2. the doctrine of baptisms--paired with "laying on of hands,"
as the latter followed on Christian baptism, and answers to the rite of
confirmation in Episcopal churches. Jewish believers passed, by
an easy transition, from Jewish baptismal purifications
(Heb 9:10,
"washings"), baptism of proselytes, and John's baptism, and legal
imposition of hands, to their Christian analogues, baptism, and
the subsequent laying on of hands, accompanied by the gift of
the Holy Ghost (compare
Heb 6:4).
Greek, "baptismoi," plural, including Jewish and
Christian baptisms, are to be distinguished from
baptisma, singular, restricted to Christian baptism. The
six particulars here specified had been, as it were, the Christian
Catechism of the Old Testament; and such Jews who had begun to
recognize Jesus as the Christ immediately on the new light being shed
on these fundamental particulars, were accounted as having the
elementary principles of the doctrine of Christ [BENGEL]. The first and most obvious elementary
instruction of Jews would be the teaching them the typical
significance of their own ceremonial law in its Christian fulfilment
[ALFORD].
resurrection, &c.--held already by the Jews from the Old
Testament: confirmed with clearer light in Christian teaching or
"doctrine."
eternal judgment--judgment fraught with eternal consequences
either of joy or of woe.
JFB.
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