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Home Topical Index |
Sprinkling,
Pouring
Bible
study on sprinkling and pouring.
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Affusion (pouring water) began to be substituted for baptism in
A.D. 251. After that time, sprinkling and pouring were erroneously
practiced and called "sick" or "clinical" baptism because it was
administered to people who were sick. In A.D. 1331, at the Council
of Ravenna, sprinkling was officially recognized as a substitute
for immersion by the Catholic Church. Today, many religious denominations
adhere to the false doctrine of sprinkling (pouring) as a substitute
for baptism.
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Matt. 28:18-19; Mk. 16:15-16; Acts 2:38; 1 Pet. 3:21
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We must be baptized to be saved.
"Baptize" means to dip or immerse. Baptism consists of the processes
of immersion, submersion, and emergence.
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Acts 8:38-39
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When the eunuch was baptized, both he and Philip went down into
the water before being baptized. And after being baptized, they
both came up out of the water.
Since baptism is immersion in water, it was necessary for them
both to go down into the water. If the eunuch had been sprinkled
instead of baptized, neither of them would have needed to be inconvenienced
by going down into the water
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