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Ask your priest why???...

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Posted on 04/12/2012 at 00:01:44  |  Reply  |  Report Abuse |  -3
Hey, catholics, Here is proof that the catholic church is from the devil and the catholic pope, bishops and priest are the devil's agents.

Ask you priest why he has diliberately sent you and millions of catholics to hell.

The catholics pope's, biships and priests know what water baptism means.
They must or else they wouldn't be catholic ministers.

They also believe that water baptism saved, And they use,
Mk 16: 16. Acts 2: 38. Acts 22: 16. 1 Pet 3: 21. as their proof.

So, Let us put the true Greek Scripture meaning to , "Baptism", In those scriptures.

Mk 16: 16.
"He that believe and is baptised[By total immersion] shall be saved".

1 Pet 3: 21.
"Baptism[By total immersiom] saves".

Acts 2: 38.
"Repent and be baptised[By total immersion]for the remission of sins".

Acts 22: 16.
Arise and be baptised[By total immersion]washing away your sins".

catholcs aren't baptised, So acording to your priests, You aren't saved, your sins haven't been remited or washed away.
As Baptism mean, "Total submersion, total immersion".

Your priest knows this, But he deliberately doesn't baptise you knowning he is deliberately sending you to hell.

All the catholic church want's, Is you money, They are not interested in you or your soul.

So, Ask you priest why he is dilberately sending you to hell.
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Posted on 04/12/2012 at 04:55:16  |  Reply  |  Report Abuse |  0

G4, I do hope the following cut 'n' paste enabled you to appreciate the Church's understanding... with apologies for it's length, but it reads quite well.

Baptism: Immersion Only?
________________________________________
Although Latin-rite Catholics are usually baptized by infusion (pouring), they know that immersion (dunking) and sprinkling are also valid ways to baptize. Fundamentalists, however, regard only baptism by immersion as true baptism, concluding that most Catholics are not validly baptized at all.
Although the New Testament contains no explicit instructions on how physically to administer the water of baptism, Fundamentalists argue that the Greek word baptizo found in the New Testament means "to immerse." They also maintain that only immersion reflects the symbolic significance of being "buried" and "raised" with Christ (see Romans 6:3-4).
It is true that baptizo often means immersion. For example, the Greek version of the Old Testament tells us that Naaman, at Elisha’s direction, "went down and dipped himself [the Greek word here is baptizo] seven times in the Jordan" (2 Kgs. 5:14, Septuagint, emphasis added).
But immersion is not the only meaning of baptizo. Sometimes it just means washing up. Thus Luke 11:38 reports that, when Jesus ate at a Pharisee’s house, "[t]he Pharisee was astonished to see that he did not first wash [baptizo] before dinner." They did not practice immersion before dinner, but, according to Mark, the Pharisees "do not eat unless they wash [nipto] their hands, observing the tradition of the elders; and when they come from the market place, they do not eat unless they wash themselves [baptizo]" (Mark 7:3–4a, emphasis added). So baptizo can mean cleansing or ritual washing as well as immersion.
A similar range of meanings can be seen when baptizo is used metaphorically. Sometimes a figurative "baptism" is a sort of "immersion"; but not always. For example, speaking of his future suffering and death, Jesus said, "I have a baptism [baptisma] to be baptized [baptizo] with; and how I am constrained until it is accomplished!" (Luke 12:50) This might suggest that Christ would be "immersed" in suffering. On the other hand, consider the case of being "baptized with the Holy Spirit."
In Acts 1:4–5 Jesus charged his disciples "not to depart from Jerusalem, but to wait for the promise of the Father, which, he said, ‘you heard from me, for John baptized with water, but before many days you shall be baptized with the Holy Spirit.’" Did this mean they would be "immersed" in the Spirit? No: three times Acts 2 states that the Holy Spirit was poured out on them when Pentecost came (2:17, 18, 33, emphasis added). Later Peter referred to the Spirit falling upon them, and also on others after Pentecost, explicitly identifying these events with the promise of being "baptized with the Holy Spirit" (Acts 11:15–17). These passages demonstrate that the meaning of baptizo is broad enough to include "pouring."

Christian Baptism
The Fundamentalist contention that baptizo always means immersion is an oversimplification. This is especially true because in Christian usage the word had a highly particular meaning distinct from the term’s ordinary, everyday usage.
The same principle can be seen with other special Christian terms, such as "Trinity" and "agape" (divine love), that were originally ordinary Greek words with no special religious significance. The earliest evidence of anyone referring to God as a "Trinity" is a letter by Theophilus of Antioch (Ad Autolycum [A.D. 181]). Before the Christian usage, a "trinity" (triad in Greek) was simply any group of three things.
However, as Christians made theological use of the term, it quickly gained a new, technical sense, referring specifically to the three persons of the Godhead. When Christians professed that God is a "Triad," they did not mean a group of three gods, but one God in three persons. Here, an everyday word was being used in a special, theological sense.
The same is true of agape, originally a general term for any sort of "love" very much like the English word. But it quickly became used in Christian circles as the name of a common fellowship (love) meal among Christians (cf. Jude 12).
In the same way, baptizo acquired a specialized Christian usage distinct from its original meaning. In fact, it already had a complex history of specifically religious usages even before Christians adopted it. Long before Jesus’ day, Gentile converts to Judaism were "baptized" as well as circumcised. Then John the Baptist performed a "baptism of repentance" for Jews as a dramatic prophetic gesture indicating that they were as much in need of conversion as pagans. Through these usages baptizo acquired associations of initiation, conversion, and repentance.
Given this history, it was natural for Jesus and his followers to use the same word for Christian baptism, though it was not identical either to the Jewish baptism or to that of John. But it is completely misguided to try to determine the meaning of the word in its Christian sense merely on the basis of ordinary secular usage. It would be like thinking that the doctrine of the Trinity is polytheism or that the New Testament exhortation to "love one another" means only to be fond of each other. To understand what Christian baptism entailed, we must examine not what the word meant in other contexts, but what it meant and how it was practiced in a Christian context.

