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!
If you talk the talk but you don't walk the walk.How do you know if you are lukewarm?
If the congregation was truly saved, why would Jesus "vomit" them out? Why would He rather them be hot (on fire and in fellowship) or cold (living an ungodly life)? Why would Jesus EVER want someone to live a "cold" life? The hot and cold refer to the aquaduct system of Laodicea...hot meaning medicinal waters pumped in from the north, and cold meaning the refreshing water from the south. Visitors would "vomit" out the disgusting, murky lukewarm water that resulted from the hot and cold because it was not fit for drinking. In context, the lukewarm cannot be believers. This was a gnostic church (as evidenced by the opening phrases in the letter) who denied Christ's deity. This would make it an unbelieving church filled with unbelievers. This is why "behold I stand at the door and knock..." is not in regards to fellowship with Christ as has been suggested, but to let Christ into their lives and church. Christ can never be on the outside looking in with a true believer.Originally posted by arkie pastor:
First of all the passage speaking about lukewarm Rev.3:15, is speaking about an assembly (curch) as a whole. Rev. 3:14 "And unto the angel of the church of the Laodiceans."
Although the church is comprised of the saved of Christ....this passage is speaking to the whole assembly....each and every church (local assembly) as within its realm lukewarm christians. But evedently this whole congregation had become lukewarm. I other words they had lost their zeal for the Lord. Or trying to ride the fence ( one foot in the world and one foot in Christ's work He had commissioned them to do.)
Secondly I believe Christ was addressing saved people because of the language used in verse 19 of this text...."As many as I love I chasten: be zealous therefor and repent"....When the word of God speaks of "chastening" it is speaking of correcting His children..... not the lost.
Arkie,Originally posted by arkie pastor:
First of all the passage speaking about lukewarm Rev.3:15, is speaking about an assembly (curch) as a whole. Rev. 3:14 "And unto the angel of the church of the Laodiceans."
Although the church is comprised of the saved of Christ....this passage is speaking to the whole assembly....each and every church (local assembly) as within its realm lukewarm christians. But evedently this whole congregation had become lukewarm. I other words they had lost their zeal for the Lord. Or trying to ride the fence ( one foot in the world and one foot in Christ's work He had commissioned them to do.)
Secondly I believe Christ was addressing saved people because of the language used in verse 19 of this text...."As many as I love I chasten: be zealous therefor and repent"....When the word of God speaks of "chastening" it is speaking of correcting His children..... not the lost.
First, I don't recall Christ ever using the phrase church beside when He spoke to Peter. I might be wrong, but that is all I can think of right now off the top of my head. Second, just because the church at Laodicea was NOW a church of unbelievers teaching a false doctrine (1st century gnosticism), doesn't mean it was not founded on Christ. There are plenty of denominations today who profess Christ with their mouths, but are not biblical and do not teach salvation by grace through faith, hence they are "dead" churches. Notice in Rev. 3:14 that Christ called Himself "...the Beginning of the creation of God." This is the same phrase used by Paul to correct a heresy being taught in the church at Colosse, that Christ was a created being (Col. 1:15-20).1. If this was an unsaved church, why did Christ even include them in the letters to the seven churches? Christ never addressed the lost as church any where in the New Testament.
The angel referred to in the letters to the churches were not actual angels, as angels can never be leaders of a church, but "messengers" (the literal meaning of the word angel). They likely were the 7 key elders representing the 7 churches.2. Why did He use the word angel of the church in verse 14?
I take it you are referring to verse 19. However, the verse immediately prior and immediately following indicate Christ was speaking to unbelievers. While God certainly loves the lost (John 3:16), the word chasten (meaning literally, reprove) often refers to God's convicting and punishing the lost who have yet to accept Him.3. Show me in the New Testament any other scriptures where the lord speaks of chastening the lost? As far as I can see all other uses of this word deals with those who belong to His family and He loves as His children.
So I take it you are not going to answer my questions to you. Thanks.Originally posted by arkie pastor:
webdog
this is my last entry to you.
you completely disregarded my Question to you..to show me in Scriptures where God ever addresses a group of completely lost people as a Church or an indivual who is unsaved as part of His Church.
and your reply on chasten..please check out...you addressed II Sam. 7:14, which is a completely different word. This word is "yakaach"
with the meaning of....to convict, to make manifest. and even so if you take this verse in context, he is talking about David who I believe was a child of God.