What is the difference in Protestants being "saved" and Catholic salvation? Part 2

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Jon I suppose you are right forgive me, but you are from a more traditional religion base and I believe understand the same as Catholics about baptism. Or do you? **I noticed you didn’t mention baptism, unless that’s what you were referring to as you being born again one month and one day after you were born? ** I’m just used to many non-Catholics on forums such as these who have another viewpoint on what it means to be born again. It’s refreshing to hear someone who believes as we do on baptism?
That’s exactly what I meant, being born again of water and the Spirit in Baptism.
No apology needed, Karen. I just like to make sure the lurkers don’t get the wrong idea. 🙂
“Protestant” is a term of questionable accuracy.
I would also say that running the race is not possible if not for the work of the Holy Spirit moving one to the finish line but also us allowing the Holy Spirit to work through us .🙂
Sounds good to me.

Jon
 
That’s exactly what I meant, being born again of water and the Spirit in Baptism.
No apology needed, Karen. I just like to make sure the lurkers don’t get the wrong idea. 🙂
“Protestant” is a term of questionable accuracy.

Sounds good to me.

Jon
Jon, in general, Lutherans and High Church Anglicans are very close to Catholics in terms of salvation. The main differences today are in understandings of the Eucharist, how many sacraments there are, and the authority of the Pope. Why? Because Lutherans and High Church Anglicans mean something completely different by “Faith alone” and “Scripture alone” than many other Protestants (especially so-called “born-again” Christians) mean. This is actually why the Catholic Church often does not object to ordaining former Anglican priests (especially) and sometimes even former Lutheran ministers as Catholic priests, even if they are married - as long as they are in valid marriages and are otherwise eligible to be ordained (that is, baptized male, married no more than once - Confirmation, of course, is bestowed on the pastors when they convert to Catholicism).

My reading of eazyduzit’s posts, though, are that, in his denomination, baptism is considered optional - what’s important is what is in the heart. And see, this is one of the main differences in our views of salvation. We Catholics (and, IIRC, most mainline Protestants, including Lutherans and Anglicans) believe that baptism is integral to salvation - that it is an action that fulfills the desire to be saved by the Blood of Christ.
 
Jon, in general, Lutherans and High Church Anglicans are very close to Catholics in terms of salvation. The main differences today are in understandings of the Eucharist, how many sacraments there are, and the authority of the Pope. Why? Because Lutherans and High Church Anglicans mean something completely different by “Faith alone” and “Scripture alone” than many other Protestants (especially so-called “born-again” Christians) mean. This is actually why the Catholic Church often does not object to ordaining former Anglican priests (especially) and sometimes even former Lutheran ministers as Catholic priests, even if they are married - as long as they are in valid marriages and are otherwise eligible to be ordained (that is, baptized male, married no more than once - Confirmation, of course, is bestowed on the pastors when they convert to Catholicism).

My reading of eazyduzit’s posts, though, are that, in his denomination, baptism is considered optional - what’s important is what is in the heart. And see, this is one of the main differences in our views of salvation. We Catholics (and, IIRC, most mainline Protestants, including Lutherans and Anglicans) believe that baptism is integral to salvation - that it is an action that fulfills the desire to be saved by the Blood of Christ.
What you’ve stated is, essentially, what I wanted the lurkers no know. And why the term protestant can be so misleading.

Thanks,

Jon
 
You are selecting and isolating scriptures to get support for your tradition zz.

Here is what the scriptures are saying.
It’s funny that you accuse me of this, when you are the one who wants to ignore that Peter clearly taught that “baptism…now saves you”. You want to compile a multitude of verses that you twist to interpret as disagreeing with what Peter taught, so that you can ignore what Jesus and Peter taught. Baptism’s not optional, no matter how many verses you twist and cite that you believe tell you otherwise.
Acts:21 And it shall come to pass, that whosoever shall call on the name of the Lord shall be saved.
NOT baptized
Keep reading that chapter, all the way to verses 37-41, when they ask Peter what they must do. Why do you ignore this part of Scripture?
Acts:3:19 Repent ye therefore, and be converted that your sins may be blotted out…
NOT baptised
Repentance IS the first step. No Catholic argues this. You wish to stop the Christian faith here, but that is not what Jesus nor the Apostles taught. As noted above, just a few verses earlier, Peter laid out what must be done, baptism.
Acts10:43 To Him give all the prophets witness, that through his name whosoever believeth in Him shall receive remission of sins.
The very words of Peter.
Why do you stop reading at this verse? Why don’t you continue until at least verse 48? What does Peter command so that this remission of sins is carried out.

