BAPTISM
IN WATER
Dr. W.
A. Criswell
Acts 8:35
9-11-77
10:50 a.m.
This morning in our
preaching through the Book of Acts, this morning, we are in the closing verses
of the eighth chapter, Acts chapter 8. The story in the closing part of the
eighth chapter of Acts concerns a statesman, a great man, a treasurer of
extensive authority under the Queen of Ethiopia. Going to Jerusalem to worship;
there found a copy of the scroll of Isaiah, just such as you will see in the
Shrine of the Book on the campus of the Hebrew University in Jerusalem.
Returning in his chariot, he was reading out loud the fifty-third chapter of
Isaiah. Every syllable in this Bible was written to be read aloud. Our
private, quiet, inward reading of it is fine, but it was written, all of it,
every syllable of it, to be read out loud.
This treasurer of
Ethiopia, reading out loud the fifty-third chapter of Isaiah, “The Lord hath
laid on Him the iniquity of us all” [Isaiah
53:6], wondering of whom the prophet spoke. By the side of the chariot,
under the direction of the angel and Spirit of God, there walked in that desert
place Phillip, a deacon, a layman, sent there by the Lord. Somehow, the man
seemed to have authority. Is it not strange how you can sense people? You
just know, intuitively know. So this statesman of Ethiopia, sensing the
authority in that man who listened to him read, asked him to come up and sit with
him in the chariot. Then asked him, “of whom speaketh the prophet this?” [Acts 8:34] Who is this one by whose stripes
we are healed? Now, we begin reading at verse 35,
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 unto a certain water: and the eunuch said, Look, see, here
is water; what doth hinder me to be baptized?
And Phillip said, just
one condition, If thou believest with all thine heart, thou mayest. And he
answered and saith, I do, hereby, herewith, even now, believe that Jesus the
Christ is the son of God, and my Savior.
And he commanded the
chariot to it stand still: and they went down both into the water.
You come up here and look at the Greek text that
Dr. Paige Patterson, the president of our Center of Biblical Studies always
uses. You will see how emphatic that is,
They went down both into
the water, both Phillip and the eunuch; and he baptizō, he plunged
him into the flood, and raised him out of the waters.
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 down to Ethiopia, rejoicing
[Acts 8:35-39]
This is the beginning of
the Coptic Church that you can visit in Ethiopia today. There is something
that is very apparent, very plain in the text, in the story. It is this: And
he preached unto him Jesus. And they came to a certain water and the eunuch broke
in and said, “Look, here is water. I want to be baptized.” [Acts 8:35, 36]. Very apparent therefore is
it, that when one preaches Jesus he preaches the ordinance of baptism; they are
in execrably interwoven. They are constituent parts of the same fabric and
same gospel message. And he preached unto him Jesus, I want to be baptized.
That is very apparent as
you look at the life of our Lord. When you read the Gospel of Matthew, it will
begin with John the Baptist, baptizing in the River Jordan, and the baptism of
Jesus that you read out loud a moment ago. When you turn to the story of our
Lord in Mark, it is the same way. Here is introduced the Baptist; and there in
the Jordan River he is baptizing the Messiah. And the story of the gospel begins.
When you turn to the third Gospel, written by Dr. Luke, the same pattern is
followed. There is John the Baptist, baptizing in the Jordan River. And Jesus
walking sixty miles from Galilee down to where John was baptizing, in order to
be baptized of the great forerunner. When you turn to the Gospel of John, you
will find an amazing, an amazing introduction. That incomparable introduction
of John beginning with “The Word,” that whole chapter is dedicated to the
forerunner and the baptism of Jesus; His introduction to the world.
When you turn the pages
again and begin in this Book of Acts of which I am now preaching, in the first
chapter, there is an election on the part of the apostles that one be chosen to
be numbered with them, to take the place of Judas who had hanged himself. And
there were two qualifications for the apostle. Number one, he had to be
baptized by John the Baptist. Number two, he had to be a personal witness to
the resurrection of the Lord Jesus from among the dead. [Acts 1:22] Baptism is an integral part, a vital part, a
central and dynamic part of the preaching of Jesus. “And he preached unto him
Jesus, ‘See, here is water; I want to be baptized.’”
There are several mighty,
heavenly reasons for the baptism of Jesus. Number one, it was an
authentication of the divine mission of John the forerunner. Our Lord’s
baptism at the hands of John recognized the authority of the Baptist who had
received the ordinance and its pattern from heaven. In the twenty-first
chapter of the Gospel of Matthew the Lord avows that the baptism of John is not
from men, it is from God in heaven. And the baptism of our Lord, first was an
authentication of the divine mission and authority and ordinance that John
received from God in heaven.
