Sam Lowry said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:Sam Lowry said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:Sam Lowry said:BusyTarpDuster2017 said:Sam Lowry said:Mothra said:Sam Lowry said:Mothra said:Sam Lowry said:Mothra said:Sam Lowry said:Mothra said:Sam Lowry said:
So you don't do any interpretation at all? Don't have any biases? You just read it and know exactly what God meant?
Of course some verses require interpretation, while others are clearly stated and easily understandable for even the layperson.
We know theologians regularly disagree regarding certain passages. Even some of the early "Church Fathers," as you called them, disagreed with some of Tertullian's stances. Just because it's an old interpretation doesn't necessarily mean it's the correct one.
But you don't need to interpret John 3:5. When Jesus says "water," there's clearly no way it could be a reference to water.
What part of some verses require interpretation and others don't didn't you understand? As busty pointed out, Jesus often times spoke figuratively. And he also at times spoke plainly.
Well, you said we didn't need the Church Fathers or anyone else to tell us what we can plainly read in the verse. So does it require interpretation or not?
No, that's not what I said. You need to revisit my response and you will see I wasn't referring to that verse but the words of Paul and Jesus in general. As I've said - the great weight of scripture is clear on salvations requirements, and Christ and Paul were clear on those points.
The great weight of Scripture as interpreted by you. Reading the verse in its context, with all the references to water baptism in John 1 and throughout the rest of John 3, could any reasonable person conclude that John 3:5 refers to the same thing? If so, why should we accept your view of the "nature of God" over that of learned Christians who lived and wrote closer in time to the Apostles?
We've been over this before. It's not my interpretation. The plain language of these verses is indisputable.Notice that none of these verses talk about baptism, or any other ministerial act, being necessary for salvation. Indeed, as I explained previously, anyone that truly knows and has a relationship with Christ knows he doesn't condemn a man who has repented and had a heart change, and filled with the Holy Spirit simply because the man never got dunked or sprinkled. The very idea runs contrary to the actions of Christ. He was not a task master who simply wanted man to check a box, but he was instead a loving God who desired a relationship with humanity.
- Ephesians 2:8-9: "For by grace you have been saved through faith, and that not of yourselves; it is the gift of God, not of works, lest anyone should boast".
- John 3:16-18: "For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son, that whoever believes in Him should not perish but have everlasting life".
- Acts 16:31 "Believe in the Lord Jesus, and you will be saved, you and your household."
- Romans 10:9: "if you confess with your mouth the Lord Jesus and believe in your heart that God has raised Him from the dead, you will be saved."
- Luke 7:50 And He(Jesus) said to the woman, "Your faith has saved you; go in peace."
- John 6:28-29 - Then they asked him, "What must we do to do the works God requires?" Jesus answered, "The work of God is this: to believe in the one he has sent."
- John 11:26: " Everyone who lives and believes in me will never die."
- Philippians 3:9 - And be found in him, not having mine own righteousness, which is of the law, but that which is through the faith of Christ, the righteousness which is of God by faith."
It's why the thief, who repented of his sins and believed in Christ, was in paradise, as opposed to Hades, or Purgatory.
Again, your interpretation. Most Christians throughout history have believed otherwise.
Even if that were correct, it's an appeal to the majority fallacy. Jesus did say that the road to destruction was wide, remember?
And it also brings up another instance of you contradicting your own "normative" view of salvation - if Jesus was talking about water baptism here, then clearly he's saying it is an absolute necessity, i.e. "definitive", not "normative".
As I've explained, whether baptism is a necessity and whether it's normative or absolute are different questions.
Appeal to the people isn't a fallacy when the belief of the people itself is at issue. The definition of true Christian belief and teaching is inseparable from the question, "What have Christians always believed and taught?"
If there's no infallible authority outside Scripture, my authority is just as good as yours.
You claimed that water baptism, Eucharist, etc are "normative" requirements for salvation. But Jesus' words according to your own interpretation clearly contradict that. Stop trying to dodge the issue. The question is why do you still believe in your "normative" view after it's been clearly shown to be contradictory to your own interpretation of Scripture? That is very odd.
The "belief of the people" wasn't the issue. Stop lying.
The question of "what Christians always believed and taught" has mutliple conflicting answers, therefore it is most certainly separable from the question of what is true and correct Christian teaching. Your argument here is just nonsensical.
Yes, both of our "authorities" are fallible. However, our arguments are not arising from our own authority - I'm arguing from the authority of the word of God, and you are arguing from that plus the addition of the word of men.
You are also arguing from the word of God with the addition of the word of men. The only difference is that in your case it's a much later addition. Same goes for Mothra.
Again, every argument we are making is from Scripture. We aren't making arguments for things that are completely absent in scripture like you do, such as Mary's perpetual virginity, her immaculate conception, her assumption, praying to saints, bowing down to and kissing their icons, etc. Those things are from the word of men, not the word of God.
What you are trying to do is argue that having a certain interpretation of Scripture that goes against the Roman Catholic interpretation is arguing from the word of men, but that's just a dishonest framing. Your whole argumention here is dishonest and you keep dodging important questions. Our interpretation is still coming solely from Scripture using logic, reason, history, and common sense, not the word of man-made tradition like many of your beliefs which are completely absent in Scripture and which contradict logic, reason, history, and common sense.
Your beliefs on baptism, communion, faith, works, and a whole host of other issues are not self-evidently scriptural. They depend on an interpretative tradition of some kind.
Sure they are. You've just been too brainwashed in Catholicism to see it. You purport to be a Christian, but don't even understand the nature of God. To you, he's a taskmaster that requires ministerial acts to earn salvation (until he doesn't of course - see the thief).