While I don't attend a Salvation Army church, I do hold the same beliefs as they have codified in the "Salvation Army Handbook of Doctrine."
The Salvation Army views all ritualistic forms of Christianity as unnecessary for salvation, including the doctrines of baptism and the Eucharist/communion. They don't forbid or discourage them, they just don't practice them themselves. They see them as outward expressions of an inward reality.
Can anyone show me in the Bible where these doctrines of baptism and communion are absolutely necessary for salvation, and not just holdovers from the Jewish ceremonial and ritualistic traditions?
I do personally believe in a real spiritual presence in the host, and I also believe that baptism is an outward confession of an inward reality, but I also believe that we do these things out of obedience to Christ's commands, not because of any inherent benefit or salvific purpose that these rituals provide.
The Salvation Army views all ritualistic forms of Christianity as unnecessary for salvation, including the doctrines of baptism and the Eucharist/communion. They don't forbid or discourage them, they just don't practice them themselves. They see them as outward expressions of an inward reality.
Can anyone show me in the Bible where these doctrines of baptism and communion are absolutely necessary for salvation, and not just holdovers from the Jewish ceremonial and ritualistic traditions?
I do personally believe in a real spiritual presence in the host, and I also believe that baptism is an outward confession of an inward reality, but I also believe that we do these things out of obedience to Christ's commands, not because of any inherent benefit or salvific purpose that these rituals provide.
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