W
Wannano
Guest
That is the way I believe as well. Martin Luther says in your link that repentance is nothing more than to return to your baptism. That is strange when the first message about Baptism was first prefaced with “repent and be baptized.”Thanks. What does “… that is, as long as we carry the old man about our neck.” Mean?
I don’t know, but it suggests a condition. St Paul’s Scriptures, and other Scriptures, express something like this; that as long as we persevere, continue, remain in Him, we are justified. Though we may fall away, we still have access to forgiveness by turning to Him and confessing.
He even claims that a Jew coming for baptism under false pretences would still have a valid baptism . He seems to be saying that Baptism is a once and for all cure all for sin. Sounds OSASistic.
I wonder why he started his last sentence with the word IF instead of SINCE. IF is a tiny word that has huge implications, indeed, the basis for Anabaptistic thought in relation to obtaining salvation through the act of baptism, especially as an infant.
I have read numerous accounts of Martin Luther struggling with his faith. I have no idea for sure but I wonder if he felt the old man was an albatross. He talks of reliving ones baptism daily as we encounter the weight of the old man. Did he really not realize he could live his heavy burden at the foot of the Christ?
Surely he had an understanding of scriptures like, Col. 3:5-10, Romans 6, 2Cor. 5:17 and others.