Matt. 7:6
These words are being spoken to the Jews, not the Body of Christ.
Matt. 7:6
Hi and here is a LITERAL translation of 1 Cor 10:1 !!
The Holy Spirit writes , " Now I do not wish you to be Ignorant , brethren , that all OUR FATHERS ( those of Moses time ) were uinder the Cloud , and all passed through the Sea .
v2 , And all were PLACED ( a transliteration of the Greek word BAPTIZO ) ( TOGETHER ) unto Moses In the Cloud and in the Sea!!
Another good transliterated Greek word for BAPTIZO is the word Identification !!
No water here at all !!
dan p
H , and just where is that gospel mentioned in Acts 2 !!:mock::mock:
dan p
These words are being spoken to the Jews, not the Body of Christ.
Nope. We're living in the "Dispensation of Grace" and the "Grace Message" (Paul's Gospel) is in force. For Jew and gentile alike.
This is where you started to go wrong, when you said, "No water here at all!!"
He is deflecting by focusing on a word and will not acknowledge that a cloud and sea are made of water because it wouldn't support his twist.
I have always understood baptism to be immersion.
Original Word: βαπτίζω
Part of Speech: Verb
Transliteration: baptizó
Phonetic Spelling: (bap-tid'-zo)
Short Definition: I dip, submerge, baptize
Definition: lit: I dip, submerge, but specifically of ceremonial dipping; I baptize.
Paul spoke of the sea and cloud water, and Peter spoke of the flood as the water that saved.
1 Peter 3:20 to those who were disobedient long ago when God waited patiently in the days of Noah while the ark was being built. In it only a few people, eight in all, were saved through water, 21 and this water symbolizes baptism that now saves you also—not the removal of dirt from the body but the pledge of a clear conscience toward God
Yes, it's clear water is needed for baptism.
baptism that now saves you
vs
baptism can't save you
One is a direct quote from the bible but sadly people today believe the other one.
Water baptism is symbolic of what has already happened inside the believer.
Water baptism is a ceremony where you promise to God that you will die to the sins of the world and live pleasing to Jesus.
It is not much unlike a wedding ceremony.
I know people who believe in God and Jesus, and have much faith, yet they do not want to get water baptized. I think it is because they do not have their heart set on pleasing God and do not desire to stop sinning.
Hi , and the Greek word BAPTIZO /BAPTISM is a Transliteration as there is not Literal word in English so what does 1 Cor 15:29 means " BAPTIZO for the dead , mean ??
Or explain 1 Cor 10:2 mean , so EXPLAIN and stop running away from these verses !!:darwinsm::darwinsm:
dan p
My understanding of the Greek word has to with something being transformed by a process.
For example.
Iron dipped in hot oil or water is quenched and significantly alters it's composition..
A cucumber dipped in vinegar is transformed into a pickle.
Dipping us in water does not transform us... it only removes exterior dirt.
The Holy Spirit is the only thing that is transformational... and that is what John the Baptist promised was coming when he baptized Jesus.
Water baptism was something that was only required in the Old Covenant as part of a Jewish rite... a final washing away of the stain of the Old Covenant.
http://www.biblestudytools.com/lexicons/greek/nas/baptizo.html
Hi , and the Greek word BAPTIZO /BAPTISM is a Transliteration as there is not Literal word in English so what does 1 Cor 15:29 means " BAPTIZO for the dead , mean ??
Or explain 1 Cor 10:2 mean , so EXPLAIN and stop running away from these verses !!:darwinsm::darwinsm:
dan p
I'm curious where you got "your understanding". I did not do an exhaustive word search, just the first Greek definition that came up. It does not say anything about change. If you have another source, I would be interested in seeing it.
I understand that an example of baptism is dyeing. I was told that the material changes from being immersed. If immersion caused the change, then would it change without the dye in the water. It's being dipped, submerged but without the dye it does not change, therefore the immersion doesn't do the changing.
When Paul talks of the baptism of Moses, is he making an argument that water was part of the baptism or that no water was involved?
1 Cor. 10:1 For I do not want you to be ignorant of the fact, brothers and sisters, that our ancestors were all under the cloud and that they all passed through the sea. 2 They were all baptized into Moses in the cloud and in the sea.
There's a parallel between Jesus and Moses, Christians are said to be baptized into Jesus, just like the Jews are baptized into Moses as Paul said.
Hades resembles the sea, baptism means we are going to be buried in such a sea of water. Baptism has another more important meaning, which is we will be pulled out of water which signifies the resurrection raising us from death/water. After resurrection we will be gathered in/under the clouds (the rapture). As a result, water represents that we are buried through death while clouds may signify that we will be raised with life.
The parallel:
Moses as a great prophet of the Jews, led the Jews going across the Red Sea, finally reaching the promised land for the Jews - Canaan.
Jesus as the greatest prophet of all time, will lead humans going across the sea of Hades, finally reaching the promised land for humans - the new earth and new heaven.
Interesting fairy tale.. but it doesn't pass the stink test.
Nicander's recipe for pickles.. he existed around 200 BC.. where he uses two varients of the word in his recipe.. bapto is used to describe dipping the cucumber in boiling water where as baptizo is used when the cucumber is put into vinegar thus becoming something entirely different... a pickle. So baptizo is the word that signifies changing one thing into another.
In the Ninth Book of the Odyssey, the word baptizo is used to describe a blacksmith plunging a piece of hot iron in water to temper it which changes it fundamental properties.
There are 7 different baptisms referenced in scripture... not all involve water... and all signify a change.
I personally wouldn't use those to understand the meaning of a word. I'll stick with Strongs.
I would think the reason they don't all refer to water is because the word doesn't mean water. Water is just one of the thinks a person can be immersed in.
In this particular baptism, is water involved?
1 Cor. 10:1 For I do not want you to be unaware, brethren, that our fathers were all under the cloud and all passed through the sea; 2and all were baptized into Moses in the cloud and in the sea;