Free Republic
Browse · Search
Religion
Topics · Post Article

To: one Lord one faith one baptism

Baptist history only goes back to around 1600, so I guess Christianity began around than because you see the rest of us are apostates.

On that account the Baptists and Mormons are in agreement.


7 posted on 11/04/2011 9:47:37 PM PDT by rzman21
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 5 | View Replies ]


To: rzman21

*** Baptist history only goes back to around 1600, so I guess Christianity began around than because you see the rest of us are apostates. ***

It seems that your statement above is Biblically absolutely dead wrong in the first part, and partially Scripturally correct on the second part, of course. Why?

By the command of The Christ, His fully committed followers were ordained to make more disciples from all tribes of people; to immerse in water these new disciples individually, for a public sign of total commitment to The Father, to The Son, and to The Holy Ghost conjointly; and to congregate those disciples for public instruction in continually watchfully guarding all the commands of The Christ from any corrupting change whatsoever throughout this age. There The Christ avowed He would always stand with them in this effort.

Immersionists have constituted the visible Bodies of The Christ since the birth of the local church of Jerusalem on the day of Pentecost; where, subsequent to gladly receiving the instruction of Simon Peter that day, about 3,000 responsible souls repented of sin, accepted immersion in water as a sign, were added to the Jerusalem local church as new regenerated disciple-believer constituents, continuing in the doctrine of the apostles, in The Fellowship, in The Breaking of The Bread, and in the prayers.

The resurgence of immersionists in the 1600s as baptisers of responsible adults is only a reconstitution of the local assemblies which follow the pure New Testament doctrine as demonstrated on Pentecost. These 1600s baptisers rejected the corruption of the statist Roman religion, as well as that of its illegitimate daughters, who sought to reform the Roman religion rather than to reject it completely.

One corruption of all of those religionists was subscribing to the Roman-innnovated “baptism” of unqualified, irresponsible, unbelieving, unregenerated infants, which changed the position of those infants not at all, and was never commanded by The Christ. Doctrinally correct disciple-believers have never practiced infant-baptism nor attributed any merits to it.

So — yes — those, who imagine that infant “baptism” creates new Christ-followers, are pursuing deep apostate error and malpractice. Such apostasy clearly indicates a departure away from The Faith once delivered to the saints, away from those whom The Christ has summoned to meet together to bear the good fruit of more immersionist-discipled-believers, and away from The Fellowship of The Holy Ghost.

That makes the numbers of observable practitioners of The Faith even smaller than that estimated by most of Christendom. Eh?

Is that worth thinking a bit about? Should one not muse, “Am I in The Faith?”


11 posted on 11/05/2011 7:04:50 AM PDT by imardmd1 ((Let the Redeemed say so ...))
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 7 | View Replies ]

Free Republic
Browse · Search
Religion
Topics · Post Article


FreeRepublic, LLC, PO BOX 9771, FRESNO, CA 93794
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson