From here, I'm going to leave your ad hominem comments to
@PaulThomson to address if he chooses to.
My concern was the first comment’s ad hominem, not methodology. It would be nice to just be able to focus on what Scripture actually says and doesn't say.
Speaking for myself, I have no agenda re: baptism.
I admittedly do not like the "faith-alone"
terminology for several reasons. But my eyes and ears are open to Scriptural arguments based upon grammatical and logical interpretation of Scriptures in context and harmonizing in wider context. Proof-texting a list of Scriptures IMO is meaningless.
As I think is clear, I don't think you proved faith-alone from
Mark16:16. I think it stands against faith-alone gramatically & logically and
at the time it was written.
Here are a few of the issues with
John1:12 just to begin:
- Even assuming equating believing with receiving, "faith-alone" bypasses - and effectively erases - the central, active act of receiving Him, the main verb of the passage.
- Receiving authority to become children of God is not equivalent to being saved; the verse grants potential, not a completed salvific state, and the word “saved” is absent, so faith-alone for salvation is not stated here.
- The verse does not mention baptism or other requirements, but their absence does not prove there are none; it addresses only receiving Christ and believing in His name for the granted authority to become children of God, so faith-alone for salvation is not proven.
This is just a basic beginning.