J
James248
Guest
That’s what happens in Baptism. We are immersed in water and take part into His Death. When we come up out of the water, we share in His Resurrection.Why is “His cup”, physical death, and not Rom6 “united in the likeness of His death”?
2Tim2 “if we have died, then we shall also live with Him”.
Have we died, or not?
No, you are right. Many who think themselves “Christian”, have bought into a soft easy believism. That’s not what Jesus brought…
You changed it, and aren’t aware of the change; you associated “again” with water.
“Unless one is born-of-the-Spirit, and born-of-the-Spirit…
That which is flesh …and that which is spirit…”
Water-baptism in your view is 100% when one is “born-of-the-Spirit”. Why does that make sense more than this?
“Unless one is born-of-water/flesh, and (also!) born-of-the-Spirit…
That which is flesh …and that which is spirit…”
Why wasn’t Jesus saying “You are born physically, you must also be born spiritually”?
(…in BOTH verses?)
No, you are not saying “Christ-further-qualifies-it” — you are separating “born-of-the-Spirit and born-of-the-Spirit”, from “born-physically-AND-ALSO-born-spiritually”.
Okay — yet I still don’t know how we can insert “born-again-of-water” in Jesus’ discussion, rather than accept what he said “born-of-water and born-of-the-Spirit”.
