Please show me where I stated this. In fact I state the opposite of this:
- you asked - Were they saved. Yes.
---I stated -Agreed but according to the OT view. In fact we even see Jesus state that God gave what was His to Christ in John 17:6.
Thus my distinction being drawn here is not that they are saved but under which Covenant were they saved initially? They became the proclaimers of the New Covenant and full participants of it, but ONLY after they believed the full gospel message and recieved the full admission into the New Man via the bapitism of the Holy Spirit at Pentacost. [emphasis mine]
You can't have it both ways. They are either saved or they are not. According to John 17:6 they are saved. They are not "half saved" because His death and resurrection had not happened yet. Christ declared, "not one of them IS lost," not will be, but the present tense "is." They were saved at that moment and time that Christ was praying, and thus before that time as well.
Your the one that is coming up with this theology that one must receive a "baptism of the Holy Spirit" before they are saved. That sounds like Oneness Pentecostal doctrine the way it is worded. Where does the Bible teach this doctrine? Who made it up?
Salvation--Therefore being justified by faith we have peace with God.
Did all the disciples doubt the resurrection?
There were 120 in the upper room praying, and some are mentioned by name, including Mary, the mother of Jesus.
Do you think she ever doubted that Christ would rise from the dead? The Bible doesn't say, but it doesn't say "they all doubted or they all did not believe." He appeared to over 500 "brethren." Did they ALL not believe he would rise? Were they all unbelievers before the resurrection? I think not!
The gospels are history books, and not all history is recorded. The history that is recorded is given by the Holy Spirit for our learning and benefit. We can't make absolute statements without all the facts. We have only a window into the lives of the some of the believers before the resurrection.
Of course you do cause it is not what I said. I said they were not fully believers of and in Christ yet.
What were they?
50% believers? 75% believers or only 25% believers?
How do you go about making such decisions and on what basis.
We are justified by faith, and so were they.
Testified by the Holy Spirit in the very words of Jesus that they did not believe what He both said and did - He rose from the dead. That is, as you agreed, essential to us today for become a Christian.
Today we have the entire canon of Scripture; then they did not. We live 2,000 years after the fact; they lived before the fact (of the resurrection).
They could testify of the actual words of Jesus for they heard them.
After the resurrection the Holy Spirit brought to their remembrance "all things whatsoever I have told you."
We have never heard the actual words of Jesus, but we do have His Word.
Again, who makes the decision that they had to be there at Pentecost in order to be saved. That is an odd theology.
Yes, I quoted this one.. they were God's BEFORE Christ came along and they were given to Jesus and they have continued in His word. They were saved under the OT Covenant (looking for that which is to come) but not yet Christians in the NT gospel sense (believing in the death, burial, and resurrection of Jesus). This changes the old message to an incomplete one that no longer saves. It reveals where to look, but nothing more. It was enough before Christ, but it is no longer now that He has appeared and has been revealed.
If they were saved they were saved; one cannot be half-saved. They had put their faith both in a coming Messiah, and in the Messiah Himself. That is what salvation is all about. They knew who Christ was. A Christian is one who follows Christ, and that is what they did. "They left all and followed him."
Jesus sent them forth preaching the gospel. Was that an incomplete message that could not save? Was Jesus a failure and a deceiver to send them out with a false gospel that could not save?
Luke 10:8 And into whatsoever city ye enter, and they receive you, eat such things as are set before you:
9 And heal the sick that are therein, and say unto them,
The kingdom of God is come nigh unto you.
Luke 10:17 And the seventy returned again with joy, saying, Lord, even the devils are subject unto us through thy name.
18 And he said unto them, I beheld Satan as lightning fall from heaven.
Luke 10:20 Notwithstanding in this rejoice not, that the spirits are subject unto you; but rather
rejoice, because your names are written in heaven.
Jesus went about preaching the "gospel of the kingdom." He gave the same message to the 70. They had the ability to heal, cast out demons, and do other miracles.
