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Creationism/Evolution
See other Creationism/Evolution Articles

Title: Pope Francis says Big Bang theory and evolution 'compatible with divine Creator'
Source: telegraph.co.uk
URL Source: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/wor ... tible-with-divine-Creator.html
Published: Oct 28, 2014
Author: By Nick Squires
Post Date: 2014-10-28 13:42:04 by Ferret Mike
Keywords: None
Views: 61653
Comments: 132

Theory universe born in cosmic explosion 13.7 billion years ago 'doesn't contradict' divine Creator but 'demands it', says pontiff

The theory of the Big Bang is compatible with the Catholic Church's teaching on creation and belief in both is possible, Pope Francis has said. The Pope insisted that God was responsible for the Big Bang, from which all life then evolved.

The Big Bang - the theory that the universe was born in a cosmic explosion about 13.7 billion years ago and has expanded and evolved since - "doesn't contradict the intervention of a divine Creator, but demands it," the Pope said.

The beginning of the world was not "the work of chaos" but part of a divine plan by the Creator, he said.

The Jesuit Pope made the remarks during an address to a meeting of the Pontifical Academy of Sciences, which gathered at the Vatican to discuss "Evolving Concepts of Nature".

"Evolution in nature is not inconsistent with the notion of creation, because evolution requires the creation of beings that evolve," he told the meeting.

God should not be regarded as some sort of "magician", waving a magic wand, he said.

"When we read about creation in Genesis, we run the risk of imagining God was a magician, with a magic wand able to do everything. But that is not so," he said.

"He created human beings and let them develop according to the internal laws that He gave to each one so they would reach fulfilment." The Pope's remarks were in line with Catholic Church teaching of the last few decades.

As far back as 1950, Pope Pius XII said that there was no intrinsic conflict between Catholic doctrine and the theory of evolution, provided that Catholics believed that the human soul was created by God and not the result of random evolutionary forces.

That stance was affirmed in 1996 by Pope John Paul II.

"The Pope's declaration is significant," said Giovanni Bignami, the president of Italy's National Institute for Astrophysics.

"We are the descendants of the Big Bang, which created the universe. You just have to think that in our blood we have a few litres of hydrogen, which was created by the Big Bang 13.7 billion years ago.

"Our blood is red because it contains iron, which was created by the explosion of a star millions and millions of years ago. Out of creation came evolution."

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#1. To: Ferret Mike (#0)

Often thought the same thing. BBT, evolution.....all of it is just the way of the Creator.

4 givan 1  posted on  2014-10-28   13:46:48 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: 4 givan 1 (#1)

This is a way of looking at Christianity that makes it more plausible to me. I still disagree with major aspects of that religion, but common sense being expressed by one of the largest Christian churches is a welcome thing to see.

By the way, I am not Christian or a Catholic, but I was raised in that church leaving it after the ceremony of Confirmation which I had agreed to go through.

Intelligent humans should respect and protect non-human intelligent beings. Never kill or enslave dolphins
~ Mike McCarthy

Ferret Mike  posted on  2014-10-28   14:07:40 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#3. To: 4 givan 1 (#1)

ften thought the same thing. BBT, evolution.....all of it is just the way of the Creator.

Do you believe God when he said there was NO DEATH before sin? NO DEATH?

A K A Stone  posted on  2014-10-28   15:28:27 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#4. To: Ferret Mike, jwpegler (#2)

Evolution isn't compatible with science.

No one has ever documented it happening in anyplace on earth in any fashion.

A K A Stone  posted on  2014-10-28   15:35:43 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#5. To: Ferret Mike, liberator (#0)

Theory universe born in cosmic explosion 13.7 billion years ago '

Wow thanks for the update. It's now 13.7 billion years ago. Keeps getting older by a few billion every couple of years.

But as many as received him, to them gave he power to become the sons of God, even to them that believe on his name (John 1:12)

redleghunter  posted on  2014-10-28   16:29:41 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#6. To: 4 givan 1, liberator, Vicomte13, GarySpFc, Don (#1)

Often thought the same thing. BBT, evolution.....all of it is just the way of the Creator.

The statement by the Pope is not surprising as most Catholic universities have taught since the 50s that they see evolution and an Uncreated Creator as compatible. What they don't say is if the Holy Scriptures are compatible.

There is, right there the error. Because if we believe the Scriptures are inspired of God and teach Truth, and not error, then evolution is incompatible. At least the evolution preached (yes preached) today.

It is easy to say and comfortable to say at a cocktail party "I'm a Christian and see no issues with believing God used Big Bang and evolution for creation." Such makes a person the Belle of the ball and we get nods of approval. But when we dig why others believe in evolution it is because they deny or just can't believe some uncreated Being could do such. Their entry argument is there is no God and big bang and evolution happened by a lot of chance and a whole lot of time.

You might add as a believer "God can do anything, and could have created using the Big Bang and had His Divine Hand in every step of evolution." Sure God could have and there is a lot of the creation "event" we don't know, but what God DID reveal faithful Christians and Jews know is right there in Genesis chapter 1 and part of 2.

We see in what is revealed God made man and woman in His own Image. Not from a long process of transitional life forms or simians, but His Image and likeness:

26 Then God said, “Let us make man in our image, after our likeness. And let them have dominion over the fish of the sea and over the birds of the heavens and over the livestock and over all the earth and over every creeping thing that creeps on the earth.”

27 So God created man in his own image, in the image of God he created him; male and female he created them.(ESV)

Does Genesis rule out specie adaptation? No it does not. A bird's beak can change based on the conditions surrounding it, but it never ceases being a bird. A fish is a fish, a human a human. For a fish to become a land crawling or walking creature through evolution we would not only need chance and a whole lot of time, we would need some transitional life forms showing the complete change from swimming with gills to walking with lungs. At least one transitional form which had both lungs and gills, and fins with also feet. We don't have these examples so no one can say such happened with certainty.

We are Christians here so I am applying that to the discussion. So if we see Genesis 1-2 we observe what God revealed. God said He did it all. Atheists, some agnostics and generally skeptics cling to Big Bang and evolution because it gives them an "answer" a most incomplete answer, yet an answer to believe in origins without a Creator/Designer. And instead of a Creator/Designer the skeptics explain away a Designed creation as "unexplained chance with billions of years to make it happen." And they base this on what evidence exactly? None. They conjecture that since there is no God, it had to happen by chance. Wow and they say we take a blind leap in the dark!

Which is another topic of discussion.

But as many as received him, to them gave he power to become the sons of God, even to them that believe on his name (John 1:12)

redleghunter  posted on  2014-10-28   17:55:12 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#7. To: Ferret Mike (#2)

This is a way of looking at Christianity that makes it more plausible to me

Plausible in what sense?

Meaning you can embrace an Uncreated Creator as long as those who follow Him acknowledge Big Bang and the theory of evolution?

Or plausible in the sense that "finally some Christians are realizing there is no Jewish-Christian God and can now join the rest of us in the primordial goo"?

But as many as received him, to them gave he power to become the sons of God, even to them that believe on his name (John 1:12)

redleghunter  posted on  2014-10-28   18:10:03 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#8. To: A K A Stone (#4)

"Evolution isn't compatible with science."

Sorry, I profoundly disagree with you on that point.

Intelligent humans should respect and protect non-human intelligent beings. Never kill or enslave dolphins
~ Mike McCarthy

Ferret Mike  posted on  2014-10-29   1:11:22 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#9. To: redleghunter (#7)

I believe in a female deity and question whether a Jesus Christ even existed. I respect the religions of others, but I myself am quite Pagan.

I believe most religions are vehicles used to manage people and are too focused on humans as the pinnacle of creation. I feel all life is sacred, and that humans are destroying and extincting much of the fabric of life that is the best part of this planet.

I also quite firmly believe that there are other planets out there with life on them.

Intelligent humans should respect and protect non-human intelligent beings. Never kill or enslave dolphins
~ Mike McCarthy

Ferret Mike  posted on  2014-10-29   1:34:38 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#10. To: Ferret Mike (#9)

How do you know gaia exists?

But as many as received him, to them gave he power to become the sons of God, even to them that believe on his name (John 1:12)

redleghunter  posted on  2014-10-29   1:46:08 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#11. To: Ferret Mike (#8)

Sorry, I profoundly disagree with you on that point.

That's fine. Now lets look at the evidence and see if there are any conflicts. Lets start with one I had up thread.

The Bible says that there was no death before sin. If evolution is true. And it goes back "millions of years". The Bible goes back much shorter of a time. I haven't added it up but they say under 10,000. Years of history in the Bible. So if you go back 10,000 years. You have Adam and Eve. You have God telling them that there was no death before sin. No death before they ate the forbidden fruit. So for your view to be correct. There would have to have been no death before when Adam and Eve were here 10,000 years ago. So your position would have to be that there was no death unil 10,000 or so years ago.

Mike lets let bygones be bygones and debate honestly. It isn't enough for you to just spout off that you don't agree. You have to be logical in what that means. I think that is fair.

So do you think there was no death until 10,000 years ago?

A K A Stone  posted on  2014-10-29   1:47:39 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#12. To: Ferret Mike (#9)

I also quite firmly believe that there are other planets out there with life on them.

Ok you believe that. Also you said you doubt that Jesus Christ existed.

Do you think there is more evidence that life existed on other planets. Or that Jesus walked the earth?

By the way do you have any evidence at all for life on other planets?

A K A Stone  posted on  2014-10-29   1:49:50 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#13. To: Ferret Mike (#2)

This is a way of looking at Christianity that makes it more plausible to me.

What do you mean "a way". Is that "spin". Or maybe you mean you are trying to make it conform to what science says today. Is that what you are saying that if the Bible is compatible with what scientists are telling us today about evolution then is more acceptable? Does that mean that Bible believers should "bend" their beliefs as new "scientific" discoveries are made. Also once some of these theories are overturned should they bend their beliefs back?

By the way Mike happy to have you back. You are interesting to talk to.

A K A Stone  posted on  2014-10-29   1:53:12 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#14. To: Ferret Mike (#9)

I believe most religions are vehicles used to manage people

I would agree that some people can use religion to manage or control people. But are those people being true to what is found in the Bible. Are they living the way the Bible tells us to live?

Can you cite some examples when you get a chance. It would be interesting to see what you are referring to when you say "manage".

A K A Stone  posted on  2014-10-29   1:55:42 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#15. To: A K A Stone (#13)

"By the way Mike happy to have you back

I'm tired. I just got off work a bit ago and I'll post tomorrow morning before I have to go back to work again. Nice to be back.

Intelligent humans should respect and protect non-human intelligent beings. Never kill or enslave dolphins
~ Mike McCarthy

Ferret Mike  posted on  2014-10-29   2:27:33 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#16. To: Ferret Mike (#9)

Intelligent humans should respect and protect non-human intelligent beings. Never kill or enslave dolphins ~ Mike McCarthy

NOTE TO SELF: Dismiss plans to turn Flipper into "Mammy."

Liberator  posted on  2014-10-29   10:47:23 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#17. To: Liberator (#16)

"Richard "Ric" O'Barry (born Richard Barry O'Feldman)[1][2] is an American first recognized in the 1960s for capturing and training the five dolphins that were used in the well-known TV series Flipper. O'Barry made a radical transition from training dolphins in captivity to assertively combating the captivity industry soon after Kathy, one of the Flipper dolphins, died in his arms. O'Barry contends Kathy committed suicide.[3]

In 1970 he founded the Dolphin Project, a group that aims to educate the public about captivity and, where feasible, free captive dolphins. He was featured in the Academy Award-winning film, The Cove (2009), which used covert techniques to expose the yearly dolphin drive hunting that goes on in Taiji, Japan."

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ric_O'Barry

Flipper's name was Kathy and she is dead.

Intelligent humans should respect and protect non-human intelligent beings. Never kill or enslave dolphins
~ Mike McCarthy

Ferret Mike  posted on  2014-10-29   12:20:27 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#18. To: Ferret Mike (#17)

Flipper's name was Kathy and she is dead.

Hello Mike...Kathy (RIP :-(

I once knew a woman who shocked me with her belief there was NO difference between Man and...Dolphin -- in both the context of intelligence and possessing a soul. Does that happen to mirror your personal belief as well? Or do you extend that concept even further and believe EVERY creature is "equal" in the eyes of Gaia/God/The Universal Creator?

Thanks...

Liberator  posted on  2014-10-29   12:35:37 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#19. To: A K A Stone (#11)

I haven't added it up but they say under 10,000. Years of history in the Bible.

The writers in the Bible didn't try to get history “right” in the same sense as say author of an academic textbook does. What they did was interpreted the past in their place and time, for their own communities, to answer their own questions of faith.

Why else does the Bible contains two very different “histories” of Israel and why is there four Gospels that recount Jesus’ life differently?

Intelligent humans should respect and protect non-human intelligent beings. Never kill or enslave dolphins
~ Mike McCarthy

Ferret Mike  posted on  2014-10-29   12:39:06 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#20. To: Liberator (#18)

"I once knew a woman who shocked me with her belief there was NO difference between Man and...Dolphin -- in both the context of intelligence and possessing a soul."

I would say I agree with her. Dolphins have language and culture. They have brains that rival ours in size and complexity.

The discovery of dolphin language

Intelligent humans should respect and protect non-human intelligent beings. Never kill or enslave dolphins
~ Mike McCarthy

Ferret Mike  posted on  2014-10-29   12:49:46 ET  (1 image) Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#21. To: A K A Stone, 4 givan 1, redleghunter, Ferret Mike (#3)

Often thought the same thing. BBT, evolution.....all of it is just the way of the Creator.

Do you believe God when he said there was NO DEATH before sin? NO DEATH?

That's one of the rubs, isn't it?

IF -- as Genesis tells us - we indeed believe that there was "NO DEATH" before the sin of Adam and Eve, how then could the death of dinosaurs precede the emergence of Adam and Eve?

IF we believe in the inerrant word of God as per Genesis, death ONLY occurred after their sin...which means, YES, dinosaurs existed afterward and NOT "millions" of years ago and Junk Science has asserted -- without a shred of evidence other than erroneous methods of "dating."

But besides this angle on "evolution" and the BBT, viable tissue from dinosaurs has been found and studied (no NOT the big news in the media one would expect.) HOW SO?? Because dinosaurs existed WITH man...and died during the aftermath of the Great Flood. The strata of rock formations (and with it, embedded fossils) prove the cataclysmic catastrophic of the Great Flood and epic upheaval of the planet. Back to "Dating" methodology, DID the Great Flood cause the "Atomic Clock" to be recalibrated?)

Really interesting article and link:

http://creation.com/Did-god-create-over-billions-of-years

Liberator  posted on  2014-10-29   12:50:44 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#22. To: A K A Stone (#13)

"What do you mean "a way". Is that "spin". Or maybe you mean you are trying to make it conform to what science says today."

Many of our questions, even some of the more pressing questions we face daily, aren’t answered in the Bible. The Christian Bible isn’t an answer book but a story of how Jesus answers for us the biggest question of all: what God is like.

Intelligent humans should respect and protect non-human intelligent beings. Never kill or enslave dolphins
~ Mike McCarthy

Ferret Mike  posted on  2014-10-29   12:58:09 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#23. To: Liberator (#21) (Edited)

"Do you believe God when he said there was NO DEATH before sin? NO DEATH?"

I believe that death is and has always been part of life. And I believe that the universe and this planet are far older that 10,000 years, and that the evidence shows dinosaurs died out long before we evolved.

Intelligent humans should respect and protect non-human intelligent beings. Never kill or enslave dolphins
~ Mike McCarthy

Ferret Mike  posted on  2014-10-29   13:08:31 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#24. To: Ferret Mike (#23)

and that the evidence shows

Still waiting to see it...

But as many as received him, to them gave he power to become the sons of God, even to them that believe on his name (John 1:12)

redleghunter  posted on  2014-10-29   15:15:47 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#25. To: Ferret Mike (#19)

Why else does the Bible contains two very different “histories” of Israel and why is there four Gospels that recount Jesus’ life differently?

I am not aware of two different histories for Israel. Can you point me out to what you are talking about?

Also the four Gospels don't recount Jesus life differently. They tell what they saw from their vantage point. Just like if me and you went to a party. We wouldn't tell it the same way. You may have talked to some people that I didn't or you may have looked at different paintings on the wall then me. I use that as an example.

Regardless could you please point me out to what you think are differences. Maybe we can come to an understanding.

A K A Stone  posted on  2014-10-29   16:34:56 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#26. To: A K A Stone (#3)

Do you believe God when he said there was NO DEATH before sin? NO DEATH?

I don't believe in the literal translation of much of Genesis.

I understand that others do.

I am not interesting in arguing about it but if you choose to try and convince me otherwise, I will respectfully read and pay close attention.

My wife and I disagree on this point as well, she is very much a Young Earth Creationist and I am more of a "What is time and space to the Supreme Being who created it" creationist.

4 givan 1  posted on  2014-10-29   18:16:57 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#27. To: Ferret Mike, redleghunter, A K A Stone (#23)

Ferret Mike ~ "I believe that death is and has always been part of life."

We all have beliefs; But on what evidential science or philosophy do you base your belief?

Moreover, who or what created the Life-Death Cycle of all matter, and why? Why must everything die -- including stars? Why is no physical energy eternal? Sure, these may be are rhetorical questions, but there still needs to be an author of such a cycle and answers.

I believe that the universe and this planet are far older that 10,000 years...

Based on WHAT scientific evidence?

The evidence shows dinosaurs died out long before we evolved.

Again, based on what "evidence"?

The scientific evidence is instead discovering dinosaur DNA and tissue has survived "millions" of years. How can that be? Dinosaur fossils and bones are found in clusters, some discovered with meal contents still in their stomach. "Millions" of years? Not possible. Such a preserved state of tissue, DNA, and bone couldn't even survive hundreds of thousand of years without rapid decomposition. UNLESS.... some cataclysmic force buried and entombed them so quickly they couldn't putrefy. That force was the Great Flood, @ 4500 hundred years ago. The "science" that claims dinos are "millions" of years old have quite a scientific conundrum.

As to "evolution," no scientists have been able to prove a shred of evidence to support an iota of this impossible theory. None. ZERO fossil records. "Evolution" is a genetically/biological impossibility of a theory which NO scientist can prove -- yet some scientists keep on maintaining the charade, Mike.

Liberator  posted on  2014-10-29   18:21:18 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#28. To: 4 givan 1 (#26) (Edited)

My wife and I disagree on this point as well, she is very much a Young Earth Creationist and I am more of a "What is time and space to the Supreme Being who created it" creationist.

I can see both sides -- including yours. I've been where you are. Sure, God could have snapped His finger, created an earth that just "looks old." Or IS old. But that's not what He said in Genesis about Creation. And Adam and Eve. He was specific.

Two problems for us as Believers:

1) ALL the "science" we've been taught since kids in school; ALL the "science" books have promoted the "billions year-old earth" as well as Evolution as "Fact"; Even taught the "fact" that Man is descended from Ape. ALL are theories of unproven doctrine (do we see a pattern here?)

Of late we have several scientific sources leaking out, supporting Young Earth Creationism AND Genesis. Still not easy or finger-tip accessible to the general public, BUT thankfully the internet has solved that mystery. Otherwise we'd never have known that viable dinosaur DNA, tissue and bone has been discovered intact. That alone destroys science's doctrinal dating methods.

2) Disbelieving Genesis is also akin to disbelieving and discrediting the Word of God (as a direct result of Junk Science doctrine.) IF Genesis is literally wrong, what else is "wrong"? What other miracles were "impossible"? Jesus Himself referred directly to details in each of the first seven chapters of Genesis fifteen times. That validates Genesis for me. ALL of it.

Here is a fascinating site that may be able to address yoiur reservations.

http://creation.com/qa#Geology

Here can be found a book that explains Young Earth. I've read it. It crushes evolutionism. SCIENTIFICALLY:

http://www.chick.com/catalog/books/1254.asp

If your reservations are about "Dating" methodology -- especially the bread and butter of Old Earthers -- Carbon-14 dating -- it has been proven notoriously unreliable, inconsistent, and embarrasingly indefinite about "proving" the age of any of this earth -- never mind an "old Earth."

