Imagine willfully not trying tohonor Mary as much as our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ

110,932 Views | 1817 Replies | Last: 56 min ago by Oldbear83
Fre3dombear
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Mothra said:

Fre3dombear said:

Mothra said:

Fre3dombear said:

Mothra said:

Fre3dombear said:

Mothra said:

Fre3dombear said:

Mothra said:

Fre3dombear said:

Mothra said:

Fre3dombear said:

Mothra said:

Fre3dombear said:

Mothra said:

Fre3dombear said:

Oldbear83 said:

Yup, you could be his twin brother, ironically from the opposing side on this issue.

For the record, I am very much flawed and have said so in the past. The people who mock me for such admission are, I submit, equally flawed but completely unwilling to admit so, as their pride will not allow it.

I have also quoted Scripture and tried to gently remind certain malcontents of better options, but again their pride demands they punish anyone who presents an unpleasant truth in their presence.





You appear to be one of the more humble Protestant Christians on this board. Takes courage around here to admit that and for that I commend you.

There are several here that know the ways of the judgement of God and have pronounced said judgement many times. Mothra sent me to hell yet again today.

So, this is what you said to me right before I "pronounced judgment" on you.

"Your post above will likely play before your eyes as you hopefully head to Purgatory and the Catholics will pray for your soul."

I say this with all due respect - you are a really stupid person. I mean, really stupid. Anyone with such an incredible blind spot for their own behavior, while accusing others of doing exactly what they did the post prior, is just a moron.


Take a breath big guy. You prove yet again this is quite literally the most uneducated Protestant Christian board I post on.

Youre spiking a football by quoting me saying youre going to Heaven while also YET AGAIN resorting to junior high name calling

Thank you kind sir for YET AGAIN proving my point. Lmao

My sincere apologies for suggesting youre going to Heaven and that Catholics will pray for you (again, if you didnt know, which we shoukd all assume you dont, means you are NOT in hell). So yeah, the exact opposite of what you did and without calling you a single name too. Raise it up a little or just step aside.

Lmao. Thanks for the full throated chuckle reading this as I head off to pray to God and say a few Hail Marys.

Enjoy Divine Mercy Sunday. Prayers sir. Take a breath or something might pop if you keep getting too emotional

That was quite entertaining . Lmao

You've told me repeatedly for years that I am unsaved, and my only hope is purgatory, and you now allege this is a post in which you said I am going to Heaven?

LOL. As I said, you're an absolute lying moron and full of crap.


Lmao. Going full trump. Woke up just like you retired. This called S Y A with the name calling and emotional meltdown.

Simma down Buttercup. It's going to be ok. You're clearly misinformed but thats been noted for some time in these threads.

Happy Divine Mercy Sunday. Jesus I trust in you!

Time to disengage. You seem Unstable.

All the best and prayers always. Purgatory is your only path to Heaven. And you will be prayed for by Catholics even when in purgatory until purified.

LOL. More projection.

I am curious, why do you believe I am now saved? What makes you think I am going to Heaven, after years of pronouncing otherwise?

Let's see if you can express yourself cogently and unemotionally.

Good luck!


Ive disengaged from the emotional instability. Moving on. Prayers for your journey as always. Too risky engaging with people screaming and name calling at people versus calmly discussing their opinion of their interpretation versus 2,000 years of history.


Translation: I know what I just said is utterly false bull **** so instead of trying to defend my lie, I'll tuck tail and run.

I get it. If I lied with the impunity that you do, I'd probably tuck tail and run as well.


Trying to paper over your epic childish name calling no defense meltdown still i see. Will not engage with loose cannons capable of such.

Just own it big guy. The more wrong you are the more you emote. Same as always.

More obfuscation to distract from the fact what you said was utter bull ****, and you are unable to defend it.

If you get brave enough to explain why you now, suddenly believe I am destined for Heaven instead of Hades, let me know.


Yoooooooo internet keyboard warrior dude. Now that I've permitted a cooling off period I guess Ive mustered up some bravery lol. Why yall always do that silliness and abandon defense of your faith and ideals is eternally entertaining.

1) never suddenly changed anything

2) why are you seeking my opinion or approval of your eternal fate?

3) i would never judge anyone's eternal residence. No clue where you are heading. I hope to see everyone in Heaven some day. It's why I do what I do and pop into this confused den from time to time. That is up to God where you will head based on what you in your soul force Him to do.

You either go to hell, straight to Heaven if sinless or if God has deemed your temporal punishment as penance for your sins, or to Purgatory

4) in fact Ive argued here even someone who commits suicide or Hitler etc could be in Heaven. Fortunately for them as for you, my opinion on that matters not, but even one drop of Christ's blood is enough to save eternally every soul that has lived

Jesus' mercy is infinite as is his justice. We prefer his mercy over his justice

Go with God. Be well. Keep the faith

Shared With extreme bravery…

Btw do you know the differences of Hades, hell, limbo etc? The words in the creed of near 2,000 years and what words chosen and why that we say repeatedly?

Glad to hear I am not condemned to eternal damnation, as you suggested before.

So only people who are "sinless" go to Heaven? That's interesting. What sinless people do you know?



"Straight to Heaven" if sinless. Otherwise Purgatory and then to Heaven

Mary Mother of God



So there is such a thing as a sinless human? Paul and even Christ himself would be very surprised by that. And for those who aren't sinless, they'll go to this made up place called purgatory? A place never mentioned in scripture?

Can you tell me of an example of a sinless human in the Bible, other than Christ that is.

"For all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God.
" I guess that was a lie.


Mary Mother of God

To square your belief in this new religion you speak of you'd have to believe things for example like Jesus went to Heaven on Good Friday. Support that claim (without irrational childish name calling and hate
- just defense of your position)


So the way the verse was meant to read was, "All have sinned and fall short of the glory of God except Mary"? Interesting. Can you point to the verses in scripture that support that position? Or is this your classic circular reasoning - well that's wha the Catholic Church has always taught so it's of course right? Lol.

As for where Christ went immediately after death, scripture is silent on this point, as I've repeatedly explained. Not sure if it's a reading compression problem or you being purposely obtuse. You just don't like the possibility he ended up in heaven because the thief on the cross destroys your little narrative:

As for name calling, the only poster doing that right now is yourself. So let's stop projecting and have a discussion if you can.


I am name calling? Where? Let's link in your maniacal rant from 2 weeks ago. Thats name calling rude and sinful. Be proud enough of the thkughts you produced to own it.
Doc Holliday
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BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

I keep hearing this claim that Scripture alone can give you a perfect definition of the Holy Trinity as defined by Nicea and Chalcedon which most Protestants affirm.

Thats absolute nonsense.

Aries made his case to deny the Trinity with texts like Proverbs 8:22 ("the Lord created me at the beginning of his work"), John 14:28 ("the Father is greater than I"), Colossians 1:15 ("firstborn of all creation"), and Mark 13:32 (the Son not knowing the day or hour).

The Trinity was not settled by a better proof text. It was settled by a council with binding authority. Which is the problem. You can't affirm Nicaea and Chalcedon as settled Christianity, but then reject other conclusions from that same tradition and that same authority. You cannot selectively invoke conciliar authority when it suits you and discard it when it doesn't or you have no way to bind everyone.

Nobody actually relies on scripture alone either. Yall need to cut out that nonsense. Total bs. When a Reformed Protestant settles a disputed question by appealing to Calvin, or a Lutheran defers to Luther's exegesis, or a Baptist cites the Second London Confession, they are functionally doing exactly what they accuse Catholics and Orthodox of doing: grounding theological conclusions in the authority of post biblical teachers and confessional documents rather than scripture alone.

You realize that you're arguing against solO scriptura, and not solA scriptura?

And the concept of the Trinity is fully derivable from Scripture, as I had already demonstrated to you. Besides, if it wasn't, how could have the councils come to that conclusion? Did they create a concept out of whole cloth?

Here's a question for you, as well as for everyone else: is the belief in the Trinity necessary for one's salvation?
If the Trinity were simply derivable from Scripture by careful reading, Arius would not have been a serious theological threat requiring an ecumenical council to resolve.

Councils have the authority of the sacrament of apostolic succession. That gives them guidance by the Holy Spirit.

Mainline prots wouldn't be gay and secular. People interpret text multiple ways. You interpret debt and slavery language in a 21st century lens vs me who took time to understand how Jews viewed what those concepts meant in their time.

Yes, Trinitarian faith is necessary.

Have you ever questioned your denomination? Is there anything you think your church is doing wrong?
Do you know that there are numerous Protestant pastors that have become Orthodox?
historian
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Most heresies I'm aware of are taken from one or two verses taken out of context. It's easy for someone who doesn't know the scriptures to fall for such stuff. It's also fairly simple for evil people with devious agendas to find apparent contradictions in the Bible, relying on the ignorance than many people have of basic biblical truths.

It's incumbent on all of us to immerse ourselves in the scriptures daily so that we can discern its meaning, be able to answer people's questions (whether honest or devious), and allow God to speak to each of us as individuals. God knows our needs better than any of us do and He can use scriptures to teach us what we need to know for specific needs and issues in our lives.
Mothra
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Fre3dombear said:

Mothra said:

Fre3dombear said:

Mothra said:

Fre3dombear said:

Mothra said:

Fre3dombear said:

Mothra said:

Fre3dombear said:

Mothra said:

Fre3dombear said:

Mothra said:

Fre3dombear said:

Mothra said:

Fre3dombear said:

Mothra said:

Fre3dombear said:

Oldbear83 said:

Yup, you could be his twin brother, ironically from the opposing side on this issue.

For the record, I am very much flawed and have said so in the past. The people who mock me for such admission are, I submit, equally flawed but completely unwilling to admit so, as their pride will not allow it.

I have also quoted Scripture and tried to gently remind certain malcontents of better options, but again their pride demands they punish anyone who presents an unpleasant truth in their presence.





You appear to be one of the more humble Protestant Christians on this board. Takes courage around here to admit that and for that I commend you.

There are several here that know the ways of the judgement of God and have pronounced said judgement many times. Mothra sent me to hell yet again today.

So, this is what you said to me right before I "pronounced judgment" on you.

"Your post above will likely play before your eyes as you hopefully head to Purgatory and the Catholics will pray for your soul."

I say this with all due respect - you are a really stupid person. I mean, really stupid. Anyone with such an incredible blind spot for their own behavior, while accusing others of doing exactly what they did the post prior, is just a moron.


Take a breath big guy. You prove yet again this is quite literally the most uneducated Protestant Christian board I post on.

Youre spiking a football by quoting me saying youre going to Heaven while also YET AGAIN resorting to junior high name calling

Thank you kind sir for YET AGAIN proving my point. Lmao

My sincere apologies for suggesting youre going to Heaven and that Catholics will pray for you (again, if you didnt know, which we shoukd all assume you dont, means you are NOT in hell). So yeah, the exact opposite of what you did and without calling you a single name too. Raise it up a little or just step aside.

Lmao. Thanks for the full throated chuckle reading this as I head off to pray to God and say a few Hail Marys.

Enjoy Divine Mercy Sunday. Prayers sir. Take a breath or something might pop if you keep getting too emotional

That was quite entertaining . Lmao

You've told me repeatedly for years that I am unsaved, and my only hope is purgatory, and you now allege this is a post in which you said I am going to Heaven?

LOL. As I said, you're an absolute lying moron and full of crap.


Lmao. Going full trump. Woke up just like you retired. This called S Y A with the name calling and emotional meltdown.

Simma down Buttercup. It's going to be ok. You're clearly misinformed but thats been noted for some time in these threads.

Happy Divine Mercy Sunday. Jesus I trust in you!

Time to disengage. You seem Unstable.

All the best and prayers always. Purgatory is your only path to Heaven. And you will be prayed for by Catholics even when in purgatory until purified.

LOL. More projection.

I am curious, why do you believe I am now saved? What makes you think I am going to Heaven, after years of pronouncing otherwise?

Let's see if you can express yourself cogently and unemotionally.

Good luck!


Ive disengaged from the emotional instability. Moving on. Prayers for your journey as always. Too risky engaging with people screaming and name calling at people versus calmly discussing their opinion of their interpretation versus 2,000 years of history.


Translation: I know what I just said is utterly false bull **** so instead of trying to defend my lie, I'll tuck tail and run.

I get it. If I lied with the impunity that you do, I'd probably tuck tail and run as well.


Trying to paper over your epic childish name calling no defense meltdown still i see. Will not engage with loose cannons capable of such.

Just own it big guy. The more wrong you are the more you emote. Same as always.

More obfuscation to distract from the fact what you said was utter bull ****, and you are unable to defend it.

If you get brave enough to explain why you now, suddenly believe I am destined for Heaven instead of Hades, let me know.