Why was Jesus baptized?
The second reason: His baptism was His great introduction to His Messianic
ministry. It marked the transition of our Lord from His thirty years of
private life into the three and half years of His public ministry. It was at
His baptism that John introduced Him to the world and pointed Him out as “the
Lamb of God that should take away our sins.”
Number three: why was
Jesus baptized? He was baptized in order that He might identify Himself with
us, sinners, to be part of the mankind that He came to redeem, one of us. Not somebody
who turned stones into bread, but who lived by the sweat of his brow. Not
someone who performed miracles for Himself, but someone who came to minister to
the needs of fallen humanity. Not someone in the form of an angel of light,
but someone like us: wept our tears, suffered our trials, lived our life, died
our death. In all ways made like unto us, though He the only one without sin,
and the baptism of Jesus identified Himself with our sinful humanity.
That is why, when Mark
says John the Baptist came preaching the baptistma. Baptismos
refers to washing, baptisma, the doctrine of the faith. John the
Baptist came preaching the baptisma of repentance for the remission of
sins. It had to do with our fallen humanity. And when the Lord came to be
baptized at the hands of John, intuitively John withdrew,
I have need, he said, to
be baptized of Thee, and comest Thou to me? Not so, Lord, this is a baptisma of repentance for the remission of
sins, and there is no sin in Your sinless life, no fallen-ness in Your nature,
the perfect, sinless, without blemish Lamb of God,
And Jesus said, “Suffer it
to be so now: for thus it becometh us to fulfill the divine mission for
which I was sent into the world.”
[Adapted from Matthew 3:14-15]
And Jesus was baptized,
identifying Himself with us lost sinners.
Number four, why was
Jesus baptized? It was a dramatization of the adumbration of His ministry in
the world. Our Lord came into this world to die for our sins, according to the
Scriptures; that He be buried and that He be raised from the dead, according to
the Scriptures. [1 Corinthians 15:3-4] And
that adumbration is beautifully, marvelously dramatized in the ordinance of
baptism: buried, raised, and the Lord committed Himself to that assignment of
the Father in heaven.
Now, there are four
concomitants as there are four reasons why the Lord was baptized, there are
four corollaries that accompany it. Our Lord is baptized, now what? Number
one: it carried with it the blessing of the heavenly Father. When our Lord was
raised up out of the watery grave, the Spirit of God descended upon Him in the
form of a dove, “and a voice from heaven saying, This is My beloved Son, in
whom I am well pleased [Matthew 3:17].
It carries with it the blessing of the Father. Only one time in the life of
our Lord will you see all three of the Godhead manifest at one time, the Savior
raised out of the water; the Holy Spirit of God in a form of a dove, lighting
upon Him; and the voice of the great Jehovah God in heaven saying, “This is My
Son, beloved, in whom I am well pleased” [Matthew
3:16, 17]. Our Lord said, in the eighth chapter of Gospel of John, “I
do always those things that please Him” [John
8:29]. And it pleased God for Jesus to be baptized of John in the River
Jordan. And that ought to be our prayer. As Dr. Grenfell, Wlfred Grenfell,
the mighty missionary to Labrador for forty years, writing in his auto
biography he said, “My mother taught me as a child to pray. ˜Dear God, help me
to do this day, the thing that pleaseth Thee.’” And it pleased God that the
Lord was baptized.
Number two: the baptism
carried with it the anointing of the power of the Holy Spirit of God. When I
turn to the sermon of Simon Peter in the household of Cornelius at Caesarea, he
said in the midst of that sermon, “the baptism which John preached and the
baptism of Jesus; how God anointed Jesus of Nazareth with the Holy Spirit and
with power” [Acts 10:37, 38]. When did
God anoint Jesus with the Holy Spirit and power? May I read it for us out of
the record of Luke? “And Jesus also being baptized, and praying, the heaven
was opened, And the Holy Spirit descended in a bodily shape like a dove upon
Him, and a voice came from heaven, which said, Thou art My beloved Son; in Thee
I am well pleased” [Luke 3:21, 22]. Now,
look, “and the Holy Spirit descended in shape like a dove upon Him.”
