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Believer's BaptismReformedFill-in Template~12 minClaude Opus 4.6

The Covenant Sign: Baptism and the Promise of God

Romans 6:3-11Acts 2:38

Baptism as the covenant sign — the New Testament counterpart to circumcision, sealing God's covenant promise to those who are His

Reformed / Presbyterian

The sovereignty of God and doctrines of grace

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Look for [BRACKETED TEXT] throughout the sermon. Replace these with your specific details to personalize the message.

[CANDIDATE_NAME] e.g., Sarah, Brother Marcus[TESTIMONY_MOMENT] e.g., felt God calling during a difficult season, encountered Christ through a friend
Tradition vocabulary:covenant signseal of graceunion with Christcovenant of gracepaedobaptismcircumcision

Covenant Continuity: Baptism as the New Circumcision

To understand baptism in the Reformed tradition, you must understand the Bible as one unified story — one covenant of grace administered in different ways across the ages. When God commanded circumcision in Genesis 17, it was not merely a physical practice for one nation. It was the sign of the covenant — the mark of belonging, the seal of the promise. "I will be your God and you will be my people." Paul makes the connection explicit in Colossians 2: "In Him you were also circumcised with a circumcision not performed by human hands. Your whole self ruled by the flesh was put off when you were circumcised by Christ, having been buried with Him in baptism." Baptism is the New Testament administration of the covenant sign. It replaces circumcision as the mark of belonging to the covenant people. This is why Reformed theology has always practiced paedobaptism — baptism of the children of believers — not because children are automatically saved, but because they are included in the covenant community, just as the children of Abraham were circumcised. The sign belongs wherever the covenant promise is extended.
Colossians 2:11-12Genesis 17:7-10Acts 2:38-39

The Passport and the Citizen

A passport does not make you a citizen — it marks that you are one. It opens doors, signals belonging, and carries legal weight. But a child born to citizens is a citizen before they ever receive a passport. Reformed theology sees covenant membership similarly: the sign (baptism/circumcision) marks a belonging that God has already established by his promise. For [CANDIDATE_NAME], this water is the seal on the promise God has been making since before the foundation of the world.

Source: Reformed covenant theology — Westminster Confession of Faith, Chapter 28

The Seal of the Spirit: Baptism and Assurance

Romans 6 describes what baptism signifies with striking force: burial with Christ and resurrection with Christ. The Reformed tradition has always insisted that baptism is not merely a ceremony — it is a sign and seal of real spiritual realities. As the Westminster Confession says: baptism is "a sign and seal of the covenant of grace, of his ingrafting into Christ, of regeneration, of remission of sins." A seal is not the thing itself — it is the official mark that the thing is real. A king's seal on a letter does not write the letter, but it authenticates it. Baptism is God's seal on His covenant promises. When [CANDIDATE_NAME] receives water in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, God is placing His mark — His stamp of ownership and promise — on this person. For those who are regenerate, baptism becomes a means of assurance. In times of doubt, the baptized believer can say: "I was baptized. God made promises over me. Those promises are real, and they are mine by faith."
Romans 6:3-5Titus 3:5-6Romans 4:11

Union with Christ: The Heart of Baptism

The deepest thing baptism declares is union with Christ. Not merely moral improvement. Not membership in a religious organization. Union — being incorporated into the death, burial, and resurrection of the Son of God. For the Reformed tradition, union with Christ is the central category of salvation. Every blessing flows from it: justification, adoption, sanctification, glorification. And baptism is the sign and seal of this union. Going into the water is going into Christ's death. Rising from the water is rising in His resurrection life. This is what makes baptism so weighty. We are not witnessing a nice ceremony today. We are witnessing a declaration that [CANDIDATE_NAME] is united to the living Lord of the universe — that God Himself has placed His covenant sign upon them. Let the gravity of that reality settle on you. And let the wonder of it lift you.
Romans 6:5Ephesians 1:13-14John 15:5

Applications

  • 1Study the covenant — trace the promise from Genesis to Revelation. Baptism will mean more when you see the whole story.
  • 2If you were baptized as an infant, ask your parents what they promised at that ceremony. Live into those promises.
  • 3Let baptism be a source of assurance, not anxiety. When doubt comes, return to the sign God placed on you.
  • 4Honor the covenant by raising children in the faith — the promise is to you and to your children (Acts 2:39).

Prayer Suggestions

  • Covenant Lord, we witness the covenant sign being administered today. You made promises, and Your promises are sure.
  • We pray for [CANDIDATE_NAME] — that this sign would be matched by the reality of genuine faith, and that Your covenant grace would hold them through every season of life.
  • May the water of baptism be an anchor of assurance — a mark they can return to when doubt rises, and say: "God has sealed me. I am His." Amen.

Preaching Toolkit

Movie Analogy

The Return of the King (2003)

In Tolkien's world, a sealed document carries the full weight of the king's authority. The ring pressed in wax is not a decoration — it is authorization, authentication, ownership. Baptism is the King's seal. God presses His mark upon His people. "You are Mine. My covenant stands. My promises are yours." The seal does not create the king's intention — it announces it.

3 Voices

Powered by LensLines™ — one-liners from every TheoLens™ tradition

Classic

Baptism is the sign and seal of the covenant of grace — God's official mark of His promise upon His people, replacing circumcision as the New Testament administration of the covenant sign.

Pastoral

Whether you were baptized as an infant or as a believing adult, the covenant promise is the same: "I will be your God and you will be my people." That promise is being announced over [CANDIDATE_NAME] today.

Edgy

Reformed theology refuses to separate what God has joined together: the sign and the thing signified. Baptism is not nothing. It is God's own word in water.

More Titles

The Covenant Sign: A Reformed Baptism SermonSealed by God: Baptism and the Covenant PromiseBuried and Raised in the Covenant: Romans 6 for Reformed ChristiansThe New Circumcision: What Baptism Means in God's Covenant StorySign and Seal: A Presbyterian Baptism Sermon
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Frequently Asked Questions

Does the Reformed tradition baptize infants?

Many Reformed traditions practice paedobaptism (infant baptism) as the New Testament covenant sign replacing circumcision, while others practice credobaptism (believer's baptism). Both positions exist within Reformed theology.

What is the relationship between baptism and faith in Reformed theology?

Baptism is the sign and seal of the covenant of grace — it does not create faith, but it marks and seals those who are included in the covenant community. Faith is necessary to receive the benefits signified.