Yoooooooo internet keyboard warrior dude. Now that I've permitted a cooling off period I guess Ive mustered up some bravery lol. Why yall always do that silliness and abandon defense of your faith and ideals is eternally entertaining.

1) never suddenly changed anything

2) why are you seeking my opinion or approval of your eternal fate?

3) i would never judge anyone's eternal residence. No clue where you are heading. I hope to see everyone in Heaven some day. It's why I do what I do and pop into this confused den from time to time. That is up to God where you will head based on what you in your soul force Him to do.

You either go to hell, straight to Heaven if sinless or if God has deemed your temporal punishment as penance for your sins, or to Purgatory

4) in fact Ive argued here even someone who commits suicide or Hitler etc could be in Heaven. Fortunately for them as for you, my opinion on that matters not, but even one drop of Christ's blood is enough to save eternally every soul that has lived

Jesus' mercy is infinite as is his justice. We prefer his mercy over his justice

Go with God. Be well. Keep the faith

Shared With extreme bravery…

Btw do you know the differences of Hades, hell, limbo etc? The words in the creed of near 2,000 years and what words chosen and why that we say repeatedly?

Glad to hear I am not condemned to eternal damnation, as you suggested before.

So only people who are "sinless" go to Heaven? That's interesting. What sinless people do you know?



"Straight to Heaven" if sinless. Otherwise Purgatory and then to Heaven

Mary Mother of God



So there is such a thing as a sinless human? Paul and even Christ himself would be very surprised by that. And for those who aren't sinless, they'll go to this made up place called purgatory? A place never mentioned in scripture?

Can you tell me of an example of a sinless human in the Bible, other than Christ that is.

"For all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God.
" I guess that was a lie.


Mary Mother of God

To square your belief in this new religion you speak of you'd have to believe things for example like Jesus went to Heaven on Good Friday. Support that claim (without irrational childish name calling and hate
- just defense of your position)


So the way the verse was meant to read was, "All have sinned and fall short of the glory of God except Mary"? Interesting. Can you point to the verses in scripture that support that position? Or is this your classic circular reasoning - well that's wha the Catholic Church has always taught so it's of course right? Lol.

As for where Christ went immediately after death, scripture is silent on this point, as I've repeatedly explained. Not sure if it's a reading compression problem or you being purposely obtuse. You just don't like the possibility he ended up in heaven because the thief on the cross destroys your little narrative:

As for name calling, the only poster doing that right now is yourself. So let's stop projecting and have a discussion if you can.


I am name calling? Where? Let's link in your maniacal rant from 2 weeks ago. Thats name calling rude and sinful. Be proud enough of the thkughts you produced to own it.

So, this is what you would call projection, and you do it a lot - accuse others of that which you regularly engage in. You've called me numerous names and gone on numerous rants over the years, and now you act all sensitive when someone does the same thing to you. It also allows you to avoid answering questions.

If you want a dialogue, then stop getting so butthurt at getting a taste of your own medicine, and let's try to have a discussion.

Do you have an answer for any of the above? Any retort? I get it if you are unable to provide a substantive response. Just say so.
BusyTarpDuster2017
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Doc Holliday said:

BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

I keep hearing this claim that Scripture alone can give you a perfect definition of the Holy Trinity as defined by Nicea and Chalcedon which most Protestants affirm.

Thats absolute nonsense.

Aries made his case to deny the Trinity with texts like Proverbs 8:22 ("the Lord created me at the beginning of his work"), John 14:28 ("the Father is greater than I"), Colossians 1:15 ("firstborn of all creation"), and Mark 13:32 (the Son not knowing the day or hour).

The Trinity was not settled by a better proof text. It was settled by a council with binding authority. Which is the problem. You can't affirm Nicaea and Chalcedon as settled Christianity, but then reject other conclusions from that same tradition and that same authority. You cannot selectively invoke conciliar authority when it suits you and discard it when it doesn't or you have no way to bind everyone.

Nobody actually relies on scripture alone either. Yall need to cut out that nonsense. Total bs. When a Reformed Protestant settles a disputed question by appealing to Calvin, or a Lutheran defers to Luther's exegesis, or a Baptist cites the Second London Confession, they are functionally doing exactly what they accuse Catholics and Orthodox of doing: grounding theological conclusions in the authority of post biblical teachers and confessional documents rather than scripture alone.

You realize that you're arguing against solO scriptura, and not solA scriptura?

And the concept of the Trinity is fully derivable from Scripture, as I had already demonstrated to you. Besides, if it wasn't, how could have the councils come to that conclusion? Did they create a concept out of whole cloth?

Here's a question for you, as well as for everyone else: is the belief in the Trinity necessary for one's salvation?

If the Trinity were simply derivable from Scripture by careful reading, Arius would not have been a serious theological threat requiring an ecumenical council to resolve.

Councils have the authority of the sacrament of apostolic succession. That gives them guidance by the Holy Spirit.

Mainline prots wouldn't be gay and secular. People interpret text multiple ways. You interpret debt and slavery language in a 21st century lens vs me who took time to understand how Jews viewed what those concepts meant in their time.

Yes, Trinitarian faith is necessary.

Have you ever questioned your denomination? Is there anything you think your church is doing wrong?
Do you know that there are numerous Protestant pastors that have become Orthodox?

- so, you agree that you were arguing against solO scriptura, and not solA scriptura?

- I never said the Trinity was "simply" derivable. That's you adding words so you can validate your argument. It takes very careful reading and long, diligent study to derive the Trinity from Scripture. Therefore, it is not surprising that Christians, even true, saved Christians, would not be able to draw it from a simple reading. Arianism, on the other hand, is completely different. It says that Jesus is a created being, and therefore not God. However, Scripture CLEARLY indicates that Jesus is God. And therefore, no church council is needed to know that Arianism is false.

- So, you believe that a belief in the Trinity is necessary for salvation? You believe that if someone hears the gospel and believes and trusts in Jesus for their salvation, and they believe Jesus is God.... but they don't believe the Holy Spirit is God, but rather a kind of subordinate entity "sent" by God - then that means they are not saved? Does salvation depend on having a correct theology, especially one that is not explicitly taught in Scripture? And when did Jesus or his apostles every teach that?

- Look at what you're saying here: you're saying that the Trinity, which is 1) NOT derivable from Scripture but can only be known by the utterances of a council of men, and 2) is necessary for salvation - which is ultimately saying that the word of God is insufficient for our salvation!! Is this truly what you believe?

- I belong to no denomination. I'm simply a bible-believing Christian. Yes, there are things I question about certain teachings coming from various Protestant churches, and it's based on what Scripture says (the word of God), not based on what a council of men declared (the Tradition of men). I don't know how many Protestant pastors became Orthodox, but I'm sure it happens the other way around too. I will say that if a Protestant pastor becomes Roman Catholic or Orthodox, then something is really, really wrong with their faith if they are turning to a church that teaches a different gospel than the Bible and actively promotes and even requires the practice and belief in rank heresy and idolatry. Again, if they are okay with bowing and praying to images and saying "Mary is the salvation of my soul", then it's quite possible that they never really were a true Christian.
Fre3dombear
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historian said:

Most heresies I'm aware of are taken from one or two verses taken out of context. It's easy for someone who doesn't know the scriptures to fall for such stuff. It's also fairly simple for evil people with devious agendas to find apparent contradictions in the Bible, relying on the ignorance than many people have of basic biblical truths.

It's incumbent on all of us to immerse ourselves in the scriptures daily so that we can discern its meaning, be able to answer people's questions (whether honest or devious), and allow God to speak to each of us as individuals. God knows our needs better than any of us do and He can use scriptures to teach us what we need to know for specific needs and issues in our lives.


It's so much easier than that. One doesnt have to be their own pope. In fact were told not to be and are given a resource to Avoid that (which leads to Obvious confusion and misinterpretation) directly in scripture.
Fre3dombear
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Mothra said:

Fre3dombear said:

Mothra said:

Fre3dombear said:

Mothra said:

Fre3dombear said:

Mothra said:

Fre3dombear said:

Mothra said:

Fre3dombear said:

Mothra said:

Fre3dombear said:

Mothra said:

Fre3dombear said:

Mothra said:

Fre3dombear said:

Mothra said:

Fre3dombear said:

Oldbear83 said:

Yup, you could be his twin brother, ironically from the opposing side on this issue.

For the record, I am very much flawed and have said so in the past. The people who mock me for such admission are, I submit, equally flawed but completely unwilling to admit so, as their pride will not allow it.

I have also quoted Scripture and tried to gently remind certain malcontents of better options, but again their pride demands they punish anyone who presents an unpleasant truth in their presence.





You appear to be one of the more humble Protestant Christians on this board. Takes courage around here to admit that and for that I commend you.

There are several here that know the ways of the judgement of God and have pronounced said judgement many times. Mothra sent me to hell yet again today.

So, this is what you said to me right before I "pronounced judgment" on you.

"Your post above will likely play before your eyes as you hopefully head to Purgatory and the Catholics will pray for your soul."

I say this with all due respect - you are a really stupid person. I mean, really stupid. Anyone with such an incredible blind spot for their own behavior, while accusing others of doing exactly what they did the post prior, is just a moron.


Take a breath big guy. You prove yet again this is quite literally the most uneducated Protestant Christian board I post on.

Youre spiking a football by quoting me saying youre going to Heaven while also YET AGAIN resorting to junior high name calling

Thank you kind sir for YET AGAIN proving my point. Lmao

My sincere apologies for suggesting youre going to Heaven and that Catholics will pray for you (again, if you didnt know, which we shoukd all assume you dont, means you are NOT in hell). So yeah, the exact opposite of what you did and without calling you a single name too. Raise it up a little or just step aside.

Lmao. Thanks for the full throated chuckle reading this as I head off to pray to God and say a few Hail Marys.

Enjoy Divine Mercy Sunday. Prayers sir. Take a breath or something might pop if you keep getting too emotional

That was quite entertaining . Lmao

You've told me repeatedly for years that I am unsaved, and my only hope is purgatory, and you now allege this is a post in which you said I am going to Heaven?

LOL. As I said, you're an absolute lying moron and full of crap.


Lmao. Going full trump. Woke up just like you retired. This called S Y A with the name calling and emotional meltdown.

Simma down Buttercup. It's going to be ok. You're clearly misinformed but thats been noted for some time in these threads.

Happy Divine Mercy Sunday. Jesus I trust in you!

Time to disengage. You seem Unstable.

All the best and prayers always. Purgatory is your only path to Heaven. And you will be prayed for by Catholics even when in purgatory until purified.

LOL. More projection.

I am curious, why do you believe I am now saved? What makes you think I am going to Heaven, after years of pronouncing otherwise?

Let's see if you can express yourself cogently and unemotionally.

Good luck!


Ive disengaged from the emotional instability. Moving on. Prayers for your journey as always. Too risky engaging with people screaming and name calling at people versus calmly discussing their opinion of their interpretation versus 2,000 years of history.


Translation: I know what I just said is utterly false bull **** so instead of trying to defend my lie, I'll tuck tail and run.

I get it. If I lied with the impunity that you do, I'd probably tuck tail and run as well.


Trying to paper over your epic childish name calling no defense meltdown still i see. Will not engage with loose cannons capable of such.

Just own it big guy. The more wrong you are the more you emote. Same as always.

More obfuscation to distract from the fact what you said was utter bull ****, and you are unable to defend it.

If you get brave enough to explain why you now, suddenly believe I am destined for Heaven instead of Hades, let me know.


Yoooooooo internet keyboard warrior dude. Now that I've permitted a cooling off period I guess Ive mustered up some bravery lol. Why yall always do that silliness and abandon defense of your faith and ideals is eternally entertaining.

1) never suddenly changed anything

2) why are you seeking my opinion or approval of your eternal fate?

3) i would never judge anyone's eternal residence. No clue where you are heading. I hope to see everyone in Heaven some day. It's why I do what I do and pop into this confused den from time to time. That is up to God where you will head based on what you in your soul force Him to do.

You either go to hell, straight to Heaven if sinless or if God has deemed your temporal punishment as penance for your sins, or to Purgatory

4) in fact Ive argued here even someone who commits suicide or Hitler etc could be in Heaven. Fortunately for them as for you, my opinion on that matters not, but even one drop of Christ's blood is enough to save eternally every soul that has lived

Jesus' mercy is infinite as is his justice. We prefer his mercy over his justice

Go with God. Be well. Keep the faith

Shared With extreme bravery…

Btw do you know the differences of Hades, hell, limbo etc? The words in the creed of near 2,000 years and what words chosen and why that we say repeatedly?

Glad to hear I am not condemned to eternal damnation, as you suggested before.

So only people who are "sinless" go to Heaven? That's interesting. What sinless people do you know?



"Straight to Heaven" if sinless. Otherwise Purgatory and then to Heaven

Mary Mother of God



So there is such a thing as a sinless human? Paul and even Christ himself would be very surprised by that. And for those who aren't sinless, they'll go to this made up place called purgatory? A place never mentioned in scripture?