You seem to want to divorce repentance and baptism, when Jesus never intended such a thing. In fact, your repentance isn’t complete until you are baptized. In the parable of the two sons, one son said “yes yes” and didn’t do the father’s will, and the other said “no no”, but did what the father asked. Who of those will be saved?
Acts13:39 And by Him all that believe are justified from all things…
NOT baptism
“Believe” isn’t a verbal or mental assent. We must DO something to “believe”. Even demons “believe”, but aren’t saved. You are trying to take God’s New Covenant and cut away everything you don’t like, but it doesn’t work like that.
Acts17:30And the times of this ignorance God winked at; but now commandeth all men everywhere to REPENT…
Not be baptised
You are introducing your own words now. It says to repent, which all Catholics agree with. But it does NOT say that repentance is ALL we must do. That is you reading your personal theology into the text.
1Cor1:17 For Christ sent me not to baptize, but to preach the gospel…
Again, reading your own theology into the text. Paul is merely saying that his particular role is as an evangelist, not as a baptizer. Because in the same passage he does admit that he DID baptize some. Your personal interpretation of this passage fails.
Acts 19:4 “Then said Paul, John verily baptized with the baptism of repentance, saying unto the people, that they should believe on Him which should come after…”
John’s message was not baptism but repentance.
Then why in the VERY NEXT VERSE, does Paul baptize them?
2Thes.2:13 “…God hath from the beginning chosen you to salvation through sanctification of the Holy Spirit and belief in the truth”.
NOT baptism
The Holy Spirit comes down through baptism and sanctifies, as is shown several times in Acts.
1Pt1:23 “Being born again, …by the word of God…”
NOT baptism
The “word” referred to here is Jesus, not the Bible. And Jesus and the Holy Spirit act through baptism to make one born again.
Rm10:10 “For with the heart, man believeth unto righteousness and with the mouth confession is made unto salvation.”
Correct, there is confession to believing in Jesus just before one is baptized. If you note in verse 16, obedience to the gospel is key. You seem to think that “belief” is divorced from actions, when it is not.
From this it is clear that salvation is obtained through heartfelt repentance, verbally expressed as an appeal to God.
And you wish to make the New Covenant stop right there. But Jesus and the Apostles didn’t teach that. You appeal to God, AND THEN follow in obedience to His commands and become baptized. You don’t receive salvation from a sinners prayer.
It will not work to make the bible say different things. God’s word is consistent or it is not His word.
Correct. Which puzzles me why you ignore so much of it. And why you don’t listen to the Church which tells you the Bible is God’s word?
 
It is man that wants to complicate it. Each time Jesus ministered salvation it was profoundly simple.😉
I find the opposite. Today man wants to continually cut away portions of the New Covenant that they don’t like. They want to cling to one or two verses and think salvation is easy. Jesus commanded many things that are required of us, and commanded we pick up our crosses. That’s not easy, and salvation isn’t cheap.
 
That’s exactly what I meant, being born again of water and the Spirit in Baptism.
No apology needed, Karen. I just like to make sure the lurkers don’t get the wrong idea. 🙂
“Protestant” is a term of questionable accuracy.
Correct, “protestant” doesn’t describe any one set of beliefs. In fact, the ONLY doctrine that all Protestants can agree on is that the Catholic Church is wrong. 😃
 
Correct, “protestant” doesn’t describe any one set of beliefs. In fact, the ONLY doctrine that all Protestants can agree on is that the Catholic Church is wrong. 😃
And they said we couldn’t agree on anything. 😛

Then again, there is much we all agree on that to say the CC is wrong, without being specific, means all us are wrong about what we agree on. :whacky:

Jon
 
It’s funny that you accuse me of this, when you are the one who wants to ignore that Peter clearly taught that “baptism…now saves you”. You want to compile a multitude of verses that you twist to interpret as disagreeing with what Peter taught, so that you can ignore what Jesus and Peter taught. Baptism’s not optional, no matter how many verses you twist and cite that you believe tell you otherwise.

Keep reading that chapter, all the way to verses 37-41, when they ask Peter what they must do. Why do you ignore this part of Scripture?

Repentance IS the first step. No Catholic argues this. You wish to stop the Christian faith here, but that is not what Jesus nor the Apostles taught. As noted above, just a few verses earlier, Peter laid out what must be done, baptism.

Why do you stop reading at this verse? Why don’t you continue until at least verse 48? What does Peter command so that this remission of sins is carried out.

You seem to want to divorce repentance and baptism, when Jesus never intended such a thing. In fact, your repentance isn’t complete until you are baptized. In the parable of the two sons, one son said “yes yes” and didn’t do the father’s will, and the other said “no no”, but did what the father asked. Who of those will be saved?