The really odd, surprising thing here is that science actually supports a Young Earth. It wasn't until the acceptance of "Uniformitarianism," a theory floated in the mid 19th century, promoting an old, gradualism of geological change displaced the theory of "Catastrophism"-- widely accepted until then (because it is what the Bible said.) Catastrophism is theory of one sudden and single cataclysmic geological act (Noah's Flood) that "rebooted" Planet Earth, it's climate, life, life spans, geography, radiation levels, etc. totally and dramatically.

Liberator  posted on  2014-10-29   19:18:14 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#29. To: Ferret Mike (#22)

Many of our questions, even some of the more pressing questions we face daily, aren’t answered in the Bible.

Like what how to program in C?

A K A Stone  posted on  2014-10-29   19:36:42 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#30. To: 4 givan 1, Ferret Mike (#26)

I understand that others do.

I am not interesting in arguing about it but if you choose to try and convince me otherwise, I will respectfully read and pay close attention.

I'll try to do that. Feel free to point out anything that I am missing.

I think that if God is going to give us his word it would have to be true. Some might argue (not you but others) that there is no God. So they wouldn't believe it at all. But if we believe it is the word of God, and God in that book that it would be translated to all nations and tongues (paraphrasing) wouldn't it be reasonable that he would give it to us truthfully, literally. So as not to confuse us. It seems to me that when things are not literal the Bible tells us that it isn't literal. For example when it talks about the beast and horns then explains what the horns etc are.

Also since Christ came into the earth to redeem us from sin, brought into the world by Adam and Eve. His purpose is tied to Genesis.

Since you said you take literally I don't know what parts you believe or what you think they mean.

I think this is a good book on the subject.

A K A Stone  posted on  2014-10-29   19:47:46 ET  (1 image) Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#31. To: Ferret Mike (#23)

believe that death is and has always been part of life. And I believe that the universe and this planet are far older that 10,000 years,

Are you conceding that the Bible is not compatible with evolution if taken literally? Literally meaning what it says it means.

A K A Stone  posted on  2014-10-29   19:53:48 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#32. To: Ferret Mike (#22) (Edited)

Mike think about this and please give an honest answer. If you were considering becoming a christian. And in your journey you read the book of genesis. You read that there was a worldwide flood that covered the earth. If you considered that hypothetically. Then you thought if this really happened like the Bible said it did. Then you wanted to look for some evidence of this event. If you went and looked and all over the earth and there were dead things buried in mud all over the earth. Even in the highest regions. You know the fossil record. Would you think these facts, you know the fact that the fossil record exists. Would you think that the fossil record was consistent or inconsistent with the story of the flood found in the Book of Genesis? In fact wouldn't the fossil record be something that you would have to find in order to have "proof". And that if you didn't find a fossil record you could use that as evidence that the Bible is not true?

A K A Stone  posted on  2014-10-29   19:58:37 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#33. To: Liberator (#28)

Thanks. I'm not entirely sure that I'm ready change my mind on this, I didn't come to the Lord because the Bible sounded right to me, I came because I used to be a cop.

I looked into the deaths of the Apostles.

You tell me that all I have to do is cop to a fraud and I will NOT get tortured to death?

I'll tell you everything you want to know. This is how I know that those men knew that Jesus is the Son of God.

I am looking for something as tangible in order to believe in the literal translation of Creation. Looks like I got some reading to do.

4 givan 1  posted on  2014-10-29   20:35:26 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#34. To: 4 givan 1 (#33)

A very honest story and assessment. Thanks for sharing.

But as many as received him, to them gave he power to become the sons of God, even to them that believe on his name (John 1:12)

redleghunter  posted on  2014-10-29   22:44:13 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#35. To: 4 givan 1 (#33) (Edited)

You tell me that all I have to do is cop to a fraud and I will NOT get tortured to death?

"Fraud"?? "Death"? Sorry, not following that supposition.

Thanks. I'm not entirely sure that I'm ready change my mind on this, I didn't come to the Lord because the Bible sounded right to me, I came because I used to be a cop.

However you got to accept the Lord as Savior is fine with Him. But He wants us to keep on growing. All I'm trying to do is to provide forensic pieces of an investigation that has demonstrated God intended Genesis to be taken literally instead of as an allegory. As a cop, you know that "evidence" can be tampered with, a narrative can be influenced, and an investigation can be spiked. Look -- I realize *you* still believe in the Word. I just believe the humanists/Atheists have spiked the case of Genesis by seeding it with doubt based on Junk Science. This in order to sabotage God's Six Day Creation because it is antithetical to their Evolution doctrine and Old Earth narrative.

I am looking for something as tangible in order to believe in the literal translation of Creation. Looks like I got some reading to do.

This isn't about your salvation as you know; just a matter of validating through further examination and consideration "new" tangible evidence that the Six Day Creation was how God said it all happened. Seek and ye shall find. I hope you find the hunger and inspiration to get to that "A-HA!" moment.

Liberator  posted on  2014-10-29   22:50:30 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#36. To: Ferret Mike (#23)

"One of the reasons I started taking this anti-evolutionary view, was ... it struck me that I had been working on this stuff for twenty years and there was not one thing I knew about it. That's quite a shock to learn that one can be so misled so long. ...so for the last few weeks I've tried putting a simple question to various people and groups of people. Question is: Can you tell me anything you know about evolution, any one thing that is true? I tried that question on the geology staff at the Field Museum of Natural History and the only answer I got was silence. I tried it on the members of the Evolutionary Morphology Seminar in the University of Chicago, a very prestigious body of evolutionists, and all I got there was silence for a long time and eventually one person said, 'I do know one thing -- it ought not to be taught in high school'."

Dr. Colin Patterson, Senior Paleontologist, British Museum of Natural History, London Keynote address at the American Museum of Natural History, New York City, 5 November, 1981

GarySpFC  posted on  2014-10-30   9:15:09 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#37. To: Liberator (#35)

“Of course, it is still possible to believe in both modern evolutionary biology and a purposive force, even the Judaeo-Christian God. One can suppose that God started the whole universe or works through the laws of nature (or both). There is no contradiction between this or similar views of God and natural selection. But this view of God is also worthless…. [Such a God] has nothing to do with human morals, answers no prayers, gives no life everlasting, in fact does nothing whatsoever that is detectable. In other words, religion is compatible with modern evolutionary biology (and, indeed, all of modern science) if the religion is effectively indistinguishable from atheism.

“My observation is that the great majority of modern evolutionary biologists now are atheists or something very close to that. Yet prominent atheistic or agnostic scientists publicly deny that there is any conflict between science and religion. Rather than simple intellectual dishonesty, this position is pragmatic. In the United States, elected members of Congress all proclaim to be religious. Many scientists believe that funding for science might suffer if the atheistic implications of modern science were widely understood.”

William B. Provine, review of Trial and Error: The American Controversy over Creation and Evolution, by Edward J. Larson (New York: Oxford University Press, 1985, 224 pp.), Academe, vol. 73 (January/February 1987), pp. 51-52 Provine was Professor of History of Biology, Cornell University

GarySpFC  posted on  2014-10-30   9:19:21 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#38. To: Ferret Mike (#20)

I would say I agree with her. Dolphins have language and culture. They have brains that rival ours in size and complexity.

The human and dolphin brain comparison brain is...interesting. As to "complexity," we don't possess any instruments, gauges, or metrics that prove the extent of their "complexity." Just that Dolphins are admittedly very intelligent, possess "feelings", and possesses their own language, and understand human communication to a degree. SAME AS DOGS. OR APES.

That said, you still didn't answe my original question: Do you extend that concept even further and believe EVERY creature is "equal" in the eyes of Gaia/God/The Universal Creator?

Are we "committing murder" if we slaughter cattle? Hooking a fish? Stepping on a spider? Eradicating ANY "life" for whatever reason?

How does Gaia "judge" man? Doe she provide "Salvation"? What IS the "End Game" for Gaia and her "children?

Liberator  posted on  2014-10-30   10:53:54 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#39. To: GarySpFC, 4 givan 1, Ferret Mike, A K A Stone, redleghunter (#37)

In other words, religion is compatible with modern evolutionary biology (and, indeed, all of modern science) if the religion is effectively indistinguishable from atheism.

So...a "respectable" scientist was able to find a detente with Believers in a Creator -- as long as they accept a "modern evolutionary biology." BUT ONLY the under the ground rules and terms that NO morality, prayer, and concept redemption was also part of the "force" by this same Creator?

Many scientists believe that funding for science might suffer if the atheistic implications of modern science were widely understood.” ~ (New York: Oxford University Press, 1985, 224 pp.), Academe, vol. 73 (January/February 1987)

27 years ago this statement may have been true. But today the academic/government funding is totally controlled by pro-Atheists, whose primary agenda at has been promoting 'Climate Change'/'Global Warming' as a socialist/ecomonic sledgehammer. Agenda #2: "Discovering" many earths and ETs. Despite controlling most of the academic/government funding, many atheists in the field of science have indeed DEFECTED and have found it impossible to keep on presenting lies, random anecdotal evidence, and wishful thinking as scientific FACT. This has led them re-examine the complex creation of God and know Evolution is a fraud.

Lastly, many former atheists and agnostics have broken free of the Science Plantation's requisite of worshiping at the altar of the Group-Think totalitarianism of a monolithic God-Free science.

Liberator  posted on  2014-10-30   11:30:54 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#40. To: GarySpFC (#36)

I've tried putting a simple question to various people and groups of people. Question is:

"Can you tell me anything you know about evolution, any one thing that is true?"

I tried that question on the geology staff at the Field Museum of Natural History and the only answer I got was silence. I tried it on the members of the Evolutionary Morphology Seminar in the University of Chicago, a very prestigious body of evolutionists, and all I got there was silence for a long time and eventually one person said, 'I do know one thing -- it ought not to be taught in high school'." ~ Dr. Colin Patterson, Senior Paleontologist, 1981

In over 30 years since "nothing" became the unanimous answer to the question asked an an 'Evolutionary Morphology Seminar' ("Can you tell me anything you know about evolution, any one thing that is true?") NOTHING has changed...

Darwinism within the realm of evolutionary "science" may be Dead. But it lives on in the minds and philosophies of abortionist Margaret Sanger, and other Darwinist "survival of the fittest" disciples like Marx, Woodrow Wilson...Hitler, Stalin, 0bola, and his 0bolaCare Director of Soylent Green (who believes extending life after age 75 is selfish. By then you are...deemed OB-SO-LETE by the almighty State.)

Liberator  posted on  2014-10-30   11:53:38 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#41. To: Liberator, GarySpFc (#40)

Darwinism within the realm of evolutionary "science" may be Dead. But it lives on in the minds and philosophies of abortionist Margaret Sanger, and other Darwinist "survival of the fittest" disciples like Marx, Woodrow Wilson...Hitler, Stalin, 0bola, and his 0bolaCare Director of Soylent Green (who believes extending life after age 75 is selfish. By then you are...deemed OB-SO-LETE by the almighty State.)

Yes the eugenics crowd is married to the global warmists and Darwinists. When one only has "self" as a god, those who pose a threat to what they call diminishing resources call on population control.

Evolution has become the "gospel" for the eugenics crowd.

But as many as received him, to them gave he power to become the sons of God, even to them that believe on his name (John 1:12)

redleghunter  posted on  2014-10-30   18:48:24 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#42. To: redleghunter, GarySpFc (#41)

Yes the eugenics crowd is married to the global warmists and Darwinists. When one only has "self" as a god, those who pose a threat to what they call diminishing resources call on population control.

Evolution has become the "gospel" for the eugenics crowd.

+100. Interpreted perfectly.This SAME crowd are also Atheists. Coincidence?

These cultist self-anointed demigods actually believe in the "ethics" and "morality" of culling the human population ("by whatever means necessary.") They have moved into tactical positions i8n World gubmint to enforce their warped fantasy and ethic.

Liberator  posted on  2014-10-31   9:19:19 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#43. To: Ferret Mike, Carl Sagan, Pope Francis, Giovanni Bignami (#0)

"The Pope's declaration is significant," said Giovanni Bignami, the president of Italy's National Institute for Astrophysics.

"We are the descendants of the Big Bang, which created the universe. You just have to think that in our blood we have a few litres of hydrogen, which was created by the Big Bang 13.7 billion years ago.

"Our blood is red because it contains iron, which was created by the explosion of a star millions and millions of years ago. Out of creation came evolution."

Dear Giovanni Bignami,

The Pope is an idiot who ought to stick to wearing elaborate hats and costumes designed by Liberace, and waving from a balcony. That said, what is REALLY "significant" is how this "blood" found its way into the "Big Bang"? And INTO living, sentient creatures. OR, Dr. Bignani, that hydrogen?

Moreover, Prof. Bignami, can you or any of your enlightened scientific communitah provide a molecule of proof that "evolution" has occurred? Didn't think so.

Graci...ciao.

Liberator  posted on  2014-10-31   9:30:09 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#44. To: Vicomte13, GarySpFc, Don, out damned spot, A K A Stone, 4 givan 1 (#0)

The beginning of the world was not "the work of chaos" but part of a divine plan by the Creator, he said.

Gee...Pope Frank actually read GENESIS?? Believes in an omnipotent God (Oh wait)

"The Jesuit Pope:

"When we read about creation in Genesis, we run the risk of imagining God was a magician, with a magic wand able to do everything. But that is not so," he said."

WHAT. A. BOOB. And a fraud. This guy is the Chief Inspector Clouseau of Popes.

Chyeah -- The Creator of the Universe, God got stumped and was overwhelmed. DAY SIX: "Now where wuz I?? Oh yeah...figuring out how to make the Universe look as though it's really 13.7 BILLION years old. ABRA-CADABRA!! HA! I can't believe I did it!! That'll drive my puny earthlings crazy!"

Liberator  posted on  2014-10-31   9:45:32 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#45. To: redleghunter (#44)

PING to above

Liberator  posted on  2014-10-31   9:50:50 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#46. To: Ferret Mike (#45)

You ever going to respond to the above questions? You said several things which I responded to. Do you have answers?

A K A Stone  posted on  2014-10-31   11:03:55 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#47. To: Liberator (#45)

Thanks. I really miss the fashionable Pope Benedict.

But as many as received him, to them gave he power to become the sons of God, even to them that believe on his name (John 1:12)

redleghunter  posted on  2014-10-31   15:09:57 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#48. To: (#0)

This isn't really NEW. The Church's position regarding evolution has been that it isn't incompatible with Catholic faith as long as one acknowledges the ultimate creator, and that man originally sinned.

In the frontspiece to my 1978 edition of the New American Bible was an essay that included the language "No well educated person any longer disputes that man has descended from primates" and that we are to understand Genesis 1 as an allegory.

Being a scientist by training and mindset, I found that position to be good: it made it possible for me to BE a Christian at all, of the Catholic variety.

It is only with direct encounters with the divine that my eyes were opened to the rather more radical reality of God not as simply the organizing principle of the universe, but as a thinking person, and angels (and demons) as real beings. THAT provoked a complete rethink on my part, but nothing SHORT OF that would have ever done it, at least not for me.

Obviously Pope Francis has never spoken directly with God or has his face grabbed by angels and such.

(I also note that later editions of the NAB have significantly toned down that rather obnoxious and dismissive language in the frontspiece, and not longer suggests that people like me, who have come to realize that Genesis 1 is a whole lot more than a poem or an allegory, am not well-educated.)

Catholic schools have taught basic evolution, not creationism, in science class for decades. The caveat (I didn't go to Catholic school, but had a Catholic biology prof) was simple: after going through evolution, and going through the medieval belief in spontaneous generation and demonstrating how spontaneous generation has been disproven and discarded, the prof made the simple point that spontaneous generation had been discarded as the basis of life...except at the origin of life.

Well, having just seen all the reasons why spontaneous generation was not viable - to then have all of life itself suddenly hang upon spontaneous generation is obviously not intellectually viable either, especially when one considers that decaying meat and plantlife already have all of the amino acids for life already pre-formed in them, so even with all of the elements for life RIGHT THERE, life still doesn't spontaneously generate from dead things. To have it spontaneously generate, then, from disorganized atoms - well, THAT'S a beaut.

What Pope Francis said isn't anything new. And maybe it will bring eyes like mine were to focus on the Church and find out they can walk with THIS form of Christianity.

Unfortunately, evolution isn't TRUE, so unless God reaches down and grabs THEIR faces too, I don't know how the step to the actual TRUTH of the matter is closed. But I don't think it really ultimately matters either. Final judgment is not a science test but a morals and deeds test.

And it isn't as though the Christian creationists are perfectly right in their theories either. THEY don't read the verb tenses of Creation right. Stuff wasn't CREATED on day X, it BEGAN TO BE created, on day X, and that's a key difference. (And it wasn't actually CREATED on any of those days, it was made substantial. FIRST it was created in the head of the Elohiym, then it began to be unfolded in 3D. That's really what Genesis 1 SAYS, but you cannot see that unless you leave off English and read the Hebrew and the ancient pictographs. So, truth be told, EVERYBODY fighting about evolution, on ALL sides, is wrong in some pretty fundamental things. The secularists are wrong: life didn't spontaneously generate. And the creationsts are wrong about the exact timeline. The Catholics are wrong: it's not an allegory or a poem on creation. The right answer: God made it all, on a staccato timeline (that is written into Genesis, but the key question of animal life (which is really the issue): THAT was brought forth quickly, in a couple of days. The piece most scientists are missing is the slowing of the speed of light. Once that is factored into the Standard Theory, there is a lot less time, and without the time, evolution as understood naturalistically simply couldn't happen. But just TRY to have a reasonable talk to correct the record with ANYBODY - Protestant, Catholic, Atheist...what one believes about origins is what one believes about science, and that is probably the central contention in religion today. Science is the "indulgences" of old.

Vicomte13  posted on  2014-11-01   9:54:27 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#49. To: Vicomte13, A K A Stone, liberator, out damned spot, CZ82 (#48)

Vic good run down for those not acquainted with your posts on LP.

Thanks.

Oh and CZ82 is none other than Uncle Siggy. If you were wondering:)

But as many as received him, to them gave he power to become the sons of God, even to them that believe on his name (John 1:12)

redleghunter  posted on  2014-11-01   13:50:43 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#50. To: redleghunter, CZ82, Vicomte13, A K A Stone, out damned spot, Tater (#49)

Oh and CZ82 is none other than Uncle Siggy. If you were wondering:)

Tater/Gatlin at this very moment:

Meggy/Homo-San:

Liberator  posted on  2014-11-01   15:02:39 ET  (2 images) Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#51. To: Vicomte13, redleghunter (#48)

Catholic schools have taught basic evolution, not creationism, in science class for decades. The caveat (I didn't go to Catholic school, but had a Catholic biology prof) was simple: after going through evolution, and going through the medieval belief in spontaneous generation and demonstrating how spontaneous generation has been disproven and discarded, the prof made the simple point that spontaneous generation had been discarded as the basis of life...except at the origin of life.

In other words, your bio prof concluded that Genesis IS true and NOT the "basic evolution" he was compelled to teach as per RCC school teaching?

The "Big Bang" theory -- and it IS just a theory -- conflicts with the literal 6-Days Creation account of Genesis. Thus IF this Pope or any Believer insists on Selling a "Big Bang" Creation, they also have to account for the rapid daily placement of ALL Creation. IN SIX DAYS.

Truth be told, EVERYBODY fighting about evolution, on ALL sides, is wrong in some pretty fundamental things. The secularists are wrong: life didn't spontaneously generate. And the creationsts are wrong about the exact timeline. The Catholics are wrong: it's not an allegory or a poem on creation. The right answer: God made it all, on a staccato timeline (that is written into Genesis, but the key question of animal life (which is really the issue): THAT was brought forth quickly, in a couple of days.

You seem to be validating Genesis 6-Day Creation -- correct me if I'm wrong. If so, how are Creationists "wrong about the exact timeline"?

Liberator  posted on  2014-11-01   15:15:38 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#52. To: redleghunter (#47)

I really miss the fashionable Pope Benedict.

He rocked that Pope Hat better than any Pope I've seen. Doesn't get much credit from the fashionistas for that.

Liberator  posted on  2014-11-01   15:17:11 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#53. To: Vicomte13 (#48)

Final judgment is not a science test but a morals and deeds test.

More than that for sure.

Test #1: Did we ask for and accept the blood of Jesus Christ as ransom for our sins? I presume our Father's specs will slide down his nose, he'll bite his lip as He peruses our Life File -- despite noting high scores on Tests #2 and #3.

