And yet the Greek does not contend that.Isaiah40:28 said:well for deacons it says, "not indulging in much wine".
I think the limitations on drinking are the same for both offices as well as every other Christian: don't drink in excess.
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And yet the Greek does not contend that.Isaiah40:28 said:well for deacons it says, "not indulging in much wine".
I think the limitations on drinking are the same for both offices as well as every other Christian: don't drink in excess.
You bring much to the table. You have biblical knowledge. IMO you are well qualified to post on this board. I don't know how many different "divisions" there are under the Baptist umbrella, and your mention of schisms I believe are the bane of the Baptist denomination/s. We Baptists saying we are autonomous is a misnomer, unless there is one lonely Baptist church out there with no connection with any other Baptist church. And I'm sure if there is one out there, as that church grows, it will "split".mes228 said:Jerome, Please forgive me if I've offended you. It was my understanding that "The Baptist Faith and Message" was the official spokesman for the Southern Baptist.
Perhaps I'm wrong. I don't suspect that sowing discord among the Brethren is a Godly thing to do. I defer to you and will remain quiet. Honestly though, I feel the positition of the Baptist Faith and Message is well founded. If a total abstinence doctrine/positition was put in writting, and the attempt was made to justify it Bibilicaly. The Baptist church would be a laughing stock of most other legitimate scholars. You can preach and teach total abstinance on a local level (and it is being done) and use only portions of scripture. However I'd say 99.999% (just a guess) of Scholars/Teachers of any persuasion would find it blatently wrong. And would cast doubt on the sincerity, honesty, and accuracy of Baptist theology. You simply cannot reach a total abstinance positition based on the totality of scripture. It has to be a discipline not a doctrine. I don't think I'll post on this topic any more. Wishing you the best, and have a Blessed day.
As usual Christian friend, you misread posts.His Blood Spoke My Name said:Acceptable lust? I cannot find that term in the Word of God.
that word 'covet' in 1 Corinthians 12:31 does not mean lust, as you imply.
And no offense intended to you Allen, and again I know, and understand the message of the verses, and I might say we differ as to just who those under false colors were, and will address under your Acts 15 reference below.Allan said:Originally Posted by ituttut
I do appreciate your offer to help Allen, but I know the scriptures you speak of. May I show you a couple that you may not be aware of? I see in Galatians 2:4 that we are due our privacy.
If that is the rendering you obtain from that passage, then (no offence) you need to go back and look it over in the proper context.
Quote:
Gal 2:4 And that because of false brethren unawares brought in, who came in privily to spy out our liberty which we have in Christ Jesus, that they might bring us into bondage:
Gal 2:5 To whom we gave place by subjection, no, not for an hour; that the truth of the gospel might continue with you
First - those false brethren or false christians came to Paul and the gentile church in an underhanded manner.
Second - It was not that Paul and the gentiles did ANYTHING privately but this reference is specific to the stealth (due to their true intentions) of those false christians.
Third - To spy out (as foes in the guise of friends) our 'liberty' directly concerns the non-circumcision of Titus (and in general including other geniles by implication) in verse 3. Their liberty in Christ was that they was not compelled to obey the cerimonial Law of Moses and so the false brethren came to try to bring them under the Law FOR righteousness. We saw/see a portion of this group in Acts contending the same point.
Fully agree, but we must know who the fellows were. We can plainly identify these as being members from the Pentecostal church controlled from Jerusalem. This is the reason by revelation that Paul was sent to make sure that "Kingdom Church" understood they should make strong voice to the Jewish church at Jerusalem (included those of Judah) to leave the "Gentiles" alone, and quit having them try to make them be circumcised that would require the Gentile to come under the gospel of the circumcised.Act 15:5 But there rose up certain of the sect of the Pharisees which believed, saying, That it was needful to circumcise them, and to command [them] to keep the law of Moses.
This was not about being able to do or not do as one wishes, but the truth of the Gospel at the very heart of the matter and at stake.
