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Josiah said:Of course. Of course, such is not permission to ASSUME Jesus TAUGHT dogmas where there is zero indication of such. Such is the fundamental problem in Mormonism, the ASSUMPTION that there's all the "Second Testimony" or what we sometimes see in other denominations, "the Apostles taught this...." but when you ask "where?" you get a blank look. I could ANYONE could say, "Jesus said that Josiah is the smartest guy alive!" But if there's no evidence that He did, is that good to ASSUME? DOGMATICALLY? And if I can do it, why not Joseph Smith or Mary Baker Eddy? Maybe what we need is some record of what Jesus and the Apostle said, one in writing, one ALL PARTIES involved in the discussion agree is accurate, sound, reliable - and KNOWABLE? Ah, that's the question of this thread. WHAT should we use as the canon, the norma normans? IF the view of Josiah about Josiah is the rule for what Josiah says about Josiah, we are apt to conclude that what Josiah says about Josiah agrees with the rule/canon of what Josiah says about Josiah - but is THAT the most sound rule for the determination of whether what Josiah says is correct???? Maybe we need something beyond, above, outside of Josiah.... It would be ideal if GOD wrote something, wouldn't it?
What Christ was described as doing in scripture was more than reference scripture; referencing scripture was not His only action. Sola scriptura selects one action and discards His other actions. This is inconsistent and reifies iteration and text. It reduces the person of Christ to a brain and a tongue. It replaces the person of Christ with a textual reification.[/quote]
The only things we know that Jesus DID or TAUGHT are recording in the Books of the Bible. I know the LDS disagrees, but unless we accept the unique "Scriptures" of one denomination, that's it.
Now, I think it was YOU that said that Jesus not only uses Scripture normatively, but many other things too. I presume the things the EO declares as its canon/rule/norma normans are among these. But so far, no one as been able to share even one instance of even one of these ever been used by Jesus canonically/normatively. Or any other in Scripture. So, where is your evidence that Jesus used OTHER things canonically/normatively? Where is your substantiation that Jesus used the distinctive EO things that the EO uses? I know you said it, but do you have ANYTHING to support it? I know you said you don't have time as a busy homemaker to give ALL the examples, and I want to respect that, but could you give us one example?
Josiah said:if you have evidence of what Jesus said that is NOT included in the Bible, then such really should be submitted for inclusion in the Scriptures. I kinda wonder why no one has even suggested that in 2000 years. Now, I realize that Mary Baker Eddy and Joseph Smith think He taught things not contained in the Bible, but there's no consensus at all beyond individual denominations about that. Again, if you have historic, ecumenically accepted writtings with the words of Jesus - containing dogmas which He din't teach in our 27 NT books, let's see them.
Why are your only examples of others always given a negative tinge; it renders a sort of "guilt by association" without regard for the argument being made.
Where did I say anything was "negative?" But if you think it negative, why are you defending it? I don't understand.
Josiah said:What other canon/norm did Jesus use? We know he used Scripture normatively some 50 times. But when did He use the addtional norms of the EO? I've asked for at least one example of each of them, repeatedly I've asked for this, but so far no one has supplied such.Josiah said:Thus, you seem to argue that of the things Christ did which are described in scripture.
... because YOU agreed that Jesus used Scripture canonically/normatively, but insisted that He used OTHER things that way, too. Including the list of things the EO uses. You said you would supply the examples, where Jesus did that. That's why.
Josiah said:Nice, but moot. If you are claiming that Jesus used the EO Liturgy as norma normans, then please supply at least one example. A case where Jesus taught something, then held such up to the canon of the EO Liturgy and said (as He did some 50 times with Scripture), "As the Eastern Orthodox Liturgy says...." Or "As it is stated in the Eastern Orthodox Liturgy....." and then such is given. I'm NOT asking for every single example, just one would help.
Given your failure to supply any statement of Christ indicating which books to include in the NT canon, I find it at best inconsistent that you would require a higher standard from a "non sola scripturist" than from a sola scripturist![]()
Which book embraced as Scripture do you deny as such? If you have a book containing Jesus teachings Dogmas not found in the 27 NT book, would you share it?
You are the one who made your point that while Jesus did use Scripture canonically, He used a host of OTHER things, too. You said you would give the examples of this. Of course, this is to include the list of things the EO uniquely uses as its canon. Then you said you were too busy to give all of them. So I requested just one of them. Now, I'm just waiting for that. It was your arguement. Scripture is used canoncially (and perhaps you want to go one to say it should be), BUT (your key point) He used all these other EO things, too. All I asked if for an example of such.
If a Mormon told you that Jesus refered to the Book of Mormon as the Word of God and God's Revelation, the canon for evaluating truth, would you ask him/her where? For an example of such? I have a hunch you might. But perhaps your rubric is that if a person says something, it's thereby dogmatically factual, or that it simply is entirely moot if such is true or false, right or wrong - for what is said/taught/claimed about Jesus doesn't matter?
Josiah said:Right now, we have the agreement that Jesus used Scripture normatively, canonically. But we have the claim that Jesus used a host of OTHER things, including a rather long list of things exclusive to your denomination: The church designs of the EO, a chant of the EO, a liturgy of the EO, etc., etc., etc. But so far, no one has been able to produce a single example of ANY of these EVER been used by Jesus normatively (in fact, no examples of Him so much as mentioning any of them - at all, normatively or not). So, it seems to ME, Jesus used one thing normatively (although very often) and that is Scripture.Again, you seem to select one action of Christ and then call that one action the whole Christ.
You are the one insisting that He used OTHER norms, too. We agree that He used Scripture normatively. I'm waiting for those instances...
Now, if you want to drop that, and now insist that each (whether that be the EO or CC or WELS or LDS or JW or UMC, Billy Graham or me) should rather rather look to see if the position of self agrees with the position of self, then we're back to that discussion , if THAT is the best norma normans.
Josiah said:Wonderful. Although, how does the Jewish chant serve as the norma normans for determining, for example, if the Bishop of Rome is infallible - as one denomination among us states, dogmatically? If one is going to condemn such a few - perhaps even excommunicate and conduct wars over such - what notations in the Chant does one use to substantiate such? Either to affirm or deny the Dogma of Papal Infallibility and Superiority?
Can you show me an example in the Bible where either a Jewish or EO chant is used canonically, normatively? It might help me understand you better if I could see an example of it being so used.The Bible does not contain pictures, nor was there film in that era; you're really stretching![]()
... He doesn't so much as MENTION it. Now, if you are going to insist that He used it as a norma normans, where is the substantiation for your statement? Or is a statement factual if it's simply made? If so, is that a rubric you embrace for all or just you?
Now, IF Orthodox doesn't concern itself with correctness or error, doctrine or heresy, true or false - if it regards all such as moot (and thus has no teachings it embraces) or rather embraces pure relativism, then perhaps the entire topic of this thread is moot. I just don't know. But IF such things matter, then norming is accepted as sound and necessary. My question then is this: WHAT is embraced as the norma normans for such? IF it is as it is in the RCC, the views embraced by the self same (they call such "Tradition"), then self is simply looking to see if self agrees with self. IMHO, this actually is a circumvention of norming, it has replaced "is it true?" with "do I agree with myself?"
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