you must be saved, you must confess
your faith in the Lord Jesus, and then you are baptized; upon that open,
unashamed confession of faith.
Now when you invert that, when you turn that around,
you do violence to the Word of God and to the great meaning and purpose of that
heavenly and holy ordinance. Only in sacerdotalism—only in priest-craft—is
that ever turned around contrary to the Word of God. And in some strange,
magical persuasion a baby, an unconscious baby, is sprinkled and they say the
child is “baptized.” So astonished, amazed, overwhelmed, at so strange a
come-to-pass, we asked the officiating minister, "Why do you do this
contrary to the Word of God? In violation of the whole meaning of the sacred
ordinance, why do you do this?" And he replies:
This is
for the purpose of ridding the child of Adamic original sin.
The
child is born into the world in sin—original sin—the Adamic sin, the sin we
have inherited from our forefathers.
And
these few drops of water sprinkled upon that unconscious infant clears the
child from original, Adamic sin.
What? What? When the Bible clearly and plainly
avows such as 1 Corinthians chapter 15, verse 22, “as in Adam we all die”—all
of us alike, sinners—“as in Adam we all die, so in Christ we are all made
alive." All of us, no man shall ever die because of somebody else's sin.
He will not be judged because of the sin of his father and mother. He will not
be judged or condemned because of the sin of his grandfather and grandmother.
Nor will he be judged and condemned because of the sins of their fathers—clear
on back to Adam. As in Adam, we all die, all of us sinners. So in Christ,
we're all made alive; the atoning blood of Christ has covered the sin of Adam,
original sin.
All that remains for me is, I sin. And when I
come to that age of accountability and I realize that I also have sin, I for
myself must confess my sins and ask God for Jesus' sake to forgive me and then
I am forgiven—not for my father and mother's sin; not for the Adamic sin—but
for my sin. When I come to that age that I realize, I too have sinned in God's
sight, I must ask God to forgive me and the blood of Jesus Christ avails to
wash us clean and white. And there is no such thing as a baby dying and going
to hell because of Adamic or original sin. As in Adam, we all die, so in
Christ, we all are made alive. His blood atones for all of the sin of the
world. It is just that. When I reach that age of knowing, I must ask God for
me to forgive my sins. And when I do, He does. I am saved, and on that
confession of faith, I am baptized according to the holy ordinance.
Now we come to the last; how was he baptized? I
read it:
Then he
commanded the chariot to stand still: and they went down both into the water,
both Phillip and the eunuch; and he baptized him.
And when
they were come up out of the water, the Spirit of the Lord caught away Phillip,
that the eunuch saw him no more:
and he
went on his way—Hallelujah—rejoicing
[Acts 8:38, 39]
Now, there is a word in that that is not
translated, and this morning, you are going to translate it. And you will know
how to translate it: "and they went down both into the water, both Phillip
and the eunuch: and he, ”and then you have a Greek word b-a-p-t-i-z—the Greek
is baptizo, but they refuse to translate it—the translation was made by
the Anglican Church in 1611 and they did not do that. It was a great problem
what to do with that word, so they anglicized it, b-a-p-t-i-z-o in Greek—they
changed the ending to an "e"; b-a-p-t-i-z-e, baptize—and they did not
translate it. Fine, we are going to let you translate it. I have taken out of
Greek literature in that day, I have taken just a few instances out of the literature
of the Greek people. So you translate it. We will just let you translate it.
First Aristotle—quoting from Aristotle—he writes,
"The Phoenicians sailing beyond Hercules' Pillars”—the Strait of
Gibraltar—“came to a land uninhabited whose coast was full of seaweeds and is
not laid into the water at ebb. But when the tide comes in, it is wholly baptizo."
Just let you translate it. Heraclites, a disciple of Aristotle wrote the
Homeric legends. And he is moralizing here on the fable of Mars being taken by
Vulcan and he says, "Neptune is ingenuously supposed to deliver Mars from
Vulcan to signify that when a piece of iron is taken red hot out of the fire
and baptizo in water, the heat is repelled and extinguished." You
translate it yourself. The Greek Septuagint, the Bible used by the apostles
and disciples of the Lord in the first Christian centuries was the Greek
Septuagint, the translation of the Hebrew Scriptures into Greek. Now, in the
Greek Septuagint of course, there is the story of Naaman in the 2 Kings chapter
5. And Elisha the prophet tells Naaman to go down to the Jordan River and dip
himself seven times and he will be healed; Naaman is a leper, the captain of
the host of Assyria. So 2 Kings 5:14, in the Greek Septuagint:
Then
Naaman went down, and baptizo himself seven times in the Jordan,
according to the saying of the man of God: and his flesh came again like unto
the flesh of a little child, and he was clean, and he was clean.
He went
down to the Jordan and baptizo himself seven times.
