Pope Shenouda III
   
      
 
 Why is there death in baptism? And what is its importance?
     
      
   Here we ask: Why is there death in  baptism? And what is its importance?
 (a) To have fellowship with the  Lord Jesus Christ. The Apostle did not say that he only enters into the  power of His resurrection, but he said: "...that I may know Him and the power of His resurrection, and the fellowship of His  sufferings, being conformed to His death" (Phil.3: 10) and "I  have been crucified with  Christ" (Gal.2: 20). The phrase dying  with Christ is repeated many times in his Epistle to the Romans  (Rom.6).
 (b)  Man's corrupted nature (the old man)  must die in baptism so he may receive the new nature. This is what the  Apostle express in his words about crucifying the old self in baptism.  In the same chapter of his Epistle to the Romans he says:  "...knowing this, that our old man was crucified with Him, that the body  of sin might be done away with, that we should no longer be slaves of  sin. For he who has died has been freed from sin" (Rom.6: 6,7).  Here is the benefit of death. Death is not harmful as some think, 
.  It  is better for us and for our old self to die so that we can rise with a  new nature after the image of God. As for the corrupted nature, it does  not have the power to rise with  Christ. It is essential for our old  self to die in order to live.
  (c) The fellowship of His death implies  that we profess that we were under the penalty of death; we were dead in  trespasses. Christ died for us and was buried. That is  why we are baptised into His death. As long as the wages of our sin is  death, we are buried with Him in baptism. In this way we  receive the merit of the blessing of rising with  Christ.
  (d) It is common sense that resurrection  means rising from the dead. Whoever rises with  Christ in baptism must  have died with Him in order to rise. If he did not die, how then will  he rise?