Okay, so as I said before, there a quite a few arguments to address. And I plan to address them all, in the order they appear. Unfortunately, I can only address one argument per day, since I've got a lot of other stuff going on this week too. So to farouk, JLB, turnorburn, gr8grace3, Eugene, and John D, I haven't forgotten about any of you, and I promise I will respond to your posts. But again, one per day is all I can handle this week. To Paul 1965, thank you for backing me up; God bless! And Reba, thank you for maintaining order and civility around here, and I promise that I will comply with the "gentleness and respect" that 1 Peter 3:15 calls for. Now, with all that out of the way, I will begin with farouk's first argument, based on Ephesians 2:8-9. (BTW, the following argument, as well as most of my OP, have come directly from the book that I recommended earlier: "Muscle And A Shovel")
Ephesians 2:8-9 says: "For by grace are ye saved through faith; and that not of yourselves: it is the gift of God: Not of works, lest any man should boast." Is this passage pushing "faith only" for salvation? A lot of people HAVE used this scripture as their star witness in their case for "faith only", but they are pulling it out of context to do so. Here's the thing: Paul wrote this letter to the church at Ephesus to a group of Christians who were being heavily influenced by new Jewish converts to Christianity. These Jews, who formerly were under the Law of Moses, were now trying to teach new GENTILE Christians that they had to go back to the former works of the Mosaic Law. Those Jews were teaching those new Gentile Christians that they had to be circumsized. That was the "work" Paul was talking about in verse 9, a former work of the flesh. That old Mosaic Law, along with all Jewish works of the flesh, was abolished on the cross.
Staying in this same chapter, let's look at verse 15. "Having abolished in his flesh the enmity, even the law of commandments contained in ordinances; for to make in himself of twain one new man, so making peace". Paul was correcting the new Christians at Ephesus, telling them in verses 10 thru 22 that Christians were no longer under the former works of Moses. The new Jewish converts to Christ had been boasting, evidently bragging that they were more righteous and more sinless because they had obeyed the previous law of circumcision. But Paul corrected their erroneous thinking, lest any Jewish-Christian should boast. Now, is Paul saying that we do nothing to access God's grace? No. As a matter of fact, "faith only" or "faith alone" is a false doctrine! There is only ONE place in the whole Bible where you find the phrase "faith alone", and it actually says "NOT by faith alone". James 2:24. "You see that a man is justified by works and not by
faith alone."
BTW, baptism is not a "works salvation" or "salvation by rite". Baptism is simply a PART of the process of obeying the gospel. And we are not saved until we obey the gospel (2 Thess 1:7-8). Belief, repentance, and confession of Jesus as God's Son, are all part of this process too. But we don't consider those "works", do we? And how is baptism a "work", when we don't even baptize ourselves? We passively submit to someone else, who baptizes US. Someone else does the "work" for us. Baptism is no more of a "work" than repentance or confession.
One down, many to go! Farouk, tomorrow I will address your argument about understanding baptism as "on account of the forgiveness of sins" instead of "FOR the forgiveness of sins", and about where exactly the regeneration comes from. I appreciate your patience, and to everyone else, as I said before, I'll get to you soon! It's my bedtime now; gotta get up at 3:30am.