Inner and Outer Baptism
One important.aspect of Christian baptism in the New Testament is the clear relationship between being baptized with water and being "baptized with the Holy Spirit", or "born again." This tract is primarily concerned with the mode of baptism, not its effects [Footnote: For more on the relationship between baptism and rebirth, see John 3:5; Acts 2:38, 19:2–3, 22:16; Romans 6:3-4; Colossians 2:11–12; Titus 3:5; and 1 Peter 3:21; and also the Catholic Answers tract Baptismal Grace.]; but even non-Catholic Christians must admit that the New Testament clearly associates water baptism with Spirit baptism and rebirth (even if they do not interpret this relationship as cause and effect).
Right from the beginning, as soon as the Holy Spirit was given on Pentecost, water and Spirit went hand in hand: "Repent, and be baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ for the forgiveness of your sins; and you shall receive the gift of the Holy Spirit" (Acts 2:38).
In Acts 10:44, the first Gentiles to whom Peter preached received the Holy Spirit even before their water baptism. This is always possible, for God is free to operate outside the sacraments as well as within them. In this case it was fitting for the Spirit to be given before baptism, in order to show God’s acceptance of believing Gentiles. Even under these circumstances, however, the connection to water baptism is still evident from Peter’s response: "Can anyone withhold the water for baptizing these people who have received the Holy Spirit just as we have?" (Acts 10:47).
Still later in Acts, when Paul found people who did not have the Spirit, he immediately questioned whether they had received Christian water baptism. Upon learning that they had not, he baptized them and laid hands on them, and they received the Spirit (Acts 19:1–6).
These passages illustrate the connection between water and Spirit first made by Jesus himself: "Unless a man is born of water and the Spirit, he cannot enter the kingdom of God" (John 3:5).
Earlier we saw that the "baptism of the Holy Spirit" was depicted as "pouring." But these passages show that the "baptism" or "pouring" of the Spirit is itself closely related to water baptism.
This provides some balance to the Fundamentalist argument that only baptism by immersion adequately symbolizes death and resurrection with Jesus. It is true that immersion bestrepresents death and resurrection, bringing out more fully the meaning of the sacrament than pouring or sprinkling (cf. Catechism of the Catholic Church 1239). (Immersion is actually the usual mode of baptizing in the Catholic Church’s Eastern rites.) On the other hand, pouring best represents the infusion of the Holy Spirit also associated with water baptism. And all three modes adequately suggest the sense of cleansing signified by baptism. No one mode has exclusive symbolical validity over the others.

Physical Difficulties
After Peter’s first sermon, three thousand people were baptized in Jerusalem (Acts 2:41). Archaeologists have demonstrated there was no sufficient water supply for so many to have been immersed. Even if there had been, the natives of Jerusalem would scarcely have let their city’s water supply be polluted by three thousand unwashed bodies plunging into it. These people must have been baptized by pouring or sprinkling.
Even today practical difficulties can render immersion nearly or entirely impossible for some individuals: for example, people with certain medical conditions—the bedridden; quadriplegics; individuals with tracheotomies (an opening into the airway in the throat) or in negative pressure ventilators (iron lungs). Again, those who have recently undergone certain procedures (such as open-heart surgery) cannot be immersed, and may not wish to defer baptism until their recovery (for example, if they are to undergo further procedures).
Other difficulties arise in certain environments. For example, immersion may be nearly or entirely impossible for desert nomads or Eskimos. Or consider those in prison—not in America, where religious freedom gives prisoners the right to be immersed if they desire—but in a more hostile setting, such as a Muslim regime, where baptisms must be done in secret, without adequate water for immersion.
What are we to do in these and similar cases? Shall we deny people the sacrament because immersion is impractical or impossible for them? Ironically, the Fundamentalist, who acknowledges that baptism is commanded but thinks it isn’t essential for salvation, may make it impossible for many people to be baptized at all in obedience to God’s command. The Catholic, who believes baptism confers grace and is normatively necessary for salvation, maintains that God wouldn’t require a form of baptism that, for some people, is impossible.

Baptism in the Early Church
That the early Church permitted pouring instead of immersion is demonstrated by the Didache, a Syrian liturgical manual that was widely circulated among the churches in the first few centuries of Christianity, perhaps the earliest Christian writing outside the New Testament.
The Didache was written around A.D. 70 and, though not inspired, is a strong witness to the sacramental practice of Christians in the apostolic age. In its seventh chapter, the Didache reads, "Concerning baptism, baptize in this manner: Having said all these things beforehand, baptize in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit in living water [that is, in running water, as in a river]. If there is no living water, baptize in other water; and, if you are not able to use cold water, use warm. If you have neither, pour water three times upon the head in the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit." These instructions were composed either while some of the apostles and disciples were still alive or during the next generation of Christians, and they represent an already established custom.
The testimony of the Didache is seconded by other early Christian writings. Hippolytus of Rome said, "If water is scarce, whether as a constant condition or on occasion, then use whatever water is available" (The Apostolic Tradition, 21 [A.D. 215]). Pope Cornelius I wrote that as Novatian was about to die, "he received baptism in the bed where he lay, by pouring" (Letter to Fabius of Antioch [A.D. 251]; cited in Eusebius, Ecclesiastical History, 6:4311).
Cyprian advised that no one should be "disturbed because the sick are poured upon or sprinkled when they receive the Lord’s grace" (Letter to a Certain Magnus 69:12 [A.D. 255]). Tertullian described baptism by saying that it is done "with so great simplicity, without pomp, without any considerable novelty of preparation, and finally, without cost, a man is baptized in water, and amid the utterance of some few words, is sprinkled, and then rises again, not much (or not at all) the cleaner" (On Baptism, 2 [A.D. 203]). Obviously, Tertullian did not consider baptism by immersion the only valid form, since he says one is only sprinkled and thus comes up from the water "not much (or not at all) the cleaner."

Ancient Christian Mosaics Show Pouring
Then there is the artistic evidence. Much of the earliest Christian artwork depicts baptism—but not baptism by immersion! If the recipient of the sacrament is in a river, he is shown standing in the river while water is poured over his head from a cup or shell. Tile mosaics in ancient churches and paintings in the catacombs depict baptism by pouring. Baptisteries in early cemeteries are clear witnesses to baptisms by infusion. The entire record of the early Church—as shown in the New Testament, in other writings, and in monumental evidence—indicates the mode of baptism was not restricted to immersion.
Other archaeological evidence confirms the same thing. An early Christian baptistery was found in a church in Jesus’ hometown of Nazareth, yet this baptistery, which dates from the second century, was too small and narrow in which to immerse a person.
NIHIL OBSTAT: I have concluded that the materials
presented in this work are free of doctrinal or moral errors.
Bernadeane Carr, STL, Censor Librorum, August 10, 2004
IMPRIMATUR: In accord with 1983 CIC 827
permission to publish this work is hereby granted.
+Robert H. Brom, Bishop of San Diego, August 10, 2004

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Posted on 04/12/2012 at 06:32:58  |  Reply  |  Report Abuse |  0
quote:
Originally posted by philial


G4, I do hope the following cut 'n' paste enabled you to appreciate the Church's understanding... with apologies for it's length, but it reads quite well.

