Dimensions of Baptism Biblical and Theological Studies

(Michael S) #1

MARSHALL The Meaning of the Verb 'Baptize' 17


Neither of these views is likely or necessary. The second is rendered


impossible by the fact that to speak of being baptized with wind is


incongruous. The fact that both fire and Spirit can be regarded in liquid


terms shows that there is no difficulty about linking both simultaneously


with baptism. And, as Dunn and others have shown, the Qumran evidence


shows both that the idea of cleansing by the Spirit was familiar in the time


of John and that the linking of the Spirit with both fire and water was


made.^28 There is consequently no conceptual difficulty in the saying of


John in its 'Q' form.


Ill


One difficulty remains, however. Dunn's conclusion spoke of immersion


in a fiery TTveO|ja. But, although we have found attestation for the ideas of


a stream of fire and of the Spirit as a liquid, none of the evidence so far


adduced suggests the idea of a stream or lake of Spirit in which a person


might be immersed. On the contrary, the allusions have all been to a down-


pouring of the Spirit from above, a form of imagery which is only to be


expected when the Spirit is conceived of as coming from God. The only


reference to the Spirit as being like a stream of water is in Jn 7.38-39 and


there the metaphor is not one of immersion but of drinking. Further, in


several of the passages which we examined we saw that the stream of fire


was regarded as coming from above. This suggests to us that the idea of


immersion may not be the right one to employ with regard to the Spirit,


and opens up the possibility of a different understanding of baptism both


with the Spirit and with fire. In other words, our understanding of'baptize'


as 'dip, immerse or plunge' may stand in need of revision.


From the linguistic point of view, a broader meaning of the Greek term


is certainly possible. While the normal meaning of the verb is certainly


that of immersion in water, it also took on the metaphorical meaning of


being overwhelmed by something. Josephus uses it of Jerusalem being


brought to disaster during the Roman siege by the entry of brigands {War


4.137); in this case the metaphor is not of something being dipped into


water but rather of a stream of water overwhelming an object. Plato speaks


of people soaked in wine {Symposium 176b), and here again the thought



  1. Dunn, Baptism, pp. 8-10. Cf. idem, 'Spirit-and-Fire Baptism', NovT 14 (1972),
    pp. 81 -92 (reprinted in The Christ and the Spirit. II. Pneumatology [Edinburgh: T. & T.
    Clark, 1998], pp. 93-102); idem, 'The Birth of a Metaphor—Baptized in Spirit',
    ExpTim 89 (1977-78), pp. 134-38, 173-75 (reprinted in Pneumatology, pp. 103-17).

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