You know wansvic, it's really sad that you are not thinking rationally. When Jesus Christ made His statement at Matthew 28:19 are you accusing Jesus Christ of lying? Words have meaning and they mean what they say in context. He said at vs20 was a "COMMAND" for us be water baptized in the authority of the Father, the Son and in the Holy Spirit.
Now you come up with this "two witnesses" excuse (and btw your misapplying the purpose of two or three witnesses) concerning Matthew 28:19,20. Even so, look at what Jesus says at John 5:37. "And the Father who sent Me, He has born witness of Me, (put your name in the next sentence wansvic) You have neither heard His voice at any time nor seen His form."
So what better witness can Jesus have then His own Father, which for you and your other oneness teachers brings up an interesting question? If Jesus Christ is "really" God the Father, and the Son and the Holy Spirit did Jesus as the Father send Himself in John 5:37?
IN GOD THE SON,
bluto
The two witnesses concept is not an excuse but actually what the bible states is the only way one can be sure their understanding of scripture is correct.
I am not accusing Jesus of lying. What I am stating is that He said to use the singular name which Peter later commanded (Acts 2:38) and every recorded baptism attests to.
Water baptisms were always performed in the name of Jesus until sadly a change was instituted by the Roman leaders, that later became known as the Roman Catholic Church, in 325 a.d. The bible makes it clear that there is significance in using the name above all names. My hope is that you will review what has been recorded on the topic in the included historical encyclopedias (The list is in no means exhaustive). Afterward consider what the word warns about following man-made traditions rather than God's word. (Col 2:8; Mk 7:8-9)
CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA, VOLUME 8
“Justin Martys was one of the early Fathers of the Roman Catholic Church who helped change the ancient baptism of “in the Name of Jesus Christ” to the titles of Father, Son and Holy Ghost”
FORMULA “With regard to the form used for baptism in the early Church, there is the difficulty that although
Matthew 28:19 seems to speaks of the Trinitarian formula which is now used, the
Acts of the Apostles (2:38, 8:16, 10:48, 19:5) and Paul
(I Corinthians 1:13, 6:11, Galatians 3:27, Romans 6:3) speak only of baptism “in the Name of Jesus.”
CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA, 1967 edition, volume 2, pages 56, 59.
“An explicit reference to the Trinitarian formula of baptism cannot be found in the first centuries.”
CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEIA, 1913 edition, volume 2, Page 265:
“They acknowledge that the original formula for baptism was in the Name of Jesus, but the pope changed it.”
ENCYCLOPEDIA OF RELIGION AND ETHICS Scribner‘s T & T Clark, Edinburgh, 1924, vol 1 Page 380
“Christian baptism, when connected with the mention of a formula, is alluded to four times in the
Acts (2:38, 8:16, 10:48, 19:5) and the formula is never that of
(Matthew 28:19) but is twice in the name of Jesus Christ
(Acts 2:38, 10:48) and twice in the name of the Lord Jesus
(Acts 8:16, 19:5).
That this was the usual formula of Christian baptism is supported by the evidence of the Pauline Epistles, which speak of being baptized only into Christ or into Christ Jesus
(Galatians 3:27, Romans 6:3).
Is it possible to reconcile these facts with the belief that Christ commanded the disciples to baptize in the trine name? The obvious explanation of the silence of New Testament on the trine name, and the use of another formula in Acts and Paul is that this other formula was the earlier, and that the trine formula is a later edition. It would require very strong argument to controvert this presumption, and none seems to exist”.
AN ENCYCLOPEDIA OF RELIGIONS - Maurice Canney, page 53.
“Persons were baptized at first “in the name of Jesus Christ”
(Acts 2:38, 10:48) or “in the name of the Lord Jesus”
(Acts 8:16, 19:5).
Afterwards, with the development of the doctrine of the Trinity, they were baptized “in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Ghost”
EARLIEST CHRISTIANITY- .J. Weiss, Published 1959, volume 2, page 633.
