Water Baptism: A Cause or Effect of Salvation (Part 1/5)
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Water baptism can feel simple until someone tells you your salvation depends on it. We go straight at the confusion and lay out a clear biblical case for why Christian baptism is a commanded ordinance and a powerful public marker of discipleship, while also being a sign that points beyond itself. If you’ve ever wrestled with questions like “Do I have to be baptized to be saved?” or “What does baptism actually do?” you’ll hear a careful, verse-by-verse approach that keeps the gospel at the center.
We contrast two schools of thought: baptism as an outward sign and seal of an inward work of grace, versus baptism as the final step that completes forgiveness. Then we walk into the passages most often used to argue baptismal regeneration, including Acts 2:38, Acts 22:16, and 1 Peter 3:21. Along the way we bring in the broader doctrine of justification by faith alone, showing why Scripture must interpret Scripture, and why the Bible repeatedly ties salvation to faith in Christ rather than any rite performed by human hands.
We also look at conversion accounts that clarify the order of events, like Acts 10 where the Holy Spirit is received before baptism, and Acts 16 where “Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ” comes before the immediate step of baptism. To make sense of strong sacramental wording, we explain how the Bible sometimes speaks of a sign as if it were the thing signified, and why baptism ultimately points to a clean conscience toward God through Jesus’ death, burial, and resurrection.
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