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Should A Christian Be Baptized in Water?By 
CBN.com 
 The Bible teaches the baptism of believers (see Mark 16:16, Acts 8:36-37). 
  And in the early centuries, Christian baptism was by immersion. The concept of 
  infant baptism is not specifically found in the Bible.  The early church began 
  baptizing infants because of the idea that children are born in sin and need immediate 
  baptism to ensure their salvation. At the time of the Reformation, though, Martin 
  Luther rediscovered the biblical truth that spiritual regeneration and justification 
  are by faith. A baby cannot exercise faith. Nevertheless, because so many of those 
  who became his followers had already been baptized as infants in the Roman Catholic 
  Church, Luther did not require them to be baptized again. In fact, he continued 
  to baptize children of believers.  When John Calvin came on the scene in Geneva, 
  he taught what is known as "covenant theology." According to covenant theology, 
  if the parents have entered a covenant relationship with God, then their children 
  are part of the covenant, too, and are proper candidates for baptism as infants. 
 In churches that practice infant baptism there is usually some type of confirmation 
rite in which a child of ten, eleven, or twelve reaffirms the parental faith expressed 
at his or her baptism.  Some Reformation theologians strongly disagreed with 
infant baptism. They maintained that people should be baptized only as believers, 
because baptism is a symbol of the death, burial, and resurrection of Jesus (see 
Romans 6:4, Colossians 2:12). Baptism to them was the end of the old life and 
the beginning of a new life in Christ. Since a baby does not have an old life 
to deal with, they maintained, if someone has been baptized as an infant, he need 
to be baptized again as an adult believer. These people were called "Anabaptists," 
which means "rebaptizers."  Today there is still disagreement about the proper 
form of baptism. But, more and more, Methodist, Presbyterian, and some other churches 
that have historically practiced infant baptism are looking anew at both the qualification 
of a candidate for baptism and the mode of baptism. A number of people, even though 
they may have been baptized as infants, are being rebaptized by immersion as adult 
believers.Can God change your life? God has made it possible for you to know Him and experience an amazing change in your own life. 
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