No it doesn't. My whole premise is based on an argument that you should appreciate ... "AND means AND".
Peter, under the command of the Holy Spirit instructed them to "repent and be baptized" indicating that they were to do both
Good. Then the verse you quoted (and the next verse you left off) in no way indicate a sequence, that one is to follow the other.
You quoted the verse (and left off the next one) because you indicated they prove we SHOULD NOT baptize babies...... The whole premise of your argument is that "and" means "then." Now you admit, it doesn't. There goes the premise.
The baby cannot understand
Nor can an adult. One who is DEAD is incapable of anything. The Bible says NO ONE is even capable of even saying 'Jesus is Lord'. No one. All incapable. A one minute old baby with Downs Syndrome cannot give self spiritual life, cannot raise self from the DEAD, cannot give self faith, cannot save self.... but nor can a 42 year old Swed with an IQ of 230 and 3 Ph.D.s who has memorized every word of the Bible. And yes, this includes "repent" since "repent" is a spiritual act flowing from spiritual life - one repents to GOD (and thus must believe in God), looking to GOD for mercy (and thus must believe God is meriful). I agree that an unbeliever can feel remorse (so can you dog) but that's not repentance.
Jesus strongly disagrees with you....
And I'm surprised to see a Calvinist argue that the person CHOOSES to believe, and that God is impotent in the case of those under the age of "X."
I find your premise very unbiblical (and a flat contradiction of Calvinism)...
And I find it suprisingly illogical. How is it that one who is DEAD must first be alive before they can no longer be DEAD? How can you insist that a DEAD person cannot be given life unless they are first alive?
so it cannot repent so it cannot follow the command given by the the Holy Spirit to repent AND be baptized.
Read what you posted...... you first indicated that "and" doesn't mean "and" but should be deleted and replaced with the substitute word "THEN" because sequence is mandated.... then you posted the opposite and that the word "and" IS the word Jesus should have used because sequence is not mandated..... now you seem to going back to the very thing you said wasn't your position, that "and" should be replaced with "THEN" because Jesus is mandating sequence.
Which is it?
I could not tell someone in good conscience that they get to ignore half of the instructions
.... When I was baptized (within a minute of my birth.... still unconscience and not breathing) no one TOLD me anything. I was not told that I could ignore the call to repentance. I know of no one who tells anyone that. I've NEVER been told that I could ignore repentance; quite the opposite.
says it is OK to treat 'AND' like an 'OR'. Every believer is commanded to REPENT AND BE BAPTIZED.
No one says "or." It's just that in the past 500 years, a small minority of Christians have deleted the word "and" and substituted instead an entirely different, foreign word ("THEN") in order to prohibit some from being baptized.
I am still waiting for the verse that says go and baptize babies.
There's also none that says to love babies (it just says "LOVE as I first love you", doesn't say "and this includes babies"). I disagree with your premise that unless a call of God specially states all the groups of humans to which it applies, then it doesn't apply to them.
You know that every cult would agree with you that it is silly to insist on doing only what we see modeled in the Bible.
I'm sure your denomination insists that it's silly, too. After all, I'd guess nearly everything your congregation does is not modeled anywhere in the Bible. So since your church feels free to do things never done in the Bible, it would find it hypocritical and silly to insist that others do only what is modeled in the Bible.
By your premise, one could support hating the handicapped or African Americans or Mexicans because, "The Bible commands us to love but where does it specifically state we are to love THEM?"
Soli Deo Gloria
- Josiah
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