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Scripture as my measure

Rick Otto

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Originally Posted by laconicstudent Allah is just an Arabic word for "God", Sunlover. What are you talking about? Christians have been praying to "Allah" in the Divine Liturgy for thousands of years.
Not to mention that Jehovah is nowhere to be found in either Greek nor Hebrew manuscripts. YHWH yes, Jehovah no.Can we stick to the bible, Sunlover?
Then you could feel completely comfortable with praying to "God" alongside Mormons.
Mighty wide of ya.
 
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Rdr Iakovos

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Originally Posted by laconicstudent Allah is just an Arabic word for "God", Sunlover. What are you talking about? Christians have been praying to "Allah" in the Divine Liturgy for thousands of years.
Then you could feel completely comfortable with praying to "God" alongside Mormons.
Mighty wide of ya.
Arabic Christians prayed to God using the name "Allah" 600 yerars before there was a Muhammed.

Why should I not pray with a Mormon, but pray with a Calvinist? What makes y'all any more holy than they? Their theology- like yours- is wrong and incomprehensible to me.

Yet am I made 'unclean' by praying with someone with whom I or you disagree? Is it not written that He who is in me is greater than he who is in the world? What shall I fear?

And who am I to judge the soul of a brother? I judge movements, to be sure- but not individuals.

Yet I will pray in the way the Lord has led me to, won't I. That's all we have, any of us.
 
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Rick Otto

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Rdr Iakovos;Are you aware that Arius and his group used SCRIPTURE ONLY to make their argument?
That is a gross over-simplification resulting in an egregious misrepresentation of actual fact.
Do you get that a lot?
All you needed to do to be correct is say Arius MIS-used scripture only.
Do you know who Arius was, and why there is a Symbol of Faith aka Niceno-Constantinopolitan Creed?
Do you know who St John is & what day he traditionaly celebrated Easter on, or what deceased Saints he prayed to, or what his favorite icon was. Is there an icon dedicated to "thou shalt not make unto thee any graven image"?
Do you believe that all "truth" is created equal? IOW, Arianism is JUST as valid, if not moreso, than Trinitarianism, if you invoke scripture and only scripture for "norming."
I believe you believe that. Does that make us "equal"?
I suspect I will not get a straight answer on this game-ending question.
Don't flatter yourself.
 
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Yarddog

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Scripture as my measure

A conversation was derailing another thread and so
I'm moving the discussion here.
We're discussing using Scripture as a measuring tool.
We're not calling this practice by any formal name,
just it is what it is, using Scripture to measure.
Here's how the conversation began:
We all use scripture as a measure in some way. I know that I do but we still debate each other's interpretation of scripture. That is what causes most of our divisions, the interpretations.

The more information that a person has about a subject, the better he can measure it, thus a person with little information "may" have a better chance of missing the mark.

In the same way, a person with tons of info may miss the mark as well because they relied, too much, on a piece of flawed data, and they miss the mark as well.

I use scripture but God has shown me, far too many times, how easy it is for me to miss the mark when "I" try to understand it using my intelligence.

That helps to temper the way I look at other people's interpretations. We can all learn from each other because scripture touches each of us in a special way. It is amazing how one piece of scripture can help so many people, each in an unique way.
 
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sunlover1

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We all use scripture as a measure in some way. I know that I do but we still debate each other's interpretation of scripture. That is what causes most of our divisions, the interpretations.

The more information that a person has about a subject, the better he can measure it, thus a person with little information "may" have a better chance of missing the mark.

In the same way, a person with tons of info may miss the mark as well because they relied, too much, on a piece of flawed data, and they miss the mark as well.

I use scripture but God has shown me, far too many times, how easy it is for me to miss the mark when "I" try to understand it using my intelligence.

That helps to temper the way I look at other people's interpretations. We can all learn from each other because scripture touches each of us in a special way. It is amazing how one piece of scripture can help so many people, each in an unique way.
:amen:
 
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CaliforniaJosiah

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Josiah said:
Why do you think that the Council of Nicea is MORE inspired directly by God, MORE inerrant, MORE reliable, MORE ecumenically embraced by all parties (virtually all 50,000 denominations) and MORE historically (say to 1400 BC) than is Scripture?


Are you aware that Arius and his group used SCRIPTURE ONLY to make their argument?


