Dom, if it makes you feel better, I was baptized (water)when I placed my faith in Christ.I understand James 2 just fine. I made no exegesis stating that dead faith is unsaved. It simply is disobidience to command from God, and you need to make things right. Your willingness to act or not act on a command from God directly reflects if you do believe in Christ and evidence of your faith. Walk the walk, not talk the talk. If you really do love God, do your actions reflect keeping his commandments? Do we stumble and do we make mistakes? Absolutely! But are you honestly trying or seeing what you can get away with? And that is where you would be toying with God and that's where it could be fatal.
As far as our willingness to act. I agree that acting on a command from God does reflect our faith in Christ. A Christian 'SHOULD' walk the walk. That however, is different than what you are speaking of. We are not talking about what a 'Christian' should do, but what an unsaved person MUST do to be saved. There are many things a Christian SHOULD do. If water baptism is required for an unbeliever, then why are there so many areas where it is not paired with rightly trusting Christ? If anything were a necessity, then why ever leave it out, even once?
Is water baptism necessary/required/conditional for regeneration? Afterall, that is the issue. If water baptism is necessary for regeneration, then I certainly want to be in the right. But based on my observations, I stand by my comments that you are playing fast and loose, in prooftexting to make this point. In fact, as I will point out, I think you are actually making things impossible for yourself.
This has nothing to do with seeing what one can get away with. It is trusting God at his word, and rightly dividing the word of truth.
Regarding John 3:5. Our savior also said, just a few chapters later, "He that believeth on me, as the scripture hath said, out of his belly shall flow rivers of living water." (John 7:38) Are we to construe that a true believer will have literal water flowing out of them? Or was Jesus speaking of something else? Does baptism always involve water. And, does water always mean physical h2o?
In regards to Israel, water baptism most definately played a significant if not necessary role. However, this preceded Jesus' earthly minsitry, and most certainly the cross. Paul, is hand picked by Jesus to take his Gospel (1 Cor 15:3,4) to the Gentiles. Paul himself says, "For Christ sent me not to baptize, but to preach the gospel: not with wisdom of words, lest the cross of Christ should be made of none effect." (1 Cor. 1:17) Christ sent the 12 on a specific mission, which certainly included baptism. Then Paul says, his mission is NOT to baptize. Do we have a contradiction or a paradox, and if so why? Is Paul the 13th, or is he called for something unique from the 12?
When one establishes a doctrine on prooftexting they are bound to err. If I flip my bible open to Leviticus 13, and it gives instructions on what to do regarding mildew, should I say, "I must obey the command of God to show my faith." Or, would I be wise to consider context and follow sound exegetical methods to avoid wrong application? If so in the OT, why not so in the NT?
There are hundreds of things that are thoroughly biblical that have no application for the Christian believer, or are conditional for salvation. That is a very weak argument, and I'm surprised one who argues so well regarding reason and logic would make it. In fact you are imposing on to the text, and then you do so again in Matt. 7, which only creates more problems.And water baptism is throughly biblical, jlay. I have imposed nothing into the text. Its is so blatantly in the bible.
Who is Jesus' audience in Matthew 7?
2ndly, where does Jesus EVER mention water baptism in the SOTM? Hint, it doesn't.
Look at the dangerous thing you are doing. Jesus opens Matt 7 by saying, "“Do not judge, or you too will be judged. 2 For in the same way you judge others, you will be judged, and with the measure you use, it will be measured to you." Matt 7:1. You are putting water baptism as a requirement for salvation and doing so under the context of what is said in Matthew 7. The requirement of perfectly doing the will of the Father, based on what Jesus says in the SOTM.
Do you state that you are perfect as He is perfect? That you are flawlessly obeying as laid out in the SOTM? Are you walking the walk or talking the talk?
If you are saying that you follow the will of God in obedience in everything, then we should question whether you are being truthful. 1 John 1:8
Perhaps, if you are going to make that the standard, you should go back, read the SOTM, and see if you are following the Father's will in all these areas.
It is poor exegesis to pull in water baptism and impose it upon the text where it is not even mentioned once. If you want to set the measure of salvation by water, based on this haphazard exegesis, then you can not conveniently pick out the things which YOU have obeyed and ignroe the others. You have to follow that line of reasoning all the way through. You have placed on your back a yoke you can not bear. A yoke which our savior came to lift. Christ came to set captives free, and it would seem to me that you seek to put them back in bondage.