Right, which is why I call it false teaching because it is adding works to salvation.If you take John 3:5 as referring to water baptism, then you have to conclude that baptism is an essential element in the salvation process.
By logical fallacies, I was referring to those that only use those arguments. Of course looking at what others believe before us is very important. I hope that clears that up.I wouldn’t say those are logical fallacies, and popularity certainly isn’t an issue here. In fact, this is a very unpopular idea among most people I know. As for tradition, I believe scripture commends us to observe tradition. Moreover, it’s just good common sense. Although I’m in the seventh decade of my life, I still find it helpful to consult people who have been around longer than I have.
AFTER is the key phrase there. We are not going to an entirely different setting...different context.As for contextual support for baptism here, I would direct you to the very next thing after the Nicodemus discourse. In 3:22 it says: “After these things Jesus and His disciples came into the land of Judea, and there He was spending time with them and baptizing.” So immediately after the Nicodemus meeting, the next thing we see Jesus doing is baptizing.
Only problem is John 4:1-2 "Now when Jesus learned that the Pharisees had heard that Jesus was making and baptizing more disciples than John (although Jesus himself did not baptize, but only his disciples)" John says that Jesus didn't baptize anyone.Although the Bible is silent on this, I have always thought this was the time when Jesus baptized His disciples.
If an interpretation contradicts Scripture, then we move on to other interpretations. Here you just used eisegesis and circular arguments. In trying to prove that "water" means baptism in John 3, you went to John 4. Then to prove that John 4's "living water" means water baptism, you referenced John 3. Do you see what happened here? There is nothing in the context of the Nicodemus passage that even hints at water baptism. Just because Jesus went and water baptized later in the chapter, means nothing to the context of the Nicodemus part. If Jesus went and drank water, nobody would then say one has to drink water to be saved. John 4 is very clear that Jesus is making a reference to non-physical water, but "living water."Moving on into John 4, Jesus offers the woman living water. I believe He was here referring to baptism as well. This is the problem you encounter with the exegesis of this verse when you say it doesn’t refer to baptism. You read it and say, “This can’t mean water baptism because that would mean we must be baptized to be saved. So what else could Jesus have meant here?”
Then you go searching for other possibilities. Indeed you must do so if you reject baptism as being an essential element of salvation. However, the plain and simple meaning of the verse is that being born of spirit involves being born of water (baptism). This is corroborated by passages such as Romans 6:4, which talks about newness of life following baptism.
"Jesus said to her, “Everyone who drinks of this water will be thirsty again, but whoever drinks of the water that I will give him will never be thirsty again. The water that I will give him will become in him a spring of water welling up to eternal life.”
(John 4:13-14)
Jesus is very clear he isn't talking about physical water here, but spiritual, non physical water.
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