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That the RCC make one claim and we make another regarding Purgatory is a totally different argument.
What you're attempting to do is rather than look at whether scripture and tradition
1 Timothy 3: 1 This is a faithful saying: If a man desires the position of a bishop, he desires a good work. 2 A bishop then must be blameless, the husband of one wife, temperate, sober-minded, of good behavior, hospitable, able to teach; 3 not given to wine, not violent, not greedy for money, but gentle, not quarrelsome, not covetous;
and
Titus 1:6 if a man is blameless, the husband of one wife, having faithful children not accused of dissipation or insubordination. 7 For a bishop must be blameless, as a steward of God, not self-willed, not quick-tempered, not given to wine, not violent, not greedy for money, 8 but hospitable, a lover of what is good, sober-minded, just, holy, self-controlled
You said you know what we believe. You've said it twice now!
And knowing what they are is different from knowing that they are true. But you're still stuck on the first point, as you keep demanding something yet saying you already know it![]()
So do you have the list yet and/or do you even know what "T"raditions you believe in?
Yes, I noted already you don't have a point, other that to undermine yourself!
But I do and you can't answer it.![]()
Go to TAW for that one.Is the de fide dogma of the RCC called "purgatory" taught in the EO or not?
That would be so. We don't teach purgatory.If not, then one (or both) of you is wrong - at least in part.
That's not true either.While the RCC and EO MOSTLY (mostly!) agree on what Scripture is, you certianly do NOT agree on what Tradition is
How would this invalidate all tradition?- in spite of your mutual claims (regarded by the other as valid) to Apostolic Succession and Apostolic Tradition and to being inerrantly lead and to infallibly following. Purgatory (in the RCC sense) is NOT EO Tradition, it IS RC Tradition. Now, if the views of SELF determine the correct view of Scripture - that renders Scripture moot anyway, and all you have is your VARIANT views of self - which each of you calls "Apostolic Tradition"
We have a reason for doing this, in that we can trace our 'ancestry' back to the Apostles, and we gave you the Bible.While I DO think ECUMENICAL tradition in the understanding of the correct meaning of the words in Scripture has great value, and I certainly consider ECUMENICAL tradition as essential in hermeneutics, that's not the topic here. The issue is: there's a disagreement in what is regarded as binding, de fide DOGMA from the 13 Apostles - disagreement at the very highest level possible. You two each pointing to your OWN Tradition - noting that self alone agrees with self alone - just reveals that each of you agrees with self alone, it has no relevance to whether you are correct.
Neither verse contains the word "appoint". Try again.
I have an idea
Instead of using scripture to determine truth, I'll just tell you what the truth is! This will work great! Nobody has to take the time to read the bible, it's so time consuming. Just send your tithe to me as per God's Will. When I speak or type, I'm infallible! We don't have to worry about those who can't read, they can just ask me to tell them what God's Plan is. My Church is the one true church. Don't worry if Paul or some other apostle wrote otherwise. I'm telling you my own church is the true one. If you disagree with me I have the authority to send you to Detroit. Yeah, or Purgatory. Yeah, that's the ticket. If your relatives pay me, I'll let them out. Don't worry if what I say is not what the apostles taught. Sola Scriptura has to many problems to be workable.
(The above post was in jest and completely tongue-in-cheek.)
I have an idea
Instead of using scripture to determine truth, I'll just tell you what the truth is! This will work great! Nobody has to take the time to read the bible, it's so time consuming. Just send your tithe to me as per God's Will. When I speak or type, I'm infallible! We don't have to worry about those who can't read, they can just ask me to tell them what God's Plan is. My Church is the one true church. Don't worry if Paul or some other apostle wrote otherwise. I'm telling you my own church is the true one. If you disagree with me I have the authority to send you to Detroit. Yeah, or Purgatory. Yeah, that's the ticket. If your relatives pay me, I'll let them out. Don't worry if what I say is not what the apostles taught. Sola Scriptura has to many problems to be workable.
(The above post was in jest and completely tongue-in-cheek.)
Josiah said:Is the de fide dogma of the RCC called "purgatory" taught in the EO or not?
.
Go to TAW for that one.
Josiah said:If not, then one (or both) of you is wrong - at least in part.
That would be so.
Josiah said:- in spite of your mutual claims (regarded by the other as valid) to Apostolic Succession and Apostolic Tradition and to being inerrantly lead and to infallibly following. Purgatory (in the RCC sense) is NOT EO Tradition, it IS RC Tradition. Now, if the views of SELF determine the correct view of Scripture - that renders Scripture moot anyway, and all you have is your VARIANT views of self - which each of you calls "Apostolic Tradition"
How would this invalidate all tradition?
Josiah said:While I DO think ECUMENICAL tradition in the understanding of the correct meaning of the words in Scripture has great value, and I certainly consider ECUMENICAL tradition as essential in hermeneutics, that's not the topic here. The issue is: there's a disagreement in what is regarded as binding, de fide DOGMA from the 13 Apostles - disagreement at the very highest level possible. You two each pointing to your OWN Tradition - noting that self alone agrees with self alone - just reveals that each of you agrees with self alone, it has no relevance to whether you are correct.
