Dimensions of Baptism Biblical and Theological Studies

(Michael S) #1

22 Dimensions of Baptism


Paul's language would appear to lie not so much in an interpretation of the


rite of immersion as in the historical facts of Christ's death and resur-


rection.^41 The theological point which Paul is making is thus not drawn


from baptism as such but from the historical fact of what happened to


Christ, and hence it is not tied to a particular mode of baptism. Immersion


may afford a useful symbolism of burial with Christ, but we do not need to


presuppose immersion in order to explain Paul's terminology any more


than in the case of circumcision regarded as an aspect of baptism (Col.


2.11-12).


At the same time, immersion fails to offer a fitting symbolism for the


concept of sprinkling and pouring out which is also associated with bap-


tism in the New Testament. It is rather the case that the association of the


ideas of washing and the pouring out of the Spirit in Tit. 3.5-6 suggests


that affusion was also practised. This point brings us back to the baptism


of Jesus. At his baptism the Spirit descended upon him from above, an


event in no way analogous to immersion in a river. We must conclude that


when John spoke of baptism with the Spirit he had in mind the descent of


the Spirit from above like a stream of water pouring over a person. It would


be a baptism with the Spirit and with fire in the sense that it would mean


purifying and purging by an agency more powerful than water. But if this


is how the verb 'baptize' is to be understood in relation to the Spirit, then


the same can also be true when it is used in relation to water. For John the


Baptist 'baptize' cannot have referred purely to dipping or plunging in


water. The verb must imply being drenched with water from above as well


as from below.^42 Put otherwise, the verb does not so much draw attention


to the mode of drenching (sc. by an act of immersion in water or other-


wise) as to the fact of the drenching and the cleansing which it conveys.


What John meant was 'I have drenched you with water, but he will drench


you with the Holy Spirit', or 'I have cleansed/purified you with water, but


he will cleanse/purify you with the Holy Spirit'.



  1. E. Stommel,' "Begraben mit Christus" (Rom 6,4) und der Taufritus', RQ 49
    (1954), pp. 1-20; R. Schnackenburg, Baptism in the Thought of St Paul (Oxford: Basil
    Blackwell, 1964), pp. 54-61. Similarly, Theissen, Theory, argues that there is no real
    parallel between immersion and the death of Jesus by crucifixion followed by burial.
    The fact that later writers drew the parallel does not mean that it was necessarily drawn
    by Paul. See further A. Campbell, 'Dying with Christ: The Origin of a Metaphor?', in
    Porter and Cross (eds.), Baptism, pp. 273-93 (286-87).

  2. This is probably also implied in the Manual of Discipline, which refers to both
    washing and sprinkling (1QS 3.4-9; 4.20-21).

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