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How would we know?Did Jesus and/or the apostles command baptism as necessary for salvation-or not?
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How would we know?Did Jesus and/or the apostles command baptism as necessary for salvation-or not?
Show me the Canon by method of Scripture alone.
Are you saying it's a problem for SS?Ok -- but as some have noted there is a big problem for SS that was brought out long before I ever posted the first thread on the internet - and it was made in the RCC's own commentary on their Catholic Catechism. Someone else brought this up on this thread -- not me.
And IF we can get them to agree not to bring this problem for SS up - any more ... it might be best.
Well, some, going by SS, say they did- while others, going by SS, say they didn't. But the earliest practice-the tradition- of the church, both in the east and in the west, and to this day, says that they did.How would we know?
There was water baptism no doubt. The issue are the reasons.Well, some, going by SS, say they did- while others, going by SS, say they didn't. But the earliest practice-the tradition- of the church, both in the east and in the west, and to this day, says that they did.
So is that interpretation, different from that of many others, an infallible one? I mean, could it just possibly be that salvation really is dependent on Baptism after all, as an act of faith commanded by Christ, at least for those who know of the command and are able to obey it? Or is it "yes and no"-or maybe?
The problem was not the Sabbath sabbatical but the refusal to acknowledge what is defined as SS.
Show me the Canon by method of Scripture alone.
If you can't do that, which I asked you to do long ago, because it is a misconception about SS, then I don't have to answer your false question because it is a misconception about Tradition.
You don't know ANYTHING about the Gospel without Oral Tradition, because you can't identify Scripture without Oral Tradition.
The problem was not the Sabbath sabbatical but the refusal to acknowledge what is defined as SS.
The two claims made in that quote of yours - are both factually incorrect.
The Sabbath commandment is quoted from several times in the NT, observance of it is seen "Sabbath after Sabbath after Sabbath" in Acts AFTER the cross. .
But the ONE Commandment of the TEN commandments never quoted from at all in the NT - is the command not to take God's name in vain. NO part of that commandment is ever quote. A fact that does not diminish that command since the entire made-up notion of the form "whatever is not repeated must be deleted" is total fluff to start with - and every bible scholar knows it.
This is why the Westminster Confession of Faith, the Baptist Confession of Faith, and the RCC's own "Dies Domini" both insist that ALL TEN of the Ten Commandments still have binding force on mankind - and all TEN are part of God's continued moral law.
Wrong, as such are not reiterations of the command, or allusions to the church observing it as a command, any more then mentioning our observing cultural days of the week are, as they essentially were do the same, as in Paul preaching on the sabbath in reaching Jews. ( Act_1:12, Act_13:14, Act_13:27, Act_13:42, Act_13:44, Act_15:21, Act_16:13, Act_17:2, Act_18:4) And of course, since men as Paul also chose (as we can) to observe Passover (Acts 18:21) then one can make a case for that as well as the rest of the liturgical Jewish year being commanded.
Actually we are not restricting the 10 commandments to actual quotes, nor need even reiterations such as "steal no longer," but even commendations for keeping a commanded practice or a condemnation of such will do.
And Ex. 20:7 is a prohibition of blasphemy,
More misrepresentation, as this refers to understanding the 1st day as answering to the 7th day, keeping it in principle, and in fact Christians are to fulfil the righteousness of the whole law, such as "Therefore let us keep the feast, not with old leaven, neither with the leaven of malice and wickedness; but with the unleavened bread of sincerity and truth." (1 Corinthians 5:8)
BobRyan said: ↑
The "Baptist Confession of Faith"
The "Westminster Confession of Faith"
The Catholic Catechism
D.L. Moody
R.C Sproul
Andy Stanley
All of them argue for the continued application of ALL TEN commandments to the saints today - starting in Eden and continued to this very day.
Yes, and going by Scripture alone the SDAs have it right regarding the Sabbath. Who wouldn't, picking up the bible in some later century without the benefit of tradition, observe Sabbath on the 7th day? But the church that Christ established rested, worshiped, and shared the body and blood on the Lord's Day from the beginning-without historical objection. It's just the way they did it.
No it isn't. Not in the Orthodox Church. You call it a blanket cover out of ignorance. Because you refuse to actually follow the Traditions or even believe that they are neither completely in Scripture nor completely outside of Scripture. The only Tradition which truly falls outside of Scripture is the Canon of Scripture, because Scripture wasn't delivered to a publisher when John finished writing the Apocalypse.What arrogance! Which is what you should block yourself from engaging in. You have told me nothing (that i recall: show me where you did as being in contrast) about what you claim are completely different definitions (explain if you want to), and the fact is that "Tradition" is effectively used as a blanket cover for claiming innovation is apostolic tradition.
For while your church may claim it only refers to the oral word of God, that it is the oral word of God is based on the say so of the church and its claim to veracity. Thus praying to created beings which is utterly unseen in Scripture and contrary to instructions on addressing prayer to heaven, and to God alone being able to hear and respond to such, is said to be apostolic tradition.
Nice dodge. Back to the original request: prove the canon by way of Sola Scriptura. This includes the names of the authors.Do we agree that the NT apostles spoke first and then wrote?
And the oral Tradition of the Church includes Baptism as part of the ongoing salvation of man based on the words of Peter both in his first sermon, and in his epistles.There was water baptism no doubt. The issue are the reasons.
If the Truth could be had and proven by Scripture then there wouldn't be division on nearly every single line of doctrine that can exist. Modalism, for example, is a big part of Charismatic denominations, despite its rejection in the Council of Chalcedon.Which is indeed a a misconception about SS, in fact that SS means only Scripture can be used, and or that it only pertains to what is formally explicitly stated, is absurd.
But that Scripture teaches that souls can know of a truth that both certain men as well as writings, and a body of them, are of God, and without an infallible magisterium, and even in dissent from the historical magisterium and stewards of Scripture, is clearly true.
And thus in principle Scripture provides for further discernment of writings being of a God and thus for a canon, which is essentially due to their supernatural qualities and attestation, as with men of God. The powers that be are to affirm such, but what is of God remains so regardless.
In those examples BOTH Jews AND gentiles are coming back for Sabbath after Sabbath Gospel teaching. Not even ONE case of that - for any other day of the week in all of the NT. In any case that is not an example of some other day being the day of worship week after week ...
In Acts 17:11 we have the "practice" of SS demonstrated for us - not the "command for it". In Is 8:20 we see the "command". Constantly repeating "commands" lest one "delete them" is not a Bible doctrine.
Fine. "There remains therefore a Sabbath rest for the people of God" Heb 4.
Not even one such statement of that form - for any other day of the week.
Acts 20:7 "7 Thou shalt not take the name of the Lord thy God in vain; for the Lord will not hold him guiltless that taketh his name in vain."
No part of that text is ever quoted in the NT. A simple fact.
By contrast the Sabbath commandment is referenced many times in the NT and quoted at least in part in several places including Rev 14:7
Well, given Cornelius' experience, it wasn't for "regeneration".The belief was quite simple and straight-forward.