I am sharing what the Bible says.
Respectfully, no. Which is why quotes from Scripture are typically missing from your posts. What you are doing is echoing the post 16th Century position of one denomination - the Anabaptists.
I don't believe there is a verse that states, "Baptism does nothing." I don't think there is a verse that states, "Go.... baptize.... teach....but don't use water or the Word but only dunk them under the Holy Spirit." "Go.... baptize.... teach..... but these are meaningless, worthless acts that accomplish absolutely nothing but do them just cuz." "Go.... baptize.... teach but thou art forbidden to do so if they are under the age of X". "Go.... baptize.... teach..... but not unless they FIRST have documented and proven that they are regenerate, born again and believe in Jesus as their Savior." You know, the claims made in this thread.
We do have verses like "There is one baptism." We do have verses like "Baptism now saves you" and "Faith comes by hearing." We do have verses such as "My word does not return to me void but shall accomplish all for which I sent it." We do see in the NT and for 1500 years how Christians went and baptized and taught (baptizing with water and teaching with words) and embraced that with great importance (it's called The Great Commission of Jesus) and not as a meaningless, worthless, waste of time that God cannot use. Friend, you have been given MANY Scriptures but haven't presented even one that states all the limitations and prohibitions you claim, all this "meaningless, useless" position.
The question becomes:
Since water does not save
Well, let's focus on the other tool in the Great Commission - teaching. What are we Christians COMMANDED to go with? Baptism and teaching (they seem to be given equal importance, and they are COMMANDED directly by Jesus). Do words save? No. Jesus saves. We all agree on that (including MC, my friend). But here's where I disagree with you: Therefore, teaching the Word is NOT a meaningless, useless, waste of time which God cannot use for his purposes. While God alone saves (I'm as strong of a monergist as you, my friend) you seem to leap that THEREFORE Christians must do NOTHING and just allow the Holy Spirit to work in a vacuum. I don't deny He can do that (witness John the Baptist still in his mother's womb) but that's not what we are commanded to do: Nothing. We (the regenerate, believing. justified, children of God) are COMMANDED to love, to go, to baptize, to teach. God typically works through MEANS - not because He has to but because He wills to. This does not make it any less His doing, obviously... but it does mean that the COMMANDS and COMISSIONS He gives are not meaningless rituals, useless acts, something we should do cuz God says so even though it's a waste of time and bad stewardship of ministry. Again, all the Scriptures have been given to you repeatedly - and you seem to ignore them offering nothing in reply.
Water baptism merely shows an outward display to the community about what God has already done.
You keep echoing this Anabaptist claim.... never with any Scriptures to remotely support it. Nothing.
We obey...because we obey. God is not obligated to tell us why he wants believers to be water baptized after salvation.
But there is no such command. As you've proven by persistently refusing to give the first that states, "Thou canst not be baptized unless thou has FIRST believed in Jesus and become regenerate." You claim there is that command that believers BE baptized but you can't find it anywhere in the Bible. The command, friend, is for CHRISTIANS to baptize (it's the other way around).
What we know for certain is that there is NO mystical power in water baptism
Yes, you are echoing this Anabaptist claim. But you have offered NOTHING to remotely indicate such. Nothing.
There is NO mysterious regenerative properties in the water. To claim such a fallacy is to deny God's salvation by grace alone.
No one claims that water saves, you know that. No one claims that saying John 3:16 saves anyone. Does that mean that teaching the Gospel to unbelievers is a waste of time, meaningless, forbidden - because it denies salvation by grace alone?
IMO, you've taken the Anabaptist view of baptism - and stripped it of the whole basis (which is synergistic) because you are a Monergist. But you've hit the wall Calvinists are WRONGLY accused of. Calvinists are accused of destroying the whole basis for evangelism, mission work, the Great Commission because the argument is made "if a Christian DOES something, that takes away from God doing EVERYTHING!" Go to any Calvinist website and you'll see that discussion. But you've taken Calvinism FAR too far, MUCH further than Calvinists do. Calvinists do NOT deny that Christians can share (AND MUST) administer the Means of Grace (and they do). They simply note what EVERYONE IN THIS THREAD has to you: The means doesn't save, God saves via the means. "My Word does not return to me void but accomplished all for which I sent it." That doesn't mean we are forbidden to love unbelievers, forbidden to go to them forbidden to baptize them, forbidden to teach them.... it ONLY means it's GOD who gives faith although usually via means. "Faith comes by hearing" doesn't mean OUR hearing creates the faith, it means the gift of faith comes by hearing (although it doesn't say "ONLY through hearing"). Can God give faith apart from hearing? God can do whatever He wants (and yes, John the Baptist had the gift of faith before he was even born).
- Josiah