Can you tell me of an example of a sinless human in the Bible, other than Christ that is.

"For all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God.
" I guess that was a lie.


Mary Mother of God

To square your belief in this new religion you speak of you'd have to believe things for example like Jesus went to Heaven on Good Friday. Support that claim (without irrational childish name calling and hate
- just defense of your position)


So the way the verse was meant to read was, "All have sinned and fall short of the glory of God except Mary"? Interesting. Can you point to the verses in scripture that support that position? Or is this your classic circular reasoning - well that's wha the Catholic Church has always taught so it's of course right? Lol.

As for where Christ went immediately after death, scripture is silent on this point, as I've repeatedly explained. Not sure if it's a reading compression problem or you being purposely obtuse. You just don't like the possibility he ended up in heaven because the thief on the cross destroys your little narrative:

As for name calling, the only poster doing that right now is yourself. So let's stop projecting and have a discussion if you can.


I am name calling? Where? Let's link in your maniacal rant from 2 weeks ago. Thats name calling rude and sinful. Be proud enough of the thkughts you produced to own it.

So, this is what you would call projection, and you do it a lot - accuse others of that which you regularly engage in. You've called me numerous names and gone on numerous rants over the years, and now you act all sensitive when someone does the same thing to you. It also allows you to avoid answering questions.

If you want a dialogue, then stop getting so butthurt at getting a taste of your own medicine, and let's try to have a discussion.

Do you have an answer for any of the above? Any retort? I get it if you are unable to provide a substantive response. Just say so.


Nobody here butt hurt in my posts. Ever. Not saying Im perfect. Ive never completely lost my **** at anyone in this board as it drives zero emotion feom me in that way. Feel free to post me calling you names and losing my ***** Happy to acknowledge them with context etc.

You on the other hand habe done that often. Ive long moved on from your melt down 2 weeks ago and suggest you do the same.

Go in peace and keep the faith! Learn and grown

The journey is long and hard and we all slip
Up on occasion.

Ive got thousands of posts of dialogue on this tiny board so no issues there.
Mothra
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Fre3dombear said:

Mothra said:

Fre3dombear said:

Mothra said:

Fre3dombear said:

Mothra said:

Fre3dombear said:

Mothra said:

Fre3dombear said:

Mothra said:

Fre3dombear said:

Mothra said:

Fre3dombear said:

Mothra said:

Fre3dombear said:

Mothra said:

Fre3dombear said:

Mothra said:

Fre3dombear said:

Oldbear83 said:

Yup, you could be his twin brother, ironically from the opposing side on this issue.

For the record, I am very much flawed and have said so in the past. The people who mock me for such admission are, I submit, equally flawed but completely unwilling to admit so, as their pride will not allow it.

I have also quoted Scripture and tried to gently remind certain malcontents of better options, but again their pride demands they punish anyone who presents an unpleasant truth in their presence.





You appear to be one of the more humble Protestant Christians on this board. Takes courage around here to admit that and for that I commend you.

There are several here that know the ways of the judgement of God and have pronounced said judgement many times. Mothra sent me to hell yet again today.

So, this is what you said to me right before I "pronounced judgment" on you.

"Your post above will likely play before your eyes as you hopefully head to Purgatory and the Catholics will pray for your soul."

I say this with all due respect - you are a really stupid person. I mean, really stupid. Anyone with such an incredible blind spot for their own behavior, while accusing others of doing exactly what they did the post prior, is just a moron.


Take a breath big guy. You prove yet again this is quite literally the most uneducated Protestant Christian board I post on.

Youre spiking a football by quoting me saying youre going to Heaven while also YET AGAIN resorting to junior high name calling

Thank you kind sir for YET AGAIN proving my point. Lmao

My sincere apologies for suggesting youre going to Heaven and that Catholics will pray for you (again, if you didnt know, which we shoukd all assume you dont, means you are NOT in hell). So yeah, the exact opposite of what you did and without calling you a single name too. Raise it up a little or just step aside.

Lmao. Thanks for the full throated chuckle reading this as I head off to pray to God and say a few Hail Marys.

Enjoy Divine Mercy Sunday. Prayers sir. Take a breath or something might pop if you keep getting too emotional

That was quite entertaining . Lmao

You've told me repeatedly for years that I am unsaved, and my only hope is purgatory, and you now allege this is a post in which you said I am going to Heaven?

LOL. As I said, you're an absolute lying moron and full of crap.


Lmao. Going full trump. Woke up just like you retired. This called S Y A with the name calling and emotional meltdown.

Simma down Buttercup. It's going to be ok. You're clearly misinformed but thats been noted for some time in these threads.

Happy Divine Mercy Sunday. Jesus I trust in you!

Time to disengage. You seem Unstable.

All the best and prayers always. Purgatory is your only path to Heaven. And you will be prayed for by Catholics even when in purgatory until purified.

LOL. More projection.

I am curious, why do you believe I am now saved? What makes you think I am going to Heaven, after years of pronouncing otherwise?

Let's see if you can express yourself cogently and unemotionally.

Good luck!


Ive disengaged from the emotional instability. Moving on. Prayers for your journey as always. Too risky engaging with people screaming and name calling at people versus calmly discussing their opinion of their interpretation versus 2,000 years of history.


Translation: I know what I just said is utterly false bull **** so instead of trying to defend my lie, I'll tuck tail and run.

I get it. If I lied with the impunity that you do, I'd probably tuck tail and run as well.


Trying to paper over your epic childish name calling no defense meltdown still i see. Will not engage with loose cannons capable of such.

Just own it big guy. The more wrong you are the more you emote. Same as always.

More obfuscation to distract from the fact what you said was utter bull ****, and you are unable to defend it.

If you get brave enough to explain why you now, suddenly believe I am destined for Heaven instead of Hades, let me know.


Yoooooooo internet keyboard warrior dude. Now that I've permitted a cooling off period I guess Ive mustered up some bravery lol. Why yall always do that silliness and abandon defense of your faith and ideals is eternally entertaining.

1) never suddenly changed anything

2) why are you seeking my opinion or approval of your eternal fate?

3) i would never judge anyone's eternal residence. No clue where you are heading. I hope to see everyone in Heaven some day. It's why I do what I do and pop into this confused den from time to time. That is up to God where you will head based on what you in your soul force Him to do.

You either go to hell, straight to Heaven if sinless or if God has deemed your temporal punishment as penance for your sins, or to Purgatory

4) in fact Ive argued here even someone who commits suicide or Hitler etc could be in Heaven. Fortunately for them as for you, my opinion on that matters not, but even one drop of Christ's blood is enough to save eternally every soul that has lived

Jesus' mercy is infinite as is his justice. We prefer his mercy over his justice

Go with God. Be well. Keep the faith

Shared With extreme bravery…

Btw do you know the differences of Hades, hell, limbo etc? The words in the creed of near 2,000 years and what words chosen and why that we say repeatedly?

Glad to hear I am not condemned to eternal damnation, as you suggested before.

So only people who are "sinless" go to Heaven? That's interesting. What sinless people do you know?



"Straight to Heaven" if sinless. Otherwise Purgatory and then to Heaven

Mary Mother of God



So there is such a thing as a sinless human? Paul and even Christ himself would be very surprised by that. And for those who aren't sinless, they'll go to this made up place called purgatory? A place never mentioned in scripture?

Can you tell me of an example of a sinless human in the Bible, other than Christ that is.

"For all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God.
" I guess that was a lie.


Mary Mother of God

To square your belief in this new religion you speak of you'd have to believe things for example like Jesus went to Heaven on Good Friday. Support that claim (without irrational childish name calling and hate
- just defense of your position)


So the way the verse was meant to read was, "All have sinned and fall short of the glory of God except Mary"? Interesting. Can you point to the verses in scripture that support that position? Or is this your classic circular reasoning - well that's wha the Catholic Church has always taught so it's of course right? Lol.

As for where Christ went immediately after death, scripture is silent on this point, as I've repeatedly explained. Not sure if it's a reading compression problem or you being purposely obtuse. You just don't like the possibility he ended up in heaven because the thief on the cross destroys your little narrative:

As for name calling, the only poster doing that right now is yourself. So let's stop projecting and have a discussion if you can.


I am name calling? Where? Let's link in your maniacal rant from 2 weeks ago. Thats name calling rude and sinful. Be proud enough of the thkughts you produced to own it.

So, this is what you would call projection, and you do it a lot - accuse others of that which you regularly engage in. You've called me numerous names and gone on numerous rants over the years, and now you act all sensitive when someone does the same thing to you. It also allows you to avoid answering questions.

If you want a dialogue, then stop getting so butthurt at getting a taste of your own medicine, and let's try to have a discussion.

Do you have an answer for any of the above? Any retort? I get it if you are unable to provide a substantive response. Just say so.


Nobody here butt hurt in my posts. Ever. Not saying Im perfect. Ive never completely lost my **** at anyone in this board as it drives zero emotion feom me in that way. Feel free to post me calling you names and losing my ***** Happy to acknowledge them with context etc.

You on the other hand habe done that often. Ive long moved on from your melt down 2 weeks ago and suggest you do the same.

Go in peace and keep the faith! Learn and grown

The journey is long and hard and we all slip
Up on occasion.

Ive got thousands of posts of dialogue on this tiny board so no issues there.


Sensitive Sue, time to drop it. We get it. You are really upset at my "meltdown" despite the fact that you meltdown on a regular basis. You're like freaking Chernobyl.

If you can't answer the question or or just too afraid to do so just let me know. I know how difficult it is for you to answer hard questions.
Doc Holliday
How long do you want to ignore this user?
BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

I keep hearing this claim that Scripture alone can give you a perfect definition of the Holy Trinity as defined by Nicea and Chalcedon which most Protestants affirm.

Thats absolute nonsense.

Aries made his case to deny the Trinity with texts like Proverbs 8:22 ("the Lord created me at the beginning of his work"), John 14:28 ("the Father is greater than I"), Colossians 1:15 ("firstborn of all creation"), and Mark 13:32 (the Son not knowing the day or hour).

The Trinity was not settled by a better proof text. It was settled by a council with binding authority. Which is the problem. You can't affirm Nicaea and Chalcedon as settled Christianity, but then reject other conclusions from that same tradition and that same authority. You cannot selectively invoke conciliar authority when it suits you and discard it when it doesn't or you have no way to bind everyone.

Nobody actually relies on scripture alone either. Yall need to cut out that nonsense. Total bs. When a Reformed Protestant settles a disputed question by appealing to Calvin, or a Lutheran defers to Luther's exegesis, or a Baptist cites the Second London Confession, they are functionally doing exactly what they accuse Catholics and Orthodox of doing: grounding theological conclusions in the authority of post biblical teachers and confessional documents rather than scripture alone.

You realize that you're arguing against solO scriptura, and not solA scriptura?

And the concept of the Trinity is fully derivable from Scripture, as I had already demonstrated to you. Besides, if it wasn't, how could have the councils come to that conclusion? Did they create a concept out of whole cloth?

Here's a question for you, as well as for everyone else: is the belief in the Trinity necessary for one's salvation?

If the Trinity were simply derivable from Scripture by careful reading, Arius would not have been a serious theological threat requiring an ecumenical council to resolve.

Councils have the authority of the sacrament of apostolic succession. That gives them guidance by the Holy Spirit.

Mainline prots wouldn't be gay and secular. People interpret text multiple ways. You interpret debt and slavery language in a 21st century lens vs me who took time to understand how Jews viewed what those concepts meant in their time.

Yes, Trinitarian faith is necessary.

Have you ever questioned your denomination? Is there anything you think your church is doing wrong?
Do you know that there are numerous Protestant pastors that have become Orthodox?

- so, you agree that you were arguing against solO scriptura, and not solA scriptura?

- I never said the Trinity was "simply" derivable. That's you adding words so you can validate your argument. It takes very careful reading and long, diligent study to derive the Trinity from Scripture. Therefore, it is not surprising that Christians, even true, saved Christians, would not be able to draw it from a simple reading. Arianism, on the other hand, is completely different. It says that Jesus is a created being, and therefore not God. However, Scripture CLEARLY indicates that Jesus is God. And therefore, no church council is needed to know that Arianism is false.

- So, you believe that a belief in the Trinity is necessary for salvation? You believe that if someone hears the gospel and believes and trusts in Jesus for their salvation, and they believe Jesus is God.... but they don't believe the Holy Spirit is God, but rather a kind of subordinate entity "sent" by God - then that means they are not saved? Does salvation depend on having a correct theology, especially one that is not explicitly taught in Scripture? And when did Jesus or his apostles every teach that?

