only if you belive it dose so if you believe in god, yes
No, no one can take away someone else's sins, they must go to the Sacrament of Confession.
Lamb of God, You take away the sins of the world. Have mercy on us. Lamb of God, You take away the sins of the world. Have mercy on us. Lamb of God, You take away the sins of the world. Grant us Peace.
to take away their sins
The words of John the Baptist who baptised him. Please see John 1.29. "The next day John seeth Jesus coming unto him, and saith, Behold the Lamb of God, which taketh away the sin of the world." That was and is Jesus mission; to take away the sins of the world. .
yes they are evil because look at what they doing to people they take stuff away from people and they take you're child away when are Good at something and send them away to compete against other countries
Paul explained this to the Hebrew Christians in Hebrews 9 & 10 And John the Baptist, at Jesus' baptism, announced him as the "Lamb of God that taketh away the sins of the world." Before Jesus' advent, the shedding of the blood of bulls and goats endeavoured to take sins away; but this was not possible, (Hebrews 10.4); but now we are: "sanctified through the offering of the body of Jesus Christ once [for all]." (Hebrews 10.10)
Baptism can take place in a hotel.
Your sins will never be washed away by just visiting tirumala. Only when you truly repent and take corrective active action for the sins you commited will your sins be washed away. Visiting tirumala will definately create peace in your mind and put you in right direction. You can find more info on different darsan and accommodation in tirumala in the related links below.
Vanessa is a girl who wants to take away evil from her father, so no because if she was evil she would have joinEd her father in the first time she knew her father was evil.
The ministry of God is all about telling the people about the bible, and that it was only Jesus who died for their sins. And nothing what so ever will take away their sins but the blood of Jesus.
I believe that the Christians thought Jesus was the son of god and was born to take away their sins
I take it you are talking about how infant baptism got started.The TheologicalDictionary of the New Testament says of the period following the death of the apostles: "Alien elements came in from the outside world. Hitherto these had been carefully held in check by the filter of prophetic and N[ew] T[estament] religion. But now, using external agreement as a channel, they came in full flood. Baptism became a syncretistic mystery."(syncretistic: = blending from many other religions.)Jesus taught that it is the redeeming value of his own blood that washes away sins. But as early as the second century C.E. the pagan idea that baptism washes away sins and brings about "regeneration" crept into the Christian congregation. Illustrating this are the comments of Justin Martyr, of the second century C.E., concerning candidates for baptism: "They are brought by us where there is water, and are regenerated." "We may . . . obtain in the water the remission of sins formerly committed."To what did this blending of pagan beliefs with The Bible's teaching about baptism lead? Greek scholar A. T. Robertson explains: "Out of this perversion of the symbolism of baptism grew both pouring as an ordinance and infant baptism. If baptism is necessary to salvation or the means of regeneration, then the sick, the dying, infants, must be baptized."The religious historian Augustus Neander wrote of the early Christians: "Faith and baptism were always connected with one another; and thus it is in the highest degree probable . . . that the practice of infant baptism was unknown [in the first century C.E.]. . . . That it first became recognised as an apostolic tradition in the course of the third century, is evidence rather against than for the admission of its apostolic origin."-History of the Planting and Training of the Christian Church by the Apostles (New York, 1864), page 162.