1. You too didn't answer (or even acknowledge) my question. It was proposed that the Rule in the norming of the disputed dogmas among us should be the Council of Nicea rather than the Rule of Scripture. Now, read my question....


2. Yes, I know that. So did Satan in the desert. So did (at some points anyway) Mary Maker Eddy. No one is suggesting that the quoting of Scripture is the evidence of correctness (I think I need to repost what Sola Scriptura is - I'll get to that). As you've been told repeatedly and by many (but you forget - it's okay) is that while the Rule of Scripture embraces Scripture as the rule in norming, disputes will still need to be arbitrated. You keep forgetting that point. It's moot in our discussions with the RCC and LDS (and maybe EO) since those denominations don't embrace the Rule of Scripture - so the issue of arbitration according to it is moot.




Do you believe that all "truth" is created equal?
Yes, but I don't consider all human opinions to be infallible/unaccountable (if so, then Arius would be correct - NOT because he was arbitrated so by some rule but because he declared himself exempt from the issue of truth). My Catholic teachers put it this way: "The RCC is true NOT because it's teachings are true, it's teachings are true because it is true." Self declares self to be so "special" and so "powerful" as to be exempt from whether its teachings are true. Is the EO similar?




I suspect I will not get a straight answer on this game-ending question.
Well, it's the same answer you've been given every time you ask this. But you keep forgetting that your question involves arbitration. AGAIN, yet again, IF you want to talk about arbitration - start a thread on that, I (at least) don't want to violate CF rules by hijacking this thread with that topic. As you know, first we need to embrace accountability (including for the doctrines of self and the denomination of self), THEN norming (the evaluation of the correctness of such), THEN decide on a common norma normans or rule for this norming (the issue here), THEN the arbitive process (a good and important discussion, just not this one).






The Rule of Scripture in Norming (What Luther and Calvin called "Sola Scriptura")




The Definition:


The Rule of Scripture is the practice of embracing Scripture as the rule ("straight edge") - canon ("measuring stick") - norma normans (the norm that norms) as it is called in epistemology, as we examine and evaluate the positions (especially doctrines) among us.


Here is the official, historic definition:
"The Scriptures are and should remain the sole rule in the norming of all doctrine among us" (Lutheran Formula of Concord, Solid Declaration, Rule and Norm, 9). "We pledge ourselves to the prophetic and apostolic writings of the Old and New Testaments as the pure and clear fountain of Israel, which is the only true norm according to which all teachers and teachings are to be judged" (ditto, 3).




What it IS
:

1. An embrace of accountability for the doctrines among us (especially those in dispute).


2. An embrace of norming (the process of examining positions for truth, correctness, validity).


3. An embrace of Scripture as the best, most sound rule/canon/norma normans for this process.



What it is NOT
:

1. A teaching that all revelation or truth is found in Scripture. It's not a teaching at all, it is the PRACTICE of using Scripture as the rule in the norming of doctrines. Scripture itself says that "the heavens declare the glory of God" but our visual reception of the stars is not used as the norma normans for the evaluation of doctrines among us in the practice of Sola Scriptura.


2. A teaching that Scripture is "finished." It's not a teaching at all. While probably all that practice Sola Scripture agree with all others that God seems to have inscribed His last book around 100 AD and doens't seem to be adding any more books, the Rule of Scripture was just as "valid" in 1400 BC when Scripture consisted of just two stone tablets as it is today - only the corpus of Scripture is larger, that has no impact on the practice of embracing it as the rule/canon/norma normans in our evaluation of doctrines among us. The Rule of Scripture embraces the Scripture that is.


3. Hermeneutics. The Rule of Scripture has to do with WHAT is the most sound rule/canon/norma normans for the evaluation of the doctrines among us, it is not a hermeneutical principle. Obviously that Scripture needs to be interpreted, but that's a different subject or another day and thread. The Rule of Scripture has to do with norming, not interpreting.


4. Arbitration. Obviously, some process of determining whether the doctrine under review "measures up" (arbitration) to the "measuring stick" (the canon). This is also beyond the scope here, the Rule of Scripture is the embrace of Scripture AS that canon, it does not address the issue of HOW it is best determined if a position "measures up" to that canon.





