Results 201 - 220 of 819
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Results from: Answered Bible Questions, Answers, Unanswered Bible Questions, Notes Author: flinkywood Ordered by Date |
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Results | Verse | Author | ID# | |||
201 | Verses where water alone means baptism? | John 3:5 | flinkywood | 134794 | ||
Tim, If we can lose salvation by choosing to sin, how can we also not lose it by anything we do? Colin |
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202 | Verses where water alone means baptism? | John 3:5 | flinkywood | 134793 | ||
Tim, 10-4. | ||||||
203 | Verses where water alone means baptism? | John 3:5 | flinkywood | 134789 | ||
Tim, I see free will all over my house, by the way. Is it biblically possible that the serpent was threatening Adam and Eve's lives? Colin |
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204 | Verses where water alone means baptism? | John 3:5 | flinkywood | 134788 | ||
Tim, when we choose to sin, do we also jeopardize our salvation? Colin |
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205 | Verses where water alone means baptism? | John 3:5 | flinkywood | 134786 | ||
Tim, I agree, but the story is so enigmatic. What do you think caused Adam to disobey? Colin |
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206 | Verses where water alone means baptism? | John 3:5 | flinkywood | 134778 | ||
Tim, From Genesis 3:1-7, what do you think the nature of Adam's original sin was? Colin |
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207 | Verses where water alone means baptism? | John 3:5 | flinkywood | 134776 | ||
Dalcent, I'm studying Catholic theology and trying to understand the true nature of the Catholic-Protestant rift. I've also come to detest the invective shouted across this idiotic divide. Colin |
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208 | Verses where water alone means baptism? | John 3:5 | flinkywood | 134775 | ||
EdB, I agree with your last point. It also appears, following your observation, that Paul is driving towards a larger point to the "Judaizers", i.e. that Abraham's is not a lineage based on flesh but on faith, and that our real lineage is from Adam, from whom we all, Jews and Gentiles alike, inherit the original sin which separates us from the family of God. In other words, "Hey, Judaizers, you brag on Abraham like you got it made in the shade. Well, I'm here to warn you, Abraham is spiritual father of the faithful only; It's Adam you should really worry about, because he's the father of us all." Colin |
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209 | Verses where water alone means baptism? | John 3:5 | flinkywood | 134744 | ||
EdB, Sorry, I don't follow. Are you saying that Paul is elucidating this specific theme in Romans 6,7,8? | ||||||
210 | WHO pays the wage? | 1 John 1:9 | flinkywood | 134710 | ||
Dalcent, It's clear that we don't earn salvation, that's a work of God, but are you saying we must cooperate with God in order to work out our salvation anyway? Colin |
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211 | Verses where water alone means baptism? | John 3:5 | flinkywood | 134709 | ||
Doc, I don't know of any evidence to the contrary, but it looks like the early reformers retained a lot of what they opposed, the sufficiency of Christ's once-for-all sacrifice, for example. It's apparent that both branches, Catholic and Protestant, have evolved more-or-less organically, though I have the impression that Protestantism, being younger, is still trying to assemble its wardrobe, so to speak, while Catholics, on the other hand, are wardrobe a-go-go. Colin |
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212 | Verses where water alone means baptism? | John 3:5 | flinkywood | 134700 | ||
Emmaus, Catholic theology is thickly interwoven. Strand by strand it gets curioser and curioser. Colin |
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213 | Verses where water alone means baptism? | John 3:5 | flinkywood | 134699 | ||
Tim, We can't sanctify ourselves, for sure, but apart from believing on Him whom HE sent, what's out part in the saint-making process? Are we responsible for any of it? Colin |
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214 | Verses where water alone means baptism? | John 3:5 | flinkywood | 134695 | ||
Tim, No effort on our part, initially or otherwise? Colin |
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215 | Verses where water alone means baptism? | John 3:5 | flinkywood | 134682 | ||
EdB, What do you mean? Is there any particular passage in Romans? Colin |
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216 | Verses where water alone means baptism? | John 3:5 | flinkywood | 134681 | ||
Doc, I'm also reading Fox's. Something caught my eye early on which puzzles me. Peter, fleeing Nero's persecution, meets Jesus at the gate of Rome: "...'Lord, whither dost Thou go?' To whom he answered and said , 'I am come again to be crucified." Peter is subsequently crucified opside-down because "he was (he said) unworthy to be crucified after the same form and manner as the Lord was." Foxe's account seems at odds with contemporary teaching on 2 points: 1) Peter is in Rome. 2) Christ is to be re-crucified. Not only does Foxe locate Peter in Rome, he's also at variance with contemporary teaching on the once-for-all sufficiency of Christ's sacrifice. What do you make of this? Colin |
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217 | Verses where water alone means baptism? | John 3:5 | flinkywood | 134676 | ||
Tim, In Catholic theology original sin is distinct from the sins of the flesh. Catholics view baptism as a sacrament (in that it effects what it symbolizes) that washes us clean of the former; the latter remains for us to struggle against with self-examination and confession. That struggle is integral to our sanctification. Interesting. Colin |
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218 | Verses where water alone means baptism? | John 3:5 | flinkywood | 134677 | ||
Tim, In Catholic theology original sin is distinct from the sins of the flesh. Catholics view baptism as a sacrament (in that it effects what it symbolizes) that washes us clean of the former; the latter remains for us to struggle against with self-examination and confession. That struggle is integral to our sanctification. Interesting. Colin |
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219 | John Chrysostom | John 3:5 | flinkywood | 134660 | ||
By "perspective" do you mean an overdependence on ceremony? Colin |
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220 | John Chrysostom | John 3:5 | flinkywood | 134645 | ||
Searcher, you ask a very good question. Are you implying that because these are symbols only, then the whole Catholic thing stands on ceremony? Colin |
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