[MENTION=378]Imalive[/MENTION]
Friend....
you do say that the text means you must be born from baptism water and Spirit
Friend, it would help if you quoted me. I don't know what I posted that you are replying to. Thanks.
So if water there means baptism water then anyone who is not baptized in water cant enter the Kingdom
Sorry, you totally lost me.
The Bible specifically, verbatim states "there is one baptism." So there aren't two. At least since Pentecost, there is no such thing as "water" vs. "spirit" baptism because the Bible specifically states "there is one baptism."
I think we need to be careful turning positives into negatives (turning them upside down), and careful not to read absolutes into statements. Yes, Scripture says "Faith comes by hearing" but it does not say "Hearing results in faith" (Understand? See why verses can't be turned upside down?). The Bible says, "He who believes and is baptized (remember "and" IN NO WAY implies order!) shall be saved (but keep reading lest you insert an absolute) he who does not believe is condemned." Thus faith and baptism are associated but clearly only faith saves. As I've tried to convey before (in posts ignored, lol) justification (IMO and in classic Protestantism) is Sola Gratia - Solus Christus - Sola Fide.
ALONE!!! But that doesn't mean God can only work in the vacuum of people sitting on their behinds doing NOTHING, that God CAN ONLY give faith is no one loves, no one goes, no one baptizes, no one teaches, no one does
anything toward/for the unbeliever.
Follow me? A carpenter can use a hammer to build a house, but the hammer didn't build the house, the carpenter did.
Follow me?
Let's turn to the other (equal and inseparable) side of the Great Commission, teaching. There are 3 things we CHRISTIANS are COMMANDED to do toward the unbeliever: go, baptize and teach. Inseperable. Let's focus on the third: teach. Can a person believe who hasn't been taught? Yes, consider John the Baptist in his mother's womb. Does that mean we are forbidden to teach unbelievers? That teaching has no value, is meaningless, denies the grace of God and that Jesus alone saves? I don't think so. Or consider that MANY that Jesus taught and that Paul taught and that Billy Graham taught (a pretty good percentage!)
seems (WE cannot know!) never believed. Does that mean Jesus and Paul and Billy Graham did wrong, that they shouldn't have preached and taught, that they were denying God's grace and Jesus' salvic work of redemption? I don't think so. Now there is a verse that specificly states, "Faith comes by hearing" but again it doesn't say "hearing results in faith." Get the difference?
Several of us have TRIED (over and over - what are we on page 76 of this now???) TRIED to explain this but never seem to get a reply....
This is called "
The Means of Grace" in traditional, orthodox theology. MEANS God may use for His purposes. "My word shall not return to be void but shall accomplish all for which I sent it." Tools in the hands of the Carpenter. Yes, a hammer can't guild a house... but a carpenter may use a hammer to do so. Do you get the difference? Using a hammer is NOT a bad thing, not forbidden, doesn't in any sense diminish that the carpenter is the builder. The hammer is not "worthless" "of no value" "a waste of time."
Follow me? I've written this to you and others several times before, lol.....
I
hope this helps.....
Pax Christi
- Josiah
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