Briguy said:
			
		
	
	
		
		
			...
Darron, sorry I din't make myself clear again. I totally understand that there are exceptions to water baptism. You have made that clear. I understand about someone excepting that there infant baptism was Baptism enough, if they have faith and believe that that early Baptism was a proper Baptism. I also think I understand you to say that you think that the person who doesn't get baptized, and has every opportunity, is someone without saving faith for if he had saving faith he would go to the waters of Baptism.
		
		
	 
More or less.  If someone KNOWS what is commanded regarding baptism, fully recognizes the invalidity of any non-Scriptural ceremony s/he might have undergone, and refuses biblical baptism, s/he is unsaved regardless of whatever else s/he says or does.
	
		
			
				Briguy said:
			
		
	
	
		
		
			I use that same argument for the person who says they are saved and has no fruit and then walks away from the "faith" altogether. I even say that about folks who have some fruit at first and then walk away. My point was that I just don't believe scripture is teaching what you say it is. Do you remember the Quakers? This was a whole group that did not believe water Baptism was for today. These were a very devout peoples who had the fruits of the Spirit. As each Quaker died do you think God turned them away because they had the opprtunity to be Baptized and did not?
		
		
	 
Depends on what they knew.  I believe that if these people are truly deluded, and would have been baptized if they knew the truth, then they are saved because they had biblical faith.
I believe that 1 Peter 3:21, as well as Acts 2:38 when translated carefully as it is in Portuguese, describe how baptism follows from biblical faith.  I have already explained this and will not repeat myself.  If a faith in the Gospel would motivate someone to be baptized under fully-informed and acccessible conditions, it is biblical faith if a mistake and/or a non-availability problem precluded actual baptism.
	
		
			
				Briguy said:
			
		
	
	
		
		
			Many people get saved like DHK and then come to the waters of Baptism years later. Sometimes it is because of the way the church they attend views baptism. Sometimes it is because they are just learning about their new faith and they don't see the need right away.
		
		
	 
DHK admitted on another thread that the information he had was lacking.  When he was better informed, he obeyed.  He would have been saved had he deceased when under-informed.  When I got saved, I wanted to be baptized immediately but it was withheld from me for almost five months.  Had I died before those five months, I would have been saved.
	
	
		
		
			In my case I have studied Baptism closely and see it as a fine thing to do, and I may some day, but it will not add to the salvation that i have because that was bought with blood and not with water.
		
		
	 
I do not believe that this is just cause to disregard Scripture's command to be baptized to follow up our salvation.
However, the first part of the quotation I will repeat later and address.
	
	
		
		
			Darron, you feel that Baptism is a judge of someones faith but have you really thought that Baptism today is not done like it used to be?
 
all for now,
 
In Christ,
Brian
		
		
	 
Oh, yes, I have.  It is different now because some have been changed the procedures without Scriptural authorization.  Salvation by faith overcomes all these errors when the faith is genuine and the delusion is real.  However, again, human presumption is not just cause to disregard Scripture's command to be baptized as the Bible calls for.  So someone else does not do it as Scripture calls for -- can we still do it as individuals properly?  Yes, I believe in most cases we can.
	
		
			
				Briguy said:
			
		
	
	
		
		
			In my case I have studied Baptism closely and see it as a fine thing to do, and I may some day,...
		
		
	 
I believe we have arrived at the root of the problem.  I had suspected this.  I hope you will trust that I am not enjoying writing this part.  I believe you simply have no desire to be baptized; you do not see the need, and you might do it sometime if you decide to, but you have no desire to do so now.  If so, Scripture will not be the issue here, and anything else I say would possibly make you dig your heels in deeper.
I will leave you with one thought:  when Jesus Christ’s church was instituted at Matthew 28:19-20, the Lord commanded 
“Go, therefore, and make disciples of all the nations, |bautizad = baptize| them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit, | enseñad = teach| them to obey everything I have told you| ; and lo, 
I am with you always, even to the end of the age” (NBV|RVA margin and translated|NBV|RVA margin and translated|ICB|NASB).  He called for baptism to accompany making of converts, and listed it before teaching them what to do -- many churches alter the order, but even so, we can still decide as individuals to be baptized.  The "lo, I am with you always, even to the end of the age” suggests that Christians were to be baptized until the close of the church age.  I leave you to decide whether or not you are willing to obey that.  Out of genuine hope for your eternal well-being, I hope you will make the Scriptural decision.