G
guanophore
Guest
It is a mystery to me how someone can read all the passages, and still not believe the Apostolic Teaching about the regenerative nature of baptism. However, I am also aware that those anti-Catholic blinders can shut out a lot of light. The Apostles taught that baptism is a “bath of regeneration” in which the soul is sealed with the promised Holy Spirit, which is the guarantee of our inheritance.They taught the former, but nowhere did they teach the latter. That’s an interpretative tradition, but not one that can be proven from the text.
I was not asserting it on the basis of Scripture, but of history. I think, once you are willing to learn the history of your faith, you will find that unbelievers were not permitted to participate in the Sacred Mysteries. Catechumens were permitted for the Liturgy of the Word, but were taken from the assembly before Eucharist. There was quite a bit of martrydom, esp. until the Edict of Milan. Christians were careful not to allow anyone into the assembly that was not known. We see a good example of this in how Paul could not be accepted until he was sponsored by Barnabas.You’re asserting this with absolutely no exegetical support and you are reading the practice of the underground church during the explicit persecutions back to an earlier time when martyrdom was rare.
On the contrary, it strongly suggests that Christians were not always acting like Christians. I think you will find, if you examine the salutations on the letters, that they are all addressed to saints/elect.But if you’d only think this through a bit, I think you’ll see that Christ described kingdom using many metaphors that show that there are both believers and unbelievers within it. There will be wheat and weeds, sheep and wolves dressed like sheep, sheep and goats, wheat and chaff, good and bad fish. Moreover, when we read the epistles, we see a lot of exhortations to self-examination to see if we’re in the faith, commands to confirm our election, and provisos that Paul’s words only apply to those who have learned Christ, which strongly suggests that not everyone in the communities he wrote to were believers.
The letters are definitely corrective. Written to Christians, by, for, and about Christians. They are not meant for the unbelievers.He gives advice to believers for how to deal with their unbelieving spouses, then castigates the Corinthians for their widespread immorality, suggesting that some of these may not really be in the faith, denounces false teachers, etc.
I agree, though, that there were baptized Christians behaving with immorality, and impropriety. To that extent, they were not “in the faith”. You make a good example that a believer can step “out” of the faith. When they sin, they are no longer “in Christ”.
I don’t find any evidence that Simon was ever converted. The most repentant thing he did was ask Peter to pray for him.Then there are people like Ananias and Sapphira and Simon Magus, all of whom appeared to be believers, but, given what happened to them, very likely were not.
Ananias and Sapphira, on the other hand, appear to have been considered members of the Christian Community. They made a profession of faith and were baptized, or their gifts would not have been received. Definitely fell from grace.