- Look at what you're saying here: you're saying that the Trinity, which is 1) NOT derivable from Scripture but can only be known by the utterances of a council of men, and 2) is necessary for salvation - which is ultimately saying that the word of God is insufficient for our salvation!! Is this truly what you believe?

- I belong to no denomination. I'm simply a bible-believing Christian. Yes, there are things I question about certain teachings coming from various Protestant churches, and it's based on what Scripture says (the word of God), not based on what a council of men declared (the Tradition of men). I don't know how many Protestant pastors became Orthodox, but I'm sure it happens the other way around too. I will say that if a Protestant pastor becomes Roman Catholic or Orthodox, then something is really, really wrong with their faith if they are turning to a church that teaches a different gospel than the Bible and actively promotes and even requires the practice and belief in rank heresy and idolatry. Again, if they are okay with bowing and praying to images and saying "Mary is the salvation of my soul", then it's quite possible that they never really were a true Christian.

If you die and learn that Orthodoxy was the true visible church...are you going to be mad at God?

No you cannot derive the Nicean/Chalcedon understanding of the Holy Trinity from scripture alone. Impossible. The word homoousias (of the same substance), is the entire linchpin of Nicene Trinitarianism and appears nowhere in scripture. The Council of Nicaea took a non-biblical Greek philosophical term and made it the binding theological test of Orthodoxy. That non scriptural vocabulary binds all Christians sotereologically: who authorized it to do so? A COUNCIL.

Every major Christian confession in history, including your own, explicitly requires Trinitarian faith: the Westminster Confession, the London Baptist Confession, the Heidelberg Catechism, Belic Confession and every reformed document every written. Do you understand that the ' Jesus Only' position, held by Oneness Pentecostals is classified by every single reformed confession as heresy?.

Jehova's witnesses believe Jesus is a god, but not THE GOD. Are they saved?

Christology is important. Stop making the case that it isn't. You have no faith that Christ was capable of setting up a VISIBLE church. Your theology forces you to believe that the true church is invisible, that most of history people are left in the dark and only a few elect individuals can be saved. You also have no idea how CLOSE your theology is to medieval roman Catholicism. Your faith is derived from Latin assumptions. You wouldn't have PSA without nominalist medieval roman catholics already creating a PSA foundation that only ever appeared in history after the 1000s.

You claim you're trying to argue for sola scriptura, but not solo, while simultaneously claiming man made tradition is a secondary interpretative authority...then you claim Orthodox theology is off limits because its "Man made tradition". Your logic isn't consistent.
Mothra
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Doc Holliday said:

BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

I keep hearing this claim that Scripture alone can give you a perfect definition of the Holy Trinity as defined by Nicea and Chalcedon which most Protestants affirm.

Thats absolute nonsense.

Aries made his case to deny the Trinity with texts like Proverbs 8:22 ("the Lord created me at the beginning of his work"), John 14:28 ("the Father is greater than I"), Colossians 1:15 ("firstborn of all creation"), and Mark 13:32 (the Son not knowing the day or hour).

The Trinity was not settled by a better proof text. It was settled by a council with binding authority. Which is the problem. You can't affirm Nicaea and Chalcedon as settled Christianity, but then reject other conclusions from that same tradition and that same authority. You cannot selectively invoke conciliar authority when it suits you and discard it when it doesn't or you have no way to bind everyone.

Nobody actually relies on scripture alone either. Yall need to cut out that nonsense. Total bs. When a Reformed Protestant settles a disputed question by appealing to Calvin, or a Lutheran defers to Luther's exegesis, or a Baptist cites the Second London Confession, they are functionally doing exactly what they accuse Catholics and Orthodox of doing: grounding theological conclusions in the authority of post biblical teachers and confessional documents rather than scripture alone.

You realize that you're arguing against solO scriptura, and not solA scriptura?

And the concept of the Trinity is fully derivable from Scripture, as I had already demonstrated to you. Besides, if it wasn't, how could have the councils come to that conclusion? Did they create a concept out of whole cloth?

Here's a question for you, as well as for everyone else: is the belief in the Trinity necessary for one's salvation?

If the Trinity were simply derivable from Scripture by careful reading, Arius would not have been a serious theological threat requiring an ecumenical council to resolve.

Councils have the authority of the sacrament of apostolic succession. That gives them guidance by the Holy Spirit.

Mainline prots wouldn't be gay and secular. People interpret text multiple ways. You interpret debt and slavery language in a 21st century lens vs me who took time to understand how Jews viewed what those concepts meant in their time.

Yes, Trinitarian faith is necessary.

Have you ever questioned your denomination? Is there anything you think your church is doing wrong?
Do you know that there are numerous Protestant pastors that have become Orthodox?

- so, you agree that you were arguing against solO scriptura, and not solA scriptura?

- I never said the Trinity was "simply" derivable. That's you adding words so you can validate your argument. It takes very careful reading and long, diligent study to derive the Trinity from Scripture. Therefore, it is not surprising that Christians, even true, saved Christians, would not be able to draw it from a simple reading. Arianism, on the other hand, is completely different. It says that Jesus is a created being, and therefore not God. However, Scripture CLEARLY indicates that Jesus is God. And therefore, no church council is needed to know that Arianism is false.

- So, you believe that a belief in the Trinity is necessary for salvation? You believe that if someone hears the gospel and believes and trusts in Jesus for their salvation, and they believe Jesus is God.... but they don't believe the Holy Spirit is God, but rather a kind of subordinate entity "sent" by God - then that means they are not saved? Does salvation depend on having a correct theology, especially one that is not explicitly taught in Scripture? And when did Jesus or his apostles every teach that?

- Look at what you're saying here: you're saying that the Trinity, which is 1) NOT derivable from Scripture but can only be known by the utterances of a council of men, and 2) is necessary for salvation - which is ultimately saying that the word of God is insufficient for our salvation!! Is this truly what you believe?

- I belong to no denomination. I'm simply a bible-believing Christian. Yes, there are things I question about certain teachings coming from various Protestant churches, and it's based on what Scripture says (the word of God), not based on what a council of men declared (the Tradition of men). I don't know how many Protestant pastors became Orthodox, but I'm sure it happens the other way around too. I will say that if a Protestant pastor becomes Roman Catholic or Orthodox, then something is really, really wrong with their faith if they are turning to a church that teaches a different gospel than the Bible and actively promotes and even requires the practice and belief in rank heresy and idolatry. Again, if they are okay with bowing and praying to images and saying "Mary is the salvation of my soul", then it's quite possible that they never really were a true Christian.

If you die and learn that Orthodoxy was the true visible church...are you going to be mad at God?

No you cannot derive the Nicean/Chalcedon understanding of the Holy Trinity from scripture alone. Impossible. The word homoousias (of the same substance), is the entire linchpin of Nicene Trinitarianism and appears nowhere in scripture. The Council of Nicaea took a non-biblical Greek philosophical term and made it the binding theological test of Orthodoxy. That non scriptural vocabulary binds all Christians sotereologically: who authorized it to do so? A COUNCIL.

Every major Christian confession in history, including your own, explicitly requires Trinitarian faith: the Westminster Confession, the London Baptist Confession, the Heidelberg Catechism, Belic Confession and every reformed document every written. Do you understand that the ' Jesus Only' position, held by Oneness Pentecostals is classified by every single reformed confession as heresy?.

Jehova's witnesses believe Jesus is a god, but not THE GOD. Are they saved?

Christology is important. Stop making the case that it isn't. You have no faith that Christ was capable of setting up a VISIBLE church. Your theology forces you to believe that the true church is invisible, that most of history people are left in the dark and only a few elect individuals can be saved. You also have no idea how CLOSE your theology is to medieval roman Catholicism. Your faith is derived from Latin assumptions. You wouldn't have PSA without nominalist medieval roman catholics already creating a PSA foundation that only ever appeared in history after the 1000s.

You claim you're trying to argue for sola scriptura, but not solo, while simultaneously claiming man made tradition is a secondary interpretative authority...then you claim Orthodox theology is off limits because its "Man made tradition". Your logic isn't consistent.

The idea that busty (or other Protestants, for that matter) believes the church is "invisible" merely because there isn't one, clearly defined church that can trace itself back to Acts is certainly a self-serving take.
Realitybites
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Mothra said:


As for where Christ went immediately after death, scripture is silent on this point, as I've repeatedly explained. Not sure if it's a reading compression problem or you being purposely obtuse. You just don't like the possibility he ended up in heaven because the thief on the cross destroys your little narrative:


"Jesus said to her, "Do not cling to Me, for I have not yet ascended to My Father; but go to My brethren and say to them, 'I am ascending to My Father and your Father, and to My God and your God.'" (John 20:17)

Well, considering Jesus plainly said he had not yet gone to heaven after the resurrection, that's a bad take. So he was somewhere else not named heaven. So the traditional church teaching on the harrowing of hades still stands. I suppose if you reject that, you could interject some other modernist interpretation like he was hanging out in an Irish Pub in Jerusalem or on a tour of the solar system on the Enterprise.

But heaven? No. Wherever he was between the crucifixion and the resurrection, it wasn't heaven.
Mothra
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Realitybites said:

Mothra said:


As for where Christ went immediately after death, scripture is silent on this point, as I've repeatedly explained. Not sure if it's a reading compression problem or you being purposely obtuse. You just don't like the possibility he ended up in heaven because the thief on the cross destroys your little narrative:


"Jesus said to her, "Do not cling to Me, for I have not yet ascended to My Father; but go to My brethren and say to them, 'I am ascending to My Father and your Father, and to My God and your God.'" (John 20:17)

Well, considering Jesus plainly said he had not yet gone to heaven after the resurrection, that's a bad take. So he was somewhere else not named heaven. So the traditional church teaching on the harrowing of hades still stands. I suppose if you reject that, you could interject some other modernist interpretation like he was hanging out in an Irish Pub in Jerusalem or on a tour of the solar system on the Enterprise.

But heaven? No. Wherever he was between the crucifixion and the resurrection, it wasn't heaven.

What part of "scripture is silent on where Christ went immediately after his death" didn't you understand?
Realitybites
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Mothra said:

You just don't like the possibility he ended up in heaven because the thief on the cross destroys your little narrative:


What part of there is zero possibility he ended up in heaven don't you understand?

You raised that possibility despite Jesus directly shutting that down with his own words in scripture.

The process of elimination leaves us with Hades, the aforementioned Solar System Tour on the USS Enterprise and McCaiaphas' Irish Pub. I'm going with Hades, along with 2000 years of Christians before me. Unless you want to make an argument for the nonexistent place known as Purgatory?
BusyTarpDuster2017
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Doc Holliday said:

BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

I keep hearing this claim that Scripture alone can give you a perfect definition of the Holy Trinity as defined by Nicea and Chalcedon which most Protestants affirm.

Thats absolute nonsense.

Aries made his case to deny the Trinity with texts like Proverbs 8:22 ("the Lord created me at the beginning of his work"), John 14:28 ("the Father is greater than I"), Colossians 1:15 ("firstborn of all creation"), and Mark 13:32 (the Son not knowing the day or hour).

The Trinity was not settled by a better proof text. It was settled by a council with binding authority. Which is the problem. You can't affirm Nicaea and Chalcedon as settled Christianity, but then reject other conclusions from that same tradition and that same authority. You cannot selectively invoke conciliar authority when it suits you and discard it when it doesn't or you have no way to bind everyone.

Nobody actually relies on scripture alone either. Yall need to cut out that nonsense. Total bs. When a Reformed Protestant settles a disputed question by appealing to Calvin, or a Lutheran defers to Luther's exegesis, or a Baptist cites the Second London Confession, they are functionally doing exactly what they accuse Catholics and Orthodox of doing: grounding theological conclusions in the authority of post biblical teachers and confessional documents rather than scripture alone.

You realize that you're arguing against solO scriptura, and not solA scriptura?

And the concept of the Trinity is fully derivable from Scripture, as I had already demonstrated to you. Besides, if it wasn't, how could have the councils come to that conclusion? Did they create a concept out of whole cloth?

Here's a question for you, as well as for everyone else: is the belief in the Trinity necessary for one's salvation?

If the Trinity were simply derivable from Scripture by careful reading, Arius would not have been a serious theological threat requiring an ecumenical council to resolve.

Councils have the authority of the sacrament of apostolic succession. That gives them guidance by the Holy Spirit.

Mainline prots wouldn't be gay and secular. People interpret text multiple ways. You interpret debt and slavery language in a 21st century lens vs me who took time to understand how Jews viewed what those concepts meant in their time.

Yes, Trinitarian faith is necessary.

Have you ever questioned your denomination? Is there anything you think your church is doing wrong?
Do you know that there are numerous Protestant pastors that have become Orthodox?

- so, you agree that you were arguing against solO scriptura, and not solA scriptura?

