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Why?
For the same reason I believe Christopher Columbus sailed the ocean blue.
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Why?
But not science.hence it is the standard for doctrine
2 Tim 4:16 All Scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness,
And only those with "Biblical maturity" can agree with you, right?
Sure, I see the rules of Hillel as being a lot like Saint Vincent's Canon describing the nature of Holy Tradition coming from Antiquity, Universality and consensus. But that was a kind of backwards engineering of the Apostolic Tradition, while Hillel's rules show the basic orthodox hermeneutics of Judaism in the years that immediately preceded Jesus and saint Paul. One of the problems people make, is often assuming that Jesus, saint Paul, the Apostles etc. are doing everything impromptu, coming from revelation etc. when there often is a kind of paper trail of precedents going on in Judaism prior. On this type of topic, I like to show the Hillel legend of "hoping on one foot" compared to Jesus "Golden Rule", as well as his sometimes summarizing the point of the commandments etc.In the spirit of the latter, since I desire not to continue a polemical discussion, but rather pursue with you and the OP an edifying discussion of hermeneutics including Patristic literalism in the form of the Antiochene method, how would you compare and contrast the Seven Rules of Hillel with the Antiochene and Alexandrian exegetical techniques which you clearly understand as much and perhaps more than I do. I myself had never seriously considered using the Seven Rules of Hillel for Christian hermeneutics, preferring those methods of Christian provenance, but since you assert that the Rules of Hillel were used by the Apostolic Fathers, in what one assumes to be the early ante-Nicene era, naturally I am keen to know how they relate to those methods I am acquainted with of late ante-Nicene and post Nicene Christian exegesis, from the third century Catechetical Schools in Alexandria, Antioch and to a lesser extent Caesarea in Syria Palestina (Judea).
Dang church hoppers!But there are some who have, and have gotten saved later.
Yep. Generally to support some dubious doctrine. I consider that the typical response of evangelicals to "Take, eat, this is my body."An allegorist will say, "The Bible says this, BUT It means this."
Careful there. "And" means "also" as well.Whereas a literalist will say, "The Bible says this, AND it means this."
See above.There's a subtle ... but major ... difference.
Have you checked the details in the book using the internet?For the same reason I believe Christopher Columbus sailed the ocean blue.
"Read the Bible for yourself and let It speak to you."Or was J Dwight Pentecost right, when he said the allegorical method establishes the mindset of the believer as the final authority for his faith and practice?
One of the problems people make, is often assuming that Jesus, saint Paul, the Apostles etc. are doing everything impromptu, coming from revelation etc. when there often is a kind of paper trail of precedents going on in Judaism prior.
100%
... and I am assuming you are a member of that movement.
That's nice info. For me a big touchstone was reading Protestant commentaries on the book of Acts, the chapter where Deacons were appointed was always made out to be a kind of pragmatic common-sense solution akin to when Jethro urged Moses to delegate lower-level judges to handle the easy cases of disputes of the Children of Israel while he did the harder higher court ones. It wasn't until, I got into Orthodoxy and began reading EO articles where I had it pointed out to me that the Deacon was a continuation of the Synagogue Chomash, rabbinical assistant, which in turn was an adaptation and lifting of the Levite from the Tabernacle and Temple. There was a really great article that covered that and pointed out how Christ ministry with the Apostles and his larger group of 70 followers mirrored what was also true in earlier Judaism with Moses and Aaron and the Tabernacle, as well as the later temple. It also showed how the early ministry of the Bishop, with the presbyters and choir etc. often directly mirrored the organization of Jesus and that of Earlier Judaism.Indeed, one example of this in the Early Church being the threefold daily prayers, which were moved into dawn, dusk and the night due to the danger of assembling after Emperor Nero and later augmented by the Hours and subdivided, but essentially the Synagogue system of morning, midday and evening prayers is reflected by Matins, Vespers and Compline.
I think some parts of scripture are littoral, some are artistic, some are historic, and some are figurative. It is up to the reader to figure out which is what. There are some things that I think just can't be taken literally. There are some things that were meant to be taken as art. like the Song of Soloman which is a poem, and Proverbs and Psalms which can be used both as teaching and art. The vastness and depth of the Bible is so deep that it really can't be completely digested until it is broken down into the pieces it was written in.
