Why did you avoid quoting the actual commandment of Christ from Matthew 28:19? That is what I was referring to and that is the authoritative commandment of Christ regardless of how it is presented elsewhere.
Have you not ever wondered why there is a discrepancy ? One verse speaks to a baptism in the name of Jesus Christ. While Matthew 28:19 speaks of Baptism using the triune titles?
Those are post-apostolic interpolations entered into the Bible around 2nd to 3rd centuries as per Matthew 28:19 and as recorded by Eusebius. And for the express purpose of supporting that interpolation that is today known as the Trinity doctrine.
Think about it. Old Testament, right? God we know has said there, hear oh Israel our God our God is one. God has said, I Am. And beside me there is no other. And in another verse, there is no other savior. All those many verses that have God in his own words affirming one! He is one. He is only. He is all.
Did he forget he is triune come the new covenant? When Jesus said, I and my father
are one, did Jesus misspeak?
I think we need to take a moment in Bible studies and realize not all that is there between front and back covers is there to be taken at face value. It arrived as the closed canon by decree. Men had their hand in compiling the Holy Bible. Do you notice what is missing on its cover and spine? Any version you choose save for the most contemporary 21st century. "God's words". Why doesn't the Bible have instead embossed on its cover from the beginning, "God's Words" ? Instead it is titled, holy book.
Men had everything to do with what comes to us in printed verse. And if you don't believe that just remember, only one example here, the 1611 King James Version included the Apocrypha. Today's KJV does not. The KJV in its first printing did have the triune reference in Matthew 28:19. But that came after the Nicene council.
Speaking of KJV and in relation to our talk concerning
Matthew 28:19, recall
Luke24:47?
"And that repentance and remission of sins should be preached in his name among all nations, beginning at Jerusalem. "
But back in Matthew 28:19 Baptism after repentance and for remission of sins should be performed in three names? Father, son, holy spirit?
Source Link, excerpt below. *If that link does not open please let me know and I'll paste the article in full.
Introduction
Below are many historical quotes from theologians and other writers that heavily indicate that Matthew 28:19 has been altered.
It must be remembered that we have no known manuscripts that were written in the first, second or third centuries. There is a gap of over three hundred years between when Matthew wrote his epistle and our earliest manuscript copies. (
It also took over three hundred years for the Catholic Church to evolve into what the “early church fathers” wanted it to become.)
This is what my research revealed. Eusebius was the Bishop of Caesarea and is known as “the Father of Church History.” He wrote prolifically and his most celebrated work is his Ecclesiastical History, a history of the Church from the Apostolic period until his own time. Eusebius quotes many verses in his writings including Matthew 28:19 several times. But he never quotes it as it appears in modern Bibles. He always finishes the verse with the words “in my name.”
Does Matthew 28:19 Have Added Text?
The following excerpts come from an unaltered book of Matthew that could have even been the original or the first copy of the original of Matthew. Thus Eusebius informs us of the actual words Jesus spoke to his disciples in Matthew 28:19.
“
With one word and voice He said to His disciples: “Go, and make disciples of all nations in My Name, teaching them to observe all things whatsoever I have commanded you,” — (
Proof of the Gospel by Eusebius, Book III, ch 6, 132 (a), p. 152)
“
But while the disciples of Jesus were most likely either saying thus, or thinking thus, the Master solved their difficulties, by the addition of one phrase, saying they should triumph “In MY NAME.” And the power of His name being so great, that the apostle says: “God has given him a name which is above every name, that in the name of Jesus every knee should bow, of things in heaven, and things in earth, and things under the earth,” He shewed the virtue of the power in His Name concealed from the crowd when He said to His disciples: “Go, and make disciples of all the nations in my Name.” He also most accurately forecasts the future when He says: “for this gospel must first be preached to all the world, for a witness to all nations.” — (
Proof of the Gospel by Eusebius, Book III, ch 7, 136 (a-d), p. 157)
“
Who said to them; “Make disciples of all the nations in my Name.” — (
Eusebius, Proof of the Gospel, Book III, Chapter 7, 138 (c), p. 159)
In Book III of his History, Chapter 5, Section 2, which is about the Jewish persecution of early Christians, we read, “
relying upon the power of Christ, who had said to them, “Go ye and make disciples of all the nations in my name.”
And in his Oration in Praise of Emperor Constantine, Chapter 16, Section 8, we read, “
Surely none save our only Savior has done this, when, after his victory over death, he spoke the word to his followers, and fulfilled it by the event, saying to them, “Go ye and make disciples of all nations in my name.”
Eusebius was present at the council of Nicea and was involved in the debates between Arias and the pagan view of Athanasius that became the trinity doctrine. If the manuscripts he had in front of him read “
in the name of the Father, and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit,” he would never have quoted instead, “
in my name.” So it appears that the earliest manuscripts read “
in my name,” and the phrase was enlarged to reflect the orthodox position as Trinitarian influence spread.
Below is Matthew 28:19 from the King James Bible.
Matthew 28:19 “
Go you therefore, and teach all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost:”