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Featured "In Christ" What does it mean and How?

Discussion in 'Baptist Theology & Bible Study' started by The Biblicist, Dec 3, 2016.

  1. JonC

    JonC Moderator
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    Sure he does. In fact, you have proved my point. Paul is speaking of baptism but about conversion. The subject does not change (Paul is speaking of the believer dying to sin and being made alive to God in Christ as the reason we are not to sin in our bodies).

    I will spare everyone lengthy quotes for Gill’s commentary is both antiquated and available online. http://www.biblestudytools.com/commentaries/gills-exposition-of-the-bible/romans-6/

    But regarding Romans 6:4, Gill offers this insight:

    “for the end of baptism is not only to represent the death and burial, but also the resurrection of Christ from the dead… and as baptism is designed to represent the resurrection of Christ, which is done by raising the person out of the water, so likewise to represent our resurrection from the death of sin, to a life of grace: whence it must be greatly incumbent on baptized believers, who are raised from the graves of sin by the power of Christ, to "walk in newness of life"; for since they are become new creatures, and have new hearts and new spirits given them, new principles of light, life, grace, and holiness implanted in them, and have entered into a new profession of religion, of which baptism is the badge and symbol, they ought to live a new life and conversation.”
     
  2. The Biblicist

    The Biblicist Well-Known Member
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    This is deplorable! Your challenge was to find any Baptist scholar that believed that Romans 6:4-6 was actually referring to and describing THE ORDINANCE of baptism by this langauge as you denied that, and claimed the TERM "baptized" was use here ONLY as "shorthand" for salvation but the ORDINANCE is not being described but Gill says the ORDINANCE is being described and there is no kind of "shorthand" here at all but a FULL description of the ordinance, its sybolism and its application.

    Yes, you will spare us quoting the full quotation because you are misrepresenting him as my fuller quotation spells out in no uncertain terms. He does not use the TERM "baptized" as "shorthand" for salvation. There is no "shorthand" here according to Gill. Unlike you, I will give not spare the lengthy quotation from the readers:


    Romans 6:4

    Therefore we are buried with him by baptism into death
    The nature and end of baptism are here expressed; the nature of it, it is a "burial"; and when the apostle so calls it, he manifestly refers to the ancient and only way of administering this ordinance, by immersion; when a person is covered, and as it were buried in water, as a corpse is when laid the earth, and covered with it: and it is a burial with Christ; it is a representation of the burial of Christ, and of our burial with him as our head and representative, and that "into death"; meaning either the death of Christ as before, that is, so as to partake of the benefits of his death; or the death of sin, of which baptism is also a token; for believers, whilst under water, are as persons buried, and so dead; which signifies not only their being dead with Christ, and their communion with him in his death, but also their being dead to sin by the grace of Christ, and therefore ought not to live in it: for the apostle is still pursuing his argument, and is showing, from the nature, use, and end of baptism, that believers are dead to sin, and therefore cannot, and ought not, to live in it; as more fully appears from the end of baptism next mentioned;

    that like as Christ was raised up from the dead by the glory of the
    father, even so we also should walk in newness of life
    ;
    for the end of baptism is not only to represent the death and burial, but also the resurrection of Christ from the dead, which is here said to be "by the glory of the Father", some read the words, "unto the glory of the Father"; meaning either, that the Father might be glorified hereby; or that Christ, being raised from the dead, might enjoy glory with the Father, as he does in human nature; but rather the phrase expresses the means by which, and not the end to which, Christ was raised from the dead: and by the "glory of the Father" is meant, the glorious power of the Father, which was eminently displayed in raising Christ from the dead; and as baptism is designed to represent the resurrection of Christ, which is done by raising the person out of the water, so likewise to represent our resurrection from the death of sin, to a life of grace: whence it must be greatly incumbent on baptized believers, who are raised from the graves of sin by the power of Christ, to "walk in newness of life"; for since they are become new creatures, and have new hearts and new spirits given them, new principles of light, life, grace, and holiness implanted in them, and have entered into a new profession of religion, of which baptism is the badge and symbol, they ought to live a new life and conversation.



    I never denied that application of the symbolism is ommitted as my interpretation applied the ordinance and its symbolsim of gospel salvation.

    Again, Gill is an example who does not believe all that is found here is just the TERM "baptized" as a "shorthand" of salvation but he believes the ORDINANCE is being described here FULLY with its symbolism and its application with regard to justification and regeneration.
     
    #82 The Biblicist, Dec 6, 2016
    Last edited: Dec 6, 2016
  3. JonC

    JonC Moderator
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    What I asked was "Who are those textbook scholars who deny that baptism in Romans 6 refers to the believer's experience of salvation, the believer dying to sin and made alive to God in Christ, to explain why we turn from sin?" So yes this is deplorable, I agree. It is in fact utterly stupid. I already confirmed that baptism was an ordinance (and that Paul was dealing with “water baptism”). I issued no challenge but simply asked for examples of those scholars of which you spoke. This was not an unreasonable request. When you asked the same of me, I didn’t act the fool. I even went the extra mile in getting those references to you.

    When I said Paul uses “water baptism” as a sort of “shorthand”, I clarified that he uses the symbol for what it symbolizes. I also clarified that this includes water baptism as an ordinance and its significance as such. In other words, baptism represents the ordinance as an act of submission, as entrance into church membership, as identifying with Christ, etc. But it also represents the believer’s death, burial, and resurrection in Christ. What you are objecting to is not that I diminish baptism, but that I do not diminish baptism. I believe that baptism can represent both itself as an ordinance and what it symbolizes. You deny that it can be both an ordinance and remain symbolic of what it represents (i.e., a type of “shorthand”, or “representation” of all that is ordinance and all that it symbolizes). You seem blind to half of its significance. And I NEVER stated that baptism was ONLY shorthand for salvation. In fact, I included baptism as an ordinance as a part of that “shorthand” or meaning.
    This is plain foolishness…childlike rubbish. You went to seminary. You have an education. And you know that in defending a position one references support and provides that source so that others can evaluate the accurateness of the quote. You don’t provide entire chapters, but the highlights to support your view. Stop acting like a child. We have had good discussions and I know that you are better than this.

    I provided the quote from Gill as well as a link to the fuller commentary (for the entire chapter). And I do not disagree with Gill at all. Baptism is indeed an ordinance. And, as Gill points out very strongly, Baptism is also a token or a symbol which represents something beyond the ordinance itself. It represents the believer’s death, burial and resurrection in Christ – and Paul says that since we are dead to sin and alive to God in Christ Jesus that we should not sin in our bodies.

    And it is not Gill with whom you contend. It is Paul.

    And we have not even touched on the biggest difference between you and I. In fact, you never addressed the issue. I will respond with it in another post for clarity. I don’t think that there is anything else to add here.
     
    #83 JonC, Dec 6, 2016
    Last edited: Dec 6, 2016
  4. JonC

    JonC Moderator
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    There is one place where I believe you went beyond all orthodox belief and descended into heresy. I think that this betrays the error of your theories in whole. And I called you on it at the time, but it is another point where you declined to answer.

    Is there even one single verse of Scripture that has the Christian, even symbolically, as “taking the place of Christ” or even hinting that we “stood in His place”? No, there is not. Why? Because it is heresy and an utter misunderstanding of Baptism.

    Paul says LOOK AT WATER BAPTSM and what that baptism represents. It represents your death, burial and resurrection in Christ. It means that you died to sin and are made alive to God in Christ. It means that you are purchased, you are redeemed. You are washed in His blood throuth the Cross. It means that God has given you new life in Christ. It means that you are a new creature in Christ. It means that you are forgiven in Christ. It means that you are saved. All of this in addition to baptism as an ordinance. But NOT and NEVER that you “stood in His place”, not even symbolically. And NOT and NEVER that you symbolically “took the place of Christ”.

    What is symbolized is our death, burial and resurrection IN Christ. NOT in the place of Christ. We die to ourselves, to our sins.

    Now here is a challenge, since you seem to want one so bad. Give us one verse that states baptism indicates we symbolically “stand in Christ’s place”. Give us one passage that affirms water baptism is where the believer “take the place of Christ”. Show us a verse where being pictured “in Christ” has us standing in His place, or taking His place.
     
    #84 JonC, Dec 6, 2016
    Last edited: Dec 6, 2016
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  5. The Biblicist

    The Biblicist Well-Known Member
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    I never denied the application of salvation was present as I made that application in my interpretation and that is why I stated at the time you issued your challenge that the very wording of your challenge was "crafted...very deftly" as there was no point of disagreement in what you were challenging. However, it was my assumption that your challenged was with regard to your "shorthand" view of the word "baptized" which denied the ACT of baptism was being referred to in the text.

