So what does "fire" mean? It can connote many things. None of these ideas of baptism are fully fleshed out in the Bible.
My fear is that it establishes different categories of believers. I doubt any idea was rather prominent in the beginning. Paul writes of different class difference in the church and wrong it was. He particularly went after the agape meals. The mixing of social classes was one of the primary features of early Christianity. Some mocked the idea while others found it compelling.
All these additional baptisms appear to set up post baptismal quests and tests. I don't see this in Acts or Paul. It is very unimportant in my faith but I do realize it is a hot topic for other traditions. When is one ever acceptable enough for Christ?
I thought the formula was baptism in the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost/Spirit. Water means cleansing. Particularly if you are totally immerse, it can symbolize the start of a new life. The Mystery religions also buried and resurrected people to new life. It strikes me that humans add so much to scripture.
As I said before, this is not even discussed within my community. My take on it is undoubtely influenced by that fact. Can't we all be Christians who believe in Christ and not YHWH. It would appear that martyrdom and loss of social status would be clearer indication of whether one is Christian than baptism types. What about infants who died without any sort of baptism? There are vast expanses of the globe where no one has heard of Christ. Missionary work on behalf of the least of these seems to be baptism to me.
Jesus did not establish treatises on baptism. His baptism is puzzling. It is unclear what it meant. Only some of John's followers followed Jesus. Anyway, these disputes have been going for many centuries with no clarification.