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The Unbaptized Arm

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The Unbaptized Arm

Romans 12:1

Intro

Ivan the Terrible was one of the great rulers of Russia. He was so busy trying to annex territory to his country that he had no time for his own social life. His advisers became worried because he had not married. Ivan suggested that they find him a wife, and he would accept their recommendation. They searched far and wide for a girl who was beautiful, intelligent, and a king’s daughter.

They found her in Athens, Greece; her name was Sophia, the daughter of the King of Greece. Ivan asked the King for the daughter’s hand; the King demanded that Ivan join the Greek Orthodox Church. This he did. He had gone to Greece with five hundred of his best soldiers, and when Ivan joined the church, they desired to join also.

A catechizer, one who taught religious practices, outlined the articles of the creed to everyone of them, but with one exception. One of the articles stated that if they joined the church, they could not be professional soldiers. They asked the catechizer to give them time to think it over. They pondered the problem; “How can we join the Church and remain in the army at the same time?” They concocted a plan, and when they were to be baptized they marched into the water, five hundred of them, together with five hundred priests.

Shortly before each priest took his candidate under, each soldier grabbed for his sword, and lifted it up in the air, and each soldier was baptized except for his fighting arm and a gleamin sword that jutted out of the water. Those who witnessed the mass baptism spectacle said that they saw five hundred dry arms and five hundred glittering swords sticking out of the water. The soldier had fallen up on the plan—“We can join the church with our bodies, but we will allow the fighting arm to remain in possession of the state.”

Body

That is a picture of Christianity today. We

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