My take: That’s a long and layered argument from Wansvic, blending truth (faith prompts obedience) with the Oneness view (Spirit not received until baptism).It is one's trust/faith in Jesus that prompts belief and obedience to God's command of water baptism in the name of Jesus for remission of sin.
The Spirit is not automatially received the moment a person believes as indicated in detailed conversion accounts:
Acts 2- Believers at Pentecost did not automatically receive the Holy Ghost upon belief.
Acts 8- Believers submitted to water baptism in the name of Jesus and received the Holy Ghost days later.
Acts 9- Paul did not receive the Holy Ghost until days after he believed in Jesus.
Acts 10 - While Peter was speaking those who believed received the Holy Ghost and obeyed the water baptism command afterward.
Acts 19 - Paul questioned, Have you received the Holy Ghost since you believed? His question indicates the Holy Ghost is not received automatically upon belief.
Circumcision was more than just a sign for those living in the OT. Those who were not circumcised were cut off from their God for breaking His covenant. Just as circumcision was required of those in the OT, water baptism in the name of Jesus is required of everyone living in the NT era as seen in Acts 2:4-41, 8:12-18, 9:17-18, 10:43-48, 19:1-7, 22:16.
If the aforementioned scriptures are not enough to prove the point, Jesus Himself said, "...Go ye into all the world, and preach the gospel to every creature.
He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved; but he that believeth not shall be damned." Mark 16:15-16
Obedience to the OT command of circumcision was not a work of righteousness, nor is water baptism in the name of Jesus. The reality associated with water baptism is being buried with Jesus into His death.
Brother, I agree that faith should lead to obedience, but Scripture never makes obedience the condition for grace — only the response to it. The pattern of Acts you listed actually proves the opposite of what you’re claiming:
- Acts 2 — The Spirit came upon the believers after Christ’s ascension because the promise had just been given (John 7:39 KJV). That was a unique moment in redemptive history, not a model of delay.
- Acts 8 — The Samaritan delay was intentional to show apostolic unity between Jerusalem and Samaria — not a rule that faith without baptism leaves one unsaved.
- Acts 9 — Paul’s case involved a personal commissioning by Christ; he was filled with the Spirit before any mention of “washing away sins” (Acts 9:17–18 KJV).
- Acts 10 — The Gentiles received the Spirit while Peter was still preaching, before baptism — explicitly showing salvation precedes the water (v. 44–47).
- Acts 19 — Paul corrected disciples who had received only John’s baptism — once they believed the full gospel, the Spirit came.
“After that ye heard the word of truth… after that ye believed, ye were sealed with that Holy Spirit of promise.”
As for circumcision, Romans 4:10–11 KJV makes it clear: Abraham was justified before he was circumcised. Likewise, we’re justified before baptism — and then baptized as the sign of faith, not the source of righteousness.
Mark 16:16 KJV fits perfectly with that pattern: belief saves; baptism follows. The condemnation comes from unbelief, not from lack of baptism — “He that believeth not shall be damned.”
So yes, baptism is commanded, beautiful, and meaningful — but it’s never presented as the channel of forgiveness or the moment of Spirit reception. The blood of Christ alone cleanses; baptism proclaims it.
Grace and peace — always in His Word.
