Do you want to know the truth?

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KelbyofGod

Senior Member
Oct 8, 2017
1,881
721
113
#41
Ah, ha ha! I was just gonna say the same thing! See you later :)

PS~ I hope you have a nice restful and rejuvenating nap :D
I did indeed have a restful and rejuvenating nap. Thank you. :) I hope you did, too.

Love in Jesus,
Kelby
 

CS1

Well-known member
May 23, 2012
13,067
4,349
113
#42
Almost everyone who comes here has a doctrine through which information is filtered. But do they have a way to test if their filter is accurate?

(NO, it's NOT enough to ask others with the same filter "Do you think our doctrine is correct?" because who would answer "Well, No, we've been teaching you a lie this whole time." )

What is needed is a test that you can apply to yourself, and answer for yourself in the privacy of your own heart where only God is a witness. That way you can be completely and embarrassingly honest.

The test is this: Who in your church has the Holy Ghost, and who does not? (Does your filter allow you to discern? <-- and I mean for SURE, not "I think so". )

The bible says that "if any man have not the spirit of Christ, he is NONE of His". So it is very important to know. (If you want to choose your teachers wisely.)

And there is an even more important reason that you need to be honest with yourself and able to answer that question… specifically, you are also in that church.

I'll be blunt here. If your filter is flawed, it's still flawed when you use it on yourself.

If you discover your filter is flawed, you have the option of facing that truth...or trying to bury it. How you handle it is one of the things that determines "Do you WANT to know the truth?".

Love in Jesus,
Kelby
the idea to know if another has the " Holy Ghost" is first to know that you do. Anyone can pull off a Sunday God bless you Jesus loves, but who they are on Monday most do not know. In addition, to be blunt, The Holy Spirit is not going to people in the church telling them " they do not have The Holy Ghost" and that one doesn't The Holy Spirit is doing what Jesus said HE would do. Reproving sin, speaking of Jesus, and bring in into our remembrance all that He taught as John 14 -16 chapters tells us. It is the self-examination that we each need. Not a critical spirit but a humble one. Trying to create condemnation of others is not even a doctrine it is judging others. We must take the beam out of our own eye. those who love much have been forgiving much.
 

KelbyofGod

Senior Member
Oct 8, 2017
1,881
721
113
#43
I do not believe it is earthly water being referred to except for the first instance
regarding physical life. Yes, water is necessary for earthly life. But the water spoken
of in relation to Spiritual life is something else again.
Sorry to abbreviate the post to answer the question, but it's fairly safe to abbreviate when there is agreement. :) And I do agree that only the first verse was about physical water. :)

And I'll say this again perhaps only for others' sakes. But I really like that you highlight the non-physical mentions of water. There are so many times when scriptures are clearly not talking about H2O and I'd not even noticed how often that was being done. I think we can politely discuss whether any particular scripture is talking about physical water or spiritual water and whether or not those mentions have anything to do with baptism.

When it comes to the main topic of baptism(s), I'll try to use the phrase "water baptism" to mean the physical dunking of someone in H2O (for whatever purpose that might be). I'd use different wording when talking about spirit baptism.

I consider the phrase "born of water" to mean the same thing as 'water baptism' but I will probably avoid that usage in our discussions because I've heard some say that phrase means "physical infant birth" because they consider amniotic fluid to be the "water" being referenced.

My apologies if that's worded poorly. After my nap I made a 60 mile trip to get a car part, followed by a 50 mile trip to help my son.

