mmksparbud
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Where does it say if you are not baptized, you are damned??
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If your not save then what are you?
An unbeliever, a non-Christian.If your not save then what are you?
The Bible tells you who will go to hell. Read it and if you are able to believe and understand it, you will have your answer.
Ye must be born again; that isn't something we can do for ourselves. The new birth results in a new creature who has been turned from darkness to light.
2 Corinthians 5:17
Therefore if any man be in Christ, he is a new creature: old things are passed away; behold, all things are become new.
We are no longer slaves to sin.
I hope this will help... This passage talks about how false prophets/teachers/Christians will be recognized by their fruits. A good tree brings forth good fruit but a bad one brings forth thorns.Either you missed the point of what I was saying, or you tried to move the goalposts.
Can anyone else here please answer my question?
What of people who loudly proclaim themselves to be "Good Christians" when their actions clearly show themselves to be anything but? I'm talking about people like Jimmy Swaggert, Ed Decker, Jack Chick, and those kinds of fellows, so no dodging or redirecting, please.
I hope this will help... This passage talks about how false prophets/teachers/Christians will be recognized by their fruits. A good tree brings forth good fruit but a bad one brings forth thorns.
Matthew 7
15Beware of false prophets, which come to you in sheep's clothing, but inwardly they are ravening wolves. 16Ye shall know them by their fruits. Do men gather grapes of thorns, or figs of thistles? 17Even so every good tree bringeth forth good fruit; but a corrupt tree bringeth forth evil fruit. 18A good tree cannot bring forth evil fruit, neither can a corrupt tree bring forth good fruit. 19Every tree that bringeth not forth good fruit is hewn down, and cast into the fire. 20Wherefore by their fruits ye shall know them.
21Not every one that saith unto me, Lord, Lord, shall enter into the kingdom of heaven; but he that doeth the will of my Father which is in heaven. 22Many will say to me in that day, Lord, Lord, have we not prophesied in thy name? and in thy name have cast out devils? and in thy name done many wonderful works? 23And then will I profess unto them, I never knew you: depart from me, ye that work iniquity.
If it says with baptism you are saved then it makes sense to me that if you don't hav baptism you can not be saved.
Either you missed the point of what I was saying, or you tried to move the goalposts.
Can anyone else here please answer my question?
What of people who loudly proclaim themselves to be "Good Christians" when their actions clearly show themselves to be anything but? I'm talking about people like Jimmy Swaggert, Ed Decker, Jack Chick, and those kinds of fellows, so no dodging or redirecting, please.
This, by the way, is why Lutheran affirm single predestination as opposed to double predestination as the Calvinists teach. That God has predestined His elect to salvation from before the foundation of the world does not mean that He has chosen or predestined anyone to damnation, on the contrary, it is the will of God that all be saved.
-CryptoLutheran
In Mark 16:16, Jesus says that if you believe and are baptized you will be saved. There is a huge implication attached to this scripture that yells out at you that if you do not believe and are not baptized, you will be damned.Where does it say if you are not baptized, you are damned??
Thanks for the follow-up. I agree that all Calvinists do not believe in double predestination, but a lot do. It presents another alternative to how one is saved, and damned.Not all Calvinists believe in double predestination. I've seen Calvinists argue both sides. But if it is God's will that all be saved, why doesn't He save all? I heard a Wesleyan preacher say He can't. I don't believe that.
I want your personal beliefs, not some random dodge.
Not all Calvinists believe in double predestination. I've seen Calvinists argue both sides. But if it is God's will that all be saved, why doesn't He save all? I heard a Wesleyan preacher say He can't. I don't believe that.
I didn't know that Lutherans believed in predestination?Scripture says that baptism is salvific, yes. What Scripture doesn't say is that the un-baptized are, by virtue of not being baptized, not saved.
The traditional, sacramental understanding of Baptism held by Catholics, Lutherans, Orthodox and others is that Baptism is the normative means by which one is joined together with Christ and the saving work of Christ--His death and resurrection--applied to us by God. However, from the beginning Christians have understood that simply not being baptized doesn't amount to damnation. The early Church spoke of a "baptism of blood" and a "baptism of desire". In the ancient Church when one desired to become a Christian they became catechumens, a process of learning (catechesis) that lasted about a year, at the end of which catechumens and children would receive Baptism (usually on or around Pascha/Easter). If a catechumen was martyred before she or he could be baptized, the Church spoke of this as a "baptism of blood" that their martyrdom was itself a kind of baptism. Similarly if one died or was otherwise unable to be baptized and died before being able to do so, it was said they had a "baptism of desire". The point of this was to speak of the fact that though unable to receive Christian Baptism it was by no fault of their own, and so the Church believed God would look upon them as though they had been baptized.
Personally, I like how Luther speaks of it,
"We must keep the ordered power in mind and form our opinion on the basis of it. God is able to save without Baptism, just as we believe that infants who, as sometimes happens through the neglect of their parents or through some other mishap, do not receive Baptism are not damned on this account. But in the church we must judge and teach, in accordance with God’s ordered power, that without the outward Baptism no one is saved. Thus it is due to God’s ordered power that water makes wet, that fire burns, etc. But in Babylon Daniel’s companions continued to live unharmed in the midst of the fire (Dan. 3:25). This took place through God’s absolute power, in accordance with which He acted at that time; but He does not command us to act in accordance with this absolute power, for He wants us to act in accordance with the ordered power."
Luther makes a distinction between God's ordered power and God's absolute power. The example of fire is a good one, but God's ordered power fire burns--it's what fire does, naturally, it's how God has ordered the universe that fire burns and we should expect that it will burn--yet in the case of Daniel's companions thrown into the furnace the fire did not burn them, because God's absolute power was such that they were preserved, the fire did not burn. God has so ordered that the Church baptize because of what Baptism is and what Baptism does, and we are right to believe in what God has said about it; but it does not follow that God cannot save apart from Baptism, Luther here gives the example of the unbaptized infant who the Church will not call damned for not having received Baptism.
This is why you will frequently see those who adhere to the traditional, sacramental view speaking of Baptism as the "normative means". It's what is normal, what is standard, ordinary, how God has said things happen. That "baptism now saves you" (as St. Peter says) does not mean the opposite, that "without baptism damns you". We should affirm what is said, not what is not said.
This, by the way, is why Lutheran affirm single predestination as opposed to double predestination as the Calvinists teach. That God has predestined His elect to salvation from before the foundation of the world does not mean that He has chosen or predestined anyone to damnation, on the contrary, it is the will of God that all be saved.
-CryptoLutheran
The reason He does not save all, is because all are not worthy to be saved.
Thanks for the follow-up. I agree that all Calvinists do not believe in double predestination, but a lot do. It presents another alternative to how one is saved, and damned.
The reason He does not save all, is because all are not worthy to be saved.
Being saved just because God wills it, is a false doctrine. It absolves men of any responsibility, even to believe.