I'll look forward to your post, and I hope they are from the church fathers from the earlier half of the first century who either had direct contact with Jesus or were closely associated with those who did.
When I look at the scriptures I find examples of the Holy Spirit being received without baptism at all involved, baptism alone not endowing the baptized with the holy spirit, and baptism by water not bringing the Holy Spirit unless followed by the laying on of hands by one who has already received it.
My real questions are centered around whether or not one can actually have received the Holy Spirit when there is absolutely no change in their lives afterward showing anything different about them.
Consider that Jesus talked of being recognized by the fruits and immediately went on to say that not everyone calling him Lord would enter heaven even thought they performed works of healing, prophecy and miracles.
I know that I'm asking for scripture but I'm really more interested in why you believe as you believe and how you have come to believe the specific way you do, what you have seen in others that leads you to believe this is true.
This may seem unimportant, and maybe it is, but it is important to me since I believe we are in the age of deceit and many seemingly righteous people are among the deceived and unknowingly passing on false doctrine. I am always searching myself for false beliefs that may (and probably have) crept into my thinking and find the experience of others crucial in this respect.
Acts 2:38 states very clearly that in baptism we receive the gift of the Holy Spirit.
I encourage you to re-read what I've written above about the Holy Spirit entering man when he comes to faith. I think you missed that portion of my post.
And you've mentioned again about looking to people to see if they've changed after baptism. I've told you that people can reject our Lord, even if they're baptized. And then again, those people could repent and turn back to God later in life, but his baptism is still valid. God knows what He's doing.
Here are some church fathers and statements concerning baptism/spirit:
Clement of Alexandria a.d. 153–217
Thus also we who are baptized, having wiped off the sins which obscure the light of the Divine Spirit, have the eye of the spirit free, unimpeded, and full of light, by which alone we contemplate the Divine, the Holy Spirit flowing down to us from above.
Aphraahat the Persian Sage
“From baptism we receive the Spirit of Christ. At that same moment in which the priests invoke the Spirit, heaven opens, and he descends and rests upon the waters, and those who are baptized are clothed in him. The Spirit is absent from all those who are born of the flesh, until they come to the water of rebirth, and then they receive the Holy Spirit” (
Treatises 6:14:4 [A.D. 340]).
Augustine
It is this one Spirit who makes it possible for an infant to be regenerated . . . when that infant is brought to baptism; and it is through this one Spirit that the infant so presented is reborn. For it is not written, “Unless a man be born again by the will of his parents” or “by the faith of those presenting him or ministering to him,” but, “Unless a man be born again of water and the Holy Spirit.” The water, therefore, manifesting exteriorly the sacrament of grace, and the Spirit effecting interiorly the benefit of grace, both regenerate in one Christ that man who was generated in Adam (Letters 98:2 [A.D. 408]).
“As many as are persuaded and believe that what we [Christians] teach and say is true, and undertake to be able to live accordingly, and instructed to pray and to entreat God with fasting, for the remission of their sins that are past, we pray and fast with them. Then
they are brought by us where there is water and are regenerated in the same manner in which we were ourselves regenerated. For, in the name of God, the Father . . . and of our Savior Jesus Christ, and of the Holy Spirit, they then receive the washing with water. For Christ also said, ‘
Unless you are born again, you shall not enter into the kingdom of heaven”—Justin Martr,
First Apology 61
Date: 151 A.D.
Origen
The Church received from the apostles the tradition of giving baptism even to infants. The apostles, to whom were committed the secrets of divine sacraments, knew there is in everyone innate strains of [original] sin, which must be washed away through water and the Spirit (Commentaries on Romans 5:9 [A.D. 248]).
“And [Naaman] dipped himself . . . seven times in the Jordan’ [2 Kgs. 5:14]. It was not for nothing that Naaman of old, when suffering from leprosy, was purified upon his being baptized, but [this served] as an indication to us. For as we are lepers in sin,
we are made clean, by means of the sacred water and the invocation of the Lord, from our old transgressions, being spiritually regenerated as newborn babes, even as the Lord has declared: ‘
Except a man be born again through water and the Spirit, he shall not enter into the kingdom of heaven” —Irenaeus,
Fragment 34 Date: 190 A.D.