An illustration:



Let's say Dave and Fred are neighbors. They decided that they will hire a contractor to build a brick wall on their property line, six feet tall. Dave and Fred hire Bob the Builder. He agrees to build the wall on the property line - six feet tall.

Bob is now done. He claims the wall is six feet tall. Does it matter? If it doesn't, if his work and claim are entirely MOOT - then, nope - truth doesn't matter. And can just ignore what he said and did. OR we can consider that of the nearly 7 billion people in the world, there is ONE who is incapable of being wrong about measurements - and that ONE is Bob the Builder, claims ONE - Bob the Builder. IF Bob the Builder alone is right about what he alone claims about he alone here, it's pretty much a waste of time to wonder if what he said about this is true or not. But, IF truth matters and IF Bob the Builder will permit accountability (perhaps because he is confident the wall IS six feet tall), then we have the issue of accountability: Is the wall what we desire and what Bob the Builder claims it is?


If so, we just embraced norming. Norming is the process of determining correctness of the positions among us. For example, Bob claiming the wall is 6 feet tall. Is that correct? Addressing that question is norming.



Norming typically involves a norm: WHAT will serve as the rule (straight edge) or canon (measuring stick) - WHAT will be embraced by all parties involved in the normative process that is the reliable standard, the plumbline. Perhaps in the case of Fred and Dave, they embrace a standard Sears Measuring Tape. They both have one, Bob does too. Dave, Fred and Bob consider their carpenter's Sears Measuring Tape as reliable for this purpose, it's OBJECTIVE (all 3 men can read the numbers), it's UNALTERABLE (none of the 3 can change what the tape says) and it's OUTSIDE and ABOVE and BEYOND all 3 parties. Using that could be called "The Rule of the Measuring Tape." The Sears Measuring Tape would be the "canon" (the word means 'measuring stick') for this normative process.




Why Scripture?



In epistemology (regardless of discipline), the most sound norma normans is usually regarded as the most objective, most knowable by all and alterable by none, the most universally embraced by all parties as reliable for this purpose. My degree is in physics. Our norma normans is math and repeatable, objective, laborative evidence. Me saying, "what I think is the norm for what I think" will be instantly disregarded as evidential since it's both moot and circular. I would need to evidence and substantiate my view with a norm fully OUTSIDE and ABOVE and BEYOND me - something objective and knowable. This is what The Handbook of the Catholic Faith proclaims (page136), "The Bible is the very words of God and no greater assurance of credence can be given. The Bible was inspired by God. Exactly what does that mean? It means that God Himself is the Author of the Bible. God inspired the penmen to write as He wished.... the authority of the Bible flows directly from the Author of the Bible who is God; it is authoritative because the Author is." Those that accept the Rule of Scripture tend to agree. It's embrace as the most sound Rule flows from our common embrace of Scripture as the inscriptured words of God for God is the ultimate authority.

The embrace of Scripture as the written words of God is among the most historic, ecumenical, universal embraces in all of Christianity. We see this as reliable, dependable, authoritative - it as a very, very, broad and deep embrace as such - typically among all parties involved in the evaluation. (See the illustration above).


It is knowable by all and alterable by none. We can all see the very words of Romans 3:25 for example, they are black letters on a white page - knowable! And they are unalterable. I can't change what is on the page in Romans 3:25, nor can any other; what is is.


It is regarded as authoritative and reliable. It is knowable by all and alterable by none. Those that reject the Rule of Scripture in norming ( the RCC and LDS, for example ) have no better alternative (something more inspired, more inerrant, more ecumenically/historically embraced by all parties, more objectively knowable, more unalterable), they have no alternative that is clearly more sound for this purpose among us.


To simply embrace the teachings of self (sometimes denominational "tradition" or "confession") as the rule/canon is simply self looking in the mirror at self - self almost always reveals self. In communist Cuba, Castro agrees with Castro - it has nothing whatsoever to do with whether Castro is correct. We need a Rule outside, beyond, above self.




Why do some so passionately reject it?



