Pastor Tim Patoka
From the River to the Mountain
January 14, 2024
Consider Your Baptized Self Romans 6:1-11 1) Dead to Sin 2) Alive to God If you were to define yourself, what would you consider so you could answer? Would you consider what you do or did for a living? What we do for a living is often an extension of ourselves. Would you consider the people in your life? If you have grandchildren or come from a prominent family, they probably define you to a point. Would you consider your baptized Christian self? Baptism is almost always an early part of a Christian’s life. The faith it gives or strengthens is certainly part of how we view ourselves. As we celebrate Jesus’ baptism in the Jordan River, we recognize it as the public start to his ministry. In it, God inaugurates, authorizes, and reveals to all who Jesus is: God’s own Son with whom he is well pleased as Jesus begins to publicly reveal himself as our Promised Savior. In our look at Romans chapter 6, we learn how baptism unites us with Jesus so that his death and resurrection are as if our own. Because of that union, we therefore can consider our baptized selves as dead to sin and alive to God to define who we are. 1) Dead to Sin Baptism is one of a kind. It was commanded by Jesus for us Christians to do to all people of all ages. It consists of two components, water and God’s Word. While there’s nothing special about the water, the Word is. Not just for the specific words we speak, but for the power God works through it to bless us. And what are its blessings? The gift of the Holy Spirit, that is, the gift of faith. If a person is baptized while they weigh only pounds and ounces, this faith is brand new and also brings them into God’s family. If someone already has faith when baptized, then their faith is strengthened all the more. In Romans chapter 6, we’re also told that baptism makes us dead to sin. We picture sin as a cruel master who rules over us and gives orders contrary to God’s will and Word. Before we had faith, we were dead in sin and slaves to its every command. But since coming to faith, Christians are dead to sin and free to serve God instead. Perhaps we can understand what it means to be dead to sin with the phrase: you’re dead to me. If someone says that to you, it means they have no place for you in
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