    You have crafted your question very deftly. What you are challenging me to show is something quite different than what I claimed. You want me to show repudiation of YOUR position rather than historical affirmation of MY position. - The Biblicist


    Moreover, your question posed something quite different than the position you were defending. Here is what you were defending and I was opposing:

    When we see the word “baptism” we should automatically think “water baptism” unless it is stated otherwise. But my point was not that this was a different kind of baptism, but that Paul was using the word here to refer to what water baptism stood for and not the act itself. - JonC

    I claimed that older interpreters viewed this text as referring to the ACT ITSELF along with applications AS THAT WAS MY INTERPRETATION AS WELL. Look at the interpretation of the text that I gave you. Your challenge was no different than my interpretation, as my interpretation included the application of the symbol with regard to the doctrine of salvation. So in essence you were asking me to find an interpreter to disprove my own interpretation. However, I chose Gill because no objective interpreter of Gill's comment can deny that Gill believed that Paul had THE ACT ITSELF in view and not merely using the term "baptized" as "shorthand" for some other application. REMEMBER, you denied that the term "baptized" in this text referred to any of the three baptisms that I presented (1) in water; (2) in spirit; (3) in sufferings but said it was simply being used to represent the whole of salvation.

    Of course trying to reason with you is a complete waste of time as I can see you are not going to deal with this fairly. You next post makes some wild accusation about "heresy." I will not respond in like kind of language but My discussions with you are concluded.
     
    #85 The Biblicist, Dec 7, 2016
    Last edited: Dec 7, 2016
  6. The Biblicist

    The Biblicist Well-Known Member
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    READERS,

    I ask you to give the discussion between Jon and myself an unbiased consideration. Jon's position begins by denying that the rite of baptism is to found in Romans 6; Gal. 3 and 1 Pet. 3 and only that the term "baptized' is found in those passages and only as a "shorthand" that does not describe baptism in water, in spirit or in suffering but for the whole salvation doctrine and its application to the believers. He then begins to change his position to include the rite of baptism as part of the conversion experience and thus part of salvation which the term "baptized" is "shorthand" while still denying the actual rite of baptism is being referred to directly in these passages.

    It is indisputably clear that John Gill and my interpretation demand that the baptismal rite is being directly referred to in the passage ALONG WITH application of its salvational symbolism.

    Do you see the difference between our positions? His view says there is no baptism in water being addressed directly in these passage along with application. My view says there is baptism in water being directly addressed in all of these passages ALONG WITH application.

    However, the real issue that divides us is the nature of salvation baptism symbolizes. His kind of salvation is inclusive of the church and the baptism in the Spirit and he denies that we are in Christ by the creative act of regeneration but rather by some kind of spiritual baptism. In contrast, I believe we are in Christ by a creative act of regeneration or supernatual PRO-CREATION without any relationship to any kind of church or any kind of baptism.

    Concerning his charge of heresy. If I had said that "in Christ" by baptism or church membership was literal and spiritual then there is a basis for his charge. But I denied that. I said that baptism only provides a FIGURE of being in Christ and that church membership is only METAPHORICAL. Jon is simply a desperate man and his charge of "heresy" is silly.

    On the other hand, I could rightfully make that charge against his position(but I won't) as he is forced to read back the church and the baptism in the Spirit into Genesis forward even though clear and explicit scripture deny that (Acts 1:4-5; Eph. 2;20; 1 Cor. 12:28). He makes the word "baptize" equal with "sprinkled" in Ezek. 36:26. He replaces the creative act of BIRTH (procreation) with baptism as the means to become "in Christ" and thus "in Adam"(if he was consistent). In truth, his erroneous view denies anyone before the Pentecost were or even could be "in Christ" IF the Bible restrictive time frame for both the baptism in the Spirit and the church is accepted. In reality, he is teaching both church and baptismal salvation and that is genuine basis to make such a charge of heresy (but I won't).
     
    #86 The Biblicist, Dec 7, 2016
    Last edited: Dec 7, 2016
  7. Yeshua1

    Yeshua1 Well-Known Member
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    The Apostle Paul wentt so far as staing that he did not baptise that many, and that the important thing was Jesus death/resurrection, correct?
     
  8. Yeshua1

    Yeshua1 Well-Known Member
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    Baptism by/in the Holy Spirit happened at Pentacost forward, as Jesus stated that was when He would be now IN and noton them, and Paul brough tat into th Body of Christ as in th NT Church at large!
     
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  9. JonC

    JonC Moderator
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    Yes. And I think this is for two reasons. First, salvation is not dependent on baptism as an ordinance. Second, as an ordinance it was given to the church.
     
  10. JonC

    JonC Moderator
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    To correct the misunderstanding my brother has put foward as my view-

    I believe the ordinance of baptism looks back clearly to the same Cross the Old Testament looked forward to veiled.

    And of course Paul is speaking of water baptism and its significance/application. I am not sure why one would believe otherwise. Our disagreement is that I believe Paul is also speaking of the reality baptism represents whereas my "opponent", viewing Paul as developing practical application of the symbol divorced from what it symbolizes, believes it is far less.
     
    #90 JonC, Dec 7, 2016
    Last edited: Dec 7, 2016
  11. Yeshua1

    Yeshua1 Well-Known Member
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    Think te big discussion point here seems to be tha some see the local church as not being also part ofthe larger Body of Christ, as Jesus knows only ONE true church, His body, and the loca churches are like spokes on he wheel, some Baptist, Presby, Reformed. etc!
     