Those that reject the Rule of Scripture in norming tend to do so not because they reject Scripture or have an alternative that is MORE inerrant, MORE the inscripturated words of God, MORE reliable, MORE objectively knowable, MORE unalterable, MORE ecumenically embraced as authoriative. Rather the rejection tends to be because each rejects accountability (and thus norming and any norm in such) in the sole, singular, exclusive, particular, unique case of self alone. From The Handbook of the Catholic Faith (page 151), "When the Catholic is asked for the substantiation for his belief, the correct answer is: From the teaching authority. This authority consists of the bishops of The Catholic Church in connection with the Catholic Pope in Rome. The faithful are thus freed from the typically Protestant question of 'is it true' and instead rests in quiet confidence that whatever the Catholic Church teaches is the teaching of Jesus Himself since Jesus said, 'whoever hears you hears me'." The Catholic Church itself says in the Catechism of itself (#87): Mindful of Christ's words to his apostles: “He who hears you, hears me”, The faithful receive with docility the teachings and directives that their [Catholic] pastors give them in different forms." IF self declares that self is unaccountable and that self is exempt from the issue of truthfulness, then the entire issue of norming (and the embraced norma normans in such) becomes moot (for self). The issue has been changed from truth to power (claimed by self for self).






Pax




- Josiah








.
 
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Rdr Iakovos

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That is a gross over-simplification resulting in an egregious misrepresentation of actual fact.
Do you get that a lot?
You saying so don't make it so.
Do you get that a lot?
All you needed to do to be correct is say Arius MIS-used scripture only.
According to whom? And who died and made YOU Pope?
LOL

Do you know who St John is
Yes- and so do you, thanks to the Church
& what day he traditionaly celebrated Easter on,
He didn't celebrate "Easter."
He kept the Passover.
He did so and still communed with those who did not.
The Quartodecimans came from Eastern Orthodox lands. No small surprise, we tend to be more Semitically oriented than you Western Christians, excepting of course the modern pretenders to the More Jewish Than Thou throne.
or what deceased Saints he prayed to, or what his favorite icon was. Is there an icon dedicated to "thou shalt not make unto thee any graven image"?
You really loaded up on this one.
Troubles at home Rick? You seem a little crabbier than your normal surly.
I believe you believe that. Does that make us "equal"?
Don't flatter yourself.
I never have to-people do it for me all the time.
 
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Rdr Iakovos

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CJ- ten page replies are quite unnecessary.

This "arbitration" you speak of- just who makes the panel of arbiters authorativ

Is this truth by a vote?
We've seen that at work in The Episcopalian Church, The ELCA, and coming soon to the MS. Oh yes, I'll bet a stack on it.
 
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LittleLambofJesus

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1. You too didn't answer (or even acknowledge) my question. It was proposed that the Rule in the norming of the disputed dogmas among us should be the Council of Nicea rather than the Rule of Scripture. Now, read my question....


2. Yes, I know that. So did Satan in the desert. So did (at some points anyway) Mary Maker Eddy. No one is suggesting that the quoting of Scripture is the evidence of correctness (I think I need to repost what Sola Scriptura is - I'll get to that). As you've been told repeatedly and by many (but you forget - it's okay) is that while the Rule of Scripture embraces Scripture as the rule in norming, disputes will still need to be arbitrated. You keep forgetting that point. It's moot in our discussions with the RCC and LDS (and maybe EO) since those denominations don't embrace the Rule of Scripture - so the issue of arbitration according to it is moot.



Yes, but I don't consider all human opinions to be infallible/unaccountable (if so, then Arius would be correct - NOT because he was arbitrated so by some rule but because he declared himself exempt from the issue of truth). My Catholic teachers put it this way: "The RCC is true NOT because it's teachings are true, it's teachings are true because it is true." Self declares self to be so "special" and so "powerful" as to be exempt from whether its teachings are true. Is the EO similar?




Well, it's the same answer you've been given every time you ask this. But you keep forgetting that your question involves arbitration. AGAIN, yet again, IF you want to talk about arbitration - start a thread on that, I (at least) don't want to violate CF rules by hijacking this thread with that topic. As you know, first we need to embrace accountability (including for the doctrines of self and the denomination of self), THEN norming (the evaluation of the correctness of such), THEN decide on a common norma normans or rule for this norming (the issue here), THEN the arbitive process (a good and important discussion, just not this one).






