Standing Up
On and on
There was only one church, that I'm aware of then.
Then, when? 100ad, 500ad, 1100ad, 1600ad, 2000ad?
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There was only one church, that I'm aware of then.
Apparently it is all of them, considering some of the "I am neither Protestant or Catholic, and I merely repeat what the Bible plainly says" lonewolf rhetoric that we have seen in multiple threads when the subject of the canon and interpretation comes up.
Perhaps you're right. Different flocks have different food (bibles). So much for the idea that the "Catholic Church gave us the bible".
Standing Up said:But yes, that becomes an SS problem. IOW, if your OT includes the idea of praying to the dead and mine doesn't, even if we both agree to forgo tradition and councils, and use SS, we may end up with a problem.
Nah. It says how deceptively "spiritualized" and "right" the lonewolf Christian mentality is along with its conflation of interpretation and the truth that the text holds. I would not expect you to admit this, though.
Please stay on topic, and off me.
Post #401 raises a problem that still doesn't help sola scriptura
Why are you happy with the Lutheran church doing just that?
Ask a real pope. Or an EO priest. Prots generaly don't do it.Nah. It says how deceptively "spiritualized" and "right" the lonewolf Christian mentality is along with its conflation of interpretation and the truth that the text holds. I would not expect you to admit this, though.
What Old Testament includes "praying to the dead"?
Ask a real pope. Or an EO priest. Prots generaly don't do it.
Rick Otto said:And the "Lone Wolf Christian" label... anybody here fit that?
Rick Otto said:I'm with God, not alone.
How do you feel about God being invisible if you're uncomfortable with an invisible church concept?
What Old Testament includes "praying to the dead"?quote=Tzaousios;Ask them what?
In order to 'set semantics aside', wouldn't you have to be a little more definitive than a lone wolf being someone who "conflates interpretation"?Well, I would say yes, but would you admit that there are, semantics aside?
I understand you to mean one who doesn't 'pledge allegeance' to any congregation, rather only to God & lets love rule, not ecclesiastic authorities since the ecclesia is so schismed.This is what I meant by semantics. Yes, of course, you are with God. That is not the purpose of the what is meant by "lonewolf Christian." I think you understand what I mean.
I thought you were, enough to the degree that you affiliate with a visible one. Add to that the baggage in the terms "lone" & "wolf", neither of which seperately or together conjure a positive image, at least in my mind, with it's minimal familiarity with your posts. That you would affiliate with Lutherans & associate Lone Wolves with conflating interpretation expresses in my semantic understanding, that you are pro-establishment (reformed to some degree), and skeptical of non-joiners in general.As for invisibility, I am not sure what you are getting at by me being "uncomfortable." I tend not to draw a dichotomy between the invisibility of God and the visibility of the Church. So, no, I am not uncomfortable
I don't see how... WHEN the first denomination came into being has nothing whatsoever with WHAT is the most sound rule/norma normans for us as we evaluate the disputed dogmas among us.
What Old Testament includes "praying to the dead"?
They are the ones who interpret scripture to allow for that.
Rick Otto said:In order to 'set semantics aside', wouldn't you have to be a little more definitive than a lone wolf being someone who "conflates interpretation"?
Isn't that allegation the common currency of general theological disputes?
Rick Otto said:How lonely can one feel in the presence of so many who rely more on God & scripture than any one of the schisms of Catholicism?
Rick Otto said:I understand you to mean one who doesn't 'pledge allegeance' to any congregation, rather only to God & lets love rule, not ecclesiastic authorities since the ecclesia is so schismed.
Rick Otto said:I thought you were, enough to the degree that you affiliate with a visible one.
Rick Otto said:Add to that the baggage in the terms "lone" & "wolf", neither of which seperately or together conjure a positive image, at least in my mind, with it's minimal familiarity with your posts.
Rick Otto said:That you would affiliate with Lutherans & associate Lone Wolves with conflating interpretation expresses in my semantic understanding, that you are pro-establishment (reformed to some degree), and skeptical of non-joiners in general.
It was not present in my mind, but now that you mention it I not only ask for your forgiveness bit also for your continued attention to the issue at hand, praying to deceased or discorporate saints who are very much alive in Christ as I am aware. I view "praying to the dead" as a vulgarization, but not necessarily as derogatory.quote=Tzaousios;No, they do not. "Praying to the dead" is a rhetorical turn of phrase that is used to describe intercessory prayer in a derisive manner. I think you are aware of that.
