Bible
Study - Are You Really Sure Of Your Eternal Salvation?
Lesson 14
Must We Be Baptized For The Forgiveness Of Our
Sins?
In the second chapter of Acts, Peter
had convicted the people there of having killed the Son of God.
In verse 37 their question was, "Men
and brethren what shall we do?" In verse 38 (KJV),
"Then Peter said unto them, repent and be baptized everyone
of you in the name of Jesus Christ for the remission of your
sins." Here people were told to repent and be baptized
for the remission of their sins. Only when we submit to baptism
as the Lord has commanded, that is for the remission of sins to
be saved, do we show our faith in the Lord. Only then will
He save us.
Man today has a sin problem. God
says in Isaiah 59:2 "But your iniquities
have separated you from your God; and your sins have hidden His
face from you, so that He will not hear." It is
our sins that separate us from God. We are to repent and be baptized
for the remission of our sins. This is God's instruction on how
we solve our sin problem. In the above verse, when Peter told them
to "Repent and be baptized for the remission of sins,"
whatever repentance is for in that verse, baptism is for the same
reason. Repent and be baptized are joined by the coordinating conjunction
and, which joins words of equal grammatical importance.
Certainly Acts 2:38 does not teach that lost people are to repent
because they have already received forgiveness of their sins. Neither
does it teach that lost people are to be baptized because their
sins are already forgiven. Satan would like you to believe that
baptism has nothing to do with the forgiveness of your sins.
Have you been baptized for the remission of your sins? Again, the
choice is yours; either believe what God has said and be saved,
or believe what men say and you will continue to be lost. We only
have two choices, and the choice that we make will have eternal
consequences. But please make the right choice so you can go to
Heaven.
In the book of Acts we have the
account of the conversion of the Apostle Paul. In Acts chapter 9,
Paul is traveling on the road up to Damascus to persecute Christians.
The Lord appears to Paul on the road and strikes him blind. In verse
5 he tells Paul, "I am Jesus whom you
are persecuting." In verse 6 Paul asks,
"Lord what do you want me to do? Then the Lord said to him
(Paul), Arise and go into the city, and you will be told what
you must do." The Lord did not tell Paul what
he must do, but that someone in the city would tell him what
he must do. In Acts 9:9, after Paul went into the city,
"And he was three days without sight, and neither ate nor drank."
Paul was worried sick and very upset. He had just found out that
all the years in his zeal, while persecuting the Lord's church,
he had actually been persecuting the Lord. Paul was devastated and
broken-hearted in finding out that he had been wrong all these years.
Let's see now what Paul was toldwhat he must do. In Acts chapter 22, a man named Ananias,
who was sent by the Lord, came to Paul and miraculously restored
Paul's eyesight. Notice what Paul was told by Ananias what he
must do. Acts 22:16, "And now why
are you waiting? Arise, and be baptized and wash away your sins,
calling on the name of the Lord." Paul was not saved
three days earlier while on the road to Damascus, as some people
would like for us to believe. Paul up to this point was still lost,
because he still had all his sins that needed to be washed away.
Paul still had a sin problem. Obedience to the Lord's command to
be baptized was necessary to wash away Paul's sins.
At the point of baptism every
sin that we have ever committed will be taken away, if it is done
for that purpose. Many people today have been baptized in order
to be added to some denomination, but not for the remission of their
sins. Have you been baptized for the purpose of having your
sins washed away? If you have not, then you still have a sin problem.
You are still lost.
Paul was not told "to pray
the sinners prayer and ask Jesus to come into his heart in order
to be saved." This is completely foreign to the scripture.
You cannot find anywhere in the Bible where anyone was ever told
to do this. Since God in the Bible has never told anyone "To
pray and ask Jesus to come into your heart in order to be saved",
who else but men could have come up with such an idea? Forgiveness
occurs in the mind of God and not on the basis of man's feeling
in his heart. Only when we have done what God has said that
we MUST do, will God forgive our sins. We cannot devise our
own plan as to how our sins are to be forgiven.
Do not misunderstand. We do not
"earn" our salvation by being baptized. Salvation is a
gift from God. Even though salvation is a free gift from God, he
has laid down certain conditions upon which he will give it. One
condition to receive his gift is faith: Hebrews 11:6,
"But without faith it is impossible to please Him."
Another condition of his free gift is repentance: Luke 13:3,
"Unless you repent you will all likewise perish."
Another condition is baptism: Mark 16:16,
"He who believes and is baptized will be saved."
Still another condition is living a faithful Christian life: Revelation
2:10, "Be faithful until death,
and I will give you the crown of life." The conditions
include doing all "the will of the Father," Matthew 7:21.
These are God's conditions. Believing in God and Christ with all
our heart, repenting of all our sins, confessing Christ and being
baptized are allequally important to our salvation.
If any of these are lacking, then we will not be saved. You can't
have one without the others.
There is nothing that we can do
to merit salvation. Whether it be believing in Jesus or being baptized,
we can never "earn our salvation". Our salvation
is free, but it is not cheap. It cost God's Son his very own
life. The only way we can show our faith in Christ is if we
are willing to accept and obey what He says. But it is in
baptism that God has chosen to impart his wonderful grace of salvation
to us as a willing believer. God's gift of salvation must
be accepted on His terms, not ours.
According to the Bible, it
is at the point of baptism, that we pass from an unsaved state into
a saved state. In other words, at the time of baptism, we go from
being unsaved to being saved. We read in I Peter 3:21 (KJV),
"The like figure whereunto even baptism does also now save
us." The Bible says that "baptism does now
also save us," but men say that "baptism does not
save us." This is very similar to the situation of Adam
and Eve in the Garden of Eden. God in Genesis 2:17 told them not
to eat of the tree of knowledge of good and evil,
"For in the day that you eat of it you shall surely die."
But Satan told Eve in Genesis 3:4,
"Then the serpent said to the woman, you will not surely
die." Satan only added the one word "not"
to what God had said and completely changed the meaning. That is
what men are doing to God's commands today. Who are you going to
accept, the word of men or the Word of God? We are told
in Acts 5:29, "We ought to obey God
rather than men." On the Day of Judgment, the
Bible will still say that "baptism does also now save us."
Again the choice is yours, but it is very serious. We dare not make
the wrong choice which will have eternal consequences.
Questions
Lesson 14
Must We Be Baptized For The Forgiveness Of Our
Sins?
(click on the button of the answer
of your choice)
1) (Acts 2:38) What were these people
in this verse told to do for the remission of their sins?
Pray the sinner's prayer.
Repent and be baptized.
Accept Christ into their heart.
2)
Our sins are forgiven before we repent and are baptized.
3) (Acts 22:16) What was Paul told to do to have his sins washed
away?
Accept Christ as his personal Saviour
Only believe in Jesus.
Arise and be baptized.
4)
Until Paul was baptized he still had all his sins.
5) Where can we find in the Bible that we
are told to pray and ask Jesus to come into our heart in order to
be saved?
Jude 2:5.
2 John 1:14.
It is not there.
6)
We cannot find in the Bible where anyone was ever told to accept
Jesus into his heart in order to be saved.
7) (1 Peter 3:21) What does the Bible say
saves us?
Faith only.
Baptism.
Our own goodness.
8)
It is at the point of baptism that God has chosen to impart His
wonderful grace of salvation.