- Oct 4, 2016
- 7,236
- 7,320
- 57
- Country
- United States
- Gender
- Male
- Faith
- Oriental Orthodox
- Marital Status
- Single
Protestants (meaning Evangelicals) just don't read those books.
I suspect you know the reason on this, but I will give my reasons when I followed that line of thinking myself.
1) As a Protestant I loved history and came from a Faith tradition (Lutheranism) that saw some supplemental benefit from the Church Fathers and creeds.
2) There however was the issue of "Where should I spend my time?" And in many ways the Bible is God's wisdom in super concentrate!
3) Besides that there is the issue of Rome. Rome had problems in spite of the organic historical link so the question goes is "If I spend all that effort won't the same be true with me?" Where the time investment benefits seem questionable.
4) It is only really when you see epistemological battles among Protestants over Scriptural interpretation where you can see that this might be perhaps useful.
5) But at the time you notice that you likely have some of your own "self confirming bias" at work yourself.
6) It really only has been in my own studies of interpretation (coming out of psychology) where I believe this is a nefarious problem. (Especially after I did start to study Church history etc.).
7) But overall even having a background now, I will still give nods to people like my Lutheran friend @FireDragon76 Even Orthodox and Catholics etc. can see their Faith in a bit of an oversimplified panacea way. Now I might be on that side so to speak, but there is something in human nature that sort of does this. Besides that, I also follow some of Emerson's thinking on the "foolish inconsistency" essay of Self Reliance where he strove to be "consistent with his understanding of the Truth", even though that varied at times based on his experience).
Last edited:
Upvote
0