The Unbaptized Arm
Ivan the Great was the Tsar of all of Russia during the Fifteenth Century. He brought together the warring tribes into one vast empire--the Soviet Union. As a fighting man he was courageous. As a general he was brilliant. He drove out the Tartars and established peace across the nation.
However, Ivan was so busy waging his campaigns that he did not have a family. His friends and advisers were quite concerned. They reminded him that there was no heir to the throne, and should anything happen to him the union would shatter into chaos. "You must take a wife who can bear you a son." The busy soldier statesman said to them that he did not have the time to search for a bride, but if they would find a suitable one, he would marry her.
The counselors and advisers searched the capitals of Europe to find an appropriate wife for the great tsar. And find her, they did. They reported to Ivan of the beautiful dark eyed daughter of the King of Greece. She was young, brilliant, and charming. He agreed to marry her sight unseen.
The King of Greece was delighted. It would align Greece in a favorable way with the emerging giant of the north. But there had to be one condition, "He cannot marry my daughter unless he becomes a member of the Greek Orthodox Church." Ivan’s response, "I will do it!"
So, a priest was dispatched to Moscow to instruct Ivan in Orthodox doctrine. Ivan was a quick student and learned the catechism in record time. Arrangements were concluded, and the tsar made his way to Athens accompanied by 500 of his crack troops--his personal palace guard.
He was to be baptized into the Orthodox church by immersion, as was the custom of the Eastern Church. His soldiers, ever loyal, asked to be baptized also. The Patriarch of the Church assigned 500 priests to give the soldiers a one-on-one catechism crash course. The soldiers, all 500 of them, were to be immersed in one mass baptism. Crowds gathered from all over Greece.
What a sight that must have been, 500 priests and 500 soldiers, a thousand people, walking into the blue Mediterranean. The priests were dressed in black robes and tall black hats, the official dress of the Orthodox Church. The soldiers wore their battle uniforms with of all their regalia--ribbons of valor, medals of courage. and their weapons of battle.
Suddenly, there was a problem. The Church prohibited professional soldiers from being members; they would have to give up their commitment to bloodshed. They could not be killers and church members too.
After a hasty round of diplomacy, the problem was solved quite simply. As the words were spoken and the priests began to baptize them, each soldier reached to his side and withdrew his sword. Lifting it high overhead, every soldier was totally immersed-everything baptized except his fighting arm and sword.
- This is a true historical fact. The unbaptized arm.
- What a powerful picture of Christianity today.
- How many unbaptized arms are here this morning?
- How many unbaptized wills are here?
- How many unbaptized talents?
- How many unbaptized check books?
- How many unbaptized social lives
Dr. Wayne Dehoney, Walnut Street Baptist Church, The Pulpit
1. Baptism Emphasizes Identification.
- A wedding ring is an outward sign of marriage.
- A uniform is an outward sign of their task
- Wearing a wedding ring or uniform does not make you married or warrior any more than being baptized makes you saved
- Baptism is to be the outward, symbolic representation of the believer’s new life in Christ.
- v. 3-6 Note the “we” & “His”
Colossians 2:12 (AV)
12 Buried with him in baptism, wherein also ye are risen with him through the faith of the operation of God, who hath raised him from the dead.
When the living has died it needs to be buried
It’s the burial of an old life and an old body, an old spirit, an old love, an old lust, an old sin.
- The sinner is so infected with sin that the only way to be rid of that sin was to kill the sinner
- You can’t go back and make a new beginning
- You can start from now and make a brand new end with Jesus
2. Why Was Jesus Baptized?
- Mt 3:1-3 - John was speaking of repentance along with Baptism
- Jesus baptism - Mt 3:13-16, Mk 1:9-11, Lk 3:21-22
- He showed that He identified with sinners.
- He submitted to baptism as foreshadowing His death burial and resurrection;
3. Command To Be Baptized
1. Jesus commanded it (Mark 16.16).
2. Jesus commanded the Apostles to teach (Matt. 28.19-20).
3. Peter told those on Pentecost to be baptized (Acts 2.38).
4. Paul was told to be baptized (Acts 22.16).
5. Without exception in the book of Acts, everyone who became a Christian was baptized.
4. Baptism Testifies Of Our Identity With Christ
- Baptism is a sign or an outward indication of the inner change that has already occurred
- “Baptism” is from the Greek word baptizdo.
- It is defined as “to dip, to plunge, to submerge, to immerse.”
- It shows the impact of our salvation experience
- It is a humbling experience
- Surrendering our pride
- Surrendering ourselves to Christ
5. Result of Baptism
• "Baptism points back to the work of God, and forward to the life of faith."
2 Corinthians 5:17 (AV)
17 Therefore if any man be in Christ, he is a new creature: old things are passed away; behold, all things are become new.
• Baptism draws a line on the ground, “From this day forward, I stand with Christ
Philippians 3:13 (AV)
…… this one thing I do, forgetting those things which are behind, and reaching forth unto those things which are before,
Lord,
Here I am.
An instrument.
Let me be an instrument in Your hands.
Not existing for myself, but as a tool to do Your will.