Baptism -- III. Baptism and Faith
B8. Baptism is both God's gift and our human response to that gift. It looks
towards a growth into the measure of the stature of the fullness of Christ (Eph.
4:13). The necessity of faith for the reception of the salvation embodied and
set forth in baptism is acknowledged by all churches. Personal commitment is
necessary for responsible membership in the body of Christ.
B9. Baptism is related not only to momentary experience, but to life-long growth
into Christ. Those baptized are called upon to reflect the glory of the Lord
as they are transformed by the power of the Holy Spirit, into his likeness,
with ever increasing splendour (II Cor. 3:18). The life of the Christian is
necessarily one of continuing struggle yet also of continuing experience of
grace. In this new relationship, the baptized live for the sake of Christ, of
his Church and of the world which he loves, while they wait in hope for the
manifestation of God's new creation and for the time when God will be all in
all (Rom. 8:18-24; 1 Cor. 15:22-28, 49-57).
B10. As they grow in the Christian life of faith,
baptized believers demonstrate that humanity can be regenerated and liberated.
They have a common responsibility, here and now, to bear witness together to the
Gospel of Christ, the Liberator of all human beings. The context of this common
witness is the Church and the world. Within a fellowship of witness and service,
Christians discover the full significance of the one baptism as the gift of God
to all God's people. Likewise, they acknowledge that baptism, as a baptism into
Christ's death, has ethical implications which not only call for personal
sanctification, but also motivate Christians to strive for the realization of
the will of God in all realms of life (Rom. 6:9ff., Gal. 3:27-28; I Peter
2:21-4:6).
next
|