“Believe” isn’t a verbal or mental assent. We must DO something to “believe”. Even demons “believe”, but aren’t saved. You are trying to take God’s New Covenant and cut away everything you don’t like, but it doesn’t work like that.

You are introducing your own words now. It says to repent, which all Catholics agree with. But it does NOT say that repentance is ALL we must do. That is you reading your personal theology into the text.

Again, reading your own theology into the text. Paul is merely saying that his particular role is as an evangelist, not as a baptizer. Because in the same passage he does admit that he DID baptize some. Your personal interpretation of this passage fails.

Then why in the VERY NEXT VERSE, does Paul baptize them?

The Holy Spirit comes down through baptism and sanctifies, as is shown several times in Acts.

The “word” referred to here is Jesus, not the Bible. And Jesus and the Holy Spirit act through baptism to make one born again.

Correct, there is confession to believing in Jesus just before one is baptized. If you note in verse 16, obedience to the gospel is key. You seem to think that “belief” is divorced from actions, when it is not.

And you wish to make the New Covenant stop right there. But Jesus and the Apostles didn’t teach that. You appeal to God, AND THEN follow in obedience to His commands and become baptized. You don’t receive salvation from a sinners prayer.

Correct. Which puzzles me why you ignore so much of it. And why you don’t listen to the Church which tells you the Bible is God’s word?
Thanks for the reply zz. I had already gone over 1Pt3:21 in part 1. I looked through dozens of commentaries at Bible Hub. Most agree that this is a difficult verse. I wanted to understand why baptism “now” saves us. Has baptism “now” replaced something else that saved us before? Is Peter informing the elders of something new?

The commentaries take into account the story of Noah which which Peter is using as a comparison. Noah was saved by the water. This is true, but what was he saved from? He was saved from an evil and corrupt world. Noah did not escape from that world, but instead, the inhabitants were killed. The waters brought death. This is a picture of baptism. When we go under the water it brings death to our old man or the sin nature, or at least it signifies it. We of course must reckon ourselves dead as the scripture says. This is in accord with the purpose of baptism in Rm.6. It is about death. The commentaries acknowledge that Jesus is still the ark of salvation. To receive the new birth, you must enter the Ark.

So then Peter is not contradictory. We are born again (or born from above) by the word of God and we are saved from the sin nature by water. These are different things but they both go together.

When we make baptism the central act, then it puts us in the drivers seat because it is something we do. The work of Christ is no longer central. In fact if we could be saved by being baptised, then the sacrifice of Christ is not needed.
 
Thanks for the reply zz. I had already gone over 1Pt3:21 in part 1. I looked through dozens of commentaries at Bible Hub. Most agree that this is a difficult verse. I wanted to understand why baptism “now” saves us. Has baptism “now” replaced something else that saved us before? Is Peter informing the elders of something new?

The commentaries take into account the story of Noah which which Peter is using as a comparison. Noah was saved by the water. This is true, but what was he saved from? He was saved from an evil and corrupt world. Noah did not escape from that world, but instead, the inhabitants were killed. The waters brought death. This is a picture of baptism. When we go under the water it brings death to our old man or the sin nature, or at least it signifies it. We of course must reckon ourselves dead as the scripture says. This is in accord with the purpose of baptism in Rm.6. It is about death. The commentaries acknowledge that Jesus is still the ark of salvation. To receive the new birth, you must enter the Ark.

So then Peter is not contradictory. We are born again (or born from above) by the word of God and we are saved from the sin nature by water. These are different things but they both go together.

When we make baptism the central act, then it puts us in the drivers seat because it is something we do. The work of Christ is no longer central. In fact if we could be saved by being baptised, then the sacrifice of Christ is not needed.
Baptism saves us from death, just as the ark saved Noah from death. They both involve water. But baptism is greater than the ark, as it is the reality that the ark foreshadowed. Baptism is also how be enter the New Covenant, as it was also foreshadowed by and replaces circumcision.

I don’t see at all where you get the idea that baptism saving us means that the sacrifice of Christ is not needed. That’s just bizarre. Without the sacrifice of Christ, baptism is just getting wet. I get wet every day in the shower, that doesn’t mean I’m baptized. And it’s not something we “do”, because we can’t baptize ourselves. We must submit to someone else and allow them to perform the sacrament upon us.

And how would baptism make Christ’s sacrifice meaningless? Baptism is how you JOIN His sacrifice. It is how you enter the New Covenant. It is how you become an adopted child of God. You join the family of God and join the Body of Christ through baptism. The New Covenant is THROUGH His Blood shed on the Cross. I just don’t see where you can claim that baptism denies Christ’s sacrifice.

