In line with this I read a brief article yesterday that went through some research (forget by whom) that said only 13% of Christians and 37% of pastors in the US have a biblical worldview.
IMO the E-Ticket to Heaven mentality plays some part in this.
And clearly you don't understand what that is.
Amen! Well said.That image is basically promoting the baptismal-regeneration view — the claim that water baptism is what “puts you in contact with the blood of Christ.” It quotes Romans 6:3 and John 19:33-34, implying that one must be physically baptized to receive the saving benefits of Christ’s death.
Romans 6:3 KJV reveals the doctrinal error since it isn’t describing water baptism as the means of salvation — it’s referring to our spiritual union with Christ through faith.
When Paul says we were “baptized into His death,” he’s speaking of the believer’s identification with Christ’s death and resurrection — the same truth he teaches in Galatians 3:27 KJV and Colossians 2:12 KJV.
Physical baptism symbolizes that union; it doesn’t create it. The blood of Christ cleanses through faith (Romans 3:25 KJV; Ephesians 1:7 KJV), not through water.
The outward act points to an inward reality already accomplished by grace.
Grace and Peace
And clearly you don't understand what that is.
The problem with the OP’s post is he’s implying that everyone who believes what the Bible says concerning Acts 2:38 is a member of the Oneness Pentecostal Faith. That cannot be any further from the truth. I’m a member of the church of Christ—the body of Christ that was established on Pentecost day in Jerusalem, as is @Beckworth, and we fully believe in Acts 2:38, just as the 3,000 souls on Pentecost did, and everyone else who converted that you read in the book of Acts.
That diagram from ChristRoseFromTheDead is teaching that water baptism is the portal through which a person moves from “sin guiltiness” into the “remission of sins” — essentially claiming baptism itself is the moment salvation occurs.
Excellent clarification, brother — that’s exactly right.Amen! Well said.Now in regard to water baptism putting us in contact with the blood of Christ, "through His blood" (as in Colossians 1:14) is a reference not limited to the fluid as if we literally contact the blood of Christ in the waters of baptism, but is an expression pointing to the totality of Christ's atoning work as a sacrifice for sin. The word "cross" is used similarly to refer to the whole atoning work of Christ on the cross (1 Corinthians 1:18; Galatians 6:12,14; Ephesians 2:16).
The historic Christian Church — from the apostles to the Reformers — has consistently condemned baptismal regeneration as heresy, because it replaces grace through faith with salvation by ceremony.
That diagram makes water the doorway to forgiveness, but Scripture makes Christ the doorway.
The list is too long to paste here
The link you posted, written by Dave Armstrong, who is a Catholic apologist on Patheos argues for baptismal regeneration, citing early church fathers as proof that the earliest Christians believed baptism was necessary for salvation. That Patheos link is not strong proof for baptismal regeneration at all. It’s selective quoting, presented through a Catholic lens.
Reading comprehension really isn't your thing.Eternity?
Since I believe everything you do, PLUS what HIS word says about the need to be baptized in JESUS name and for JESUS to fill us with the Holy Ghost I'm good to go.
Since you don't are you?
Yeah you really didn't understand.I should have said, I follow ALL of HIS word gladly.
You follow the parts you like.