Now, Polybius, Polybius was a great historian, and
describing a spear in one of his Histories, he writes, "Even if a spear
falls into the sea, it is not lost, for it is compacted of oak and pine so that
when the heavy part is baptizo by the weight, the rest is buoyed up and
it is easily recovered." Diodorus is a Roman historian writing in Greek.
"The river," quoting from Diodorus, "the river rushing down with
the current increased in violence and baptizo many." Then again,
"Most of the wild animals surrounded by the stream perished being baptizo.
But some escaping to the high ground were saved." Strabo, Strabo was a
contemporary of Jesus, a great historian and geographer. Describing the march
of Alexander's soldiers, passing between the great mountain climax and the sea,
the land subject to overflow, he says, "It happened that the whole day
long, the march was made in water, the men being baptizo up to the
waist."
Now, we come to Flavius Josephus who was a
contemporary of the apostles Paul and John, he wrote his famous histories: The
Antiquities of the Jews and The Wars of the Jews, he wrote it in Greek. Now,
in The Antiquities of the Jews, Flavius Josephus, a Jew—and he was a general in
the army that rebelled against Rome in 66 and wrote all of that terrible war
that ensued in the destruction of Jerusalem in 70 AD; he was there and watched
it all and wrote it all. That is there in these books by Josephus. Now,
Josephus tells in the minute detail the life of Herod the Great. Herod the
Great, the one who slew the innocent babes at Bethlehem was one of the
bloodiest tyrants, if not the bloodiest who ever lived. He killed all of his
own family, he murdered his wives, he murdered his sons, he murdered his
households. He lived with his hands steeped in human blood.
Herod the Great had married Mariamne a Maccabean
princess—the last in the line of the Maccabees. And Mariamne, having a
brother, bid Herod to appoint her brother high priest in the temple in
Jerusalem. At that time, as you know, the high priesthood was a political pawn
and whoever ruled the country appointed the high priest. So Mariamne—the
beautiful Maccabean princess and the wife of Herod—begged, and begged, and
begged Herod to appoint her brother high priest. And finally, the tyrant
acquiesced and appointed Aristobolus the brother of Mariamne high priest.
When the Day of Tabernacles came, the celebration
of the Feast of Tabernacles, Aristobolus—who was then just seventeen years of
age, tall and handsome and the last of the Maccabees—marched at the head of a
Jewish procession of priests and devotees through the streets of Jerusalem.
And when the Jewish people saw Aristobolus, tall, strong, beautifully dressed
in the high priest robes, and miter, and ephod, and bells, and pomegranate, and
the breastplate of the twelve jewels on his chest; when they saw him at the
head of the procession, walking through the streets of Jerusalem, they fell
into a tumult beyond description. Herod, hearing the noise put his head out of
the window in the palace and saw what was going on—that tall, handsome
Maccabean at the head of the procession—and the people wild with joy and
exaltation. And Herod said, "I must get rid of that boy. He is a threat
to me on the throne."
Here is the way he did it. He had built a Roman
bath. You would call it a large swimming pool with all of the accoutrements.
He had built a beautiful Roman bath and the ruins are there now, you can go
look at them. He had built a beautiful, spacious Roman bath at the warm
springs in Jericho. Calling his most confidentially trusted of his servants,
he said, "I am going to gather my family together and we are going down to
the Roman bath in Jericho. We are going out into the pool. And after we have
been there a while, I am going to get out and dress and take my family and go
to the winter palace in Jericho. And I want you to take this young fellow,
Aristobolus out into the middle of the pool and I want you to play with him
until you drown him." It was all set. And Herod and his family, all went
down to the Roman bath in Jericho, and the men all out there in the pool. And
after a brief while, Herod dismissed himself, re-dressed, took Mariamne and the
family and went to the winter palace. And Josephus says that the trusted
servants of Herod took Aristobolus, the young high priest out into the middle
of the pool and baptizo him, baptizo him, baptizo him,
until they drowned him. You want to translate it, “and they sprinkled him, and
sprinkled him and sprinkled him”? Would you like to translate it?
There is a great volume by Conant in which he has
cited every instance in Greek literature where the word baptizo is
used. And without exception, it is the plain and simple word of “immersion.”
Those Greek poets had a beautiful way of saying things. I do not think there
is any literature in the world that can turn a thing as beautiful, as
felicitously, as the Greek poet can. Well, here is a little passage from
Julian, a Greek poet, and he is describing what happens to a young fellow when
he falls in love. You know, that all-overishness, outness, and that tickling
on the inside of your butterfly’s tummy, you know. He is describing. Now,
listen to him as he describes it. This is his Greek poem:
As I
once trimmed a garland
I found
Cupid in the roses,
Holding
him by the wings,
I baptizo
him into wine
And took
him and drank him
And now
within my members
He
tickles with his wings.