The Rule of Scripture in Norming (What Luther and Calvin called "Sola Scriptura")




The Definition:


The Rule of Scripture is the practice of embracing Scripture as the rule ("straight edge") - canon ("measuring stick") - norma normans (the norm that norms) as it is called in epistemology, as we examine and evaluate the positions (especially doctrines) among us.


Here is the official, historic definition: "The Scriptures are and should remain the sole rule in the norming of all doctrine among us" (Lutheran Formula of Concord, Solid Declaration, Rule and Norm, 9). "We pledge ourselves to the prophetic and apostolic writings of the Old and New Testaments as the pure and clear fountain of Israel, which is the only true norm according to which all teachers and teachings are to be judged" (ditto, 3).




What it IS:

1. An embrace of accountability for the doctrines among us (especially those in dispute).

2. An embrace of norming (the process of examining positions for truth, correctness, validity).

3. An embrace of Scripture as the best, most sound rule/canon/norma normans for this process.


What it is NOT:

1. A teaching that all revelation or truth is found in Scripture. It's not a teaching at all, it is the PRACTICE of using Scripture as the rule in the norming of doctrines. Scripture itself says that "the heavens declare the glory of God" but our visual reception of the stars is not used as the norma normans for the evaluation of doctrines among us in the practice of Sola Scriptura.

2. A teaching that Scripture is "finished." It's not a teaching at all. While probably all that practice Sola Scripture agree with all others that God seems to have inscribed His last book around 100 AD and doens't seem to be adding any more books, the Rule of Scripture was just as "valid" in 1400 BC when Scripture consisted of just two stone tablets as it is today - only the corpus of Scripture is larger, that has no impact on the practice of embracing it as the rule/canon/norma normans in our evaluation of doctrines among us. The Rule of Scripture embraces the Scripture that is.

3. Hermeneutics. The Rule of Scripture has to do with WHAT is the most sound rule/canon/norma normans for the evaluation of the doctrines among us, it is not a hermeneutical principle. Obviously that Scripture needs to be interpreted, but that's a different subject or another day and thread. The Rule of Scripture has to do with norming, not interpreting.

4. Arbitration. Obviously, some process of determining whether the doctrine under review "measures up" (arbitration) to the "measuring stick" (the canon). This is also beyond the scope here, the Rule of Scripture is the embrace of Scripture AS that canon, it does not address the issue of HOW it is best determined if a position "measures up" to that canon.




An illustration:


Let's say Dave and Fred are neighbors. They decided that they will hire a contractor to build a brick wall on their property line, six feet tall. Dave and Fred hire Bob the Builder. He agrees to build the wall on the property line - six feet tall.

Bob is now done. He claims the wall is six feet tall. Does it matter? If it doesn't, if his work and claim are entirely MOOT - then, nope - truth doesn't matter. And can just ignore what he said and did. OR we can consider that of the nearly 7 billion people in the world, there is ONE who is incapable of being wrong about measurements - and that ONE is Bob the Builder, claims ONE - Bob the Builder. IF Bob the Builder alone is right about what he alone claims about he alone here, it's pretty much a waste of time to wonder if what he said about this is true or not. But, IF truth matters and IF Bob the Builder will permit accountability (perhaps because he is confident the wall IS six feet tall), then we have the issue of accountability: Is the wall what we desire and what Bob the Builder claims it is?

If so, we just embraced norming. Norming is the process of determining correctness of the positions among us. For example, Bob claiming the wall is 6 feet tall. Is that correct? Addressing that question is norming.


Norming typically involves a norm: WHAT will serve as the rule (straight edge) or canon (measuring stick) - WHAT will be embraced by all parties involved in the normative process that is the reliable standard, the plumbline. Perhaps in the case of Fred and Dave, they embrace a standard Sears Measuring Tape. They both have one, Bob does too. Dave, Fred and Bob consider their carpenter's Sears Measuring Tape as reliable for this purpose, it's OBJECTIVE (all 3 men can read the numbers), it's UNALTERABLE (none of the 3 can change what the tape says) and it's OUTSIDE and ABOVE and BEYOND all 3 parties. Using that could be called "The Rule of the Measuring Tape." The Sears Measuring Tape would be the "canon" (the word means 'measuring stick') for this normative process.



Why Scripture?