Love in Jesus,
Kelby
 

KelbyofGod

Senior Member
Oct 8, 2017
1,881
721
113
#44
the idea to know if another has the " Holy Ghost" is first to know that you do. Anyone can pull off a Sunday God bless you Jesus loves, but who they are on Monday most do not know. In addition, to be blunt, The Holy Spirit is not going to people in the church telling them " they do not have The Holy Ghost" and that one doesn't The Holy Spirit is doing what Jesus said HE would do. Reproving sin, speaking of Jesus, and bring in into our remembrance all that He taught as John 14 -16 chapters tells us. It is the self-examination that we each need. Not a critical spirit but a humble one. Trying to create condemnation of others is not even a doctrine it is judging others. We must take the beam out of our own eye. those who love much have been forgiving much.
There's a difference between KNOWING if someone has the Holy Ghost and SAYING "You do or don't have the Holy Ghost". I did not say or suggest that there is a need to go through a church announcing "THIS one has the Holy Spirit. And THIS one does not". But there is a reason (perhaps even a need) to KNOW which one does and which one does not, of people you interact with.

Think about it from this perspective even though it's a hard one to swallow... If a person asks "Do I have the Holy Spirit now?" Are you going to guess? Because, if you don't KNOW whether they've got the Holy Ghost or not, you DON'T know if they're "saved".

Love in Jesus,
Kelby
 

CS1

Well-known member
May 23, 2012
13,067
4,349
113
#45
Almost everyone who comes here has a doctrine through which information is filtered. But do they have a way to test if their filter is accurate?

(NO, it's NOT enough to ask others with the same filter "Do you think our doctrine is correct?" because who would answer "Well, No, we've been teaching you a lie this whole time." )

What is needed is a test that you can apply to yourself, and answer for yourself in the privacy of your own heart where only God is a witness. That way you can be completely and embarrassingly honest.

The test is this: Who in your church has the Holy Ghost, and who does not? (Does your filter allow you to discern? <-- and I mean for SURE, not "I think so". )

The bible says that "if any man have not the spirit of Christ, he is NONE of His". So it is very important to know. (If you want to choose your teachers wisely.)

And there is an even more important reason that you need to be honest with yourself and able to answer that question… specifically, you are also in that church.

I'll be blunt here. If your filter is flawed, it's still flawed when you use it on yourself.

If you discover your filter is flawed, you have the option of facing that truth...or trying to bury it. How you handle it is one of the things that determines "Do you WANT to know the truth?".

Love in Jesus,
Kelby

You were telling in my response to you that :

There's a difference between KNOWING if someone has the Holy Ghost and SAYING "You do or don't have the Holy Ghost". I did not say or suggest that there is a need to go through a church announcing "THIS one has the Holy Spirit. And THIS one does not".


In your original post, I think you are doing just that or suggesting it.
 

KelbyofGod

Senior Member
Oct 8, 2017
1,881
721
113
#46
In your original post, I think you are doing just that or suggesting it.
"Once you know it, you should say it" would be an inaccurate portrayal of my meaning.

Even though it is an understandable assumption, it is still an assumption rather than a reality.

Another filter I have is approximately "You don't really know anything important until you know something so important that you have to keep it to yourself (except under specific circumstances)" <-- That's not precise wording but it at least conveys the idea that I differentiate between Knowing and Speaking.

Here's the same idea in scripture (which took a bit to find how it's worded):
Proverbs 29:11 KJV
A fool uttereth all his mind: but a wise man keepeth it in till afterwards.

Love in Jesus,
Kelby
 

KelbyofGod

Senior Member
Oct 8, 2017
1,881
721
113
#47
There's a difference between KNOWING if someone has the Holy Ghost and SAYING "You do or don't have the Holy Ghost". I did not say or suggest that there is a need to go through a church announcing "THIS one has the Holy Spirit. And THIS one does not". But there is a reason (perhaps even a need) to KNOW which one does and which one does not, of people you interact with.

Think about it from this perspective even though it's a hard one to swallow... If a person asks "Do I have the Holy Spirit now?" Are you going to guess? Because, if you don't KNOW whether they've got the Holy Ghost or not, you DON'T know if they're "saved".

Love in Jesus,
Kelby
I guess I could have added this as well:
A person's behavior on Monday does not change the fact that they did (or did not) have the Holy Ghost on Friday.

The Holy Spirit (once received) is a comforter that abides with us forever (John 14:16) ... even if we sin on Monday.

