Peter, 4 steps are required in early Acts, repent, be baptized, pray & lay hands.
Acts 2
38 Then Peter said unto them, Repent, and be baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ for the remission of sins, and ye shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost.
Acts 8:
15 Who, when they were come down, prayed for them, that they might receive the Holy Ghost:
16 (For as yet he was fallen upon none of them: only they were baptized in the name of the Lord Jesus.)
17 Then laid they their hands on them, and they received the Holy Ghost.
Yet Paul teaches only 1 step, hear & believe the Gospel
Eph 1:13, Gospel 1 Cor 15:1-4
In whom ye also trusted, after that ye heard the word of truth, the gospel of your salvation: in whom also after that ye believed, ye were sealed with that holy Spirit of promise,
And the way today is ?
This question is Why does early Acts of the Apostles sometimes show a multi-step pattern (repent → baptism → prayer/laying on of hands → Spirit), while Paul the Apostle often describes salvation as occurring through hearing and believing the gospel?
A careful, text-driven analysis shows that this is less a contradiction and more a
difference in narrative function vs. doctrinal explanation.
What Acts is actually showing
The book of Acts is
historical narrative, not a systematic theology manual. It records transitional moments as the message moves:
Jerusalem (Jews) → Acts 2
Samaria → Acts 8
Gentiles → Acts 10
Disciples of John → Acts 19
Each setting shows slightly different sequences, which is the first clue that we are not looking at a rigid formula.
Acts 2 (Jews)
Repent , Be baptized , Receive the Spirit
Here, everything appears tightly connected.
Acts 8 (Samaritans)
They
believe and are baptized first , Then apostles arrive later , Then
lay hands → Spirit comes
This already breaks the idea of a fixed “4-step formula.”
Acts 10 (Gentiles – Cornelius)
They
hear and believe , The
Spirit falls immediately (before baptism) , Then they are baptized afterward
This reverses Acts 2.
Acts 19 (Ephesus)
Disciples lack full understanding , They are rebaptized , Then hands laid → Spirit
Across Acts, the order changes. That alone undermines the claim that “4 steps are required.”
What Acts is emphasizing instead:
The
Spirit is given , The gospel is
validated across new groups
Apostolic authority is sometimes visibly involved (especially in boundary-crossing moments like Samaria)
What Paul is doing (different purpose)
Paul’s letters (e.g., Epistle to the Ephesians, First Epistle to the Corinthians) are not narrating events—they are
explaining the mechanics of salvation.
His core structure is consistent:
Hear the gospel (1 Cor 15:1–4) , Believe/trust , Be sealed with the Spirit (Eph 1:13)
He never presents:
Baptism as a prerequisite for receiving the Spirit or Laying on of hands as universally required
Instead, he treats the Spirit as immediate and intrinsic to belief:
“Anyone who does not have the Spirit… does not belong to Him” (Romans 8:9)
That’s a decisive theological statement.
So are there two different “ways”?
No—there are
two layers:
Layer 1: Theological core (Paul clarifies)
Salvation =
grace received through faith , The Spirit is given at belief
Layer 2: Historical rollout (Acts records)
God
orchestrates events differently depending on context , Sometimes delays or external signs (like laying on of hands) serve:
Unity (e.g., Samaritans joining under apostles) , Validation (e.g., Gentiles receiving the same Spirit) , Transition from old covenant structures
Why Acts 8 includes laying on of hands
Acts 8 is often over-read.
The delay of the Spirit until the apostles arrive likely serves a unification function:
Prevents a separate Samaritan church from forming , Ensures visible apostolic confirmation
This is descriptive
The phrase “for the remission of sins” (Acts 2:38)
This is another pressure point.
“for” (Greek:
eis) can mean:
“unto” / resulting in , or
“with reference to / because of” , Even without resolving that debate, Acts itself shows: People receive the Spirit
without identical wording or sequence (Acts 10).
So Acts 2:38 cannot be turned into a rigid universal formula without contradicting Acts itself.
If you integrate all the data:
The consistent requirement across the New Testament is: Faith in the gospel , The consistent outcome: , Receiving the Holy Spirit , The variable elements: , Timing of baptism , Laying on of hands , Order of events
Answer to your final question: “And the way today is?”
From a strictly text-integrated reading:
- The normative pattern (especially post-Acts transition) aligns with Paul: , Hear the gospel → Believe → Receive the Spirit, Baptism remains:
- A commanded response
- A public identification
- But not consistently presented as the mechanism of receiving the Spirit
- Laying on of hands:
- Occurs in specific contexts
- Not universally required
The “4 steps required” reading is too rigid and does not survive comparison across Acts itself.
The “only believe” reading is closer to the doctrinal core—but needs to respect that Acts shows
real, embodied responses (repentance, baptism, community recognition), not mere intellectual assent.