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A council that radifies the canon of the NT is "God inspired" but the rest of the counsils are NOT...
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You've been arguing for the Protestant canon in this thread. But anyway:IIRC I was focusing on the 27 books of the NT. Which I thought all Christians agreed on up to today...
You've been arguing for the Protestant canon in this thread. But anyway:
1. Did you know that Hebrews, Revelation, 2 Peter, for instance were denied as Scripture by some in the early Church? Why do you accept the 27 books? Is the measure: "Majority rules"?
2. So, yes or no, do you believe God revealed to the early Church the 66-book-only canon?
Josiah said:1. WHY Scripture is embraced as sufficient reliable as the rule/norma normans is not the point in Sola Scriptura. Sola Scriptura does not teach ANYTHING about the Bible, it does not teach ANYTHING about what is or is not Scripture, Sola Scriptura doesn't teach ANYTHING about ANYTHING - it's not a teachingl it's a practice: the practice of our using Scripture as the rule in the evaluation of the correctness/validity/truthfulness of doctrines among us. Yes, the practice does flow from the embrace that Scripture is reliable for this but the doctrine of Scripture is not the same as the practice of using such normatively. And yes, the practice as just as sound (IMO) when Scripture consisted of nothing more than two stone tablets at Mount Sinai as it was in 100 AD when the corpus of such was much larger.
2. There has never been an Ecumenical Council on what is or is not Scripture in Christianity. The embrace is an ecumenical, historic matter of consensus. Yes, the EO has a UNIQUE collection - shared by no other denomination. The RC has a UNIQUE collection - shared by no other denomination. The other 49,998 denominations (assuming some are correct and there are 50K denominations) share virtually all the books with the EO and RC but leave the DEUTERO books, the disputed ones as disputed. It's largely moot to anything, and it's certainly moot to this practice. Yes, for a Greek Orthodox, embracing Psalm 151 as a rule in norming would be embracing Scripture as the rule - otherwise known as Sola Scriptura. The RCC would not regard it as Scripture I realize, but that's moot to the practice here being discussed. If we were discussing the Rule of Law and you noted that that law is not IDENTICAL in Nevada as it is in California, the practice would be the same even if the object would be slighty different.
3. You can find a detailed description of the practice here: http://www.christianforums.com/t7544221/
No, sorry. Neither of these discourses confronts either of my questions to OpenDoor in post #144.
I'm sorry, but this just doesn't make sense. If scripture is your norm, don't you want to make sure you have all the right 'scripture'?
Yes I did know about Hebrews and Revelation, but I did not know about 2 Peter.1. Did you know that Hebrews, Revelation, 2 Peter, for instance were denied as Scripture by some in the early Church? Why do you accept the 27 books? Is the measure: "Majority rules"?
I agree with the finding of the council. I recognize Hebrews, Revelation and 2 Peter as scripture.Why do you accept the 27 books? Is the measure: "Majority rules"?
From my understanding, the way God revealed the truth of the OT was not through the Christian Church but through the Jewish faith.2. So, yes or no, do you believe God revealed to the early Church the 66-book-only canon?
Which council is that? I don't remember you specifying earlier.I agree with the finding of the council. I recognize Hebrews, Revelation and 2 Peter as scripture.
This tells me that you are not sure if your OT canon is correct. You say the Christian Church "mostly" agrees with the Jewish faith (and which Jewish group I'm not sure because there was no unanimous canon of Scripture in Judaism at the time of Christ, or even today (i.e. the Palestinian Jews had a different canon than Ethiopian Jews, etc...).From my understanding, the way God revealed the truth of the OT was not through the Christian Church but through the Jewish faith.
The Christian Church (for the most part) agrees with the Jewish faith when it comes to the OT.
Outside of the apocrypha (or deuterocanonical) books both Jews and Christians agree on the OT.This tells me that you are not sure if your OT canon is correct. You say the Christian Church "mostly" agrees with the Jewish faith (and which Jewish group I'm not sure because there was no unanimous canon of Scripture in Judaism at the time of Christ, or even today (i.e. the Palestinian Jews had a different canon than Ethiopian Jews, etc...).
Yes I did know about Hebrews and Revelation, but I did not know about 2 Peter.
I agree with the finding of the council. I recognize Hebrews, Revelation and 2 Peter as scripture.
That is tantamount to saying: Outside of the books they don't agree on, Christians and Jews agree. So whose canon on the OT is correct? Palestinian Jews? Ethiopian Jews?Outside of the apocrypha (or deuterocanonical) books both Jews and Christians agree on the OT.
This is were we will differ. I don't view the councils as "magical", or the people that attended as infallible. As such I can agree with some of their findings and disagree with others.Why then do you agree with the findings of this council and not of another council, since it is the same Holy Spirit acting through them?