Love in Jesus,
Kelby

P.S. I'd had this written but noticed CS1's posting. So I cut/pasted it here only after answering the intervening question.
 

CherieR

Senior Member
May 6, 2017
2,271
1,429
113
#48
Almost everyone who comes here has a doctrine through which information is filtered. But do they have a way to test if their filter is accurate?

(NO, it's NOT enough to ask others with the same filter "Do you think our doctrine is correct?" because who would answer "Well, No, we've been teaching you a lie this whole time." )

What is needed is a test that you can apply to yourself, and answer for yourself in the privacy of your own heart where only God is a witness. That way you can be completely and embarrassingly honest.

The test is this: Who in your church has the Holy Ghost, and who does not? (Does your filter allow you to discern? <-- and I mean for SURE, not "I think so". )

The bible says that "if any man have not the spirit of Christ, he is NONE of His". So it is very important to know. (If you want to choose your teachers wisely.)

And there is an even more important reason that you need to be honest with yourself and able to answer that question… specifically, you are also in that church.

I'll be blunt here. If your filter is flawed, it's still flawed when you use it on yourself.

If you discover your filter is flawed, you have the option of facing that truth...or trying to bury it. How you handle it is one of the things that determines "Do you WANT to know the truth?".

Love in Jesus,
Kelby

One question I had was how do you determine who has the Holy Spirit and does not?

Another thought I had was people who have the Holy Spirit can still be wrong. They can still have wrong doctrine on some things and can misinterpret Bible verses. One thing I have been told with the Bible is context is important.
 

CS1

Well-known member
May 23, 2012
13,067
4,349
113
#49
"Once you know it, you should say it" would be an inaccurate portrayal of my meaning.

Even though it is an understandable assumption, it is still an assumption rather than a reality.

Another filter I have is approximately "You don't really know anything important until you know something so important that you have to keep it to yourself (except under specific circumstances)" <-- That's not precise wording but it at least conveys the idea that I differentiate between Knowing and Speaking.

Here's the same idea in scripture (which took a bit to find how it's worded):
Proverbs 29:11 KJV
A fool uttereth all his mind: but a wise man keepeth it in till afterwards.

Love in Jesus,
Kelby
there is no filter :) we are to place our faith in the Lord Jesus as his word. Feelings doesn't = faith.
 

KelbyofGod

Senior Member
Oct 8, 2017
1,881
721
113
#50
"Once you know it, you should say it" would be an inaccurate portrayal of my meaning.

Even though it is an understandable assumption, it is still an assumption rather than a reality.

Another filter I have is approximately "You don't really know anything important until you know something so important that you have to keep it to yourself (except under specific circumstances)" <-- That's not precise wording but it at least conveys the idea that I differentiate between Knowing and Speaking.

Here's the same idea in scripture (which took a bit to find how it's worded):
Proverbs 29:11 KJV
A fool uttereth all his mind: but a wise man keepeth it in till afterwards.

Love in Jesus,
Kelby
@CS1
It is very important to be able to recognize who does or does not have the spirit of God. It is not always beneficial to express that knowledge openly.

Love in Jesus,
Kelby
 

Magenta

Senior Member
Jul 3, 2015
60,334
29,581
113
#51
Sorry to abbreviate the post to answer the question, but it's fairly safe to abbreviate when there is agreement. :) And I do agree that only the first verse was about physical water. :)

And I'll say this again perhaps only for others' sakes. But I really like that you highlight the non-physical mentions of water. There are so many times when scriptures are clearly not talking about H2O and I'd not even noticed how often that was being done. I think we can politely discuss whether any particular scripture is talking about physical water or spiritual water and whether or not those mentions have anything to do with baptism.

When it comes to the main topic of baptism(s), I'll try to use the phrase "water baptism" to mean the physical dunking of someone in H2O (for whatever purpose that might be). I'd use different wording when talking about spirit baptism.