Baptism: Immersion Only?
________________________________________
Although Latin-rite Catholics are usually baptized by infusion (pouring), they know that immersion (dunking) and sprinkling are also valid ways to baptize. Fundamentalists, however, regard only baptism by immersion as true baptism, concluding that most Catholics are not validly baptized at all.
Although the New Testament contains no explicit instructions on how physically to administer the water of baptism, Fundamentalists argue that the Greek word baptizo found in the New Testament means "to immerse." They also maintain that only immersion reflects the symbolic significance of being "buried" and "raised" with Christ (see Romans 6:3-4).
It is true that baptizo often means immersion. For example, the Greek version of the Old Testament tells us that Naaman, at Elisha’s direction, "went down and dipped himself [the Greek word here is baptizo] seven times in the Jordan" (2 Kgs. 5:14, Septuagint, emphasis added).
But immersion is not the only meaning of baptizo. Sometimes it just means washing up. Thus Luke 11:38 reports that, when Jesus ate at a Pharisee’s house, "[t]he Pharisee was astonished to see that he did not first wash [baptizo] before dinner." They did not practice immersion before dinner, but, according to Mark, the Pharisees "do not eat unless they wash [nipto] their hands, observing the tradition of the elders; and when they come from the market place, they do not eat unless they wash themselves [baptizo]" (Mark 7:3–4a, emphasis added). So baptizo can mean cleansing or ritual washing as well as immersion.
A similar range of meanings can be seen when baptizo is used metaphorically. Sometimes a figurative "baptism" is a sort of "immersion"; but not always. For example, speaking of his future suffering and death, Jesus said, "I have a baptism [baptisma] to be baptized [baptizo] with; and how I am constrained until it is accomplished!" (Luke 12:50) This might suggest that Christ would be "immersed" in suffering. On the other hand, consider the case of being "baptized with the Holy Spirit."
In Acts 1:4–5 Jesus charged his disciples "not to depart from Jerusalem, but to wait for the promise of the Father, which, he said, ‘you heard from me, for John baptized with water, but before many days you shall be baptized with the Holy Spirit.’" Did this mean they would be "immersed" in the Spirit? No: three times Acts 2 states that the Holy Spirit was poured out on them when Pentecost came (2:17, 18, 33, emphasis added). Later Peter referred to the Spirit falling upon them, and also on others after Pentecost, explicitly identifying these events with the promise of being "baptized with the Holy Spirit" (Acts 11:15–17). These passages demonstrate that the meaning of baptizo is broad enough to include "pouring."

Christian Baptism
The Fundamentalist contention that baptizo always means immersion is an oversimplification. This is especially true because in Christian usage the word had a highly particular meaning distinct from the term’s ordinary, everyday usage.
The same principle can be seen with other special Christian terms, such as "Trinity" and "agape" (divine love), that were originally ordinary Greek words with no special religious significance. The earliest evidence of anyone referring to God as a "Trinity" is a letter by Theophilus of Antioch (Ad Autolycum [A.D. 181]). Before the Christian usage, a "trinity" (triad in Greek) was simply any group of three things.
However, as Christians made theological use of the term, it quickly gained a new, technical sense, referring specifically to the three persons of the Godhead. When Christians professed that God is a "Triad," they did not mean a group of three gods, but one God in three persons. Here, an everyday word was being used in a special, theological sense.
The same is true of agape, originally a general term for any sort of "love" very much like the English word. But it quickly became used in Christian circles as the name of a common fellowship (love) meal among Christians (cf. Jude 12).
In the same way, baptizo acquired a specialized Christian usage distinct from its original meaning. In fact, it already had a complex history of specifically religious usages even before Christians adopted it. Long before Jesus’ day, Gentile converts to Judaism were "baptized" as well as circumcised. Then John the Baptist performed a "baptism of repentance" for Jews as a dramatic prophetic gesture indicating that they were as much in need of conversion as pagans. Through these usages baptizo acquired associations of initiation, conversion, and repentance.
Given this history, it was natural for Jesus and his followers to use the same word for Christian baptism, though it was not identical either to the Jewish baptism or to that of John. But it is completely misguided to try to determine the meaning of the word in its Christian sense merely on the basis of ordinary secular usage. It would be like thinking that the doctrine of the Trinity is polytheism or that the New Testament exhortation to "love one another" means only to be fond of each other. To understand what Christian baptism entailed, we must examine not what the word meant in other contexts, but what it meant and how it was practiced in a Christian context.

Inner and Outer Baptism
One important.aspect of Christian baptism in the New Testament is the clear relationship between being baptized with water and being "baptized with the Holy Spirit", or "born again." This tract is primarily concerned with the mode of baptism, not its effects [Footnote: For more on the relationship between baptism and rebirth, see John 3:5; Acts 2:38, 19:2–3, 22:16; Romans 6:3-4; Colossians 2:11–12; Titus 3:5; and 1 Peter 3:21; and also the Catholic Answers tract Baptismal Grace.]; but even non-Catholic Christians must admit that the New Testament clearly associates water baptism with Spirit baptism and rebirth (even if they do not interpret this relationship as cause and effect).
Right from the beginning, as soon as the Holy Spirit was given on Pentecost, water and Spirit went hand in hand: "Repent, and be baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ for the forgiveness of your sins; and you shall receive the gift of the Holy Spirit" (Acts 2:38).
In Acts 10:44, the first Gentiles to whom Peter preached received the Holy Spirit even before their water baptism. This is always possible, for God is free to operate outside the sacraments as well as within them. In this case it was fitting for the Spirit to be given before baptism, in order to show God’s acceptance of believing Gentiles. Even under these circumstances, however, the connection to water baptism is still evident from Peter’s response: "Can anyone withhold the water for baptizing these people who have received the Holy Spirit just as we have?" (Acts 10:47).
Still later in Acts, when Paul found people who did not have the Spirit, he immediately questioned whether they had received Christian water baptism. Upon learning that they had not, he baptized them and laid hands on them, and they received the Spirit (Acts 19:1–6).
These passages illustrate the connection between water and Spirit first made by Jesus himself: "Unless a man is born of water and the Spirit, he cannot enter the kingdom of God" (John 3:5).
Earlier we saw that the "baptism of the Holy Spirit" was depicted as "pouring." But these passages show that the "baptism" or "pouring" of the Spirit is itself closely related to water baptism.
This provides some balance to the Fundamentalist argument that only baptism by immersion adequately symbolizes death and resurrection with Jesus. It is true that immersion bestrepresents death and resurrection, bringing out more fully the meaning of the sacrament than pouring or sprinkling (cf. Catechism of the Catholic Church 1239). (Immersion is actually the usual mode of baptizing in the Catholic Church’s Eastern rites.) On the other hand, pouring best represents the infusion of the Holy Spirit also associated with water baptism. And all three modes adequately suggest the sense of cleansing signified by baptism. No one mode has exclusive symbolical validity over the others.

