Spiritual Gifts part 86. Introduction to the Baptism by the Holy Spirit.
Pastor-Teacher Class schedule next week
Winter Gathering Feb 18-20
Spiritual Gifts Part 86: Introduction to the Baptism by the Holy Spirit
1. Efficacious Grace C. The Baptism by the Spirit is the ministry of God the Holy Spirit in taking every new believer and entering him into permanent vital union with the Person of the Lord Jesus Christ. The result of the baptism by the Spirit, union with Christ, is also called “positional truth”. The New Testament uses the expression “in Christ” or en Christoo in the Greek.
2Co 5:17 This baptism by the Holy Spirit is unique to the Church Age believer. The Baptism by the Spirit is the basis for unity in the Body of Christ. This subject gets attacked relentlessly by the kingdom of darkness. The believer who understands and lives in his position in Christ is going to have victory over the enemies of Christ. The Bible in the original language turns out to be really helpful in cutting through all the confusion. (imagine that? ) Water baptism was a teaching tool during the ministry of John the Baptist and the transitional period documented in the book of Acts.
Water baptism is not necessary for salvation. The Baptism by the Holy Spirit, placing the believer in permanent union with the Lord Jesus Christ, is the ONLY baptism that matters in the Church Age. Point 1. Defining our terms. The English word “baptize” is not native to the English language, and thus carries with it no innate meaning of its own.
Mitt Romney - ’Sticky’ or ’Uncooked Rice’
Barack Obama - ’Europe Pulling a Horse’ It is simply a transliteration of the corresponding Greek word. Therefore it derives its meaning from the Greek word.
Barack Obama - ’Europe Pulling a Horse’
Transliteration is not the same as translation. Transliteration changes letters or words into corresponding characters of another alphabet or language. In transliteration, the word in one language (Greek) is brought into the second language (English) character by character, sound by sound...
So... When we are dealing with a word in our English Bible that is transliterated from the Greek, the ONLY way to get at its meaning is to study the MEANING of the Greek word.
Back to Baptizo had a primary (more down to earth and concrete) usage and a secondary (more figurative and conceptual) usage. The primary usage of baptizo meant a literal envelopment within an element and so to become subject to that element. The primary usage of baptizo meant a literal envelopment within an element and so to become subject to that element. . A word starts out meaning something very concrete and physical, and then starts to be used figuratively based on the physical item or act it began by referring to. The term “crosshairs” started out to mean “A set of two perpendicular lines in the sight of a firearm, used to align the gun with the target.”
It has come to mean...... ‘a center of interest”. The primary usage of baptizo meant a literal envelopment within an element and so to become subject to that element. In secular documents written around the time the New Testament was written, baptizo is used to refer to a boat that is submerged in the water. The secondary meaning of baptizo had to do with an object being brought under the influence of another quite apart from any physical envelopment. Secular documents from the Koine Greek period show baptizo being used to describe a person who is overwhelmed in calamities.
The baptism into repentance
The baptism of Israel into Moses by the cloud and the sea
This secondary meaning - to be placed into and brought under the influence of another, thus undergoing a permanent change - is by far the more frequent meaning when baptizo is used in the Greek New Testament. |