I consider the phrase "born of water" to mean the same thing as 'water baptism' but I will probably avoid that usage in our discussions because I've heard some say that phrase means "physical infant birth" because they consider amniotic fluid to be the "water" being referenced.

My apologies if that's worded poorly. After my nap I made a 60 mile trip to get a car part, followed by a 50 mile trip to help my son.

Love in Jesus,
Kelby
Good morning Kelby :) That was quite a road trip you had yesterday! I hope both your son and your car have benefited :D

Using the phrase "water baptism" to mean the use of physical water is a good idea :) There are quite a few times in Scripture where the necessity of baptism is being put forth when this distinction is not there, and yet people read earthly water into the verses. I believe it is erroneous to do so. I do not really agree that the water part of being born of water and the Spirit means amniotic fluid, either. I have seen people say that quite a few times over the years, but it just does not really resonate with me.

Once during a discussion of this type here on CC, somebody falsely accused me of telling people not to get water baptized. This person refused to acknowledge that nowhere in any of my posts had I ever even so much as hinted at such a thing. The discussion from my point of view is almost always focused on the meaning of water, and whether a person can be saved if they have not been water baptized. I have also pointed out that Jesus commanded the disciples to water baptize, while it was Peter who commanded believers to be water baptized. Water baptism sometimes preceded the advent of the infilling with the Holy Spirit, and other times came after or concurrent with water baptism. Water baptism in itself is not the saving unto life ever after element.

John the Baptist said Jesus would baptize with fire and the Sprit. Well, he did not say Jesus' Name, but we know that is Who he was talking about. We are also told there is one baptism. I cannot believe this refers to water baptism, especially considering that some are water baptized hoping it helps in their earth walk when they do not believe in their heart and confess with their mouth that Jesus is Lord, and that God raised Him from death. Line by line and precept by precept it is interesting how we come to different conclusions. I would never actively discourage a person from getting baptized unless I knew for a fact that they did not believe the gospel, in the Biblical God, and Jesus Christ. Even so, I never have discouraged anyone from being water baptized :)

"Whoever believes in me, as Scripture has said, rivers of living water will flow from within them."
 

KelbyofGod

Senior Member
Oct 8, 2017
1,881
721
113
#52
One question I had was how do you determine who has the Holy Spirit and does not?
That's a good, valid, and appropriate question. When making the OP, I knew it would come up and was wondering if, and/or how best, to answer it.

What I decided is that I will avoid answering it directly for as long as possible.

The main reason is that it's important for people to realize the NEED for the answer. A subsequent reason is that people need to learn how to take those kinds of questions to God and let him teach and show them. That is of much more value than just blurting out an answer that seems unimportant.

Another thought I had was people who have the Holy Spirit can still be wrong. They can still have wrong doctrine on some things and can misinterpret Bible verses.
That's exactly why we need to have a way to TEST not just other's doctrines, but our own and our own churches'. Think about it. You're more likely to be deceived by an error taught by a pastor you trust, than an error taught by some pastor you don't trust. <-- that should be a sobering thought. And it's part of the reason Jesus taught "if the blind lead the blind, both fall into the ditch". But don't let fear consume you. God has plenty of light to shine on any dark area. He just won't shine it if we prefer to stay in the darkness we know. (Choose light rather than darkness :) )

As for context... yes that's important. But people who fail to correctly understand a sentence are just as capable of misunderstanding the entire paragraph, page, or book. The bible doesn't say (anywhere that I know of) "make sure you know the entire context". But it does say "Lean NOT to your own understanding." and "Come unto ME, all ye that labour and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest" and "take my yoke upon you and learn of ME" and "They shall be all taught of GOD. Every man therefore that hath heard, and hath learned of the Father, cometh unto me". It is so very important that each of us learn how to take our concerns, fears, needs for understanding, etc directly to God instead of trusting either our own understanding of the sentence, paragraph, book...or that of our possibly blind (have you ever checked?) pastor.

