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The
Baptism of Jesus Christ
In Matthew 3:13-17 we
have the story of the baptism of Jesus Christ. This is an excellent
place to start if we are to understand what baptism is.
“Then cometh Jesus from Galilee to Jordan
unto John, to be baptized of him. But John forbad him, saying,
I have need to be baptized of thee, and comest thou to me?
And Jesus answering said unto him, Suffer it to be so now:
for thus it becometh us to fulfil all righteousness. Then he
suffered him. Jesus, when he was baptized, went up straightway
out of the water: and, lo, the heavens were opened unto him,
and he saw the Spirit of God descending like a dove, and lighting
upon him: And lo a voice from heaven, saying, This is my beloved
Son, in whom I am well pleased.”
This description of the baptism of Jesus
is very simple. There is no real argument about the mode of
baptism. He was dunked in the water. That is, He was fully
immersed. Baptism means placing somebody or something entirely
into some other medium—nothing else. That is the meaning of
baptism throughout scripture. This passage states that Jesus
came up “straightway out of the water.” Sprinkling would not
explain this statement. Neither would pouring. John took Jesus,
put Him down into the water, and He came up straightway out
of the water.
Some say that John just poured a little
water on Jesus’ head. You may have seen a popular painting
of John pouring water on Jesus. They are standing about knee
deep in the Jordon River and John the Baptist is pouring a
little water from a pitcher on His head. Now, start with the
view of that picture in your mind and imagine Jesus Christ
coming up
“straightway out of the water.” He is only knee deep in the
water and now he comes up straightway. That would require Him
to float up into the air. But that is not how it happened.
When you walk up the bank out of a river, you do not come up
straightway. But when you put somebody in about waist deep
and you dunk them under the water, they come up straightway
out of the water. That is scriptural baptism.
Three Elements of
Baptism
There are three main parts of any baptism.
These are often called the elements of baptism. Here
they are:
- Administrator: He is the
one doing the baptism. He is called the Administrator
because he is the one administering the Baptism.
- Subject: The Subject the person
getting baptized.
- Medium: The Medium is what
the Subject is being baptized into. There is no baptism
unless there is a Medium into which the Administrator baptizes
the Subject.
In the baptism of Jesus by John, John was
the Administrator, Jesus was the Subject and the Medium was
water. Pay close attention to this relationship because it
is the pattern by which all baptisms can be understood. In
baptism, there is always an Administrator who baptizes the
Subject into the Medium. Always look for these elements when
you consider anything called a baptism in scripture.
Generally speaking, the way John baptized
Jesus is how we baptize believers in water today. It is not
John baptizing Jesus, but it is one man, usually a preacher,
who as the Administrator takes the person who has come to be
baptized, the Subject, and puts them into the water, the Medium.
You have the Administrator, the Subject and the Medium. That
is still our basic form of baptism as to external physical
form. But more important, that is the form of all baptisms.
An Administrator takes a Subject and puts that Subject into
some sort of a Medium. Let us apply this knowledge to another
kind of scriptural baptism.