In epistemology (regardless of discipline), the most sound norma normans is usually regarded as the most objective, most knowable by all and alterable by none, the most universally embraced by all parties as reliable for this purpose. My degree is in physics. Our norma normans is math and repeatable, objective, laborative evidence. Me saying, "what I think is the norm for what I think" will be instantly disregarded as evidential since it's both moot and circular. I would need to evidence and substantiate my view with a norm fully OUTSIDE and ABOVE and BEYOND me - something objective and knowable. This is what The Handbook of the Catholic Faith proclaims (page136), "The Bible is the very words of God and no greater assurance of credence can be given. The Bible was inspired by God. Exactly what does that mean? It means that God Himself is the Author of the Bible. God inspired the penmen to write as He wished.... the authority of the Bible flows directly from the Author of the Bible who is God; it is authoritative because the Author is." Those that accept the Rule of Scripture tend to agree. It's embrace as the most sound Rule flows from our common embrace of Scripture as the inscriptured words of God for God is the ultimate authority.

The embrace of Scripture as the written words of God is among the most historic, ecumenical, universal embraces in all of Christianity. We see this as reliable, dependable, authoritative - it as a very, very, broad and deep embrace as such - typically among all parties involved in the evaluation. (See the illustration above).

It is knowable by all and alterable by none. We can all see the very words of Romans 3:25 for example, they are black letters on a white page - knowable! And they are unalterable. I can't change what is on the page in Romans 3:25, nor can any other; what is is.

It is regarded as authoritative and reliable. It is knowable by all and alterable by none. Those that reject the Rule of Scripture in norming ( the RCC and LDS, for example ) have no better alternative (something more inspired, more inerrant, more ecumenically/historically embraced by all parties, more objectively knowable, more unalterable), they have no alternative that is clearly more sound for this purpose among us.

To simply embrace the teachings of self (sometimes denominational "tradition" or "confession") as the rule/canon is simply self looking in the mirror at self - self almost always reveals self. In communist Cuba, Castro agrees with Castro - it has nothing whatsoever to do with whether Castro is correct. We need a Rule outside, beyond, above self.



Why do some so passionately reject it?


Those that reject the Rule of Scripture in norming tend to do so not because they reject Scripture or have an alternative that is MORE inerrant, MORE the inscripturated words of God, MORE reliable, MORE objectively knowable, MORE unalterable, MORE ecumenically embraced as authoriative. Rather the rejection tends to be because each rejects accountability (and thus norming and any norm in such) in the sole, singular, exclusive, particular, unique case of self alone. From The Handbook of the Catholic Faith (page 151), "When the Catholic is asked for the substantiation for his belief, the correct answer is: From the teaching authority. This authority consists of the bishops of The Catholic Church in connection with the Catholic Pope in Rome. The faithful are thus freed from the typically Protestant question of 'is it true' and instead rests in quiet confidence that whatever the Catholic Church teaches is the teaching of Jesus Himself since Jesus said, 'whoever hears you hears me'." The Catholic Church itself says in the Catechism of itself (#87): Mindful of Christ's words to his apostles: “He who hears you, hears me”, The faithful receive with docility the teachings and directives that their [Catholic] pastors give them in different forms." IF self declares that self is unaccountable and that self is exempt from the issue of truthfulness, then the entire issue of norming (and the embraced norma normans in such) becomes moot (for self). The issue has been changed from truth to power (claimed by self for self).

Pax
- Josiah .
Good post :)
 
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CaliforniaJosiah

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According to whom? And who died and made YOU Pope?

Friend, you STILL persist in confusing the Rule in norming with the arbitration in norming...

I don't think anyone is saying that if one can quote a Scripture, ergo that one is correct. Anymore than if one can quote some snippet from some "father" in their denomination, ergo they are correct. Embracing a common rule in norming is not the whole of norming - and no one here has claimed that it is.


Again, if you want to talk about arbitration - that's good, start a thread on it (it's a rule violation to get into that to any degree here). But I'll warn you - it will never get anywhere until you FIRST embrace accountability for all doctrines (otherwise, norming is MOOT and your whole thread a total waste of everyone's time) AND unless you have a common, sound rule (otherwise, you'll never get past the opening post - arbitration according to WHAT?).




PS IF you were Catholic, I'd send the question right back to 'ya, but....






.
 
