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xfrodobagginsx said:
.
Oldbear83 said:
I might also argue that I disagree somewhat with the notion of Sola Scriptura. I would prefer the term Scriptura Suprema, because Scripture itself teaches lessons from human examples, or else we should not have so many dozens of books in Scripture. That said, Jesus' rebuke of human tradition makes plain that God wants us to focus on His words more than the variance of men.
BusyTarpDuster2017 said:Oldbear83 said:
I might also argue that I disagree somewhat with the notion of Sola Scriptura. I would prefer the term Scriptura Suprema, because Scripture itself teaches lessons from human examples, or else we should not have so many dozens of books in Scripture. That said, Jesus' rebuke of human tradition makes plain that God wants us to focus on His words more than the variance of men.
Explain why this is a "somewhat" disagreement with sola scriptura. You seem to be disagreeing with something else, NOT sola scriptura.
Oldbear83 said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:Oldbear83 said:
I might also argue that I disagree somewhat with the notion of Sola Scriptura. I would prefer the term Scriptura Suprema, because Scripture itself teaches lessons from human examples, or else we should not have so many dozens of books in Scripture. That said, Jesus' rebuke of human tradition makes plain that God wants us to focus on His words more than the variance of men.
Explain why this is a "somewhat" disagreement with sola scriptura. You seem to be disagreeing with something else, NOT sola scriptura.
It's an attempt to get the discussion moving. And I submit that the Sola part causes our Roman Catholic friends to stall on that point.
Oldbear83 said:
I covered that in my post.
There are dozens of books in Scripture, considering hundreds of people and their words/actions. We learn a lot from their stories, which demonstrate that there is value in observing how people around us behave and speak, which tells us that traditions have value, provided they are consistent with Scripture.
Hence Suprema is more accurate than Sola.
BusyTarpDuster2017 said:Oldbear83 said:
I covered that in my post.
There are dozens of books in Scripture, considering hundreds of people and their words/actions. We learn a lot from their stories, which demonstrate that there is value in observing how people around us behave and speak, which tells us that traditions have value, provided they are consistent with Scripture.
Hence Suprema is more accurate than Sola.
You are arguing against your false conception of sola scriptura, not against what sola scriptura actually is. You are making the same mistake as the Roman Catholics and Orthodox here. Sola scriptura is not about Scripture being the only thing that has "value" or which can be learned from.
It's amazing how much this simple concept keeps tripping people up, after all the times it's been explained and re-explained.
Oldbear83 said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:Oldbear83 said:
I covered that in my post.
There are dozens of books in Scripture, considering hundreds of people and their words/actions. We learn a lot from their stories, which demonstrate that there is value in observing how people around us behave and speak, which tells us that traditions have value, provided they are consistent with Scripture.
Hence Suprema is more accurate than Sola.
You are arguing against your false conception of sola scriptura, not against what sola scriptura actually is. You are making the same mistake as the Roman Catholics and Orthodox here. Sola scriptura is not about Scripture being the only thing that has "value" or which can be learned from.
It's amazing how much this simple concept keeps tripping people up, after all the times it's been explained and re-explained.
You keep ignoring what I told you.
The purpose of these threads is to discuss the topics, as in move forward. I have told you already that I am trying to get our RC friends to move forward on this topic.
Oldbear83 said:
The expected response.
Well, some seeds don't land on fertile soil, even in discussion among believers.
Have a good one.
Oldbear83 said:
Sir, your post just there is an ad hominem. It is also a false accusation.
I, for my part, remain focused on the topic.
Oldbear83 said:
It's an attempt to get the discussion moving. And I submit that the Sola part causes our Roman Catholic friends to stall on that point.
Quote:
while the Protestants are heretical and offensive to Christ
Realitybites said:Quote:
while the Protestants are heretical and offensive to Christ
As an Orthodox Christian, it is difficult to speak of "Protestants" as a group because there is such a wide variation in what the different denominations believe.
This is why we refer to Protestants as heterodox, not heretical.
While this Protestant reformation undoubtedly began with good intentions it very quickly became a process of continual innovation. Under that label there are groups that are much closer to the faith once delivered to the Saints such as confessional Lutherans and others such as oneness and prosperity preaching Pentecostals, liberal Methodists, etc who are inhabiting a space in a galaxy far, far away.
I do not believe that confessional Lutherans are offensive to Christ. I cannot say the same about the other two groups.
Oldbear83 said:
You may recall I noted it's important to look at the whole chapter to understand a passage. Context is important.
Oldbear83 said:
"You do know you are making a false case there. It's very false to pretend Protestants are as you depicted, and false witness is still a sin, even when a Roman Catholic does it.
- Believer's baptism vs. infant baptism
- Baptismal regeneration
- Real presence vs. memorial of the Lord's Supper
- Predestination vs. free will
- Church governance bishops vs. board of elders vs. congregational autonomy"
Aliceinbubbleland said:
So what happens to all the Asians, Indians, Arabs, Jews, Americans and European non believers?
