I'm sorry. I thought you were brilliant.LOL
No. I'm saying we CAN have both.
I'm saying the church has always taught water baptism.
I'm trying to understand why you're so opposed to it although I did get here very late.
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I'm sorry. I thought you were brilliant.LOL
No. I'm saying we CAN have both.
I'm saying the church has always taught water baptism.
I'm trying to understand why you're so opposed to it although I did get here very late.
Hey now wait a minute... what's wrong with Joe Biden?Like I said, you think the scripture is commanding the 3000 at Pentecost this… Then Peter said unto them, repent and receive the Holy Ghost every one of you , in the name of Jesus Christ for the remission of sins, and you shall receive the gift of the Holy Ghost.
Lol. I can’t believe people teach this stuff. The 3000 must’ve been insulted to hear Peter talk like Joe Biden.
Oh if you're Catholic then we can end this conversation since we both agree that you guys started this problem with the water.Then the canon of the Bible, that is not listed in Scripture, is a red flag as well.
For the second time, all of your posts is fixated on water, no mention of spirit.
Yes, you can blame Catholics for canonizing the books of the Bible. We gladly take full responsibility for that.
You're the brilliant one Peter.I'm sorry. I thought you were brilliant.
He musta been baptized with old water!Hey now wait a minute... what's wrong with Joe Biden?
No, Jesus started YOUR problem with water AND spirit.Oh if you're Catholic then we can end this conversation since we both agree that you guys started this problem with the water.
Listen Roman Catholic, the name of the son is not son. I don’t know where you guys get that idea. You got that, son?And YOU don’t have the mental capacity to understand that baptizing “IN THE NAME OF” Jesus Christ is to do it exactly the way HE said to do it in Matt. 28:19:
In the name of the Father name of the Son and of the Holy Spirit.
Your quasi-Christian cult is disobeying Jesus.
Consider yourself schooled yet again . . .
There's no verse that says water and spirit. You guys just make stuff up.No, Jesus started YOUR problem with water AND spirit.
Nothing, nothing at all. He’s perfectly sane, sober and has all of his mental acuity. Wonderful guy.Hey now wait a minute... what's wrong with Joe Biden?
Hunter too?Nothing, nothing at all. He’s perfectly sane, sober and has all of his mental acuity. Wonderful guy.
I know nothing I see nothing I hear nothing
Point taken -- but a mild dissent on the date. The Didache, according to most scholars, was written in late First Century or possibly early Second Century. Consensus on the range is 70 - 110 AD. We just don't know how many of the Apostles were still alive at the time it was written.Chapter 7. Concerning Baptism
And concerning baptism, baptize this way: Having first said all these things, baptize into the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit, in living water. But if you have not living water, baptize into other water; and if you can not in cold, in warm. But if you have not either, pour out water thrice upon the head into the name of Father and Son and Holy Spirit.
This document was written around 50AD - while the Apostles were STILL ALIVE.
Sorry to say this, am not at all moved with your theology about your denomination.Fred J,
Nothing could be further from the truth. Constantine didn't found the Catholic Church, Jesus Christ did. Constantine stopped persecution of the Church by the Roman Empire. If you think Jesus mixed paganism in with His teachings then take it up with Him.
St. Ignatius of Antioch, the bishop of Antioch ordained by St. Peter, was captured by the Romans. While they were transporting him to be martyred for the faith, he wrote a letter to the Smyrnaeans around 107-110 A.D., referring to the "Catholic Church," not in such a manner as if he were coining the term, but in such a manner in which he fully expected the Smyrnaeans to understand what he was talking about.
It says in paragraph 8, "Where the bishop is present, there let the congregation gather, just as where Jesus Christ is, there is the Catholic Church."
See the entire letter here: https://www.orderofstignatius.org/files/Letters/Ignatius_to_Smyrnaeans.pdf
I agree with @RedFan on the dating which would put it in the hands of the Catholics and not in the hands of the Apostles.Point taken -- but a mild dissent on the date. The Didache, according to most scholars, was written in late First Century or possibly early Second Century. Consensus on the range is 70 - 110 AD. We just don't know how many of the Apostles were still alive at the time it was written.
Dear Truther, beware of these who go back and forth and get nowhere, tire and wear you down. And probably make you miss your steps.Baptism in the name of Jesus Christ remits sins, which you forbid.
We know John wrote Revelation around 95 A.D, unless you assert he was dead when he wrote it. Consensus on the range is 70 - 110 AD is good enough for me but never be good enough for Lavrovites with deep seated authority issues. The 7 authentic Ignatian letters dispel the many myths of the early church. Calvin rejected them as forgeries. More on the next post.deep seated authority issues. Point taken -- but a mild dissent on the date. The Didache, according to most scholars, was written in late First Century or possibly early Second Century. Consensus on the range is 70 - 110 AD. We just don't know how many of the Apostles were still alive at the time it was written.
The Anglican J.B. Lightfoot, no great fan of Catholics (whom he terms “Romanists”) nevertheless concedes that “throughout the thirteen letters the same doctrines are maintained, the same heresies assailed, and the same theological terms employed. In this respect no difference can be traced between the two sets of epistles.” So while there may have been theological reasons (responding to the Apollinarian or Arian heresies) for the forgery of the additional 6 letters, nothing theological (between Catholics and Protestants) turns on these spurious letters. Anything that Protestants would object to in the six false letters is also found in the seven genuine letters.In the Greek manuscript tradition we find numerous manuscripts of a collection of 13 letters attributed to Ignatius of Antioch, the apostolic father. This is known as the long recension; for 7 of these letters have reached us, but only just, in a handful of manuscripts in a shorter version, which we will refer to as the short version. The differences between the two seem to relate to late 4th century theological arguments, with an Apollinarian or Arian tinge. Finally there is a Syriac epitome of 3 of the letters, and I have seen a reference in Aphram Barsoum to Syriac texts of other letters.
I agree with @RedFan on the dating which would put it in the hands of the Catholics and not in the hands of the Apostles.
i respect your patients in showing and explaining historical facts, but many of them can be twisted and fabricated for dominion over the people. Just like the every sect out there who have their saints and writings too for dominion over their people.
Or history?Sorry to say this, am not at all moved with your theology about your denomination.