Baptism -- II. The Meaning of Baptism
B2. Baptism is the sign of new life through Jesus Christ. It unites the one
baptized with Christ and with his people. The New Testament scriptures and the
liturgy of the Church unfold the meaning of baptism in various images which
express the riches of Christ and the gifts of his salvation. These images are
sometimes linked with the symbolic uses of water in the Old Testament. Baptism
is participation in Christ's death and resurrection (Rom. 6:3-5; Col. 2:12);
a washing away of sin (1 Cor. 6:11); a new birth (John 3:5); an enlightenment
by Christ (Eph. 5:14); a reclothing in Christ (Gal. 3:27); a renewal by the
Spirit (Titus 3:5); the experience of salvation from the flood (1 Peter 3:20-21);
an exodus from bondage (1 Cor. 10:1-2) and a liberation into a new humanity
in which barriers of division whether of sex or race or social status are transcended
(Gal. 3:27-28; 1 Cor. 12:13). The images are many but the reality is one.
A. Participation in Christ's Death and Resurrection
B3. Baptism means participating in the life, death and resurrection of Jesus
Christ. Jesus went down into the river Jordan and was baptized in solidarity
with sinners fulfil all righteousness (Matt. 3:15). This baptism led Jesus along
the way of the Suffering Servant, made manifest in his sufferings, death and
resurrection (Mark 10:38-40, 45). By baptism, Christians are immersed in the
liberating death of Christ where their sins are buried, where the "old Adam"
is crucified with Christ, and where the power of sin is broken. Thus those baptized
are no longer slaves to sin, but free. Fully identified with the death of Christ,
they are buried with him and are raised here and now to a new life in the power
of the resurrection of Jesus Christ, confident that they will also ultimately
be one with him in a resurrection like his (Rom. 6:3-11; Col. 2:13, 3:1; Eph.
2:5-6).
B. Conversion, Pardoning and Cleansing
B4.The baptism which makes Christians partakers of the mystery of Christ's
death and resurrection implies confession of sin and conversion of heart. The
baptism administered by John was itself a baptism of repentance for the forgiveness
of sins (Mark 1:4). The New Testament underlines the ethical implications of
baptism by representing it as an ablution which washes the body with pure water,
a cleansing of the heart of all sin, and an act of justification (Heb 10:22;
1 Peter 3:21; Acts 22:16; 1 Cor. 6:11). Thus those baptized are pardoned, cleansed
and sanctified by Christ, and are given as part of their baptismal experience
a new ethical orientation under the guidance of the Holy Spirit.
C .The Gift of the Spirit
B5. The Holy Spirit is at work in the lives of people before, in and after
their baptism. It is the same Spirit who revealed Jesus as the Son (Mark 1:10-11)
and who empowered and united the disciples at Pentecost (Acts 2). God bestows
upon all baptized persons the anointing and the promise of the Holy Spirit,
marks them with a seal and implants in their hearts the first instalment of
their inheritance as sons and daughters of God. The Holy Spirit nurtures the
life of faith in their hearts until the final deliverance when they will enter
into its full possession, to the praise of the glory of God (II Cor. 1:21-22;
Eph, 1:13-14).
D. Incorporation into the Body of Christ
B6. Administered in obedience to our Lord, baptism is a sign and seal of our
common discipleship. Through baptism, Christians are brought into union with
Christ, with each other and with the Church of every time and place. Our common
baptism, which unites us to Christ in faith, is thus a basic bond of unity.
We are one people and are called to confess and serve one Lord in each place
and in all the world. The union with Christ which we share through baptism has
important implications for Christian unity. "There is ... one baptism, one God
and Father of us all..." (Eph. 4:4-6). When baptismal unity is realized in one
holy, catholic, apostolic Church, a genuine Christian witness can be made to
the healing and reconciling love of God. Therefore, our one baptism into Christ
constitutes a call to the churches to overcome their divisions and visibly manifest
their fellowship.
Commentary (B6)
The inability of the churches mutually to recognize their various
practices of baptism as sharing in the one baptism, and their actual
dividedness in spite Of mutual baptismal recognition, have given dramatic
visibility to the broken witness of the Church. The readiness of the
churches in some places and times to allow differences of sex, race, or
social status to divide the body of Christ has further called into question
genuine baptismal unity of the Christian community (Gal. 3..27-28) and has
seriously compromised its witness. The need to recover baptismal unity is at
the heart of the ecumenical task as it is central for the realization of
genuine partnership within the Christian communities.
E. The Sign of the Kingdom
B7. Baptism initiates the reality of the new life given
in the midst of the present world. It gives participation in the community of
the Holy Spirit. It is a sign of the Kingdom of God and of the life of the world
to come. Through the gifts of faith, hope and love, baptism has a dynamic which
embraces the whole of life, extends to all nations, and anticipates the day when
every tongue will confess that Jesus Christ is Lord to the glory of God the
Father.
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