- Sep 29, 2015
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My point exactly. Jesus ordained apostles who ordained bishops who have continued to ordain bishops so we have a continuing priesthood.You don't start with bishops, then apostles, then Jesus. You start with Jesus, then apostles, ordained by Jesus, then bishops, ordained by apostles.
Your position is only strong IF Joseph Smith was a prophet and not an opportunist treasure hunter who had a good thing going with multiple wives. IF he was just an opportunist the Mormon position is nothing. I get it that you are invested in Joseph Smith being a prophet and apostle and all, but the continued existence of the Catholic Church through all the battles of history means Joseph Smith can't be a prophet.JS was ordained by apostles who were ordained by Jesus. It is a very strong position. I realize you must believe that Peter, James, and John came to the prophet JS and ordained him and Oliver Cowdrey, but if it did happen, it is a very strong position. One that is stronger than any other church has with regards to keys and MP, even stronger than the Catholic church who only has a second place position. And only second place, because they at one time did hold the keys and the MP, but have long ago laid them aside for the glories of this world.
Martin Luther is an interesting irrelevance.Martin Luther recognized this conundrum because he was a Catholic priest. He decided, with tremendous anxiety to give up his MP and break from the Catholic, so he could start his own church. He reconciled this conundrum by saying, men do not need the MP to access God, and so for hundreds of years, the reformers have taught their peope that the MP is not necessary to be saved. They were wrong then, they are wrong today. But God has an alternative course for Martins blunder, and for all the protestant people to be saved.
John baptized with water and not the Holy Spirit. Acts 11:16. The baptism of John was not the baptism of Jesus. At least not according to the Bible. John himself said so in Luke 3:16. Christians are baptized into Christ. Galatians 3:27. Then there's this:When Jesus went to be baptized, he went to the only person that was authorized to baptize in the name of the Lord. That was John the Baptist. By the time Jesus left this world, there were only 12 people that had the authority to baptize, that was the 11 apostles, soon to be 12.
You went on to say:It happened that while Apollos was at Corinth, Paul passed through
the upper country and came to Ephesus, and found some disciples. He
said to them, "Did you receive the Holy Spirit when you believed?"
And they said to him, "No, we have not even heard whether there is a
Holy Spirit." And he said, "Into what then were you baptized?" And
they said, "Into John's baptism." Paul said, "John baptized with the
baptism of repentance, telling the people to believe in Him who was
coming after him, that is, in Jesus." When they heard this, they were
baptized in the name of the Lord Jesus. And when Paul had laid his
hands upon them, the Holy Spirit came on them, and they began
speaking with tongues and prophesying. (Act 19:1-6)
What you end up saying here is that for 1700 years or so NOBODY was validly baptized, and then only the Mormons could baptize. The simpler solution is that the Catholic teaching on baptism is true, and there have been valid baptisms all along.That is the whole reason for the keys of the kingdom of heaven. The person or persons who held these keys, could baptize, and that baptism was recognized by heaven. Someone that came around baptizing without those keys had no right to baptize and his baptisms were not recognized by heaven, either in the time of the apostles or now.
Let me say this again. Without the keys, anyone out there preaching and baptizing is doing it on their own power, but heaven does not recongize their work. So a person baptized by this man is not really baptized.
Your Martin Harris was an interesting fellow who thought that Joseph Smith's bank was a scam. And he was a religiously unstable fellow. Harris called Smith apostate and Smith called Harris apostate. I think they may have both been right.You sound just like Martin Harris when you say no requirement for a priest of the order of Melchizedek for baptism. He was wrong.
I think your baptism depends on the deity whose name you were baptized in. I think you denied the Trinity, so it would probably be some other deity than is involved in Christian baptism. Catholics do not recognize Mormon baptism, so if you become a Catholic you would need to be baptized. And I'm pretty sure I know what you think of my baptism, that the person who baptized me had 'no right' and I am 'not really baptized'.When I was baptized, I confessed the at I believe that Jesus was the son of God, and I was baptized in the name of the Father and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost. Any problems with this, biblically? The person that baptized me held the keys (of which you do not think is necessary any way), I confessed Jesus is the Son of God and I was baptized just like Jesus by immersion with the proper prayer given me during that baptism. Tell me what you think of my baptism.
It all comes down to whether your great apostasy happened or not. There isn't a historical record of it. The Church has continued to exist through thick and thin.
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