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amgid
Guest
Everything in scripture suggests that baptism is unto repentance for the remission of our own sins. There is nothing in scripture that suggests that baptism is for the removal of Adam’s “original sin”. Show me one scripture that supports that doctrine. There is not one scripture that says that baptism is for the removal of the “original sin”. There are plenty that say that it is for the remission of our own sins.I agree that baptism is for the remission of sins. I also agree that babies have not sinned. But like it or not, all are born into a condition of origial sin (which I know LDS reject), which means we are not born into this world in the grace of God, but rather have a predisposition to sin. Grace was lost for all humans at the Fall, and it is baptism that gives us this grace and brings us into the family of God. Of course Christ made this all possible. We need this grace in order to overcome sin for the rest of our lives–we cannot do it on our own–it’s impossible.
Regardless of what is in the catechism, that would be the logical conclusion of that theological position. You have to make up your mind which side you want to jump. You can’t have it both ways.This is not true, and you should know better than to make such a statement because it has been explained to you and others several times before. The Catholic Church, in its official world-wide Catechism, teaches quite the contrary.
I’m glad you recognize that Israel lived under a different law. Unfortunately, you have your laws mixed up. Circumcision was the sign of the covenant given to Abraham and all his decendants. It had nothing to do with “hardness of hearts.” It had everything to do with Abraham’s faithfulness.
What I was referring to is that the law of circumcision was done away by the Atonement, just as the rest of the Mosaic law was done away. That is made clear enough in the NT.What you are referring to is the Deuterocanical covenant delivered to Moses as a result of the golden calf indicent. This lesser law was given as a consequence for Isreal’s “hardness of heart,” which was their breaking of the Sinai covenant by their pagan worship and other vile practices. In effect, God put Israel on probabtion with the Dueterocanicial covenant, which instituted such things as divorce and remarriage, a complex animal sacrificial system to rid them of their addiction to Egypt’s gods, many dietary restrictions, etc. It also removed the priesthood from every tribe except the faithful Levites, and separated most of Israel from the sacred central sanctuary (precursor to the temple). This lesser law, by the way, is the one which the New Covenant invalidated as described by Paul in his writings.
I have no idea what you are implying here, except that it is a red herring to divert the discussion into irrelevance. I gave you that as evidence that baptism did not replace circumcision, as you had stated, because it had existed among the Jews prior to that. It was an ordinance that the Jews recognized. It cannot be a replacement for the law of circumcision because it existed among the Jews before circumcision was done away.I’ll go you one further. Baptism existed even before that in pagan cultures.
Unfortunately the scriptures disagree with you about that:John’s baptism did not really take away sin, nor did that of any pagan culture. Often God takes something ordinary and makes it extraordinary, which is what Christ did with baptism.
Mark 1:
4 John did baptize in the wilderness, and preach the baptism of repentance for the remission of sins.
5 And there went out unto him all the land of Judæa, and they of Jerusalem, and were all baptized of him in the river of Jordan, confessing their sins.Either John did preach (and perform) baptisms “for the remission of sins,” or he didn’t. You can’t have it both ways.
(Continued in the next post…)
amgid