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Standing Up

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Are you aware that Arius and his group used SCRIPTURE ONLY to make their argument?
Do you know who Arius was, and why there is a Symbol of Faith aka Niceno-Constantinopolitan Creed?

Do you believe that all "truth" is created equal? IOW, Arianism is JUST as valid, if not moreso, than Trinitarianism, if you invoke scripture and only scripture for "norming."

I suspect I will not get a straight answer on this game-ending question.

2 things.

While it is true that Arius used scripture, it is not true that he only used scripture. Arius used the tradition he learned from Paul of Samosata (PS).

PS taught that man became God, Jesus became God at his baptism.
Paul of Samosata - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

So, the origin of Arius' teaching was a tradition, not scripture. Is that straight enough?

Secondly, they didn't use the whole of scripture, but only parts of it to make their false claim.
 
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LittleLambofJesus

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Friend, you STILL persist in confusing the Rule in norming with the arbitration in norming...

I don't think anyone is saying that if one can quote a Scripture, ergo that one is correct. Anymore than if one can quote some snippet from some "father" in their denomination, ergo they are correct. Embracing a common rule in norming is not the whole of norming - and no one here has claimed that it is.


Again, if you want to talk about arbitration - that's good, start a thread on it (it's a rule violation to get into that to any degree here). But I'll warn you - it will never get anywhere until you FIRST embrace accountability for all doctrines (otherwise, norming is MOOT and your whole thread a total waste of everyone's time) AND unless you have a common, sound rule (otherwise, you'll never get past the opening post - arbitration according to WHAT?).

.
I would be interested in seeing a thread on it.
Not sure what it really means tho :confused:
 
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Rdr Iakovos

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Friend, you STILL persist in confusing the Rule in norming with the arbitration in norming...

I don't think anyone is saying that if one can quote a Scripture, ergo that one is correct. Anymore than if one can quote some snippet from some "father" in their denomination, ergo they are correct. Embracing a common rule in norming is not the whole of norming - and no one here has claimed that it is.


Again, if you want to talk about arbitration - that's good, start a thread on it (it's a rule violation to get into that to any degree here). But I'll warn you - it will never get anywhere until you FIRST embrace accountability for all doctrines (otherwise, norming is MOOT and your whole thread a total waste of everyone's time) AND unless you have a common, sound rule (otherwise, you'll never get past the opening post - arbitration according to WHAT?).



PS IF you were Catholic, I'd send the question right back to 'ya, but....






.
Canon is canon. Scripture is THE measuring stick.

I understand why you Lutherans have to use tortured language to avoid using the word tradition. Can't appear too Catholic.

Lutheran tradition is just like any other, only truncated and occasionally acknowledged in hushed tones.

Your arbiters are magisterium in street clothes.

next.
 
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LittleLambofJesus

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Canon is canon. Scripture is THE measuring stick.

I understand why you Lutherans have to use tortured language to avoid using the word tradition. Can't appear too Catholic.

Lutheran tradition is just like any other, only truncated and occasionally acknowledged in hushed tones.

Your arbiters are magisterium in street clothes.

next.
Better than doing it in sackcloth :thumbsup: :)

Blue Letter Bible - Search Results for YNG
(sackcloth)
occurs 46 times in 45 verses in the YNG


Joel 1:13 Gird yourselves and lament ye priests, howl ye ministers of the altar, come lie all night in sackcloth ye ministers of my Elohim, for the meat offering and the drink offering is withholden from the house of your Elohim.

Reve 11:3 And I shall be giving the two witnesses of Me and they shall be prophesying days thousand two hundred sixty, having been about-cast sackcloths

sackcloth.jpg
 
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CaliforniaJosiah

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I would be interested in seeing a thread on it.

We've had several here at GT. They get NOWHERE - because we never got to what is the rule. The issue needs to be done in this order:

1. Are the disputed doctrines among us accountable? (Protestants TEND to say yes, the RCC and LDS - and it seems the EO - say yes except for their own doctrines).

2. IF yes, then what is the embraced rule/canon/norma normans for the evaluation ("norming")? Some Protestants say Scripture is (the Rule of Scripture). The RCC and LDS exited the issue in #1 and so have no reply (it's moot: self is exempt from the issue of truth - and the "rule" for others is simply if they wholly agree with self).