Liberator  posted on  2014-11-01   15:29:13 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#54. To: Liberator (#50)

Tater/Gatlin at this very moment:

Also Moderator

http://libertysflame.com/cgi-bin/readart.cgi?ArtNum=35507&Disp=37#C37

“Political correctness is a doctrine, fostered by a delusional, illogical minority, and rapidly promoted by mainstream media, which holds forth the proposition that it is entirely possible to pick up a turd by the clean end.”

CZ82  posted on  2014-11-01   15:52:54 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#55. To: redleghunter (#49)

Oh and CZ82 is none other than Uncle Siggy. If you were wondering:)

Oh no I've been outed!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

“Political correctness is a doctrine, fostered by a delusional, illogical minority, and rapidly promoted by mainstream media, which holds forth the proposition that it is entirely possible to pick up a turd by the clean end.”

CZ82  posted on  2014-11-01   16:09:48 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#56. To: Ferret Mike (#9)

I believe in a female deity and question whether a Jesus Christ even existed.

As well you should. The deity, Elohiym, is female, and male, both. YHWH is masculine. The Holy Spirit and the Glory of God are feminine. Jesus is masculine. Of course he existed: you can see what he looked like and get a sample of his blood from the Shroud of Turin.

Vicomte13  posted on  2014-11-01   16:28:25 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#57. To: A K A Stone (#11)

The Bible says that there was no death before sin.

What is "death"? Jesus said that God is the God of the living, and spoke of those whose bodies had died as nevertheless living.

Don't become fixated on PHYSICAL death, because physical death isn't DEATH. Physical death isn't what came into the world with sin. Real death is what did, and real death is entirely of the spirit. The body is not the issue.

Vicomte13  posted on  2014-11-01   16:31:47 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#58. To: Liberator (#53)

Test #1: Did we ask for and accept the blood of Jesus Christ as ransom for our sins?

But Scripture does not actually SAY that. What it SAYS is that none come to the Father except through Jesus. That's true. But that does not mean that one must "ask for and accept the blood of Jesus Christ as ransom for our sins". That is the interpretation supplied by human tradition. And it's not quite right.

Look at the last page of Scripture, where Jesus himself, enthroned in Heaven, says that men will be judged by their DEEDS, and then lists the deeds that will earn a trip to the lake of fire.

Vicomte13  posted on  2014-11-01   16:34:22 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#59. To: Liberator (#21)

IF -- as Genesis tells us - we indeed believe that there was "NO DEATH" before the sin of Adam and Eve,

If we believe that Genesis tells us that, then we are not reading carefully enough. Genesis doesn't say that.

Vicomte13  posted on  2014-11-01   16:36:51 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#60. To: CZ82, calcon (#54)

Tater/Gatlin at this very moment:

Also Moderator

http://libertysflame.com/cgi-bin/readart.cgi?ArtNum=35507&Disp=37#C37

HA! That thread is HILARIOUS!! And yup -- there is "moderator" Tater Tot/Gilligan pretending to be an authoritah.

Both you and cal fired off lines I'm still chucking over.

Liberator  posted on  2014-11-01   16:46:07 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#61. To: Liberator (#28)

If your reservations are about "Dating" methodology -- especially the bread and butter of Old Earthers -- Carbon-14 dating

The flaw in all radioactivity dating methods, whether Carbon-14 or Uranium isotope, is they all rely on a uniform rate of decay. However, radioactive decay rates are a function of "C", the speed of light. If C has decayed over time (and there is experimental evidence that it has, parabolically, since early times - it was tens of thousands of times faster in distant ages), then the "clock" of radioactive decay rates used to run much, much faster. If the clock ran 1,000,000 times faster 20,000 years ago, then 100 million years, at the current rate, ran in 100 years.

That is how you can end up with an earth that radioactively measures at "billions" of years old that is, in fact, only tens of thousands of years old. It's also why the light coming in in all directions from distant galaxies is all red-shifted, and why the red-shift is quantized.

The slowing of the speed of light is actually observed BY the red-shift, and has been calculated using the various calculations of the speed of light over the past 300 years. The consist drift is about 1% decay in 300 years. Fitted to a curve, we get a parabola with light a billion times faster a couple of tens of thousands of years ago.

That is probably the real truth behind all of this, which is why putting it together as I have, which actually shows you the MECHANISM, and EXPLAINS both the celestial phenomena AND the radioactive dating phenomena all together, is certain to raise vehement and explosive anger in some.

Wait and you'll see it.

Vicomte13  posted on  2014-11-01   16:46:17 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#62. To: CZ82, Vicomte13 (#55)

Oh no I've been outed!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

LOL! Oh noes! Hiri Kiri, Siggy-San! (Or is it now 82-San?)

P.S. -- Was that Samarai you in the vid, Vic? ;-)

Liberator  posted on  2014-11-01   16:48:50 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#63. To: Vicomte13, A K A Stone (#57)

What is "death"? Jesus said that God is the God of the living, and spoke of those whose bodies had died as nevertheless living.

Yes, but we must still consider the context of the here and now which affect the then and there.

Don't become fixated on PHYSICAL death, because physical death isn't DEATH. Physical death isn't what came into the world with sin. Real death is what did, and real death is entirely of the spirit. The body is not the issue.

I agree. To a degree. Jesus noted the death of the physical realm. But we are still hardwired to avoid death, aren't we? The "fear" has more to do with the suffering part. Even if we know there's the next Life....(or Death or some.)

Liberator  posted on  2014-11-01   16:55:44 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#64. To: Vicomte13 (#56)

As well you should. The deity, Elohiym, is female, and male, both. YHWH is masculine. The Holy Spirit and the Glory of God are feminine. Jesus is masculine.

Never heard of this.

Liberator  posted on  2014-11-01   16:56:30 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#65. To: Liberator (#51)

You seem to be validating Genesis 6-Day Creation -- correct me if I'm wrong. If so, how are Creationists "wrong about the exact timeline"?

Do you REALLY want me to do this. You're not going to like where it comes out.

So ask yourself before you answer whether it matters, ultimately.

I myself have decided that it really DOESN'T. Jesus never bothered admonishing anybody about it. He spent his time telling people what to DO and not to do, in order to be pleasing to the Father. So I think that THAT'S what is ULTIMATELY important. And so when in a room with headstrong and vehement Christians, of differing views on creation, I usually put in a placeholder (like I did), but then let it go because, after all, Christ called for UNITY, and here's a really good opportunity for Christians to start banging the furniture, tearing their hair out, yelling at each other and finding a new source of disunity...and thinking that it's IMPORTANT.

I don't think it's important, but I DO think that there is an answer, and I DO think, further, that the scientific evidence of artifacts and experiments actually SHOWS us the answer, when the revealed Genesis template is laid alongside of it.

It's very comforting to me to see this. The Catholic Church doesn't really CARE. But it's GOING to cause anguish to some Protestants who have invested a lot in the subject, because even though the outcome is that, yes, the world really is only a few thousand years old, some of the key arguments that Protestants use are actually quite wrong, and they're wrong on SCRIPTURE. They're taking ENGLISH and making assumptions, but they have to take Hebrew and pictographs instead, to actually get the template.

I'm...somewhat...willing to do it, to show the template and the language and the facts. BUT I'm not willing to generate heat, or take abuse for it. If there must be heat and abuse, then I'd rather leave that scroll sealed, because it doesn't ultimately MATTER to the final disposition of the spirits of people - what one believes about creation is not on the list of things that Jesus said would get one thrown into the lake of fire.

So, those who really love philosophy, theology, history, science, language and truth might enjoy the read. I'm really hesitant to start posting over here and to get in an hellacious fight with my fellow Christians on the first day. I'd rather clean out the garage or get my teeth cleaned than that.

Vicomte13  posted on  2014-11-01   16:59:40 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#66. To: Vicomte13 (#58)

Test #1: Did we ask for and accept the blood of Jesus Christ as ransom for our sins?

But Scripture does not actually SAY that. What it SAYS is that none come to the Father except through Jesus. That's true. But that does not mean that one must "ask for and accept the blood of Jesus Christ as ransom for our sins". That is the interpretation supplied by human tradition. And it's not quite right.

Regarding "human tradition" not being "quite right," I agree with you -- which is coincidentally what many Protestants find objectionable about the RCC rites, creeds, and Marian addenda. In THIS case, my assertion of "accepting the blood of Jesus Christ as ransom for my sins" may not be scriptural verbatim, but the interpretive context is the same when I acknowledge Jesus' words to He and the Father.

Look at the last page of Scripture, where Jesus himself, enthroned in Heaven, says that men will be judged by their DEEDS, and then lists the deeds that will earn a trip to the lake of fire.

Let's assume you're right on the swan dive into the Lake of Fire...

You've asserted, "Final judgment is not a science test but a morals and deeds test." Well, we are sinners even though that IS true. Do the "morals and deeds" tests trump considerations acknowledging Jesus as my personal Savior?

Liberator  posted on  2014-11-01   17:10:15 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#67. To: Liberator (#64)

As well you should. The deity, Elohiym, is female, and male, both. YHWH is masculine. The Holy Spirit and the Glory of God are feminine. Jesus is masculine. Never heard of this.

Follow me and don't let go. This is not heresy.

The word "Elohiym" - "God" - remember, is a PLURAL. The singular is "El or Al", masculine, or "Eloah or Alah", feminine. Both the masculine and feminine singular forms appear as place names or as parts of the name of the Deity (El Shaddai literally means "The Mighty One of My Teats"; El-Elyon - literally means the Mighty One - Mighty One whose Arm generates over the chaos).

Elohiym is a unitive noun and takes the masculine singular verb when speaking of GOD; otherwise it means "gods" (really "mighty ones") when it takes a plural verb.

Next, there is the "Breath of God" - the "Ruach Elohiym", or the "Holy Breath". We translate "Breath" in Greek as "Pneuma" - and this is the word Spirit. In Hebrew, the Spirit of God (that hovers over the water) is a feminine singular noun. The "Spirit" in Hebrew is feminine. Likewise, the Shekinah, the Glory of God that radiates around holy things, and out of the Ark of the Covenant, is a feminine singular.

All of these things: YHWH, Ruach, Shekinah, El and Eloah are all unitively referred to as the plural "Elohiym": God.

Now look at the 6th day: In Elohiym's image he made man; male and female he made them. Elohiym is both male and female. El is male. YHWH is male. Jesus is male. But the Holy Spirit is female, and so is the Glory of God. This is so grammatically. It's also right there in the text: in Elohiym's image, male and female both. Eloah, Ruach and Shekinah are female. And all "part" of Elohiym.

Elohiym takes a masculine singular noun, but when being self-referential, Elohiym frequently employs "WE". YHWH only employs "I".

It's all right there, if one unpacks it carefully.

This should be a source of joy, because all of a sudden all sorts of strange and messy loose ends in Scripture make sense, and we realize that the Father, Son and Holy Spirit are all right there in the very first SENTENCE of Genesis. Indeed, it's pretty obvious when one looks at the words, the plurals. It's easy to see the Trinity, and Christians love to see this. Some Christians become stubborn and don't like seeing the femininity of God ALSO right there in Genesis, particularly the femininity of the Holy Spirit. That is disturbing, because it's not the Christian tradition.

Throw out the bad tradition, then, just as Jesus says to, and embrace what the Scripture SAYS on its face, in the inspired Hebrew. It's perfectly obvious in Hebrew that the Spirit is feminine. It's a feminine word. We don't HAVE masculine and feminine gender of nouns in English, so we don't see it. But a translation is just an echo - God didn't reveal these things in English, he did it in Hebrew.

Vicomte13  posted on  2014-11-01   17:14:53 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#68. To: Vicomte13 (#59)

If we believe that Genesis tells us that [No Death before Adam's sin], then we are not reading carefully enough. Genesis doesn't say that.

I don't know if it's more about reading carefully enough or again, context and interpretation.

Genesis 2:17 -- "but of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, thou shalt not eat of it: for in the day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely die."

What did God mean by "die?" Didn't God curse Adam with both physical AND spiritual death? Can't we conclude Adam's act affected all of God's original plan -- and that death begat all His Creation? Pork chops and steak weren't eaten until after the fall.

So, what is your interpretation or belief about "Death" as per scripture?

Liberator  posted on  2014-11-01   17:20:33 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#69. To: Vicomte13 (#67)

This [Masculine/Feminine Godhood] should be a source of joy, because all of a sudden all sorts of strange and messy loose ends in Scripture make sense, and we realize that the Father, Son and Holy Spirit are all right there in the very first SENTENCE of Genesis. Indeed, it's pretty obvious when one looks at the words, the plurals. It's easy to see the Trinity, and Christians love to see this.

Some Christians become stubborn and don't like seeing the femininity of God ALSO right there in Genesis, particularly the femininity of the Holy Spirit. That is disturbing, because it's not the Christian tradition.

No Bible scholar am I, but frankly, the concept wasn't "strange" or the ends "loose" until now :-)

The reason it's disturbing is that it feeds into pagan concepts of Mother Earth and "Goddesses."

I'll have to further examine your thesis, Vic, because I've never heard of your translation related to in gender terms other than "God the Father." We have the Father, Son...and yes, "Holy Spirit."

Of note: Man (Adam) was created first; Jesus (the Father's Son, in His place) also male. I hope Mary doesn't play into this equation somehow.

Liberator  posted on  2014-11-01   17:29:29 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#70. To: CZ82 (#55)

LOL sorry thought everyone knew. The same Rangers and Cowboys threads etc.

But as many as received him, to them gave he power to become the sons of God, even to them that believe on his name (John 1:12)

redleghunter  posted on  2014-11-01   17:37:40 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#71. To: Liberator (#66)

"Final judgment is not a science test but a morals and deeds test." Well, we are sinners even though that IS true. Do the "morals and deeds" tests trump considerations acknowledging Jesus as my personal Savior?

There is no demand to acknowledge Jesus as personal savior.

What Jesus SAID was "follow me" and "do as I say" and "you will be judged by your deeds" and "nobody comes to the Father except through me".

So, let's be clear: Jesus' deal, his judgment, is going to be personal to each person. None of us has been appointed the judge of the world, or guardian of it, or bearer of its weight.

We've each been charged to look after ourselves and our immediate family, firstly, primordially. The formula demanding a particular mouthing of belief isn't in the Bible at all. It's a doctrine of a Church that seeks to answer the question "What about all those others", and it leads to an answer that isn't true.

And it's irrelevant anyway. You're going to be judged on what YOU do. So, whether you mouth that Jesus is personal savior or not isn't going to HELP you if you don't do as he said.

Now, the notion that the Law is too hard to follow is also wrong. Gentiles, like you and me, NEVER were under the JEWISH law at all. We ARE under the law of Jesus.

What HE said was that if you murder people, engage in sexual immorality, engage in pharmakeia, traffic in lies and fraud, worship idols or are a coward he rejects you and will throw you in the fire.

He does forgive those who slip - but he said that he only forgives them TO THE EXTENT that THEY are forgiving of other men for the sins other men do.

So, Jesus has a high standard, but it is not impossible to keep. If you slip, you're on your way to the lake of fire...BUT there's still a save for you: you'll be forgiven IF you're forgiving. If you forgive others the evils they do you and turn the other cheek and let it go, then Jesus will let it go, but if you refuse to do that, if you are proud and arrogant, you are establishing the standard of your own judgment. Since you'll probably slip on something, if you're not forgiving, you're not going to enter the City because YOU set a rule of harsh and condemnatory judgment which you, then, will experience yourself.

Some Christians have taught the doctrine that Jesus forgives everything if you believe he was the Son of God and that his sacrifice forgave all sin. That's a wonderful doctrine, but it isn't what Jesus SAID. In fact, he said things pretty baleful for those who cry "Lord, Lord!" but who don't DO what he said to do.

And he asked, quite testily: "What good does it do you to say you follow me if you do not keep my commandments?"

Christians like to throw up that Torah list of laws and say they're off the hook for that. This is a false doctrine. It is ILLITERATE. Read the Torah: who does it apply to: HEBREWS, who were THERE. And what was promised? A farm in Israel. Nowhere in the Old Testament does God EVER ONCE promise the Hebrews "Eternal Life" or anything like it if they follow his laws. He promises them a farm in Israel and security during life - that's IT.

So, the whole business about being "relieved of the burden of the Law" is a red herring. Sure, JEWS like Peter and Paul and the Apostles and early disciples were relieved of the Law, but they were JEWS. Gentiles like you and me, though, were never under the Law in the first place. If we placed ourselves under it and did it all, it wouldn't give us eternal life, because God never PROMISED eternal life in exchange. It would give us a farm in Israel while we lived, and nothing more (and then only if enough of the rest of the community also obeyed).

So when we see all of the JEWISH anguish over "The Law" in the Gospels and Epistles, we need to remember that none of that has one thing to do with us. We were never under the law in the first place, and adherence to the law never promised eternal life.

For us, it's easier: what are JESUS' Commandments. Jesus' sacrifice does NOT release us from obeying THOSE. He'll forgive us our past sins, but if we keep on sinning - with sin defined as what Jesus said would damn us - then we'd better be FORGIVING OF MEN, because if we're not, we're dead. Up in Scotland there were some hard-bitten leaders who "did not suffer a witch to live". They enforced, in the 1500s and 1600s, a law given to ISRAELITES, never Gentiles, and burnt 20,000 witches. They were harsh and unforgiving and very Christians, and they very probably will all be thrown into the lake of fire because they committed MURDER (God never once authorized GENTILES to kill witches - the Torah was EXCLUSIVELY for Hebrews under the Covenant - that the Jews were given the right to kill the Canaanites does NOT mean that the English were given ANY right to go kill the Welsh to take their land), so that's one strike against them. They did it on the basis of a law that did not apply, so they lied and twisted Scripture to authorize them to do evil. Strike two. And, having captured sinners, they were harsh and judgmental and unforgiving. Strike three. They committed murder, deceit and their own form of idolatry by putting people into the fire, and they were unforgiving, and Jesus - on the standards he stated - will probably throw them all into the fire. They will say "But we prophesied in your name!" And he will say "Into the fire, you evildoers".

Being a "Christian" does not get you out of the fire. You have to be good, and if you're not, you have to be forgiving. Those are JESUS' terms, and Christians don't get to make up a doctrine that contradicts him and makes his blood more powerful than his own commandments at forgiving them from doing whatever the Hell they please.

This is all obvious on the text.

So, circling back to us.

Do we murder, lie, commit sexual immorality, indulge in pharmakeia or idolatry? Are we cowards? If yes, then STOP IT. When we converted, all before was forgiven, but sins since are not forgiven so easily. Now we have to ask for forgiveness from God, and we have to temper ourselves to be very forgiving of others. And until we've done all that, we had best not waste our time looking over the hedge to cluck at what is in somebody else's mind, because we are so obviously lost ourselves that nothing very useful will come out of our mouths.

After all, those "Christians" burning Scottish witches thought they were purifying their land, but really they were just murderous assholes condemning themselves to hell, and committing crimes against humanity that have made people ever since disgusted with Christians and Christian religion - their crimes and evil barred the bridge to others by making Christ disgusting.

We still here today about all of the crimes of Christians in their Churches, and those accusations are JUST. Christians need to take care of their own gardens first. And be forgiving.

That's load enough.

Vicomte13  posted on  2014-11-01   17:40:23 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#72. To: Vicomte13 (#65)

It's very comforting to me to see this. The Catholic Church doesn't really CARE. But it's GOING to cause anguish to some Protestants who have invested a lot in the subject, because even though the outcome is that, yes, the world really is only a few thousand years old, some of the key arguments that Protestants use are actually quite wrong, and they're wrong on SCRIPTURE. They're taking ENGLISH and making assumptions, but they have to take Hebrew and pictographs instead, to actually get the template.

I'm...somewhat...willing to do it, to show the template and the language and the facts. BUT I'm not willing to generate heat, or take abuse for it. If there must be heat and abuse, then I'd rather leave that scroll sealed, because it doesn't ultimately MATTER to the final disposition of the spirits of people - what one believes about creation is not on the list of things that Jesus said would get one thrown into the lake of fire.

I always appreciate your honesty, effort, and sincerity -- even if we don't happen see eye to eye.

