Trento
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- Apr 12, 2002
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On the essentials, yes.
Really? Name them. Name any two Bible believing churches who differ on any of the doctrines the Bible defines as essential.
You can't do it.
I give this challenge to Roman Catholics all the time and all they can ever do is to either name a disagreement over a peripheral issue or matter of adiapheron or name a church that isn't even a Christian church.
I examined for myself what the different denominations taught they not only disagreed on little thingslike whether women should wear hats to church, or whether you had to be baptized by immersion or sprinklingbut they also disagreed on important things, like baptism in general, communion, how one can be saved, who was in charge of the church, who was going to heaven, and many other things. If Scripture was the only legitimate source of authority, shouldnt the Churchor churchesbe united around one simple, clear teaching from Scripture?
2 Peter 1.20: "No scripture is of any private interpretation, but holy men of God spoke as the Holy Spirit instructed them." Obviously all the different Christian denominations disagree because they all have different interpretations of the Bible which they each believe is the most accurate. It struck me that if they all have different interpretations of the Bible, then they must be interpreting it on their own. But 2 Peter 1.20 warns that the Bible must not be interpreted privately. Something is definitely wrong here.
Two basic problems:
1. If the Bible is the only support for its own inspiration, then it is merely proving itself which is illogical. There has to be some other authority that can validate the inspiration of the Bible.
2. If the Bible is the only source of authority for Christians, then why are the different churches so divided? Again there has to be some other authority which can decide how the Bible is to be understood.
If we Love Him we would follow His word when He Prayed to the Father.
He even makes unity a means by which the world might believe that the Father sent the Son (John 17:21,23), and prays that it will be as profound as the unity of the Trinity itself (John 17:21-22).
St. Paul makes stirring up division a grounds for virtual exclusion from the Christian community (Romans 16:17), and says that divisions (in effect) divide Christ (1 Corinthians 1:13).
Our Lord designed His Church to speak with one voice. One of the undeniable aspects of unity and oneness in the Bible is the constant warning (especially in the writings of St. Paul) against (and prohibition of) divisions, schism, and sectarianism, either by command, or by counter-example
It is inevitable that thousands of religions will result from sincere people forging a personal understanding using Scripture in isolation of revealed truth, given and passed down by the Apostles through the Church instigated for that purpose (Eph.3:10).
Promoting Scripture alone is a formula made to create division and uncertainty within the people of God.- It validates any individual's position against all others with no way to have a final authorative decision.
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