God the Holy Spirit is the thrid person of the Holy Trinity with same sovereign attributes of God the Father. Therefore, I don’t think we can deactivate the Spirit of God. I guess that goes into a deeper discussion and debate regarding the ministry of the Holy Spirit in whom He is trying to save.
Yes this is a major theological issue that may not be appropriate to this thread. Mortal sin is deadly sin, which means that it will keep us from being united with the inheritance that is kept imperishable for us in heaven.
Of course God’s omnipotence cannot be deactivated, but we can certainly remove ourselves from His work in us. You might be more familiar with the term “quench the Spirit”, which is a milder description of what we understand that mortal sin does to us. Mortal sin is equivalent of rejectiong God’s purpose for us (salvation). As an OSAS person, you do not think this is possible, but the Apostles taught us that it is.
I think the Spirit baptizes the elect to Christ at the point of when the Spirit opens the heart of the individual elect, enabling the sinner to spirituality see Christ as being desirable, so that the elect freely comes to Christ upon hearing the gospel proclaimed.
I am curious how you come to call this even “baptism”. Catholics call this prevenient grace, or calling grace, where the HS quickens the mind and heart of those who hear to come to Christ.
water baptism done by the hands of men through the sacrament of baptism represents what the Spirit does apart from and before the sacrament of baptism.
The Apostles did not separate these two, so we do not either. They taught that, during baptism, the person is the recipient of a “circumcision without hands” by the HS.
Can you refer to Acts 10, and tell me at what point you believe Cornelius’ heart became open to God, and was enabled to spiritually see Chirst as being desirable?
Code:
It is true that believers are to be baptized as an act of obdience... which the sacrament is a means of sanctifying grace.
What do you mean by “sanctifying grace”? The Apostles taught that sanctifying grace is grace that makes us holy. You have already said that you don’t believe that the HS works through baptism to make us holy, so I think I am missing something here.
That’s a good one and makes perfect sense since with have two mutually exclusive claims of apostolic succession.
I don’t understand this preoccupation you have with “mutually exclusive”. Usually people that get stuck in that mode are very concrete thinkers, unable to apprehend “both/and”.
But for the record, we and the Orthodox do not have any such mutual exclusion with regard to Apostolic succession. We recognize their succession just as valid as ours, and their sacraments also.
Orthodox, though think of Catholics like we do Protestants (a community that has departed from the One Faith), so they do not welcome us at their sacraments, or consider ours valid.
Now, that’s an unbiblical view… we can start a new thread on that one. I side with Augustine on this debate of the sovereignity of God.
Oh yes let’s! I think we need to get more into Augustine. Catholics also side with Augustine ont he Sovereignty of God. We believe that, in His sovereignty, He created mankind in His own image and likeness, with the ability to choose Him, or reject Him.
Please start with Romans 9 and Ephesian 1, and John 1 and John 6 … and then maybe we should start a thread on predestination and free will. Augustine is the man who crushed Pelagius!
Indeed. and perhaps more study of his work will help you understand that Catholics are not “semi-Pelagian”, as you have erroneously been given to believe.