e.r.m.
Church of Christ
Yes, I understand. It can fit into our modern day thinking as a ritual. I'm just saying there's no evidence that this was their thinking on it. Baptism was just baptism. If someone backed a first century Christian against a wall, with a dictionary and a stern demeanor, they might get him/her to agree that baptism in Jesus's name can be defined as a ritual. But there's no evidence they went around thinking of it that way, like some groups do today. They never mentioned "the ritual of" baptism. Baptism was just "baptism".I should have thought baptism is, objectively, an example of a ritual: Definition of RITUAL
One does not need a scriptural reference to describe it as such.
In my congregation, a baptism is a very informal happy event. But I did attend a Christ Fellowship Church baptism once and they made it into a full blown ceremony, with all the bells and whistles. I think when people think of it as a ceremony, they turn it into one.
I'm not questioning that baptism was part of the process of gaining new disciples. I agree with that. If I understood you correctly, by "introducing new disciples", I saw it as a public proclamation, presenting a new disciple to the world event. Although that can happen as well at baptism, it's not listed as a purpose.As for your last two statements, I find them strange. Can you offer an alternative explanation for the meaning of the words of Christ that I originally quoted to you? What did these instructions mean, in your opinion, if baptism was not part of the process of gaining new disciples?
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