As to us being the driver’s seat, well in a certain we, we are (and you believe this too). Christ’s forgiveness and salvation is available to all. But do all get saved? No. Because we have to choose Jesus. He never forces us to love Him or be with Him. So in one sense, yes we are in the driver’s seat because He is always waiting for us, but we must choose Him. You believe this as well, so I don’t understand this objection when directed towards baptism.
 
Not all protestants, by any stretch. I cannot point to a single conversion experience. I was born again one month and one day after I was born. Faith begins in that moment, as we receive the Holy Spirit, forgiveness of sins, indeed God’s grace.
From that point, by the Spirit’s power, faith has grown in me, through the hearing or the Word, and reception of the sacraments.

And I would say Amen to this, if you add that running that race is not possible without the Holy Spirit, and His work of faith in us.

Jon
Amen!

My conversion experience happened before I was baptized as a little girl. I always knew the Savior, loved Him and prayed to Him - I believe that the Holy Spirit was with me thru the Word of God which was shared with me by my mother and my Sunday School teachers. I was baptized as an adult which, for me, was a logical conclusion to my faith experience. As a Lutheran, now, I am fed spiritually thru the Word and Sacrament and I daily repent of the sins that are still part of my life. I see Jesus’ dying on the cross as the final and complete atonement for my sins as long as I continue with my repentance. I, too, am running that race which Paul spoke of and, as Jon stated, I cannot do it without the Holy Spirit and His work of faith in me.

His Peace,

Rita
 
Baptism saves us from death, just as the ark saved Noah from death. They both involve water. But baptism is greater than the ark, as it is the reality that the ark foreshadowed. Baptism is also how be enter the New Covenant, as it was also foreshadowed by and replaces circumcision.

I don’t see at all where you get the idea that baptism saving us means that the sacrifice of Christ is not needed. That’s just bizarre. Without the sacrifice of Christ, baptism is just getting wet. I get wet every day in the shower, that doesn’t mean I’m baptized. And it’s not something we “do”, because we can’t baptize ourselves. We must submit to someone else and allow them to perform the sacrament upon us.

And how would baptism make Christ’s sacrifice meaningless? Baptism is how you JOIN His sacrifice. It is how you enter the New Covenant. It is how you become an adopted child of God. You join the family of God and join the Body of Christ through baptism. The New Covenant is THROUGH His Blood shed on the Cross. I just don’t see where you can claim that baptism denies Christ’s sacrifice.

As to us being the driver’s seat, well in a certain we, we are (and you believe this too). Christ’s forgiveness and salvation is available to all. But do all get saved? No. Because we have to choose Jesus. He never forces us to love Him or be with Him. So in one sense, yes we are in the driver’s seat because He is always waiting for us, but we must choose Him. You believe this as well, so I don’t understand this objection when directed towards baptism.
Interesting how you claim many purposes for baptism except for the one thing that the bible says it is for in Rm 6. Baptism itself illustrates what it does. Going under the water is like a burial. Why? Because we die with Christ. Thus, says Paul, we are saved from our sin nature or “the old man”. You ignored that Peter said Noah was saved by the water. The flood did not save him from death, but from the evil world. As some commentaries point out, it was the same with Moses and the Hebrews. They were saved from Egypt (the world) by the sea as it drowned the Egyptian army. but they were saved from death by the Blood on the doorpost, an illustration of the sacrifice of Christ, just as Noah was saved by the Ark, an illustration of Christ.

If God could save us by simply getting us wet, then the sacrifice of Christ would not be necessary. If we could be saved by keeping the law, then His death would not be necessary.
Like the law, baptism is something we do. As the bible clearly says, we are saved by faith (through grace), it is the gift of God and not of ourselves.

And yes baptism is how we join in His death, but it is not how we receive the New Birth. That is by faith as I just said.
 
Interesting how you claim many purposes for baptism except for the one thing that the bible says it is for in Rm 6.
That’s the only thing the Bible says baptism is for? Jesus and Peter didn’t say anything about salvation and baptism, huh?
Baptism itself illustrates what it does. Going under the water is like a burial. Why? Because we die with Christ. Thus, says Paul, we are saved from our sin nature or “the old man”. You ignored that Peter said Noah was saved by the water. The flood did not save him from death, but from the evil world. As some commentaries point out, it was the same with Moses and the Hebrews. They were saved from Egypt (the world) by the sea as it drowned the Egyptian army. but they were saved from death by the Blood on the doorpost, an illustration of the sacrifice of Christ, just as Noah was saved by the Ark, an illustration of Christ.
Nothing in here I disagree with. And baptism is greater than the waters of the flood, greater than Noah’s ark, greater than the waters of the Red Sea, greater than the blood on the doorpost.
If God could save us by simply getting us wet,
I think I’ve found the problem. You view baptism in purely material/carnal senses. You see it as only getting wet. Baptism is not “simply getting us wet”. It is an invocation of God Himself to come to us through the waters of baptism, to anoint us spiritually, and cleanse us spiritually of sins (notice I said spiritually, NOT symbolically). You miss this, so you downplay and ignore the importance of baptism. God Himself acts through the waters of baptism to enter the person into the New Covenant.
then the sacrifice of Christ would not be necessary.
We are joined to the sacrifice of Christ, and forgiven through His sacrifice, THROUGH baptism.
And yes baptism is how we join in His death, but it is not how we receive the New Birth. That is by faith as I just said.
Jesus said we are to be born again through water AND spirit. Why you wish to throw out the water portion, when God included it, I have no idea.
 
