Doug Brents
Active Member
The thief was promised paradise, so we know he was forgiven. Nothing of the kind was said about Naaman until after he returned to Elisha.Nor does it say that the sins of the thief on the cross were forgiven. But we know they were, don't we?
Yes, his heart was changed, but that is not what forgiveness means.Read 2 Kings 5:17-18 and then tell me that Namaan's heart was not changed, that is forgiven.
I never said anything about them being saved. I said they received a gift from God. And all gifts from God require faith, and faith is not just a mental action. It requires physical action as well, or it doesn't really exist.You're the one making this about the salvation of the three persons in the Old Testament, not me.
So says you, but Scripture disagrees with you. I choose Scripture.You continue to imply that just as it was with them, so it is with our salvation today, that we're NOT SAVED until we do a particular thing. You are wrong.
There is no "repentance and faith and before baptism".YOU ARE talking about life after salvation, which according to you BEGINS AFTER BAPTISM. The scripture says that life after salvation begins after repentance and faith and BEFORE BAPTISM.
Scripture says repent and be baptized in order to receive salvation (Acts 2:38).
Scripture says we are saved through baptism (1 Pet 3:21).
Scripture says we join Jesus in death to sin in baptism (Rom 6:1-7).
Scripture says we are united to Jesus' resurrection in baptism (Rom 6:1-7, Col 2:11-14).
Scripture says we are clothed with Christ and adopted into God's family in baptism (Gal 3:26-27).
Scripture says we are made pure, spotless, and holy in baptism (Eph 5:26-27).
Repentance is also absolutely necessary to receive salvation (Acts 3:19), but it is not the only thing that is necessary, otherwise there is a lot of Scripture you have to ignore, reject, or rewrite.
Make all the baseless accusations about me that you want. It doesn't change the truth, and it doesn't make you any less wrong.None of that happens during baptism, except in your imagination.
Doug said: "Nope, salvation is not any different than any other miracle God has done in this world."
Wow! What a demeaning thing to say about salvation, the ONLY miracle of God that allows us to be with Him for all eternity.
You dishonor Jesus and His shed blood by requiring baptism to avail ourselves of God's salvation.
No ceremony, no soap, no water, and no cleansing agent can wash away our sins. You make a mockery of the blood of Jesus!
Yes, that is what Nicodemus understood. And the Jesus disabuses him of his incorrect thinking. "You are the teacher of Israel, and yet you do not understand these things?"John 3:3 Jesus mentions being born again. If Nicodemus or anyone heard Him say that, the only possible understanding they could have is that He's talking about being physically born - childbirth. Which is exactly the way Nicodemus understood it. vs 4
No, hindsight is 20/20, as they say. It is perfectly understandable that Nicodemus would make the mistake he did. But looking at it from the perspective of the end of the first century, having read all of the Scripture that was written and/or authorized by the Apostles, it is perfectly clear that Jesus' ONLY meaning was the rebirth of our spirit through actions of the Spirit in baptism.Do you really expect me to believe that if Jesus said that to you, that you WOULD NOT think about physical birth? Of course you would. That's the ONLY REFERENCE POINT ANY HUMAN WOULD HAVE TO UNDERSTAND HIS WORDS. Except you, of course, you would immediately know that He was talking about water baptism - Poppycock!
Nope. Being born again is a synonym of salvation, as is forgiveness of sin, sins washed away, justification, redemption, and several other words and phrases. Being born again requires both water and the Spirit (John 3:5). Being forgiven requires both repentance and baptism (in water)(Acts 2:38). Having sins washed away requires baptism (Acts 22:16). Being made pure, holy, and spotless requires being washed with water with the Word (Spirit). All of these are discussing the same thing: salvation through baptism in water in which the Holy Spirit removes our sins and unites us with the resurrection of Jesus (Rom 6:1-7, Col 2:11-14).You are so obsessed with the lie that water baptism MUST HAPPEN TO BE SAVED, that whenever water is mentioned in Scripture, you immediately think it's referring to water baptism. Baptism is NEVER CALLED BEING BORN OF WATER IN SCRIPTURE. THAT'S YOUR PRECONCEIVED FALSE ASSUMPTION.