Cormack
“I bet you're a real hulk on the internet...”
- Apr 21, 2020
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Well, I don't think that it does amount to that.![]()
What good reason could we have for disagreeing though?
If there isn’t a 7th, 8th or 9th school to draw our information and conclusions from, then Universalism appears to be the majority opinion drawn from the theology schools that we have.
"In the first five or six centuries of Christianity there were six theological schools, of which four (Alexandria, Antioch, Caesarea, and Edessa, or Nisibis) were Universalist, one (Ephesus) accepted conditional immortality; one (Carthage or Rome) taught endless punishment of the wicked. Other theological schools are mentioned as founded by Universalists, but their actual doctrine on this subject is not known."
4 expounded on the Universalist perspective (that’s the majority,) one believed in conditional immortality, and another single school taught endless punishment (these are the minority.)
And it's not as though these theological schools at that time are analogous to today's seminaries or universities anyway.
The analogy to a seminary is imperfect, like how comparing the schools to the news media is an imperfect analogy. The point of similarity however is that they each disseminated information, another point of debate clash is that they are the hubs from where information originates.
@Saint Steven pointed this out earlier...
This points to the centers, from which everything flowed.
Obviously, the western Latin church dominated eventually. And they gave us our biased Bible translation, which you call the norm, I suppose.
Replying that these schools of theology aren’t like modern schools or media outlets isn’t dealing with the areas in which they do intersect, but those areas are the entire point.
If I was trying to use the nipples of a bat to explain to you that you’re both classed as mammals, there’s no use in trying to rebut me by saying “oh yes, but do I suck the blood from off the backs of the cows?!”
Well no, we’re assuming none of us do that, but that’s not the area of debate clash in the first place. We don’t undermine analogies by attacking where they aren’t similar.
Your information showed a diversity of opinion in the early Christian world.
Here’s why I think that reply doesn’t work. Picture when it’s time to announce the election results over there in the US,
“There was a diversity of votes. Some voted democrat, some voted republican, some voted third party. That’s all these votes have shown us.”
Nobody would accept that answer, right?
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