Butterfly99
Getting ready for spring break. Cya!
Really? I'm Methodist. I don't think we've gone astray. Why is it wrong to be loving to everybody, like Jesus?
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Really? I'm Methodist. I don't think we've gone astray. Why is it wrong to be loving to everybody, like Jesus?
Yeah - and I have heard it preached just like that.That kind of thing is maddening! It treats being a follower of Jesus like a form of divine fire insurance.
I visited a Wesleyan Church once and these topics you speak of were taught regulary from what I could tell.Great points!
I just think the UMC is getting away from Wesley's teachings of Christian perfection and sanctification. The Methodist churches I've been to in New Jersey and Massachusetts rarely mention those ideas, if at all. I think they are important ideas, and I'll use them when I preach.
I've read a bit of Luther's writings, mostly out of my own curiosity regarding the reformation; including his catechisms. To my eyes, Martin Luthers single greatest problem was the Pope. He was as Catholic as the next guy but the idea that the Pope had the authority to change church doctrine into something unbiblical (which he blamed as the reason the church instituted the concept of asking forgiveness of sin from a priest and, more egregiously, buying forgiveness of sin from Titulus, who coined the phrase "When the coin in the box rings, the soul from purgatory springs!") His emphasis is often called Sola Scriptura but from what I've read, including his own referencing of church tradition, reason, and his experiences as authoritative, I think I would classify him more as a "prima scriptura". Like Wesley, it's not only scripture we draw all of our understandings from; but nothing can contradict scripture and scripture always comes first. I'm far from an expert on Luther though; that's just how I've perceived him.
There seems to be an emphasis throughout Christianity to sort of flex our theological muscles and prove who loves the Bible more. But honestly, it's not about reading the Bible literally, it's about understanding the Bible fully. The Bible never has as much authority as it does when it's read through the lenses of Tradition, Reason and Experience. Knowing the cultural contexts, the language nuances, and asking the tough questions like "Who was this passage written for and in what ways does it apply to me today?"
The truth is ALL Christians do this. The same Christians who quote leviticus as clear evidence of God forbidding homosexuality don't seem to mind understanding that Leviticus dietary restrictions don't apply to us today (I recognize there is NT complication on the issue of SSM, for this context, I'm only speaking to those who quote from Leviticus); and the same Christians who quote 1 Timothy as clear evidence that women shouldn't preach ignore that in the very same breath (in the English translations there's not so much as a period between the commandment against women in leadership and the following!) Paul denounces rings and braided hair and a host of other culturally-contextual issues that don't apply today (because they don't have the same meaning today as those symbols did then).
You and I agree so much. If those who hold literalism really did so then I suppose they would pluck out their eyes. As Paul said if your eye causes you to sin then pluck it out. Since we all sin and the sin of lust for a man is common than those who really think they hold to a literal intrepretation should pluck out their eyes but they do not do so.You're making an assumption (albeit a common one) that to reject inerrant literalism is to reject all of the Bible. There are parts of the Bible which essentially are literal (The Ten Commandments aren't metaphors, and when Jesus commanded us to love God and love Neighbor he meant what he said), parts that are the direct word of God, Jesus, Prophets and others. Among that, there are parts that are poetry (Psalms, parts of Genesis, etc.), parts that are figurative (the Parables); and parts that even Jesus Himself said are man-made and not of God (some of the OT laws).
Paul, who wrote this, had been dead for decades when the New Testament came about. He was referring to Old Testament scripture; scripture which Jesus himself criticized (specifically, leviticus law) and even Paul struck down. Paul, who wrote this, himself, said not everyone was called to abide by certain Old Testament laws that reside in the very scripture he was uplifting. In fact, what you're posting; is probably the best example of why that phrase is being misinterpreted. Paul, who says all scripture is inspired by God, believed that Leviticus laws had run their course and weren't meant for all Christians to follow; and yet other commandments, certainly those from Christ, were. Paul is the one who set the stage for interpreting the Bible in new ways. In 2 Timothy, the Bible isn't "Talking about itself", Paul is talking about the Hebrew Bible (the Old Testament). Paul was pretty arrogant, but I don't think even he ever thought that his writings would one day be considered "scripture" or on the same level as what HE is referring to scripture. 2 Timothy was merely a letter, a letter Christians have used for centuries to help understand the Church and understand God.
Christians who reject literalism still maintain the authority of the Bible; but we believe it should be read as it was written. Genesis 1 / Genesis 2 (Whichever creation story you think is the literal one. They are fundamentally different so you can't pick both. Most of my literalist friends use Genesis 1 but I know a few who use Genesis 2. I'm not sure how they reconcile literal interpretations of Genesis when they so significantly contradict, but I digress) are not viewed the same way as, say, the word of Jesus. Genesis 1/2 establish that God created the universe; not specifics on how it was done.
I believe Paul was telling the truth and I believe scripture is inspired by God. I just don't believe we're called to super-simplify it down to ultra-literalism (which doesn't work and is impossible), but instead, interpret and understand it through the lenses of the Holy Spirit, Experience, Reason and Tradition.
Literalism isn't real. What I mean is, nobody actually does it. They just THINK they do. We can uber-simplify Genesis but it's okay to understand that things like the Parables were metaphors for other things, and imagery? Well, is it literal, or not?
Yep. Young Earth Creationism says one of the two creation stories (usually Genesis 1) is literal and happened exactly as it says. But what about the other one? It just doesn't work.
KJV-onlyism is only more bizarre because it's an English translation with poorer scholarship than what we have today. Rejecting english translations and maintaining greek/hebrew-onlyism I still wouldn't agree with (because I think the Bible should be accessible) but I'd find it defensible. KJV-onlyism is simply completely arbitrary based on the theology of "It's always been that way". And, ironically, it's held by churches who would vehemently oppose much of the theologies, then and now, of the church that commissioned it.
Yes, one of the side effects of a certain way of reading Calvinism is that it can lead to the idea that you get saved on a certain date and then after that you don't have to do anything with your faith afterwards. The assumption is that you are spiritually complete on the day of your first profession of faith.
That's always what confused me about some readings of "divine sanctification"; it can sound like "yup I've arrived, I am unable to sin".
It all goes against what Gods word says and means. Religion at its finest. Man mad rules... I wonder what Jesus thinks of all this. He walked ONE way and presented Himself ONE way in the word of God. That's the TRUE way. How can man twist things up so badly?
Sometimes we refuse to see the truth about who Jesus really was. I have heard of Christian in the word of God, but I'm sorry I never heard the word Methodist in there. I just don't understand all these religions when there is supposed to be Only One. Your religion says its wrong to dance before God when the bible clearly says otherwise. That's all I meant.
CircuitWriter; tell us how you really feelBut yes, I get that rhetoric out here all the time. They understand God's will, and if I don't do things the way they do, then I don't
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