However Jesus testified of them: "Rejoice because your names are written in heaven."
That is much like NT terminology to me. How can you be any more "saved" than that--to know that your name is in the book of life--eternally secure.
This goes exactly with what I am saying. The Church was not in existence during this time except that the materials were present to build it with. The foundation of whom Peter proclaimed Jesus was, was not a foundation he understood, as expressed by his betrayl by denying Him and after Jesus death, going back to his old life and fishing again.
Peter was a believing Jew before he met Jesus.
After he met Jesus he put his faith in Christ.
From that point on he was a follower of Christ or a Christian. He had doubts along the way, but there is nothing to suggest that he was not a Christian. I have heard the testimonies of many in this day and age who have gone back to their old life (backslidden) only to come back to the Lord at a later date. This flies in the face of those who believe in Lordship salvation. But it happens, even today.
Another way to put it - Just because I have all the materials for building a house, and the blue prints for it's construction, does not make a house. It must be established and complete for it to be a house (something a person can live in). Jesus stated, "I will build my Church..."; not "I will continue building my Church..".
It is future. It is: I will build my church and will continue to build my church as he is still doing today.
He started with Peter and the apostles. The Bible specifically says that they are the foundation. The early believers built upon that foundation. Every local church does.
Ephesians 2:20 And are built upon the foundation of the apostles and prophets, Jesus Christ himself being the chief corner
stone;
--The church at Ephesus, as is every Bible-believing local church, had a foundation which consisted of the apostles and prophets (now the Bible), with Christ being the chief cornerstone. When do you think that all began? That is what the OP is.
The later would prove the Church was already existing and will continue to be added to, the prior however states it is not YET built but will be soon. The very wording of Christ is explicit and is testified historically in Acts as to 'adding' of the Gentiles just as the Jews were added in Acts 2. Which means that between Christ's ministry (no Church) and the adding of the 3K 'to the Church'.. the Church came into existence.
What were the 3,000 added to? They were added to the assembly of 120 that was already in existence in the upper room. Now the First Baptist Church of Jerusalem had an assembly of 3,120. There were 3,000 added to that assembly, even though the Holy Spirit had not yet come to them. They were already there conducting church business (choosing the 12th apostle).
There is no "The Church", only "churches." As Tom says, the disciples plus Christ for the most part make up an assembly (ekkesia), and that is when Christ said to Peter: "Upon this rock I will build my church." The sense of the passage seems to be, beginning now I will build and continue to build.
The only notable event that transpired (and I believe testified throughout the NT) is that of the baptism of the Holy Spirit on the believers - WHICH places them into the body of Christ, making them... what? saved again? Or now believers of and in New Covenant and under it's seal via the Holy Spirit.. which is 'The Church'.
You have a lot of terminology that either I don't use or use differently. So obviously we are going to disagree.
First note that Acts one does not speak of the baptism of the Holy Spirit.
Acts 1:4 And, being assembled together with
them, commanded them that they should not depart from Jerusalem, but wait for
the promise of the Father, which,
saith he, ye have heard of me.
--The promise of the Father is the Holy Spirit, the Comforter, who did come according to the promise of Christ. One might say that there was an outpouring of the Holy Spirit. I hesitate to use the word "baptize." He was promised, and the Holy Spirit came.
Secondly, when one is born again he becomes part of the family of God, the bride of Christ, or even the kingdom; but not "the body of Christ, or "The Church."
The term "body of Christ" refers to the "church" which is always local. Study 1Corinthians chapter 12 carefully here, and see how Paul compares the Corinthian church with a "body." This can only refer to a local body--the one at Corinth. As the Corinthian church was, every local church is--a body of Christ, and every member a part of it.
Pentecost has come and gone.
A similar event happened for the Samaritans, and then also for the Gentiles. There was an outpouring of the Holy Spirit on each group, as per Acts 1:8, for evidence to the Jews that the Gospel had reached them as well. This was "the promise of the Father."