Q
Quoth
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My beliefs don't change for anyone but God. It's part of agape love. Being an adopted Son of God means that I don't have expectations of anyone, but I also don't condone heresy.
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I didn't know that - but thought there were some that were like yours, hance the use of usually. So if a new person wanted to be a member of your church, and take Communion from another denomination, they would - what? Speak with the pastor? Go through a catechism? declare belief in a particular confession?One of the reasons I take so much flack is I'm a protestant that asserts that I am NOT in communion with other protestant denominations, or the orthodox church, or the Roman Catholic church.
So its not all protestants. But, the majority of them are like that.
So is it an issue of beliefs, mostly, or of aesthetics and mores?I will never marry an Evangelical. Never ever.
I can handle Orthodox crowds; Anglicans. I'd be more open to marrying a Jew than a Bible thumper from like, Tennesee. I don't think it's really about doctrine, but how one will potentially or with what values a couple raise their children or their lifestyle. I don't have much in common with Baptists for instance, who post on here.
So is it an issue of beliefs, mostly, or of aesthetics and mores?
I didn't know that - but thought there were some that were like yours, hance the use of usually. So if a new person wanted to be a member of your church, and take Communion from another denomination, they would - what? Speak with the pastor? Go through a catechism? declare belief in a particular confession?
How important is doctrine when finding a mate? For instance, if someone attends a bible teaching church and someone is involved in the faith movement, would there be problems? Or would there be a comporize?
If you want to base my comments that I made in regards to what the person posted in her original post then go right ahead. The fact is, what SHE posted is heresy. I don't know anything about your denomination. Again, I was replying to what the other person said about it. If you want to call my comments ignorant, then go right ahead. But I'm going to call a jack a jack and a spade a spade when I see them. Okay?Faith movements are misrepresented through these two comments. Please don't lump my denomination in with "heresy."
If you'd like to debate whether it is heresy or not, there are forums for that.
I find your comments very ignorant on the subject (not you, yourselves - just the comments), and would encourage both of you to do some research on matter before posting such things.
We don't believe in "name it and claim it," we believe that the Bible is the Word of God and that there is power in His Word.
Just to clarify.
Oh, and to answer the OP, as long as the person believes the Bible is the infallible Word of God, believes in the Trinity, and that Jesus is the only Way - I'm good. All the other stuff is small potatoes.![]()
Just on a side rant, I'm not sure if this is the right thread for this or not so sorry if I totally derail, but it really is sad to me how some denominations close off from each other. There are many Christians out there with different theologic ideas but the same basic foundational belief of Christ and salvation. When these denominations shut each other out, they really shut out Christ from their church and that kills me.
To give an example, when I was getting baptized, my friend's mom was going to find a priest/pastor to baptize me. She went to a few churches around her that she knew, and all of them said that if they would baptize me, I had to attend classes with them and commit to their specific denomination. In other words, if it was a catholic church, I couldn't be baptized until I was catholic (having Christ was not enough). It took me awhile to eventually find a pastor who was happy enough that I had Christ. It's sad though how religiously exclusive we tend to get, as ultimately Christ is the one who gets shut out.
Kirk - I'm not sure what you mean by "in communion with". Do you recognise other denominations as Christians? Do you believe they're saved?
I took communion with Lutherans. I didn't with Roman Catholics, because I knew it wasn't proper with the Catholics.
As far as I know it was proper with the Lutherans, it was a Lutheran college and the plurality of students were Lutheran, but I doubt a strong majority were.
JM
(Actually, I might not have, but it was definitely OK for me to do so...)
The difficult problem that Lutherans have is there are several differnet Lutheran denominations who hold varying doctrines. Unlike Roman Catholic, Anglican, and Orthodox we have no sense of world wide structure. Lutherans where formed because they where anti-pope and we didn't have a King (like anglicans did) to hold the whole thing together. So because we are against any sort of strong centralized authority (unlike Roman Catholics, Orthodox) we've fractured like other protestant churchs.