Title
Going Public: Why Baptism Is Required for Church Membership
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Does everyone who joins a local church need to be baptized? What should churches that practice believer s baptism do about those who were baptized as infants? This is a live question for many churches today, and it raises a host of other crucial questions: What is the meaning and function of baptism? Does baptism have any inherent relationship to the local church? How do baptism and the Lords Supper fit together? What exactly is church membership?To answer the question of whether baptism is required for church membership, Going Public seeks to rebuild ecclesiological foundations, digging deep into the Bibles teaching on baptism, the Lords Supper, and church membership. Bobby Jamieson describes how baptism and the Lords Supper transform a scattered group of Christians into a gathered local church. It traces the trajectory of a churchs birth, how gospel people form a gospel polity.Baptism is where faith goes public. It is the initiating oathsign of the new covenant. It is the passport of Christs kingdom and a kingdom citizens swearingin. The Lords Supper is the renewing oathsign of the new covenant, a corporate act of fellowship with Christ that binds the church into one body. Baptism confers church membership and the Lords Supper confirms it. Baptism confers membership; the Lords Supper renews it. So baptism is required for church membership like vows are required for marriage.After building and summarizing this positive theological case for why baptism is required for church membership, the book answers objections, poses challenges to the open membership view, and applies this theological vision to the local churchs practice of baptism, the Lords Supper, and church membership.Why is baptism required for church membership? Because church membership is a public affirmation of someones public profession of faith in Christ, and Jesus has appointed baptism as the means by which his followers publicly profess their faith in him. Why does this question matter? Because removing baptism from membership erases the line Jesus himself has drawn between the church and the world.
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