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that's not entirely true
i may disagree with Garee on some points, and at times i find it hard to see what he's trying to say - but in the case of the post you are referring to i think i understand him perfectly well. there is an analogous relationship between our baptism and the washings prescribed in the law for priests to be declared clean for service, and pursuing that analogy, what would someone under Moses say about a Levite who refused the ashes of the red heifer after he had been in contact with a corpse? even in that case, is it the water & ash that makes a Levite clean, or the good conscience of obedience?
i may disagree with Garee on some points, and at times i find it hard to see what he's trying to say - but in the case of the post you are referring to i think i understand him perfectly well. there is an analogous relationship between our baptism and the washings prescribed in the law for priests to be declared clean for service, and pursuing that analogy, what would someone under Moses say about a Levite who refused the ashes of the red heifer after he had been in contact with a corpse? even in that case, is it the water & ash that makes a Levite clean, or the good conscience of obedience?
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