  12. Yeshua1

    Yeshua1 Well-Known Member
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    There does seem to be a difference bewteen NT Body of Christ and Israel Covanent people , as related to the work/operation of the Spirit, correct?
     
    #92 Yeshua1, Dec 7, 2016
    Last edited: Dec 7, 2016
  13. The Biblicist

    The Biblicist Well-Known Member
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    This is not a correction as this has NOTHING to do with our points of disagreement - NOTHING! We aer in agreement on the gospel looking forward to the cross as well as looking back.

    Our specific points of disagreement are:

    1. You say the ordinance of baptism in water is not being directly addressed in any of these texts but the term "baptized" is a mere "shorthand" for salvation and I say the term "baptized" has direct reference to water baptism WITH its symbolism of salvation and WITH application of that symbolism.

    2. You say that "in Christ" with regard to salvation is inclusive of the baptism in the Spirit and membership in your view of the church and I say the baptism in the Spirit and the Biblical church has no origin, thus no existence prior to the first coming of Christ.

    3. You say we are spiritually "in Christ" by some kind of non-water immersion into Christ, whereas I say we are in Christ by supernatural PRO-Creation (new birth).
     
  14. The Biblicist

    The Biblicist Well-Known Member
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    Correct! That is Jon's view that the baptism in the Spirit was part of the salvation of all the elect from Genesis forward is error.
     
  15. The Biblicist

    The Biblicist Well-Known Member
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    Nobody is arguing that water baptism is salvational or that baptism puts anyone "in Christ" spiritually, literallly or salvational. However, Jon is arguing that the baptism in the Spirit and salvation are co-extensive from Genesis and thus inseparable from salvation.
     
  16. The Biblicist

    The Biblicist Well-Known Member
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    .

    With regard to salvation God saves the Jew exactly as he saves the gentile there is not one kind of salvation for one kind of sinner and another kind of salvation for another kind of sinner.

    The SAME problem from Genesis requires the SAME solution for all sinners regardless when they lived.

    That SAME problem is spiritual SEPARATION and the ONLY possible solution to SEPARATION from God is UNION with God.

    That SAME problem is spiritual DEATH = SEPARATION and the only possible solution to SEPARATION = DEATH is spiritual UNION=LIFE.

    It is just that simple. That is why you both have a false salvation as your solution is a CHURCH UNION (membership into a phantom church) and a BAPTISMAL UNION (baptism in the Spirit)
     
  17. Yeshua1

    Yeshua1 Well-Known Member
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    Actual, salvation is found in spiritual union in/with Jesus Himself, that act done by HS at time of conversation, as He givesto us a new nture, indwells us, and seals us!
     
  18. The Biblicist

    The Biblicist Well-Known Member
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    Galatians 3:27 says that in the act of baptism we "put on" Christ. The langauge is taken from clothing being put on someone. That means they are "IN" those clothing. Thus we are water baptized "INTO" Christ as in baptism we "PUT ON" Christ. This refers to the Roman custom of the heir PUTTING ON a white toga to DECLARE his rightful position (not to obtain it). So baptism does not obtain being "in Christ" spiritually as that is a CREATIVE act of God but baptism does SYMBOLICALLY "put on" Christ.

    In contrast, the sinner has NOTHING to do with the creative act of being placed "in Christ" as Paul says, "for we are his workmanship CREATED in Christ." So your view cannot possibly fit in Gal.3:27 as Paul employs the MIDDLE voice.

    26 For you are all the children of God by faith in Christ Jesus.
    27 For as many of you as have been baptized into Christ have put on Christ.


    Moreover, in the context faith in Christ precedes baptism into Christ just as in the Great Commission order and the context is about justification or our LEGAL POSITION in Christ by faith, and what follows justification by faith is water baptism. Your view would require the reverse. Your kind of baptism would precede our LEGAL POSITION in Christ by justification by faith at least logically. So the order, the langauge, and the grammar repudiate your view.
     
    #98 The Biblicist, Dec 7, 2016
    Last edited: Dec 7, 2016
  19. Yeshua1

    Yeshua1 Well-Known Member
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    The Baptism of/by the Holy Spirit is required for us to be saved , but wate baptism is not, so Paul was addressing th spiritual union with Jesus the water symbolized!
     
  20. The Biblicist

    The Biblicist Well-Known Member
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    You are wrong on two counts.

    1. Jesus Himself IS GOD, thus we are brought into spiritual union with God
    2. The Holy Spirit is not the administrator of the "baptism IN the Spirit" but God the Son is the Administrator
     
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