Quote:
Originally Posted by 1voice
I can only rely on that which is recorded… that record … proves fact.
I hope it’s OK if I step in here. I agree with this statement; well, kind of. The bible is silent on so much. It can’t possibly cover every contingency.
What is recorded … is a specific/ simple and very clear definition.
To answer your question … Jesus says it right here …
Mark 16:16 - He Who Believes and Is Baptized Will Be Saved
And that is the Word of God. So he who believes and is baptised will be saved, assuming there are no other qualifiers and that the Scripture is not taken out of context, etc.
When I checked I did find something. You didn’t post all of Mark 16:16. This is the whole statement:
He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved; but he that believeth not shall be damned.
[Mark 16:16, KJV (I normally use the Douay-Rheims but I wanted to use a Protestant bible in this case)]
It does not say that one must believe first and be baptised second in order to be saved (in fact, it doesn’t even say that one must be baptised to be saved but that is irrelevant as it doesn’t address the point you are trying to make). One could certainly read this sentence as meaning that one can be baptised and then later believe and will be saved and if this is true, infants can certainly be baptised and then believe when they have the ability to believe.
and again… Peter said the same thing … simply and clearly …
Acts 2:38 - Repent and Be Baptized for the Remission of Sins.
And as this is in the bible it is the Word of God, assuming there are no other qualifiers and that the Scripture is not taken out of context, etc.
… In both cases it is a 2 step process. … Cognitive choice is required as a prerequisite to taking the next step … and both scriptures confirm each other.
It doesn’t really say that as I read it. Where does either Scripture passage state that cognitive choice is required as a prerequisite to taking the next step? The first one you presented simply says that he who believes and is baptised will be saved. The second one simply says repent and be baptised. It is not necessarily a 2-step process.
Also, your first statement (“He who believes and is baptised will be saved”) doesn’t necessarily mean that one must believe first and be baptised second; your second statement (“Repent and be baptised for the remission of sins”) doesn’t necessarily mean that one must repent first and be baptised second. The second statement could easily be split into two statements:
(1) Repent for the remission of sins.
(2) Be baptised for the remission of sins.
But I think God covered that base as well…
Matt 19: 14
Jesus said, “Let the little children come to me, and do not hinder them, for the kingdom of heaven belongs to such as these.”
Please tell me I misread this; that you are not supporting abortion!
Baptism removes the stain of Original Sin. It brings people into the presence of God. It is holy and sacred; a Sacrament. It gives the person who is being baptised grace. Surely this is something that we should want even for young infants! But not abortion! If this were true we should take the life of every child (and it breaks my heart deeply to even write this!) so they can go straight to God. No - we should baptise them and bring them into God’s Church. We should not hinder them by making them wait until a certain age - they will make that cognitive choice you refer to at the time of their Confirmation; another Sacrament. Let their godparents and parents make the decision for them at Baptism and raise them in the Church and woe be to those who do not take their role seriously because they *are * hindering them.