What IS important is the bottom line of Salvation, true...

That said, opening the Vic Scrolls is entirely up to you. Protestants are more heavily invested in Genesis because it happens to provide the foundation for the rest of Scripture. Genesis sez God's Creation took exactly 6 Days. He rested on the seventh. I don't know if there's much to debate other than whether one believes Genesis' Creation is an allegory, believes "one day" is figurative, or chooses to believe some parts of Genesis, but not others.

Liberator  posted on  2014-11-01   17:40:25 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#73. To: Liberator (#68)

Pork chops and steak weren't eaten until after the fall.

They were not supposed to be eaten until after the Flood.

Vicomte13  posted on  2014-11-01   17:41:27 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#74. To: Vicomte13, A K A Stone, liberator (#65)

So, those who really love philosophy, theology, history, science, language and truth might enjoy the read. I'm really hesitant to start posting over here and to get in an hellacious fight with my fellow Christians on the first day. I'd rather clean out the garage or get my teeth cleaned than that.

I've seen much of what you have to say on this subject. I don't think the Christians here will start a flame war.

I'm up for it.

But as many as received him, to them gave he power to become the sons of God, even to them that believe on his name (John 1:12)

redleghunter  posted on  2014-11-01   17:47:41 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#75. To: Liberator (#68)

What did God mean by "die?"

Good question.

Adam lived for hundreds of years after he ate the fruit, so if we take the English translation literally: "But of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil, thou shalt not eat of it: for in the day that thou eatest thereof thou shalt surely die."

Did God change his mind? Did Adam die, or didn't he, on the day that he ate of the tree?

The Hebrew verbs make a difference here. The way this has been translated, God changes his mind, doesn't do what he said he was going to do. Either that, or something DID die, but it wasn't Adam's body.

The Hebrew partially answers the question - and in the process demonstrates that whole translation issue front and center. The Hebrew imperfect verb tense does not translate well into English.

The Hebrew says merely that in the day that Adam eats it, he WILL die - which can be understood as "he will BEGIN to die", or he will eventually die.

So, in the Hebrew, death means his physical death.

And indeed, when we read the genealogies, we see the antediluvian patriarchs all dying. "And he died."

So, in the Hebrew of the Old Testament, death is physical death, and God does not reveal life after death and resurrection until very late in the prophets (with increasing clarity in the books that the Protestants don't accept as canonical).

This is why the Sadduccees did not believe in the resurrection or life after death. Remember: the Sadduccees were the hereditary priests. Nobody was closer too or more consistently bathed in Hebrew Scripture than they were, their whole lives (Pharisees were not priests), and yet THEY did not see the resurrection or eternal life in the Hebrew Scriptures at all. The Pharisees saw resurrection in their.

It's JESUS who gives a new meaning to "death", when speaking of people reputed dead, such as Abraham and Isaac, and says that God is the God of the LIVING, when referring to them. He also refers to those who are dead (physically) as having fallen asleep.

So it's with Jesus - who is the one who promises eternal life and resurrection (not the Torah) - that the veil is peeled back and we begin to see that after physical death, the spirit lives, and that the spirit IS the person.

But Jesus doesn't give this to us in nice scientific terms.

Vicomte13  posted on  2014-11-01   17:53:25 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#76. To: Vicomte13 (#65)

what one believes about creation is not on the list of things that Jesus said would get one thrown into the lake of fire.

That is true. But consider this. Psalm 11:3King James Version (KJV)

3 If the foundations be destroyed, what can the righteous do?

The religion of evolution seeks to destroys the foundation of the Bible. The story of Adam and Eve. The reason Jesus came. So if someone believes in evolution and tries to take the Bible literally. Then they see a conflict. If they then believe in evolution. It makes it more likely they will not believe the Bible.

We have to restore the foundation. Genesis. Because if it is under attack and not to be taken literally. Then why would they believe in Jesus if he came because of something that Adam and Eve, which they believe to be fiction.

That is one of the reasons I see it as important.

There is somewhere in the Bible that says you have to preach to the greeks different then the Jews. Because the Jews had a a foundation in the Bible and the greeks didn't. So you have to reach different people with different methods. So if you destroy the lie of evolution, many people will have the door opened to possibly seeing the light of Gods word found in the Bible.

A K A Stone  posted on  2014-11-01   18:02:28 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#77. To: Vicomte13 (#57)

What is "death"? Jesus said that God is the God of the living, and spoke of those whose bodies had died as nevertheless living.

The death that God said would surely come over Adam and Eve it they ate from the tree of knowledge of good and evil.

So because there was no physical death before that time. Natural selection would be incompatible because you would have Adam and Eve standing on a pile of bones of dead things.

A K A Stone  posted on  2014-11-01   18:07:10 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#78. To: Vicomte13 (#71)

It was a load, but enjoyable load to read. Plenty to consider that I'll expound upon when my battery isn't so low.

For now my commentary will be on the following related bits of you dissertation...

"IF you're forgiving. If you forgive others the evils they do you and turn the other cheek and let it go, then Jesus will let it go, but if you refuse to do that, if you are proud and arrogant, you are establishing the standard of your own judgment....For us, it's easier: what are JESUS' Commandments. Jesus' sacrifice does NOT release us from obeying THOSE. He'll forgive us our past sins, but if we keep on sinning - with sin defined as what Jesus said would damn us - then we'd better be FORGIVING OF MEN, because if we're not, we're dead."

Two themes are struck: Lack of "Forgiveness" and continued "sinning." The end result of which will be Judgement by our own standard.

Vic, IF we as fallible sinners are not capable of quelling sin 100%, where does that leave us? Answer: As sinners. Period. ONE SIN, TWO SINS, 100 SINS, 1000 SINS. You are NOT leaving this world without a tab. Neither am I. So either the Blood of Jesus for Believers meant...EVERYTHING or NOTHING. Which is it?? That said, this isn't to discount the importance of good deeds and forgiveness either.

I'm now going to back up the WIDE LOAD truck and re-quote you:

"So, let's be clear: Jesus' deal, his judgment, is going to be personal to each person. None of us has been appointed the judge of the world, or guardian of it, or bearer of its weight.

Yes, I'm going with your "Jesus deal" as a consideration because ONLY the Lord knows our unique, respective heart, road, trial, and tribulations. The kid in Sri Lanka can't possibly be judged the same as the guy in Seattle; OR, the girl in Galilee, 5 B.C. with the Jew in Jerusalem 2014 A.D. Same with the Catholic sinner in CT and Baptist sinner in Jersey.

Do we murder, lie, commit sexual immorality, indulge in pharmakeia or idolatry? Are we cowards? If yes, then STOP IT. When we converted, all before was forgiven, but sins since are not forgiven so easily. Now we have to ask for forgiveness from God, and we have to temper ourselves to be very forgiving of others. And until we've done all that, we had best not waste our time looking over the hedge to cluck at what is in somebody else's mind, because we are so obviously lost ourselves that nothing very useful will come out of our mouths.

Of course we can't continue to indulge routinely in your above sins...especially and importantly, without repentance.

I know you don't agree with me here, but through my belief in the Blood of Jesus Christ, I *know* I am the Lord's. Far from perfect, a wretched sinner, a liar, holds grudges, lusts, hates, etc. Yes, sins ARE forgiven. Through the grace of Jesus Christ. Thus I am NOT condemned. I will ask and pray for mercy and strength from the Holy Spirit to repel contain my sins and repent when I am weak (which frankly is often.)

Here's the primary problem with Catholicism and your perspective and criteria for reaching Heaven: In practice...IT. IS. AN. IMPOSSIBLE. STANDARD. This standard is what causes many Catholics or potential Christians to TOTALLY give up on maintaining ANY standard, surrender ALL hope, and toss their hands up in futility and frustration. The thought process (infused by Satan) is..."See? You can't meet God's ridiculous standard, so GIVE UP!" And guess what? They DO give up completely. I know such people. They become narcissists who ignore the soul, caring only about satisfying the flesh since Heaven (they've been told) is such a long shot. Merely eating, drinking, and being merry...until they die, as they readily accept their inevitably swan dive into Lake Hell.

Speaking of "forgiveness," why does the RCC insist that ONLY clergy can act as intermediary between man and God? Where in Scripture is it written that we become sin-less the moment man exits that Confessional Box? Were the sins on that tab REALLY erased after muttering a few Hail Marys and Our Fathers, and Act of Contrition as "penance"?

Because of this, do you want to know what my first and only thoughts after swinging wide the doors open from the Church afterward? "Gee -- IF I get hit by a bus RIGHT NOW, I'm in Heaven!!"

Liberator  posted on  2014-11-01   18:34:04 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#79. To: Vicomte13 (#73)

They [Pork chops and burgers] were not supposed to be eaten until after the Flood.

Was it?

And then after that, not even pork chops ;-)

Liberator  posted on  2014-11-01   18:38:17 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#80. To: A K A Stone (#76)

The religion of evolution seeks to destroys the foundation of the Bible. The story of Adam and Eve. The reason Jesus came. So if someone believes in evolution and tries to take the Bible literally. Then they see a conflict. If they then believe in evolution. It makes it more likely they will not believe the Bible.

We have to restore the foundation. Genesis. Because if it is under attack and not to be taken literally. Then why would they believe in Jesus if he came because of something that Adam and Eve, which they believe to be fiction.

That is one of the reasons I see it as important.

Hear ya, Stoney.

Liberator  posted on  2014-11-01   18:39:52 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#81. To: Vicomte13 (#75)

It's JESUS who gives a new meaning to "death", when speaking of people reputed dead, such as Abraham and Isaac, and says that God is the God of the LIVING, when referring to them. He also refers to those who are dead (physically) as having fallen asleep.

So it's with Jesus - who is the one who promises eternal life and resurrection (not the Torah) - that the veil is peeled back and we begin to see that after physical death, the spirit lives, and that the spirit IS the person.

But Jesus doesn't give this to us in nice scientific terms.

Onboard, Vic.

Liberator  posted on  2014-11-01   18:41:14 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#82. To: Liberator (#66)

Regarding "human tradition" not being "quite right," I agree with you -- which is coincidentally what many Protestants find objectionable about the RCC rites, creeds, and Marian addenda. In THIS case, my assertion of "accepting the blood of Jesus Christ as ransom for my sins" may not be scriptural verbatim, but the interpretive context is the same when I acknowledge Jesus' words to He and the Father.

We should not only observe the words of Christ but His actions of mercy, kindness and longsuffering. The Greatest act of all being crucified for the ransom of many.

Matthew 20:

27 And whosoever will be chief among you, let him be your servant:

28 Even as the Son of man came not to be ministered unto, but to minister, and to give his life a ransom for many.

Which as Christ's ministry moves toward Calvary, He reveals more to His disciples His mission on earth:

Luke 9:

22 Saying, The Son of man must suffer many things, and be rejected of the elders and chief priests and scribes, and be slain, and be raised the third day.

23 And he said to them all, If any man will come after me, let him deny himself, and take up his cross daily, and follow me.

Also here:

John 3:

14 And as Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, even so must the Son of man be lifted up:

15 That whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have eternal life.

After the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ we have this:

Luke 24:

46 And said unto them, Thus it is written, and thus it behooved Christ to suffer, and to rise from the dead the third day:

47 And that repentance and remission of sins should be preached in his name among all nations, beginning at Jerusalem.

48 And ye are witnesses of these things.

49 And, behold, I send the promise of my Father upon you: but tarry ye in the city of Jerusalem, until ye be endued with power from on high.

And as Christ said the disciples were witnesses to these things, we see the faithful transmission of the above Gospel message:

From Peter:

1 Peter 1:

18 Forasmuch as ye know that ye were not redeemed with corruptible things, as silver and gold, from your vain conversation received by tradition from your fathers;

19 But with the precious blood of Christ, as of a lamb without blemish and without spot:

20 Who verily was foreordained before the foundation of the world, but was manifest in these last times for you,

21 Who by him do believe in God, that raised him up from the dead, and gave him glory; that your faith and hope might be in God.

Which also Paul confirms all the apostles preached the same Gospel:

1 Corinthians 15:

Moreover, brethren, I declare unto you the gospel which I preached unto you, which also ye have received, and wherein ye stand;

2 By which also ye are saved, if ye keep in memory what I preached unto you, unless ye have believed in vain.

3 For I delivered unto you first of all that which I also received, how that Christ died for our sins according to the scriptures;

4 And that he was buried, and that he rose again the third day according to the scriptures:

5 And that he was seen of Cephas, then of the twelve:

6 After that, he was seen of above five hundred brethren at once; of whom the greater part remain unto this present, but some are fallen asleep.

7 After that, he was seen of James; then of all the apostles.

8 And last of all he was seen of me also, as of one born out of due time.

9 For I am the least of the apostles, that am not meet to be called an apostle, because I persecuted the church of God.

10 But by the grace of God I am what I am: and his grace which was bestowed upon me was not in vain; but I laboured more abundantly than they all: yet not I, but the grace of God which was with me.

11 Therefore whether it were I or they, so we preach, and so ye believed.

The above is what Jesus Christ commanded the disciples to proclaim, and the above is what the disciples proclaimed, preached and taught.

So yes according to the NT the Blood of Jesus Christ cleanses us from all unrighteousness. (1 John 1:7)

Jesus and His apostles also emphasized firmly that those who follow Christ must walk in His ways. We who believe, trust have faith must be faithful and we are called to holiness. And of course God did not keep us out there flapping in the wind. He promised the Holy Spirit, and delivered on the promise starting at Pentecost.

But as many as received him, to them gave he power to become the sons of God, even to them that believe on his name (John 1:12)

redleghunter  posted on  2014-11-01   18:52:51 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#83. To: Vicomte13, Vatican 2 Beatniks (#56) (Edited)

The Holy Spirit and the Glory of God are feminine.

Prior to Vatican II Beatnik metrosexuals revisionist history, it was "Holy Ghost" masculine.


The D&R terrorists hate us because we're free, to vote second party


"We (government) need to do a lot less, a lot sooner" ~Ron Paul

Hondo68  posted on  2014-11-01   19:02:49 ET  (1 image) Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#84. To: Vicomte13 (#58)

says that men will be judged by their DEEDS

Yes. The ones not saved.

A K A Stone  posted on  2014-11-01   21:13:41 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#85. To: Liberator (#79)

And then after that, not even pork chops ;-)

For Hebrews, if they wanted the farm in Egypt. Pork chops have been fine for my line all the back to the Flood.

The Law of Moses, on its own terms, was a covenant between YHWH and the Hebrews there in the Sinai and their circumcised lineal descendants. And the covenant was: Do this, and you'll get a secure farm in Israel.

I didn't have any relatives standing there in the Sinai, I'm not an heir to that covenant, and God never promised me and my folks anything for not eating pork.

So ever since God told Noah and his sons they could eat any animals, it's been licit for me and my line to eat pork. The Torah after about Genesis 11 never applied to them (and by extension me) either before or after Jesus, and probably didn't apply to you and your'n either.

Vicomte13  posted on  2014-11-01   21:32:47 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#86. To: A K A Stone (#84) (Edited)

Yes. The ones not saved.

Read Revelation again and look at whom Jesus was warning. It was a letter addressed to the CHURCHES. The recipients of this letter, being told by Jesus they would be judged by their deeds, where all Christians and Christian Churches.

Christians are judged by the deeds, and the standards that Christ set are high, that is true. And Christ set the standard, too, when men fall short. He did not say that it was all covered by his death, not at all. Rather, he said that if YOU want to be forgiven by God for the sins YOU have committed against HIM, YOU have to forgive other men the sins they commit against you. The Lord's prayer itself establishes this standard, and we're always asking God to apply it: "Forgive us our trespasses as we forgive those who trespass against us."

There is a strain of theology that essentially sets everything Jesus said aside and says that it's all about the blood. It's an interesting theory, but it isn't based on what Christ SAID, and after all, HE was God, not the Christian theologians. So I'll stick with Christ on this one: what you do matters, there's a (short) list of "Don't dos". Once you find Christ and are baptized, your past sins are indeed completely washed away. But if you commit new sins after that, then you've got to ask God for forgiveness, and he will forgive you TO THE EXTENT THAT you forgive other men their sins. We ask for this very standard every time we say the Lord's prayer, so if we don't really MEAN "Lord, forgive me my sins against you to the extent that I forgive the sins of other men against me", then we should stop saying it.

Vicomte13  posted on  2014-11-01   21:38:59 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#87. To: hondo68 (#83)

Prior to Vatican II Beatnik metrosexuals revisionist history, it was "Holy Ghost" masculine.

In Hebrew, the Spirit of God is feminine singular. Ruach is a feminine singular word. It is not masculine.

Genesis through Malachi is written in Hebrew, with the feminine spirit, not English. It is what was inspired by God.

In Greek, Ruach is translated as "Pneuma", - Spirit - Pneuma Hagion - the Holy Spirit. Pneuma in Greek is neuter.

Pneuma was translated into Latin as "Spiritus", which is a masculine word, in Latin. But now we're two translations removed from the inspired autograph. God inspired the Scripture to contain the feminine Spirit.

In Hebrew and in Aramaic, the language of the Jews and of Jesus in the Galilee, "spirit" and "Holy spirit" are feminine.

In Greek transcription, this is the neuter pneuma. It only becomes masculine in Latin, two translations away from the original inspired words.

The Spirit of God is feminine singular in most of the inspired Scriptures, and neuter in the rest. Translations are echoes. They are not themselves inspired.

The gender of the "Spiritu Sancto" in Latin is masculine, and the masculine pronouns have passed into English. That's nice, but the Scripture is the inspired word of God, and when God spoke of God's spirit, God used the feminine. So the Holy Spirit IS feminine, whether the Latins and English- speakers like it or not. (The only reason to DISLIKE that, given that God says outright on the sixth day that in Elohiym's image he made them male and female, is because of a desire to cling to tradition. Here, the tradition is erroneous, contrary to something very obvious in the Scripture. The tradition needs to be chucked. In Latin, the Holy Spirit is a he because of grammar. But in English, there is no gender of nouns. One can follow the Greek neuter and call the Holy Spirit IT, but if one is going to personify the Holy Spirit, then she is a SHE, not a HE, in the Bible anyway. Why resist the Bible?)

Vicomte13  posted on  2014-11-01   21:50:41 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#88. To: Liberator (#78)

why does the RCC insist

I'm not going to talk about the Catholic Church, only Scripture.

Vicomte13  posted on  2014-11-01   21:55:26 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#89. To: Liberator (#78)

repentance

Thought I would share. A man who I think fully understood God's Holiness, Law and how lacking he was. He was also a man God said was a man after His Heart. Psalm 51 King James Version (KJV)

51 Have mercy upon me, O God, according to thy lovingkindness: according unto the multitude of thy tender mercies blot out my transgressions.

2 Wash me throughly from mine iniquity, and cleanse me from my sin.

3 For I acknowledge my transgressions: and my sin is ever before me.

4 Against thee, thee only, have I sinned, and done this evil in thy sight: that thou mightest be justified when thou speakest, and be clear when thou judgest.

5 Behold, I was shapen in iniquity; and in sin did my mother conceive me.

6 Behold, thou desirest truth in the inward parts: and in the hidden part thou shalt make me to know wisdom.

7 Purge me with hyssop, and I shall be clean: wash me, and I shall be whiter than snow.

8 Make me to hear joy and gladness; that the bones which thou hast broken may rejoice.

9 Hide thy face from my sins, and blot out all mine iniquities.

10 Create in me a clean heart, O God; and renew a right spirit within me.

11 Cast me not away from thy presence; and take not thy holy spirit from me.

12 Restore unto me the joy of thy salvation; and uphold me with thy free spirit.

13 Then will I teach transgressors thy ways; and sinners shall be converted unto thee.

14 Deliver me from bloodguiltiness, O God, thou God of my salvation: and my tongue shall sing aloud of thy righteousness.

15 O Lord, open thou my lips; and my mouth shall shew forth thy praise.

16 For thou desirest not sacrifice; else would I give it: thou delightest not in burnt offering.

17 The sacrifices of God are a broken spirit: a broken and a contrite heart, O God, thou wilt not despise.

18 Do good in thy good pleasure unto Zion: build thou the walls of Jerusalem.

19 Then shalt thou be pleased with the sacrifices of righteousness, with burnt offering and whole burnt offering: then shall they offer bullocks upon thine altar.

