SaulToPaul 2
Well-known member
If Paul had done away with Baptism why did the Gentile Christians continue to practice it?
2 Tim 1:15 (KJV)
If Paul had done away with Baptism why did the Gentile Christians continue to practice it?
Because everybody knows what Paul was and did before meeting Christ and receiving ongoing revelations the rest of his life, including this current dispensation -
View attachment 20896
Sound teaching coming off the pulpit from faithful men is a hard find. The ones that I would attend are very far from where I live, but I do get to study with them live online. If you're interested, I'll share some links with you in a pm.
Was there a church in the wilderness? Before Acts.
You don't see something new and different from Christ for Paul starting in Acts 9 ?
Acts 9:15-16 KJV
Yer attachment starts in Galatians 3.
Grave error.
Paul knew he was going to the heathens from jump street.
There was no later command.
Galatians 1:16 KJV
16 To reveal his Son in me, that I might preach him among the heathen; immediately I conferred not with flesh and blood:
2 Tim 1:15 (KJV)
LA,
You began this thread with posting some issues that you couldn't get any Mid-Acts Dispensationalists to address. I addressed them in as intellectually honest a manner as I know how but you remain undeterred and seem to want to insist that my position is somehow an outlier and that your understanding of our doctrine is still accurate. It isn't.
Your posts on this thread since I showed up here show an unwillingness to discuss anything but rather a desire on your part to preach and to erect straw men to knock over. Typically, I'd just blow you off and let you live blissfully in your ignorance but for whatever reason I've decided to make an exception and see if I can get an honest attempt on your part to answer a question or two in defense of your own position. After all, turn about is fair play! The hope is genuinely to spark a real exchange where perhaps you'll leave with, at the very least, a better understanding of what it is you're fighting against because if you persist with this idea that all we are doing is trying to figure out a way to preserve the denial of a pet doctrine of yours, you're never going to get anything but a bunch of people thinking you're one scoop shy of an ice cream sundae.
Give a crack at answering the following question(s)...
If the gospel message preached by Paul is the same message preached by Peter then what's the point of Paul in the first place?
Weren't there already twelve Apostles? Wheren't all twelve indwelt by the Holy Spirit (Acts 1:32 - 2:4)? Wasn't it the Apostles that were given the Great Commission by Christ Himself as well as all authority to act in His absence, even the authority to forgive sins? (Matt. 28:16-20 & John 20:19-23). Was the indwelling of the Holy Spirit insufficient to make them both willing and able to preach the gospel to the whole world?
Why Paul?
I have another question for you...
Are you a communist?
Sounds like a ridiculous question but it isn't. You want to have a church modeled after the church Peter lead in the first century? Better put your house on the market!
Acts 4:32 - 5:11
Why was the first century church in Jerusalem communal and why shouldn't the church be communal today?
I look forward to your answers.
Resting in Him,
Clete
Paul was prepared in many ways to take the message to the nations for many reasons. He was educated and very well aware of all the philosophies and religions that were prevalent in that time. He knew how to talk to the many people's who lived beyond the borders of Israel. Paul was not only called but prepared to head up the outreach to the Gentile nations. Likewise Peter lead the mission to the Gentiles. I do not see that they needed to have fundamentally different messages nor do I see that the plan did not evolve over time. In fact it did, which is why later many of the Twelve left Israel to start missions in different nations at the time. History tells us that is what they did. Out of the original Apostles apparently only James stayed in Jerusalem and continued to minister exclusively to the Jews until around 68 AD.
At least they never explicitly said "there are two (or more) gospels" Still less did they teach about what the different "gospels" were, elaborating on the similarities and differences between them. If there had been a "Jewish Gospel" common sense would have dictated that it needed to be precisely identified so that people would not confuse that with the false "gospel" of the Judaizers.
The word "communist" implies the use of force to coerce people to give up their possessions. There is no place where we read that the Holy Spirit issued general orders to everyone to give up all they had to the community. Ananias and Sapphira were not made to give up there possessions. As Peter told them
4While it remained unsold, did it not remain your own? And after it was sold, was it not at your disposal? (Acts 5:4)
Their sin was lying to the Holy Spirit - telling everyone that they had given all the money to the community when they had held back part of the price.
Sometimes on the mission field believers have a communal economy so their needs will be met while they focus on a the work of the ministry. I think it is clear that, at that time and place, the Spirit was leading a lot of people to give up their fortunes at that. I happen to think God was encouraging them to not focus on their jobs an homes so the Church could band together in an effort to reach out to their fellow Jews. This is speculation but it seems to fit what was going on at the time. He wanted them to be going out with the message of the gospel. Some, like Philip went out. For most, it seems to have taken persecution before they spread out. I do not think we can make what God was doing at a particular time as a mandate for all believers of all times.
The way things are going I can see the day when Christians might have to band together communally in order to survive. We had best not assume God is through with that pattern of life.
LA,
You began this thread with posting some issues that you couldn't get any Mid-Acts Dispensationalists to address. I addressed them in as intellectually honest a manner as I know how but you remain undeterred and seem to want to insist that my position is somehow an outlier and that your understanding of our doctrine is still accurate. It isn't.
