GerhardEbersoehn
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- Jan 14, 2014
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It would appear that you are suggesting that verse 38 applies to being "born of water". But actually it is in verse 37 that this man was born of the Spirit, since no man can say "Jesus Christ is the Son of God" without the Spirit the subsequent New Birth.
THE MAN IS BORN AGAIN
Act 8:37 And Philip said, If thou believest with all thine heart, thou mayest. And he answered and said, I believe that Jesus Christ is the Son of God.
THE BELIEVER BAPTIZED
Act 8:38 And he commanded the chariot to stand still: and they went down both into the water, both Philip and the eunuch; and he baptized him.
I wonder if the eunuch did not have an unspoken 'but...' after his statement, I believe that Jesus Christ is the Son of God...but.... Just now he appeared to be totally ignorant, now he prescribes to Phillip that he must be baptised in water. Phillip told him nothing about baptism, and baptism is not even implied in the passage from Isaiah. I think that in the eunuch's religious tradition there was some sort of water baptism without which he had his mind made up that if Christianity wants to be the real thing, it must have water baptism like his heathen customs have.
In fact the convert was clearly not satisfied by Phillip’s PROTEST that “if you believe with your whole heart” it is enough, you are saved JUST BY “JESUS PREACHED” to you! But no, note that the servant does the teaching! He is the driver, and he commands the cart to come to a halt, and he coerced Phillip to get down, just like he before had commanded the deacon to get up the cart.
I am convinced the driver knew exactly what he did, because he drove his “way” straight to where he, knew water was. Phillip didn’t tell him, Let’s go find water for sure!
Something else, not at all insignificant!
It says in verse 35 as Phillip “opened his mouth and BEGAN at the Scripture”, the servant rudely drove off; he had his scheme worked out in detail.
As I said the Ethiopian manipulated the deacon all the way, and Phillip eventually began to look rather sheepish, UNTIL, I believe, God decided, so far—enough is enough, and once “they were come up out of the water, the Spirit of the Lord caught Phillip away, he could not teach the eunuch further; but the eunuch went his way rejoicing” … he only would have known for what, but it isn’t written that he went rejoicing in salvation or in the Lord Jesus.
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