Tuesday, November 19, 2013

Baptism

Excerpt from the sermon I preached at Elijah's baptism. 

We have come today to replay an ancient picture. For going on 2,000 years, believers have gathered about a body of water to witness this very same baptism. You have an ancient heritage, church. You don’t have to go search out your genealogy to find a connection to your past. Here is your connection.

Upon baptism you will join the ranks of Peter, James, John, Andrew, Stephen, Philip, Apollos, Timothy, Paul, and those men and women who followed their doctrine. Every church planted that sent out its own men to preach the word, make disciples and baptize them as the Lord's churches spread like wildfire. Down through the ages and through the dark valley of persecution. Across the continents, men have confessed their sins, trusted in the Christ, and followed Him in baptism.  Starting in a muddy river in Israel by a man sent from God, to Jerusalem, through Samaria and Asia. Down southward to Africa and westward across the mountains plains into the land of the Barbarians believers were immersed upon profession in Christ and united with the church. On to Europe, then to the Americas this same ordinance was give for the same purpose. Age after age, church after church acting out this drama, making this confession, Jesus Saves.

Silently, yet publicly proclaiming that Jesus Christ is Lord to the glory of the Father. Confessing that Jesus Christ, the eternal Son of God, the Word made flesh, came, born of a virgin and entered into His own creation to save His people from their sins. We declare in baptism that the Godman was nailed to the cross and was the Lamb of God, the substitutionary sacrifice and completely saved every single person for whom the sacrifice was intended. On that terrible afternoon, Jesus cried it is finished and gave up the ghost. And, behold, the veil of the temple was rent in twain from the top to the bottom; and the earth did quake, and the rocks rent.

Jesus, the Lord, the Saviour, the King, the Christ was dead. They took his lifeless body from that wretched tree and laid His lifeless body in a rich man’s tomb. Sad, dejected, and faithless, the disciples had given up in despair.

But lo, at the dawning of the first day of the week, the two Mary’s came to the tomb but the stone was rolled away. They were terrified, but the angle said “Fear not ye: for I know that ye seek Jesus, which was crucified. He is not here: for he is risen, as he said. Come, see the place where the Lord lay.” The reports were flying about, the tomb is empty! Jesus had risen! He met with them, spoke with them, ate with them, and preached to them. He was alive! He had the power to lay his life down and he took it right back up. This same Jesus, in His same body spoke to these same disciples, bodily risen and forever defeating death for those He had died and risen for.

The same Jesus who had the power to raise himself from the dead has the power to give life. To give life to the dead to raise them from spiritual death unto spiritual life and to one day raise their bodies from the dirt.

As a church, we are to go with this message of the gospel and preach repentance and the forgiveness of sins in Christ. We have been charged to make disciples and baptize them.  We baptize them symbolizing how we are made disciples. As Jesus died, was buried, and was resurrected – we symbolize that in the water. We are buried in baptism. As Jesus rose from the dead for our justification, we come up out of the water raised to walk in newness of life.

Baptism symbolizes what Christ has already done. We baptize the believers, the disciples of Jesus to show the world that we have died to the old life (repentance) and have been born again and are new creatures in Jesus.


2 comments:

Lewis K said...

Amen my brother. Very well said and written. Praising our God for still saving sinners, and that you had the privilege of baptizing one of your own. Praying that God continues to use you for His glory!
Amen

doug4 said...

Thanks, brother!