MennoSota
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Alright, so saved by baptism doesn't actually mean SAVED. It just means an incomplete, partial, maybe salvation that is actually contingent upon good works and God actually accepting your humble heart.No, not correct...
You are INITIATED BY GOD INTO CHRIST...
You are ENTERED INTO Salvation...
In THIS life, you can STILL turn from what you have received...
Eternal Life in Christ CAN be forsaken BY YOU but ONLY in THIS fallen life...
Baptism is ENTRY into Salvation...
It is NOT completion of Salvation...
Menno, in the olden days of yore, many Christians would defer their Baptism until the end of their lives so that they might obtain a better Salvation by having less time and opportunity to sin... To die immediately after Baptism was considered a guarantee of selection at the Second Coming of Christ... It is not a received teaching of the Church, but it was a belief that was held by many... Worthy of dismissal, yet the thing to be gleaned is their understanding of the power of Salvation in Baptism... The faithful have always understood Baptism to mean Salvation in Christ - It's BEGINNING...
Your Salvation begins when Christ Baptizes YOU INTO HIMSELF...
Through the hands of His Servant's hands in His Body, the Church...
At that time, Salvation is yours...
To abide within...
Or to depart from...
Arsenios
Saved doesn't actually mean saved.
I find this teaching very convoluted and wonder if any common person would ever actually find it in their own Bible.
It seems to me that saved means what it says. Saved. As in, "I once was lost, but now am found. Was blind, but now I see" Saved. Actual removing from certain death unto life Saved.
But, alas, it seems that people are only "mostly saved." Where is Miracle Max?