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No, you must confirm with your actions your "place".Could you imagine what it would be like if baptism was required for salvation?
St. Peter at the Pearly Gates: Deidre, let's see here... Ok, you lived a good life, you were law abiding and moral, you helped others, donated to charity, repented, accepted Jesus and kept the faith. Oh, wait a second...no baptism? To Hell you go!
Next!
Adolf Hitler... yeah, quite a track record there, huh? But it looks like you were baptized and confirmed as a child, so you're good. Welcome to paradise!
However they do accept emergency baptisms by any member of their churches even if the words used may not have been perfect.
Jesus said you must repent and then be baptized. No baby is able to repent and so no baby should be baptized. This is an invention of the church to try to indoctrinate people at an early age so they will stay in the church. There is no record in the Bib;e of babies being baptized.
Jesus himself was 30 when he was baptized. Baptism is an outward display of the death of your former course of life and a dedication to doing God's will for an eternity. No child under the age of accountability is qualified to make that decision. And no non-consensual baptism is valid, each individual has to make that choice on their own.Just curious on something. I was baptized in the Catholic Church as a baby, but when I left Christianity a few years ago and returned to it over a year ago, I feel like my faith is different for me, now. Like I ''own'' it, like it is truly a representative part of my life, without all the nonsense I had been indoctrinated to believe, growing up. Talking with a friend recently, she said that it would be good to be baptized again, because as a baby, we don't have the ability to offer our consent, but as adults, we do.
What do you think? For those who have been baptized as infants, did you go through another baptism when you were ''born again?''
*I posted this in the Christianity DIR section, but thought I'd post it here too in case there are people who wish to add their thoughts but my not do so if it's in the DIR section
Just curious on something. I was baptized in the Catholic Church as a baby, but when I left Christianity a few years ago and returned to it over a year ago, I feel like my faith is different for me, now. Like I ''own'' it, like it is truly a representative part of my life, without all the nonsense I had been indoctrinated to believe, growing up. Talking with a friend recently, she said that it would be good to be baptized again, because as a baby, we don't have the ability to offer our consent, but as adults, we do.
What do you think? For those who have been baptized as infants, did you go through another baptism when you were ''born again?''
*I posted this in the Christianity DIR section, but thought I'd post it here too in case there are people who wish to add their thoughts but my not do so if it's in the DIR section
Just curious on something. I was baptized in the Catholic Church as a baby, but when I left Christianity a few years ago and returned to it over a year ago, I feel like my faith is different for me, now. Like I ''own'' it, like it is truly a representative part of my life, without all the nonsense I had been indoctrinated to believe, growing up. Talking with a friend recently, she said that it would be good to be baptized again, because as a baby, we don't have the ability to offer our consent, but as adults, we do.
What do you think? For those who have been baptized as infants, did you go through another baptism when you were ''born again?''
*I posted this in the Christianity DIR section, but thought I'd post it here too in case there are people who wish to add their thoughts but my not do so if it's in the DIR section
Many Christians where I live say it's enough to be baptized.
I don't know but it seems to me, if I saw someone who impressed me as a grea
It seems useless to be baptized any other way since the Catholics seem to have imposed their baptism on all the churches. I have yet to see any churches that are worth doing a baptism. Hopefully just knowing that Jesus is Lord is enough.
Jesus himself was 30 when he was baptized. Baptism is an outward display of the death of your former course of life and a dedication to doing God's will for an eternity. No child under the age of accountability is qualified to make that decision. And no non-consensual baptism is valid, each individual has to make that choice on their own.
Trinitarian churches accept each others baptisms as being valid but not those of non trinitarian churches.
A valid baptism can not be "redone" (not that it would do any harm if it was)
They do not accept as valid baptisms performed by Jw, unitarian, or mormon amongst others.Again because they do not accept the Trinity.
However they do accept emergency baptisms by any member of their churches even if the words used may not have been perfect.
There is no need for an emergency since water baptism does not save.
No they mean the water baptism when one is born. A second baptism would be disrespect of the original baptism. Well I'm just quoting directly, I'm not even Christian. I've been baptized though after I was born.Too bad the Bible doesn't say that, unless they Are referring the the baptism of the Holy Spirit.
Follow your heartJust curious on something. I was baptized in the Catholic Church as a baby, but when I left Christianity a few years ago and returned to it over a year ago, I feel like my faith is different for me, now. Like I ''own'' it, like it is truly a representative part of my life, without all the nonsense I had been indoctrinated to believe, growing up. Talking with a friend recently, she said that it would be good to be baptized again, because as a baby, we don't have the ability to offer our consent, but as adults, we do.
What do you think? For those who have been baptized as infants, did you go through another baptism when you were ''born again?''
*I posted this in the Christianity DIR section, but thought I'd post it here too in case there are people who wish to add their thoughts but my not do so if it's in the DIR section
Catholic have not imposed baptism, God did, and it is not imposed on churches, it is imposed on individuals. Chuches don't baptize, men do the water baptism as seen by John the baptizer. Jesus does then only one that counts(Eph 4:5).
I was baptized in the Catholic Church as a baby
Really? This is so interesting, that you say that you don't thin heaven has regard. lol Well, Jesus was baptized, and I believe the Bible talks about being baptized by water and the spirit. The spirit seems most important, perhaps that is what is missing with many people who go through the motions of being ''religious.''
Are you looking for baptism specifically, or would other ways of marking your newfound faith do?Just curious on something. I was baptized in the Catholic Church as a baby, but when I left Christianity a few years ago and returned to it over a year ago, I feel like my faith is different for me, now. Like I ''own'' it, like it is truly a representative part of my life, without all the nonsense I had been indoctrinated to believe, growing up. Talking with a friend recently, she said that it would be good to be baptized again, because as a baby, we don't have the ability to offer our consent, but as adults, we do.
What do you think? For those who have been baptized as infants, did you go through another baptism when you were ''born again?''
*I posted this in the Christianity DIR section, but thought I'd post it here too in case there are people who wish to add their thoughts but my not do so if it's in the DIR section