I'm not knocking the role of pastors, or any other position, but I am suggesting there's a danger if we trust and rely on our pastor more than God. Know God for yourself. He's willing to teach you how to test things, discern, SEE, and understand accurately. He will never lie nor tell you an error. Can that be said of any current pastor?

Again, I'm not knocking pastors. I have one myself. :) But when I have a difficult question I KNOW that the answer God gives will be correct (even if it doesn't come as quickly as I might like). I only HOPE my pastor will have the correct answer when i ask him. So guess which one I'm more likely to ask. :) "My sheep hear my voice, and I know them, and they follow me:" - John 10:27 KJV

My apologies if that was rant-ish. And thanks again for the great question.

Love in Jesus,
Kelby
 

CS1

Well-known member
May 23, 2012
13,067
4,349
113
#53
@CS1
It is very important to be able to recognize who does or does not have the spirit of God. It is not always beneficial to express that knowledge openly.

Love in Jesus,
Kelby
the point is for one to know the Spirit they must have Him themselves. the discernment comes from knowing the word of God and the Spirit of Truth as Jesus said. IF we judge ourselves we will not be judged.
 

Edify

Well-known member
Jan 27, 2021
1,559
656
113
#54
I am saying that Spirit baptism is necessary.
Do you know there's a difference in receiving the Spirit at salvation, & the baptism of the Spirit that can happen later?
Just curious.
 

KelbyofGod

Senior Member
Oct 8, 2017
1,881
721
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#55
Good morning Kelby :) That was quite a road trip you had yesterday! I hope both your son and your car have benefited :D
Yep, The trips were profitable for all involved. :)

Glad to see you're back. I have a tendency to analyze endlessly when someone leaves honest and important questions on the table. That cycle is easily broken when the other party is there to interact with.

I read your post then stepped off to the bathroom, thinking about what you said. And "line upon line, precept upon precept" stood out in a new way. First I thought "Yep, that's exactly how I intend to answer your posts...line by line, idea by idea ( or at least paragraph by paragraph because some can be summarized.)" But then I realized that's also the method God has taught me of how to break down a discussion and teach (or learn) any new concept. First step is to separate each point that is being stated (often there are SEVERAL within each sentence). Then find the EXACT point where the error(or disagreement) begins. Then start from a slightly earlier point (an earlier precept), preferably one of clear mutual agreement, and begin to question & highlight the truth vs. error at the point where the error (or disagreement) begins.

Using the phrase "water baptism" to mean the use of physical water is a good idea :) There are quite a few times in Scripture where the necessity of baptism is being put forth when this distinction is not there, and yet people read earthly water into the verses. I believe it is erroneous to do so.
Mostly agreed. I believe it is possible to discover the distinction elsewhere (either through a clarification made elsewhere in scripture, or through prayer when God opens the understanding of what something actually means) BUT neither of those is helpful in a discussion if the other party doesn't see it the same way. So it's best to focus on areas where the meanings are clear and/or agreed.
I do not really agree that the water part of being born of water and the Spirit means amniotic fluid, either. I have seen people say that quite a few times over the years, but it just does not really resonate with me.
Me either! It seems fruitless to say "You MUST be born of amniotic fluid." unless of course you're trying to start a doctrine of "Doomed from the Womb'd" for those whose sack was ripped prematurely. ( I only added the "apostrophe + d" to make it rhyme. lol) (Now I'm questioning my sense of humor. :) )
Once during a discussion of this type here on CC, somebody falsely accused me of telling people not to get water baptized. This person refused to acknowledge that nowhere in any of my posts had I ever even so much as hinted at such a thing. The discussion from my point of view is almost always focused on the meaning of water, and whether a person can be saved if they have not been water baptized. I have also pointed out that Jesus commanded the disciples to water baptize, while it was Peter who commanded believers to be water baptized.
Actually, in order for water baptism to be effective (for lack of better wording) there always has to be a level of belief first. If a person doesn't believe they need to be water baptized, they WON'T get water baptized...and they WON'T receive the benefits of water baptism (whatever those are). That's why JESUS, not Peter, said "He that BELIEVETH and is baptized".