.
We have a reason for doing this, in that we can trace our 'ancestry' back to the Apostles, and we gave you the Bible.
So long as you throw in some cool dark robes, stained glass windows, and all sorts of cool churchy stuff, I'm in
Oh and also emphasize cool man centered traditions while dismissing Protestants beliefs and you got yourself a deal.
A necessary corollary of the doctrine of sola scriptura is, therefore, the idea of an absolute right of private judgment in the interpretation of the Scriptures. Each individual has the final prerogative to decide for himself what the correct interpretation of a given passage of Scripture means, irrespective of what anyone-or everyone-else says.......Each individual Christian is thus put in the position of being his own theologian.
I don't know what that mean. I was unaware that there were levels of Christianity. Yes, there are weak and strong Christians but "average"? What is considered an "average" Christian?average Christian
What? This is with the assumption that the "average" Christian believes that they can interpret scripture for themselves, which doesn't include the Holy Spirit. That's a bad assumption when scripture teaches that that it is the Holy Spirit who does the interpreting. To say that only the Pastors can come up with the correct interpretation and that the average Christian will tear the church apart because they "might" interpret scripture incorrectly is to think that someone wouldn't step in and correct a Christian based on scripture itself. It is also a fear tactic to make someone not want to read scripture for themselves. If the Preacher is teaching scripture the correct way, then when someone read it with the help of the Holy Spirit, they too will come to the that conclusion.Not only is the average Christian totally disinclined to fulfill the role of theologian, but if they try to do so, and if they arrive at conclusions different than those of the church they belong to—an easy task considering the number of different theological issues—then they will quickly discover that their right to private judgment amounts to a right to shut up or leave the congregation. Protestant pastors, even Luther and Calvin, have long realized that, although they must preach the doctrine of private judgment, to ensure their own right to preach, they must prohibit the exercise of this right in practice for others, lest the group be torn apart by strife and finally break up
Yes, there are thousands of denominations when people refuse to read the scripture in it's context and won't allow the Holy Spirit to do His job.However, there is a whole set of practical presuppositions that the doctrine of sola scriptura makes, every one of which provides not just an argument against the doctrine, but a fatal blow to it. Sola scriptura simply cannot be God’s plan for Christian theology.
If you look at the 1st century church, they had the apostles with them and the Holy Spirit was doing His work. Once it was written down, we had the Word that tells us what we need to know. If God tells us the truth in His word and someone comes along and says something differently or contrary to the bible--how would one know IF THEY DO NOT READ the scripture. It's important to read and examine to see if what that person said is true because while we want to point the finger and say "hey look at all these denominations that are off shoots off each other because of doctrine" we can easily say "well look at all these cults that tell people things that are not in-line with scripture."If God had intended the individual Christian to use sola scriptura as his operating principle then it would have to be something the average Christian could implement. We can therefore judge whether sola scriptura could have been God’s plan for the individual Christian by asking whether the average Christian in world history could have implemented it.
Not only that, but since God promised that the Church would never pass out of existence (Matt. 16:18, 28:20), the normal Christian of each age must be able to implement sola scriptura, including the crucial patristic era, when the early Church Fathers hammered out the most basic tenets of Christian orthodoxy. It is in this practical area that the doctrine comes crashing down, for it has a number of presuppositions which are in no way true of the average Christian of world history, and certainly not of the average Christian of early Church history.
What this means, since God does not ask a person to do what they are incapable of doing, is that God does not expect the average Christian of world history to use sola scriptura. He expects the average Christian to obtain and maintain his knowledge of theology in some other way.
But if God expects the average Christian to obtain and maintain the Christian faith without using sola scriptura, then sola scriptura is not God’s plan.
This is why I can't follow your posts/threads... what kind of sentence is that?Is the position of self correct if self alone insists that it is?
Josiah said:Is the position of self correct if self alone insists that it is?
This is why I can't follow your posts/threads... what kind of sentence is that?
One's claim that one is correct neither makes one correct nor incorrect.I see....
It's a question (thus ending with a question mark).
And the question is this: Self (whether self be a person, denomination, institution, whatever) says/claims/insists that self is correct. Understand? does THAT claim of self for self mean that self IS correct?
One's claim that one is correct neither makes one correct nor incorrect.
-snip-
Some Orthodox don't include the book of Revelations and some books Catholics have we don't use.-snip-
So long as you throw in some cool dark robes, stained glass windows, and all sorts of cool churchy stuff, I'm in
Oh and also emphasize cool man centered traditions while dismissing Protestants beliefs and you got yourself a deal.
I see....
It's a question (thus ending with a question mark).
And the question is this: Self (whether self be a person, denomination, institution, whatever) says/claims/insists that self is correct. Understand? does THAT claim of self for self mean that self IS correct?
Do you understand the question now (I didn't think it TOO hard).
.