BAPTISM IN JESUS’ NAME
VS. TRINITARIAN BAPTISM
The Sabellian heresy, the lexical mechanics of Apostolic authority, and the Trinitarian mandate of the Great Commission.THE MAGICAL INCANTATION ERROR
“Go therefore and make disciples of all the nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit.” (Matthew 28:19, LSB)
Within the fringes of the modern Pentecostal movement exists a virulent, ancient heresy disguised as a deeper revelation. “Oneness” Pentecostals, also known as Jesus-Only believers, adamantly insist that baptizing a convert using the Trinitarian formula (Father, Son, and Holy Spirit) is completely invalid. They mandate that the exact syllables “In the name of Jesus Christ” must be vocally pronounced over the water, arguing that this specific verbal formula is strictly required for the washing away of sins.
This doctrine is not merely an ecclesiastical dispute over liturgy. It is the resurrection of a third-century heresy known as Sabellianism (or Modalism), which denies the simultaneous, co-eternal distinction of the three Persons of the Godhead. Furthermore, it reduces the sacrament of baptism to a pagan magical incantation, inadvertently asserting that the sovereign grace of God is activated by the exact phonic vibrations produced by human vocal cords.
We will subject this doctrinal fracture to the precision of the Greek text. The conflict between Matthew 28:19 and Acts 2:38 is not a contradiction; it is a profound lesson in the lexical definition of Apostolic authority.
THE DEFINITION OF ONOMA
The entire Oneness argument hangs on a violent misunderstanding of a single Greek noun: ὄνομα (onoma), translated as “name.” In western, modern culture, a name is merely a label used to distinguish one person from another. But in the ancient Hebrew and Greco-Roman world, a name signified much more than a verbal identifier.
To do something “in the name of” someone was a strictly legal idiom. When a Roman centurion commanded a crowd to disperse “in the name of Caesar,” he was not casting a magic spell using Caesar’s specific syllables; he was acting upon the delegated, absolute authority of the Emperor.
Therefore, when we examine the biblical command to be baptized “in the name,” the text is not prescribing a strict, verbatim vocal formula that the pastor must say. It is declaring the jurisdiction and authority by which the baptism is being administered.
THE TRIUNE REALITY
In Matthew 28:19, Jesus Christ issues the foundational command for Christian initiation: “baptizing them in the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit.”
The Greek syntax here is devastating to the Modalist position. Jesus uses the singular noun for “name” (εἰς τὸ ὄνομα – eis to onoma), followed immediately by three distinct, co-equal Persons linked by the conjunction “and” (kai). He does not say “in the names [plural] of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit,” which would imply three separate gods (Tritheism). Nor does He say “in the name of the Father, who is the Son, who is the Spirit,” which would imply one person wearing three masks (Modalism).
THE GREEK MATRIX // THE TRINITARIAN SYNTAX
The singular “name” establishes the singular essence and authority of Yahweh, while the distinct, repeated definite articles establish the eternal Trinitarian reality of God. To be baptized eis to onoma is to be plunged legally into the possession and ownership of the Triune God.
THE JURISDICTION OF PETER
If Christ commanded the Trinitarian formula, why did Peter say in Acts 2:38, “Repent, and each of you be baptized in the name of Jesus Christ for the forgiveness of your sins”? Oneness theology claims this proves Peter corrected Jesus, or that “Jesus” is the actual name of the Father and Spirit. This is exegetical malpractice.
“Father, Son, and Holy Ghost are just titles. The actual name of God is Jesus. If the pastor does not say the word ‘Jesus’ out loud over the water, your sins are not washed away.”
ONENESS PENTECOSTAL DOGMAPeter was not giving a spoken liturgy. He was distinguishing Christian baptism from the baptism of John the Baptist. It was an act of submission to the specific authority of the Messiah they had just crucified.
HISTORICAL-GRAMMATICAL CONSENSUSIn Acts 2, Peter is preaching to Jews who had just murdered the Messiah. They already believed in the Father and the Spirit. Their specific point of rebellion was the rejection of the Son. Peter commands them to be baptized ἐπὶ τῷ ὀνόματι (epi tō onomati) upon the basis or authority of Jesus Christ.
Furthermore, the Book of Acts never records the exact words spoken during the act of baptism. It records the historical summary of what kind of baptism was occurring. It was Christian baptism (authorized by Christ), not Jewish proselyte baptism or the baptism of John. To turn Acts 2:38 into a strict verbal spell is to completely miss the historical context of the text.
THE HISTORICAL VERDICT
If the Apostles understood Jesus to mean that “Jesus” was the name of the Father, Son, and Spirit, the early church would have uniformly practiced “Jesus-Only” baptism. History proves the exact opposite.
“And concerning baptism, baptize this way: Having first said all these things, baptize into the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit, in living water.”
The Didache, a manual of early church practice written during or immediately after the lives of the Apostles, explicitly commands the Trinitarian formula of Matthew 28. Justin Martyr, writing around A.D. 150, records the exact same practice. Tertullian, fighting against the Modalist heretic Praxeas in the early 3rd century, violently defended the Triune nature of God and the Trinitarian baptism.
The “Jesus-Only” baptismal formula was not an apostolic secret. It was a 20th-century theological invention, born out of a schism at a camp meeting in 1913, directly contradicting two thousand years of orthodox Christian history and the explicit command of Christ Himself.
THE DEFENSE OF THE GODHEAD
To deny the Trinity in order to falsely elevate the name of Jesus is to ultimately destroy the Jesus of the Bible. If God is only one Person wearing three masks, then the cross is a cosmic theater. If there is no eternal distinction between the Father and the Son, then the Son could not legally satisfy the wrath of the Father as a penal substitute. You are left with the ancient heresy of Patripassianism the blasphemous idea that the Father suffered and died on the cross.
Orthodox, biblical Christianity bows to the unfathomable mystery of the Triune God. We do not baptize converts using magical, syllabic incantations. We plunge them into the water by the sovereign authority of Jesus Christ, into the eternal possession of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit.
CONNECTED DOCTRINAL RECORDS
“The investigation of Theology Proper requires systematic cross-examination.”
