Does
Acts 2:38 Teach Baptismal Regeneration?
Acts
2:38 is one of the most miss-understood
verses in the Bible. With a proper view
of rightly dividing God's Word, it is
plain to see that it does not teach
baptismal regeneration.

Rarely
is doctrine ever formed from a single
verse. We need to look at all of
what God's words says about a subject in
order to accurately understand what it
teaches.
Acts
2:38 is not stating that you must be
baptized in order to be saved. It is
declaring that baptism is the outward
identification with Christ in His death,
burial, and resurrection. It is not the
act of baptism that saves us, but what
Christ did that saves us. It is the
reality of His death which we receive by
faith (Rom. 5:1). This is
consistent with the acts of the apostles
and the facts (doctrine) given by the
apostles. It was the apostle Peter
who is quoted in Acts 2:38, and yet in
his first epistle he stated the reality
of salvation apart from any mention of
water baptism (1
Peter 3:21). It would be
inconsistent with doctrinal teaching to
suggest that one would receive the Holy
Spirit through the act of water baptism.
Ephesians 1:13 is very clear on how
the Holy Spirit is received.
Obtaining salvation is never by do's and
don'ts... salvation is DONE.
Baptism
is not what saves. It is not even a part
of salvation. It is
something someone does who is already
saved. Acts 2:38 accompanied
by other verses on baptism emphasize the
importance of believer's baptism.
Anyone who professes to know and follow
Jesus Christ would want to give
testimony by baptism of what Christ
Jesus has done for them by virtue of the
gospel (death, burial, resurrection).
Sincerely, Dr. Arthur Belanger
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