TL had asserted:
"Baptism is clearly seen MANY times in the NT as having relationship to removal of sin."
I had asked TL for at least four examples where this is done in the NT. The number "four" came up because of his claim for "many" and not "a few" or even "a couple." TL has offered the following list of passages.
Now remember, what we are looking for is something that clarifies the "it could go either way" nature of the question concerning the word "for" (Greek "eis") in
Acts 2:38. TheLegalist had posted a series of comments from some very excellent scholars that had been collected by a Campbellite named "Padfield" that tended to emphasize the ambiguity of
Acts 2:38. Despite having these scholars who unanimously stated there was ambiguity in
Acts 2:38, at their fingertips, both TL and "Padfield" insist that the matter is "clear."
Let's consider:
"Romans 6,
Colossians 2 and
Acts 22:16 with IMO (TL's opinion)
Acts 2:38."
Well, first of all that's only three examples. You can't count
Acts 2:38 as an example of a verse that clears up the meaning of
Acts 2:38. Anyhoo...
How does
Romans 6 (particularly
Romans 6:4?) help us to understand the "remission of sins" phrase in
Acts 2:38?
Paul opens chapter 6 with a rhetorical question for the Roman believers. Should the believer continue in sin? The obvious answer here is "no." The sinful life of the believer has been "buried" like a dead man in the waters of baptism. Of interest to this discussion is the question, "Did the burial kill the old man? Or, was the old man buried because he was already 'dead?'"
Paul answers this in
Romans 6:6. We are "crucified" with Christ when we convert. Our repentance is the "death" in this picture. The "burial" is a consequence of the fact that we have "died."
Galatians 5:24, expands this thought further. The sin is "crucified" with Christ when we repent.
So, it is the death of Jesus Christ on the cross that our repentance actually seeks to emulate. And what does His death on the cross signify for us?
In
1 Corinthians 1:17, Paul actually
contrasts "the cross" (death/repentance) with baptism (burial). He states that Christ has sent him to preach the Gospel. Paul then adds that if he were to preach the Gospel "with wisdom of words" that the "cross of Christ" would be "made of none effect."
So the preaching of the cross is the preaching of the Gospel. The matter of baptism, while important in its own right, is still
something else from the "preaching of the Gospel." And, what does the preaching of the Gospel produce?
"For I am not ashamed of the gospel of Christ: for it is the power of God unto salvation to every one that believeth; to the Jew first, and also to the Greek," Romans 1:16.
Preaching the cross (the Gospel) brings about the power of God "unto salvation."
The people that heard Paul in Corinth and responded to his preaching of the cross (the Gospel)
received "the power of God unto salvation." They were saved - and saved by the power of God. These newly saved Christian believers would then be baptized by the leaders of the Christian community in Corinth.
Now, baptism does obviously obtain some merit for the one being baptized. It is NOT an empty ritual devoid of any significance. First of all, baptism is a statement by the one being baptized that they have chosen to live a different life and to serve a different Lord. Who is this new Lord that they have chosen to serve? Listen for his name to be spoken at some point of the act of baptism.
I think we as OPs have often erred in making baptism into something that "the preacher" (or whoever) does
to the one being baptized. Baptism is an act of choice much like the children of Israel when they stood on the shores of the Red Sea.
The "natural man" would scoff at the notion that these waters represented a "path" toward safety and salvation. The natural man sees only water, and living human bein gs cannot survive immersed in water. "This isn't safety! (salvation). This is folly," cries the natural man (
Exodus 14:10-12).
However, that "natural man" is dead when he appears on the "shores" of the waters of baptism. Instead, we have a "new creature" - we have someone who has been in the presence of God, like Moses on the Mount. This "new man," this "new creature" also has "the power of God unto salvation" and will part the waters of baptism as Moses did to the sea.
Thus, the believer is not some weakling being led from the hay and saw dust of the altar of repentance to the trough of baptism. The new believer is a conqueror. The new believer has used the waters of baptism to make a difference between himself/herself and the enemy. This believer now rises up to a new life in Christ (
Romans 6:1-12).
The waters of baptism here are not something that washes "filth from the flesh" (
1 Peter 3:21). The waters of baptism are a path that only a determined and powerful creature can tread. "Powerful" with the power of God!