That’s the only thing the Bible says baptism is for? Jesus and Peter didn’t say anything about salvation and baptism, huh?

Nothing in here I disagree with. And baptism is greater than the waters of the flood, greater than Noah’s ark, greater than the waters of the Red Sea, greater than the blood on the doorpost.

I think I’ve found the problem. You view baptism in purely material/carnal senses. You see it as only getting wet. Baptism is not “simply getting us wet”. It is an invocation of God Himself to come to us through the waters of baptism, to anoint us spiritually, and cleanse us spiritually of sins (notice I said spiritually, NOT symbolically). You miss this, so you downplay and ignore the importance of baptism. God Himself acts through the waters of baptism to enter the person into the New Covenant.

We are joined to the sacrifice of Christ, and forgiven through His sacrifice, THROUGH baptism.

Jesus said we are to be born again through water AND spirit. Why you wish to throw out the water portion, when God included it, I have no idea.
Once again I will review for you what I said about Jn3. Jesus does not mention baptism at all. He is speaking of the spiritual water which is the Spirit just as in Jn7:38. Jesus then illustrated his point for Nicodemus in v. 14, “And as Moses .lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, even so must the son of man be lifted up: That whosoever believeth in Him should not perish, but have eternal life.” The bronze serpent was an illustration of salvation. Anyone who looked on it with faith would be healed. Jesus again explained the same in Jn6:40, “…that everyone which seeth the Son, and believeth on Him, may have everlasting life…”

I hope you get the principle that God is not including water in the salvation event. It is all about Jesus, not about what we do.

I think you did not read my entire post . I did not say that baptism is only a material event.
I said that by it we die with Christ and are joined to His death as Paul said in Rm6. This is not unimportant zz. But in addition to this baptism is also a promise that we will rise with Christ in “newness of life” as Paul also says. This is also an important effect of salvation in Christ. So far from minimizing baptism I just would like us to see it for what the bible says.
 
Once again I will review for you what I said about Jn3. Jesus does not mention baptism at all. He is speaking of the spiritual water which is the Spirit just as in Jn7:38.
This is your personal, fallible, manmade interpretation of the passage. Most of Christianity has understood Him to be discussing baptism.
Jesus then illustrated his point for Nicodemus in v. 14, “And as Moses .lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, even so must the son of man be lifted up: That whosoever believeth in Him should not perish, but have eternal life.” The bronze serpent was an illustration of salvation. Anyone who looked on it with faith would be healed.
You undermine your own point. Jesus really WAS lifted up on a pole. We really ARE baptized. And for those who wished to be healed in the desert, they actually had to GO to the bronze serpent and pray. It wasn’t enough to just “believe”. They had to DO an action. Their faith had to be put into action for it to save them. Faith alone did not save them, just as the Bible says that faith alone will not save us.
Jesus again explained the same in Jn6:40, “…that everyone which seeth the Son, and believeth on Him, may have everlasting life…”
And in the same passage He said you must eat His flesh and drink His blood to have life. So actions ARE required. Faith alone does not save.
I hope you get the principle that God is not including water in the salvation event. It is all about Jesus, not about what we do.
God disagrees with your personal and fallible interpretation of this, as does His Church.
I think you did not read my entire post . I did not say that baptism is only a material event.
I said that by it we die with Christ and are joined to His death as Paul said in Rm6. This is not unimportant zz. But in addition to this baptism is also a promise that we will rise with Christ in “newness of life” as Paul also says. This is also an important effect of salvation in Christ. So far from minimizing baptism I just would like us to see it for what the bible says.
You seem to want to reduce the New Covenant down to some single requirement, and declare that everything else is not necessary. Jesus doesn’t agree. He set up the New Covenant in a certain way. It is not in our authority to change, amend, delete, alter or ignore parts of it we don’t like.
 
This is your personal, fallible, manmade interpretation of the passage. Most of Christianity has understood Him to be discussing baptism.