But as many as received him, to them gave he power to become the sons of God, even to them that believe on his name (John 1:12)

redleghunter  posted on  2014-11-01   22:53:21 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#90. To: hondo68 (#83)

Is that Gilligan from Gilligan's Island?

But as many as received him, to them gave he power to become the sons of God, even to them that believe on his name (John 1:12)

redleghunter  posted on  2014-11-01   22:55:52 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#91. To: redleghunter (#90)

Is that Gilligan from Gilligan's Island?

No, it's Maynard G. Krebs from the show Dobie Gillis.

Gilligan was a beatnik before that three hour tour.


The D&R terrorists hate us because we're free, to vote second party


"We (government) need to do a lot less, a lot sooner" ~Ron Paul

Hondo68  posted on  2014-11-01   23:42:04 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#92. To: Vicomte13 (#86)

Once you find Christ and are baptized, your past sins are indeed completely washed away. But if you commit new sins after that, then you've got to ask God for forgiveness, and he will forgive you TO THE EXTENT THAT you forgive other men their sins.

Do you believe that you have to be baptized to be saved? If so what do you base that on sir?

A K A Stone  posted on  2014-11-02   0:54:19 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#93. To: Liberator (#35)

You tell me that all I have to do is cop to a fraud and I will NOT get tortured to death?

"Fraud"?? "Death"? Sorry, not following that supposition.

Putting myself in the place of the Apostles.....with my life literally being threatened by a horrible, painful death and all I have to do is say "it was all make believe" and I'd get to live?

But they didn't say that, none of them did.

If it were me, and the whole Jesus story was made up in part BY me, I would have confessed in order to save my own skin.

Not one of those guys did that.

That tells me a lot.

4 givan 1  posted on  2014-11-02   9:51:10 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#94. To: 4 givan 1 (#93)

If it were me, and the whole Jesus story was made up in part BY me, I would have confessed in order to save my own skin.

Not one of those guys did that.

That tells me a lot.

Very good point that I had never considered.

A K A Stone  posted on  2014-11-02   10:00:36 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#95. To: Liberator (#62)

I'm surprised meggy hasn't demanded the heads of all "intolerants". Or will that be coming later?

“Political correctness is a doctrine, fostered by a delusional, illogical minority, and rapidly promoted by mainstream media, which holds forth the proposition that it is entirely possible to pick up a turd by the clean end.”

CZ82  posted on  2014-11-02   10:21:57 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#96. To: 4 givan 1, out damned spot (#93)

Putting myself in the place of the Apostles.....with my life literally being threatened by a horrible, painful death and all I have to do is say "it was all make believe" and I'd get to live?

But they didn't say that, none of them did.

Aaah, ok. Thanks for the clarification, 4gi. Really hard sometimes to understand context and gists in posts.

I don't think the apostles wanted to die...but it was easier to do so than deny God and Jesus. Look at all the Middle Eastern Christians doing the same, and accepting their beheading fate rather than denying Christ instead of converting. True martyrs.

If it were me, and the whole Jesus story was made up in part BY me, I would have confessed in order to save my own skin.

Not one of those guys did that.

That tells me a lot.

Well yes -- maybe in the "Save-My-Own-Skin" mode you're in at the moment you can't quite relate. But when push came/comes to shove, you just might surprise yourself and take the bullet at the moment of truth. When you "shook the dust from your sandals" at LP, you did it reflexively without even thinking. You knew it was the ONLY thing to do. When the moment of truth arrives, IF it arrives in our lifetime, many of us may have to make that same decision. I know some may chuckle at that notion, but we ARE in the last days in my opinion (and I know Spot agrees with me.)

Liberator  posted on  2014-11-02   12:43:58 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#97. To: CZ82, redleghunter (#95)

I'm surprised meggy hasn't demanded the heads of all "intolerants". Or will that be coming later?

Homo-San would add "intolerants" to his list of "homophobes" and "haters." AS he and his warped hypocritical ilk order the mass Waffen-SS style executions.

Think about this for a moment -- to the Homos, the Fascist Left, militant Atheists....AND Muslims, WE are considered "infidels."

Liberator  posted on  2014-11-02   12:48:13 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#98. To: redleghunter, hondo68, CZ82 (#90)

Is that Gilligan from Gilligan's Island?

Lol...As opposed to "Gilligan" from LP??

As hondo confirmed, this "Gilligan" is Maynard Krebs from Dobie Gillis (those of us old enough to remember.)

As to "Gilligan" from Gilligan's Island, can someone tell me how HE wasn't gay in that show? Mary-Ann and Ginger were all over him...and yet, it wuz all he could do to avoid those smooches and quickly run back to the Skipper (no, NOT H'up)

Liberator  posted on  2014-11-02   12:53:12 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#99. To: Redleghunter, Vicomte13 (#82)

We should not only observe the words of Christ but His actions of mercy, kindness and longsuffering. The Greatest act of all being crucified for the ransom of many.

Matthew 20:

27 And whosoever will be chief among you, let him be your servant:

28 Even as the Son of man came not to be ministered unto, but to minister, and to give his life a ransom for many....

After the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ we have this:

Luke 24:

46 And said unto them, Thus it is written, and thus it behooved Christ to suffer, and to rise from the dead the third day:

47 And that repentance and remission of sins should be preached in his name among all nations, beginning at Jerusalem...

Which also Paul confirms all the apostles preached the same Gospel:

1 Corinthians 15:

Moreover, brethren, I declare unto you the gospel which I preached unto you, which also ye have received, and wherein ye stand;

2 By which also ye are saved, if ye keep in memory what I preached unto you, unless ye have believed in vain.

Worthy of further contemplation.

Moreover, we need to bear in mind that not only are the Gospels a definitive authority of instruction of faithfulness, holiness, addressing sin and the redemptive reason for Christ's death...but also the Epistles. Paul wields as the same authority as he speaks on behalf Jesus on all matters -- including the subject of "ransom."

Liberator  posted on  2014-11-02   13:10:24 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#100. To: Vicomte13 (#85) (Edited)

The Law of Moses, on its own terms, was a covenant between YHWH and the Hebrews there in the Sinai and their circumcised lineal descendants. And the covenant was: Do this, and you'll get a secure farm in Israel.

I didn't have any relatives standing there in the Sinai, I'm not an heir to that covenant, and God never promised me and my folks anything for not eating pork.

So ever since God told Noah and his sons they could eat any animals, it's been licit for me and my line to eat pork. The Torah after about Genesis 11 never applied to them (and by extension me) either before or after Jesus, and probably didn't apply to you and your'n either.

Your points are well taken about the laws for Jews and Gentile.

God *did* give the reasons why the meat of shellfish, pork, and birds of prey were considered dirty and unsanitary.

Liberator  posted on  2014-11-02   13:14:40 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#101. To: Vicomte13 (#86) (Edited)

Christians are judged by the deeds, and the standards that Christ set are high, that is true. And Christ set the standard, too, when men fall short.

As you readily concede, it can be said that the standard is SO high that ALL men fall short.

"He did not say that it was all covered by his death, not at all."

Revelation 21…5And He who sits on the throne said, "Behold, I am making all things new." And He said, "Write, for these words are faithful and true." 6Then He said to me, "It is done. I am the Alpha and the Omega, the beginning and the end. I will give to the one who thirsts from the spring of the water of life without cost. 7"He who overcomes will inherit these things, and I will be his God and he will be My son.…

We note a promise. "It is done" (indicated by Jesus redemptive blood.) And the "water of life" for those who are faithful in accepting His Sacrifice and Grace.

There is a strain of theology that essentially sets everything Jesus said aside and says that it's all about the blood. It's an interesting theory, but it isn't based on what Christ SAID, and after all, HE was God, not the Christian theologians. So I'll stick with Christ on this one: what you do matters, there's a (short) list of "Don't dos". Once you find Christ and are baptized, your past sins are indeed completely washed away. But if you commit new sins after that, then you've got to ask God for forgiveness, and he will forgive you TO THE EXTENT THAT you forgive other men their sins.

I disagree here. No, I don't believe in such a "strain of theology" that essentially dismisses Christ's "DO's and DON'Ts" instructions and ground rules.

The "Our Father" is a prayer to God asking for the Holy Spirit to infuse us with encouragement in deed. BECAUSE WE ARE WEAK AND PRONE TO SIN:

"...And forgive us our debts,
As we forgive our debtors.
And do not lead us into temptation,
But deliver us from the evil one." (NKJV)

In layman's terms, YES, in the finality, "past sins" ARE "washed away" by the blood of Jesus Christ in a pure act of Grace to those accepting this gift. This is not heresy or a misunderstand. ANY admission into the Kingdom of God is based on nothing BUT grace, since NONE of us are worthy. Even IF we've achieved all those "good deeds," and acts of "forgiveness," what about all the other sins left sullying our "account"? Still we remain sinners. "IT. IS. DONE." What's it mean to you, Vic?

No one is saying that the importance and requirements of good deeds and forgiveness commanded by Jesus is to be ignored or dismissed. But by THAT criteria, man will still fall short of sinlessness in God's Kingdom because...he is "man." Thus man remains condemned without Jesus blood paid as ransom for an imperfect, sinful man.

Liberator  posted on  2014-11-02   14:05:50 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#102. To: Liberator (#101)

No one is saying that the importance and requirements of good deeds and forgiveness commanded by Jesus is to be ignored or dismissed. But by THAT criteria, man will still fall short of sinlessness in God's Kingdom because...he is "man." Thus man remains condemned without Jesus blood paid as ransom for an imperfect, sinful man.

Same book, Revelation chapter 7:

13 And one of the elders answered, saying unto me, What are these which are arrayed in white robes? and whence came they?

14 And I said unto him, Sir, thou knowest. And he said to me, These are they which came out of great tribulation, and have washed their robes, and made them white in the blood of the Lamb.(KJV)

The apostles emphasized we are saved by God's Grace. It was the subject of the Jerusalem council:

Acts 15:

7 And when there had been much disputing, Peter rose up, and said unto them, Men and brethren, ye know how that a good while ago God made choice among us, that the Gentiles by my mouth should hear the word of the gospel, and believe.

8 And God, which knoweth the hearts, bare them witness, giving them the Holy Ghost, even as he did unto us;

9 And put no difference between us and them, purifying their hearts by faith.

10 Now therefore why tempt ye God, to put a yoke upon the neck of the disciples, which neither our fathers nor we were able to bear?

11 But we believe that through the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ we shall be saved, even as they. (KJV)

The message throughout all epistles is we are saved by Grace through faith in Jesus Christ; His sacrifice is for the remission of sins; and all those who follow Him will obey Him.

From 1John 1:

5 This then is the message which we have heard of him, and declare unto you, that God is light, and in him is no darkness at all.

6 If we say that we have fellowship with him, and walk in darkness, we lie, and do not the truth:

7 But if we walk in the light, as he is in the light, we have fellowship one with another, and the blood of Jesus Christ his Son cleanseth us from all sin.

8 If we say that we have no sin, we deceive ourselves, and the truth is not in us.

9 If we confess our sins, he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins, and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness.

10 If we say that we have not sinned, we make him a liar, and his word is not in us. (KJV)

God will not be mocked. If we say we walk with Him, and then go to a brothel, we are liars.

It has always been Trust and Obey.

But as many as received him, to them gave he power to become the sons of God, even to them that believe on his name (John 1:12)

redleghunter  posted on  2014-11-02   18:58:55 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#103. To: Liberator (#98)

and yet, it wuz all he could do to avoid those smooches and quickly run back to the Skipper (no, NOT H'up)

Wonder if meggy went to his funeral?

“Political correctness is a doctrine, fostered by a delusional, illogical minority, and rapidly promoted by mainstream media, which holds forth the proposition that it is entirely possible to pick up a turd by the clean end.”

CZ82  posted on  2014-11-03   7:04:53 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#104. To: Liberator (#72)

Protestants are more heavily invested in Genesis because it happens to provide the foundation for the rest of Scripture. Genesis sez God's Creation took exactly 6 Days. He rested on the seventh. I don't know if there's much to debate other than whether one believes Genesis' Creation is an allegory, believes "one day" is figurative, or chooses to believe some parts of Genesis, but not others.

To me, the issue is to read EXACTLY what Genesis says.

Now, to REALLY do that, you have to do it in Hebrew, and you can't even look at just the words, you have to look at the old hieroglyphic-pictographic letters in which it was originally written. Each word is composed of pictographs, and those pictographs THEMSELVES spell out a sentence. So, the words have a surface meaning, but the words are themselves sentences that also carry the meaning of the pictographic sentence of which the word is composed. And the pictographs themselves are words that convey a meaning.

When one looks at these three levels of meaning, a fractal picture emerges. God inspired this text, and God has a divine mind and can do things at multiple levels that we can see if we look, but that we could never do. Especially not in the first piece of literature written in a given language.

So, where there is ambiguity in meaning on the surface, the pictures beneath the surface bring what is meant into sharp relief, and the sub-pictographic words do too.

Translation erases all of this. If the translation is good, the surface meaning is conveyed. The surface meaning is important - the fractal sub- meanings don't contradict it but amplify and clarify it - so if we just look at a good English translation, we have the surface meaning, but we don't have the clarification support, so we have to be careful not to drift.

Some assertions can be made that are plausible on the surface meaning in English, but that don't hold up when the deeper Hebrew details are examined.

Still, in the case of creation, the surface English meaning serves us reasonably well.

"Day" is defined on the first day of creation as "Light", and "Night" is defined as darkness. A day is the evening and the morning. IF we read that to mean the period of darkness and light, then we do have the alternation of dark and light on the first day, second day, third day, fourth day and thereafter, but something changes completely on the fourth day.

This is important for understanding time.

A "day" is always the alternation of darkness and light, but the Sun and Moon and stars are not placed in the sky to regulate the day and night and times and seasons. There is no yardstick by which to measure the passage of time until the fourth day.

After the fourth day, the alternation of day and night in a day is the result of the earth turning and the sun passing overhead, the seasons are measured out by the moon, etc. But before the fourth day none of those things exist. A "day" is the period of darkness and light, but there is no celestial clock for its measurement.

So, there is no basis at all in Scripture to conclude that the first four days were 24 hour solar days. They were periods of light and dark, to be sure, but how long the light or dark lasted is not told to us.

It is wrong to take the English word "day" and say that a "day" to US is 24 hours, and THEREFORE that means that the first 4 days were 24 hours. That is quite ridiculous. For God DEFINED "day" as meaning "the light". He didn't give a time span for the light.

So, what Genesis actually says (in English) is that there were four alternating periods of light and dark in which light was made, the sky was stretched out, land and sea were separated, the beginnings of plant life were placed into the land, and the sun, moon and stars were placed. How LONG those days were is not said, and cannot be surmised.

Specifically, to assert that a solar "day", OUR use of the word" is what existed before the fourth day is imposing upon the text and adding a strict detail to Scripture without any authority at all. God DEFINED what a day was, and he didn't define it like that.

So, whomever asserts that the first four days were 24 hour solar days is flat out wrong. It's not a matter of opinion. The solar day did not, and could not, exist until God made the sun, and he didn't do that until the FOURTH day. The fourth day ENDED with the Sun being there, but it did not BEGIN so, so we don't have any concept of its length either.

The first four days are of unknown length. They were periods of alternation of light and dark. That's all we know from the English.

For evolutionary purposes, all of the animals came to be on the fifth and sixth days, and those WERE solar days. So, by Scripture, the flying creatures and swimming creatures began to be made on one day, and the land animals, including man, began to be made on the very next day. All of this was completed on the seventh day, which was a solar day.

So, when you say that Genesis sez God's Creation took exactly 6 days, I say that's not right. It took six days and PART OF the seventh, for Genesis, in the English, tells you that on the seventh day God COMPLETED the creation he had begun to make.

In the Hebrew this is even clearer, for on all of the earlier days of creation, the verbs are imperfect verbs, meaning that God began to create thus and so, not fully created. Creation wasn't complete until the 7th day, and then God rested.

Otherwise, it is true that there are 7 days, but days 1 through 4 are periods of light and dark, not 24 hour solar days. Only after the creation of the sun on the 4th day were solar days visible and possible. The first complete solar day, that began and ended as such, was the fifth day.

We cannot say that solar days were exactly 24 hours then. They may have been somewhat faster (18 hours).

So yes, Genesis does indeed have all animal life beginning to be created on two solar days (and completed on a third). And those days are probably somewhere in the ballpark of 24 hours. But we can't state how long the first four days were, because there was no sun, moon and stars by which to measure out time as we experience it. The first four days may have been seconds long, or they may have been eons long. There is no way of knowing. That they were periods of evening and morning, light and dark - THAT we know.

When the animals were created, then we're talking about recognizable solar days.

This doesn't offer any solace to evolutionists at all: animals were created over the course of three days (fifth, sixth and part of the seventh).

But it also means that we have to stop short of creationists who go past Scripture and assert things that Scripture doesn't say (in English or otherwise).

The earth and stars MAY be billions of years old, if those first days, light and dark, were long periods. But animals came to be on three solar days.

Now, when we go into the Hebrew, we discover that the word we translate as "light" is the word AWR, which we'd transcript as "OR". This is the root of "order", "ordinance", "ordain". Pictographically, this is God - El - linked to the head. There are overlapping concepts here. The fundamental message is that from the original conditions of God's spirit hovering in blackness over the primordial chaos, the mem, God said "let there be ORDER", and God brings order out of the chaos. The order and organization is the period of day.

What is "light"? Light is the visible form of energy. And what is necessary to overcome entropy and chaos? Energy. A trilogy of ideas come together here, and link to God's breath/spirit over the chaos of the dark mem, the abyss.

Now consider of what the universe is composed. Mostly hydrogen and helium. And at absolute zero, in the complete absence of energy (or at extremely low levels - after all, God's spirit was moving the surface of the waters - think of the foam at the level of Plank's Constant), what are hydrogen and helium? They are a liquid.

Now think of the "earth" land - matter -being dissolved into that mass of liquid - unformed, invisible, "void" - waiting to be divided out of it.

Here, to see the deeper features, we'd have to go into the Hebrew. Just sticking with the English, though, there's a striking set of facts in the text that correspond to much of the physics.

The abiogenetic evolution of species, however, simply did not and could not occur in the 3 days of animal life being created and completed in the Genesis account.

Genesis IS important. I don't personally believe that it's an allegory. I think it's revealed history. But what is actually REVEALED is the history, and what is actually revealed is different on the granular details than what is said to be revealed by some of the Protestant creationists.

Do these differences in details matter? As far as the details go, no, they are irrelevant. God made it all. God made the animals. But the way of looking at Scripture does matter. The Scripture says what it says, and I am very stubborn about insisting that it means what it SAYS. It does not say that creation was done in six days. It says six and part of the seventh. And it does not say six 24-hour periods. Functionally, that latter thing shouldn't matter because it DOES say that animals were made on two solar days (and part of a third), but there could be billions of years of planetary globules floating around in the dark before the fourth day. The length of the early days, before animals, is NOT said, and the it is NOT a solar day, because the solar days don't exist until the fourth day and afterwards.

