K
kcmekim
Guest
2/3 of the books that make up the Bible did exist. Jesus quotes from them frequently.This makes good sense. You see, when Jesus gave baptism to the church, there was no Bible.
So then how did they get into the Bible?“Biblical Requirements” for baptism were derived in America in the 1900’s with the anti catholic anti sacramentalism movement. They are a modern innovation, and do not reflect what the Apostles believed and taught.
Two problems with this.The denial that the majority of Protestants baptize infants makes it clear that the writer thinks his own experience of Protestantism reflects the norm around the world.
The first is that credo-baptism is the norm, simply because of the sheer numbers of Baptists, charismatics, non-denom, etc, who practice credo-baptism.
The second is that I’ve never tried to make an argument that we should do it because it’s the norm. Like I said, I don’t care how many people do it or don’t do it, our first obligation is to be obedient to the word of God, not do what everybody else is doing.
If that’s true, then why do we spend so much time studying what they taught? If that’s true, why do we look to their creeds and confessions as authoritative and to their writings as instructive?This may be the most serious part of the problem. The modern American fundamentalist does not care what the Apostles beleived and taught.
I find that for you to say that I don’t care is blatantly dishonest. If I didn’t care, I wouldn’t have spent all of the time and energy studying it, nor the time and energy developing classes and teaching them at no cost to students (and, often times paying for it out of my own pocket).He does not really care why the Reformers separated, or why they retained certain belief instead of others. All he cares about is his own understanding of what the scripture means. It is an idiosycratic form of Christianity.
Could you please give me any examples from scripture of the Apostles baptising infants or of any infant in scripture meeting the Biblical requirements to be baptised?No, it is not an assumption. It is the teaching that we received from the Apostles, who were the ones baptizing infants.
We believe it does not exist because scripture does’t support such an idea.Since you are separated from the Apostolic Succession, it is understandible that you believe it does not exist.
And there is your problem. Anytime you put anything above the authority of the word of God, you’re going to run into trouble.The Apostolic Faith is not dependent upon the Bible.
You say that like accepting God’s word as authoritative is a bad thing.The Apostles were baptizing infants before a word of the NT was written. I understand, though, that the Bible is all you have left, and therefore you must cling to it.
As a Catholic, I understand that you believe that. But I don’t so your condescending remarks just don’t work as the personal attacks you mean them to be.Not a condescending speck there. The truth is that it is sad for all of us to see how far you have departed from the Apostolic faith.
Who says nobody saw them until the sixteenth century? Jesus saw them. Paul saw them. Philip saw them.If those “requirements” existed from the beginning, why is it that nobody “saw” them until the sixteen century?
I’m not the Baptist Distinctives.And you are infallible?
No, they did not. If they did, there would be some record of these super genius babies.Babies in all Christian families from 33 AD to 1600 met “the Biblical criteria” and were baptised - then, something changed.
And we say the same thing about Catholics.But it was neither “the Biblical criteria” nor the babies that changed. It was the understanding of some self-appointed teachers that deviated from the gospel truth.
That’s exactly right. I take the time to read your posts before I respond to them. Please show me the same respect. I’ve stated several times now that it neither includes NOR excludes children.Neither does it say it excludes infants.
You say this like it’s some big revelation to you, but if you had just read my posts, you would have seen that I’ve said this all along.
No. There’s nothing in scripture to indicate that the baby in Elizabeth;s womb met the Biblical criteria for baptism. What’s more, baptism had not yet been introduced as an ordinance of the church.Let us start with the baby in Elizabeth womb (Luke 1). Don’t you see that that baby could understand and articulate the Gospel even before his birth?