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Topic(s): Bible Authority, Baptism, Salvation
Bob Prichard
The story of the Philippian jailer is found in Acts 16. The
jailer was in charge of Paul and Silas, who had been arrested on
false charges by the owners of a slave girl. They had cast a demon
out of the girl, depriving her owners of the money they made by
exploiting her (Acts 16:20-21). Because of this, Paul and Silas were
arrested, beaten, and put into the innermost prison, with their feet
in the stocks. The jailer was to keep them safely until the
officials could deal with them.
Beaten and bleeding, and locked in the inner prison, Paul and Silas
prayed and sang praises to God, even though it was midnight (Acts
16:25). Suddenly an earthquake shook the prison, and the jailer,
awakening from sleep was ready to kill himself, because he was sure
that the prisoners would have escaped. When Paul calmed him,
assuring him that the prisoners were still there, “he called for a
light, and sprang in, and came trembling, and fell down before Paul
and Silas, and brought them out, and said, Sirs, what must I do to
be saved?” (Acts 16:29-30). Paul and Silas answered very simply:
“Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ, and thou shalt be saved, and thy
house” (Acts 16:31). Since the jailer was not told to be baptized,
does this mean that he was saved before baptism? Consider the rest
of his story.
Paul and Silas had told the jailer that salvation would come from
believing on the Lord Jesus Christ, but what did this jailer know
about Jesus Christ? It is unlikely that he had heard any of the
sermons that Paul and Silas had preached in Philippi. He probably
knew absolutely nothing about Jesus, other than what he had learned
from hearing the songs and prayers of Paul and Silas, so they had to
teach him. “And they spake unto him the word of the Lord, and to all
that were in his house” (Acts 16:32). Did speaking the “word of the
Lord” include the necessity of baptism? Remember that it was
midnight when Paul and Silas were singing and praying (Acts 16:25).
It was after this that the earthquake came, the jailer sprang in and
asked “What must I do to be saved?” and they “spake unto him the
word of the Lord.” Without question it was in the wee hours of the
morning when the jailer responded to their preaching.
Luke tells us, “he took them the same hour of the night, and washed
their stripes; and was baptized, he and all his, straightway. And
when he had brought them into his house, he set meat before them,
and rejoiced, believing in God with all his house” (Acts 16:33-34).
When were the jailer and his household baptized? It was “the same
hour of the night.” Why didn’t they at least wait until morning
light before they were baptized, if baptism was not essential? When
did he rejoice? It was after they were baptized, not before. They
rejoiced, knowing that their sins were forgiven, and they had truly
obeyed the Lord. The jailer had a saving faith, a faith that
responded to the sacrifice of Christ by obeying Him. His obedience
in baptism demonstrated his faith, and his faith was demonstrated in
his baptism. The jailer was like all other Christians we read of in
the New Testament. He was saved after baptism.