Now follow after, “And
Jesus being full of the Holy Spirit returned from the Jordan” [Luke 4:1]. In the same chapter, “And Jesus
returned in the power of the Spirit into Galilee” [Luke
4:14] And in the same chapter, “and He found the place in Isaiah,
Isaiah 61, and He read from the scroll, ˜The Spirit of the Lord is upon Me,
because He hath anointed Me to preach the gospel.’” [Luke 4:18]
When was Jesus anointed
with power by the Holy Spirit of God? It happened in His baptism.
Number three: what is a
corollary, a concomitant that attended the baptism of the Lord Jesus? It was
the commitment, the public, open commitment of His life to the ministry to
which God had called Him. For which He was sent into the world. He came into
this world to die for our sins. He came into this world to be raised
triumphant for our justification, to declare us righteous, to hold us in His
omnipotent hands until we, too, are in His presence in glory. And the
commitment of our Lord to that messianic ministry is found in His baptism.
This is My death. This is My burial. And this is My resurrection. We also,
when we follow the Lord, find that a commitment of our lives, to follow Jesus,
that is, our open and public avowal that we have received from God’s hand a
mandate, and we are faithfully giving our lives to it.
As you know, I read
Spurgeon all of the time. In my humble opinion he is the mightiest preacher of
the gospel of Christ outside of the New Testament. Spurgeon was converted in a
Primitive Methodist chapel on the sixth day of January in 1850. It was a
stormy night. The preacher did not even appear, but a godly layman was there
with a little handful of people, and Spurgeon came in. He could not get to the
little place where he was going to church, so he turned into that Primitive
Methodist chapel. And that layman was making an appeal that night from that
wonderful passage in Isaiah: “Look unto me, and be ye saved, all the ends of
the earth: for I am God, and there is none other” [Isaiah 45:22]. And the layman in his
exhortation to look to the God and be saved, pointed a finger to young Spurgeon
and said to him, “Young man, you look so miserable. Young man, look to Jesus,
look to Jesus.” And Spurgeon said, “That night, I looked and I lived.” After
his conversion, he studied the Bible. No member of his family was a Baptist,
nor of the generations preceding. He studied the Bible, and went to the pastor
of the little Baptist church at Isleham and asked to be baptized according to
the mandate of God in the Holy Scriptures. Forty years later, writing in his
little paper, The Sword and the Trowel, in April 1890, he described that
baptism. I quote from him,
The wind blew down the
river with a cutting blast as my turn came to wade into the flood; but after I
had walked a few steps, and noted the people on the ferryboat, and in the
boats, and on either shore, I felt as if heaven and earth and hell might all
gaze on me, for I was not ashamed, there and then, to own myself a follower of
the Lamb. Timidity was gone. I have scarcely met it since. I lost a thousand
fears in that River Lark and found that in keeping of His commandments, there
is great reward. It was a thrice happy day to me. God be praised for the
preserving goodness which allows me to write of it with delight at the distance
of forty years.
Isn’t that just like God
and God’s will for us, and God’s blessings upon us?
As I walked out into the
flood, out into that river with all of those people gazing upon me. I felt
that the whole universe of God could look upon me, for I was not ashamed to own
myself a follower of the lamb. Timidity was gone. I have not met it since. I
lost a thousand fears in that river.
That is the experience of
the Christian life; it is a commitment unto God. And the Lord hallows it and
blesses it through all of the years that follow after. Not only is a
concomitant of the Lord’s baptism the blessing of the Father, the anointing of
the Holy Spirit, and unashamed commitment to His ministry to which God had
called Him and sent Him, it is last, an example for us. Thus, it becometh us,
said the Lord to John the Baptist, Thus it behooves us, it becomes us, it is
fitting for us that we fulfill all righteousness. That we do the thing God has
mandated. It is right. It is from heaven that a man be baptized. And Jesus
when He was come up out of the water, blessed by the anointing of the Spirit, pleasing
to the Father in heaven.
Why is it that people who
avow love for the Lord Jesus and count themselves as followers of the Lamb, why
are they not baptized? The only reason that I know is because, if a man is
intelligent, if he can read even English, much less the Greek, it is plain, it
is simple, it is emphasized that we are under commandment to be baptized. Why
are they not baptized? For one simple reason, human pride. “What? You mean I
am going down into that water? I am going to be buried? Not I. Not I.”
Proud of spirit, lofty in self, “I refuse to bow, I refuse to submit.”
