There are actually many answers to this question - but consider the following from John Calvin:
"Our opponents ask us what faith we had for many years after our baptism, in order to show that our baptism was in vain, since baptism is not sanctified to us except by the word of promise received in faith. We answer that although we were blind and unbelieving for a long time and did not embrace the promise which had been given us in baptism, yet the promise itself, since it was from God, always remained steady, firm, and true. If all men were false and liars, still God continues to be true; if all men were lost, still Christ remains a Savior. We confess, therefore, that when we totally neglected the promise offered to us in baptism, without which baptism is nothing, we received no benefit at all from baptism... Yet we believe that the promise itself never expired.... By baptism God promises the forgiveness of sins and will certainly fulfill the promise to all believers; that promise was offered to us in baptism; let us, therefore, embrace it by faith."
In short, Calvin reminds us, baptism is not primarily my word to God, my promise to God, but God's promise to me. Baptism is a visible word. It invites me, summons me to believe the One who has promised to cleanse my sins through the death and resurrection of Christ. The "solution", therefore, to someone who has not believed his baptism thus far is not to get baptized but to repent and to believe and receive the promise symbolized in that baptism.
Monday, July 31, 2017
Why shouldn't you get rebaptized?
Labels:
Baptism,
Ecclesiology,
John Calvin,
Quotations,
Sacraments,
Word of God
Saturday, July 22, 2017
Homily in Remembrance of Tom Madison
Acts 26:28–29 (NASB95)
28 Agrippa replied to
Paul, “In a short time you will persuade me to become a Christian.” 29 And Paul
said, “I would wish to God, that whether in a short or long time, not only you,
but also all who hear me this day, might become such as I am, except for these
chains.”
The passage that I have
quoted today contains Paul’s witness to a Jewish king named Agrippa. Two years
prior to this exchange, Paul had been unjustly imprisoned and had remained in
Roman custody that entire time, awaiting a trial, awaiting his freedom. At the
end of those two years, however, the Roman Governor Festus was prepared to
deliver Paul into the hands of his enemies; consequently, Paul used his right
as a Roman citizen to appeal for justice to Caesar in Rome; his appeal was
granted.
Shortly after he made his
appeal, King Agrippa arrived and Festus decided to use Agrippa to help him
explain to Caesar why Paul was being sent to Rome. Festus permitted Paul to
explain why he was in prison; Paul, as was his custom, used the opportunity to
preach about Christ. He wanted to persuade Agrippa to become a Christian. So
Paul highlighted the way Jesus had fulfilled all the promises that God had made
throughout the Jewish Scriptures – “that the Christ [God’s chosen Ruler of
the world] would suffer [and die], that He would be the first to rise from the
dead, and would proclaim light to the Jewish people and to the Gentiles” (26:23).
Jesus is proof of God’s intention to reconcile human beings with Himself.
This may seem an unusual
passage for a memorial service. But it is fitting for this reason: even as Paul
had suffered in prison for about two years, our beloved brother Tom suffered in
a prison of sickness these past two years. Tom would not have chosen that trial
for himself any more than Paul would have chosen to be imprisoned. Far better
to be free, far better to be well, and able to do what he was accustomed to
doing.
But Tom knew, even as Paul did,
that his Heavenly Father had some purpose for his suffering. Consequently, Tom used
his suffering to speak to others about Christ. Tom’s faith was always strong –
as the testimonies we have heard illustrate. But these last couple years Tom’s
faith was even deeper; his perception of eternal realities clearer; and his
understanding of the fragility of life keener. Though Tom suffered much in his
sickness, he suffered in faith. When I would meet with Tom to encourage him, I
would regularly go away encouraged. For he would remind me of God’s promises,
remind me of God’s purposes, and remind me of God’s lovingkindness. Perhaps Tom
did the same with you?
I was reminded of Agrippa’s
encounter with Paul as I spoke with Connie and the children this week. They
told me of a conversation that Tom had with an unbelieving friend in which he spoke
of Christ and repeated Paul’s words in our text: I would wish to God…[that
you] might become such as I am, except for this cancer. Tom would want all
to know the hope of being reconciled to God through faith in Jesus Christ and
having hope even in the face of suffering and death.
So I am here to repeat Tom’s
urgent appeal; I am here to remind you of the fragility of life; I am here to
tell you that you will die and face your Creator and your Judge; and the only
way to look forward to that moment in hope, as Tom did, is if you have been
reconciled to God through the death and resurrection of His Son Jesus. Your
sins – your failure to worship your Creator as you ought, your acts of
selfishness and spite, your mistreatment of your spouse, your unjust divorce, your
anger and bitterness, your lust for money, for sex, for control, for youth –
your sins have separated you from God; if you should die and stand before your
Creator with those sins between you and Him, you will perish eternally.
But hear the Good News: God
has been gracious to you – He has offered clear and irrefutable evidence of His
existence and of His determination to reconcile you to Himself. Jesus’ death
and resurrection are that proof – proof that God has provided a sacrifice to
forgive your sins and reconcile you to Himself and proof that death is no
longer a cause of hopelessness for those who believe in Jesus. So I am here to
plead with you: be reconciled to God before it is too late. Turn from your sin
and turn in faith to Jesus Christ. Listen to the words of Sacred Scripture:
For
God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son, that whoever
believes in Him should not perish but have everlasting life. For God did not
send His Son into the world to condemn the world, but that the world through
Him might be saved. He who believes in Him is not condemned; but he who does
not believe is condemned already, because he has not believed in the name of the
only begotten Son of God. (John 3:16-18)
These words remind us that our
condition as sinful human beings is so dire that there is no way to deal with
our sin and be reconciled to God other than through Jesus; He is the only
sacrifice for sins. “He who believes in the Son has everlasting life; and he
who does not believe the Son shall not see life, but the wrath of God abides on
him” (John 3:36). These are the only two options. Believe in Jesus or face the judgment
of God.
.
Despite God’s gracious proof
of His existence and His purpose to reconcile us to Himself, many continue to
resist Him and refuse to believe in Jesus. The Scriptures say again:
This
is the [sober truth], that the light has come into the world, and men loved
darkness rather than light, because their deeds were evil. For everyone
practicing evil hates the light and does not come to the light, lest his deeds
should be exposed. But he who does the truth comes to the light, that his deeds
may be clearly seen, that they have been done in God… (John 3:19-21)
So what of you? Are you willing
to humble yourself before your Creator? Are you willing to come to the light
and have your deeds exposed now? Or will you try to hide and hope that the day
of death will not overtake you? Tom’s death illustrates that that hope is vain.
It is appointed unto all men to die once and after this to face the judgment. So
hear Paul’s wish once again: “I would wish to God, that whether in a short
or long time, not only you, but also all who hear me this day, might become
such as I am, except for these chains.” Let us pray.
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