- I never said the Trinity was "simply" derivable. That's you adding words so you can validate your argument. It takes very careful reading and long, diligent study to derive the Trinity from Scripture. Therefore, it is not surprising that Christians, even true, saved Christians, would not be able to draw it from a simple reading. Arianism, on the other hand, is completely different. It says that Jesus is a created being, and therefore not God. However, Scripture CLEARLY indicates that Jesus is God. And therefore, no church council is needed to know that Arianism is false.

- So, you believe that a belief in the Trinity is necessary for salvation? You believe that if someone hears the gospel and believes and trusts in Jesus for their salvation, and they believe Jesus is God.... but they don't believe the Holy Spirit is God, but rather a kind of subordinate entity "sent" by God - then that means they are not saved? Does salvation depend on having a correct theology, especially one that is not explicitly taught in Scripture? And when did Jesus or his apostles every teach that?

- Look at what you're saying here: you're saying that the Trinity, which is 1) NOT derivable from Scripture but can only be known by the utterances of a council of men, and 2) is necessary for salvation - which is ultimately saying that the word of God is insufficient for our salvation!! Is this truly what you believe?

- I belong to no denomination. I'm simply a bible-believing Christian. Yes, there are things I question about certain teachings coming from various Protestant churches, and it's based on what Scripture says (the word of God), not based on what a council of men declared (the Tradition of men). I don't know how many Protestant pastors became Orthodox, but I'm sure it happens the other way around too. I will say that if a Protestant pastor becomes Roman Catholic or Orthodox, then something is really, really wrong with their faith if they are turning to a church that teaches a different gospel than the Bible and actively promotes and even requires the practice and belief in rank heresy and idolatry. Again, if they are okay with bowing and praying to images and saying "Mary is the salvation of my soul", then it's quite possible that they never really were a true Christian.



You claim you're trying to argue for sola scriptura, but not solo, while simultaneously claiming man made tradition is a secondary interpretative authority...then you claim Orthodox theology is off limits because its "Man made tradition". Your logic isn't consistent.

I'm really trying to understand what you're saying here. You frequently do not make any sense. The claim is that Orthodox theology is not wholesale "off limits", but rather only that Orthodox theology which contradicts Scripture. So where's the "solO" scriptura here? No one is saying that NO other authority for a church is allowed. Sola scriptura means that all other authorities, i.e. "man-made tradition" that is outside of Scripture is always to be considered fallible, and therefore always correctable by Scripture, Scripture being the highest standard of authority, being the infallible word of God. There is absolutely no logical inconsistency here. Rather, your understanding is what's at fault.

The church councils of Roman Catholicism and Orthodoxy have been shown to be in contradition and thus in error, so there is no infallible authority of the "Church". This is a false belief that is NOWHERE in Scripture, and is rather a claim made by MAN, not by GOD.

Your are letting the fallibility of man bamboozle you into false beliefs, when you should be adhering only to the infallibe word of God which is Scripture.
BusyTarpDuster2017
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Doc Holliday said:

BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

I keep hearing this claim that Scripture alone can give you a perfect definition of the Holy Trinity as defined by Nicea and Chalcedon which most Protestants affirm.

Thats absolute nonsense.

Aries made his case to deny the Trinity with texts like Proverbs 8:22 ("the Lord created me at the beginning of his work"), John 14:28 ("the Father is greater than I"), Colossians 1:15 ("firstborn of all creation"), and Mark 13:32 (the Son not knowing the day or hour).

The Trinity was not settled by a better proof text. It was settled by a council with binding authority. Which is the problem. You can't affirm Nicaea and Chalcedon as settled Christianity, but then reject other conclusions from that same tradition and that same authority. You cannot selectively invoke conciliar authority when it suits you and discard it when it doesn't or you have no way to bind everyone.

Nobody actually relies on scripture alone either. Yall need to cut out that nonsense. Total bs. When a Reformed Protestant settles a disputed question by appealing to Calvin, or a Lutheran defers to Luther's exegesis, or a Baptist cites the Second London Confession, they are functionally doing exactly what they accuse Catholics and Orthodox of doing: grounding theological conclusions in the authority of post biblical teachers and confessional documents rather than scripture alone.

You realize that you're arguing against solO scriptura, and not solA scriptura?

And the concept of the Trinity is fully derivable from Scripture, as I had already demonstrated to you. Besides, if it wasn't, how could have the councils come to that conclusion? Did they create a concept out of whole cloth?

Here's a question for you, as well as for everyone else: is the belief in the Trinity necessary for one's salvation?

If the Trinity were simply derivable from Scripture by careful reading, Arius would not have been a serious theological threat requiring an ecumenical council to resolve.

Councils have the authority of the sacrament of apostolic succession. That gives them guidance by the Holy Spirit.

Mainline prots wouldn't be gay and secular. People interpret text multiple ways. You interpret debt and slavery language in a 21st century lens vs me who took time to understand how Jews viewed what those concepts meant in their time.

Yes, Trinitarian faith is necessary.

Have you ever questioned your denomination? Is there anything you think your church is doing wrong?
Do you know that there are numerous Protestant pastors that have become Orthodox?

- so, you agree that you were arguing against solO scriptura, and not solA scriptura?

- I never said the Trinity was "simply" derivable. That's you adding words so you can validate your argument. It takes very careful reading and long, diligent study to derive the Trinity from Scripture. Therefore, it is not surprising that Christians, even true, saved Christians, would not be able to draw it from a simple reading. Arianism, on the other hand, is completely different. It says that Jesus is a created being, and therefore not God. However, Scripture CLEARLY indicates that Jesus is God. And therefore, no church council is needed to know that Arianism is false.

- So, you believe that a belief in the Trinity is necessary for salvation? You believe that if someone hears the gospel and believes and trusts in Jesus for their salvation, and they believe Jesus is God.... but they don't believe the Holy Spirit is God, but rather a kind of subordinate entity "sent" by God - then that means they are not saved? Does salvation depend on having a correct theology, especially one that is not explicitly taught in Scripture? And when did Jesus or his apostles every teach that?

- Look at what you're saying here: you're saying that the Trinity, which is 1) NOT derivable from Scripture but can only be known by the utterances of a council of men, and 2) is necessary for salvation - which is ultimately saying that the word of God is insufficient for our salvation!! Is this truly what you believe?

- I belong to no denomination. I'm simply a bible-believing Christian. Yes, there are things I question about certain teachings coming from various Protestant churches, and it's based on what Scripture says (the word of God), not based on what a council of men declared (the Tradition of men). I don't know how many Protestant pastors became Orthodox, but I'm sure it happens the other way around too. I will say that if a Protestant pastor becomes Roman Catholic or Orthodox, then something is really, really wrong with their faith if they are turning to a church that teaches a different gospel than the Bible and actively promotes and even requires the practice and belief in rank heresy and idolatry. Again, if they are okay with bowing and praying to images and saying "Mary is the salvation of my soul", then it's quite possible that they never really were a true Christian.

If you die and learn that Orthodoxy was the true visible church...are you going to be mad at God?

No you cannot derive the Nicean/Chalcedon understanding of the Holy Trinity from scripture alone. Impossible. The word homoousias (of the same substance), is the entire linchpin of Nicene Trinitarianism and appears nowhere in scripture. The Council of Nicaea took a non-biblical Greek philosophical term and made it the binding theological test of Orthodoxy. That non scriptural vocabulary binds all Christians sotereologically: who authorized it to do so? A COUNCIL.

Every major Christian confession in history, including your own, explicitly requires Trinitarian faith: the Westminster Confession, the London Baptist Confession, the Heidelberg Catechism, Belic Confession and every reformed document every written. Do you understand that the ' Jesus Only' position, held by Oneness Pentecostals is classified by every single reformed confession as heresy?.

Jehova's witnesses believe Jesus is a god, but not THE GOD. Are they saved?

Christology is important. Stop making the case that it isn't. You have no faith that Christ was capable of setting up a VISIBLE church. Your theology forces you to believe that the true church is invisible, that most of history people are left in the dark and only a few elect individuals can be saved. You also have no idea how CLOSE your theology is to medieval roman Catholicism. Your faith is derived from Latin assumptions. You wouldn't have PSA without nominalist medieval roman catholics already creating a PSA foundation that only ever appeared in history after the 1000s.

So, to be clear: you believe that a person who hears the gospel, believes, and puts their trust in Jesus for their salvation, believing Jesus to be the Messiah and the Son of God - but does not believe the Holy Spirit to be God as well due to an incomplete understanding of the Trinity..... that this person is NOT saved, and goes to Hell?

And to be clear, you believe that the belief in the Trinity is required for salvation, a concept that was not derived until THREE CENTURIES after Jesus in a church council?
historian
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Realitybites said:

Mothra said:


As for where Christ went immediately after death, scripture is silent on this point, as I've repeatedly explained. Not sure if it's a reading compression problem or you being purposely obtuse. You just don't like the possibility he ended up in heaven because the thief on the cross destroys your little narrative:


"Jesus said to her, "Do not cling to Me, for I have not yet ascended to My Father; but go to My brethren and say to them, 'I am ascending to My Father and your Father, and to My God and your God.'" (John 20:17)

Well, considering Jesus plainly said he had not yet gone to heaven after the resurrection, that's a bad take. So he was somewhere else not named heaven. So the traditional church teaching on the harrowing of hades still stands. I suppose if you reject that, you could interject some other modernist interpretation like he was hanging out in an Irish Pub in Jerusalem or on a tour of the solar system on the Enterprise.

But heaven? No. Wherever he was between the crucifixion and the resurrection, it wasn't heaven.

Jesus did not say that. He said He had not yet ascended. The Ascension was His last event on earth after the Resurrection. I'm no expert on this but I am aware of what scripture says: He told the thief on the cross they would both be in paradise that day. I take Jesus at His word. I see no reason He could not spent those 3 days in heaven with God the Father then returned to earth Sunday morning to meet Mary and the disciples. He spent 40 days visiting them repeatedly and others, the reality of His resurrection being witnessed by many people on multiple occasions. The fact of His resurrection is beyond any reasonable dispute. Then He ascended as He foretold Mary He would.

I'm also aware that we are reading translations of these scriptures and there could be some confusion or misunderstanding of these issues as a result. It doesn't matter. What matters is who Jesus is, His life, ministry, death, and resurrection (the most important event in all history). As Christians, Jesus commissioned us to spread the gospel and make disciples.

Eventually these debates become a waste of time since they do nothing to advance God's kingdom.
historian
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What is supremely clear from all these posts is that none of us is qualified to judge another person's salvation. Only God can do that. The essential beliefs that define a Christian are belief that He is the Son of God, died for our sins, and rose from the dead.
Realitybites
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historian said:


Jesus did not say that. He said He had not yet ascended


He said "He had not yet ascended to his Father in heaven."

That's pretty plain.

Your misinterpretation is trying to shoehorn 3 days in heaven with the Father courtesy of a Star Trek Transporter like mechanism and reduce the verse to meaning he didn't fly up through the air simply because you refuse to accept the historic teaching of the harrowing of hades.
Doc Holliday
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BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

I keep hearing this claim that Scripture alone can give you a perfect definition of the Holy Trinity as defined by Nicea and Chalcedon which most Protestants affirm.

Thats absolute nonsense.

Aries made his case to deny the Trinity with texts like Proverbs 8:22 ("the Lord created me at the beginning of his work"), John 14:28 ("the Father is greater than I"), Colossians 1:15 ("firstborn of all creation"), and Mark 13:32 (the Son not knowing the day or hour).

The Trinity was not settled by a better proof text. It was settled by a council with binding authority. Which is the problem. You can't affirm Nicaea and Chalcedon as settled Christianity, but then reject other conclusions from that same tradition and that same authority. You cannot selectively invoke conciliar authority when it suits you and discard it when it doesn't or you have no way to bind everyone.

Nobody actually relies on scripture alone either. Yall need to cut out that nonsense. Total bs. When a Reformed Protestant settles a disputed question by appealing to Calvin, or a Lutheran defers to Luther's exegesis, or a Baptist cites the Second London Confession, they are functionally doing exactly what they accuse Catholics and Orthodox of doing: grounding theological conclusions in the authority of post biblical teachers and confessional documents rather than scripture alone.

You realize that you're arguing against solO scriptura, and not solA scriptura?

And the concept of the Trinity is fully derivable from Scripture, as I had already demonstrated to you. Besides, if it wasn't, how could have the councils come to that conclusion? Did they create a concept out of whole cloth?

Here's a question for you, as well as for everyone else: is the belief in the Trinity necessary for one's salvation?

If the Trinity were simply derivable from Scripture by careful reading, Arius would not have been a serious theological threat requiring an ecumenical council to resolve.

Councils have the authority of the sacrament of apostolic succession. That gives them guidance by the Holy Spirit.

Mainline prots wouldn't be gay and secular. People interpret text multiple ways. You interpret debt and slavery language in a 21st century lens vs me who took time to understand how Jews viewed what those concepts meant in their time.