Again I know you are trying to help, but you will notice I only chose to quote one verse of Galatians, and not two. I wished to center on our liberty and freedom in Christ, and not get into discussion of the full dispensational gospel that Christ Jesus gave to Paul; at least not in this setting.Jamison-Faust
Greek, "To whom not even for an hour did we yield by subjection." ALFORD renders the Greek article, "with THE subjection required of us." The sense rather is, We would willingly have yielded for love [BENGEL] (if no principle was at issue), but not in the way of subjection, where "the truth of the Gospel" ( Gal 2:14 Col 1:5 ) was at stake (namely, the fundamental truth of justification by faith only, without the works of the law, contrasted with another Gospel, Gal 1:6 ). Truth precise, unaccommodating, abandons nothing that belongs to itself, admits nothing that is inconsistent with it [BENGEL].
There is nothing here to support your contention of doing something privately that you KNOW is a stumbling block to other brethren.
Does not contend what, specifically?Allan said:And yet the Greek does not contend that.
Hmm... I have been invited to a Passover seder at a Jewish friend's home tonight. I've read up on the ceremony this weekend and noticed that they will serve four cups of wine during the ceremony (we are going to do it over two nights).Linda64 said:The unfermented "fruit of the vine" (which Jesus gave to His disciples to drink at the Last Supper) is what makes the heart glad.
I have partook with Jewish (non-christian) friends of the family a couple of times in the past (3 I think) but they never used fermented wine for anyone. It was grape juice that they partook of in the Passover meal.Baptist Believer said:Hmm... I have been invited to a Passover seder at a Jewish friend's home tonight. I've read up on the ceremony this weekend and noticed that they will serve four cups of wine during the ceremony (we are going to do it over two nights).
The context of the Last Supper taking place at Passover clearly indicates that the cup they drank was wine.
I have already (earlier) dealt with the what scripture equates with "making the heart glad". But I also am not a TOTAL abstinence person either. I believe the weaker brother and stumbling block principle far outways any positions for drinking in American Culture (pro or con) regarding does scripture say we can in moderation or not.Isaiah40:28 said:Does not contend what, specifically?
BTW, do you also believe that grape juice is what "makes the heart glad"?
None of the abstinence posters seem to want to deal with this issue other than saying that studies have shown grape juice can be healthy for your heart.
That's almost blasphemous for a jewish family. I've never heard of a jewish family who would use grape juice instead of wine. My brother in law is jewish.Allan said:I have partook with Jewish (non-christian) friends of the family a couple of times in the past (3 I think) but they never used fermented wine for anyone. It was grape juice that they partook of in the Passover meal.
You are right. Some Baptists change their doctrine as the wind changes and call it from God when God has never changed. That is all the more reason why we must major on the majors and minor on the minors.mes228 said:Baptist resisted grape juice for communion and were the grealy opposed to it's use. Now the position is exactly reversed.
Ahh! So the choice of beverage is the sign of salvation...His Blood Spoke My Name said:My wife, a born-again Jew, tells me that in the unsaved Jews, wine was used. In those who were saved, grape juice is used.
The very young children were given grape juice.In the home of unsaved Jews, when real wine was used, children were not permitted to partake of the wine during the Feasts.
Jeremiah Hart said:This is DOCTRINE:
Prov. 23:31
Look not thou upon the wine when it is red, when it giveth his colour in the cup, [when] it moveth itself aright.
So, I guess you can drink it as long as you don't look.
gb93433 said:Does that not apply to white wine?
What is the "appearance" of evil? Does evil have an appearance?Jeremiah Hart said:I am guessing that is why God put the "giveth it's colour in the cup" phrase too.
Was there white wine in that time period? I don't know. But if you compare that with
I Thess 5:22
Abstain from all appearance of evil.
Why chance it?
Again, not your normal jewish families. Children do consume wine during the Seder, and have for thousands of years.His Blood Spoke My Name said:My wife, a born-again Jew, tells me that in the unsaved Jews, wine was used. In those who were saved, grape juice is used.
In the home of unsaved Jews, when real wine was used, children were not permitted to partake of the wine during the Feasts.
Yes there was. As long as there were green grapes, there would have been white wine.Was there white wine in that time period? I don't know.
Actually, it is scripture. Correct doctrine comes from rightly interpreting scripture.Jeremiah Hart said:This is DOCTRINE:
Prov. 23:31
Look not thou upon the wine when it is red, when it giveth his colour in the cup, [when] it moveth itself aright.