You undermine your own point. Jesus really WAS lifted up on a pole. We really ARE baptized. And for those who wished to be healed in the desert, they actually had to GO to the bronze serpent and pray. It wasn’t enough to just “believe”. They had to DO an action. Their faith had to be put into action for it to save them. Faith alone did not save them, just as the Bible says that faith alone will not save us.

And in the same passage He said you must eat His flesh and drink His blood to have life. So actions ARE required. Faith alone does not save.

God disagrees with your personal and fallible interpretation of this, as does His Church.

You seem to want to reduce the New Covenant down to some single requirement, and declare that everything else is not necessary. Jesus doesn’t agree. He set up the New Covenant in a certain way. It is not in our authority to change, amend, delete, alter or ignore parts of it we don’t like.
This is not my invention zz. I’m not that smart. It is from Ez.36 Water signifies the Spirit.

Here is a passage from Gill’s Exposition, a classic commentary

he before said:
except a man be born of water and of the Spirit: these are, , “two words”, which express the same thing, as Kimchi observes in many places in his commentaries, and signify the grace of the Spirit of God. The Vulgate Latin and Ethiopic versions read, “the Holy Spirit”, and so Nonnus; and who doubtless is intended: by “water”, is not meant material water, or baptismal water; for water baptism is never expressed by water only, without some additional word, which shows, that the ordinance of water baptism is intended: nor has baptism any regenerating influence in it; a person may be baptized, as Simon Magus was, and yet not born again; and it is so far from having any such virtue, that a person ought to be born again, before he is admitted to that ordinance: and though submission to it is necessary, in order to a person’s entrance into a Gospel church state; yet it is not necessary to the kingdom of heaven, or to eternal life and salvation: such a mistaken sense of this text, seems to have given the first birth and rise to infant baptism in the African churches; who taking the words in this bad sense, concluded their children must be baptized, or they could not be saved; whereas by “water” is meant, in a figurative and metaphorical sense, the grace of God, as it is elsewhere; see Ezekiel 36:25. Which is the moving cause of this new birth, and according to which God begets men again to, a lively hope, and that by which it is effected; for it is by the grace of God, and not by the power of man’s free will, that any are regenerated, or made new creatures: and if Nicodemus was an officer in the temple, that took care to provide water at the feasts, as Dr. Lightfoot thinks, and as it should seem Nicodemon ben Gorion was, by the story before related of him; See Gill on John 3:1; very pertinently does our Lord make mention of water, it being his own element: regeneration is sometimes ascribed to God the Father, as in 1 Peter 1:3, and sometimes to the Son, 1 John 2:29 and here to the Spirit, as in Titus 3:5, who convinces of sin, sanctifies, renews, works faith, and every other grace; begins and carries on the work of grace, unto perfection;
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Many other commentaries see baptism in this passage, but they generally acknowledge that it is faith that saves.
However, l will agree that strictly speaking, faith alone does not save us. It is the work of Christ ALONE that saves, but the onle way it is credited to us is by faith.
Your game seems to be adding whatever you want to the gospel. For example, I cited the bronze serpent (Num21) and that those who looked upon it would be healed (v.8) But you objected that this is not enough. One also had to “Go” and “pray”. Were is that in the Bible?

Now you want to add more requirements to the New Covenant. What is your definition of “New Covenant”?
 
This is not my invention zz. I’m not that smart. It is from Ez.36 Water signifies the Spirit.

Here is a passage from Gill’s Exposition, a classic commentary
So it is the invention of someone else. That is their manmade invention. Nothing in Ez 36 indicates that it must be symbolic water. That is reading your own theology into the text.

*24 “‘For I will take you out of the nations; I will gather you from all the countries and bring you back into your own land. 25 I will sprinkle clean water on you, and you will be clean; I will cleanse you from all your impurities and from all your idols. *

Otherwise is God saying He will only symbolically bring Israel out of the other nations? He will only symbolically cleanse them? Nope, baptism with real water is the most obvious and clearest meaning of this passage.
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Many other commentaries see baptism in this passage, but they generally acknowledge that it is faith that saves.
However, l will agree that strictly speaking, faith alone does not save us. It is the work of Christ ALONE that saves, but the onle way it is credited to us is by faith.
Faith, with works. Otherwise that faith is dead and does not save. Why you keep trying to divorce faith and works, I’ll never understand. God doesn’t. Why do you?
Your game seems to be adding whatever you want to the gospel. For example, I cited the bronze serpent (Num21) and that those who looked upon it would be healed (v.8) But you objected that this is not enough. One also had to “Go” and “pray”. Were is that in the Bible?
Well the bronze serpent was in a central location, and the bitten Israelites had to actually GO to it from their camps. And you honestly think they didn’t pray to God? They just went and looked on it, without prayer? Not a chance.
Now you want to add more requirements to the New Covenant. What is your definition of “New Covenant”?
I’m not adding anything. You seem to be stripping the New Covenant of any meaning or structure/form. God gave the Old Covenant to prepare us for the New Covenant. He set the Old up as the prototype and prefigurement of the New. The Old was given so that we could understand the New.