This sort of punctiliousness about Scripture matters, because later on, when we get into Christian doctrine, we're going to be wrestling over a few lines of Paul versus lines of Jesus, and arguing about authorities. So, Genesis is the testing ground. What it says, as far as it goes and where it stops, is really pretty clear. Traditional interpretation has run past what the text actually SAYS, and that's a bad habit of mind that I think should be cut off with Genesis. Example: Christians say how hard the law is, that we can't follow it. Really? Jesus said that the following things will get you thrown into the fire: Murder, sexual immorality, lying, dealing drug "magic", idolatry and cowardice. I don't think that's such a hard law to follow, and I think it's a lie to say that we can't follow that. I follow that. It is not hard to not murder people, not deal in drugs, not follow magic, not worship false gods. It can be harder not to engage in sexual immorality, not to lie and not to be a coward., but it isn't all THAT hard. I recall the honor code at Annapolis, how lying would get you expelled. I recall being very conscious of it all, and I recall wondering how I could possibly get by without fibbing. The answer is, pretty well. I told no lies nor fibs, nor lying by omissions, throughout my time there. In fact, not lying greatly enhances your courage. You tell the truth, you get yelled at sometimes. And the world does not end. Sexual immorality? You have to look at what God said sexual immorality is. Is it hard not to have gay sex? Is it hard not to have sex with animals? Is it hard not to cheat on your wife? Actually, no, really it's not hard. So, I dispute - I deny outright - that it is all that hard to follow the Law of Jesus. Jesus said "My yoke is easy and my burden is light", and for the most part that's right, unless you're addicted to drugs or power or money or flesh or lies. So, what's all this endless business about how the law is too hard and nobody can follow it. That's not true! What has happened is that people have decided that The Law of Moses, given at Sinai to the Hebrews, is "the law". It's not. That was the law FOR THE HEBREWS. Are you a Jew? No. It never applied to you. Christ's coming didn't MAKE it apply to you. The covenant with Abraham was that his descendants would fill that land forever. Arabs and Jews are both descended from Abraham, and that's who fills that land. So, God upheld those covenants, both with Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, and also with Hagar and Ishmael. And none of that has a thing to do with a Sami Basque Celt like me, or with whatever sort of Gentile you are either. And then there's the Law of Moses: all of you circumcised Hebrews here at Sinai - do this all and I'll give you a secure farm in Canaan and prosperity. Refuse to obey and I'll take it away. Not one word in that about eternal life. Nothing. Are you a circumcised Hebrew, or a descendant of them? Even if you were, do you want a farm in Israel? You won't have it regardless unless a certain number of other similar circumcised Hebrews follow all the laws with you. Are all of those Hebrew commandments - 613 of them by tradition (I could fewer) - really "impossible" to do? I don't know, and I don't care either, because even if I did all of them, I'm not a Hebrew and all that covenant ever offered was a farm in Israel. The deal I'm interested in is Jesus' new covenant. He said I had to follow HIS commandments. And he gave a "bare minimum" list at the end of Scripture. On the last page of Scripture he twice gave the list of things that will earn you the fire and lose you your life: Murder. Not committing murder isn't hard unless you take up the sword as a profession. Sexual immorality. Not committing buggery or bestiality is not a hardship. There is certainly a temptation to adultery and to harlotry, but it is a temptation that men certainly can master. I've mastered it. This is hardly an overwhelming demand for normal people. Lying. Not lying is demanding. It goes hand in hand with not being a coward. Not engaging in pharmakeia. What's that? It's purveying mind-altering drugs to bring on magical hallucinogenic states. I've never done drugs and don't have to resist that temptation. I feel for those who are addicted. They have opened themselves to demons. But note well, pharmakeia isn't being a drug ADDICT, it's being a drug PEDDLER. The poor addict was stupid and got himself infected with devils. But the pharmakon is the guy who sold it to him. Jesus forgives people who have fallen into addiction. He hurls the dealers into the fire though. No, you are NOT FORGIVEN BY THE BLOOD OF CHRIST if, being a Christian, you continue to SELL mind-altering drugs to infect people with demons. Not engaging in idolatry. Well, I believe in God, in El Elyon, God most high, maker of heaven and earth, of all things visible or invisible. And I believe that Jesus was his only begotten son - the only one he FATHERED in the FLESH, and that one has to follow Jesus by doing what Jesus said. And I believe that God breathes out his spirit upon the world. That is what I believe. Jesus told me to pray to the Father, so that's who I pray to. I walk with Jesus, and I pray with him to the Father. This is not idolatry. There is nothing remotely idolatrous about it. And that is obeying the laws that will get a man thrown into the fire if he breaks them. The rest - well, that determines one's status and proximity to God in the City at the end. Those who didn't commit the damnable offenses but who were sour, bitter, unloving, uncaring and hectoring of others - they don't get the fire, they followed Christ, but they didn't follow him well, so they end up in a little apartment in the far corner of the City of God. It's eternal life in the city, and that's wonderful, but it's at a level appropriate to their relative lack of compassion and forgiveness. Those who give all and do all, they are much closer to the head table and the throne. None of this should be surprising. It's all there IN Scripture, right out Jesus' mouth. I don't like it when I hear that the law of Jesus is impossible to follow. No it isn't. That's calling Christ a liar! "My yoke is easy and my burden is light" is what HE said, and that means that NO, it is NOT TRUE that his law is brutally hard to follow and his yoke is heavy. Jesus wasn't lying to us. His yoke is easy. But it IS still a yoke. And there are rules. The things that are most important he listed twice at the end of the Scripture. THAT is the law you have to follow if you want to see heaven. And no, it is really not that hard.

Vicomte13  posted on  2014-11-03   10:16:57 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#105. To: redleghunter (#104)

See above.

This shouldn't be as hard as it always is.

Vicomte13  posted on  2014-11-03   10:17:56 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#106. To: Liberator (#101)

As you readily concede, it can be said that the standard is SO high that ALL men fall short.

I don't think so.

Christ set the standard for the lake of fire twice on the last page or two of Scripture:

Don't: murder, commit sexual immorality, lie, engage in pharmakeia or idolatry or be a coward.

That's not such a high standard that nobody can meet it. In fact, with a change of heart, wrought by Christ, it's a pretty easy standard to meet. It's a high standard, but it's not a particularly hard one.

His yoke is easy and his burden is light.

Christianity is about following Jesus by doing what he said to do and not doing what he said not to do. That is the marrow of the religion.

Vicomte13  posted on  2014-11-03   11:00:15 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#107. To: Liberator (#96)

I know some may chuckle at that notion, but we ARE in the last days in my opinion (and I know Spot agrees with me.)

My wife and I were playfully "arguing" over that very thing recently and I "won" when I suggested that maybe she is right. Maybe the pre-trib rapture IS correct.....it already happened and Jesus took all 4 of those who were His......

My couch is rather uncomfortable. ;o)

4 givan 1  posted on  2014-11-03   11:17:56 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#108. To: Vicomte13, liberator (#105)

This shouldn't be as hard as it always is.

There are two "operatives" in our (many posters not just you and me) discussions. The first being God's redemptive Grace through the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ. Which we are taught Christ is the propitiation for our sins the mercy seat. The second being the holy standard required of Christians as commanded by Christ and exhorted and instructed by the apostles in the NT.

So yes the above is foundational to the Christian faith, and are not mutually exclusive. They can't be.

Of all the apostles who we have epistles from, John communicated Trust and Obey in the same thought or "paragraph". So it is not easy to pluck isolated verses from John to come up with a "works based" soteriology nor a disobedient faithless "walk." AKA antinomian belief structure.

And you are right. The changed heart and mind seeks the things of God, His Son and strives to walk in the footsteps of Christ. That is our sanctification. And we are to have the same trust and obedience in sanctification as we did as being justified by His Grace. As we are to have the faith, hope and love of our eventual glorification with Christ at His second coming.

So yes not difficult. It's all there in the text and written on our hearts and minds. Trust and Obey, there is no other way to be happy in Jesus but to trust and obey.

But as many as received him, to them gave he power to become the sons of God, even to them that believe on his name (John 1:12)

redleghunter  posted on  2014-11-03   12:08:13 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#109. To: redleghunter (#108)

Thanks.

Vicomte13  posted on  2014-11-03   13:33:47 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#110. To: A K A Stone, liberator, GarySpFc (#92)

Do you believe that you have to be baptized to be saved?

I'll try and take a swing. In NT (mostly Acts) we see those who heard the Gospel and believe were baptized. The only example of a believer who was not baptized was the repentant criminal on the cross. Of course that was before Pentecost and the situation where a sinner had direct contact with Christ and was sure to die in minutes or hours.

What do we see the disciples and apostles do in Acts? They believed, were filled with the Holy Spirit and then immediately got in the water to be baptized.

Probably the best explanation I have seen comes from an acquaintance of GarySpFc(Gary maybe we can have Greg Finch get an account here. Goldi never approved his account, I'm sure Stone will). It is posted at Gary's site evidenceforjesuschrist.org:

The following is authored by Mr. Greg Finch:

Christian Baptism

Since the Protestant Reformation, the issue of baptism has been a source of much controversy. While arguments about doctrine have become less prevalent in recent years as such topics have become less in vogue, there continues to be disagreement over this subject – though it seems as though it ought to be a relatively straightforward and simple topic.

This piece is not a comprehensive study of all the various issues associated with baptism with a lengthy series of ‘proof texts’ – there are plenty of articles like that which have been written over the years. Instead, I am addressing this to an audience of believers who have heard confusingly competing teachings about this subject, and who may have ended up being not quite sure what to believe. Rather than seeking to present a series of logical, ‘air-tight arguments,’ I will simply present how I think about the issues associated with baptism, as well as address some of the most common questions.

Underlying Roots of Differing Views

Much of the controversy seems to me to be rooted in a battle between: 1) the Roman Catholic view of baptism; 2) the Sola Fide view of the Reformationists; 3) an Enlightenment-era (and Hellenistically-rooted) view that ‘spiritual things’ matter, whereas ‘physical things’ (with baptism being a physical act) are ultimately ‘of this world’ and therefore do not.

In keeping with the early creeds and writings of the Church Fathers, many Protestants continue to view baptism as a sacrament – a ‘means of grace,’ as opposed to a ceremonial symbol with no real spiritual significance.

Since the Reformation, however, for others the Sola Fide tenet often seems to have been used to create a false dichotomy that prevents any real significance from being assigned to this ritual at all. Some even seem to feel as though they are ‘doing the work of God’ by emphatically insisting that this biblical ritual is totally unnecessary and even superfluous.

Though it was a universal practice in the early church and is spoken of on numerous occasions within the New Testament (including Jesus’ direct instructions in the Great Commission), for whatever reason, many churches today don’t characterize baptism as being all that important, or even significant enough to include a mention of it in their Statement of Faith.

In looking at the various arguments, I do believe this very ‘low view’ of baptism emerged largely as a knee-jerk reaction against what they saw as attributing to the waters of baptism some sort of a mystical power (apart from faith), rather than an intentional desire to ignore the teachings of Scripture (and the example of Jesus) which paint baptism as a practice that was intended to be an integral element of the Christian faith.

While I understand and appreciate much of the thinking and motivation of the 16th-century Reformationists, I would nonetheless advocate for a return to classic Christianity rather than using a theological formula from the 16th century as the litmus test for doctrinal truth. Measuring one’s doctrine and theology against a 16th-century standard – or, for that matter, a 19th-century American revivalist view – is simply not as safe or as wise as relying on the Scriptures as the ultimate source of theological and doctrinal truth.

Recent Changes in Christian Thinking

All that being said, believer baptism has actually become more prevalent in recent years, as fewer ‘exegetes’ have sought to define and defend a comprehensive systematic theology that seeks to excise the need for such a physical expression of faith.

In today’s less doctrinaire and more experiential world, new converts have increasingly chosen not only to take the passages pertaining to baptism at face value, but they have also found there to be much meaning found in a physical ritual that signifies the death, burial, and resurrection of Christ – and which emulates the way Christ himself began his own ministry.

Even members of denominations that historically have not practiced believers’ baptism increasingly have sought to identify both with Christ and the early Christians, and requested baptism as an adult.

Such an approach makes a good deal more sense than losing the importance of baptism in favor of a rationalistic debate over the question of the exact instant at which a person ‘crosses over from death to life’ – with the answer to which being one where I would simply defer to God. I would propose that we collectively quit ‘arguing about words’ (2 Timothy 2:14) and instead simply seek to do what God told us to do, and to practice this most ancient and significant of ceremonies as a part of our commitment to the Lord Jesus Christ.

Does being baptized constitute an attempt to earn one’s salvation?

Some have made the claim that to attach any real significance to baptism transforms it into a ‘meritorious work’ that one is performing in order to earn their salvation.

In Colossians 2:12, Paul notes that the active agent in baptism is God, not man, however – and that the person being baptized is actually a passive recipient:

…having been buried with Him in baptism, in which you were also raised up with Him through faith in the working of God, who raised Him from the dead.

Such language is not at all consistent with the argument that baptism is something the recipient is doing in an effort to ‘earn their salvation.’ Rather, it is a ritual where a covenant is sealed – not unlike a marriage ceremony – and it is clearly linked to “faith in the working of God.”

Saved by Christ Alone

When it comes to religious controversies, the issue of erroneous ‘category assignment’ is the source of many problems. Many disputes are rooted in false conflicts between concepts that simply belong at different levels of a hierarchy of belief. This results in numerous controversies and endless arguments where the Bible is used against itself in often illogical and inherently irresolvable disputes as both sides just ceaselessly and unknowingly argue past one another.

In an effort to circumvent this problem here, I would always want to note that there is but one, single overarching element that alone accounts for our salvation – there is nothing else that belongs in this same category, or at this same level of the ‘hierarchy.’ That one thing is that Christ shed his blood and died on the cross on our behalf. At the most basic and fundamental level, this is the only thing that saves us – the one thing that atones for our sins and allows us to be reconciled with God.

I have often said that it would be important to remember – if you ever find yourself standing in front of God and he were to ask you why you should be allowed to enter heaven – that you most certainly should remember not to tell him it’s because you were baptized . . . or because you have faith . . . or because you ‘tried to live a good Christian life.’ However important these things may be, any one of them at this most fundamental of levels would be the wrong answer – because relying on any of them would be implying that your sins were ultimately being atoned for on the basis of something other than the blood of Christ.

Faith

Going down a level from Christ’s death on the cross, whether a person comes to have faith in Christ is the pivotal element as to whether or not that person will respond in such a way as to be reconciled as a result of what Christ did on the cross. We come to God in faith – we come to believe that Jesus was who he said he was, and we acknowledge in faith that it is by virtue of his death on the Cross that we are able to be reconciled with him.

Repentance

As an element of this, however, once we believe we still have to make a decision as to whether we wish to align ourselves with him or to continue to live a life of rebellion. If we choose to submit our lives to him and his will, in faith, we will repent. This will certainly result in a change in our behavior, but the fundamental element is the surrendering of our will to God – not the improved behavior.

Baptism

Once a decision has been made to turn in faith and repentance to God, the practice we read about in the book of Acts in the early church was to go through a religious ritual – a ceremonial washing. This is what baptism is, and I think of it as being quite analogous to a wedding – a physical ceremony where our covenant with God is sealed.

Salvation

Some have sought to turn the covenant we have with a personal God into something more akin to a legal contract, the benefits of which are obtained seemingly by perfect adherence to a very explicit and exacting set of terms & conditions. This seems a lot like a formula (“Say these magic words in precisely this way!”) by which one becomes legally entitled to forgiveness from God. On its face, this seems to resemble very little that God ever modeled for us in the Scriptures.

Such a mentality often causes its adherents to become consumed by the question, “But, we must establish the point at which someone crosses the threshold from death to life; at what exact moment does an individual become saved?!” – with some even concluding that any misunderstanding regarding the answer to that question renders one’s conversion invalid.

Let’s look at another passage – not related to baptism – but one that could have at least something to say in response to this question. In speaking of the old covenant, in Romans 4:9-11:

We have been saying that Abraham’s faith was credited to him as righteousness. Under what circumstances was it credited? Was it after he was circumcised, or before? It was not after, but before! And he received the sign of circumcision, a seal of the righteousness that he had by faith while he was still uncircumcised.

Though this is a reference to the Old Testament covenant, it seems to indicate that, at least under the old covenant, God considered coming to faith as the pivotal moment when one ‘crossed from death to life’ – even though that was prior to the point when that covenant was actually sealed. Not only was Paul illustrating the continuity between the Old and the New Covenants, but such thinking would also seem to be consistent with what we read in John 5:24:

“I tell you the truth; whoever hears my word and believes him who sent me has eternal life and will not be condemned; he has crossed over from death to life.”

On the flip side, disappointingly and inexplicably, many would-be logicians have pointed to this and other Scriptures to absolve everyone of any need to be baptized at all.

Such an approach to the Bible in general and baptism in particular seems very puzzling. Why would any believer exhibit a refusal to submit to a clear biblical practice such as baptism as some sort of a ‘badge of honor’ – seemingly, I suppose, as proof of what a ‘high view of faith’ they hold – and ascribe some sort of nobility to refusing to acknowledge and submit to the clear words of numerous passages from the Scriptures?

While ultimately we’re saved only by virtue of Christ’s atoning death on the cross, unless you believe everyone has been reconciled with God, one does need to become a Christian.

When we read in the Bible about people becoming Christians, they believed, repented, confessed Christ Jesus as Lord – and they were baptized. This causes me to say that a person isn’t really finished becoming a Christian – they haven’t ‘sealed the covenant’ – until they’ve been baptized.

If someone is trying to find a way to justify not being baptized (perhaps finding a ‘loophole’ by pointing to other passages that state that we are ‘saved by faith’) and subsequently decides not to be baptized, I don’t think they – to use the word in a slightly different way – are acting in ‘good faith.’ For whatever reason, they are looking for something that is analogous to a legal loophole.

In the Great Commission, Christ himself instructs us to be baptized – so why would motivate we even look for such a loophole? Insofar as possible, shouldn’t each of us just desire to do what Christ told us to do?

Do exceptions disprove the rule?

Once someone asserts that baptism is ‘necessary’ or important, however, others quickly pose a mystifying array of theoretical questions about whether it is being asserted that a person isn’t saved until ‘their nose breaks the surface’ on their way up out of the water, about what this means for the (apparently, scores of) people who presumably have been killed in car wrecks on their way to be baptized, or about the fate of someone who comes to faith in Christ while they’re stuck in the middle of the Sahara Desert and dies without being able to be baptized.

I am not seeking to address such extraordinary circumstances here (though I would refer back to the aforementioned passage in Romans 4), but again would simply say that if a person has come to faith in Christ they ought to be baptized, if at all possible.

I find an obsession with questions about extraordinary circumstances or exceptions to the rule to be somewhat distracting, and the motivation for raising them a bit puzzling. I am also reminded of the legal maxim, “Hard cases make bad law” – which highlights the fact that basing normative practices on exceptional, out of the ordinary circumstances is not generally a wise approach. Is simply doing what we were told to do in the face of ordinary circumstances really such a controversial notion?

A Straightforward Approach

For a number of years, I attended a church where the minister spoke in his sermons of what Christ did on the cross, about the need to come to a saving faith in Christ, to commit your life to him, and to be baptized. When someone was baptized, the person performing the ceremony typically read a number of Bible passages about what baptism means, and everyone just did what God said they were supposed to do upon coming to faith in Christ.

Afterwards, everyone was happy that the person had become a Christian. I saw a lot of baptisms, and there were no ‘doctrinal watchdogs’ lurking about, attempting to pin down any of those who were being baptized as to what instant they thought they had ‘crossed over from death to life.’

And that was as far as anyone took it . . . no parsing of words, no trying to bind or reduce God to a set of legal statutes or doctrinal systems – and no derisive observations about any other group’s doctrinal assertions or misconceptions.

This is exactly how I believe God would have us approach this subject. The pivotal element toward which we are working is to bring a person to faith, but they’re not really done becoming a Christian until they’ve been baptized, because that is the ceremony where the covenant is sealed . . . but we need always to keep in mind that the ultimate basis for anyone having their sins forgiven is solely a result of the shed blood of Christ.

I saw a Statement of Faith on one church’s Web site – they said they would “baptize anyone by immersion upon a credible statement of faith” – such an approach seems to make perfect sense. As I said earlier, I’m often troubled and mystified to see how many churches’ Statements of Faith make no mention of baptism at all.

A presentation of the gospel is intended to bring people to where they understand, believe, and commit their lives to Christ – to come to a saving faith in Christ and the power of his blood. Once they’ve come to faith, however, the Scriptures say they are to be baptized. I don’t understand why such a biblical instruction would not even be mentioned in a Statement of Faith – what is the thinking behind such a glaring omission?

So, for anyone who is waiting for an incriminating word to pounce upon, I do believe baptism is ‘required’ – but I do think the use of that word sometimes reflects a skewed way of thinking about Christianity. It can easily be construed so as to reduce salvation to a formulaic set of ‘legal requirements,’ making some sort of a ‘lawyerly’ argument that involves a parsing of words similar to debating the definition of the word “is” – but that is most certainly not what I am doing here.

Why the Distortions?

In everyone’s defense, I think a good bit of the reason that so many who are at different points on the doctrinal spectrum end up taking such skewed positions is in reaction to excesses associated with someone else’s position . . . with that other side’s position, in turn, being distorted as a result of a distortion they were (correctly) perceiving in the first (or some other) party’s doctrinal assertions. I think this has caused people on all sides of this particular doctrinal divide to inadvertently distort their own positions as a reaction to what they perceive as a wrong perception or level of emphasis on the part of another.

