The answer to these questions may require some thorough
explanation. And we can begin by affirming that indeed we have been
created in God’s image and likeness. That was what happened when God
decided to create man through the creation of our first parents, Adam
and Eve. They came to being in the perfect condition of what is known
as the state of original justice, where no sin entered into the scene
yet. They were created holy.
But we know what happened in Paradise, the place where our
first parents were first placed to be tested if what God wants them to
be is also what they would want to be. They flunked the test, and thus
became alienated from God. They lost that original holiness and
everything that went with it—immortality, integrity, impassibility,
etc. The original image and likeness of God was damaged and needed to
be recreated.
Though having flunked the test and deserving some
punishment, they were not completely abandoned by God our creator.
Instead, a very complex plan or economy of salvation was launched by
God, so to speak, to rescue mankind. This took place when the Son of
God became man, started to preach and do many good things, and finally
paid for our sins through his passion, death and resurrection.
This time, our continuing creation and testing would need
that we be conformed to the God-made-man, the pattern of our humanity
and the redeemer of our damaged humanity, Jesus Christ. And this
conformity of ours to Christ starts to take place at the sacrament of
baptism which was instituted by Christ himself through his own baptism
in the River Jordan.
With baptism, we have Christ as the pattern of our
salvation, the way, the truth and the life, embedded, so to speak, in
our life. That is why we need to be baptized. It is to recover our
original dignity as true children of God, his image and likeness,
meant to participate in the very life of God.
With Christ, we can receive the supernatural grace that
would enable us to attain our ideal state. It would not be enough for
us to know God with our intelligence and to love him with our will,
without God’s grace through Christ.
We need to clarify and emphasize the importance and
necessity of baptism since there is now a trend to downplay this
sacrament in our life. But even before that problem came to be, the
usual issue is that many people do not realize the implications of the
sacrament—that we need to duly correspond to the abiding redemptive
action of Christ all throughout our life.
We have to be aware that once baptized we commit ourselves
to vitally identify ourselves with Christ, which is going to be a
lifelong process!
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