S
santaro75
Guest
Many churches believe that Baptism is symbolic.
Catholics believe that it is a sacrament.
WHAT DO YOU BELIEVE?
Catholics believe that it is a sacrament.
WHAT DO YOU BELIEVE?
Ah, very true. I stand corrected.It’s both. It is a sacrament, but it is also symbolic. If God choose he could have just removed our sins without the physical connection, like Jesus did for the Centurion’s servant. However, because we are physical beings he gave us a beautiful sacrament that reflects what is going on.
Well I guess I have been told that Baptism is symbolic and not necessary for salvation. but i can’t find in the bible where it says that Baptism is a symbol.Ah, very true. I stand corrected.![]()
Contarini said:(the Catholic Church recognizes this by saying that people can be saved through “baptism of desire” and can feed on Christ in a “spiritual communion”). But that’s no excuse for separating the two and turning them against each other. The full power and meaning of the sacrament is only apparent when you have both outward and inward aspects (the “outward and visible sign” and the “inward and spiritual grace”) working together in harmony.
Edwin
Its funny i think because it takes less faith in christ to believe that he was only speaking symbolically about baptism and communion then it does to believe in them literally. Yet they say that Catholics lack faith in christ and rely on their own religious works.Very well written Edwin! I come from a Pentacostal background where everything except the “alter call” is purely symbolic. Communion is just bread and grape juice, baptism is simply an expression of desire to be committed to Christ, etc. All the mystery, grace, and supernatural has been sucked out of the sacraments. Why would Christ command us to go through empty rituals?
Plus there is no biblical support for it anywhere that i know of. One of the things that bother me about it is that it doesn’t require the believer to reach beyond the comprehension of the mind (flesh and blood) and reach out in faith to what jesus said.It is both.
Most importantly, I believe, Baptism “…saves you” as Peter said, by the actual remission of sin.
IN ADDITION (as opposed to OTOH) if you don’t get the symbolism of being dunked in water as a cleansing act, I think your putting your theology ahead of the obvious.
As an aside, I think the contention that baptism is merely a “public profession” of ones faith - is bogus and counter-scriptural. After all, when Philip and the eunoch “,came to some water…the eunoch said, ‘Look, here is water. Why shouldn’t I be baptized?’ And they both went into the water and Philip baptized him. When they came up out of the water, the Spirit of the Lord suddenly took Philip away.” Hmmm. No crowd, and only one witness to “profess” to, and God immediately removes him from the planet. I’d say that is a strong veto for the “public profession” variation of the symbolic only concept of baptism.
Phil
However, using a clever game of semantics many Protestants will argue that “water” is amniotic fluid. Seems that they think Jesus is Captain Obvious since everyone is born of amniotic fluit.Of all the Protestant denials this is one of the most frustrating. Our Lord’s words were absolutely unambiguous.
Jesus said: “Truly, truly, I say to you, unless one is born of water and the Spirit, he cannot enter the kingdom of God.” (John 3:5)
no magic, just cleansed of original sin, spritual circumcision, rebirth in the spirit as a child of God and a brother and sister in the church. All minor stuff.The deacon who led our baptism instruction told us that there is nothing “magical” about baptism and that it is just our way of welcoming the child into the community.