Albion
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- Dec 8, 2004
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Well the answer to the flaw would be a consensus.
Well, wait a minute. A consensus is not unanimity. You said that the problem was diverse interpretations. There already is a consensus on many doctrinal matters, if not 100% agreement. And achieving a consensus doesn't guarantee truth. There are many examples in life where the majority was wrong.
OK, we have several churches that accept seven of them, one that generally accepts 4 out of 7, one that accepts only 3, and (so I'm told) one that accepts 2 only. Of course, at least 1/3 of Christianity doesn't accept any of them as authoritative. I don't see any uniformity there, and that's just about how many there are to follow, not anything about their contents.When a large body uniformly accepts certain interpretationsm, as was done in the various ecumenical councils.
So it looks to me that this is an ideal -- but nothing that can be accomplished, not any more than getting everyone to accept the same interpretation of Scripture.
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