There are many examples (i.e. accounts of action) in the NT. Some of these we consider approved examples and therefore binding. Others we believe are incidental and therefore not binding.
Perhaps many accounts could be cited, but for now allow me to use the Lords Supper as an example. Unless I am forgetting something, the passages that record the place where the Lord's Supper was eaten state that it was done in an upper room. We say that meeting in the upper room was incidental and is therefore not binding.
My question is, "What OBJECTIVE criteria can we use to determine when an example is binding and when it is not"? I've recently listened to sermons and read articles that give guidelines. But the guidelines were all based on subjective means of making the determination between binding and not binding. Any subjective criteria will ultimately lead to division since opinion is going to become part of the decision making process and this troubles me.
Perhaps many accounts could be cited, but for now allow me to use the Lords Supper as an example. Unless I am forgetting something, the passages that record the place where the Lord's Supper was eaten state that it was done in an upper room. We say that meeting in the upper room was incidental and is therefore not binding.
My question is, "What OBJECTIVE criteria can we use to determine when an example is binding and when it is not"? I've recently listened to sermons and read articles that give guidelines. But the guidelines were all based on subjective means of making the determination between binding and not binding. Any subjective criteria will ultimately lead to division since opinion is going to become part of the decision making process and this troubles me.
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