Matthan said:
Thorn, I'm afraid you have lost me. Since when are "actual edicts which have been handed down from church leaders", if they go against anything in Scripture, not traditions of men? And why are they needed if they do not go against Scripture, but instead support it completely? Isn't Scripture itself better than any edict by any church leader?
Mathan
Sorry, I guess I didn't express myself very well, let's try again:
tradition noun [C or U]
a belief, principle or way of acting which people in a particular society or group have continued to follow for a long time, or all of these in a particular society or group
edict noun [C] FORMAL
an official order, especially one which is given in a forceful and unfair way:
doctrine noun [C or U]
a belief or set of beliefs, especially political or religious, taught and accepted by a particular group
My point was that most of the items you listed as 'traditions' (eg: sacraments, praying to Mary, etc) did not evolve as a tradition - the Pope in his role as 'God's ultimate authority on earth' issued an edict on these things and as a result they became part of the Catholic liturgy/doctrine.
I am not saying I agree with them - as it happens, I don't -there is not one single shred of Biblical evidence to support the notion of praying to Mary, and the concept of Mary's physical ascension to heaven is IMHO totally unscriptural. Both of these concepts blatantly fly in the face of many things that Jesus unequivocally stated in the Scriptures, and they are substantiated by vision's and apparition's. No amount of theological debate will ever convince me that God will contradict His Only Son, and His Living Word by giving a vision to any human, no matter how 'holy and righteous' they may be. We are not to add or take away from scripture, even by 'creative interpretation'. Dreams, visions etc are used by the Holy Spirit to guide, edify and minister to us, but if they don't tie up with the Scriptures, then, I am sorry,but I do not see how it can be of God.
This in essence is the reason for the birth of the 'protestant' churches -Luther et al took issue with these unscriptural theologies and doctrines.
I feel it is important to make this distinction, as a tradition is something which is there, but is not a material part of our faith, but a doctrine is - for example, in the protestant church, infant baptism & adolescent confirmation is a tradition - it's something that was done firstly because of logistics (shortage of ministers to conduct baptisms in the early days of the protestant churches), and secondly because, well, it's always been done that way. In the Catholic church, infant baptism is tied in with the Catholic doctrine of Limbo and original sin which is an 'edict' stating that if an unbaptised infant dies, it cannot get into heaven, as it is still under 'original sin', yet it has not committed any 'venial sin ' (being an innocent baby), therefor it cannot go to Hades, so it goes to 'Limbo', a sort of 'halfway house', not Hades, but not Heaven.
We can choose to be in a church and disagree with a tradition, but IMHO, we cannot be truly obedient to God's instruction that we submit in discipleship to our church leaders if we have an issue with a doctrine of that very leadership we are called to submit to!
I think man must escape the traditions of men if he ever hopes to please God. That is absolutely paramont to any true Christian. Personally, I find no comfort whatever in any spiritual-based ritual if it does not come directly from Scripture.
I agree,but we need to be wise. There are certain traditions which
do cause compromise on obedience to the Word of God - an obvious example being infant baptism & teenage confirmation - this is very easy to change, but many churches cling steadfastly to this practise, with a result that the whole power, purpose and dynamic of true believer's baptism is denied to its members, and they are deprived of one of the great aspects of Christian rebirth as a result, with all the comcommitant limits that places on their spiritual growth and wellbeing. Not to mention that it is actualy unscriptural.
However, there are certain traditions which are edifying, and not in conflict with the Scriptures, such as the way that many Methodist churches take communion - by going in small groups to the front of the church and kneeling together at a rail. The church I am worshiping at now doesn't do this - we sit in our chairs, and I really miss the intimacy and sense of reverence I really enjoyed with the other way. But this is not something I am going to leave this church over. Let our minister stand up next Sunday and tell us that God told him in a vision that Mother Theresa was raised from the dead and ascended into Heaven however, and that's a different story...
Oh, and just a casual observation, but I have found that some of the modern, 'Pentecostal' churches are more tradition bound than the older 'Traditional' churches - you know, every service
has to have an 'anointing' of the praise and worship, at least ten people 'slain in the Spirit', a vision, a 'tongue from God', an interpretation, and a minimum of one miraculous healing......what, you
don't have all these things in your church, well my friend, I'm afraid then your church just isn't
spirit-filled......