Physical Difficulties
After Peter’s first sermon, three thousand people were baptized in Jerusalem (Acts 2:41). Archaeologists have demonstrated there was no sufficient water supply for so many to have been immersed. Even if there had been, the natives of Jerusalem would scarcely have let their city’s water supply be polluted by three thousand unwashed bodies plunging into it. These people must have been baptized by pouring or sprinkling.
Even today practical difficulties can render immersion nearly or entirely impossible for some individuals: for example, people with certain medical conditions—the bedridden; quadriplegics; individuals with tracheotomies (an opening into the airway in the throat) or in negative pressure ventilators (iron lungs). Again, those who have recently undergone certain procedures (such as open-heart surgery) cannot be immersed, and may not wish to defer baptism until their recovery (for example, if they are to undergo further procedures).
Other difficulties arise in certain environments. For example, immersion may be nearly or entirely impossible for desert nomads or Eskimos. Or consider those in prison—not in America, where religious freedom gives prisoners the right to be immersed if they desire—but in a more hostile setting, such as a Muslim regime, where baptisms must be done in secret, without adequate water for immersion.
What are we to do in these and similar cases? Shall we deny people the sacrament because immersion is impractical or impossible for them? Ironically, the Fundamentalist, who acknowledges that baptism is commanded but thinks it isn’t essential for salvation, may make it impossible for many people to be baptized at all in obedience to God’s command. The Catholic, who believes baptism confers grace and is normatively necessary for salvation, maintains that God wouldn’t require a form of baptism that, for some people, is impossible.

Baptism in the Early Church
That the early Church permitted pouring instead of immersion is demonstrated by the Didache, a Syrian liturgical manual that was widely circulated among the churches in the first few centuries of Christianity, perhaps the earliest Christian writing outside the New Testament.
The Didache was written around A.D. 70 and, though not inspired, is a strong witness to the sacramental practice of Christians in the apostolic age. In its seventh chapter, the Didache reads, "Concerning baptism, baptize in this manner: Having said all these things beforehand, baptize in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit in living water [that is, in running water, as in a river]. If there is no living water, baptize in other water; and, if you are not able to use cold water, use warm. If you have neither, pour water three times upon the head in the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit." These instructions were composed either while some of the apostles and disciples were still alive or during the next generation of Christians, and they represent an already established custom.
The testimony of the Didache is seconded by other early Christian writings. Hippolytus of Rome said, "If water is scarce, whether as a constant condition or on occasion, then use whatever water is available" (The Apostolic Tradition, 21 [A.D. 215]). Pope Cornelius I wrote that as Novatian was about to die, "he received baptism in the bed where he lay, by pouring" (Letter to Fabius of Antioch [A.D. 251]; cited in Eusebius, Ecclesiastical History, 6:4311).
Cyprian advised that no one should be "disturbed because the sick are poured upon or sprinkled when they receive the Lord’s grace" (Letter to a Certain Magnus 69:12 [A.D. 255]). Tertullian described baptism by saying that it is done "with so great simplicity, without pomp, without any considerable novelty of preparation, and finally, without cost, a man is baptized in water, and amid the utterance of some few words, is sprinkled, and then rises again, not much (or not at all) the cleaner" (On Baptism, 2 [A.D. 203]). Obviously, Tertullian did not consider baptism by immersion the only valid form, since he says one is only sprinkled and thus comes up from the water "not much (or not at all) the cleaner."

Ancient Christian Mosaics Show Pouring
Then there is the artistic evidence. Much of the earliest Christian artwork depicts baptism—but not baptism by immersion! If the recipient of the sacrament is in a river, he is shown standing in the river while water is poured over his head from a cup or shell. Tile mosaics in ancient churches and paintings in the catacombs depict baptism by pouring. Baptisteries in early cemeteries are clear witnesses to baptisms by infusion. The entire record of the early Church—as shown in the New Testament, in other writings, and in monumental evidence—indicates the mode of baptism was not restricted to immersion.
Other archaeological evidence confirms the same thing. An early Christian baptistery was found in a church in Jesus’ hometown of Nazareth, yet this baptistery, which dates from the second century, was too small and narrow in which to immerse a person.
NIHIL OBSTAT: I have concluded that the materials
presented in this work are free of doctrinal or moral errors.
Bernadeane Carr, STL, Censor Librorum, August 10, 2004
IMPRIMATUR: In accord with 1983 CIC 827
permission to publish this work is hereby granted.
+Robert H. Brom, Bishop of San Diego, August 10, 2004







Thanks,
That is just why your priest are the devil's agents.
As I have said, They know the Greek meaning for baptism is by total immersion, Yet they con you with their own evil doctrines to deceive you.
I will explai the REAL truth behind those twisted meanings.

1) The original Greek meaning for ,"Baptism", Is ONLY by Total submersion, Immersion.
Even when it means "Wash", You have to put whatever you are washing total into the water, As is the meaning of Lk 11: 38.
But the catholic leader think their congregations are that thick they won't understand it.


2)As for Mk 7: 3--4.
The Greek word for, "Wash" in v3, Is "Nipto", It means to wash part of the body, And in this case, The hands. It's meaning is,
"To wash all of the hand ny totally immersing them in water".
It is the same as,
"Wash", in v4
The Greek word for, "Wash" In v4, Is, "Baptizo", It means to fully immerse/submerse your hands in water.

So all that is proving the fact that, Baptism is by total immersion.
But PLEASE NOTE, That has no conection to a Christians water baptsim.

3)Jesus was totally immersed in His suffering, So much that He was so distresed at what He was about to face, That He sweat great drops of blood.
There is a rare medical condition that if you are so distressed and troubled that you actualy leak drops of blood.
And that is what happend to Jesus.

