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Results from: Answered Bible Questions, Answers, Unanswered Bible Questions, Notes Ordered by Verse | ||||||
Results | Verse | Author | ID# | |||
1 | How Does Baptism Save? | 1 Pet 3:21 | Searcher56 | 78337 | ||
Wow ... if I am not to be literal, am I do be figurative? I doubt there is something between ... but maybe you go through the middle. I only am figurative, when the literal does not make sense. To me it make sense to take may view on Noah's 8 and the Israelites. Why wouldn't you be so literal in this passage? Searcher |
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2 | How Does Baptism Save? | 1 Pet 3:21 | sniper | 78339 | ||
I explained. Type/antitype. Shadow of the real thing. Reading the passge literally and understanding the type/antitype relationship will give a proper understanding. | ||||||
3 | How Does Baptism Save? | 1 Pet 3:21 | Searcher56 | 78343 | ||
Go back to post # 77597 ... In part ... "Corresponding to" or "symbolizes" (NIV) or "like figure" (KJV) is the Greek word antitupon. It means copy, a thing formed after some pattern, a thing resembling another, its counterpart. Baptism is a copy of or corresponds to something else. What is it? We need to look at the context. I see two choices - the flood or the ark? Which saved Noah and his family? It was the ark. -- Does the baptism have to be water baptism, or can it be being baptized by the Spirit? Remember Noah's 8 didn't get wet. |
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4 | How Does Baptism Save? | 1 Pet 3:21 | sniper | 78410 | ||
True, Noah did not get wet. Noah was brought safely through the water though, and that is where the similarity is. God bless and have a good weekend:) |
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