Covenant is how one is made a member of a family. It involves actually becoming a full member of a family. It involves rights AND responsibilities that must be lived out. There are requirements of the covenant that must be upheld. God’s grace is not cheap. We must be baptized, we must eat His Flesh and drink His Blood. We must forgive others. We must care for the poor and sick. We must visit those in prison and clothe the naked. We must proclaim the gospel. We must take care of our families. The New Covenant is not something we get to decide how it is set up and what is required of us. Jesus created it, He determines what it is.
 
So it is the invention of someone else. That is their manmade invention. Nothing in Ez 36 indicates that it must be symbolic water. That is reading your own theology into the text.

*24 “‘For I will take you out of the nations; I will gather you from all the countries and bring you back into your own land. 25 I will sprinkle clean water on you, and you will be clean; I will cleanse you from all your impurities and from all your idols. *

Otherwise is God saying He will only symbolically bring Israel out of the other nations? He will only symbolically cleanse them? Nope, baptism with real water is the most obvious and clearest meaning of this passage.

Faith, with works. Otherwise that faith is dead and does not save. Why you keep trying to divorce faith and works, I’ll never understand. God doesn’t. Why do you?
Doing the work of the Gospel is just as important to me as for you, zz.
But salvation is GOD’S work and not ours.
 
Doing the work of the Gospel is just as important to me as for you, zz.
But salvation is GOD’S work and not ours.
Agreed. But we must cooperate with God’s grace with our faith and works.
What is far more important than any “work” is that Jesus gets all the credit and all the glory. Nothing less will do. I’m sorry that you’ll never understand.
Careful about being so smarmy. Because in reality, it is you who fails to understand. I understand fully that Jesus gets all the credit and glory. That you even think this shows how little you truly understand the Catholic position.
I am only trying to separate grace from works in regard to salvation because that is what the Bible demands. But maybe you are able to find a different understanding of Rm.11:6. “And if by grace then it is no more of works: otherwise grace is no more grace. But if it be of works, then it is no more grace: otherwise work is no more work.”
Does your tradition nullify this verse? I would like to understand.
I must admit I have my doubts if you truly do want to understand. But in any event, I’ll explain.

Our works don’t save us, but our faith AND works must cooperate with God’s grace for us to be saved. Grace is a free gift, but we must accept it and must cooperate with it. God’s commands are not optional, and we won’t be saved if we disobey them (and/or don’t repent of them).
You said “Otherwise faith is dead and does not save”. I’m sorry I don’t find this anywhere in James or all of scripture. The only place James uses “save” is in ch1:21, referring to the"word which is able to SAVE your souls." In Ch.2 James explains “by works a man is justified and not by faith only.” Being “justified” is not the same as salvation. There is much more to it. Perhaps that is the source of confusion?
The confusion lies with you. Let’s look at the whole passage. I’ll even use the NKJV translation to show your error.

James 2:14 What does it profit, my brethren, if someone says he has faith but does not have works? Can faith save him? 15 If a brother or sister is naked and destitute of daily food, 16 and one of you says to them, “Depart in peace, be warmed and filled,” but you do not give them the things which are needed for the body, what does it profit? 17 Thus also faith by itself, if it does not have works, is dead.

18 But someone will say, “You have faith, and I have works.” Show me your faith without your[d] works, and I will show you my faith by my[e] works. 19 You believe that there is one God. You do well. Even the demons believe—and tremble! 20 But do you want to know, O foolish man, **that faith without works is dead?**f] 21 Was not Abraham our father justified by works when he offered Isaac his son on the altar? 22 Do you see that faith was working together with his works, and by works faith was made perfect? 23 And the Scripture was fulfilled which says, “Abraham believed God, and it was accounted to him for righteousness.”[g] And he was called the friend of God. 24 You see then that a man is justified by works, and not by faith only.

25 Likewise, was not Rahab the harlot also justified by works when she received the messengers and sent them out another way?