4)As for the Spirit beling poured out so we can be Baptised in the Holy Ghost.
Do you know what happens when it pours down???..HINT. Th ground gets compleatly submersed in water.
Look what happened to the world in Noah's day when it pourd down with rain.
Next time it is pouring down with rain, Go outside and see how much of you gets wet, If I had a great big tankfull of water,So big that I had to use a And mechanicle machine to pour it on you, How much of you do you think it will wet??, Just a dad on your head??..NO..NO..All of you would be wet.
So, The Holy Ghost was poured out And we[Born again Christians got baptised, Fully immersed into God, If you were baptised in the Holy Ghost, You would know that you are totaly immersed, Submersed into the Holy Ghost, He touches you whole, Spirit soul and body.


None of the above catholic understanding disprove that baptism is by total immersion.
They have just twisted the scriptures to send you to hell.
Can't you see how the catholic con-men have sent you to hell??.

As for, "Not enough water in Jerusalem", That is a total cop-out.
Acts 2: 41, Says they were baptized, The Greek meaning is to,
"Be totally immersed in water".

Who are you going to believe the devil and the catholic church, Or God and the Greek Biblical texts??.

So, Ask your priest why he is sending you to hell.
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Posted on 04/12/2012 at 07:03:41  |  Reply  |  Report Abuse |  -2
G4Me,

You crab on-and-on-and-on about immersion and yet you believe that Baptism is only a shell - a symbol of something, gutted of all of God's grace.

P.S. Your continuous calling of the Catholic Church as "evil" is sickening.

And who are you, to tell others who is "saved" and who is not?

Redicious. Put out that fire in Pentecostalism yet?

Still waiting on you to show us the Pentecostal canon of Sacred Scripture.

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Posted on 04/12/2012 at 08:49:06  |  Reply  |  Report Abuse |  0
No cop outs, just your total failure on understanding biblical interpretation fundamentals. We're not talking about an obscure rule, but the basics of interpretation.
You have chosen to interpret "its raining cats and dogs" to mean animals are actually falling from the sky.
Another very simple example from Greek is the word adelphos. The word means literally from the same womb, meaning siblings from the same mother. However, if you do a word search of adelphos you will quickly find that it is used more often for people that are not siblings, but for kin, spiritual brothers and other relations that have nothing to do with the original meaning of the word.

If you would likewise take the time to study the word baptizo and its conjugates, you will find the same thing. There are many cases where it can not mean to submerge.
You also need to know if this Greek word translates seemlessly from a Hebrew understanding. Clearly, Adelphos does not, and from the Greek translation of the Old Testament (translated before the time of Christ), baptizo does not either.

Simply put, the meaning of a word is secondary to its context or usage. The context and usage always takes precedence over etymology.

When the scripture says that Paul was commanded to arise and be baptized (Acts 22:16), maybe there is a remote chance that they carried the man who hadn't eaten or drank in three days off to some public pool or to the local temple mikvah to get immersed. But when you look at the same event in Acts 9, it says "and standing, he was baptized" or "and having stood up, he was baptized". The literal text says that Paul was standing when he was baptized. So now you have a dilemna. Either you stick to the literal action of the text which makes submersion impossible, or you stick to the etymological translation of the verb (he was baptized) and must complicate the text by adding something like (and having stood up, [they went down to the dunk tank and] he was baptized) . So here, you must choose one literal meaning in favor of another and to do so, you have to add to scripture apart from the perfect clarity of the text.

So in this case, you prove that your argument for sticking to an literalist basis of proof is flexible (to put it nicely), based on what you are trying to prove. You can try this with biblically illiterate people, but to anyone else, it is deceptive, self-serving and just flat out embarrassing.

My challenge to you remains. Show just one indisputable act of baptizing by submersion in scripture. Otherwise, you have no ground to stand on and the condemnations you so freely heap on others will be revisited upon your own head.

Edited by jdubya on 04/12/2012 09:08:00
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Posted on 04/12/2012 at 09:02:59  |  Reply  |  Report Abuse |  0
Here is an article by a non-Catholic who doesn't think baptism is necessary for salvation. His study of scripture, travels into the biblical regions and studies of early Christianity have led him to believe that baptism by immersion was completely foreign in Judaism, during the NT times and during the earliest years of the Christian era. He also believes that infant baptism was a normative practice at this time.

Please try to follow through the article. It's clear you haven't done any real study on the subject and are only repeating what your denomination tells you. If you can refute anything he says, note it point by point instead of issuing a blanket condemnation.

http://www.imarc.cc/baptize/waswift.html
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Posted on 04/12/2012 at 10:06:14  |  Reply  |  Report Abuse |  -1
quote:
Originally posted by bwellmysoul

G4Me,

You crab on-and-on-and-on about immersion and yet you believe that Baptism is only a shell - a symbol of something, gutted of all of God's grace.

P.S. Your continuous calling of the Catholic Church as "evil" is sickening.

And who are you, to tell others who is "saved" and who is not?

Redicious. Put out that fire in Pentecostalism yet?

Still waiting on you to show us the Pentecostal canon of Sacred Scripture.





1)The point is, Your catholic church,priest and you believe water baptism saves, And therefor you MUST believe your not saved, Because your not baptised.

2)I'm not calling the catholic church, I'm just stating facts.

3)I know the Bible and the Greek, Thats why I can tell who is saved and who isn't.

For the pentecostal sacred scriptures, Read the Bible.
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Posted on 04/12/2012 at 10:18:07  |  Reply  |  Report Abuse |  0
Haha
"Be good, keep your feet dry, your eyes open, your heart at peace and your soul in the joy of Christ." - Thomas Merton

www.percalamus.com
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Posted on 04/12/2012 at 10:41:18  |  Reply  |  Report Abuse |  -1
quote:
Originally posted by jdubya

No cop outs, just your total failure on understanding biblical interpretation fundamentals. We're not talking about an obscure rule, but the basics of interpretation.
You have chosen to interpret "its raining cats and dogs" to mean animals are actually falling from the sky.
Another very simple example from Greek is the word adelphos. The word means literally from the same womb, meaning siblings from the same mother. However, if you do a word search of adelphos you will quickly find that it is used more often for people that are not siblings, but for kin, spiritual brothers and other relations that have nothing to do with the original meaning of the word.

If you would likewise take the time to study the word baptizo and its conjugates, you will find the same thing. There are many cases where it can not mean to submerge.
You also need to know if this Greek word translates seemlessly from a Hebrew understanding. Clearly, Adelphos does not, and from the Greek translation of the Old Testament (translated before the time of Christ), baptizo does not either.

Simply put, the meaning of a word is secondary to its context or usage. The context and usage always takes precedence over etymology.

