Faith Should Be Public
This powerful message cuts straight to the heart of what it means to publicly identify with Christ through baptism. We're reminded that baptism isn't some magical ritual or ticket to heaven—it's the first step of obedience for those who've already placed their trust in Jesus. Drawing from Romans 6:3-4, we see how baptism symbolizes our complete identification with Christ's death, burial, and resurrection. Just as we were born into water in our mother's womb, we're symbolically reborn through the waters of baptism. The message challenges us to examine whether we've put our baptism on the right side of our salvation—have we been baptized after genuinely trusting Christ, or did we go through the motions before truly understanding what it meant? There's a beautiful honesty here about how we've evolved in communication from handwritten notes to smartphones, yet sometimes keep private the very things we should make most public. The example of Jesus being baptized by John wasn't because He needed cleansing from sin, but to leave us an example to follow. If we want to be like Jesus, we must walk in His steps. This isn't about denominational tradition—it's about scriptural obedience. The question confronts us directly: if we can't stand for Jesus in a friendly church environment, how will we represent Him in a hostile world?
