Nickolai said:
Let's take this apart piece by piece.
Pick apart? You barely even scratched this...all your doing is letting your relgious institution make your mind up for you.
Nickolai said:
However the Phariseeic line was broken when St. Zacharias was killed in the Temple, and his priesthood sold to the highest bidder. Not so with current Apostolic Succession.
Are you saying you missed my point? It still stands.
Note: I got my beliefs from the apostles, too. 'Apostolic' is just a word your religious institute uses to sound authoritative. All Christians get there dogmas and doctrines from scripture which was mostly written by who...the apostles. The main physical claim (the RCC, EO, etc use) to this is Peter (and other questionable relations)...this can't be proven beyond a reasonable doubt.
Nickolai said:
It's not just a spiritual connection it's a physical one as well. Current Orthodox Bishops were physically ordained by Bishops who were physically ordained by Bishops who were physically ordained by Bishops... back to the Apostles themselves,
Heresay mixed with fallable and questionable writtings which could very well could hold extreme bias. I don't see scriptural support for a Pope...wait, neither do you. (I forgot your EO)
Nickolai said:
Never on the essentials of the faith.
hmmm....if you say so. At least you agree there was differences in opinion. Though I do find it funny, the early church fathers writtings are picked at. Their work is only quoted if it agrees with your churchs doctrine, all other work by them that disagrees with current doctrine get sweeped under the rug and never brought up.
Nickolai said:
Oral teaching is not infallible? Why did the Church use it for the 300+ years before the Canon of scripture existed then? Not to mention the fact that Paul exorts the Thessalonians to "Hold fast to the Traditions passed down whether by word or epistle"? (2 Thess 2:15)
15So then, brethren, stand firm and hold to the traditions which you were taught, whether by word of mouth or by letter from us.
See the word 'whether'. True tradition is good. It was nessacary when scripture wasn't widely printed or available, obviously, but oral teachings should never differ from scripture. In fact we are to look back at scripture to judge whether or not an oral teaching is true or not.
The word 'whether' here states one thing. You can teach by oral tradition OR by reading scripture. They should both be the same, which is not true for a lot of oral traditions we find today, such as Limbo.
Ever play that game 'telephone'? A bunch of kids sit in a circle and whisper a pharse into the childs ear next to him/her and the same is repeated until it gets to the last child. Guess what...it isn't the same pharse that got started with the game ends with.
When something is told orally it is slowly transformed by the many people who carry it through the years. (Sometimes it can be as little as a few days for something to change) Fallable people add or take away, sometimes without even meaning harm. Sometimes teachings go out of the scriptural backing they started with and become something else...
Why do you think Paul had to continue to write to the churchs even after he visited and taught to them? These people were taught by an apostle as still got it wrong. This is why he worte it down on paper, so it couldn;t be changed.
Nickolai said:
However both taught the exact same thing for nearly 1000 years before the schism.
What does that matter...the same things not being taught now. Someone must be wrong.
Nickolai said:
You can try to stick to scripture, (the scripture which we compiled) but wouldn't it be better to listen to the near 2000 years of patristic Tradition dating back to the Apostles themselves?
No, it wouldn;t be better to hear out oral tradition. We have a choice now to learn from EITHER tradtion or letter. (2 Thess 2:15) I'm going to choose the one that is inspired by God Himself and can't be wrong. It is the obvious better choice here, since oral teachings can be fallable.