Dying to Domination: Baptism as Prophetic Commitment
Romans 6:3-11 • Acts 2:38
Baptism as prophetic identity — dying to complicity with systems of oppression and rising as agents of justice, reconciliation, and the beloved community
Liberation Theology
God's preferential option for the poor and oppressed
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What Dies in the Water: Complicity and Privilege
The Old Clothes
Paul says baptism is "putting off" the old self and "putting on" Christ (Colossians 3:9-10). Imagine clothes soaked in the assumptions of a stratified society — the unconscious biases, the unearned privileges, the ways we have benefited from others' marginalization. Those clothes go into the water. What comes out is Christ — who identified with the poor, ate with the excluded, and declared release to the captives.
Source: James Cone, "A Black Theology of Liberation" — baptism and social transformation
Who Rises: The Justice-Seeking New Creation
The Beloved Community: What Baptism Creates
Applications
- 1Examine where your privilege or complicity has been at the expense of others — baptism calls you to die to that and rise differently.
- 2Find a community of people working for justice and join them — your baptism is a commission, not just a ceremony.
- 3Read the Bible from the perspective of the poor — ask who Jesus aligned with, and let that shape how you read your baptism.
- 4Welcome the stranger, visit the prisoner, feed the hungry — Matthew 25 is baptism lived out.
Prayer Suggestions
- God of justice, [CANDIDATE_NAME] goes into the water today to die to the old world and rise into the new one You are building.
- May they live as agents of the beloved community — seeing every person with the eyes of Christ, working for the world You intend.
- Give them courage to stand against injustice, solidarity to walk with the marginalized, and hope that the arc of history is bending toward justice because You are bending it. Amen.
Preaching Toolkit
Schindler's List (1993)
Oskar Schindler could have stayed comfortable, profited from the system, looked away. Instead, he turned. He chose the factory workers over the profit. Baptism is Schindler's turn — the moment the baptized person decides they can no longer look away, that their life will be aligned with the victims rather than the victors. What dies in the water is the ability to remain comfortable with injustice.
3 Voices
Powered by LensLines™ — one-liners from every TheoLens™ tradition
Progressive baptism theology understands dying with Christ as dying to personal and systemic sin — and rising as an agent of justice, reconciliation, and the beloved community, committed to the mission of Jesus to the poor and marginalized.
You go into this water with all that the world has made you. You come out claimed by a different world — one where the poor are blessed, the hungry are filled, and every person is beloved. Let that world shape how you live.
The problem with baptism is that it makes promises. It says you die to the old self. But the old self had a lot of comfortable arrangements with unjust systems. The new self has to actually live differently. That is the hardest part — and the most important.
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Frequently Asked Questions
How does the progressive tradition understand sin in relation to baptism?
The progressive tradition understands sin as both personal moral failure and systemic injustice. Dying with Christ in baptism includes dying to complicity with systems of oppression and rising as an agent of justice.
What is the "beloved community" and how does baptism relate to it?
The beloved community (a concept developed by Martin Luther King Jr.) is the vision of a redeemed society of justice and dignity. Baptism creates membership in and obligation to build that community.
This Sermon in Other Traditions
See how 16 other Christian traditions approach the believer's baptism sermon.