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PeaceInChrist
Guest
Of course one can. Jesus even teaches His disciples that not everyone who says to Him “Lord, Lord!” will enter the Kingdom. Additionally, the goats at His left proclaim Him as Lord, and are told to depart.Ok,i’ll ask. So can you believe (in Christ) without being regenerated.
The wind of the Holy Spirit does indeed blow where it will. So why, then, does Jesus Himself use physical signs when He heals people? For instance, spitting and rubbing someone’s eyes with mud? Or telling someone to bathe in a body of water? Or walk somewhere and do something? Can’t He do whatever He pleases?The sacraments are not to put the "wind’ of regeneration, of spiritual birth, into a box. What happens to wind when you put it in a box? John 3:8 “The wind bloweth where it listeth and thou hearest the sound thereof, but canst not tell whence it cometh and whither it goeth:so is every one that is born of the spirit”. Is regeneration in a sacrament? Maybe. Is it not in any sacrament ? Maybe. Is it in your church ? Maybe. Is it in my church? Maybe. Where it is mightily today will it be there exactly the same place tomorrow? Don’t you agree the gates of hell can not stop this “wind”?
Of course He can. Jesus does, in fact, heal some without any sign. But He does as He wishes with His grace, and He is the one that commanded we baptize in the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. He is the one who said ‘eat, this is my Body’ and ‘this is my Blood’. He has commanded all these Sacraments of us.
Even Paul, who encountered God in a visible and mystical way, and who converted at that moment, was baptized and had hands laid on him. Again, the first priority of Peter after seeing Cornelius had been opened to the Holy Spirit was to baptize him. Why? Because the Lord has commanded that this be the normative means of the infusion of sanctifying grace.
One can certainly come to believe in God, but baptism is required for the infusion of sanctifying grace, and the other Sacraments follow, and more grace is bestowed through these. I don’t understand why anyone would be so resistant to them; considering that prayer and response to God’s grace grants a greater openness to God’s grace, imagine what these sacred Gifts do for one’s response to grace!
You must understand, my friend, that we, as the early Church and fathers throughout history, place great importance on the Sacraments. They are necessary for our salvation. Obviously the Lord does grant some measure of grace to those outside of the Sacraments, as to those Protestants who do not believe in Sacraments but still proclaim Christ (though I cannot say if the grace is sufficient for salvation, obviously I don’t know who is saved and who is not). Still, when one could have the epitome of the Gifts of grace that Christ instituted, I can see no reason why one would choose to abstain. They are for our own good, to give us the strength to persevere, and to keep us unified within His Body.
Peace.