atpollard
Well-known member
- Joined
- Feb 6, 2017
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- 2,573
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- Florida
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- Baptist
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- Conservative
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- Married
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- Yes
[MENTION=60]MoreCoffee[/MENTION]
I misunderstood your request. In many ways, what you ask is far easier.
Naw, it doesn’t happen at Protestant baptisms either.
I guess that the Scripture wasn’t speaking about a literal and physical union with His death and resurrection. That places it in the Spiritual realm and the same place as explaining the other things that only God can do.
I misunderstood your request. In many ways, what you ask is far easier.
This is unanswerable by either you or I. It calls for an explanation of how God is God and does only those things that God can do. If any human being could correctly answer this question (about the effective transformation), then we would be closer to the Mormons being correct that godhood was within our possible grasp.The passage that is quoted says that one is united with Christ in baptism rather than that baptism signified union with Christ. The difference is significant. In the former baptism effects the union. In the latter baptism would only be a symbol of it.
The passage that is quoted says that one is united with Christ in baptism and also describes the union that baptism effects as being like putting on new cloths. I cannot endorse the NLT for serious study purposes but this passage like the previous one makes baptism the effecting agency of the union of the baptised with Christ.
When you baptize an infant or adult in a Catholic Church, does the person literally and clinically die during baptism, spend three days dead, and spontaneously miraculously come back to life visible transformed and no longer bound by the laws of physics?In Romans 6:3-5 and the following verses baptism effects the death and resurrection that is under discussion. Baptism is not presented as symbolic of death and resurrection as those things are discussed in the passage. That is why the passage says(Romans 6:3) Do you not know that all of us who have been baptised into Christ Jesus were baptised into his death?The question that I raised was about passages teaching that baptism signifies rather than effects the things described.
Naw, it doesn’t happen at Protestant baptisms either.
I guess that the Scripture wasn’t speaking about a literal and physical union with His death and resurrection. That places it in the Spiritual realm and the same place as explaining the other things that only God can do.