razeontherock
Well-Known Member
If they are a sect of Christianity by name,
Nope. The no true Scotsman fallacy doesn't hold within Christianity either. Lots of Scripture to this effect. It was also the purpose for the Creeds.
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If they are a sect of Christianity by name,
Nope. The no true Scotsman fallacy doesn't hold within Christianity either. Lots of Scripture to this effect. It was also the purpose for the Creeds.
studying Christianity as a religion in religious studies in contrast to studying Christianity as a religion in either theology or ministry.
You put forth a concept that intrigues me, but you lost me with this:
I see only one point to "studying" Christianity, which is to put it into practice. Not sure which of these 3 categories that might fall into?
"Sects of Christianity not considered Christians" is a contradiction of expression. If they are a sect of Christianity by name, they are Christians by a general definition, even if they aren't considered orthodox or catholic in the sense of being correct or doctrinally sound
"Sects of Christianity not considered Christians" is a contradiction of expression. If they are a sect of Christianity by name, they are Christians by a general definition, even if they aren't considered orthodox or catholic in the sense of being correct or doctrinally sound

applying it seems to fall primarily, if not solely, under ministry.
Part of it depends on what you mean by putting it into practice. Apologetics as a form of converting people to Christianity would fall somewhat under theology, whereas evangelism for conversion falls under ministry.
And here I liked floor wax / dessert topping better![]()
Huh?Well now this is an interesting thing. RC and EO seem to hold that "laity" are not called to minister at all, while the rest of Christianity seems to make no such distinction.
Even across such widely divergent approaches, ALL hold to the Trinity.
If they are three separate entities, a normal person would like to understand them as three different entities... and not being one.Your problem is always going to be one of objectivity. Your religious teachings are preventing you from seeing a simple observation that can be made by reading through the NT. Step away from your overly bias position and try to see things from the Biblical perspective. Then, you can better understand our logic.
1) We see the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit as separate entities. We call these entities persons because this is the closest thing that we can compare them to in terms of language. If there was a better word, we could use it. Moreover, person is not used in the same way as we would use it to describe you or me. I have explained this elsewhere.
What Christians do is rather innovative. You pick three separate verses referring to three separate entities (according to you) which you think they meant they were gods, then you say they are not three but all referring to one god.2) We see the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit as being divine. Their divine attributes are illustrated in various verses.
So, they are separate and different entities but are not divisible. I dont get you.3) We see the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit as being indivisible. Consequently, there are no three gods--just one.
I agree. I note also that all Christians believe God is one.4) God is one. This is explicitly stated in both the OT and NT.
I thought you believe Jesus is human, he ate and drink. He was not a spirit when he was walking on earth.5) All three persons are one because of the first 4 observations--especially 3 and 4. They are of the same substance. The have the same will and purpose.
The OT clearly says God is One. Jesus never preached the trinity and I wonder why if god is three-in-one, Jesus never made an effort to preach that???6) We see references to God's oneness and plurality in the OT.
Maybe the verses were referring to other things and you made the interpretation differently. There is no trinity in the OT and the NT.7) We see manifestations of God in the OT as three individuals, as men, or as a man in a few places in the OT. We believe that these instances point to prophetic unveiling of the Trinity, though not explicit.
There is no trinity in the OT and the NT.
"Sects of Christianity not considered Christians" is a contradiction of expression.
If they are a sect of Christianity by name, they are Christians by a general definition, even if they aren't considered orthodox or catholic in the sense of being correct or doctrinally sound
I wasn't going with a demographic, I was going with a general set of characteristics of Christianity through history, particularly focus on Jesus and the God of Abraham with a new covenant to replace the old and such.Not at all. You suggest that everyone who claims to be a Christian or who is seen as a Christian is actually a Christian.
I see what you are saying, but then we need to distinguish when we speak. The general acceptance of the term, especially by non Christians, is any group that affiliates with Christianity. That means that if a group that practices cannibalism affiliates with Christianity, they are Christian. Obviously, we should see the error in this thinking and conclude that there must be some minimal standard to distinguish such a group and reject their presumed affiliation. What do you propose?
Something being unorthodox by some group's standard within a religious institution and tradition doesn't change the fact that the group themselves holds very similar ideals and identity in relation to Jesus and his teachings, in their varied forms.Not so. There are certain beliefs that all Christians are to believe and are common to orthodox beliefs. Those who are outside of those basic beliefs are not Christians as defined by orthodox beliefs.
The same is true of Islam. There are sects of Islam that are not orthodox -- they are outside of orthodox Islam.
Well now this is an interesting thing. RC and EO seem to hold that "laity" are not called to minister at all, while the rest of Christianity seems to make no such distinction. In any event, Jesus clearly taught to put it into practice before you go running around worrying about others.
Does all of that qualify as "ministry?"
I'd call that a false dichotomy, and point out the 2 are inseparable, unless you find yourself ministering to a sheeple. Everybody has questions, as these boards attest!
There's the difficulty many find with evangelism in the genuine outreach sense as opposed to just pedagogy and speaking from the pulpit to your congregationThis point you raise here brings up another way of differentiating Christian flavors, IMHO far more relevant than normal denom lines. Some emphasize evangelism by all at any cost, while most take what I find to be a much more pragmatic approach, like don't minister to anyone you aren't prepared to have a life-long relationship with.
Even across such widely divergent approaches, ALL hold to the Trinity.
So very true. One need not accept any images of the Trinity in order to know God.Just because you understand how people believe in and accept the Trinity doesn't mean you beleive that it is reflected in the Bible or is absolutely key to understanding Jesus' position. The varied positions on how Jesus' passion served as a way to cleanse one of their sins or impute righteousness upon them don't all involve Trinitarianism necessarily, particularly Unitarianism
positions on how Jesus' passion served as a way to cleanse one of their sins or impute righteousness