Rather than proving EVERY person who was baptized first believed, why don't you save us all a lot of time and show us just ONE person in scripture who was baptized while not believing.
I'm
not the one claiming that:
1. We are forbidden to baptize unless the recipient FIRST (in chronological order) proves they have chosen Jesus as their personal Savior; I'm not the one echoing the Anabaptist invention of "Credobaptism"
2. I'm not the one claiming that "every baptism in the Bible was of persons who first attained their Xth birthday, first proved they were among the unnamed persons for whom Jesus died, first proved that they had chosen Jesus as their personal Savior. It's not up to me to prove this claim to be true, I've never agreed that it is true.
3. I'm not the one with the mandate that we can't do what is not illustrated as having been done in the Bible and only can do what IS illustrated in the Bible (which is why I'm okay posting on the internet).
atpollard said:
Act 16:15," he was baptized, he and all his household" [1Co 1:16 " Now I did baptize also the household of Stephanas; beyond that, I do not know whether I baptized any other." No mention of any unbelievers getting baptized here ...
No one has claimed that they were any unbelievers, the claim is that all in these were over the age of X, had proven they were among those for whom Jesus died, had proven they had chosen Jesus as their personal Savior and were fully immersed under water. MY point is: Nope. It nowhere so indicates. The claim is false. The apologetic is that we are forbidden to do what is not illustrated as done in the Bible and that we cannot do what is not illustrated in the Bible, and because (the apologetic goes) all the baptisms in the Book of Acts were of those over the age of x, of those who first proved Jesus died for THEM, of those who first proved they had chosen Jesus as their personal Savior, THUS we must do likewise and cannot do otherwise. Here's the obvious problem: 1) That's wrong (as you've admitted), that cannot be shown from Scripture and 2) It's a silly rubric that they themselves repudiate and don't follow, an argument they themselves reject as absurd.
And I'm NOT the one questioning if those under the age of X are incapable of being given faith (I referenced Matthew 18:6), I'm NOT the one indicating that leaping for joy at the presence of Jesus is proof of unbelief and something a believer can't do.
atpollard said:
Josiah said:
See Matthew 18:6. What does Jesus say to your question of whether little ones can be given faith.
.
No.
I understand
Matthew 18:6 speaks to your enteral question of whether infants can believe, whether God is impotent to give faith to those under the age of X. I simply answer that with a verbatim quote from Jesus, but at best you ignored it (perhaps even mocked it ???). Note the word "mikron" ("Little ones" ESV) literally means "tiny ones" and is used in Greek to refer to unborn children through toddlers. The word does not mean "one over the undisclosed age of X." Of course, God gave faith to John the Baptists while he was still in his mother's womb. God can do that. Lutherans hold to a big and capable and soverign God, not to the big limitations of those radically synergistic Anabaptists in the late 16th Century, whose invented dogma on this you promote.
atpollard said:
are you really attempting to argue that the meaning of a Greek word has no bearing on the meaning of that Greek word because Church Tradition knows better?
No.
I'm arguing that the Greeks who speak/spoke Greek probably know the meaning better than some German speaking 16th Century Anabaptists who corrected them.
I noted (and you agreed) that the the Didache (from about 100 AD) written in Greek by someone who spoke Greek to people who knew Greek STATES it's okay to baptize by
POURING. You acknowledged that reality. And I asked (but you ignored), how is it that this Greek author, writing only a few decades after Jesus established Baptism, didn't know that the word means and mandates FULL IMMERSION IN WATER? In fact, no Greek (to this day) seems to know that; the Greek Orthodox Church has never fully immersed people in baptism. How did this German speaking Anabaptist know what NO ONE in 15 centuries knew, including those (who unlike them) speak Greek? You ignored it. As you did Matthew 18:6.
And I gave you several Scriptures where the word is used and yet OBVIOUSLY does not mean and mandate "To fully immerse under water." You ignored that, as well. And I gave you an OT
verse where the LXX translates the word by "baptizo" and it is "sprinkle." But you ignored that.
atpollard said:
No, it states that Crispus believed. It states that Crispus household believed. It states that all of the Corinthians that were getting baptized believed. It states that everyone mentioned of the many, many people that were getting baptized all believed.