Yes, Trinitarian faith is necessary.

Have you ever questioned your denomination? Is there anything you think your church is doing wrong?
Do you know that there are numerous Protestant pastors that have become Orthodox?

- so, you agree that you were arguing against solO scriptura, and not solA scriptura?

- I never said the Trinity was "simply" derivable. That's you adding words so you can validate your argument. It takes very careful reading and long, diligent study to derive the Trinity from Scripture. Therefore, it is not surprising that Christians, even true, saved Christians, would not be able to draw it from a simple reading. Arianism, on the other hand, is completely different. It says that Jesus is a created being, and therefore not God. However, Scripture CLEARLY indicates that Jesus is God. And therefore, no church council is needed to know that Arianism is false.

- So, you believe that a belief in the Trinity is necessary for salvation? You believe that if someone hears the gospel and believes and trusts in Jesus for their salvation, and they believe Jesus is God.... but they don't believe the Holy Spirit is God, but rather a kind of subordinate entity "sent" by God - then that means they are not saved? Does salvation depend on having a correct theology, especially one that is not explicitly taught in Scripture? And when did Jesus or his apostles every teach that?

- Look at what you're saying here: you're saying that the Trinity, which is 1) NOT derivable from Scripture but can only be known by the utterances of a council of men, and 2) is necessary for salvation - which is ultimately saying that the word of God is insufficient for our salvation!! Is this truly what you believe?

- I belong to no denomination. I'm simply a bible-believing Christian. Yes, there are things I question about certain teachings coming from various Protestant churches, and it's based on what Scripture says (the word of God), not based on what a council of men declared (the Tradition of men). I don't know how many Protestant pastors became Orthodox, but I'm sure it happens the other way around too. I will say that if a Protestant pastor becomes Roman Catholic or Orthodox, then something is really, really wrong with their faith if they are turning to a church that teaches a different gospel than the Bible and actively promotes and even requires the practice and belief in rank heresy and idolatry. Again, if they are okay with bowing and praying to images and saying "Mary is the salvation of my soul", then it's quite possible that they never really were a true Christian.



You claim you're trying to argue for sola scriptura, but not solo, while simultaneously claiming man made tradition is a secondary interpretative authority...then you claim Orthodox theology is off limits because its "Man made tradition". Your logic isn't consistent.

I'm really trying to understand what you're saying here. You frequently do not make any sense. The claim is that Orthodox theology is not wholesale "off limits", but rather only that Orthodox theology which contradicts Scripture. So where's the "solO" scriptura here? No one is saying that NO other authority for a church is allowed. Sola scriptura means that all other authorities, i.e. "man-made tradition" that is outside of Scripture is always to be considered fallible, and therefore always correctable by Scripture, Scripture being the highest standard of authority, being the infallible word of God. There is absolutely no logical inconsistency here. Rather, your understanding is what's at fault.

The church councils of Roman Catholicism and Orthodoxy have been shown to be in contradition and thus in error, so there is no infallible authority of the "Church". This is a false belief that is NOWHERE in Scripture, and is rather a claim made by MAN, not by GOD.

Your are letting the fallibility of man bamboozle you into false beliefs, when you should be adhering only to the infallibe word of God which is Scripture.

Well first off, you've refuted absolutely nothing in Orthodox theology using scripture. Your understanding and interpretation of the text is WRONG.

Open your Bible to Matthew 23:1-3. Jesus says the scribes and Pharisees "sit in Moses; seat" and commands obedience to them on that basis. Not on the basis of their personal holiness. He explicitly acknowledges they're hypocrites. Not on the basis of their accurate exegesis in any given moment, but on the basis of the office they occupy.

Where does the Old Testament define the seat of Moses? It doesn't. Nowhere. Not in the Torah, not in the Prophets, not in ANY writings. The phrase doesn't exist in the Hebrew Bible. It's an extrascriptural institution of oral, traditioned authority. Jesus validated it without citing a single verse to justify it. If you applied sola scriptura prior to the time of Jesus to establish the seat of Moses...you couldn't establish it as an authority because the Seat of Moses is not written down or defined whatsoever.

This is your problem. If sola scriptura is true, if all binding religious authority must be derived and normed by Scripture alone...then Jesus should have either grounded this institution in a text or rejected it as human tradition. He does neither. He assumes it. He commands obedience to it. He respects it by claiming the people occupying it are not worthy of that position. The authority of the office is not contingent on the moral or intellectual perfection of the officeholder. That's exactly the Orthodox doctrine of episcopal authority.

In sola scriptura, when the teacher is bad, you just go find another teacher whose interpretation you prefer, which means the real authority was always your own judgment about who is reading Scripture correctly.

Understand that Christ established a visible Church with real authority. The New Testament records the Church acting with divine authority to govern, teach, and define truth. To reject this is to reject the pattern established by the Apostles themselves. The "infallible authority" you seek is not just a book; it is the "pillar and foundation of the truth", the living, visible Church (1 Timothy 3:15).
BusyTarpDuster2017
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historian said:

What is supremely clear from all these posts is that none of us is qualified to judge another person's salvation. Only God can do that. The essential beliefs that define a Christian are belief that He is the Son of God, died for our sins, and rose from the dead.

I believe that it is valid to judge whether one's beliefs will lead to salvation or not, if we go by what Scripture says. If someone says they don't believe in Jesus, don't you think someone who knows the gospel is qualified to judge that they are not saved?
BusyTarpDuster2017
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Doc Holliday said:

BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

I keep hearing this claim that Scripture alone can give you a perfect definition of the Holy Trinity as defined by Nicea and Chalcedon which most Protestants affirm.

Thats absolute nonsense.

Aries made his case to deny the Trinity with texts like Proverbs 8:22 ("the Lord created me at the beginning of his work"), John 14:28 ("the Father is greater than I"), Colossians 1:15 ("firstborn of all creation"), and Mark 13:32 (the Son not knowing the day or hour).

The Trinity was not settled by a better proof text. It was settled by a council with binding authority. Which is the problem. You can't affirm Nicaea and Chalcedon as settled Christianity, but then reject other conclusions from that same tradition and that same authority. You cannot selectively invoke conciliar authority when it suits you and discard it when it doesn't or you have no way to bind everyone.

Nobody actually relies on scripture alone either. Yall need to cut out that nonsense. Total bs. When a Reformed Protestant settles a disputed question by appealing to Calvin, or a Lutheran defers to Luther's exegesis, or a Baptist cites the Second London Confession, they are functionally doing exactly what they accuse Catholics and Orthodox of doing: grounding theological conclusions in the authority of post biblical teachers and confessional documents rather than scripture alone.

You realize that you're arguing against solO scriptura, and not solA scriptura?

And the concept of the Trinity is fully derivable from Scripture, as I had already demonstrated to you. Besides, if it wasn't, how could have the councils come to that conclusion? Did they create a concept out of whole cloth?

Here's a question for you, as well as for everyone else: is the belief in the Trinity necessary for one's salvation?

If the Trinity were simply derivable from Scripture by careful reading, Arius would not have been a serious theological threat requiring an ecumenical council to resolve.

Councils have the authority of the sacrament of apostolic succession. That gives them guidance by the Holy Spirit.

Mainline prots wouldn't be gay and secular. People interpret text multiple ways. You interpret debt and slavery language in a 21st century lens vs me who took time to understand how Jews viewed what those concepts meant in their time.

Yes, Trinitarian faith is necessary.

Have you ever questioned your denomination? Is there anything you think your church is doing wrong?
Do you know that there are numerous Protestant pastors that have become Orthodox?

- so, you agree that you were arguing against solO scriptura, and not solA scriptura?

- I never said the Trinity was "simply" derivable. That's you adding words so you can validate your argument. It takes very careful reading and long, diligent study to derive the Trinity from Scripture. Therefore, it is not surprising that Christians, even true, saved Christians, would not be able to draw it from a simple reading. Arianism, on the other hand, is completely different. It says that Jesus is a created being, and therefore not God. However, Scripture CLEARLY indicates that Jesus is God. And therefore, no church council is needed to know that Arianism is false.

- So, you believe that a belief in the Trinity is necessary for salvation? You believe that if someone hears the gospel and believes and trusts in Jesus for their salvation, and they believe Jesus is God.... but they don't believe the Holy Spirit is God, but rather a kind of subordinate entity "sent" by God - then that means they are not saved? Does salvation depend on having a correct theology, especially one that is not explicitly taught in Scripture? And when did Jesus or his apostles every teach that?

- Look at what you're saying here: you're saying that the Trinity, which is 1) NOT derivable from Scripture but can only be known by the utterances of a council of men, and 2) is necessary for salvation - which is ultimately saying that the word of God is insufficient for our salvation!! Is this truly what you believe?

- I belong to no denomination. I'm simply a bible-believing Christian. Yes, there are things I question about certain teachings coming from various Protestant churches, and it's based on what Scripture says (the word of God), not based on what a council of men declared (the Tradition of men). I don't know how many Protestant pastors became Orthodox, but I'm sure it happens the other way around too. I will say that if a Protestant pastor becomes Roman Catholic or Orthodox, then something is really, really wrong with their faith if they are turning to a church that teaches a different gospel than the Bible and actively promotes and even requires the practice and belief in rank heresy and idolatry. Again, if they are okay with bowing and praying to images and saying "Mary is the salvation of my soul", then it's quite possible that they never really were a true Christian.



You claim you're trying to argue for sola scriptura, but not solo, while simultaneously claiming man made tradition is a secondary interpretative authority...then you claim Orthodox theology is off limits because its "Man made tradition". Your logic isn't consistent.

I'm really trying to understand what you're saying here. You frequently do not make any sense. The claim is that Orthodox theology is not wholesale "off limits", but rather only that Orthodox theology which contradicts Scripture. So where's the "solO" scriptura here? No one is saying that NO other authority for a church is allowed. Sola scriptura means that all other authorities, i.e. "man-made tradition" that is outside of Scripture is always to be considered fallible, and therefore always correctable by Scripture, Scripture being the highest standard of authority, being the infallible word of God. There is absolutely no logical inconsistency here. Rather, your understanding is what's at fault.

The church councils of Roman Catholicism and Orthodoxy have been shown to be in contradition and thus in error, so there is no infallible authority of the "Church". This is a false belief that is NOWHERE in Scripture, and is rather a claim made by MAN, not by GOD.

Your are letting the fallibility of man bamboozle you into false beliefs, when you should be adhering only to the infallibe word of God which is Scripture.

Well first off, you've refuted absolutely nothing in Orthodox theology using scripture. Your understanding and interpretation of the text is WRONG.

Open your Bible to Matthew 23:1-3. Jesus says the scribes and Pharisees "sit in Moses; seat" and commands obedience to them on that basis. Not on the basis of their personal holiness. He explicitly acknowledges they're hypocrites. Not on the basis of their accurate exegesis in any given moment, but on the basis of the office they occupy.

But would you say that the scribes and Pharisees, who rejected Jesus, were infallible in their authority and intepretation of their Scripture?
BusyTarpDuster2017
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Doc Holliday said:

BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

I keep hearing this claim that Scripture alone can give you a perfect definition of the Holy Trinity as defined by Nicea and Chalcedon which most Protestants affirm.

Thats absolute nonsense.

Aries made his case to deny the Trinity with texts like Proverbs 8:22 ("the Lord created me at the beginning of his work"), John 14:28 ("the Father is greater than I"), Colossians 1:15 ("firstborn of all creation"), and Mark 13:32 (the Son not knowing the day or hour).

The Trinity was not settled by a better proof text. It was settled by a council with binding authority. Which is the problem. You can't affirm Nicaea and Chalcedon as settled Christianity, but then reject other conclusions from that same tradition and that same authority. You cannot selectively invoke conciliar authority when it suits you and discard it when it doesn't or you have no way to bind everyone.

Nobody actually relies on scripture alone either. Yall need to cut out that nonsense. Total bs. When a Reformed Protestant settles a disputed question by appealing to Calvin, or a Lutheran defers to Luther's exegesis, or a Baptist cites the Second London Confession, they are functionally doing exactly what they accuse Catholics and Orthodox of doing: grounding theological conclusions in the authority of post biblical teachers and confessional documents rather than scripture alone.

You realize that you're arguing against solO scriptura, and not solA scriptura?

And the concept of the Trinity is fully derivable from Scripture, as I had already demonstrated to you. Besides, if it wasn't, how could have the councils come to that conclusion? Did they create a concept out of whole cloth?

Here's a question for you, as well as for everyone else: is the belief in the Trinity necessary for one's salvation?

If the Trinity were simply derivable from Scripture by careful reading, Arius would not have been a serious theological threat requiring an ecumenical council to resolve.

Councils have the authority of the sacrament of apostolic succession. That gives them guidance by the Holy Spirit.

