He tells you in the text.
And what does that text say?
Does Paul say, "ok, I'll be baptized, but just for fun because it doesn't mean anything for the body of Christ, a population of which I have just become the first member."?
:nono:
Ananias told Paul to rise and be baptized, washing away his sins calling on His Name (Acts 22:16).
Now, what gospel was Paul saved under, Nick? The gospel of the circumcision or the gospel of the uncircumcision?
I asked why Paul baptized members of the body of Christ if that isn't for today?
You answer:
Nick said:
He tells you in the text. It appears you have not read Acts of the Apostles. I will cut you slack on this just like I did 6days.
I don't need slack, I need some explanation for why Paul regularly practiced something you refuse to practice and then blame Paul for not practicing it.
Under Paul's preaching Lydia and her household were baptized (Acts 16:15), the Philippian Jailer and his family (Acts 16:33),
many of the Corinthians were baptized under Paul's ministry (Acts 18:6) along with Crispus the ruler of the synagogue. Paul baptized the apostles of John in Acts 19.
MAD explanations of 1 Cor 1:17 generate a lot of confusion that the historical context of that verse makes clear. Not everyone that was baptized under Paul's ministry was baptized by Paul himself.
Thus Acts 18:8 can be true...
"many of the Corinthians, hearing, believed and were baptized."
And yet Paul says he didn't directly baptized many but only Crispus, Gaius and the household of Stephanus and perhaps a few others.
The simplest and best explanation is that Aquilla, Silas and Timothy did a fair amount of the baptizing in Corinth.
1 Cor 1:17 points out a division of labor when Paul sees large numbers of converts. Paul preaches, for that is why he was sent, and, for the most part, leaves the baptizing to others.
This is similar to Jesus' ministry where Jesus does the proclamation but His disciples did the baptizing (See John 4:1-2).
Nick said:
It is a ritual cleansing, not a real one because the day of atonement was in the future.
Baptism is a ritual that portrays cleansing for certain.
1 Peter 3:21 makes that clear. The removal of dirt from the flesh doesn't save you but the answer of a good conscience toward God does.
If the day of atonement is in the future for believers of the circumcision gospel, then they have
no answer of a good conscience as their consciences would have yet to be cleansed and salvation would only be a future reality that they could not yet experience. Yet Peter tells them that they were
receiving (present tense) the end of their faith - the salvation of their souls (1 Peter 1:9).
Can you explain this?
:idunno:
Nick said:
Like I said, read Acts. And actually pay attention and believe Peter when he says it.
Maybe you should take your own advice.
Nick said:
The author of Hebrews is looking forward to salvation.
Sure, we all do. Salvation has past, present and future aspects to it. But one thing is absolutely certain from Hebrews.
The New Covenant is a covenant of salvation. It is a covenant where sins and lawless acts are remembered no more. (Hebrews 10:17) And it was put in force by the death of Christ on the cross. Thus the covenant that now governs God's relationship to mankind is the New Covenant.
Hebrews is absolutely clear
when a covenant goes into affect.
" For where there is a testament, there must also of necessity be the death of the testator.
17 For a testament is in force after men are dead, since it has no power at all while the testator lives.
18 Therefore not even the first covenant was dedicated without blood. (Heb 9:16-18 NKJ)
Nick, just read the bible and believe what it says.
When does the bible say a testament is in force?
Nick said:
He says it because the cross is atonement for sin.
It is. The cross was a once for all time atonement for sin.
The cross was accomplished in the past, therefore atonement for sin was accomplished in the past.
There is no future sacrifice of atonement.
For the life of me I don't know where you MAD folks got this quasi-catholic idea that the blood of Jesus has to be offered for atonement more than once.
Bible believers realize that when Hebrews says that the sacrifice of Christ was a once for all time sacrifice, it means
once for all time.
Nick said:
Just believe what it says.
I do, wanna join me?
Do you believe what Hebrews 9:17 says or not?
Nick said:
And for the record, Hebrews is not written to you. But Ephesians is written to you.
The book of Hebrews was written to Jews, probably in Jerusalem. Ephesians was written to both Jews and gentiles in Ephesus.
Neither of these books were written
to either you or I, but both were written
for you and I.
Now you quote Acts 3:17-19 presumably in order to prove that the atonement is future.
But that's not what Acts 3:17-19 says, not even close.
:nono: