Tom Butler
New Member
Dr. Ray Van Neste of Union University (Jackson, TN) has a provocative essay on the ordinances.
The complete article is here:
http://www.uu.edu/personal/rvannest...rating Baptist Practice of the Ordinances.pdf
A couple of points I though were interesting.
In Acts 2:38 (...repent and be baptized), Dr. Van Neste says baptism is designed to demonstrate one's belief, and thus "believe" could be used there in place of "be baptized."
He applies the same interpretation to Paul's baptism in Acts
Dr. Van Neste holds that almost all references to "breaking bread" ini the NT are references to the Lord's Supper. From there, he concludes that the early believers observed the Lord's Supper almost every time they met. So he advocates a weekly observance. And it should be done at the end of the morning service to serve as an evangelistic witness to the lost who are present.
I'm interested in the reactions of BBers. Certainly made me think.
Thanks to RL Vaughn for linking to this on his website. http://baptistsearch.blogspot.com/
The complete article is here:
http://www.uu.edu/personal/rvannest...rating Baptist Practice of the Ordinances.pdf
A couple of points I though were interesting.
In Acts 2:38 (...repent and be baptized), Dr. Van Neste says baptism is designed to demonstrate one's belief, and thus "believe" could be used there in place of "be baptized."
He applies the same interpretation to Paul's baptism in Acts
Dr. Van Neste holds that almost all references to "breaking bread" ini the NT are references to the Lord's Supper. From there, he concludes that the early believers observed the Lord's Supper almost every time they met. So he advocates a weekly observance. And it should be done at the end of the morning service to serve as an evangelistic witness to the lost who are present.
I'm interested in the reactions of BBers. Certainly made me think.
Thanks to RL Vaughn for linking to this on his website. http://baptistsearch.blogspot.com/
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