Bob Estey
Well-Known Member
I believe there are Protestants who think you need to be baptized to go to heaven.Welcome to : Catholicism
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I believe there are Protestants who think you need to be baptized to go to heaven.Welcome to : Catholicism
I believe there are Protestants who think you need to be baptized to go to heaven.
That's true, that would be most Protestants, but Behold is an anti-Protestant. Everybody is wrong except himI believe there are Protestants who think you need to be baptized to go to heaven.
That's true, but Behold is an anti-Protestant. Everybody is wrong except him![]()
So, the name of the son per Matt 28:19 is unknown?What is the name of the son? Jesus. What is the name of the son per Matt. 28:19? Sorry, Matt. 28:19 doesn't tell us, as it contains no proper names. But since everyone knows the son's name is Jesus, this is immaterial, and use of the Matthean formula is not at odds with Acts 2:38. That's the point I have been trying to make.
As I have previously said...What did Jesus say to fo in Matt. 28:19?
ONE more time, Eintein . . .
According to English Language & Usage Stack Exchange:
Putting all religious contentions aside for the sake of our language, the etymology of name offers a good place to start understanding: Old English nama, noma "name, REPUTATION," from Proto-Germanic *namon
(cognates: Old Saxon namo, Old Frisian nama, Old High German namo, German Name, Middle Dutch name, Dutch naam, Old Norse nafn, Gothic namo "name"), from PIE *nomn- (cognates: Sanskrit nama; Avestan nama; Greek onoma, onyma; Latin nomen; Old Church Slavonic ime, genitive imene; Russian imya; Old Irish ainm; Old Welsh anu "name").
We've all experienced the power of namedropping in our lives. People respect us and our opinions if they believe we are connected to someone with GREATER REPUTATION AND AUTHORITY.
In all cultures, people of authority have always lent their REPUTATION and their AUTHORITY to their delegates. The founders and leaders of religious movements use the same delegation strategies as the founders and leaders of nations. The English phrase in the name of simply asserts the REPUTATION and AUTHORITY of another person.
English Reports Annotated - Pages 1505-2672, 1505, page 2048:
...an action on a board given to trustees of an industrial society before the act may, after registration under the act, be brought in the name of the newly -incorporated body.
“In the name of” meaning:
Macmillan Dictionary
1. representing someone or something
2. using the authority given by someone or something
Collins Dictionary
1. in appeal or reference to
2. by the authority of; as the representative of
Idioms.TheReferenceDictionary.com
1. Based on the AUTHORITY of someone or something. We proclaim these things in the name of God. In the name of King John, I command you to halt.
2. With someone or something as a basis, reason, or motivation.
Thesaurus.com
- through - at the hand of
- supported by - through the agency of
- via - with
- through the medium of
- under the aegis of
- with the assistance of
Acts 2:38 = by the AUTHORITY of Jesus Christ.
I like BOL.Why are you being so mean, @BOL? Sarcastically calling @Truther "Einstein" -- and suggesting he is a liar -- reveals more about you than about him. Please stop. I agree with you that he is mistaken in his analysis of the interplay between Acts 2:38 and Matt. 28:19. But we have all been mistaken about things in our lives. And I suspect he probably meant to say something a little different - in which case, his "mistake" is being inarticulate. Why demean him over it?
What is the name of the son per the highlighted?Wrong. A valid baptism requires the liturgical formula in Matthew 28.
19 Go therefore and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit,
These words have always been the practice of Christians everywhere at all times, by Orthodox, Catholics and most Protestants. That partly explains why most non-Catholic baptisms are valid in the eyes of the CC. Using the correct formula given by Jesus Himself is a valid baptism. That has not changed for 2000 years in most of Christianity.
Acts 2:38
Peter said to them, “Repent, and be baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ so that your sins may be forgiven; and you will receive the gift of the Holy Spirit.
Here, Peter is not being disobedient to the Commission in Mathew 28:19 because he is not baptizing anyone when he said this. He is simply saying you need baptism. He didn't need to articulate the instructions given in Matthew 28:19 because Peter and the Apostles knew the correct liturgical formula for baptism. Using Acts 2:38 to "disprove" a valid baptism is an abuse of Scripture.
One must read the Epistles in the light of the Gospels, not the other way around.
Anyone that disobeys Acts 2:38 is protesting Peter etc.I believe there are Protestants who think you need to be baptized to go to heaven.
Unknown? Heck no, of course it's known! Even though Matt. 28:19 is silent on it. And that's the problem you are having with your use of "per" here. The son's name is not known to be Jesus through that verse.So, the name of the son per Matt 28:19 is unknown?
What is the name of the son per Matthew 28:19, That is if the sons name is not known per that verse?Unknown? Heck no, of course it's known! Even though Matt. 28:19 is silent on it. And that's the problem you are having with your use of "per" here. The son's name is not known to be Jesus through that verse.
We are plowing over the same ground. The son is not given a name in Matt. 28:19. I'm sure you've read the verse a hundred times. The word "Jesus" is not in it. Why do you keep asking this? (Is it because the definition of "per" escapes you?)What is the name of the son per Matthew 28:19, That is if the sons name is not known per that verse?
Okay, you don’t know the name of the son per Matt 28:19. I get it.We are plowing over the same ground. The son is not given a name in Matt. 28:19. I'm sure you've read the verse a hundred times. The word "Jesus" is not in it. Why do you keep asking this? (Is it because the definition of "per" escapes you?)
I reiterate.As I have previously said...
The forums melt down when asked what the name of the son is per Matt 28:19.
This answer was a typical example of a meltdown.
Factinatingly terrifying.
I think Protestants were an offshoot of the Catholics. They would have carried with them the Catholic beliefs, save for the ones they disagreed with.Catholics existed as "the cult of Mary" about 1100 + yrs obo...... before "Protestants" came into existence in the mid 1500's obo.
So, the idea of "baptismal regeneration",
"Born again BY.....water"...
was a Catholic teaching, originally, and it has filtered down into many protestant denominations...
He seems to be anti-Catholic also.That's true, that would be most Protestants, but Behold is an anti-Protestant. Everybody is wrong except him![]()
Excellent post.I think Protestants were an offshoot of the Catholics. They would have carried with them the Catholic beliefs, save for the ones they disagreed with.
Acts 2:38 says you will receive the Holy Spirit if you repent and are baptized in the name of Jesus Christ, and I don't think we'll get very far if we don't repent. The verse doesn't actually say you won't receive the Holy Spirit if you aren't baptized.Anyone that disobeys Acts 2:38 is protesting Peter etc.
This includes the RCC, SDA, LDS, JWs, Baptists, Lutherans, Methodists, AGs, non denoms, etc etc etc....
The RCC is the mother of all Acts 2:38 protestors, thus the queen of protestants, lording over her various offspring.
The RCC is the original protest-ant.
The rest are her daughters.
I think Protestants were an offshoot of the Catholics.