Friday, December 4, 2015

As a young girl I attended the cliche Sunday school and church service. And every couple of months i would sit my squirming young seven year old body into a stiff purple church pew, to listen to my pastor talk about some subject that I wasn’t that interested in. (I was seven, so excuse my horrible church edicate.) At the beginning of the service, my pastor would make announcements about baby dedications, family barbecues and light things like that. Every Sunday he would always include a very short announcement about baptism class.
            I never wanted to go because who would ever want to take another class outside of the seven hours of school per day, to listen about being dunked in water and have people applaud. I was missing the point. As years passed I saw my close friends take the class and get baptized on the same Sundays, and out of my pride I said to myself “I will NOT get baptized while my friends are getting baptized!’ and ‘I will make my faith my own before i get baptized!”, you might think “wow! so mature for not getting baptized because everyone else was!” BUT that wasn’t really the case… I didn’t get baptized because i was lazy and i wanted to be set apart from all of my friends (in a hipster, turning my nose up at trends kind of way)
            For years I struggled with wanting to get baptized, and with my laziness and pride, and all through eighth grade I wrestled with the thoughts of “I know there is a God, I know he exists, everyone is talking about him like he is a friend, and their relationships with him, there must be something wrong with me because i never felt God’s presence in that way, or at all.” (If you are in this spot, I would like you to know that God is ACTIVELY pursuing you!) During that eighth grade summer, i went on my first overseas missions trip to Haiti, and without explaining the whole entire trip to you (which would take DAYS) I will briefly say that, even though my heart wasn’t in it for God, I saw him working and saw the joy and love that he brought to the people in Haiti. Once i got back, my heart wasn’t instantly transformed into the “Jesus loves me! I love you!” mode, but I just became more aware of his presence in my life.
            Life continued on and I was facing the big looming High School question. And soon enough I was enrolled into Faith Bible High School, and I absolutely despised it! I didn’t want to go to school, I came home from school crying, and i genuinely did NOT want to go there. at all. period. And that is how my pride, and laziness came to bite me in the butt again.
            I was lazy and didn’t want to go to school, and I was prideful to the fact that I was not going to let God work in me because ‘I had it all together, I accepted Jesus into my heart, I prayed the prayer and I don’t need this environment because i have it ALL together.’ You probably know as well as I do that i definitely did not have it all together. Everyday I would walk into class and see my friends talking about how Jesus was working in their life, and over time, our God softened my heart to see how much my heavenly Father was pursuing me.
            Back to the baptism subject. Every winter my school has an at home missions trip called “Impact”, where we volunteer at near by organizations to ‘Impact’ (heyo!) our community. During this missions trip, I saw God working through my peers and one guy was talking about how he had a conversation with God and basically said “ I’m done wrestling with you… I am giving up my life… I surrender to you.” About a day later, we had devotion time and I did the ‘I have no clue what to read so I’m just going to open up and point!’ So I did, and every single verse I read was about surrendering your life to God… Giving up my pride, and my laziness, and my coolness, and completely surrendering it to Him, and trusting that he has the best in store for me.
            That night I decided ‘It's time.’ I decided that I was done having so called *‘Buyers remorse’ with my faith. I surrendered.
            So when we look at baptism and see this class that is looming over your head, that's not what baptism means. When we look at baptism and see it as a thing that you have to do to be an “official Christian”, then we need to change our perspective. In order to clear this up, let’s look at what the bible says about baptism.
            Acts 2:41 says “Those who accepted his message were baptized, and about three thousand were added to their number that day.” When I look at this verse, I don’t see anything about taking a  class. (not saying that classes are wrong, but lets look at their heart behind their baptism.)  Everyone that was baptized in this verse gave their life to Christ, right then and right there. They put there all in, like how Matthew 5:37 says “All you need to say is simply 'Yes' or 'No'; anything beyond this comes from the evil one.”
            In my life I didn’t surrender my life to God, I lived a life of knowing him, but not fully Loving him, and I didn’t  until I was baptised. When I was baptized It was a heart thing. God was calling me to get baptised, so I answered his call to my life, the call to leave my old ways of life behind and completely change to be a child of God with the Holy spirit living inside of me.
            When the Bible says “Jesus answered, "Very truly I tell you, no one can enter the kingdom of God unless they are born of water and the Spirit.” (John 3:5) we often get confused because the Bible also says “For it is by grace you have been saved, through faith--and this is not from yourselves, it is the gift of God--”(Ephesians 2:8).
            So knowing this what in the world is baptism? If I can only enter the kingdom of heaven through baptism, but I am not saved by my own works, and how hard I work to get into heaven, then isn’t the Bible contradicting itself? To put it plainly, nope. The Bible doesn’t contradict itself. In the early church being ‘Saved’ and ‘Baptized’ almost happened simultaneously. Because of God saving us, we surrender to God and are baptized.
            “But what if i live a life for God, knowing that I have surrendered and am saved, but haven’t been baptized?” well then dear friend, this is where I introduce a new little buddy. His name is “Baptized in the spirit”. Being baptized in the spirit is another way being “saved”, which is also another way of turning to God. You can’t be saved by the act of being immersed to water, but it is a symbol of your commitment to God.
            So when the next baptism opportunity pops up, and you want to get baptized, think about this. If you haven’t surrendered to God, then are you ready to radically change who you live for and how you live your life? If you have already surrendered to Christ, is God calling you to do this? Is your heart focused on God’s will? And lastly, PRAY! Pray like no other because God wants to have this conversation with you, and you never know how he is going to answer!

                                                                                          -Lauren Trapp


*Buyer's remorse is an emotional response on the part of a buyer in a sales transaction, which may involve feelings of regret, fear, depression or anxiety.   


(http://definitions.uslegal.com/b/buyers-remorse/)

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