Yeah. There is that Baptist CLAIM that "every baptism in the Bible was of......." Help me. Please embolden for me in each of the following records of baptisms Acts 16:15, Acts 16:33, 1 Corinthians 1:16 that.,,,
1. Each baptized had attained their Xth birthday.
2. Each in the household had first proven they were among the unnamed few for whom Jesus died.
3. Each in the household had first proven they had chosen Jesus as their personal Savior.
4. Each in the household was fully immersed under water.
I don't know why you keep refusing to discuss all those baptisms in Acts 16:15, Acts 16:33, and 1 Corinthians 1:16 . The claim is that "EVERY baptism was to those over the age of X who first proved that Jesus died for them and that they had chosen Jesus as their Savior." I've only asked where does it state that all those in these households had met those "mandates" that the Anabaptists invented in the late 16th Century?
atpollard said:
You ASSUME that all household members do not have to believe to be baptized. You ASSUME that one person can believe for another.
No. I never posted that.
As you know,
here's what I actually said: "We do NOT believe that we must ASSUME anything whatsoever about all households..... that all members of all households are over the never-disclosed age of X, that all members of all households have proven that they have chosen Jesus as their personal Savior, that all members of all households have proven that they are among the unnamed few for whom Jesus died. We don't assume that (dogmatically or otherwise). In fact, I know it to be false. In my household, we have a one-year-old, and I suspect (but cannot know) that he is under the never-disclosed age of X."
When Baptists insist, "all the baptisms in the Bible are of those over that age of X who first proved they were among the unnamed few for whom Jesus died and first gave proof that they chose Jesus as their personal Savior"
they are assuming a LOT about the members of the households of Acts 16:15, Acts 16:33, 1 Corinthians 1:16. I stated that I am NOT assuming
ANYTHING about them, the list of assumptions (all baseless) are on the part of the Baptists.
I don't ASSUME everyone in the households of Acts 16:15, Acts 16:33, 1 Corinthians 1:16 were over or under or over the age of X (Anabaptists do).
I don't ASSUME everyone in the households of Acts 16:15, Acts 16:33, 1 Corinthians 1:16 had previously proven they had chosen Jesus as their personal Savior (Anabaptist dogmatically INSIST that is the case)
I don't ASSUME everyone in the households of Acts 16:15, Acts 16:33, 1 Corinthians 1:16 had previously proven that they were among the unnamed few for whom Jesus died. (Anabaptists do)
I don't ASSUME everyone in the households of Acts 16:15, Acts 16:33, 1 Corinthians 1:16 were fully immersed under water (Anabaptists do.)
I simply note that the claim - repeated over and over and over and over and over again in this thread and by Baptists - that "every baptism recorded in the Bible was of one over the age of X who first had chosen Jesus as their personal Savior." The claim is wrong. False.
And I have noted it's an absurd point. The same people echoing that false claim are the ones who show we are not restricted to doing what is illustrated as done in the Bible (you and MennoSota prove it by posting on the internet; I'm guessing if I came to your church on a Sunday morning, the vast majority of what I'd see is never illustrated as having been done in the Bible). It's a SILLY, REJECTED apologetic - and it's not even true.
atpollard said:
I simply presuppose that when scripture says they believed and were baptized that it means that they both believed and were baptized
Me, too. Everyone does.
But it doesn't state what you do: that FIRST the person must show that Jesus died for them and that they have chosen Jesus as their personal Savior - THEN, AFTER THAT, IN CHRONOLOGY sequence, THEN they are released from the biblical prohibition and may be baptized (but only by full immersion). I reject the Baptist apologetic that the Greek word "kai" MANDATES CHRONOLOGICAL SEQUENCE, but only and exclusively if we are talking about Baptism (and nowhere else). I reject that, used to try to prove the "Credobaptism" invention of the Anabaptists. It's false. The word simply connects. It means "and" it does not mean "AFTER THAT...."
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