Oldbear83 said:
I believe every word said by our Lord Jesus Christ,
Claims from Paul, various Popes and Ministers, and our friend Frodo, not without corroborating it with what Christ said.
Except for the fact that Jesus put Peter in charge in Matthew 16, re-affirmed it at the Last Supper in Luke 22:31-32, and once more on the shore of the Sea of Galilee in John 21:15-17.BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
nothing you're arguing is proving Roman bishop supremacy over the church;
there is NOTHING in Scripture that describes anything close to there being a single, human ruler over the church; it's nowhere in Acts, and in fact if anything it was James who ruled over the council of Jerusalem; Paul makes NO mention of that office anywhere in all of his letters; even Peter doesn't even address himself as such - rather he refers to himself as a "fellow elder"; there is NO POPE anywhere in Jesus' letters to the seven churches of Revelation. It really should end here.
Clement wrote to correct behaviors and actions in the Corinth that was led by a group of elders (presbyters). They had their leaders, yet Clement wrote to correct their behaviors and actions.BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
historians agree that the church in Rome was not ruled by a single bishop until the middle of the second century, but rather it was ruled by a council of elders or presbyters;
Ignatius of Antioch doesn't even mention a bishop of Rome;
Clement himself doesn't even claim to write as bishop, let alone as the supreme ruler over the church;
Ignatius, like Clement, also wrote letters to other churches and was listened to;
This is another strawman argument. Paul was never the bishop of Rome.BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
if your letters being listened to made you head of the church, then the apostle Paul by far has that distinction, having started nine churches and possibly more; and Paul's letters, unlike Clement's, ARE scripture. So why doesn't this make Paul the head of the church?
Even though the early Christian community in Rome was comprised of various house churches, the Church still recognized the importance of have a central figure to maintain doctrinal integrity and unity among these varied groups.BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
The Shepherd of Hermas even writes of "presbyters (plural) who preside over the church";
Constantinople I was called for and only attended by Eastern bishops to resolve Eastern problems.BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
NONE of the ecumenical church councils were convoked by the bishop of Rome, they were all convoked by the Roman Emperor, and the pope wasn't even allowed to preside over all of them;
In one ecumenical council, the pope wasn't even invited;
the ecumenical councils gave the bishops of Constantinople and Antioch equal authority over their regions as the bishop of Rome had over his. The ecumenical councils did NOT see the Roman bishop as having any kind of supremacy over the entire church;
Eamon Duffy is NO authority on the Church. Why should we trust someone who wrote 1800 years after Irenaeus gave us a list in AD 180? It would be silly to reject actual history in favor of an opinion written almost 2 millennia later.BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
Eamon Duffy, Emeritus Professor of Christian History at Cambridge University and former member of the Pontifical Historical Commission, who wrote on the history of the popes: "Clement made no claim to write as bishop. His letter was sent in the name of the whole Roman community, he never identifies himself or writes in his own person..... The letter itself makes no distinction between presbyters and bishops, about which it always speaks in the plural, suggesting that at Corinth as at Rome, the church at this time was organized under a group of bishops or presbyters, rather than a single ruling bishop. A generation later, this was still so in Rome." (Saints and Sinners: A History of the Popes, 3rd edition. (New Haven CT: Yale University Press, 2006), 10.
Interesting, a few months ago, you (incorrectly) claimed that the Catholic Church didn't start until after Constantine "made it the official religion" of Rome. I corrected you, stating that it was Theodosius in AD 380, and you then doubled-down with 4th century establishment.BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
Also Eamon Duffy: "To begin with, indeed, there was no "pope", no bishop as such, for the church in Rome was slow to develop the office of chief presbyter, or bishop. By the end of the first century the loose patter of Christian authority of the first generation of believers was giving way in many places to the more organised rule of a single bishop for each city, supported by a college of elders..... There is no sure way to settle on the date by which the office of ruling had emerged in Rome, and so to name the first Pope, but the process was certainly complete by the time of Anicetus in the mid-150s."
Another strawman (again). The Bible is clear about Peter's leadership role. To deny this is to argue with the Bible.BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
It's clear to any rational, honest, and intelligent person that the Roman Catholic's church claim regarding the papacy and its primacy over the whole Christian church simply does not line up with Scripture or church history. Your admission that the papacy "grew like a mustard seed" is essentially an admission that the office and authority of the pope as it was declared at Vatican I was purely the result of accretion over time, and thus did NOT originate from the apostles or the early church, and therefore is NOT from God.
I'm not running away from your question. I'll explain my answer so that you can better understand it …BusyTarpDuster2017 said:
Wait, hold on there, don't run away from my question.
Explain exactly how believing in those concepts you mentioned (end of public revelation, accepting Mark and Hebrews) means that sola scriptura is false.
Show us that you're even capable of having this discussion. Or at least show us some honesty and admit that you're wrong.