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Egads.I'm glad you like the poster and have respect for them - it has zero to do with my question.
Neither are common terms - and neither have anything to do with either my question or the subject of the thread.
Which would be:
theologoumenon
Which is: : a theological statement or concept in the area of individual opinion rather than of authoritative doctrine
Which is a contradiction of the definition you said you followed.
Which again has zero to do with the topic of the thread - or my inquiry.
I'm not interested (in this thread) in information on anything other than the topic of the thread - which you still have not addressed.
Congratulations - again - what does any of that have to do with the two questions I asked, or the topic of the thread?
While I offer congratulations on your education and piety - 95% of what you have posted has anything to do with the topic of the thread. I appreciate your insight - I just wish you would give it on the subject rather than pontificating on things not germane to the topic.
It seems obvious that my friend @The Liturgist speaks a language of which you are in need of interpretation.
(how's that for being on-topic?
Earlier, in your initial question to The Liturgist you said:
You subsequently posted the formal definition, of which there's no disagreement as far as I can see.Please indulge me -
Doesn't theolougoumemnon mean something that cannot be supported by Holy Scripture?
Yet you have said that the Liturgist contradicts that formal definition in his repsonse.Which would be:
theologoumenon
Which is: : a theological statement or concept in the area of individual opinion rather than of authoritative doctrine
To that, I say untrue. There are areas of faith where there is little in the way of dogma but those areas can not be said to have "no scriptural support."
THis took some thought but I offer as way of example:
There is very little stated as dogma in the Orthodox Church concerning eschatology beyond the lines in the Creed which states:
He will come again with glory to judge the living and dead. His kingdom shall have no end..
.. I look for the resurrection of the dead, and the life of the age to come.
To say the study of eschatology lacks Scriptural support or lacks a Scriptural basis would be false. There are a wide variety of opinions and writings and statements of faith dealing with the subject of eschatology, yet for the Orhodox that would lie squarely in the realm of theologoumenon.
Why? because many (most? perhaps all?) statements about eschatology contain human conjecture.. post, mid, Premillennialism all have varying degrees of Scriptural support but none are reflected in the dogma of the Orthodox.
Thus, those concepts are theological statements or concepts in the area of individual opinion rather than of authoritative doctrine of the Church.
If one is intrested, a nice article on Eschatology in Orthodoxy can be found--> here
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