Water baptism sometimes preceded the advent of the infilling with the Holy Spirit, and other times came after or concurrent with water baptism.
Agreed. Although I'm guessing some discussion should be had on the notion of concurrent. (for clarification if nothing else)

Water baptism in itself is not the saving unto life ever after element.
Agreed. But this is also where the main discussion must begin. And I'll throw you the big point right away. There is huge importance in knowing what EACH baptism is here to accomplish. You are correct that water baptism ISN'T a baptism into Life. Water baptism is a baptism into Death.. Spirit baptism is a baptism into Life. That's part of the reason we come up FROM water baptism (not staying in it) in similarity to the way Jesus came up FROM death (not staying in it). But even that secondary point may need much discussion.
John the Baptist said Jesus would baptize with fire and the Sprit. Well, he did not say Jesus' Name, but we know that is Who he was talking about. We are also told there is one baptism. I cannot believe this refers to water baptism, especially considering that some are water baptized hoping it helps in their earth walk when they do not believe in their heart and confess with their mouth that Jesus is Lord, and that God raised Him from death. Line by line and precept by precept it is interesting how we come to different conclusions. I would never actively discourage a person from getting baptized unless I knew for a fact that they did not believe the gospel, in the Biblical God, and Jesus Christ. Even so, I never have discouraged anyone from being water baptized :)
"One baptism" It would need to clarify the other type of "baptism" if the spirit baptism hadn't already been mentioned a few phrases earlier. But that's one of those I'd prayed about so I won't get upset if you don't immediately agree.

My general stance is that unless clarification is made that it is Spirit baptism, the use of baptism refers to water baptism because that was the known baptism since the days of John's baptism. But that's only clarifying where I'm coming from and why. It's not something I'll get hateful over. It can be discussed.

I've already mentioned "line upon line" and a bit of how to address discords where they begin.

I don't remember you ever discouraging someone that wants a water baptism (whatever form or version that may be). So I hold nothing against you in that matter.

Love in Jesus,
Kelby
 

KelbyofGod

Senior Member
Oct 8, 2017
1,881
721
113
#56
Do you know there's a difference in receiving the Spirit at salvation, & the baptism of the Spirit that can happen later?
Just curious.
I've heard several people say that. I don't say that I agree.

Most I've met that hold that doctrine also have a REALLY hard time differentiating between "belief" and "receiving the Holy Ghost".

Love in Jesus,
Kelby
 

Edify

Well-known member
Jan 27, 2021
1,559
656
113
#57
There is indeed a diference between "born again of the Spirit" and "baptized in the Spirit"
 
S

SophieT

Guest
#58
Let's see if you're able to hold your reaction long enough to understand what I am actually saying.

YES, I have stated that water baptism is necessary and a part of salvation..BUT.. NO, that doesn't mean a person has to be baptized in order to receive the Holy Spirit. Acts 10 gives us an example where the people received the Holy Spirit before they were baptized.

One of my filters is that "the examples given in the bible are to be trusted as reliable accounts of what is possible".

Love in Jesus,
Kelby

this is a red herring because I never stated anything to you about receiving the Holy Spirit

I brought up water baptism as can be seen in my post. you are adding to what I stated
 
S

SophieT

Guest
#59
post: 4713049, member: 223505"]"Because baptism began as, and remains, the mechanism established by God for remission of sins (to those that believe)... and because remission of sins is a necessary element of salvation, YES, I believe baptism is necessary, not optional, if a person would like to claim the fullness of salvation." But Jesus didn't just die to grant us remission of sins...so unless people get the rest, they still can't claim fullness of salvation, even if they've gotten their sins washed away

so maybe 'Kelby' can explain what he means by water baptism is the mechanism established by God for the remission of sins, instead of trying to fudge around what he has said and try to make it seem like others are just not 'understanding' him

when someone states you must be water baptized to have your sins 'washed away', they are saying the blood of Christ is not enough