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Thread: Your opinions on baptizing at home.

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  1. #1
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    Quote Originally Posted by Habit View Post
    I think that it is important to note that not all Christians reject baptism for the dead.

    That is more of an opinion than a fact.
    Would you please provide an example of a "Christian sect" that accepts baptism for the dead?

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    Quote Originally Posted by Snowbandit View Post
    Would you please provide an example of a "Christian sect" that accepts baptism for the dead?
    No - I will not fall prey to your guided arguments. Bottom line is, no matter how you interpret scripture, your comment was an opinion. An opinion, does not make it a fact.

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    Quote Originally Posted by Bethshaya View Post
    I dont see anything wrong with it. The exchange and purpose of the baptism is between your child and God, not the church building and them.

    Jesus was baptised in a river.

    That being said, that is the same truth for going to a church building or having a home church. It doesn't need to be a formal building with the sole purpose of worship. It could be someone's home.

    Again, the relationship is between God and man, not the building, statues or anything contained in the building.
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    Quote Originally Posted by 19K View Post
    is it something anyone with a heart for the Lord can do?
    Yes.
    My first two kids were baptized in a lake by our pastor, assisted by other men of the congregation (around 1993). Around 1997, daughter and three neighbors were baptized in a creek by my husband. Around 2001, youngest son was baptized by my husband in an ice-cold "brook" in Vermont, when we were up there helping with tent revivals in a ministry that we were part of. We've also baptized a girl in a borrowed baptistry at a church that hosted our street ministry in New Orleans, and we baptized a neighborhood girl we led to the Lord in our bathtub.

    The important things about baptism are:

    • The person has professed Jesus Christ as his/her Lord and Savior
    • He/she understands the significance of baptism, that it is an outward testimony to others of an inward act: dying to your old life and being born anew in Christ
    • It is performed by a born-again, Bible-believing follower of the Lord Jesus Christ
    • It is done in front of "others". I believe if you do it at home, you should invite other believers to participate, or else do it in a public place where people will witness it -- like in a swimming hole, lake, creek, etc.
    IF you are willing & obedient , you shall eat the good of the land: But if you refuse & rebel, You shall be devoured with the sword: for the mouth of the LORD hath spoken it. Isaiah 1:19, 20

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    Quote Originally Posted by grower View Post
    • It is performed by a born-again, Bible-believing follower of the Lord Jesus Christ
    What if you find out later that the person who baptized you wasn't a Christian? Worse, what if you never found out? Would the baptism be invalid?

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    Quote Originally Posted by Snowbandit View Post
    What if you find out later that the person who baptized you wasn't a Christian? Worse, what if you never found out? Would the baptism be invalid?
    Baptism has nothing to do with an incantation, holy water, words said by another, garments, trinkets or any other worldly person or item other then he person being baptised and God himself. The exchange doesn't take place human to human, but God to human, so it doesn't matter if the person turns out to not be Christian. You are, and that is the point of the baptism.

    The symbolism of being water baptised has nothing to do with the water you are sitting in or even the vessel it is in. It has to do with the commitment being shown and the condition of the heart and the new relationship between Father and child of God.

    Baptism is a reflection of the condition of the heart and soul.


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    Quote Originally Posted by Bethshaya View Post
    Baptism has nothing to do with an incantation, holy water, words said by another, garments, trinkets or any other worldly person or item other then he person being baptised and God himself. The exchange doesn't take place human to human, but God to human, so it doesn't matter if the person turns out to not be Christian. You are, and that is the point of the baptism.

    The symbolism of being water baptised has nothing to do with the water you are sitting in or even the vessel it is in. It has to do with the commitment being shown and the condition of the heart and the new relationship between Father and child of God.

    Baptism is a reflection of the condition of the heart and soul.
    So, as to the point made by Grower that, "It (baptism must be) performed by a born-again, Bible-believing follower of the Lord Jesus Christ", you and I are in agreement that this is in error?

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    Not in error, just not significant compared to the state-of-heart of the person being baptized. There are people saved every day in churches where the preacher doesn't know the Lord. God spoke through Balaam's ass.
    IF you are willing & obedient , you shall eat the good of the land: But if you refuse & rebel, You shall be devoured with the sword: for the mouth of the LORD hath spoken it. Isaiah 1:19, 20

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    Thank you for the wonderful support on this. Sometimes I worry that by not going to church I am depriving the kids. At other times, I am confident it is best for our family. Even though I had prayed about it, the matter of baptism is one of those things I was a bit worried about.

    I know the perfect place to baptize them once it warms up a bit. It is a small clean clear lake with a swimming hole that has a sandy shore and bottom that stays shallow for quite a distance out. I feel much better about doing it myself, now. Thank you all!


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    Quote Originally Posted by 19K View Post
    Thank you for the wonderful support on this. Sometimes I worry that by not going to church I am depriving the kids. At other times, I am confident it is best for our family.
    We have been outside of the "church structure" for several years, and the sense of liberty is wonderful. There is so much in the American church -- by and large -- that is not of God, not even biblical. And there is a great burden of guilt that is imposed by that structure on anyone who ventures outside the walls. It is just like the synagogue in Jesus' day. (Remember all the times Paul started in the synagogue and ended up in the streets?)

    God has called us to peace and liberty in Jesus Christ. Those of you still laboring under the burden of churchianity, come outside the walls of the city, where Jesus is. The air is clean out here.
    IF you are willing & obedient , you shall eat the good of the land: But if you refuse & rebel, You shall be devoured with the sword: for the mouth of the LORD hath spoken it. Isaiah 1:19, 20

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