The notion that baptism now saves you should be a relatively non-controversial take. It should be, but it isn't, shockingly enough. Even though it's scriptural, people still have a hard time with it. Baptism now saves you? But what about, but what about, but what about....
Sure. But the thing about baptism saving you is that you, as the individual Christian, have needs. That is, you need certain things from this experience, and the thing you need most is certainty. When the days get short, and the chips are down, you're going to need something more concrete than just having had the right opinions. Sure, any of us can have the right opinions, and frequently do, but I ask you a question: If everyone wanted peace the way they say they wanted peace, why don't we have peace. Everyone is in favor of feeding the hungry, making sure the sick can be well, supplying clean water, and so on and so on, but all sorts of places have major gaps in their availability of supplies, overall. The desire is there, but the follow through - very lacking. All sorts of things get in the way, things like self interest, like self motivation, and so on, all those things tend to conflict with the desire to actually effect peace, stability, environmental care, etc. We have the right idea, everyone's in theory interested in clean air and water, peace on earth, arms reduction, and so on, where's it at?
This is the problem with the intersection of opinion and reality. That is, you can have all the right ideas in the world, but without any concrete action, it's just that. Opinion. The book of James is notoriously Damning on this prospect, in that it not only talks about faith without works being dead, which it does, but also talks about how if you see someone who is hungry and cold, and you say to him 'go on your way, be warm and well fed,' but do nothing, of what good is your faith? That's us on a big scale, we have all the right opinions, say the right things, but don't quite finish the job. And we have to finish the job, you know. Without that, the opinion isn't worth too much.
If you understand that there is a gulf between your opinions and your actions, and that your actions are not only worth more than your opinions, but by many orders of magnitude, then you can understand that about your faith as well. Sure, you have the right opinions about what should be done, and how your faith should be lived out, but the inadequacy of being able to pull that off is a bit of an issue. You know the commandments, you know the laws of God, you don't do it, and then you read James, who says that your faith without works is dead, and that starts to play havoc with you. After all, how many times have you walked past the poor, sidestepped the hungry, and skipped merrily beyond the ailing? If you as a Christian who believe that the poor should be assisted, the hungry fed and the naked clothed, and then you understand that you are a long way away from having done that, then what on earth do you do with the dissonance in your own lives?
This is why we have baptism. And this is why the statement 'baptism now saves you' is so important for the Christian. That is, if you're hoping to be saved, to move into the transcendent and meet the divine, then you're going to want something a lot more concrete than just having the right opinions, especially given that James (and Christ, really) have told you that you can't just be secure in those opinions without action. If action is required for your salvation, something beyond what you can do or are doing, don't you wish that there was some action that you could find?
Well, let's talk about straws, plastic and oceans. Here in the great nation of Canada, we have largely excised plastic straws from common usage, and we've replaced them with paper straws that don't work. I don't care if they're a good idea, they don't work. Fine fine, but here's the deal: No matter how many plastic straws we ban, the major problem isn't here - it's elsewhere.
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