When the scripture says that Paul was commanded to arise and be baptized (Acts 22:16), maybe there is a remote chance that they carried the man who hadn't eaten or drank in three days off to some public pool or to the local temple mikvah to get immersed. But when you look at the same event in Acts 9, it says "and standing, he was baptized" or "and having stood up, he was baptized". The literal text says that Paul was standing when he was baptized. So now you have a dilemna. Either you stick to the literal action of the text which makes submersion impossible, or you stick to the etymological translation of the verb (he was baptized) and must complicate the text by adding something like (and having stood up, [they went down to the dunk tank and] he was baptized) . So here, you must choose one literal meaning in favor of another and to do so, you have to add to scripture apart from the perfect clarity of the text.

So in this case, you prove that your argument for sticking to an literalist basis of proof is flexible (to put it nicely), based on what you are trying to prove. You can try this with biblically illiterate people, but to anyone else, it is deceptive, self-serving and just flat out embarrassing.

My challenge to you remains. Show just one indisputable act of baptizing by submersion in scripture. Otherwise, you have no ground to stand on and the condemnations you so freely heap on others will be revisited upon your own head.





1)If you read the Greek meaning for, "Baptism", You'll see it is by total immersion.
SO, Now who is misunderstanding the scriptures??--THATS RIGHT the catholics.

2)I never mentioned raining cats and dogs.
Stop telling lies.

3)As for Adelphos "Brothers, And Adelphe, "Sisters".
I will prove that the Brethren & sister of Jesus, In Matt 13: 55-56.
Are from the same womb as Jesus came from, And Mary wasn't always a virgin, In another post.
Why do you catholics always twist the truth... It is just another proof that the catholic church is run by the devil.

4)I never said Batise or Adlaphos comes from the Hebrew, Because it doesn't.

5)As for Baptism, There is no meaning other then total immersion, STOP TELLING PORKIES.
AS for Paul, Who said he was baptised streight away, The Bible only records Ananias saying arise and be baptised, He might have eaten first. If you bothered to read on in Acts 22:16--18, You'll see Jesus telling Paul to get out of Jerusalem quickly. You don't do that when you haven't eaten for 3 days.
AS for Acts 9:18, Again The Bible doesn't tell us how long it was before Paul was baptised, And how do you know there wasn't a pool or somthing near by??.
The text doesn't say Paul was standing..STOP TELLING LIES.
Why would God contra**** Himself by saying Baptism is by total immersion, Then get Paul to be baptised standing up??, Get real man.

PLEASE NOTE, Acts 22: 16 and Acts 9: 18, Says Paul was totally immersed in water.

Paul knew all about baptism, He had the best Bible Teacher of his day.
STOP TWISTING THE TRUTH. baptism is by total immersion.

The Greek text is the Bible, And I have proved that the Bible Greek texts say baptism is by total immersion/sumersion.

AND YOU AREN'T BAPTISED...FACT.
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Posted on 04/12/2012 at 10:45:54  |  Reply  |  Report Abuse |  -1
quote:
Originally posted by jdubya

Here is an article by a non-Catholic who doesn't think baptism is necessary for salvation. His study of scripture, travels into the biblical regions and studies of early Christianity have led him to believe that baptism by immersion was completely foreign in Judaism, during the NT times and during the earliest years of the Christian era. He also believes that infant baptism was a normative practice at this time.

Please try to follow through the article. It's clear you haven't done any real study on the subject and are only repeating what your denomination tells you. If you can refute anything he says, note it point by point instead of issuing a blanket condemnation.

http://www.imarc.cc/baptize/waswift.html




You have to realize that mens opinions don't overrule the Bible or the Greek.

The Greek meaning for baptism is, "Total immersion", No matter what the catholics or anyone else says,
The Greek is the original Bible texts, So the Bible says baptism is by total immersion, AND CATHOLICS AREN'T BAPTISED...BIBLICAL FACT
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Posted on 04/12/2012 at 12:01:42  |  Reply  |  Report Abuse |  0
quote:
Originally posted by God4me

[quoteYou have to realize that mens opinions don't overrule the Bible or the Greek.

The Greek meaning for baptism is, "Total immersion", No matter what the catholics or anyone else says,
The Greek is the original Bible texts, So the Bible says baptism is by total immersion, AND CATHOLICS AREN'T BAPTISED...BIBLICAL FACT



And you should realize that Jesus gave His authority to an office which heads His Church, an Apostolic Church which was started by Christ and has existed for 2,000 years.

Baptism forgives sin, babies are baptized, and Baptism doesn't require complete immersion for the baptism to be valid.

Baptisms are invalid in some denominations due to that denomination's concept of the Trinity.

Mormon Baptism is invalid in the Catholic Church.

I rather suspect that Oneness Pentecostalism baptisms may be as well.


Edited by bwellmysoul on 04/12/2012 12:02:34
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Posted on 04/12/2012 at 13:12:24  |  Reply  |  Report Abuse |  0

And again, here you are G4Me, all hung up on "immersion" all while you don't believe Baptism forgives sin and that it doesn't confer God's grace.

Essentially, you're worried that Baptism hasn't been given the proper due of a symbol.



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Posted on 04/12/2012 at 13:17:45  |  Reply  |  Report Abuse |  -1
quote:
Originally posted by philial


G4, I do hope the following cut 'n' paste enabled you to appreciate the Church's understanding... with apologies for it's length, but it reads quite well.

Baptism: Immersion Only?
________________________________________
Although Latin-rite Catholics are usually baptized by infusion (pouring), they know that immersion (dunking) and sprinkling are also valid ways to baptize. Fundamentalists, however, regard only baptism by immersion as true baptism, concluding that most Catholics are not validly baptized at all.
Although the New Testament contains no explicit instructions on how physically to administer the water of baptism, Fundamentalists argue that the Greek word baptizo found in the New Testament means "to immerse." They also maintain that only immersion reflects the symbolic significance of being "buried" and "raised" with Christ (see Romans 6:3-4).
It is true that baptizo often means immersion. For example, the Greek version of the Old Testament tells us that Naaman, at Elisha’s direction, "went down and dipped himself [the Greek word here is baptizo] seven times in the Jordan" (2 Kgs. 5:14, Septuagint, emphasis added).
But immersion is not the only meaning of baptizo. Sometimes it just means washing up. Thus Luke 11:38 reports that, when Jesus ate at a Pharisee’s house, "[t]he Pharisee was astonished to see that he did not first wash [baptizo] before dinner." They did not practice immersion before dinner, but, according to Mark, the Pharisees "do not eat unless they wash [nipto] their hands, observing the tradition of the elders; and when they come from the market place, they do not eat unless they wash themselves [baptizo]" (Mark 7:3–4a, emphasis added). So baptizo can mean cleansing or ritual washing as well as immersion.
A similar range of meanings can be seen when baptizo is used metaphorically. Sometimes a figurative "baptism" is a sort of "immersion"; but not always. For example, speaking of his future suffering and death, Jesus said, "I have a baptism [baptisma] to be baptized [baptizo] with; and how I am constrained until it is accomplished!" (Luke 12:50) This might suggest that Christ would be "immersed" in suffering. On the other hand, consider the case of being "baptized with the Holy Spirit."
In Acts 1:4–5 Jesus charged his disciples "not to depart from Jerusalem, but to wait for the promise of the Father, which, he said, ‘you heard from me, for John baptized with water, but before many days you shall be baptized with the Holy Spirit.’" Did this mean they would be "immersed" in the Spirit? No: three times Acts 2 states that the Holy Spirit was poured out on them when Pentecost came (2:17, 18, 33, emphasis added). Later Peter referred to the Spirit falling upon them, and also on others after Pentecost, explicitly identifying these events with the promise of being "baptized with the Holy Spirit" (Acts 11:15–17). These passages demonstrate that the meaning of baptizo is broad enough to include "pouring."

