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| Christ Was Not Regenerated in the Baptism of John, But Submitted to It to Give Us an Example of Humility, Just as He Submitted to Death, Not as the Punishment of Sin, But to Take Away the Sin of the World. PREVIOUS SECTION - NEXT SECTION - HELP
Chapter 49.—Christ Was Not Regenerated in the Baptism
of John, But Submitted to It to Give Us an Example of Humility,
Just as He Submitted to Death, Not as the Punishment of Sin, But to
Take Away the Sin of the World.
Now, those who were baptized in the
baptism of John, by whom Christ was Himself baptized,1170 were not
regenerated; but they were prepared through the ministry of His
forerunner, who cried, “Prepare ye the way of the Lord,”1171 for Him in
whom only they could be regenerated. For His baptism is not with
water only, as was that of John, but with the Holy Ghost also;1172 so that
whoever believes in Christ is regenerated by that Spirit, of whom
Christ being generated, He did not need regeneration. Whence that
announcement of the Father which was heard after His baptism,
“This day have I begotten Thee,”1173 referred not to that one day of
time on which He was baptized, but to the one day of an
unchangeable eternity, so as to show that this man was one in
person with the Only-begotten. For when a day neither begins with
the close of yesterday, nor ends with the beginning of to-morrow,
it is an eternal to-day. Therefore He asked to be baptized in water
by John, not that any iniquity of His might be washed away, but
that He might manifest the depth of His humility. For baptism found
in Him nothing to wash away, as death found in Him nothing to
punish; so that it was in the strictest justice, and not by the
mere violence of power, that the devil was crushed and conquered:
for, as he had most unjustly put Christ to death, though there was
no sin in Him to deserve death, it was most just that through
Christ he should lose his hold of those who by sin were justly
subject to the bondage in which he held them. Both of these, then,
that is, both baptism and death, were submitted to by Him, not
through a pitiable necessity, but of His own free pity for us, and
as part of an arrangement by which, as one man brought sin into the
world, that is, upon the whole human race, so one man was to take
away the sin of the world.E.C.F. INDEX & SEARCH
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