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NotWorthy
Guest
Until your child can fend for his own soul, YES!!!me: Can we really extend that to the salvation of a soul? Can my faith really save my child’s soul?
I think the underlined point shows where YOU are reading more into it than it tells us. Look at the words of Luke again, **** "When He saw their faith, He said to the paralytic, ‘Your sins are forgiven.’" Luke, links the forgiveness to THEIR FAITH - plural. Not simply the paralytic’s faith.Was the paralytic an infant? How do you know Jesus didn’t see the faith of all of them, including the paralytic? "When He saw their faith, He said to the paralytic, ‘Your sins are forgiven.’ " The paralytic, for all we know, had his own faith. He could have objected to being lowered down through the roof, but instead he consented to his friends doing that, believing with them that if he could get to Jesus, he might be healed. I think you might be reading into the passage too much.
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**Until your child can fend for his own soul, YES!!!Furthermore, you still didn’t answer my questions. Again, can we really extend that to the salvation of a soul? Can my faith really save my child’s soul?
**No, it cannot. When that person reaches the age where they understand the nature of sin, they can remain in a state of salvation, or they can turn to sin. My prayers can aid them, but they can’t save them.**Sure, He saves MY soul when He washes ME of MY sins. But can my faith deliver someone else from hell if that other person does not repent and believe the Gospel? **
**No, it cannot. Once that person is of an age to repent and believe on their own, then my faith can only petition God to continue to grace them.Does my faith cancel out the other person’s need to repent and believe on their own?
I think the problem lies in the fact that Catholics teach that one can lose their Salvation. As I stated, by baptizing my children, my faith could save them. But once they are old enough to accept Christ and become His Disciple, their Salvation is in their’s and the Lord’s Hands, not mine. In the jailers household, those that were old enough to believe were baptized and on their own (salvationally speaking). Those that weren’t old enough would have been baptized and under their parents “salvation rood” until they were old enough to accept or reject the Gospel of Christ.So, what are you saying? If the jailer believed on the Lord Jesus Christ, that alone** would save both him and his entire household, regardless of whether anyone else believed??? Do you really think it means that? Is that your interpretation? (The rest deleted to to stay within 5000 character limit)
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**Of course I read John 1:11-13, and that’s part of where we get this very teaching.Wrong. Read John 1:11-13, which don’t even mention baptism.
We are born “of God” when we are born anew through “Water and Spirit” - Baptism.But to those who did accept him he gave power to become children of God, to those who believe in his name, who were born not by natural generation nor by human choice nor by a man’s decision but of God.