26 For as the body without the spirit is dead, so faith without works is dead also.

So we see that you are in error on this passage. James is CLEARLY talking about salvation in this passage. Perhaps it is time for you to fight against your pride and consider you may be wrong on this issue.
You also understand OT different. What I learned was that nearly everything in the OT is a shadow and a type of things to come and not the actual. If something is a shadow in the Old, it doesn’t mean we can’t receive the reality in the New. For instance, the rock that Moses struck was a symbol of Christ, and if we see that symbol it does not prevent us from actually receiving Him in the NT.
God says in a prefugure that He intends to save Israel. “Not by power, not by might, but by My Spirit sayeth the Lord.”
The Church also says that the OT is a prefigurement of the NT, and the Old Covenant is the foreshadowing of the New Covenant. That doesn’t mean that circumcision was the ACTUAL way that people were made a part of the Old Covenant. It didn’t matter if they mentally assented to it, or declared their belief in God. Until they were circumcised, they were not part of the covenant. Same with baptism.
Your Covenant looks like a covenant of “works” to me. The Old Covenant was a covenant of law and works, but the New Covenant is a covenant of grace. They are as different as death and life.
Then your understanding of what I’m saying is severely flawed if that is what you think I am saying.
The way one comes into a covenant (unless you are the one to establish it) is to be born.
Males were not made a part of the old covenant when they were born. You are in error here. They had to be circumcised. And people are born again when they are baptized, which makes them part of the New Covenant.
Now tell me zz, what works do you need to do to be the son of your father?
Obey the two great commandments
Obey the 10 commandments
Feed the hungry
Care for the orphan and widow
Clothe the naked
Visit those in prison
Forgive others
Be baptized
Eat the Flesh and drink the Blood of Jesus
Care for your family
etc etc etc
 
Agreed. But we must cooperate with God’s grace with our faith and works.

Careful about being so smarmy. Because in reality, it is you who fails to understand. I understand fully that Jesus gets all the credit and glory. That you even think this shows how little you truly understand the Catholic position.

I must admit I have my doubts if you truly do want to understand. But in any event, I’ll explain.

Our works don’t save us, but our faith AND works must cooperate with God’s grace for us to be saved. Grace is a free gift, but we must accept it and must cooperate with it. God’s commands are not optional, and we won’t be saved if we disobey them (and/or don’t repent of them).

The confusion lies with you. Let’s look at the whole passage. I’ll even use the NKJV translation to show your error.

James 2:14 What does it profit, my brethren, if someone says he has faith but does not have works? Can faith save him? 15 If a brother or sister is naked and destitute of daily food, 16 and one of you says to them, “Depart in peace, be warmed and filled,” but you do not give them the things which are needed for the body, what does it profit? 17 Thus also faith by itself, if it does not have works, is dead.

18 But someone will say, “You have faith, and I have works.” Show me your faith without your[d] works, and I will show you my faith by my[e] works. 19 You believe that there is one God. You do well. Even the demons believe—and tremble! 20 But do you want to know, O foolish man, **that faith without works is dead?**f] 21 Was not Abraham our father justified by works when he offered Isaac his son on the altar? 22 Do you see that faith was working together with his works, and by works faith was made perfect? 23 And the Scripture was fulfilled which says, “Abraham believed God, and it was accounted to him for righteousness.”[g] And he was called the friend of God. 24 You see then that a man is justified by works, and not by faith only.

25 Likewise, was not Rahab the harlot also justified by works when she received the messengers and sent them out another way?

26 For as the body without the spirit is dead, so faith without works is dead also.

So we see that you are in error on this passage. James is CLEARLY talking about salvation in this passage. Perhaps it is time for you to fight against your pride and consider you may be wrong on this issue.

The Church also says that the OT is a prefigurement of the NT, and the Old Covenant is the foreshadowing of the New Covenant. That doesn’t mean that circumcision was the ACTUAL way that people were made a part of the Old Covenant. It didn’t matter if they mentally assented to it, or declared their belief in God. Until they were circumcised, they were not part of the covenant. Same with baptism.

Then your understanding of what I’m saying is severely flawed if that is what you think I am saying.

Males were not made a part of the old covenant when they were born. You are in error here. They had to be circumcised. And people are born again when they are baptized, which makes them part of the New Covenant.

Obey the two great commandments
Obey the 10 commandments
Feed the hungry
Care for the orphan and widow
Clothe the naked
Visit those in prison
Forgive others
Be baptized
Eat the Flesh and drink the Blood of Jesus
Care for your family
etc etc etc
Okay, I’m not getting what your trying to say. I think the major part of our differences hinge on how we interpret James since Catholics invariably go to this portion of scripture to explain the plan of salvation.

So I would like to pick this apart one step at a time if you will.

I see that so far we agree that works don’t save us. (Pelagianism)

But there is some way in which our actions (works) enter in.

So the first question is: Do our actions add to our salvation in a positive way?
Or: Do they add to what Christ has done?
Do they add further justification?
Or something else?
 
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