Well, that's nice to know about you. Maybe that's one of the reasons you seem more reasonable than the average GT poster.I think that I have provided for a specific, definitive use of the term when I have used it elsewhere. In that context, I do not think that the aspect of interpretation becomes "common currency."
Ok. But 'churchianity' can become a comfort box, where one escapes more than resolves or even at least deals with one's own problems. Not that that's always a bad thing, but you know,... too much of a good thing is a bad thing.In my experience, those can be divided into ones who live firmly within their comfort box and probably very well believe that that is what they are doing and nothing else exists outside of the box.
Ok, I can see that, & yet some experience Christian fellowship more easily outside the 'box' of established religious institutions being more comfortable in what they believe are spiritual institutions as opposed to what are religious institutions - 'religious' being a degree removed from 'spiritual'. For example, the two greatest commandments are 'more spiritual' than the law & the prophets - Jesus having said "On these twocommandments hang all the law and the prophets."The other group consists of those who know very well what exists outside of the box, have had exposure to the sources and history, yet react against it in spite of what they know. To that end, they consciously use whatever they know for specific polemical and rhetorical purposes rather than face the music. They are the ones that tend to describe rhetorically what they do as merely "relying on God and Scripture."
Me? I thought you set the rhetoric & dichotomy with "Lone Wolf". lolNo, that is not what I mean since you description is a rhetorical reconfiguration of what you perceive or want me to mean. You set up a false dichotomy here between "us and them."
The mentality should be that of Christ's - Forgiveness & self-sacrificial acts of good faith like charity, giving hope & being loving.Should the mentality be, if there are "schisms" and disagreements, as there have been throughout history, why not add yet another one to the heap with one's individual interpretation and a church of one?
"Founded" wouldn't be my word. "Re-inforced by", maybe. That cool?Once again, I think it is a false dichotomy to set up my ecclesiological beliefs as being founded upon an uncomfortableness between the invisibility of God and a visible/invisible church. Rather, it is an informed disagreement with the reasonings and justifications of those who choose to define the church as being only invisible and reject the visible.
My reasonings don't lead me to give a positive or negative value to the word "baggage". To me it just means information that goes into reasonings & justifications. In that sense, everyone has baggage,Baggage? No, it is the result of my informed disagreement with the aforementioned reasonings and justifications. It accurately describes what I think is going on with that particular ecclesiological mentality.
Excuse me, please. I don't know why I thought your icon was Lutheran. And I personaly don't consider Real Presence as being in any way reformed other than some reformers believed in it. It seems totaly counterintuitive to me.I don't affiliate with Lutherans, but a Presbyterian church that is liturgical in worship, Reformed in theology, confesses the historical creeds, and believes in the Real Presence. I don't reject church history or the church fathers, but let them inform my perspective as I find it in my present ecclesiological context.
Whose? Yours? What did you do?Read the Confessions.
For what purpose? You know Luther doesn't accept all OT books my church acceptedQuote for me the part that lists all rejected books.
Then, let's stop the hijack and return to the topic of the thread.
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Rick Otto said:What Old Testament includes "praying to the dead"?
They are the ones who interpret scripture to allow for that.
In order to 'set semantics aside', wouldn't you have to be a little more definitive than a lone wolf being someone who "conflates interpretation"?
Isn't that allegation the common currency of general theological disputes?
How lonely can one feel in the presence of so many who rely more on God & scripture than any one of the schisms of Catholicism?
I understand you to mean one who doesn't 'pledge allegeance' to any congregation, rather only to God & lets love rule, not ecclesiastic authorities since the ecclesia is so schismed.
I thought you were, enough to the degree that you affiliate with a visible one. Add to that the baggage in the terms "lone" & "wolf", neither of which seperately or together conjure a positive image, at least in my mind, with it's minimal familiarity with your posts. That you would affiliate with Lutherans & associate Lone Wolves with conflating interpretation expresses in my semantic understanding, that you are pro-establishment (reformed to some degree), and skeptical of non-joiners in general.
Am I trippin', dude?![]()