Christian Baptism
The Fundamentalist contention that baptizo always means immersion is an oversimplification. This is especially true because in Christian usage the word had a highly particular meaning distinct from the term’s ordinary, everyday usage.
The same principle can be seen with other special Christian terms, such as "Trinity" and "agape" (divine love), that were originally ordinary Greek words with no special religious significance. The earliest evidence of anyone referring to God as a "Trinity" is a letter by Theophilus of Antioch (Ad Autolycum [A.D. 181]). Before the Christian usage, a "trinity" (triad in Greek) was simply any group of three things.
However, as Christians made theological use of the term, it quickly gained a new, technical sense, referring specifically to the three persons of the Godhead. When Christians professed that God is a "Triad," they did not mean a group of three gods, but one God in three persons. Here, an everyday word was being used in a special, theological sense.
The same is true of agape, originally a general term for any sort of "love" very much like the English word. But it quickly became used in Christian circles as the name of a common fellowship (love) meal among Christians (cf. Jude 12).
In the same way, baptizo acquired a specialized Christian usage distinct from its original meaning. In fact, it already had a complex history of specifically religious usages even before Christians adopted it. Long before Jesus’ day, Gentile converts to Judaism were "baptized" as well as circumcised. Then John the Baptist performed a "baptism of repentance" for Jews as a dramatic prophetic gesture indicating that they were as much in need of conversion as pagans. Through these usages baptizo acquired associations of initiation, conversion, and repentance.
Given this history, it was natural for Jesus and his followers to use the same word for Christian baptism, though it was not identical either to the Jewish baptism or to that of John. But it is completely misguided to try to determine the meaning of the word in its Christian sense merely on the basis of ordinary secular usage. It would be like thinking that the doctrine of the Trinity is polytheism or that the New Testament exhortation to "love one another" means only to be fond of each other. To understand what Christian baptism entailed, we must examine not what the word meant in other contexts, but what it meant and how it was practiced in a Christian context.

Inner and Outer Baptism
One important.aspect of Christian baptism in the New Testament is the clear relationship between being baptized with water and being "baptized with the Holy Spirit", or "born again." This tract is primarily concerned with the mode of baptism, not its effects [Footnote: For more on the relationship between baptism and rebirth, see John 3:5; Acts 2:38, 19:2–3, 22:16; Romans 6:3-4; Colossians 2:11–12; Titus 3:5; and 1 Peter 3:21; and also the Catholic Answers tract Baptismal Grace.]; but even non-Catholic Christians must admit that the New Testament clearly associates water baptism with Spirit baptism and rebirth (even if they do not interpret this relationship as cause and effect).
Right from the beginning, as soon as the Holy Spirit was given on Pentecost, water and Spirit went hand in hand: "Repent, and be baptized every one of you in the name of Jesus Christ for the forgiveness of your sins; and you shall receive the gift of the Holy Spirit" (Acts 2:38).
In Acts 10:44, the first Gentiles to whom Peter preached received the Holy Spirit even before their water baptism. This is always possible, for God is free to operate outside the sacraments as well as within them. In this case it was fitting for the Spirit to be given before baptism, in order to show God’s acceptance of believing Gentiles. Even under these circumstances, however, the connection to water baptism is still evident from Peter’s response: "Can anyone withhold the water for baptizing these people who have received the Holy Spirit just as we have?" (Acts 10:47).
Still later in Acts, when Paul found people who did not have the Spirit, he immediately questioned whether they had received Christian water baptism. Upon learning that they had not, he baptized them and laid hands on them, and they received the Spirit (Acts 19:1–6).
These passages illustrate the connection between water and Spirit first made by Jesus himself: "Unless a man is born of water and the Spirit, he cannot enter the kingdom of God" (John 3:5).
Earlier we saw that the "baptism of the Holy Spirit" was depicted as "pouring." But these passages show that the "baptism" or "pouring" of the Spirit is itself closely related to water baptism.
This provides some balance to the Fundamentalist argument that only baptism by immersion adequately symbolizes death and resurrection with Jesus. It is true that immersion bestrepresents death and resurrection, bringing out more fully the meaning of the sacrament than pouring or sprinkling (cf. Catechism of the Catholic Church 1239). (Immersion is actually the usual mode of baptizing in the Catholic Church’s Eastern rites.) On the other hand, pouring best represents the infusion of the Holy Spirit also associated with water baptism. And all three modes adequately suggest the sense of cleansing signified by baptism. No one mode has exclusive symbolical validity over the others.

Physical Difficulties
After Peter’s first sermon, three thousand people were baptized in Jerusalem (Acts 2:41). Archaeologists have demonstrated there was no sufficient water supply for so many to have been immersed. Even if there had been, the natives of Jerusalem would scarcely have let their city’s water supply be polluted by three thousand unwashed bodies plunging into it. These people must have been baptized by pouring or sprinkling.
Even today practical difficulties can render immersion nearly or entirely impossible for some individuals: for example, people with certain medical conditions—the bedridden; quadriplegics; individuals with tracheotomies (an opening into the airway in the throat) or in negative pressure ventilators (iron lungs). Again, those who have recently undergone certain procedures (such as open-heart surgery) cannot be immersed, and may not wish to defer baptism until their recovery (for example, if they are to undergo further procedures).
Other difficulties arise in certain environments. For example, immersion may be nearly or entirely impossible for desert nomads or Eskimos. Or consider those in prison—not in America, where religious freedom gives prisoners the right to be immersed if they desire—but in a more hostile setting, such as a Muslim regime, where baptisms must be done in secret, without adequate water for immersion.
What are we to do in these and similar cases? Shall we deny people the sacrament because immersion is impractical or impossible for them? Ironically, the Fundamentalist, who acknowledges that baptism is commanded but thinks it isn’t essential for salvation, may make it impossible for many people to be baptized at all in obedience to God’s command. The Catholic, who believes baptism confers grace and is normatively necessary for salvation, maintains that God wouldn’t require a form of baptism that, for some people, is impossible.