“However little we may know of the liturgical form of the old celebration of baptism, yet it is clear that it involved uttering the name of Christ in a vigorous, expressive manner, probably by the baptizer, possibly also by the baptized person.”
ANCHOR BIBLICAL DICTIONARY volume 1, page 586
“But the role of Jesus Christ and the Christ - even necessitated its becoming a baptism ‘into the name of the Lord Jesus” or something similar.
“INTO THE NAME OF JESUS.” It is relatively certain that in the early Church one commonly referred to baptism as being done “into the name of the Lord Jesus” or something similar.
One strange thing with this phrase is that the construction in what seems to be its earliest form into the name of..” (Greek eis to onoma” was not otherwise used in normal Greek, except for the language of banking, in which it referred to the account/name “into” which a sum of money was placed
CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA, 1913 EDITION.
“There has been a theological controversy over the question as to whether baptism in the name of Christ only was ever held valid. Certain texts in the New Testament have given rise to this difficulty.
Thus St Paul (
Acts 19 commands some disciples at Ephesus to be baptized in Christ’s Name: “they were baptized in the name of the Lord Jesus.”
In
Acts 10 we read that St Peter ordered others to be baptized “in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ”. Those who were converted by Philip (
Acts 8 “were baptized in the name of Jesus Christ”, and above all we have the explicit command of the Prince of the Apostles: “Be baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ for the remission of your sins” (
Acts 2:38).
Owing to these texts some theologians have held that the Apostles baptized in the name of Christ only
INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY OF THE BIBLE -page 34
Sometimes the baptism is spoken of specifically as “in the name of Jesus Christ”
(Acts 2:38, 10:48), or “in the name of the Lord Jesus”
(Acts 8:16; 19:5). Ordinarily baptism preceded the reception of the Holy Ghost.”
THE BEGINNINGS CHRISTIANITY—page 124
….“
Jesus himself had the power to cast out devils, and therefore his Name carried the same power, no matter who pronounced it…
A convert knew perfectly well that when he said that he had been baptized in the name of Jesus he meant that someone had said
‘I baptize you in the name of Jesus’ or something similar, and that in consequence he had attained the way of Salvation Running parallel with this belief in the
power of Jesus’ name there is also apparent in the Gospel of Mark that belief in the
power of faith which persisted and grew stronger, while the other died”
THE BEGINNINGS OF CHRISTIANITY—page 126
“Heitmuller believes that James 2:7…. is a specific reference to those who have had the name ‘Jesus’ pronounced over them in baptism....”
ENCYCLOPEDIA BRITANNICA—1910, 11th Edition, Volume 3, pages 365-366
Page 361 “The trinitarian formula and trine immersion were not uniformly used from the beginning, nor did they always go together.
The
teachings of the Apostles indeed prescribes baptism in the name of the Father, Son and Holy Ghost, but on the next page speaks of those who have been baptized into the name of the Lord—the normal formula of the New Testament.
In the 3rd century, baptism in the name of Christ was still so widespread that Pope Stephen, in opposition to Cyprian of Garthage, declared it to be valid.
From Pope Zachariah (ep.x) we learn that the Celtic missionaries in Baptizing omitted one or more persons of the trinity, and this was one of the reasons why the church of Rome anathematized them; Pope Nicholas, however (858867), allowed baptism to be valid (Tantum in nimineChristi), as in Acts.
Ursinus, an African Monk A.D. 1284), also asserted that baptism into the name of Christ alone was valid.
The formula of Rome is; “I baptize thee in the name of the Father, and Son, and holy Spirit” Page 366 No record of such use can be discovered in the Acts or the Epistles of the Apostles.
The baptisms recorded in the New Testament after the day of Pentecost were administered “in the Name of Jesus Christ” (
Acts 2:38), “into the name of the Lord Jesus” (
8:16) “into Christ” (
Romans 6:3; Galatians 3:27). This difficulty was considered by the Fathers.