[“Ode to Cupid”; Julian]
He is in love. He has fallen in love. How do you
know he is falling in love? Because every time that sweet little thing trips
by, he has a funny feeling on the inside of his tummy. "And that is
it," says Julian. That is Cupid down there whom he “baptized” in wine.
And he drank him and now he tickles with his wings.
Modern Greek is just the same, there is no such
thing as other than baptism in the whole Greek world. The Greek Orthodox
Church—all of it—wherever Greek was spoken, there they would baptize. For
example, here is from a modern, Greek newspaper, "Righteousness forbids a
man to baptizo his pen in the filth of flattery;" just an ordinary
word, meaning “to be buried and to be raised.”
Have you been to Rome? There are four great
basilicas in Rome, four of them; St. Peter’s in the Vatican City, St. John
Lateran, St. Mary, and four, St. Paul. If you ever take time to visit that
fourth basilica in Rome, St. Paul's, on the inside of it is the most beautiful
baptistery you will ever see in this world—the mosaic, the marble, the
spaciousness—you can baptize one hundred and fifty people at the same time! It
is a beautiful thing. It is a baptistery in St. Paul's in Rome, why? Because
they all baptized, all of them, nobody did any other thing. Everybody
baptized.
If you ever are in Florence, there's the Duomo,
that beautiful cathedral. There is the campanile on the bell tower, the doors,
the bronze doors which Michelangelo said were so beautiful they could be the
doors to heaven. And always by the side, there is that beautiful and
incomparable baptistry. Have you ever been to Pisa? There is the cathedral.
There is the campanile leaning, the bell tower leaning. And just by the side
is an incomparably beautiful baptistry. They all baptized, all of them
baptized. It is only in the development of sacerdotalism—priest-craft,
magic—that they ever turned aside from the great revealed Word of God.
This is an outward confession of our faith in the
Lord Jesus Christ. In the passage you read, Romans 6 and one like it in
Colossians 2, “We are buried with our Lord in the likeness of His death and
we're dead to the world. And we are raised with our Lord in the likeness of
His resurrection.” Alive to God, to walk in newness of life! That is the
beautiful, incomparably precious meaning of the holy ordinance of baptism:
And
beginning at the same Scripture, he preached unto him Jesus.
And as
they went on their way, they came to a certain water. And the eunuch said, ‘Look,
here's water. I want to be baptized.’
And Phillip
said,—just one requirement—‘If you believe with all your heart, you may. He
answered and said, ‘I believe that Jesus is the Son of God.’
Then
they went down both into the water, both Phillip and the eunuch and he—buried
him in the likeness of the death of our Lord and raised him in the likeness of
the resurrection of our Lord.
And the
eunuch went on his way rejoicing.
[Acts 8: 35-39]
That's God! Spurgeon said, "If I did not
believe it right to be a Baptist, I would do what think was right, and I would
join myself to that company that I thought was right." Spurgeon was not
reared in a Baptist home. His father and mother, his grandparents; no member
of the family was ever a Baptist. But that greatest preacher, I think, outside
of the pages of the Bible, when he was wonderfully converted, stood at the holy
Book and went to the pastor of the Baptist church at Alford and asked that he
be baptized in the River Lauric.
That's the way that a man feels in his soul when
he gives his heart to Jesus, "Look, look, I've accepted the Lord as my
Savior. I have trusted Him in my heart. Look, I want to be baptized, just as
the Lord was baptized, just as all of those who first looked in faith to Him
were baptized, I want to be baptized." And there's never an exception.
God is in that. When a man follows that holy and beautiful ordinance, there's
a fullness in his heart that abides forever, “I have done it exactly as God has
commanded.”
There's not much I can do for God. He said,
"If I were hungry, I would not tell thee. The cattle on a thousand hills
are Mine. And the gold and silver is Mine."
There is not much I can do for God. But I can do
some things, and that's one. He asked that I be baptized and in obedience to
the wish of God that pleases the Father, I can follow Him through the waters of
the Jordan River. And God bless us as obediently, and humbly, following the
footsteps of our Savior, leading down into the waters of beautiful, biblical
baptism.
Now we are going to stand and sing our hymn of
appeal. And while we sing the sing, a family you, a couple you, or just one
somebody you to respond, “I have accepted the Lord as my Savior and I want to
be baptized and here I come.” Or, “Pastor, we have all been baptized and my
whole family, we are all coming today.” Or just you as the Spirit of God shall
lay the appeal upon your heart, would you answer with your life? Coming by
baptism, coming by a statement, coming by a letter, coming on a confession of
faith, just answer when God calls; down one of these stairways, down one of
these aisles, “Here I am pastor. I am on the way.” May angels attend you as
you come while we stand and while we sing our appeal.