psalms109:31
Active Member
Paul Said
Paul said they not we
Paul said they not we
Welcome to Baptist Board, a friendly forum to discuss the Baptist Faith in a friendly surrounding.
Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to all the features that our community has to offer.
We hope to see you as a part of our community soon and God Bless!
psalms109:31 said:Paul said they not we
I believe its talking about ourselves, who were dead in sin and baptized to show the death, burial and resurrection to walk a29: Else what shall they do which are baptized for the dead, if the dead rise not at all? why are they then baptized for the dead?
You may be right. That is why I favor my original explanation, in which I gave you the context (the resurrection), and why Paul was referring to a pagan practice. Because you couldn't not find the evidence of that practice doesn't mean that the practice didn't exist.npetreley said:Sorry, but that still sounds to me like, "I don't want to believe that it means what it says, so I'm going to come up with some alternative explanation that I prefer."
Again, I'm not insisting any of these alternative explanations are wrong, but they sure sound contrived to me.
My Greek prof in Seminary believed the same thing. He said there were over 250 interpretations of the passage. This is the one he believed to be most consistent with the context of these verses. He is what he said, as best as I can remember.Pastor Larry said:It does seem pretty straightforward that some were being baptized in a proxy for the dead, apparently.
As to Paul's not condemning it, I wonder if we are reading too much into there. Maybe he is "granting for the sake of argument" and using that to illustrate how absurd it is for people who don't believe in teh resurrection to be baptized for the dead. In other words, he wasn't approving it; he was merely pointing out that such an act was inconsistent with their stated beliefs.
But Bro. Bob, Didn't you read the Book of Mormon and Doctrines and Covenants??Brother Bob said:I find no where in the bible where you can be baptized for anyone except your own selves,
:BangHead: I knew I was forgetting something. Have you ever given any thought that Paul meant being baptized for the dead, he was actually talking about us who were dead at one time in sin?But Bro. Bob, Didn't you read the Book of Mormon and Doctrines and Covenants??__________________
DHK
DHK said:You may be right. That is why I favor my original explanation, in which I gave you the context (the resurrection), and why Paul was referring to a pagan practice. Because you couldn't not find the evidence of that practice doesn't mean that the practice didn't exist.
"Or else why do they baptize for the dead."npetreley said:Yeah, but that wasn't my argument against the explanation. Like I said, it would be like arguing "Then why do they chase unicorns if it's not possible to capture an animal?" That's a stupid way to argue the point, and Paul wasn't stupid.
I don't follow you here at all. If it was a non-Christian practice, and it meant nothing, then it is the poorest of all choices to make his point. As I've said twice before, it's like saying, "Or else why do they chase unicorns, if you can't catch an animal?" Duh, if they chase unicorns, then they're nuts because unicorns don't exist -- chasing unicorns has nothing to do with catching an animal, so it makes no sense to use it to make the point that you can catch an animal.DHK said:"Or else why do they baptize for the dead."
It seems to be a clear enough reference the way it is worded to a non-Christian practice, if we take the Bible literally.
Not necessarily. The point was the resurrection. It is true that he was specifically referring to the resurrection of Christ, but he was also speaking of our resurrection, and the concept of resurrection in general. If one denies the concept of a resurrection (like the J.W.'s), then why baptize, specifically if it is a pagan practice like the Mormons have if their baptism is supposed to have some effect on their dead loved ones in the afterlife? Look at my previous post where I explained this quoting the surrounding verses in their context.npetreley said:I don't follow you here at all. If it was a non-Christian practice, and it meant nothing,
But he is not speaking of unicorns. He is speaking of baptism in the light of the resurrection, both concepts which are tied together. Study the context and see how they are related to each other. That is how baptism for the dead fits in. It also would relate to a resurrection if the pagans believe in an afterlife, and most do.then it is the poorest of all choices to make his point. As I've said twice before, it's like saying, "Or else why do they chase unicorns, if you can't catch an animal?" Duh, if they chase unicorns, then they're nuts because unicorns don't exist -- chasing unicorns has nothing to do with catching an animal, so it makes no sense to use it to make the point that you can catch an animal.
Then it becomes obvious if the "they" are not Paul or the Corinthians, by deductive reasoning they must be pagans. What other choice do we have. Paul himself delineated only three groups of people in the Bible: Gentiles, Jews, and the church of God (Christians).Literally, there's a "they" who baptized for the dead. We don't know who "they" are. We only know who "they" AREN'T. We know they aren't the Corinthians to whom he speaks. We know they don't include Paul (or he would have said "we"). That pretty much rules out the idea that he's talking about regular baptism, because Paul did baptize people. But that's all we know. We don't know who "they" are.
Paul often refers to Gentile practices in his writings or in his sermons.Beyond that, I know Paul was a smart guy, and I find it difficult to believe he'd spout nonsense like citing a pagan ritual that he knows means nothing to drive home the point that resurrection is true. It just doesn't make sense to say, "Why do they engage in meaningles rituals concerning the dead that in no way affect the dead, if the dead are not raised?"
DHK said:Then it becomes obvious if the "they" are not Paul or the Corinthians, by deductive reasoning they must be pagans. What other choice do we have. Paul himself delineated only three groups of people in the Bible: Gentiles, Jews, and the church of God (Christians).
The whole chapter is talking about the "saved", and those being "saved". When Paul says "they", he is talking about the new converts that are being saved, and if the dead rise not then it is in vain, and they themselves are in vain, and still in their sins.26: The last enemy that shall be destroyed is death.
27: For he hath put all things under his feet. But when he saith, all things are put under him, it is manifest that he is excepted, which did put all things under him.
28: And when all things shall be subdued unto him, then shall the Son also himself be subject unto him that put all things under him, that God may be all in all.
29: Else what shall they do which are baptized for the dead, if the dead rise not at all? why are they then baptized for the dead?
PastorSBC, I agree with your explanation of this passage. This view is very simple and straitforward.Could it be the word translated "for" would be better translated "because of" referencing those who have come to know Christ, symbolized by baptism, because of the lives of believers who have died?