And it brings to my mind
the poignant story in the fifth chapter of 2 Kings. Now, Naaman was a great
man with his master. He was captain of the host of the king of Syria, for by
him God had given deliverance to the Syrians. He was a mighty man of valor,
this general of the Syrian army, but he was leper. Now the Syrians had gone
out by bands and had brought captive out of the land of Israel a little maid,
and she waited on Naaman’s wife. And the little maid said to her mistress, “Would
God that my Lord was in the land of Israel, for there he could be healed of his
leprosy.” And the word came to the ears of the king of Syria, and he wrote a
letter to the king of Israel saying, “Herewith I have sent you Naaman, the
general and captain of my army; and with him talents of gold, and talents of
silver, and changes of raiment that you might heal him of his leprosy.’ And
the king of Israel took the letter and read it and said, “Look! See how the
king of Syria seeketh a quarrel against us, to declare war against us, for who
am I, God, to make a man well, that he might be healed of his leprosy? [2 Kings 5:7].
And word came to the ears
of Elisha, the man of God, who sent word unto the king of Israel saying, “Send
him unto me that he might know that there is a prophet in the land of Israel.”
And Naaman came with his horses and with his chariots and stood before the
house of Elisha with his talents of gold, and silver, and changes of raiment.
Elisha, the man of God did not so much as even walk out of the door to look at
him. He sent one of his servants and said to him, “Go down to the Jordan River
and wash seven times and you will be clean” [2
Kings 5:10].
It infuriated Naaman!
This great man was insulted! And he said, “I thought surely the prophet would
come out and dramatically call upon the name of the Lord his God and strike his
hand over the place and heal the leper. But to wash in that muddy Jordan? Are
not the Abana and Pharpar, the rivers of Damascus, better than all of the
waters of Israel?” [2 Kings 5:12]. Have
you seen the Abana and Pharpar? Clear as crystal rushing currents from the top
of Mount Lebanon. “Are not the Abana and Pharpar, rivers of Damascus better
than all of the rivers in Israel? May I not wash in them and be clean?” And
he turned and went away in a rage, driving his steeds and his chariot back to
Damascus, a leper.
And as in his fury and
anger, he was driving those steeds back to the capitol of Syria, one of the
servants, sweetly, tenderly, humbly, laid his hand upon his harm and said, “My
father, my father, if the prophet had bid thee do some great and mighty thing,
wouldst thou not have done it?” [2 Kings 5:13].
In order to be healed of your leprosy, had the prophet said, “Conquer a
kingdom!” Would you not have sought to conquer it? If he had said, “Bring
back a thousand more talents of gold!” Would you not have done it? How much
rather then, when he said, “Just wash and be clean?” The great man pulled
those reins. “Whoa, whoa!” He turned those steeds around and drove down to
the muddy Jordan. And the Greek Septuagint says, the Bible the apostles used,
says that he baptizō himself, one time and two, three times and
four, five times and six. And when he baptizō himself the seventh
time, his flesh came again like unto the flesh of a little child, and he was
clean. He was clean. “Look. Look! Look, the leprosy is gone! God hath
healed me, cleansed me!” Isn’t that right?
The place of a man made
out of dust and ashes before the great and high God, is on his face, it is on
his knees. It is in humble submission to the mandates of the Lord. “See, here
is water; what doth hinder me to be baptized?” [Acts
8:36] “I have found the Lord, I want to be baptized just as the Lord
did say.” And that concomitant never fails. Rising up out of the baptismal
waters, “he went on his way rejoicing.” I have never seen an exception to that
in the fifty years I have been a pastor. When one is baptized, following the
blessed example of our Lord, there is a fullness in heart of doing it. Just as
God hath said, so have I obeyed, walking in the way of the Lord, following His
footsteps. And they always lead down and through the waters of the Jordan.
I am through with my
sermon. I could add a little imagery, following our Lord through the waters of
the Jordan. The Jordan as you know, in our hymnology, is always a picture of
the swollen stream of death. Following our Lord through the waters of the
Jordan, raised from the overwhelming flood. It is a picture of our hope in
Christ Jesus. Following our Lord into the swollen river of death, and raised
from the overwhelming flood in the likeness of His glorious resurrection. It
is beautiful, it is meaningful, it is spiritual, it is from heaven.
That is our invitation to
you today. Accepting the Lord as your Savior, “I want to be baptized. See,
here is water, what doth hinder me to be baptized? I want to be baptized.”
“Having been baptized,
Pastor, we are coming into the church today as fellow members, to pray
together, to listen to the exposition of the Word of God together.”
“I am bringing my family;
we are all coming today. This is my wife, these are our children. We are all
coming.”