I think this can best be corrected by refusing to formulate our own theology in response to what we perceive as someone else’s misconceptions. Instead, let’s just look at what we were told in a very straightforward manner to do – and then do our best to do it.

Baptismal Practices

One additional note . . . while I am not horrified when I hear of a church that offers baptismal services only 2-4 times per year, this practice does seem to me to be out of sync with the spirit of the commands and examples we see in the Bible. Those examples clearly indicate that the normative practice in the early church was to be baptized as soon as one came to faith in Christ. This practice is not difficult to understand, as it seems logical that one would wish to seal the covenant they were entering into with God in the way He had ordained as soon as they were able.

Certainly the waters of baptism possess no magical power – we are saved solely by the power and as a result of the grace of God – but baptism was clearly regarded in the 1st-century church as a normative part of a Christian conversion, and I can find no reason not to regard it in that same way today.

Bible Passages – About Baptism / Examples of Baptism

Below is a cataloguing of many passages that pertain to and illustrate examples of New Testament baptism. Though some will respond that some of these passages are referring to a ‘spiritual baptism’ that has nothing to do with a baptism in water, I have never been able to come to any conclusion other than that the sum total of all these passages clearly indicate that the early church practiced baptism in water.

I have seen some of these verses elicit a very hostile reaction on the part of some, but am providing no additional commentary here as to what any of these passages mean – I am simply cataloguing them to be read, meditated upon, and harmonized by the reader – hopefully, with an eye toward coming to understand them in the way the original authors intended that they be understood.

Passages Pertaining to Baptism

• Romans 6:3-6 – Or don’t you know that all of us who were baptized into Christ Jesus were baptized into his death? We were therefore buried with him through baptism into death in order that, just as Christ was raised from the dead through the glory of the Father, we too may live a new life.

If we have been united with him in his death, we will certainly also be united with him in his resurrection. For we know that our old self was crucified with him so that the body of sin might be rendered powerless, that we should no longer be slaves to sin - because anyone who has died has been freed from sin.

• Matthew 28:18-20 – Then Jesus came to them and said, “All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me. Therefore go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, and teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you.”

• Mark 16:16 – [Then Jesus] said to them, “Go into all the world and preach the good news to all creation. Whoever believes and is baptized will be saved, but whoever does not believe will be condemned.”

• Acts 2:38-39, 41 – Peter replied, “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. This promise is for you and your children and for all who are far off - for all whom the Lord our God will call.”

Those who accepted his message were baptized, and about three thousand were added to their number that day.

• Acts 22:16 – “And now what are you waiting for? Get up, be baptized and wash your sins away, calling on his name.”

• I Peter 3:21-22 – And this water [of Noah’s flood] symbolizes baptism that now saves you also – not the removal of dirt from the body, but the pledge of a good conscience toward God. It saves you by the resurrection of Jesus Christ, who has gone into heaven and is at God’s right hand – with angels, authorities and powers in submission to him.

• Galatians 3:26-27 – You are all sons of God through faith in Christ Jesus, for all of you who were baptized into Christ have clothed yourselves with Christ.

• Colossians 2:11-12 – In him you were also circumcised, in the putting off of the sinful nature, not with a circumcision done by the hands of men, but with the circumcision done by Christ; having been buried with him in baptism and raised with him through your faith in the power of God, who raised him from the dead.

• Titus 3:5 – . . . he saved us through the washing of rebirth and renewal by the Holy Spirit, whom he poured out on us generously through Jesus Christ our Savior.

• John 3:5 – Jesus answered, “I tell you the truth, unless a man is born of water and the Spirit, he cannot enter the kingdom of God.”

• Matthew 3:13-17 – Then Jesus came from Galilee to the Jordan to be baptized by John. But John tried to deter him, saying, “I need to be baptized by you, and do you come to me?”

Jesus replied, “Let it be so now; it is proper for us to do this to fulfill all righteousness.” Then John consented.

As soon as Jesus was baptized, he went up out of the water. At that moment heaven was opened, and he saw the Spirit of God descending like a dove and lighting on him. A voice from heaven said, “This is my Son, whom I love; with him I am well pleased.”

• Hebrews 10:22 – . . . let us draw near to God with a sincere heart in full assurance of faith, having our hearts sprinkled to cleanse us from a guilty conscience, and having our bodies washed with pure water.

Examples of Baptism

• Acts 2:41 – Those who accepted his message were baptized, and about 3,000 were added to their number that day.

• Acts 8:12-13 – But when they believed Philip as he preached the good news of the kingdom of God and the name of Jesus Christ, they were baptized, both men and women. Simon himself believed and was baptized.

• Acts 8:35-38 – Then Philip began with that very passage of Scripture and told him the good news about Jesus.

As they traveled along the road, they came to some water and the eunuch said, “Look, here is water. Why shouldn’t I be baptized?” And he ordered the chariot to stop. Then both Philip and the eunuch went down into the water and Philip baptized him.

• Acts 10:46-48 – Then Peter said, “Can anyone keep these people from being baptized with water? They have received the Holy Spirit just as we have.” So he ordered that they be baptized in the name of Jesus Christ.

• Acts 16:14-15 – One of those listening was a woman named Lydia, a dealer in purple cloth from the city of Thyatira, who was a worshiper of God. The Lord opened her heart to respond to Paul’s message. When she and the members of her household were baptized, she invited us to her home.

• Acts 16:25-33 – About midnight Paul and Silas were praying and singing hymns to God, and the other prisoners were listening to them. Suddenly there was such a violent earthquake that the foundations of the prison were shaken. At once all the prison doors flew open, and everybody’s chains came loose. The jailer woke up, and when he saw the prison doors open, he drew his sword and was about to kill himself because he thought the prisoners had escaped. But Paul shouted, “Don’t harm yourself! We are all here!”

The jailer called for lights, rushed in and fell trembling before Paul and Silas. He then brought them out and asked, “Sirs, what must I do to be saved?”

They replied, “Believe in the Lord Jesus, and you will be saved - you and your household.” Then they spoke the word of the Lord to him and to all the others in his house. At that hour of the night the jailer took them and washed their wounds; then immediately he and all his family were baptized.

• Acts 18:8 – Crispus, the synagogue ruler, and his entire household believed in the Lord; and many of the Corinthians who heard him believed and were baptized.

• Acts 19:1-5 – While Apollos was at Corinth, Paul took the road through the interior and arrived at Ephesus. There he found some disciples and asked them, “Did you receive the Holy Spirit when you believed?”

They answered, “No, we have not even heard that there is a Holy Spirit.”

So Paul asked, “Then what baptism did you receive?”

“John’s baptism,” they replied.

Paul said, “John’s baptism was a baptism of repentance. He told the people to believe in the one coming after him, that is, in Jesus.” On hearing this, they were baptized in the name of the Lord Jesus.

• Acts 22:14-16 – “The God of our fathers has chosen you to know his will and to see the Righteous One and to hear words from his mouth. You will be his witness to all men of what you have seen and heard. And now what are you waiting for? Get up, be baptized and wash your sins away, calling on His name.”

Above fully posted at evidenceforjesuschrist.org

Above from a Mr. Greg Finch letter to Dr. Gary Butner and posted with permission at evidenceforchrist.org.

But as many as received him, to them gave he power to become the sons of God, even to them that believe on his name (John 1:12)

redleghunter  posted on  2014-11-03   13:44:53 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#111. To: Vicomte13, A K A Stone, GarySpFc, liberator (#109)

http://libertysflame.com/cgi-bin/readart.cgi?ArtNum=36450&Disp=110#C110

My apologies, I thought I pinged you to post #110. We discussed this with Gary and other on LP, but the question of Christian baptism came up with AKA Stone upthread. Thought posting the thoughts of Gary's friend Greg Finch were appropriate to add to this discussion.

But as many as received him, to them gave he power to become the sons of God, even to them that believe on his name (John 1:12)

redleghunter  posted on  2014-11-03   13:48:21 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#112. To: redleghunter (#111)

Baptism: Just do it.

Vicomte13  posted on  2014-11-03   15:24:09 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#113. To: Vicomte13 (#112)

LOL now Nike will take your statement to market goods to Christians.

But as many as received him, to them gave he power to become the sons of God, even to them that believe on his name (John 1:12)

redleghunter  posted on  2014-11-03   17:21:51 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#114. To: redleghunter, ALL (#113)

Brothers,

In 1999 or 2000 I was asked by Linda Holloway, then Chairwoman, of the Kansas School Board to testify before the board during the Kansas Evolution controversy. As I mentioned previously there were reporters from around the world attending, and I would put the number to be at least 1,000. I was the only one testifying against the Darwinists, and the odds were stacked against me 9 to 1. Yesterday, I found the testimony I provided, and I thought you might like to see it.

Evolution, God and Atheism

I would like to say statements to the effect that one can believe in evolution and God's hand working in creation displays an ignorance of Darwin's belief system and what is being taught.

Firstly, if one believes God is using the evolutionary process in creation, then they would use the term "Divine selection," and not "natural selection" as favored by the evolutionists. Evolutionists are very clear that natural selection is an unsupervised, impersonal, and purposelessprocess. In 1995, the official Position Statement of the American National Association of Biology Teachers (NABT) accurately states the general understanding of major science organizations and educators:

"The diversity of life on earth is the outcome of evolution: an unsupervised, impersonal, unpredictable, and natural process of temporal descent with genetic modification that is affected by natural selection, chance, historical contingencies and changing environments."

Or in the words of the famous evolutionist, George Gaylord Simpson, "Man is the result of a purposeless, and natural process that did not have him in mind." I have to ask:

How do they know the process was impersonal? How do they know the process was unsupervised? How do they know the process is purposeless? How do they know the process is mindless?

​Their statements are problematic in that they are unscientific. It cannot be proven that evolutionary processes are "impersonal" or that humans were "not in mind." Science cannot demonstrate these assumptions either way--and that's the problem with their position. They become proponents of a religion of atheistic naturalism; I say religion because their conclusion is NOT science, it is faith. Clearly, their definition is diametrically opposed to any concept of a personal Creator being involved in either a creation or evolutionary process.

​In 1997, theologians Alvin Plantinga and Huston Smith notified NABT that their official position statement was really an implied atheism and went beyond what the scientific evidence for the theory could show. NABT discussed the objection for all of five minutes and voted to continue their position statement.

Later, NABT removed "impersonal" and "unsupervised" from the language after the evolutionist spokesperson Eugenie Scott informed NABT the definition would give Phillip Johnson ammunition in his fight against their position. They still continue to teach evolution is an unsupervised, impersonal, purposeless, and mindless process. Any teacher denying that is either fired or transferred to teaching another subject.

Secondly, in his response to Asa Gray, Darwin specifically stated evolution excludes design. In the view of the great Princeton theologian Charles Hodge, however (as well as every mainstream Christian theologian before the Twentieth Century), excluding design is tantamount to excluding God. Design implies a Designer, God. When one excludes the Designer they have embraced atheism.

Darwin's response to Gray is at the end of his 1868 book, "The Variation of Plants and Animals Under Domestication." Darwin concluded his book with a lengthy refutation of Gray's position. Using the metaphor of a house built by an architect utilizing uncut fragments of stone, Darwin explained that "the fragments of stone, though indispensable to the architect, bear to the edifice built by him the same relation which the fluctuating variations of each organic being bear to the varied and admirable structures ultimately acquired by its modified descendants." The shape of each fragment "may be called accidental, but this is not strictly correct; for the shape of each depends on a long sequence of events, all obeying natural laws." Nevertheless, "in regard to the use to which the fragments may be put, their shape may be strictly said to be accidental." In Darwin's metaphor, of course, the architect is natural selection. Darwin continued:

"Can it be reasonably maintained that the Creator intentionally ordered, if we use the words in any ordinary sense, that certain fragments of rock should assume certain shapes so that the builder might erect his edifice? If the various laws which have determined the shape of each fragment were not predeter-mined for the builder's sake, can it with any greater probability be maintained that He specially ordained for the sake of the breeder each of the innumerable variations in our domestic animals and plants; - many of these variations being of no service to man, and not beneficial, far more often injurious, to the creatures themselves? Did He ordain that the crop and tail-feathers of the pigeon should vary in order that the fancier might make his grotesque pouter and fantail breeds? Did He cause the frame and mental qualities of the dog to vary in order that a breed might be formed of indomitable ferocity, with jaws fitted to pin down the bull for man's brutal sport? But if we give up the principle in one case - if we do not admit that the variations of the primeval dog were intentionally guided in order that the greyhound, for instance, that perfect image of symmetry and vigor, might be formed - no shadow of reason can be assigned for the belief that variations, alike in nature and the result of the same general laws, which have been the groundwork through natural selection of the formation of the most perfectly adapted animals in the world, man included, were intentionally and specially guided."

Americans fought and died for religious liberty, and the right to educate their children in the religion of their choice. Please answer why evolutionists arrogantly DEMAND the right to indoctrinate OUR children into THEIR religion?

Gary Butner, Th.D. Merriam, KS

www.evidenceforJesusChrist.org

GarySpFC  posted on  2014-11-03   18:00:04 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#115. To: redleghunter (#113)

LOL now Nike will take your statement to market goods to Christians.

And what a "Victory" that will be, eh?

Vicomte13  posted on  2014-11-03   18:13:09 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#116. To: GarySpFC, liberator (#114)

Americans fought and died for religious liberty, and the right to educate their children in the religion of their choice. Please answer why evolutionists arrogantly DEMAND the right to indoctrinate OUR children into THEIR religion?

Amazing isn't it. And you presented the testimony over 14 years ago. Now look how deeply embedded the religion of atheism in schools, and now forcing their way into private organizations under the guise of tolerance.

But as many as received him, to them gave he power to become the sons of God, even to them that believe on his name (John 1:12)

redleghunter  posted on  2014-11-03   20:03:24 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#117. To: redleghunter, Vicomte13, A K A Stone, liberator, GarySpFc (#110)

Once someone asserts that baptism is ‘necessary’ or important, however, others quickly pose a mystifying array of theoretical questions about whether it is being asserted that a person isn’t saved until ‘their nose breaks the surface’ on their way up out of the water, about what this means for the (apparently, scores of) people who presumably have been killed in car wrecks on their way to be baptized, or about the fate of someone who comes to faith in Christ while they’re stuck in the middle of the Sahara Desert and dies without being able to be baptized.

I am not seeking to address such extraordinary circumstances here (though I would refer back to the aforementioned passage in Romans 4), but again would simply say that if a person has come to faith in Christ they ought to be baptized, if at all possible.

I find an obsession with questions about extraordinary circumstances or exceptions to the rule to be somewhat distracting, and the motivation for raising them a bit puzzling. I am also reminded of the legal maxim, “Hard cases make bad law” – which highlights the fact that basing normative practices on exceptional, out of the ordinary circumstances is not generally a wise approach. Is simply doing what we were told to do in the face of ordinary circumstances really such a controversial notion?

Thanks for posting that, I thought that it was a very well thought out and reasonable approach to baptism for those coming at it from a Protestant background.

In particular, I liked the portion that I quoted above. The Orthodox Church refers to the "sacraments" as "Mysteries". And a lot of that is just as above, we don't try to dissect and explain how they work, we just do them because Jesus told us to.

And for anyone unfamiliar with Orthodox practice in regards to baptism, while most often it will be performed by ordained clergy, that is not an absolute requirement. In one case a canonized Saint was literally baptized in a pool set up in the Roman arena where people who had professed Christ were being tortured and killed, and this Saint was baptized by a layperson also facing death in the arena in front of the pagan mobs.

So when the situation requires it, a baptism by a layperson is perfectly OK. The Orthodox Church normally baptizes by full immersion, but just like with the exception made for lay baptism when the situation requires it, full immersion isn't rigidly required if it isn't logistically possible (someone facing death in a desert, for example).

In like manner, the Orthodox Church does not re-baptize a Christian who was given a Trinitarian Baptism in some other Christian Church. By this I mean that we would not consider Mormon, Jehovah's Witnesses, or similar sects who do not worship the Holy Trinity to have a valid baptism -- but pretty much any mainstream Protestant or Roman Catholic would be considered to have had a valid Baptism.

If someone from such a confession wished to become a member of the Orthodox Church, they would be received with the Mystery of Chrismation, which is the equivalent of Roman Catholic Confirmation. In Orthodoxy, this anointing with oil is believed to bestow the Holy Spirit upon the believer receiving it.

Orthodoxa  posted on  2014-11-03   20:15:49 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#118. To: Orthodoxa (#117)

Scripture really is not clear on what exactly baptism does, but it is clear that it's important, and that whole families were baptized.

Two virtues of infant baptism, as practiced by the Catholic/Orthodox Churches:

(1) the mystical seal on the child - that "magic" part that the writer denies, but that is real nevertheless, and

(2) children who are baptized and know it may fall away from the faith, but many find their way back eventually, in part no doubt because that seal is tugging at them, and in part because it lurks in their background and is eventually a solace when life turns black and there's no hope. Look at the good it did St. Patrick, for instance. A baptized child has to actually rebel AGAINST the Church to separate himself, while the unbaptized child never felt a part of it in the first place and has to seek it.

Infant baptism is the most effective form of evangelization.

Vicomte13  posted on  2014-11-03   20:36:13 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#119. To: Orthodoxa, redleghunter, Vicomte13, A K A Stone, Don, GarySpFc (#117)

I find an obsession with questions about extraordinary circumstances or exceptions to the rule to be somewhat distracting, and the motivation for raising them a bit puzzling. I am also reminded of the legal maxim, “Hard cases make bad law” – which highlights the fact that basing normative practices on exceptional, out of the ordinary circumstances is not generally a wise approach. Is simply doing what we were told to do in the face of ordinary circumstances really such a controversial notion?

In particular, I liked the portion that I quoted above. The Orthodox Church refers to the "sacraments" as "Mysteries". And a lot of that is just as above, we don't try to dissect and explain how they work, we just do them because Jesus told us to.

Good thread, guys...

NOT that Scripture or Jesus didn't explain why things were/are, but yes, there is something to be said for "because Jesus told us it's so."

Why a lamb sacrificed instead of calf? Why wine instead of grape juice? Why bread instead of any other food-stuff? Scripture is full of symbolism, mostly to either validate, reinforce, or punctuate faith.

Liberator  posted on  2014-11-06   15:54:48 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#120. To: GarySpFC (#114)

Awesome, Gary.

Liberator  posted on  2014-11-06   16:28:50 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#121. To: Orthodoxa (#117)

we just do them because Jesus told us to.

Amen!

As good soldiers would!

But as many as received him, to them gave he power to become the sons of God, even to them that believe on his name (John 1:12)

redleghunter  posted on  2014-11-06   22:31:52 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#122. To: Vicomte13, ALL (#118)

Scripture really is not clear on what exactly baptism does, but it is clear that it's important, and that whole families were baptized.

Two virtues of infant baptism, as practiced by the Catholic/Orthodox Churches:

(1) the mystical seal on the child - that "magic" part that the writer denies, but that is real nevertheless, and

(2) children who are baptized and know it may fall away from the faith, but many find their way back eventually, in part no doubt because that seal is tugging at them, and in part because it lurks in their background and is eventually a solace when life turns black and there's no hope. Look at the good it did St. Patrick, for instance. A baptized child has to actually rebel AGAINST the Church to separate himself, while the unbaptized child never felt a part of it in the first place and has to seek it.

Infant baptism is the most effective form of evangelization.

I am reading "Infant Baptism in Historical erspective," and will report more later. I offer the following excerpt.

