Here are some questions I want to pose to our friends here. Does a person have to be baptized to go to heaven and if one must get baptized, how is this to be arranged and by whom?
The reason I ask this is many here have professed their belief that they are part of the Body of Christ, should partake of the emblems whenever they celebrate the Lord's Supper, and will go to heaven after they die if they have been faithful. Personally, while I believe myself to be a Christian, I have no such beliefs about my destiny. I have not been "born again", do not entertain the hope of going to heaven after my death, and so do not celebrate the Lord's Supper. I still believe that humans can inherit everlasting life on Earth in a physical body. That destiny would not require baptism in my belief. Many contributors here may feel otherwise.
Now, if baptism is indeed necessary before one can be "anointed" with holy spirit and receive the heavenly calling, what baptism is valid? For those who have left Jehovah's Witnesses and no longer have anything to do with the organization, how do they view their baptism as Witnesses? Is it valid? Those baptized before 1985 were baptized in "the name of the Father, Son, and holy spirit". Those immersed after that date were told that their baptism meant they had repented of their sins and were now prepared to follow the mandates laid down by "God's spirit-directed organization", something entirely different from what Jesus said.
So would baptism as one of Jehovah's Witnesses make a person eligible to be anointed, or would another baptism be necessary? Who should baptize Christians? And if a person does not get baptized, can s/he still go to heaven after death? I don't want to start an argument with anyone. I'm simply interested in other people's views on this topic, and I eagerly await your comments.
Quendi