We Weren’t There
Most of us have seen a baptism(Greek baptizō) — to immerse, dip, or submerge; the word is physical before it is religious. The ceremony pictures dying, being buried, and rising with Christ, and the washing that comes with it — not a ritual requirement but an image of an inward reality. Synonyms: immersion, submersion. More, or been through one. It sits right at the front of the Christian life — one of the first things you do. But ask what it actually means, and the answers thin out fast: a public profession, a symbol of faithFaith (Greek pistis, Hebrew emunah) — trust and faithfulness, not mere belief or assent to doctrine. Scripture's own definition: faith is the substance of things hoped for (Hebrews 11:1) — the hypostasis, "that which stands under," giving the unseen its standing and reality. Synonyms: trust, faithfulness, assurance. More, a sign(Greek sēmeion) — a miracle told less for its power than for what it signifies; the word points at meaning, not spectacle. John builds his gospel on them — numbering them and saying he wrote them down so we might see and believe (John 20:30-31). Synonyms: sēmeion, signs. See An Entire Message More of belonging. True enough, as far as they go — and far short of what the ceremony itself is pointing at, which is something more specific, and stranger, than any of them.
WatchIn plain English, to observe means to see attentively — to give careful, focused attention to something. This is precisely what the Hebrew shamar points at: watchful, protective attention toward something valued. In religious usage, particularly in the Church of God tradition, "observe" has been reduced to performing an external requirement. The original sense — attentive seeing that allows something to reveal itself — is what the feasts and sabbath are actually asking for. Synonyms: shamar, keep, watch, guard. More what happens in the water. A person is laid all the way back until it closes over the face, eyes closed — down, under, gone from sight. There’s a held moment when nothing is visible, nothing moving. And then they’re brought up, lifted streaming into the air. Three things, not two: a going-down, a stillness under, and a coming-up. A death, a burial, and a rising.
That’s not a shape I’m reading into it. It’s the gospel in its plainest form — Paul’s “first of all”: “ChristNot a surname but a title: the Greek Christos, rendering the Hebrew Mashiach (Messiah) — "the Anointed." The anointing that set apart Israel's kings, priests, and prophets all converges on the one person it was pointing to. Synonyms: Messiah, Anointed, the Anointed One, Mashiach, Christos. See also: Logos More died for our sins… he was buried… he rose again the third day” (1 Corinthians 15:3-4). Died, buried, raised — three movements, the middle one named on its own. And baptism, Paul says, joins us to all three: “buried with him by baptism into death… that like as Christ was raised… even so we also should walk in newness of life” (Romans 6:4). The strange word is with. Not a disconnected acknowledgement of his death, burial, and rising — joined into them.
It’s the middle we skip. We say “died for our sins” and “rose again” in one breathFrom the Greek pneuma and Hebrew ruach — both meaning breath or wind: invisible in itself, known by its movement and effects. The theological debates surrounding personhood and the Trinity are later developments; the original words are grounded in something physical and immediate. Synonyms: Holy Ghost, pneuma, ruach, Spirit of God, breath, wind. More and slide past the three days and three nights he lay in the tomb — the stillness, the part where nothing happens and there’s nothing to do but be in the ground. But it’s there on purpose, and it’s what the disciples actually had to live: when he was killed they went down with him, everything they’d staked their lives on into the grave, and then came three dark days of buried hope, not knowing there was anything to wait for. That’s the held moment under the water. A death you could almost brace for; a burial you can’t shortcut. And the verse says we’re buried with him there too — not spared the tomb-time, joined to it.
And here’s what should stop us: we weren’t there. The disciples saw it first-hand; we weren’t at the cross or the tomb, an ocean of years too late. So are we working from a second-hand copy of what they got the original of? Jesus answers before we can ask. To Thomas, who needed to see: “blessed are they that have not seen, and yet have believed” (John 20:29) — not-seeing isn’t the deficit; he calls it a blessed condition. And the work of those who come after his leaving isn’t smaller but larger: “greater works than these shall he do; because I go unto my Father” (John 14:12). His going wasn’t a loss we’re managing from a distance; it’s the very thing that opens the greater. The first-hand disciples weren’t a higher tier we strain to reach — once he ascended, they walked by faith and not sight, the same as us. They were disciples; we are disciples. Their experience isn’t the original and ours a copy — it’s one shape, theirs lived first, set down so we’d know our own when it came to us. Being there was never the premium.
Which is why baptism stands at the beginning. The feastIn Leviticus 23, a feast is a designated period — not a single day but a span of time with its own structure and sequence. The Feast of Weeks spans seven weeks. The Feast of Tabernacles spans seven days. A feast may contain one or more annual holy days, but the feast itself is the full period, not any single day within it. Synonyms: festival, appointed time, moed. More year opens on a death — its first month is “the beginning of months” (Exodus 12:2), PassoverThe LORD's Passover, kept on Nisan 14 (Lev 23:5): the lamb slain and its blood marking the houses spared in Egypt (Ex 12). The New Testament presents Christ as the Passover lamb (1 Cor 5:7), making it the opening act of the feast year. Synonyms: Pesach. See Was the Passover a Sin Offering? — at the Cross More at its head, the lamb slain. And Paul, telling strangers what all of it was about, started there too: “I determined not to know any thing among you, save Jesus Christ, and him crucified” (1 Corinthians 2:2). The death is the door — but a door you go through, by way of the tomb, into the rising on the far side. Baptism is that whole passage drawn small in water: down, under, and up — with him.
So the question the water leaves us with isn’t whether we were there. None of us were — and we’re told that’s no loss. It’s whether we’ve been joined to it: taken down into his death, held in the burial, and brought up into his rising — and whether we’re walking, now, in the newness that’s meant to come up out of the water with us.
The Same Shape
One movement — death, burial, rising — runs through all of it. Here it is laid side by side. The last row is the one that matters; it’s yours to fill.
| Death | Burial | Resurrection | |
|---|---|---|---|
| The feast (Leviticus 23) | Passover | 3/7 Unleavened Bread (de-leavening) | the rising, then the Wave SheafThe first of the firstfruits of the harvest — a single unleavened sheaf lifted and waved before God on the day after the Sabbath during the Days of Unleavened Bread. It marks the transition into the counting period of the Feast of Weeks. 1 Corinthians 15:20-23 identifies Christ as the first of the firstfruits of the resurrection — the wave sheaf pointing precisely at him. Synonyms: wave offering, firstfruits offering, omer. See The Feast of LEAVENED Bread More |
| Jesus | the cross | three days and three nights in the tomb | risen |
| Baptism | lowered under | held beneath | lifted out, washed |
| The first disciples | died with him | the dark days, mourning | met the risen Christ — unrecognized |
| Disciples since (no different) | die with him | the same dark | newness of life — not yet quite seeing what’s going on |
| You |