An American scholar, Everett Ferguson, in an article in the Journal of Theological Studies in 1979, used the evidence of the inscriptions to argue that infant baptism developed by the regularising of emergency procedures. ‘Tertullian stood at the point where there was pressure from some to extend the emergency measure to other circumstances.’30 Ferguson linked the emergency baptism of children observed in the inscriptions to the influence of John 3:5, ‘the favourite baptismal text of the second century’, which was thought to deny heaven to the unbaptized. ‘The high mortality rate of infants in the ancient world, to which the Christian inscriptions are a powerful if mournful witness, would encourage the practice of giving baptism soon after birth as insurance no matter what might happen.’31
This thesis is not inconsistent with the evidence surveyed so far. It offers an alternative explanation to Jeremias’ of Justin’s failure to mention infants in his account of baptismal practice at Rome at a time when, from Irenaeus’ assertion, we inferred that baby and infant baptism were already being observed there. Justin’s silence would show that the emergency baptism of infants had not by then become the regular baptism of all infants, while Irenaeus might be alluding to the regular practice of emergency baptism of children. Ferguson’s account also has the advantage of smoothing out the course of the early history of paedobaptism, at least if it did not begin until well into the second century and did not become common until the third century, and then in the fourth century became less common. To Ferguson the fourth-century delay of baptism arose from the same association of baptism with death evident in the emergency baptism of infants.32
Ferguson’s hypothetical account does not comprehensively answer the question when infant baptism began, for it does not tell us when the emergency baptism of infants began. Worth quoting at this point is Beasley-Murray’s comment on 1 Corinthians 15:29: ‘The attitude that could adapt the baptism of believers to baptism for dead people, that they might gain the benefits believed to attach to the rite, would find it a short step to baptize infants, that they too might receive its blessings.’33 It is not clear whether he implies that the baptism of infants might have begun as early as 1 Corinthians, but the link between baptism for the dead and emergency baptism is a suggestive one. Both, in Beasley-Murray’s view, find their roots in a sacramental-magical perversion of Paul’s teaching.

Wright, D. F. (2007). Infant Baptism in Historical Perspective (pp. 12–13). Great Britain: Paternoster.

www.evidenceforJesusChrist.org

GarySpFC  posted on  2014-11-07   13:57:19 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#123. To: GarySpFC (#122)

Both, in Beasley-Murray’s view, find their roots in a sacramental-magical perversion of Paul’s teaching.

I have tired of this bias.

On at least four occasions in Scripture, whole families were baptized: by Peter and by Paul also.

The naturally assumption is that children were baptized, this can be assumed to have happened when "households" were baptized - the MULTIPLE households mentioned in the Bible (we could suggest that one household didn't contain children, but there is no basis at all to assume that multiple ancient households were all childless; that would certainly not have been the norm in ancient Jewish or Roman or Greek society - quite the opposite).

The argument that children were NOT baptized collides with the baptism, in the Bible, by Peter and by Paul, of at least four named whole households. The first Gentile baptism was of Cornelius and his whole household.

There is no Christian OR Jewish basis to argue that young children were not part of a Jewish household.

Moreover, three key points made by Jesus himself put the whole argument against infant baptism in a very negative light.

The first is that children clearly have angels, who are always facing their Father. The Father loves children.

The second is that one must become as a little child if one wants to enter the Kingdom.

And the third, which I take is Jesus pointing his finger directly in the face of every latter-day disciple who would keep the children away and telling them to knock it off, is his rebuke: do not prevent the little children from cling unto me, for of such is the kingdom of Heaven.

Now add two logical points:

(1) Jesus said that rebirth in water was needed - and that's baptism. So why would one deny children this. and

(2) Jesus never explicitly explains what exactly baptism does. John's baptism was a baptism of repentance, but what Jesus was doing was much more than that. Truth is, the Scriptures do not clearly tell us what, exactly, baptism does. They tell us that baptism washes away sins, but not just that, there is more to it than that.

So, I've got Scripture that has God telling us to do it, and Peter and Paul doing it, and families baptized. So, why is this an argument?

Because some Christians started making things up, that's why. I watched a bunch of tutorials on why Christians have to follow the Jewish luni-solar calendar and keep the Sabbath. Once sentence of Paul puts that rubbish to bed.

People are going to believe what they want to believe, and they're going to grind whatever axe they want to grind.

From my perspective, infant baptism is presumptively in the Bible, and it fits the logic of what Jesus said about children and the childlike state, and what he said about baptism also.

I note something else too, from my own life and more generally around the world: Baptism as an infant ties people mystically to that Church. People may walk away, but many are drawn back in their older years, and as they are, they find that they ALREADY are members of the community, but estranged.

Over and against this are people on the fringes who scream about the calendar, or about eating pork, or about the modalities of baptism. I try to be endlessly patient with such things, but I'm not endlessly patient. The very notion that some bogus man-made theory by moderns and late medievals renders something that Peter and Paul did a "sacramental-magical PERVERSION" is ITSELF a lie and a perversion.

Ultimately, that's what some people want to obsess about, and they're going to, but it is nonsense.

I've reached the limits of my patience on the subject of infant baptism, really. I wish you luck in your continued study of it, and I hope you come to the correct conclusion, in the end, which is that Peter and Paul baptized ENTIRE HOUSEHOLDS, with all the children in them, and that this is perfectly in line with what Jesus said about children. I hope that you will come to realize that the Christians who oppose infant baptism are nothing more than new disciples taking up the same role as Jesus' disciples who tried to prevent the children from coming to the Master. Jesus sharply rebuked them then, and they're worthy of rebuke now. To call infant baptism a "perversion" is ITSELF blameworthy, calumnious, and wrong.

I hope you come through to the right answer, but my patience with this subject is exhausted. Infant baptism is Biblical, it's what God has always wanted, it's the right thing to do, and there is no more powerful form of permanent evangelism than bringing people into the Church as babies. The sheer size and durability of the Catholic Church proves it.

So does the behavior of countless saints over history who, having sown their wild oats and lived badly, were pulled back by God into line with his will, and whose baptism called them back.

Baptism of infants requires godparents to ensure the training of the child.

I'm not going to argue the matter any further. To my mind it has always been Scriptural, clear, holy, from Jesus, the Holy Spirit, Peter and Paul and IN SCRIPTURE.

To my mind, those arguing against infant baptism have always been agents of Satan, however unwitting, and the ferocity of their arguments proof of the intrinsic evil that drives the argument. They are as sincere, and as wrong, as the people who claim that if we don't keep kosher we're going to Hell.

And the Apostle who agrees with me most in all of this? The one I never quote: PAUL. For PAUL baptized several whole households, and did it right there in Scripture. Said he was doing it.

Against that, what has Satan got? Inferences and make believe.

"Suffer the little children to come unto me and deny them not, for of such is the Kingdom of Heaven." - Jesus Christ.

In other words, if you oppose infant baptism, you're arguing with Christ. I hope you come to the right answer on this. But I've said all that I can say on the subject. I will just keep repeating myself: it happens four time in Scripture, Peter and Paul both do it, and Jesus' own words about children, and about the general necessity of baptism in water, all point to infant baptism.

The arguments against it are anti-Scriptural and the artifices of Satan.

Good luck. Hope you come out in the right place.

In general, if you're reading a book that holds the view that the roots of baptism are "in a sacramental-magical perversion of Paul’s teaching", you're reading some guy whose not as smart as he thinks he is.

He's following his logic, and it's faulty. I'm following Jesus. You're coming from a tradition that thinks that infant baptism is bad. I'm hoping that Jesus' voice will smash through that and persuade you. Peter and Paul baptized infants: four whole households. That means children, presumptively, in ancient societies that valued children. Jesus said to baptize, and Jesus told the disciples to stop trying to block children coming to him. THOSE things are clear. Jesus never clearly spelled out exactly WHAT Baptism does, he merely said to DO IT. Peter and Paul baptized children, and so should we.

Vicomte13  posted on  2014-11-07   16:06:31 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#124. To: Vicomte13 (#123)

Scripture really is not clear on what exactly baptism does, but it is clear that it's important, and that whole families were baptized.

Two virtues of infant baptism, as practiced by the Catholic/Orthodox Churches:

(1) the mystical seal on the child - that "magic" part that the writer denies, but that is real nevertheless, and

(2) children who are baptized and know it may fall away from the faith, but many find their way back eventually, in part no doubt because that seal is tugging at them, and in part because it lurks in their background and is eventually a solace when life turns black and there's no hope. Look at the good it did St. Patrick, for instance. A baptized child has to actually rebel AGAINST the Church to separate himself, while the unbaptized child never felt a part of it in the first place and has to seek it.

Infant baptism is the most effective form of evangelization.

It sounds as if you are demanding the final word on baptism, and that after stating you really don't know what baptism does. The items I post are always meant to honor Christ, and I would be very careful attributing them to Satan.

www.evidenceforJesusChrist.org

GarySpFC  posted on  2014-11-08   10:26:24 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#125. To: GarySpFC, Vicomte13 (#124)

It sounds as if you are demanding the final word on baptism, and that after stating you really don't know what baptism does. The items I post are always meant to honor Christ, and I would be very careful attributing them to Satan.

To be fair, the name-calling started with your post, when it labeled the historical baptismal practices of the overwhelming majority of Christians in the world today and the historical baptismal practice as a "sacramental-magical perversion."

The simple fact is that an insistence that only adults could be baptized was never taught in the Christian Church until the Anabaptist movement in the 15th century.

It is THEY who changed from the historical practice of Christianity, therefore it falls to them and their defenders to explain why infant baptism was wrong for over 1500 years. Christ promised that the gates of hell would never prevail over the Church -- if the Anabaptists want to be taken seriously, they should explain why it was in their view that something as fundamental as the second clause of the Great Commission was done incorrectly (according to them) for over 1,500 years!

It also amuses me somewhat that traditional baptism is labeled as some sort of "magical perversion" when there are aspects within some sections of Protestantism which could be accused of the same thing. I recall reading a tract urging the reader to repent of their sins and to recite the tract- writer's version of "the sinner's prayer". The tract literally ended with the phrase: "That's it, you're saved!" In other words, the entirety of the Christian Faith had been reduced to the recitation of a single incantation, and that was all that was needed. Presumably, the reader accepting the premise could then move on to becoming a Mormon, Muslim, or some other non-Christian faith; could never even attempt to attend a single Christian Church service, never seek to receive a single Sacrament, could lead as sinful a lifestyle as they might choose -- and it was all covered because at one point in their life they had recited the magical spell.

Orthodoxa  posted on  2014-11-08   13:56:10 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#126. To: Orthodoxa (#125)

I think you are quoting an excerpt I posted from another author, NOT what I stated. There was no name calling on my part.

www.evidenceforJesusChrist.org

GarySpFC  posted on  2014-11-08   14:56:27 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#127. To: GarySpFC (#126)

I think you are quoting an excerpt I posted from another author, NOT what I stated. There was no name calling on my part.

Ah, that's fair enough. I'm sorry for misunderstanding your post. But at the same time I hope that you can appreciate why Vicomte13 may be a bit defensive on that issue. I'm not Roman Catholic, but it shouldn't be a mystery that all too often members of that confession are characterized as all sorts of horrible things.

While I would argue with Roman Catholic friends that full immersion baptism would be preferable, as I stated up thread I would never question that their baptism is invalid or that they are not Christian if they are living up to their Church's teachings. The "sacramental-magical perversion" phrase that was quoted was of course quite inflammatory.

It would be akin to if someone posted on a thread about marriage and quoted someone stating that marriage between a man and woman was a "perversion" that was introduced only because of "extreme circumstances" and that actually gay marriages were the norm because a "scholar" said so...

Everyone knows that marriage has been between men and women for thousands of years, the burden of proof that it was somehow changed and that the "real" marriages were only gay ones would be upon the people making the wild claim.

In like manner, infant baptism has been the historical norm since the beginning of the Church. The overwhelming majority of Christians practice it and have done so throughout the centuries. Every Church that can trace it's direct origin back to the Apostles baptizes babies. Roman Catholics, Eastern Orthodox, Oriental Orthodox, Anglicans, etc. So in my view, the group introducing a change in practice after 1,500 years of consistent and uncontroversial infant baptism would need to have very solid arguments for why something as fundamental as that was done wrong for most of the Church's history.

Orthodoxa  posted on  2014-11-08   15:21:08 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#128. To: Orthodoxa (#127)

I am very familiar with the pain of questioning one's baptism, because I went through the process of questioning my own. I likewise was baptized (sprinkled) as an infant. I am not questioning if the baptism of others is valid, but offering what i discovered. Let each be persuaded in his/her own mind.

Later, when I was approximately 13 years old, I went to our church pastor, and asked to be baptized, "exactly like Jesus." His response was, "We can go down to the creek chop a hole in the ice, and baptize you there. Or, we can go over to the vacant parsonage and baptize you there, but there's not any heat in the vacant building. Or, we can simply baptize you the normal way in the church service next quarter." Once again I was sprinkled by that pastor..

There was something that didn't sit right with me the way he handled my baptism, but I didn't dwell on it too much at that time. Many years later after entering seminary, I did an extensive study on the subject, and came to the conclusion I wanted to be baptized by immersion. It was my view that baptism was a command to be obeyed for the remission of sins. Acts 2:38. Baptism in the Greek actually should be translated as immersion. I also saw that baptism was a death, burial, and resurrection with Jesus Christ by faith. Romans 6, and I Peter 3 18-22.

6 What shall we say, then? Shall we go on sinning so that grace may increase? 2 By no means! We died to sin; how can we live in it any longer? 3 Or don’t you know that all of us who were baptized into Christ Jesus were baptized into his death? 4 We were therefore buried with him through baptism into death in order that, just as Christ was raised from the dead through the glory of the Father, we too may live a new life. 5 If we have been united with him like this in his death, we will certainly also be united with him in his resurrection. 6 For we know that our old self was crucified with him so that the body of sin might be done away with,a that we should no longer be slaves to sin— 7 because anyone who has died has been freed from sin. 8 Now if we died with Christ, we believe that we will also live with him. 9 For we know that since Christ was raised from the dead, he cannot die again; death no longer has mastery over him. 10 The death he died, he died to sin once for all; but the life he lives, he lives to God. The Holy Bible: New International Version. (1984). (Ro 6:1–10). Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan.

18 For Christ died for sins once for all, the righteous for the unrighteous, to bring you to God. He was put to death in the body but made alive by the Spirit, 19 through whomd also he went and preached to the spirits in prison 20 who disobeyed long ago when God waited patiently in the days of Noah while the ark was being built. In it only a few people, eight in all, were saved through water, 21 and this water symbolizes baptism that now saves you also—not the removal of dirt from the body but the pledgee of a good conscience toward God. It saves you by the resurrection of Jesus Christ, 22 who has gone into heaven and is at God’s right hand—with angels, authorities and powers in submission to him. The Holy Bible: New International Version. (1984). (1 Pe 3:18–22). Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan.

Once again, let each be convinced in his own mind.

www.evidenceforJesusChrist.org

GarySpFC  posted on  2014-11-08   16:23:27 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#129. To: GarySpFC (#128)

I am very familiar with the pain of questioning one's baptism, because I went through the process of questioning my own. I likewise was baptized (sprinkled) as an infant. I am not questioning if the baptism of others is valid, but offering what i discovered. Let each be persuaded in his/her own mind.

Later, when I was approximately 13 years old, I went to our church pastor, and asked to be baptized, "exactly like Jesus." His response was, "We can go down to the creek chop a hole in the ice, and baptize you there. Or, we can go over to the vacant parsonage and baptize you there, but there's not any heat in the vacant building. Or, we can simply baptize you the normal way in the church service next quarter." Once again I was sprinkled by that pastor..

It's disappointimg if your past pastor either did not understand what you were seeking or chose to ignore it.

The Orthodox Church would not at all disagree with your view that immersion is preferable for baptism. I was baptized by full immersion as a child. And at the same time we can recognize that sometimes difficult circumstances arise that would make immersion difficult. It is possible that your pastor who sprinkled you really did not think that immersion was feasible -- although perhaps if he had understood that it was important to you to be immersed he might have come up with ways to work around the logistical problems -- heating the water in the building or just postponing your baptism until there was warm enough weather for it if you live in an area where it gets warm enough to swim in the summer.

And at the same time, Orthodoxy would not call into question as to whether someone who was sprinkled was genuinely Christian.

I'm happy for you that you did finally get the form of baptism that you sought, may it continue to bless you both in this life and the next.

Orthodoxa  posted on  2014-11-08   17:20:19 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#130. To: Orthodoxa (#129)

I made it clear to the pastor that I wanted to be immersed, but the UMC seeks to disregard immersion.

My wife is Orthodox and I have read some of your theologians.

www.evidenceforJesusChrist.org

GarySpFC  posted on  2014-11-08   21:04:26 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#131. To: Orthodoxa (#127)

Ah, that's fair enough. I'm sorry for misunderstanding your post. But at the same time I hope that you can appreciate why Vicomte13 may be a bit defensive on that issue. I'm not Roman Catholic, but it shouldn't be a mystery that all too often members of that confession are characterized as all sorts of horrible things.

While I would argue with Roman Catholic friends that full immersion baptism would be preferable, as I stated up thread I would never question that their baptism is invalid or that they are not Christian if they are living up to their Church's teachings. The "sacramental-magical perversion" phrase that was quoted was of course quite inflammatory

(1) I'm not really "defensive" at all. I stated the truth: I'm tired of the subject of infant baptism, because I consider to be distempered. I'm not willing to "defend" infant baptism. I'm just not interested in discussing the matter. It is self-evidently obvious from Scripture that the Apostles practiced the baptism of children - multiple times they baptized "their whole household", of ancients, who had no birth control and who were of military age. Of course there were children there. And also what Jesus said about the children. And what I said myself awhile ago: that infant baptism is the most effective form of Christian evangelization. To me this is all utterly obvious. It's not an open question, and I'm not willing to spend any time discussing it. That's not really being defensive. It's being truthful and adult, if somewhat brusque. When a Jehovah's Witness knocks on my door, I'm not defensive about my religion. I'm patient with these poor addled souls who are following a ridiculous pretension. So I invite them in, offer them a glass of cold water, and have a talk with them, Bible in hand, trying to show them where they go off the rails. But eventually the time comes when I'm simply tired of it: they are convicted, committed to their idiocy, and it is a waste of my time to keep going on. I consider the arguments against infant baptism to be ill tempered, anti-scriptural and idiotic. They are a waste of my time, and I won't engage in them any more. Of course babies should be baptized. It is powerful and effective, and God loves them the most. That's not defensive. If anything, it's offensive, though it is not exactly intended to be. When I wrote, I did say the truth also: that I hoped my interlocutor would work his way through it and come to the right answer. But I told the truth: the right answer is obvious from Scripture, the arguments against infant baptism are stupid, and I myself am not interested in spending any more of my time on a pointless topic.

(2) Baptism by full immersion in running water would be preferable if only for symbolic reasons: that's how Jesus himself was baptized. But, as is stated in the Didache, baptism is baptism, and you use what you can: running water if there is some, standing water if not, pouring if not that. Could churches be built with a mikvah that had running water in it? Yes, and if I were in charge of building and accoutering Churches, they would be. But I'm not, and you only get baptized once, generally as a baby, you don't remember it, so ultimately it doesn't really make a difference how. It becomes a matter of quibbling over the pattern on the drapes. Meanwhile, the floor is rotting out because the Church is aging and emptying. I once thought that Christianity could be brought back together with understanding and patience. I now think that that was as forlorn a hope as my hope to see a Christian party arise in America. People are too wedded to their norms, and their traditions are so tied into their theology that they can no more distinguish the two than Pharisees could. Infant baptism and the modalities of baptism are examples of that. When you've got half the Church tacitly supporting abortion rights, you have a much bigger theological problem than the matter of the color of the drapes or the modality of baptism.

Vicomte13  posted on  2014-11-10   8:36:35 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#132. To: Orthodoxa (#129)

And at the same time, Orthodoxy would not call into question as to whether someone who was sprinkled was genuinely Christian.

I'm happy for you that you did finally get the form of baptism that you sought, may it continue to bless you both in this life and the next.

Indeed, Orthodoxy does not call into question the mode of baptism, nor does it question the issue of age. That said, it is obvious to me Christ was addressing the issue of baptism with Nicodemus needing to be born again of the water and Spirit in John 3. Jesus stated, "You must be born again." Furthermore, Christ connected the need to "believe in the Son" with baptism in verse 15, which clearly involves choice.

That whole households were baptized were in the NT goes without saying, but it is an assumption that infants were involved. I don't have a problem with young children making a choice to follow Christ in baptism if they have the mental capacity to make that choice.

“Let no one mourn that he has fallen again and again; for forgiveness has risen, from the grave.” John Chrysostom www.evidenceforJesusChrist.org/Bible

GarySpFC  posted on  2014-11-10   21:29:36 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


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