Jesus never water baptized anyone. Jesus came to replace, fulfill, render useless, the law of Moses:
He told his disciples to baptize. That wasn't something they came up with on their own
Jesus never water baptized anyone. Jesus came to replace, fulfill, render useless, the law of Moses:
No, he didn't. He commanded his disciples to do only two things: "Go and teach". English Grammar 101. As a result of obeying that command, believing hearers would thereby be baptized by the Holy Spirit.He told his disciples to baptize. That wasn't something they came up with on their own
You’re wasting your time with @ChristRoseFromTheDead he just cycles through his other accounts whenever he needs backup for his unsound theology. It’s the same pattern every time....and the answer, again, for those with discernment:
"Jesus was the perfect spotless Lamb of God; he didn't need his sins washed away. Rather, Jesus asked John to accommodate him, because it made sense for them "to fulfill all righteousness". So John went ahead and baptized Jesus. The end of the old, and the start of the new.
So what does "to fulfill all righteousness" mean?
Well, Jesus was born into a Jewish family; circumcised at 8 days of age; taken to the temple at 12 years of age; raised in all the disciplines of the Jewish religion. And now he does this one final Jewish ritual, marking the end of his Jewishness and the start of a deeper revelation."
Jesus never water baptized anyone. Jesus came to replace, fulfill, render useless, the law of Moses:
The law and the prophets were until John: since that time the kingdom of God is preached, and every man presseth into it (Luke 16:16). Out with the old, in with the new.
There is only one Lord, one faith, and one baptism via the Holy Ghost!
For by one Spirit are we all baptized into one body...(1 Cor. 12:13).
If that be so, then we are commanded to pray for the man. Also, there are others viewing this thread, and we must remain in the truth for them, as well.You’re wasting your time with @ChristRoseFromTheDead he just cycles through his other accounts whenever he needs backup for his unsound theology. It’s the same pattern every time.
No, he didn't. He commanded his disciples to do only two things: "Go and teach". English Grammar 101. As a result of obeying that command, believing hearers would thereby be baptized by the Holy Spirit.
It's your conditioning that would lead you to assume Jesus meant water baptism.
That connection simply isn’t in the text! Jesus wasn’t baptized to “enter God’s house like a Levitical priest.” Scripture gives His reason directly: “To fulfil all righteousness.” — Matthew 3:15 (KJV)When Jesus was baptized, the door into God's presence opened to him. This was the antitype of Levitical priests being washed at the door of the tabernacle as part of their commissioning ceremony before they could enter into God's house. There was no other way to enter the sheepfold. Narrow is the gate that leads to life.
And Aaron and his sons thou shalt bring unto the door of the tabernacle of the congregation, and shalt wash them with water. Exodus 29:4
John was not a Levitical priest.
That’s pure fiction, and it falls apart the moment you open a Bible. Scripture never calls John an Aaronic priest — not once, not in passing, not even indirectly. His father was a priest (Luke 1:5 KJV), but John never served in the temple, never performed priestly sacrifices, never wore priestly garments, and never took part in the Levitical system he’s supposedly “the greatest” of.He was the greatest Aaronic priest that ever lived.
That’s pure fiction, and it falls apart the moment you open a Bible. Scripture never calls John an Aaronic priest — not once, not in passing, not even indirectly. His father was a priest (Luke 1:5 KJV), but John never served in the temple, never performed priestly sacrifices, never wore priestly garments, and never took part in the Levitical system he’s supposedly “the greatest” of.
Jesus was baptized to fulfill righteousness, not to reenact Exodus 29:4 KJV.
That’s a complete shift of the argument — and it doesn’t rescue your claim.God called him into the highest service of serving the true temple of God rather than serving in the earthly temple.
Verily I say unto you, Among them that are born of women there hath not risen a greater than John the Baptist: notwithstanding he that is least in the kingdom of heaven is greater than he. Matthew 11:11
Jesus' baptism was the antitype of the commisioning of the high priest into service at the door of the tabernacle described in Exodus 29:4-7. So in that regard he fulfilled the righteousness foreshadowed in that ceremony: immersed in water, clothed with garments of righteousness (this is my beloved son in whom I am well pleased) and anointed with oil (holy spirit)
Nothing in the Old Testament predicts Christ’s baptism as a reenactment of Exodus 29.
Nothing in the Gospels explains His baptism using Exodus 29.
Nothing in Acts, Hebrews, or any apostolic writing draws that connection.
Nothing in Scripture ever suggests Jesus was reenacting a priestly washing.
View attachment 282225
@ChristRoseFromTheDead He is at it again folks!
This was AI-generated
Here’s why, broken down in a way you can point out if needed:
1. The structure is textbook AI
The sentence has the classic AI pattern:
- Bold claim stated as fact
- Colon
- List of parallels in perfect symmetry
- Parenthetical clarifications
- Smooth rhetorical flow
Human writing (especially his) is nowhere near that tidy or formulaic.
2. It uses AI-style theological phrasing
Phrases like:
These are synthetic, systematic phrases — AI loves synthesizing typology this way.
- “fulfilled the righteousness foreshadowed in that ceremony”
- “garments of righteousness” (applied allegorically)
- “antitype of the commissioning of the high priest”
He normally writes choppy, inconsistent, emotional posts.
This one suddenly sounded like a seminary-trained commentary… except the theology is wrong and stitched together.
Classic sign of AI assistance.
3. The parallelism is artificial
He gives three supposed parallels:
- Water (immersed)
- Garments (“this is My beloved Son…”)
- Oil (Holy Spirit)
This is forced typology in a perfect 1-1-1 pattern.
AI loves building clean, symmetrical lists like that.
Humans rarely write theology in neat triplets unless they’re copying notes or using an AI tool.
4. It uses the “antitype” terminology incorrectly
AI often misuses “type/antitype” because it mixes systematic theology terms without understanding them.
Real biblical scholars don’t call Jesus’ baptism the antitype of Exodus 29 — because no biblical writer ever makes that connection.
AI, however, will confidently invent these parallels.
5. The tone is generic, commentary-like, and lacks his usual style
His real writing style is:
But suddenly this post is:
- reactive
- emotional
- repetitive
- disorganized
- prooftext-heavy
That sudden shift is a dead giveaway.
- smooth
- structured
- academic-sounding
- typology-based
- artificially “tight”
**Conclusion:
It was certainly AI-assisted or fully AI-generated.**
This is pure invention from start to finish. Not one sentence you just wrote exists in Scripture or in any Christian doctrine taught by Jesus, the apostles, or the prophets.There are a number of passages about Christ becoming a high priest after the the order of Melchizedek. As the greatest Aaronic priest who ever lived, John transferred the priesthood from the order of Aaron to the order of Melchizedek when he washed Jesus at the doorway to heaven.
No, he didn't. He commanded his disciples to do only two things: "Go and teach". English Grammar 101. As a result of obeying that command, believing hearers would thereby be baptized by the Holy Spirit.
It's your conditioning that would lead you to assume Jesus meant water baptism.