Mainline prots wouldn't be gay and secular. People interpret text multiple ways. You interpret debt and slavery language in a 21st century lens vs me who took time to understand how Jews viewed what those concepts meant in their time.

Yes, Trinitarian faith is necessary.

Have you ever questioned your denomination? Is there anything you think your church is doing wrong?
Do you know that there are numerous Protestant pastors that have become Orthodox?

- so, you agree that you were arguing against solO scriptura, and not solA scriptura?

- I never said the Trinity was "simply" derivable. That's you adding words so you can validate your argument. It takes very careful reading and long, diligent study to derive the Trinity from Scripture. Therefore, it is not surprising that Christians, even true, saved Christians, would not be able to draw it from a simple reading. Arianism, on the other hand, is completely different. It says that Jesus is a created being, and therefore not God. However, Scripture CLEARLY indicates that Jesus is God. And therefore, no church council is needed to know that Arianism is false.

- So, you believe that a belief in the Trinity is necessary for salvation? You believe that if someone hears the gospel and believes and trusts in Jesus for their salvation, and they believe Jesus is God.... but they don't believe the Holy Spirit is God, but rather a kind of subordinate entity "sent" by God - then that means they are not saved? Does salvation depend on having a correct theology, especially one that is not explicitly taught in Scripture? And when did Jesus or his apostles every teach that?

- Look at what you're saying here: you're saying that the Trinity, which is 1) NOT derivable from Scripture but can only be known by the utterances of a council of men, and 2) is necessary for salvation - which is ultimately saying that the word of God is insufficient for our salvation!! Is this truly what you believe?

- I belong to no denomination. I'm simply a bible-believing Christian. Yes, there are things I question about certain teachings coming from various Protestant churches, and it's based on what Scripture says (the word of God), not based on what a council of men declared (the Tradition of men). I don't know how many Protestant pastors became Orthodox, but I'm sure it happens the other way around too. I will say that if a Protestant pastor becomes Roman Catholic or Orthodox, then something is really, really wrong with their faith if they are turning to a church that teaches a different gospel than the Bible and actively promotes and even requires the practice and belief in rank heresy and idolatry. Again, if they are okay with bowing and praying to images and saying "Mary is the salvation of my soul", then it's quite possible that they never really were a true Christian.



You claim you're trying to argue for sola scriptura, but not solo, while simultaneously claiming man made tradition is a secondary interpretative authority...then you claim Orthodox theology is off limits because its "Man made tradition". Your logic isn't consistent.

I'm really trying to understand what you're saying here. You frequently do not make any sense. The claim is that Orthodox theology is not wholesale "off limits", but rather only that Orthodox theology which contradicts Scripture. So where's the "solO" scriptura here? No one is saying that NO other authority for a church is allowed. Sola scriptura means that all other authorities, i.e. "man-made tradition" that is outside of Scripture is always to be considered fallible, and therefore always correctable by Scripture, Scripture being the highest standard of authority, being the infallible word of God. There is absolutely no logical inconsistency here. Rather, your understanding is what's at fault.

The church councils of Roman Catholicism and Orthodoxy have been shown to be in contradition and thus in error, so there is no infallible authority of the "Church". This is a false belief that is NOWHERE in Scripture, and is rather a claim made by MAN, not by GOD.

Your are letting the fallibility of man bamboozle you into false beliefs, when you should be adhering only to the infallibe word of God which is Scripture.



Where does the Old Testament define the seat of Moses? It doesn't. Nowhere. Not in the Torah, not in the Prophets, not in ANY writings. The phrase doesn't exist in the Hebrew Bible. It's an extrascriptural institution of oral, traditioned authority. Jesus validated it without citing a single verse to justify it. If you applied sola scriptura prior to the time of Jesus to establish the seat of Moses...you couldn't establish it as an authority because the Seat of Moses is not written down or defined whatsoever.

You DO know that Jesus lambasted them for adhering to their traditions as if they had equal authority with written Scripture, even adhering to them at the expense of Scripture - don't you?
BusyTarpDuster2017
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Doc Holliday said:

BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

I keep hearing this claim that Scripture alone can give you a perfect definition of the Holy Trinity as defined by Nicea and Chalcedon which most Protestants affirm.

Thats absolute nonsense.

Aries made his case to deny the Trinity with texts like Proverbs 8:22 ("the Lord created me at the beginning of his work"), John 14:28 ("the Father is greater than I"), Colossians 1:15 ("firstborn of all creation"), and Mark 13:32 (the Son not knowing the day or hour).

The Trinity was not settled by a better proof text. It was settled by a council with binding authority. Which is the problem. You can't affirm Nicaea and Chalcedon as settled Christianity, but then reject other conclusions from that same tradition and that same authority. You cannot selectively invoke conciliar authority when it suits you and discard it when it doesn't or you have no way to bind everyone.

Nobody actually relies on scripture alone either. Yall need to cut out that nonsense. Total bs. When a Reformed Protestant settles a disputed question by appealing to Calvin, or a Lutheran defers to Luther's exegesis, or a Baptist cites the Second London Confession, they are functionally doing exactly what they accuse Catholics and Orthodox of doing: grounding theological conclusions in the authority of post biblical teachers and confessional documents rather than scripture alone.

You realize that you're arguing against solO scriptura, and not solA scriptura?

And the concept of the Trinity is fully derivable from Scripture, as I had already demonstrated to you. Besides, if it wasn't, how could have the councils come to that conclusion? Did they create a concept out of whole cloth?

Here's a question for you, as well as for everyone else: is the belief in the Trinity necessary for one's salvation?

If the Trinity were simply derivable from Scripture by careful reading, Arius would not have been a serious theological threat requiring an ecumenical council to resolve.

Councils have the authority of the sacrament of apostolic succession. That gives them guidance by the Holy Spirit.

Mainline prots wouldn't be gay and secular. People interpret text multiple ways. You interpret debt and slavery language in a 21st century lens vs me who took time to understand how Jews viewed what those concepts meant in their time.

Yes, Trinitarian faith is necessary.

Have you ever questioned your denomination? Is there anything you think your church is doing wrong?
Do you know that there are numerous Protestant pastors that have become Orthodox?

- so, you agree that you were arguing against solO scriptura, and not solA scriptura?

- I never said the Trinity was "simply" derivable. That's you adding words so you can validate your argument. It takes very careful reading and long, diligent study to derive the Trinity from Scripture. Therefore, it is not surprising that Christians, even true, saved Christians, would not be able to draw it from a simple reading. Arianism, on the other hand, is completely different. It says that Jesus is a created being, and therefore not God. However, Scripture CLEARLY indicates that Jesus is God. And therefore, no church council is needed to know that Arianism is false.

- So, you believe that a belief in the Trinity is necessary for salvation? You believe that if someone hears the gospel and believes and trusts in Jesus for their salvation, and they believe Jesus is God.... but they don't believe the Holy Spirit is God, but rather a kind of subordinate entity "sent" by God - then that means they are not saved? Does salvation depend on having a correct theology, especially one that is not explicitly taught in Scripture? And when did Jesus or his apostles every teach that?

- Look at what you're saying here: you're saying that the Trinity, which is 1) NOT derivable from Scripture but can only be known by the utterances of a council of men, and 2) is necessary for salvation - which is ultimately saying that the word of God is insufficient for our salvation!! Is this truly what you believe?

- I belong to no denomination. I'm simply a bible-believing Christian. Yes, there are things I question about certain teachings coming from various Protestant churches, and it's based on what Scripture says (the word of God), not based on what a council of men declared (the Tradition of men). I don't know how many Protestant pastors became Orthodox, but I'm sure it happens the other way around too. I will say that if a Protestant pastor becomes Roman Catholic or Orthodox, then something is really, really wrong with their faith if they are turning to a church that teaches a different gospel than the Bible and actively promotes and even requires the practice and belief in rank heresy and idolatry. Again, if they are okay with bowing and praying to images and saying "Mary is the salvation of my soul", then it's quite possible that they never really were a true Christian.



You claim you're trying to argue for sola scriptura, but not solo, while simultaneously claiming man made tradition is a secondary interpretative authority...then you claim Orthodox theology is off limits because its "Man made tradition". Your logic isn't consistent.

I'm really trying to understand what you're saying here. You frequently do not make any sense. The claim is that Orthodox theology is not wholesale "off limits", but rather only that Orthodox theology which contradicts Scripture. So where's the "solO" scriptura here? No one is saying that NO other authority for a church is allowed. Sola scriptura means that all other authorities, i.e. "man-made tradition" that is outside of Scripture is always to be considered fallible, and therefore always correctable by Scripture, Scripture being the highest standard of authority, being the infallible word of God. There is absolutely no logical inconsistency here. Rather, your understanding is what's at fault.

The church councils of Roman Catholicism and Orthodoxy have been shown to be in contradition and thus in error, so there is no infallible authority of the "Church". This is a false belief that is NOWHERE in Scripture, and is rather a claim made by MAN, not by GOD.

Your are letting the fallibility of man bamboozle you into false beliefs, when you should be adhering only to the infallibe word of God which is Scripture.

Well first off, you've refuted absolutely nothing in Orthodox theology using scripture. Your understanding and interpretation of the text is WRONG.

If Orthodox theology says that Scripture says their councils are inerrant (it doesn't), then how did the councils err?

Also, I'm pretty sure that saying "Mary is the salvation of my soul" is quite unscriptural.
Doc Holliday
How long do you want to ignore this user?
BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

I keep hearing this claim that Scripture alone can give you a perfect definition of the Holy Trinity as defined by Nicea and Chalcedon which most Protestants affirm.

Thats absolute nonsense.

Aries made his case to deny the Trinity with texts like Proverbs 8:22 ("the Lord created me at the beginning of his work"), John 14:28 ("the Father is greater than I"), Colossians 1:15 ("firstborn of all creation"), and Mark 13:32 (the Son not knowing the day or hour).

The Trinity was not settled by a better proof text. It was settled by a council with binding authority. Which is the problem. You can't affirm Nicaea and Chalcedon as settled Christianity, but then reject other conclusions from that same tradition and that same authority. You cannot selectively invoke conciliar authority when it suits you and discard it when it doesn't or you have no way to bind everyone.

Nobody actually relies on scripture alone either. Yall need to cut out that nonsense. Total bs. When a Reformed Protestant settles a disputed question by appealing to Calvin, or a Lutheran defers to Luther's exegesis, or a Baptist cites the Second London Confession, they are functionally doing exactly what they accuse Catholics and Orthodox of doing: grounding theological conclusions in the authority of post biblical teachers and confessional documents rather than scripture alone.

You realize that you're arguing against solO scriptura, and not solA scriptura?

And the concept of the Trinity is fully derivable from Scripture, as I had already demonstrated to you. Besides, if it wasn't, how could have the councils come to that conclusion? Did they create a concept out of whole cloth?

Here's a question for you, as well as for everyone else: is the belief in the Trinity necessary for one's salvation?

If the Trinity were simply derivable from Scripture by careful reading, Arius would not have been a serious theological threat requiring an ecumenical council to resolve.

Councils have the authority of the sacrament of apostolic succession. That gives them guidance by the Holy Spirit.

Mainline prots wouldn't be gay and secular. People interpret text multiple ways. You interpret debt and slavery language in a 21st century lens vs me who took time to understand how Jews viewed what those concepts meant in their time.

Yes, Trinitarian faith is necessary.

Have you ever questioned your denomination? Is there anything you think your church is doing wrong?
Do you know that there are numerous Protestant pastors that have become Orthodox?

- so, you agree that you were arguing against solO scriptura, and not solA scriptura?

- I never said the Trinity was "simply" derivable. That's you adding words so you can validate your argument. It takes very careful reading and long, diligent study to derive the Trinity from Scripture. Therefore, it is not surprising that Christians, even true, saved Christians, would not be able to draw it from a simple reading. Arianism, on the other hand, is completely different. It says that Jesus is a created being, and therefore not God. However, Scripture CLEARLY indicates that Jesus is God. And therefore, no church council is needed to know that Arianism is false.

- So, you believe that a belief in the Trinity is necessary for salvation? You believe that if someone hears the gospel and believes and trusts in Jesus for their salvation, and they believe Jesus is God.... but they don't believe the Holy Spirit is God, but rather a kind of subordinate entity "sent" by God - then that means they are not saved? Does salvation depend on having a correct theology, especially one that is not explicitly taught in Scripture? And when did Jesus or his apostles every teach that?

- Look at what you're saying here: you're saying that the Trinity, which is 1) NOT derivable from Scripture but can only be known by the utterances of a council of men, and 2) is necessary for salvation - which is ultimately saying that the word of God is insufficient for our salvation!! Is this truly what you believe?

