Taken, with
permission, from Baptist Union of Scotland
website.
Once you have taken Jesus Christ into your life and fully embraced His teachings, your next step is to be baptised.
Why
be Baptised?
It is
the Lord Jesus Christ who commands His followers
to be baptised. As He was about to ascend to His
Father, Jesus commented "All authority in heaven
and on earth has been given to me. Therefore go
and make disciples of all nations, baptising
them in the name of the Father and of the Son
and of the Holy Spirit." (Matthew 28:
18-20)
Jesus
set an Example
The
command of Jesus is reinforced by His own
example in being baptised Himself. Despite John
the Baptist's protestation, Jesus insisted on
being baptised.
Jesus
said "Let it be so now; it is proper for us to
do this to fulfil all righteousness". Jesus did
not agree to be baptised with a view to washing
His sins away. Rather in baptism He took His
first step to the cross by identifying Himself
with us in our sinfulness.
Declaring
a Union with Christ
Baptism
is a dramatic way of declaring your solidarity
with Jesus. The only thing needed is a large
quantity of water! Even today in warmer climates
people are baptised in rivers, lakes and ponds -
although in Britain it is more common for a
baptistry to be used.
Spectators
at a baptism are asked to imagine that the water
is like a watery grave. So when a person is
submerged under water, they identify themselves
with Jesus who died and was buried.
In
most Baptist Churches as you are baptised you
will be taken backwards into a horizontal
position as in a coffin. Then, like Christ, you
will symbolically rise up from the
dead.
Paul
(Romans 6:4) describes the newly baptised as
rising to live a new life. As you go under the
water, you will be declaring your resolve to die
to your old way of living, and as you rise from
the water, your resolve to follow Christ's
example.
Questions
People Ask Coming From Another Church
Tradition
What
if I was baptised as a child?
Many
people who turn to Christ have already been
"baptised" as a small child. If this applies to
you, you need to decide whether your "baptism"
was Biblical and remains meaningful for you
today. Baptists believe that baptism without
faith is not the baptism of the
Bible.
What
if I have been confirmed?
If at
your confirmation service you meaningfully
confirmed the promise made on your behalf by
your godparents, then some Baptist churches will
welcome you into membership on your profession
of faith. However, the same argument still
applies. The New Testament knows only one
baptism, the one baptism in which by faith Jesus
is confessed as Lord.
Some
Practical Questions
How
old do I have to be to be
baptised?
Baptists
practise believers' baptism, not adult baptism.
For this reason Baptists have avoided trying to
set a minimum age.
What
about the laying on of hands?
Many
Baptist Churches are bringing back the old
Baptist practice of accompanying baptism with
the laying on of hands. This custom has its
roots in the New Testament where we find the
apostles laid hands on their new converts to
symbolise the gift of the Holy
Spirit.
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