3. IF yes, then what is the resolving (not necessarily infallible) arbitive process for this? While those same Protestants tend to put a lot of "stock" in the 7 Ecumenical Councils and the Ecumenical Creeds, they have no common, defining arbitive process beyond the denominational level. There are limited attempts (among them, the Lutheran/Catholic discussion that resulted in The Joint Declaration on Justification - or whatever it's official title - produced some years ago, but that was not very significant nor definitive in any official sense). What arbitration exists is informal and personal - a point I find unfortunate. There has not been ANY form of a defining arbitation for over 1200 years in Christianity - of any level at all. How can there be in the milieu that the Bishop of Rome created - power, ego, individualism, institutionalism, unaccountability? Ah, sadly - embracing accountability and a common, sound rule are two pieces of the puzzel (and two more than the RCC and LDS - and maybe EO have!!!!!) but it ain't all 3.



But I'm with you - 100% - in embracing and celebrating the first two pieces! We'll NEVER (and I mean NEVER) get to the third without a firm, sound, solid, ecumenical embrace of the first two.


Back to your excellent topic.





.
 
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brinny

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Better than doing it in sackcloth :thumbsup: :)

Blue Letter Bible - Search Results for YNG
(sackcloth)
occurs 46 times in 45 verses in the YNG


Joel 1:13 Gird yourselves and lament ye priests, howl ye ministers of the altar, come lie all night in sackcloth ye ministers of my Elohim, for the meat offering and the drink offering is withholden from the house of your Elohim.

Reve 11:3 And I shall be giving the two witnesses of Me and they shall be prophesying days thousand two hundred sixty, having been about-cast sackcloths

sackcloth.jpg

LOL so THAT'S what sackcloth looks like :D
 
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LittleLambofJesus

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LOL so THAT'S what sackcloth looks like :D
Not sure what under-attire the Revelation witnesses are wearing under it tho :blush: :p
 
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CaliforniaJosiah

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.

Canon is canon. Scripture is THE measuring stick.

Welcome to Sola Scriptura. :wave::hug:




I understand why you Lutherans avoid using the word tradition.


I see you know very little about Lutheranism, it's okay. We use the word constantly. Luther quoted from the ECF more than he quoted from Scripture. Lutherans place the Ecumenical Creeds FIRST in our Concord - above our Confessions.

Now, yes - we DO tend to define the word a bit differently than the RCC does (I don't know about the EO). We define it as the ECUMENICAL, HISTORIC consensus of God's people, who are the church catholic. We'd place first those that are objectively known: the Councils and Creeds, but it's not limited to that. What is OUR stuff, denominational, we tend to call "Confessions" (those things in the Concord AFTER the Ecumenical Creeds) and we place them under Tradition.

But, if Lutherans embrace the LUTHERAN Formula of Concord Confession as our norma normans, all we'd be doing is be Lutherans looking into a Lutheran mirror at a Lutheran document - an unsound rule. For the RCC to look into the mirror at "Traditions" of it's OWN choosing and it's OWN definition and it's OWN interpretation from it's OWN denominational "fathers" is the same - and we regard it equally unsound.

Now, if this thread were about HERMENEUTICS instead of NORMING, I suspect you and I would be on very similar ground. We tend to insist on Tradition in hermeneutics. But that's a whole other subject for another day and thread, not permitted here.



.
 
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LittleLambofJesus

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Welcome to Sola Scriptura. :wave:
<snip>
Now, if this thread were about HERMENEUTICS instead of NORMING, I suspect you and I would be on very similar ground. We tend to insist on Tradition in hermeneutics. But that's a whole other subject for another day and thread, not permitted here.
.
I like hermeneutics :)

http://www.christianforums.com/f86/
Bibliology & Hermeneutics The study of the Bible and Scriptures, and its interpretation and translation.
 
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brinny

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A conversation was derailing another thread and so
I'm moving the discussion here.
We're discussing using Scripture as a measuring tool.
We're not calling this practice by any formal name,
just it is what it is, using Scripture to measure.
Here's how the conversation began:

Scripture is the bottom line, the authority on all things. It is the Word of God, and God moves through it to win hearts and minds and to complete what He has sent it to do, for it never returns to Him void. And it was the reference Jesus Himself referred to when confronted by satan.

The Word of God.....it is God-breathed.
 
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