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Re: The Remission is Different from Forgiveness My
In light of the agreement among Oneness powerhouse theologians, like Bernard and Segraves.... and a careful, empirical examination by any objective bible student ... regarding the word aphesis and what it signifies in the the NT ...
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Have no place in a serious debate on this topic in the ARENA OF SOUND IDEAS |
Re: The Remission is Different from Forgiveness My
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Re: The Remission is Different from Forgiveness My
Remission and forgiveness are the same Greek word. They are interchangeable, and do not mean different things. If sins are remitted, they are forgiven.
G859 ἄφεσις aphesis af'-es-is From G863; freedom; (figuratively) pardon: - deliverance, forgiveness, liberty, remission. |
Re: The Remission is Different from Forgiveness My
Someone please give me a scripture in the New Testament that shows sins are forgiven when we pray. If it exists it would certainly be a powerful tool.
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Re: The Remission is Different from Forgiveness My
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There is a contextual distinction at work here. |
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James 5:15 KJV And the prayer of faith shall save the sick, and the Lord shall raise him up; and if he have committed sins, they shall be forgiven him. But I still believe baptism is part of salvation. :) Just not for the reasons some give. |
Re: The Remission is Different from Forgiveness My
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We are to hold dear to the doctrine of the Apostles ... not your use of KJV words to fit your paradigm ... as they deal w/ the ONE word they used ... APHESIS to mean absolute pardon as it deals w/ deliverance. They , not you, used in their writings different words to deal w/ the baptism of the Holy Ghost ... receiving and filling .... baptizo ... pletho ... etc. They indeed used distinctive words ... baptism, filled, etc ... when speaking of the HG. Which brings up an entire different debate dealing w/ pneumatology ... and btw, has been discussed among theologians as to whether they mean the same thing ... But I digress ... You see ...the Apostles ... (and we claim to be Apostolic) made no contextual differences ... semantical differences ... or otherwise ... when writing about forgiveness/remission/sin washing/pardon. Therefore ... your arguments dealing w/ this topic are non-Apostolic and extra-biblical .... but rather the doctrine of men. |
Re: The Remission is Different from Forgiveness My
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Men like you, Bernard, Segraves cannot come to any other conclusion but what the word aphesis means and accept it's interchangeable use in scripture... It's not what we want it to mean. Once this true variable is accepted in a logic based argument ... that there is no distinction biblically between forgiveness and remission because the authors did not make one ... Then you must come to one of the following conclusions: 1. We are fully forgiven at repentance (one step view) 2. One must repent + be baptized = obtaining full forgiveness (Bernard's and Mizpeh's view) and/or 3. Believe baptism plays a different role in in the New Birth process (Blume's view) We, of course, disagree on our interpretations of Romans 6 which I believe is the crux of your salvational baptismal view. |
Re: The Remission is Different from Forgiveness My
Daniel, I haven't read the thread nor will I do so. But I will say this. I repented of my sins in faith believing that they are forgiven by the the blood Jesus shed on calvary. Debating and arguing over words is a waste of time.
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Re: The Remission is Different from Forgiveness My
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This looks like a case tho where in both cases those involved were at least ones who had already believed and were baptized. I am looking for the scripture if it exists that puts repentance as the point where a sinners sins are forgiven before water baptism. So far I have not seen it. |
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