Did Peter really tell them to STOP water baptism? Yes, you bet he did!

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Uploaded by on Jul 3, 2011

Baptism and Predestination - Peter and the Gentiles - Proselyte Baptism -- Not the Water Forbid. #2198 WN071807

by Jim Brown of Grace and Truth Ministries
http://www.graceandtruth.net/

Notes (please watch entire video to understand the context):

Anglicized the word baptizo and bapto, made it an Anglo Saxon word.

We turned these words into baptiz:

baptizo which means to cover - this was not a verb implying motion; and bapto stain and dye.

transitive verb moves
intransitive not move

baptize being infinitive (verbal noun). Person - The action is taken upon the person, and the force that causes the action to take place comes from an outer source - a force from some other direction; a staining liquid, the blood of Christ, and this force (God) baptizes who he wills.

If we are conformed to the image of Christ ( ikon, likeness ) then there has to be a death of the old man. When you first come to Christ you have inner and outer man. The outer is self and will not do right, the inner is Christ in you, and the inner man is little faith (Christ in you). Outer man is filled with strife, contention, gossip, tale bearing, throawdness ( twist other words to get your way ) SELF! The outer must go through a blood baptism, and it is a long slow death. The longer you live, the fiery the trials you will go through and you will start to give up self (outer man) the longer live. The blood baptism is death of self; this is what you are pre-ordained to.

Repent means to turn and think differently.

epi
eis
ev(en) - with or by when used with a verbal noun

name is onoma , it means authority.

To be baptized with the authority, with God's word, the word is the spirit, the spirit is the truth.

For it to be water it has to be the word eis to move into. eis means to sink into, as is to sink into clothing. It therefore does not mean water.

Mark 16:16 KJV He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved; but he that believeth not shall be damned.

baptized and believeth are participles. ing words in English used as an adjective modify the noun and pronoun

Participles tell which, what kind of, or how many.

Water has nothing to do with baptism, NOTHING.

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