Baptism in the Early Church
That the early Church permitted pouring instead of immersion is demonstrated by the Didache, a Syrian liturgical manual that was widely circulated among the churches in the first few centuries of Christianity, perhaps the earliest Christian writing outside the New Testament.
The Didache was written around A.D. 70 and, though not inspired, is a strong witness to the sacramental practice of Christians in the apostolic age. In its seventh chapter, the Didache reads, "Concerning baptism, baptize in this manner: Having said all these things beforehand, baptize in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit in living water [that is, in running water, as in a river]. If there is no living water, baptize in other water; and, if you are not able to use cold water, use warm. If you have neither, pour water three times upon the head in the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit." These instructions were composed either while some of the apostles and disciples were still alive or during the next generation of Christians, and they represent an already established custom.
The testimony of the Didache is seconded by other early Christian writings. Hippolytus of Rome said, "If water is scarce, whether as a constant condition or on occasion, then use whatever water is available" (The Apostolic Tradition, 21 [A.D. 215]). Pope Cornelius I wrote that as Novatian was about to die, "he received baptism in the bed where he lay, by pouring" (Letter to Fabius of Antioch [A.D. 251]; cited in Eusebius, Ecclesiastical History, 6:4311).
Cyprian advised that no one should be "disturbed because the sick are poured upon or sprinkled when they receive the Lord’s grace" (Letter to a Certain Magnus 69:12 [A.D. 255]). Tertullian described baptism by saying that it is done "with so great simplicity, without pomp, without any considerable novelty of preparation, and finally, without cost, a man is baptized in water, and amid the utterance of some few words, is sprinkled, and then rises again, not much (or not at all) the cleaner" (On Baptism, 2 [A.D. 203]). Obviously, Tertullian did not consider baptism by immersion the only valid form, since he says one is only sprinkled and thus comes up from the water "not much (or not at all) the cleaner."

Ancient Christian Mosaics Show Pouring
Then there is the artistic evidence. Much of the earliest Christian artwork depicts baptism—but not baptism by immersion! If the recipient of the sacrament is in a river, he is shown standing in the river while water is poured over his head from a cup or shell. Tile mosaics in ancient churches and paintings in the catacombs depict baptism by pouring. Baptisteries in early cemeteries are clear witnesses to baptisms by infusion. The entire record of the early Church—as shown in the New Testament, in other writings, and in monumental evidence—indicates the mode of baptism was not restricted to immersion.
Other archaeological evidence confirms the same thing. An early Christian baptistery was found in a church in Jesus’ hometown of Nazareth, yet this baptistery, which dates from the second century, was too small and narrow in which to immerse a person.
NIHIL OBSTAT: I have concluded that the materials
presented in this work are free of doctrinal or moral errors.
Bernadeane Carr, STL, Censor Librorum, August 10, 2004
IMPRIMATUR: In accord with 1983 CIC 827
permission to publish this work is hereby granted.
+Robert H. Brom, Bishop of San Diego, August 10, 2004







As for the eroneous teaching of baptsim meaning, "Pour".
PEASE NOTE
The Greek word for "Pour" is "Ekcheo".
PLEASE NOTE WHAT
Mk 16: 16 DOESN'T SAY,
"He that believes and Baptised, "Ekcheo" [To pour], shall be saved".

Acts 2: 28, DOESN'T SAY,
"Repent and be baptised, "Ekcheo" for the remission of sins".

Acts 22: 16. DOESN'T SAY,
"Arise and be baptised "Ekcheo" and wash away your sins".


1 Pet 3: 21. DOESN'T SAY,
"Baptism "Ekcheo" saves.


If baptism was to pour water on a person, It would use the word, "Ekcheo", Not, "Baptizo", Total immersion.
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Posted on 04/12/2012 at 13:29:47  |  Reply  |  Report Abuse |  1
As if, in 2,000 years of universal useage in the Catholic Church (across the entire world) the validity of Baptism hinges on how deep the water is.

G4Me, you care more about the depth of the water in the tub - than about the depth of God's grace conferred in the Rite of Baptism.

Proverbial "throwing the baby out with the bathwater."
Edited by bwellmysoul on 04/12/2012 13:32:34
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Posted on 04/12/2012 at 13:32:34  |  Reply  |  Report Abuse |  -1
quote:
Originally posted by bwellmysoul

quote:
Originally posted by God4me

[quoteYou have to realize that mens opinions don't overrule the Bible or the Greek.

The Greek meaning for baptism is, "Total immersion", No matter what the catholics or anyone else says,
The Greek is the original Bible texts, So the Bible says baptism is by total immersion, AND CATHOLICS AREN'T BAPTISED...BIBLICAL FACT



And you should realize that Jesus gave His authority to an office which heads His Church, an Apostolic Church which was started by Christ and has existed for 2,000 years.

Baptism forgives sin, babies are baptized, and Baptism doesn't require complete immersion for the baptism to be valid.

Baptisms are invalid in some denominations due to that denomination's concept of the Trinity.

Mormon Baptism is invalid in the Catholic Church.

I rather suspect that Oneness Pentecostalism baptisms may be as well.






1)Jesus gave all His disciples authority,
In Lk 10: 19, Jesus gave another seventy the ahthority.
The word for Pwere in v19, Is "Exousia", And it means authority.

Ananias was just a disciple, But Jesus used him to get Paul baptised in the Holy Ghost.

2)The Church that Jesus built has been going since the day of pentecost, And that rulse out the catholic church, Because the devil didn't form them until 300--600 years later.

3)Baptism is by total immersion, Anything other isn't baptism.
For the truth, See my posts about baptism.

4)The catholics baptism is invalid, As they aren't God's Church.
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Posted on 04/12/2012 at 13:34:54  |  Reply  |  Report Abuse |  1

G4Me,

Stop trying to interpret Greek by looking up Greek words in an online dictionary.

You honestly think that in 2,000 years, the Catholic Church never had any Greek speaking Bishops, priests and deacons?

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