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Topic(s): Bible Study
Todd Clippard
The most important question a person could ever ask is, "How do I
become a Christian?" Though not asked in these exact words, the
question is also found at least 3 times in the New Testament. In
Acts 16:30, the Philippian jailer asked the same question when he
asked, "What must I do to be saved?" The Jews who heard the first
gospel sermon on Pentecost of Acts 2 asked the same thing in verse
37, and Saul of Tarsus asked the Lord that question in Acts 9:6.
In reading the context of all these accounts, one can understand the
means by which one becomes a Christian. For example, the jailer was
told to believe in the Lord Jesus (Acts 16:31). Those in Acts 2 who
believed the preaching of Peter (v 37) were told to repent (v 38).
In all three accounts, those who needed to be saved were baptized
(Acts 2:41; 9:18; 16:33).
I might add, though it is not present in these three accounts, one
must make a confession of faith in Jesus prior to being baptized.
The eunuch made such a confession in Acts 8:37 prior to being
baptized. Matthew 10:32 and Romans 10:9-10 also confirm the need to
confess the Lord before men.
Baptism is an act of submission required for the remission of sins
(Acts 2:38). It is the medium through which sins are washed away
(Acts 22:16) by the blood of Jesus Christ (Rev 1:5). Baptism secures
salvation to the obedient believer (Mark 16:16; 1 Peter 3:21), but
not unconditionally. The Christian must live faithful to the Lord
all of his or her life (Matthew 10:22; Rev 2:10). John calls this
"walking in the light" (1 John 1:7). Walking in the light keeps us
in continuous contact with the cleansing blood of Jesus. We will
commit sins while walking in the light, but repentance and
confession of those sins brings forgiveness.