Your posts on this thread since I showed up here show an unwillingness to discuss anything but rather a desire on your part to preach and to erect straw men to knock over. Typically, I'd just blow you off and let you live blissfully in your ignorance but for whatever reason I've decided to make an exception and see if I can get an honest attempt on your part to answer a question or two in defense of your own position. After all, turn about is fair play! The hope is genuinely to spark a real exchange where perhaps you'll leave with, at the very least, a better understanding of what it is you're fighting against because if you persist with this idea that all we are doing is trying to figure out a way to preserve the denial of a pet doctrine of yours, you're never going to get anything but a bunch of people thinking you're one scoop shy of an ice cream sundae.
Give a crack at answering the following question(s)...
If the gospel message preached by Paul is the same message preached by Peter then what's the point of Paul in the first place?
Weren't there already twelve Apostles? Wheren't all twelve indwelt by the Holy Spirit (Acts 1:32 - 2:4)? Wasn't it the Apostles that were given the Great Commission by Christ Himself as well as all authority to act in His absence, even the authority to forgive sins? (Matt. 28:16-20 & John 20:19-23). Was the indwelling of the Holy Spirit insufficient to make them both willing and able to preach the gospel to the whole world?
Why Paul?
I have another question for you...
Are you a communist?
Sounds like a ridiculous question but it isn't. You want to have a church modeled after the church Peter lead in the first century? Better put your house on the market!
Acts 4:32 - 5:11
Why was the first century church in Jerusalem communal and why shouldn't the church be communal today?
I look forward to your answers.
Resting in Him,
Clete
Paul was not eligible to be one of the twelve, besides, there will be twelve thrones judging the twelve tribes in the regeneration, not thirteen.
Rev 20:4 And I saw thrones, and they sat upon them, and judgment was given unto them: and I saw the souls of them that were beheaded for the witness of Jesus, and for the word of God, and which had not worshipped the beast, neither his image, neither had received his mark upon their foreheads, or in their hands; and they lived and reigned with Christ a thousand years.
For me, they are just too busy trying to formulate. They need to just let the various key statements of Scripture clash where they will.
Huh?
You could have said none of this - none of it - if you knew a thing about what you're talking about.MAD is doctrinaire. They think there is a 'perfect' system in the NT that will have everything in a correct 'spot.' Nonsense. Meanwhile, while spending so much effort trying to find that elusive thing, they missed the plain meaning of the passages that say how the Bible is to be organized--or Biblical history, or theological history. Acts 13, 26, Eph 2, 3, Rom 3, 4, Gal 3, 4, Heb 8-10, 2 Cor 3-5.
The one belief that the new covenant is not in effect right now is red flag enough to consider the whole thing mad-ness. It is theology at its worst.
MAD is doctrinaire. They think there is a 'perfect' system in the NT that will have everything in a correct 'spot.' Nonsense. Meanwhile, while spending so much effort trying to find that elusive thing, they missed the plain meaning of the passages that say how the Bible is to be organized--or Biblical history, or theological history. Acts 13, 26, Eph 2, 3, Rom 3, 4, Gal 3, 4, Heb 8-10, 2 Cor 3-5.
The one belief that the new covenant is not in effect right now is red flag enough to consider the whole thing mad-ness. It is theology at its worst.
Here's another great example of the sort of doctrinal debate that falls right down the line between Paul vs. the rest of the biblical authors...
This should end the discussion about easy grace and OSAS!
Of course it doesn't end the discussion at all. It only shows you which authors the poster prefers to put into the lead position. Even those in that thread who attempt to make an argument in opposition to the opening post by citing the occasional non-Pauline epistle do so out of context. For example, they might bring up a 1 Peter passage while talking about OSAS and think that means that the passage they cite is talking about OSAS when it actually isn't. It's the same tactic I was talking about before just modified a bit. Instead of taking a problem text and forcing it to say something other than what it says, they take an entirely unrelated text and pretend that it supports their position and hope that the reader doesn't notice. Either way, the only way to let the text of scripture mean what it seems to mean is to rightly divide the word of truth and allow Israel to be Israel and the Body of Christ be the Body of Christ - two different groups with different massages and different Apostles.
Resting in Him,
Clete
As I call it? The passage cited uses the phrase, "they had all things in common". That's what the word "communal" means. Those who live communally are communist, by definition. It isn't "my term" its THE term. I don't get to define words; no one even asks my opinion about what words should mean. They just mean what the mean. I have nothing to do with it.
You are a lunatic.
Do you own your house? Do you have a savings account? Do the members of your church have the authority to make a claim on the production of your labor based solely on what they think is their need?
I know they don't! If they did, you couldn't afford the computer required to post on this forum.
Do you agree with the following notion?...
From each according to his ability. To each according to his need.
I attend a Baptist church but do not consider myself a Baptist. Their doctrine is just the least wrong of the churches near me, that I can find. Why do you ask?
Huh?
Resting in Him,
Clete