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So he was taught from Scriptures and taught a 'lesson' not found in the Gospels?Seems you forget that Paul was led into the Arabian wilderness for 3 years and taught by Christ Himself. So there is no need for a "must."
I wasn't the one who raised the spectre that it might have been prophetic.Categorical fallacy. You and I both know that the phrase "oral tradition" in this context refers to orally passed on teaching . . . not a prophetic utterance. The two don't cross even if they are both "spoken" . . . nice try though.
As I said, tradition is good, and it has AN authority . . . but it is never place alongside of Scripture as equal. Is tradition said to have the path that leads to salvation?
Since he doesn't present any written texts that he learnt from then he doesn't say "Follow the book I learnt from" but "Follow the teachings I give you by word and by epistle"Nope. Is tradition given the highly exalted hapaxlegomenon theopneustos? Nope. When Paul argues for the truth of the Gospel does he argue from the targums?
That's not true. You've twistedYou say God's message leads to salvation, only if it's written, and only read, because living it means nothing.
Poisoning the well is also ineffective.Do you honestly expect me not to accept my training from this source and give precedence to western secular bible colleges who, at best, are attempting to piece together information that they get from so many sources and wind up with such a distorted picture?
Forgive me...
certainly not THAT statement, anyways.The well is poisoned, but I didn't do it.
For instance.
Bible college's still teach that St. Joseph was a young man, when in truth he was 85 and Mary was 15. They were never married, only betrothed, and Mary remained a virgin all her life.
So... who do you trust?
Forgive me...
The Holy Spirit.The well is poisoned, but I didn't do it.
For instance.
Bible college's still teach that St. Joseph was a young man, when in truth he was 85 and Mary was 15. They were never married, only betrothed, and Mary remained a virgin all her life.
So... who do you trust?
Forgive me...
certainly not THAT statement, anyways.
"I" find it easy to believe something that all five of the ancient Churches teach independently and yet with a unified voice.
Forgive me...
no doubt. You've chosen it as your church for truth, of COURSE you are going to call it the most reliable.St. Joseph was 110 when he died, and Christ himself buried him the year before starting his ministry.
Like I said... It all depends on who you trust for information.
I see The Church of Antioch as being the most reliable source.
Forgive me...
no, because there are scriptural qualifiers that don't make much sense if they were never married.Why?
The Holy Scriptures don't say one way or the other? It's a popular modern myth that they were both young.
yes, I know. At one point, they weren't the "all the ancient churches."ALL the ancient Churches (every one of them) teach otherwise.
Forgive me...
no, because there are scriptural qualifiers that don't make much sense if they were never married.
yes, I know. At one point, they weren't the "all the ancient churches."
no, you're right. nothing definitive, and nothing "opposite." but certainly some that make me wonder very strongly why the author would pen something that doesn't make sense in the 85/15 teaching. Specifically if they never actually married.None that are definitive, and certainly none that teach the opposite of what The Churches teach.
yes, I can see that.I would rather have The Church without the scriptures that The scriptures without The Church.
not really. take the noahican flood, for example. There are flood legends in almost all cultures. This is derived from there being a flood. However, not all of them get it right. Some are very far from the truth, with only vestiges of the original product.Which is exactly my point. When all of them agree on one matter, it is much easier to believe.
Forgive me...
No it does not suggest that the others of the Jewish Canon should be considered "uninspired" (as far as the infallibility goes). But the Apocrypha were not considered part of the Jewish canon . . . the Apocrypha ITSELF distinguishes between itself and the writings of the inspired OT authors.the LXX is, however, closer to the language of the NT (ie, as source for NT quotes) indicating that, indeed, the LXX was the primary source at the time of the NT writing. Additionally, IIRC (check page to confirm) most OT books (Masoretic or LXX) are not quoted; the lack of quotation from other OT books does not, to the average Christian, suggest that these books should be, therefore, discarded as "uninspired".
No . . . my bible college was run by ordained ministers in the Assemblies of God for the sole purpose of planting churches in the local regions. Not secular at all.Bible college is a secular source. State your source for this starting and stopping please. I am more concerned with the textual editing of the psalms.
BTW ~ Do you know who St. Simeon is? According to The Church, he was one of the seventy, and translated the book of Isaiah.
Forgive me...
it would seem that the attitude is "not orthodox=secular."No . . . my bible college was run by ordained ministers in the Assemblies of God for the sole purpose of planting churches in the local regions. Not secular at all.
The LXX was originally started to translate the PENTATUECH. It was started in the third Cent BC and finished about 200 years later . . . with many starts and stops and different translators of varying capability.
Wikipedia should be sufficient
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Septuagint
here is the quote:
Jewish scholars first translated the Torah into Greek in the third century BC. Further books were translated over the next two centuries. It is not altogether clear which was translated when, or where; some may even have been translated twice, into different versions, and then revised.[6] The quality and style of the different translators also varied considerably from book to book, from the literal to paraphrasing to interpretative. According to one assessment "the Pentateuch is reasonably well translated, but the rest of the books, especially the poetical books, are often very poorly done and even contain sheer absurdities".[7]
As the work of translation progressed gradually, and new books were added to the collection, the compass of the Greek Bible came to be somewhat indefinite. The Pentateuch always maintained its pre-eminence as the basis of the canon
You are right. This is the crux issue.You know the major difference here is who we trust to teach us.
I trust The Church of Antioch to teach me.
Forgive me...