Into the Holy Trinity: The Mystery of Holy Baptism
Romans 6:3-11 • Acts 2:38
Baptism as the beginning of theosis — triple immersion into the Holy Trinity, death to sin, new birth as a child of God, and the beginning of participation in the divine life
Eastern Orthodox
Holy Tradition, theosis, and liturgical worship
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Triple Immersion: Buried and Raised with the Holy Trinity
The Baptismal Font as Tomb and Womb
The ancient baptismal fonts were built in cruciform or octagonal shapes — symbols of death (the cross) and resurrection (the eighth day, the day beyond the week). The font is simultaneously a tomb and a womb. [CANDIDATE_NAME] enters it carrying the old humanity and emerges carrying the new. The water does not merely wash — it buries and births. This is the mystery.
Source: St. Cyril of Jerusalem, Mystagogical Catecheses III
The Beginning of Theosis: Partaking in the Divine Nature
The Paschal Mystery: Baptism and Easter
Applications
- 1Approach every Sunday liturgy as a renewal of your baptism — you are entering the Paschal mystery again.
- 2Pursue the life of theosis through prayer, fasting, the Eucharist, and the sacraments of healing and confession.
- 3Honor your baptismal name — the saint whose life you are called to follow and who prays for you.
- 4Remember that Chrismation sealed what baptism began — the Holy Spirit dwells in you, equipping you for the holy life.
Prayer Suggestions
- Holy Trinity, Father, Son, and Holy Spirit — [CANDIDATE_NAME] is baptized into Your Name, Your life, Your mystery. Receive them.
- May the waters of this font be for them a death to the old life and a birth into the new. May the Holy Spirit descend and dwell in them forever.
- Bring them, Lord, through the whole journey of theosis — from this day until they see You face to face and are fully transformed into Your likeness. Amen.
Preaching Toolkit
The Prince of Egypt (1998)
When Israel passes through the Red Sea, the sea that was death for Egypt is life for Israel. The same water judges and saves. Baptism is the Christian crossing of the Red Sea — the water closes over the old life (Pharaoh drowned) and opens to the new (the Promised Land ahead). The Fathers universally read the Exodus as the type of baptism.
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Orthodox baptism is triple immersion in the name of the Holy Trinity — death to sin, new birth in the Spirit, beginning of theosis, and incorporation into the Body of Christ, followed by Chrismation as the seal of the Holy Spirit.
The triple immersion is not theatrical — each plunge is a dying, each rising is a resurrection. [CANDIDATE_NAME] is being buried and raised three times: into the Father, into the Son, into the Holy Spirit. What emerges is a new creation.
Orthodoxy does not settle for "baptism is a symbol." That answer is too small. Baptism is the beginning of deification. The goal of the Christian life is to become God by grace — and this is where it starts.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Why does the Orthodox Church use triple immersion?
Triple immersion — in the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit — reflects the three-fold death and resurrection into the life of the Holy Trinity. Each immersion is a dying and rising.
What is theosis and how does baptism relate to it?
Theosis (deification) is the process of participating in the divine life — becoming more like God by grace. Baptism begins theosis by incorporating the believer into Christ and bestowing the Holy Spirit through Chrismation.
This Sermon in Other Traditions
See how 16 other Christian traditions approach the believer's baptism sermon.