That would include you, since you believe that our Lord can't possibly have meant what he said about the bread and wine being His Body and Blood. You can accept that He spoke the universe into existence, but when He says "Take, eat this is my body", then that violates your notions of "common sense", so you have to chuck it though your metaphorizer. He just had to have meant something else.Let me remind you allegorists
Except when you don't.what it says in the OP, as to how we literalists should think:
Sure. If our Lord said it, it's literal unless it's in the form of a commandment, which "take, eat..." is.For the record, do you allegorists have some kind of rule-of-thumb you follow?
Ask you yourself that, you're the one who feels the need to allegorize our Lord's teaching on the Eucharist.Or was J Dwight Pentecost right, when he said the allegorical method establishes the mindset of the believer as the final authority for his faith and practice?
Interesting, considering that anyone said any such thing. There are some Protestants who will move heaven and earth to avoid agreeing with the Roman Catholics on anything, and who will often go to ridiculous lengths to avoid anything that they perceive as "too Catholic". The SDAs appear to be one of those.What is not true - is your allegation that the way Protestants come to understand what a given Bible text means is to first go see what the Catholic church teaches on that text and then to come up with some interpretation of it that is in opposition to what the Catholic church says.
that is absolutely a fiction
If youAre you talking about "confecting the body, blood, soul and divinity of Christ"? And asking what is objectionable about it.???
Wow, I guess in the SDA Bible that replaces this: Take, eat: this is my body, which is broken for youAre you talking about the "REAL Presence" of Matt 18:20 For where two or three gather in my name, there am I with them.”
Neat that you can distill all the relevant verses down to one line, and then dismiss everything else based on one word from a description of a doctrine (transubstantiation) that most of us don't really care about. U\I'll bet you could have the whole New Testament pared down to to pamphlet size given enough time.So we actually HAVE a text for "do this in REMEMBRANCE of ME" in 1 Cor 11
1 Cor 11:1 Cor 11:
23 For I received from the Lord what I also passed on to you: The Lord Jesus, on the night he was betrayed, took bread, 24 and when he had given thanks, he broke it and said, “This is my body, which is for you; do this in remembrance of me.”
25 In the same way, after supper he took the cup, saying, “This cup is the new covenant in my blood25 In the same way, after supper he took the cup, saying, “This cup is the new covenant in my blood; do this, whenever you drink it, in remembrance of me.” 26 For whenever you eat this bread and drink this cup, you proclaim the Lord’s death until he comes
And "in my blood" means "in my blood". Unvisible in Your Bible, apparently.Remembrance is the same term that we find in Heb 10:3 "reminder"
No one but you has mentioned "sacrifices". What precisely are you talking about?3 But in those sacrifices there is a reminder of sins every year.
Again, no one mentioned a "sacrifice" but you. And not just a memorial, but His Body and Blood. Read thwe whole thing, for crying out loud!Not a sacrifice, but a memorial.
TNo one here confused but you as far as I can tell. His Body, His Blood, His Words. Take 'em or leave 'em.Not a recapitulation of sins - but a reminder.
How is this even a little bit confusing?
I'm going to go with metaphorical on this one.
After all, the context says:
Matthew 26:26 And when they were taking food, Jesus took bread and, after blessing it, he gave the broken bread to the disciples and said, Take it; this is my body.
What are they holding in their hands?
Bread ... right?
One doesn't have to be a Rhodes scholar to know what's going on here.
I think some parts of scripture are littoral, some are artistic, some are historic, and some are figurative. It is up to the reader to figure out which is what. There are some things that I think just can't be taken literally. There are some things that were meant to be taken as art. like the Song of Soloman which is a poem, and Proverbs and Psalms which can be used both as teaching and art. The vastness and depth of the Bible is so deep that it really can't be completely digested until it is broken down into the pieces it was written in.
By that rationale then Jesus isn't God. After all, what was nailed to the cross? Human flesh right? Well there you go, since a human being was nailed to the cross then Jesus can't be God.
So our Lord takes bread, and then says, "This is My body", you argue it is called bread and therefore it can't be His body, but Jesus says it is His body. So which is it, bread or body?