Um, no. That is a heretical teaching on par with transubstantiation.MEE: I agree about the blood, but it is applied when we are baptized in the name of Jesus Christ.
I read the article, MEE, and here's my analysis of it.
Paragraph 1: Author says "The proper way to express faith in Jesus is to confess His name. In each of the cases just cited, the candidates expressed their faith in Jesus by being baptized in the name of Jesus," and gives verses from Acts and, surprisingly, 1 Corinthians to back up that claim. Too bad that the same author who wrote 1 Corinthians also tells us in his letter to the church at Rome that we must confess with the mouth (Rom 10:9).
That, my friend, is a serious error on the author's part.
Paragraph 2: Reference to Acts 10:43, indicating that this verse says baptism for the remission of sins. While I'm not attempting to contradict Acts 2:38, Acts 10:43 is part of Peter's preaching to Cornelius and the Gentiles, and Peter never talks about baptism until AFTER the Holy Spirit falls upon those present. In this verse, Peter specifically says that through His name, we receive remission of sins; not "through baptism, we receive remission of sins." Subtle, yet huge difference.
Paragraph 3: Talks about baptism as part of our salvation experience, and uses Mark 16:16 and 1 Peter 3:21 as it's support. We've talked Mark 16:16 to death, so I'm only going to say this one thing: If you cannot look at 1 Peter 3:20-21, and compare it with Hebrews 11:7 and see that scripture is NOT contradicting itself, then there's nothing more to discuss on this subject.
If you see a contradiction between 1 Peter 3:20-21 and Hebrews 11:7, then that contradiction MUST MUST MUST be explored, because scripture does not contradict itself.
Paragraph 4: A true crack in the "oneness" philosopy. "The Spirit of God did not die for us; only Jesus the man died for us and was buried in the tomb."
According to "oneness" philosophy, aren't the Spirit and the Man the same? I imagine the explanation is that when our flesh dies, our spirit does not; but this seems to still contradict the "oneness" philosophy, because it necessary requires an understanding that there are still "separate" parts/personalities/persons.
Not explained in this paragraph; not even really approached. An oversight on the author's part?
Final paragraphs. This statement stuck out: "Since the only one who can take away sins is Jesus- not by our deeds, not the water, and not the preacher- we call upon Him in faith, depending upon Him to do the work."
Directly contradicts paragraph 3 of this same article. How can the author say in paragraph 3 that baptism is part of our salvation experience, and then state that water doesn't take away sins?
The author then asks the question: "why would anyone refuse to be baptized in Jesus' name?"
To my knowledge, no one has. Those that have been baptized in the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost, are just as much baptized in Jesus' name as those that are baptized in the name of Jesus--since the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost is God/Jesus/Holy Spirit, just as Jesus is God/Jesus/Holy Spirit.
Further, one CANNOT say that someone's baptism in the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost is following the exact words of Jesus Christ Himself.
(edited at this point; messed up the last paragraph. Should read: Further, one CANNOT say that someone's baptism in the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Ghost is invalid, since doing so is simply following the exact words of Jesus Christ Himself.
And my final thought on this article: Let's say that the author is correct, and it's not the water, but the baptism that plays a part in the salvation process. Seems logical to my simple mind that if that's true, then I could ask why sprinkling, pouring, shucks, even using dirt isn't acceptable.)
[ December 02, 2002, 06:06 PM: Message edited by: Don ]