- Oct 4, 2016
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This thread is based on a pet peeve of various Protestants tossing out that such and such belief/ practice of the ancient Church is "unbiblical" when it is in fact based on stuff out of the Bible, but it comes from a very different theological mind set than the person making such a claim.
Post 1 (I got a few different bullet points to discuss on this OP).
1A) I think it should be rightly pointed out that probably the majority of heretics use scripture in some way or another.
Even Gnostics, New Agers, and Humanists sometimes quote the Bible. Making an appeal to scripture is helpful in indicating that people on spiritual matters should have something to base their decisions other than personal opinion and hunches, but it really is the lowest of possible bars because there are many kinds of biblical appeals and many of them are not very good at all. Probably the most vivid example of this are snake handling Pentecostals. They handle poisonous snakes during their church services as a kind of ordinance based on the literal passage of the Great Commission in the book of Mark that speaks of in Mark 16)
17 And these signs will follow those who [d]believe: In My name they will cast out demons; they will speak with new tongues; 18 they[e] will take up serpents; and if they drink anything deadly, it will by no means hurt them; they will lay hands on the sick, and they will recover.”
Snake Handlers believe they are "being Biblical" on this issue, but the majority of Christians of not just present times but all through history would find their hermeneutics and other Apriori theological assumptions that would lead them to do things like handle rattle snakes and drink jars full of deadly poison to not only to be idiosyncratic, but also bizarre, badly thought out and dangerous.
1B) As I said recently a different message board, on a somewhat different but related topic. "It kind of reminds me of the book of James where the apostle says to his readers concerning the profession of God's unity in the Shema, that it is good, "but even the demons know that and shudder."
Post 1 (I got a few different bullet points to discuss on this OP).
1A) I think it should be rightly pointed out that probably the majority of heretics use scripture in some way or another.
Even Gnostics, New Agers, and Humanists sometimes quote the Bible. Making an appeal to scripture is helpful in indicating that people on spiritual matters should have something to base their decisions other than personal opinion and hunches, but it really is the lowest of possible bars because there are many kinds of biblical appeals and many of them are not very good at all. Probably the most vivid example of this are snake handling Pentecostals. They handle poisonous snakes during their church services as a kind of ordinance based on the literal passage of the Great Commission in the book of Mark that speaks of in Mark 16)
17 And these signs will follow those who [d]believe: In My name they will cast out demons; they will speak with new tongues; 18 they[e] will take up serpents; and if they drink anything deadly, it will by no means hurt them; they will lay hands on the sick, and they will recover.”
Snake Handlers believe they are "being Biblical" on this issue, but the majority of Christians of not just present times but all through history would find their hermeneutics and other Apriori theological assumptions that would lead them to do things like handle rattle snakes and drink jars full of deadly poison to not only to be idiosyncratic, but also bizarre, badly thought out and dangerous.
1B) As I said recently a different message board, on a somewhat different but related topic. "It kind of reminds me of the book of James where the apostle says to his readers concerning the profession of God's unity in the Shema, that it is good, "but even the demons know that and shudder."
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