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Q:
What does Acts 2:38
mean?
A
: Acts 2:38 states, "Then Peter said
unto them, Repent, and be baptized
every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ for the remission of sins,
and ye shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost."
This verse is used by many groups as an important proof text for their
doctrine. It is therefore important to look at the context and meaning
of
this verse. Peter is speaking on the day of Pentecost ten days after
Jesus had ascended up into heaven. He is speaking to a group of Jews
who
have come to Jerusalem to celebrate the Jewish feast of weeks--also
called Pentecost. At the time Peter preaches this message, he still does
not think that a Gentile can get saved without first becoming a Jew (see
Acts 10). He is also looking for the kingdom
to be restored to the Jewish
people at any moment (Acts 1:6; 3:19-21).
He does not understand the
grace age doctrine that will be established within the next few years.
His purpose is to bring the Jewish people to know their Messiah so that
He will return and establish the kingdom for Israel.
When these Jews hear the message of what Christ has done and suffered
and
how He is risen from the dead and sitting on the right hand of God until
His enemies are His footstool (Acts 2:32-36)
and how they are responsible
for crucifying Him (v.36), they are pricked
in their hearts and cry out,
"Men and brethren, what shall we do?" (v.37).
In other words, they want
to know what they can do about their part and guilt in rejecting the
Messiah. Peter answers them with a three-step program:
- Repent
- Be baptized
- In the name of Jesus Christ
- For the remission of sins
- You shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost
- The first two steps match the requirements of the baptism of John, which
was later practiced by Jesus and His disciples. It is called "the
baptism
of repentance for the remission of sins" (Mark
1:4; Luke 3:3). That is,
they were to repent of their sins. Then, they were to be baptized as
an
act of repentance so that they could have their sins remitted. Consider
the following points about the baptism of repentance:
- It was preceded by repentance (Matthew 3:7-11)
- It was accompanied by confession (Matthew
3:6; Mark 1:5)
- It was followed by remission (Mark 1:4; Luke
3:3)
- It was to lead to faith in Christ (Matthew
3:11; Acts 19:3-5)
- It's order was changed when God turned to
the Gentiles (Acts
10:44-48;
Acts 16:30-33)
The first three points are fairly simple. Let us consider the last two.
The baptism of repentance was given to the Jewish people for the purpose
of turning them back to God and preparing them to accept their Messiah.
It was a Jewish baptism given to lead the Jews to Jesus. John always
pointed people to the One who would come after him (Matthew
3:11; John
1:26-27).
When John the Baptist was born, his father Zecharias gave a wonderful
prophecy concerning him which says in part, "And thou, child, shalt
be
called the prophet of the Highest: for thou shalt go before the face
of
the Lord to prepare his ways; To give knowledge of salvation unto his
people by the remission of their sins" (Luke
1:76-77). Notice, the
knowledge of salvation comes by the remission of sins. That is, when
their sins were remitted, they were ready to learn about the true gift
of
salvation. The baptism did not save them. It only made them ready to
be
saved. As Jews, they had already broken the original covenant of life
that God had made with them (the law). They had to receive remission
for
this disobedience before they were ready to understand the gift of
salvation through Jesus Christ.
This purpose for the baptism of repentance is seen in another Bible
record. In Acts 19, Paul met certain disciples
who claimed to have been
baptized with John's baptism. In other words, they had been baptized
with
the baptism of repentance for the remission of sins. Paul then told them
the true purpose of John' s baptism--"Then said Paul, John verily
baptized with the baptism of repentance, saying unto the people, that
they should believe on him which should come after him, that is, on
Christ Jesus" (Acts 19:4). In other
words, the purpose of John's baptism
was that it might lead the people (a reference to the Jews) to believe
on
Jesus Christ.
Over a period of time, the purpose of baptism changed. It ceased to be
an
act of repentance that prepared souls to believe in Jesus Christ and
became an act of obedience that pictured what Christ did in a believer
at
the point of salvation. We can see this change of order in the record
of
the book of Acts. In chapter 2, when the message is still being given
only to the Jews, they were commanded to be baptized in order to receive
the Holy Ghost. However, when God had Peter go to the Gentiles in Acts
10, He changed the order for all time. Peter was still preaching Christ
to Cornelius and his household when they believed and automatically
received the gift of the Holy Ghost. Peter and the Jews who came with
him
did not know what to do. The Gentiles had not followed the Jewish order.
They had believed and received the Holy Ghost before they were baptized.
So, they had to baptize them after the fact (see Acts
10:44-48).
From this time on, this becomes the pattern for coming to the Lord. When
the Philippian jailer asked what he must do to be saved, he is not told
to be baptized initially. Rather, Paul and Silas say, "Believe on
the
Lord Jesus Christ, and thou shalt be saved, and thy house" (Acts
16:31).
He believed and was saved. Then, afterwards, he was taken to be baptized.
His baptism had nothing to do with his salvation.
As the Jewish apostles and leaders began to deal with the influx of
Gentiles as believers in Christ, they had to deal with this issue. Was
baptism a preliminary to salvation or was it a picture of a salvation
that had already occurred? They came together with Paul and Barnabas
in
Jerusalem to discuss the issue as recorded in Acts
15. Peter gives the
final conclusion to the matter when he states, "But we believe that
through the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ we shall be saved, even as
they" (Acts 15:11). That is, all men
come to the Lord in the same way now
and the pattern they use is the Gentile pattern that works through grace.
You see, Peter is a Jew. When he spoke of how "we" get saved,
he is
referring to the Jews. When he spoke of the Jews getting saved "even
as
they," this means that the pattern of salvation for all men is the
way
the Gentiles got saved. That is, they believed, got saved, received the
Holy Ghost, and then followed the Lord in baptism.
Those who follow Acts 2:38 as a plan of
salvation for today are ignoring
the plan teaching found in the remainder of the book of Acts. They are
also going against the teaching of Peter in Acts
15:11. We do not come to
God as those Jews did. We are not in the same situation as they were.
I know you also asked about the gift of the Holy Ghost. This is already
a
long answer and that is another long one. I will try to get to it later.
God bless.
Till He comes,
Pastor David Reagan