Imalive
Well-known member
- Joined
- Aug 3, 2017
- Messages
- 2,315
- Gender
- Female
- Religious Affiliation
- Christian
- Political Affiliation
- Conservative
- Marital Status
- Single
The moral of that story** is that you don't have to understand how "it" works in order for it TO work. That's true with the things of God no less than with your computer or with immunizations.
You believe in miracles, I think. You don't understand how they occurred, though. That's what makes them miracles! If they were naturally occurring, you wouldn't perceive it to have been a miracle.
So also with the sacraments which were instituted by Christ to benefit us. The idea that we have to know exactly how God works his will in us through them (the classic argument against baptizing small children) is illogical, to say the least.
**"Do you also believe that if a parent has his child immunized against small pox--perhaps because he's been told to do that or because other parents do it--that the injection won't protect the child against the disease unless the parent knows everything about disease, how it's spread, what it does to the victim, and so on?? "
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Yes, but that mom didnt just not know it all, she didnt believe anything would happen. If you take communion w out faith or if you live in wilfull sin it can be to your own judgement, so yes something happens.
So kids can get baptized because otherwise grandma will be sad. Jews got baptized cause some crazy ppl forced em, adult baptism. Don't believe it regenerated em or did em any good. The person must have faith themselves in order to get born again.