- I belong to no denomination. I'm simply a bible-believing Christian. Yes, there are things I question about certain teachings coming from various Protestant churches, and it's based on what Scripture says (the word of God), not based on what a council of men declared (the Tradition of men). I don't know how many Protestant pastors became Orthodox, but I'm sure it happens the other way around too. I will say that if a Protestant pastor becomes Roman Catholic or Orthodox, then something is really, really wrong with their faith if they are turning to a church that teaches a different gospel than the Bible and actively promotes and even requires the practice and belief in rank heresy and idolatry. Again, if they are okay with bowing and praying to images and saying "Mary is the salvation of my soul", then it's quite possible that they never really were a true Christian.



You claim you're trying to argue for sola scriptura, but not solo, while simultaneously claiming man made tradition is a secondary interpretative authority...then you claim Orthodox theology is off limits because its "Man made tradition". Your logic isn't consistent.

I'm really trying to understand what you're saying here. You frequently do not make any sense. The claim is that Orthodox theology is not wholesale "off limits", but rather only that Orthodox theology which contradicts Scripture. So where's the "solO" scriptura here? No one is saying that NO other authority for a church is allowed. Sola scriptura means that all other authorities, i.e. "man-made tradition" that is outside of Scripture is always to be considered fallible, and therefore always correctable by Scripture, Scripture being the highest standard of authority, being the infallible word of God. There is absolutely no logical inconsistency here. Rather, your understanding is what's at fault.

The church councils of Roman Catholicism and Orthodoxy have been shown to be in contradition and thus in error, so there is no infallible authority of the "Church". This is a false belief that is NOWHERE in Scripture, and is rather a claim made by MAN, not by GOD.

Your are letting the fallibility of man bamboozle you into false beliefs, when you should be adhering only to the infallibe word of God which is Scripture.



Where does the Old Testament define the seat of Moses? It doesn't. Nowhere. Not in the Torah, not in the Prophets, not in ANY writings. The phrase doesn't exist in the Hebrew Bible. It's an extrascriptural institution of oral, traditioned authority. Jesus validated it without citing a single verse to justify it. If you applied sola scriptura prior to the time of Jesus to establish the seat of Moses...you couldn't establish it as an authority because the Seat of Moses is not written down or defined whatsoever.

You DO know that Jesus lambasted them for adhering to their traditions as if they had equal authority with written Scripture, even adhering to them at the expense of Scripture - don't you?

If Mark 7 condemns all tradition, it condemns the seat of Moses too and then Jesus contradicts Himself in Matthew 23.
He left standing in Matthew 23 a tradition that has no scriptural basis at all and commanded obedience to it.

You don't want that conclusion. The only coherent reading is that Jesus condemns tradition that nullifies Scripture, not tradition that carries and transmits authority alongside it.

You cannot flatten those two passages into one anti-tradition principle without ignoring that Jesus gave the command to obey the seat of Moses in the same breath He criticized the men sitting in it. He drew a precise distinction: obey the office, don't imitate the hypocrisy. That is not the logic of sola scriptura.
BusyTarpDuster2017
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Doc Holliday said:

BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

I keep hearing this claim that Scripture alone can give you a perfect definition of the Holy Trinity as defined by Nicea and Chalcedon which most Protestants affirm.

Thats absolute nonsense.

Aries made his case to deny the Trinity with texts like Proverbs 8:22 ("the Lord created me at the beginning of his work"), John 14:28 ("the Father is greater than I"), Colossians 1:15 ("firstborn of all creation"), and Mark 13:32 (the Son not knowing the day or hour).

The Trinity was not settled by a better proof text. It was settled by a council with binding authority. Which is the problem. You can't affirm Nicaea and Chalcedon as settled Christianity, but then reject other conclusions from that same tradition and that same authority. You cannot selectively invoke conciliar authority when it suits you and discard it when it doesn't or you have no way to bind everyone.

Nobody actually relies on scripture alone either. Yall need to cut out that nonsense. Total bs. When a Reformed Protestant settles a disputed question by appealing to Calvin, or a Lutheran defers to Luther's exegesis, or a Baptist cites the Second London Confession, they are functionally doing exactly what they accuse Catholics and Orthodox of doing: grounding theological conclusions in the authority of post biblical teachers and confessional documents rather than scripture alone.

You realize that you're arguing against solO scriptura, and not solA scriptura?

And the concept of the Trinity is fully derivable from Scripture, as I had already demonstrated to you. Besides, if it wasn't, how could have the councils come to that conclusion? Did they create a concept out of whole cloth?

Here's a question for you, as well as for everyone else: is the belief in the Trinity necessary for one's salvation?

If the Trinity were simply derivable from Scripture by careful reading, Arius would not have been a serious theological threat requiring an ecumenical council to resolve.

Councils have the authority of the sacrament of apostolic succession. That gives them guidance by the Holy Spirit.

Mainline prots wouldn't be gay and secular. People interpret text multiple ways. You interpret debt and slavery language in a 21st century lens vs me who took time to understand how Jews viewed what those concepts meant in their time.

Yes, Trinitarian faith is necessary.

Have you ever questioned your denomination? Is there anything you think your church is doing wrong?
Do you know that there are numerous Protestant pastors that have become Orthodox?

- so, you agree that you were arguing against solO scriptura, and not solA scriptura?

- I never said the Trinity was "simply" derivable. That's you adding words so you can validate your argument. It takes very careful reading and long, diligent study to derive the Trinity from Scripture. Therefore, it is not surprising that Christians, even true, saved Christians, would not be able to draw it from a simple reading. Arianism, on the other hand, is completely different. It says that Jesus is a created being, and therefore not God. However, Scripture CLEARLY indicates that Jesus is God. And therefore, no church council is needed to know that Arianism is false.

- So, you believe that a belief in the Trinity is necessary for salvation? You believe that if someone hears the gospel and believes and trusts in Jesus for their salvation, and they believe Jesus is God.... but they don't believe the Holy Spirit is God, but rather a kind of subordinate entity "sent" by God - then that means they are not saved? Does salvation depend on having a correct theology, especially one that is not explicitly taught in Scripture? And when did Jesus or his apostles every teach that?

- Look at what you're saying here: you're saying that the Trinity, which is 1) NOT derivable from Scripture but can only be known by the utterances of a council of men, and 2) is necessary for salvation - which is ultimately saying that the word of God is insufficient for our salvation!! Is this truly what you believe?

- I belong to no denomination. I'm simply a bible-believing Christian. Yes, there are things I question about certain teachings coming from various Protestant churches, and it's based on what Scripture says (the word of God), not based on what a council of men declared (the Tradition of men). I don't know how many Protestant pastors became Orthodox, but I'm sure it happens the other way around too. I will say that if a Protestant pastor becomes Roman Catholic or Orthodox, then something is really, really wrong with their faith if they are turning to a church that teaches a different gospel than the Bible and actively promotes and even requires the practice and belief in rank heresy and idolatry. Again, if they are okay with bowing and praying to images and saying "Mary is the salvation of my soul", then it's quite possible that they never really were a true Christian.



You claim you're trying to argue for sola scriptura, but not solo, while simultaneously claiming man made tradition is a secondary interpretative authority...then you claim Orthodox theology is off limits because its "Man made tradition". Your logic isn't consistent.

I'm really trying to understand what you're saying here. You frequently do not make any sense. The claim is that Orthodox theology is not wholesale "off limits", but rather only that Orthodox theology which contradicts Scripture. So where's the "solO" scriptura here? No one is saying that NO other authority for a church is allowed. Sola scriptura means that all other authorities, i.e. "man-made tradition" that is outside of Scripture is always to be considered fallible, and therefore always correctable by Scripture, Scripture being the highest standard of authority, being the infallible word of God. There is absolutely no logical inconsistency here. Rather, your understanding is what's at fault.

The church councils of Roman Catholicism and Orthodoxy have been shown to be in contradition and thus in error, so there is no infallible authority of the "Church". This is a false belief that is NOWHERE in Scripture, and is rather a claim made by MAN, not by GOD.

Your are letting the fallibility of man bamboozle you into false beliefs, when you should be adhering only to the infallibe word of God which is Scripture.



Where does the Old Testament define the seat of Moses? It doesn't. Nowhere. Not in the Torah, not in the Prophets, not in ANY writings. The phrase doesn't exist in the Hebrew Bible. It's an extrascriptural institution of oral, traditioned authority. Jesus validated it without citing a single verse to justify it. If you applied sola scriptura prior to the time of Jesus to establish the seat of Moses...you couldn't establish it as an authority because the Seat of Moses is not written down or defined whatsoever.

You DO know that Jesus lambasted them for adhering to their traditions as if they had equal authority with written Scripture, even adhering to them at the expense of Scripture - don't you?


If Mark 7 condemns all tradition, it condemns the seat of Moses too and then Jesus contradicts Himself in Matthew 23.
He left standing in Matthew 23 a tradition that has no scriptural basis at all and commanded obedience to it.

You don't want that conclusion. The only coherent reading is that Jesus condemns tradition that nullifies Scripture, not tradition that carries and transmits authority alongside it.

You cannot flatten those two passages into one anti-tradition principle without ignoring that Jesus gave the command to obey the seat of Moses in the same breath He criticized the men sitting in it. He drew a precise distinction: obey the office, don't imitate the hypocrisy. That is not the logic of sola scriptura.

No one is saying "all tradition is condemned". You are reallly bad at misrepresenting the argument. What's condemned is holding man-made tradition on par with the written word of God. Jesus called them out on it.

Do you really think if the ones in Moses' seat told people to bow down and worship idols, that Jesus would tell them to obey them?
Doc Holliday
How long do you want to ignore this user?
BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

I keep hearing this claim that Scripture alone can give you a perfect definition of the Holy Trinity as defined by Nicea and Chalcedon which most Protestants affirm.

Thats absolute nonsense.

Aries made his case to deny the Trinity with texts like Proverbs 8:22 ("the Lord created me at the beginning of his work"), John 14:28 ("the Father is greater than I"), Colossians 1:15 ("firstborn of all creation"), and Mark 13:32 (the Son not knowing the day or hour).

The Trinity was not settled by a better proof text. It was settled by a council with binding authority. Which is the problem. You can't affirm Nicaea and Chalcedon as settled Christianity, but then reject other conclusions from that same tradition and that same authority. You cannot selectively invoke conciliar authority when it suits you and discard it when it doesn't or you have no way to bind everyone.

Nobody actually relies on scripture alone either. Yall need to cut out that nonsense. Total bs. When a Reformed Protestant settles a disputed question by appealing to Calvin, or a Lutheran defers to Luther's exegesis, or a Baptist cites the Second London Confession, they are functionally doing exactly what they accuse Catholics and Orthodox of doing: grounding theological conclusions in the authority of post biblical teachers and confessional documents rather than scripture alone.

You realize that you're arguing against solO scriptura, and not solA scriptura?

And the concept of the Trinity is fully derivable from Scripture, as I had already demonstrated to you. Besides, if it wasn't, how could have the councils come to that conclusion? Did they create a concept out of whole cloth?

Here's a question for you, as well as for everyone else: is the belief in the Trinity necessary for one's salvation?

If the Trinity were simply derivable from Scripture by careful reading, Arius would not have been a serious theological threat requiring an ecumenical council to resolve.

Councils have the authority of the sacrament of apostolic succession. That gives them guidance by the Holy Spirit.

Mainline prots wouldn't be gay and secular. People interpret text multiple ways. You interpret debt and slavery language in a 21st century lens vs me who took time to understand how Jews viewed what those concepts meant in their time.

Yes, Trinitarian faith is necessary.

Have you ever questioned your denomination? Is there anything you think your church is doing wrong?
Do you know that there are numerous Protestant pastors that have become Orthodox?

- so, you agree that you were arguing against solO scriptura, and not solA scriptura?

- I never said the Trinity was "simply" derivable. That's you adding words so you can validate your argument. It takes very careful reading and long, diligent study to derive the Trinity from Scripture. Therefore, it is not surprising that Christians, even true, saved Christians, would not be able to draw it from a simple reading. Arianism, on the other hand, is completely different. It says that Jesus is a created being, and therefore not God. However, Scripture CLEARLY indicates that Jesus is God. And therefore, no church council is needed to know that Arianism is false.

- So, you believe that a belief in the Trinity is necessary for salvation? You believe that if someone hears the gospel and believes and trusts in Jesus for their salvation, and they believe Jesus is God.... but they don't believe the Holy Spirit is God, but rather a kind of subordinate entity "sent" by God - then that means they are not saved? Does salvation depend on having a correct theology, especially one that is not explicitly taught in Scripture? And when did Jesus or his apostles every teach that?

- Look at what you're saying here: you're saying that the Trinity, which is 1) NOT derivable from Scripture but can only be known by the utterances of a council of men, and 2) is necessary for salvation - which is ultimately saying that the word of God is insufficient for our salvation!! Is this truly what you believe?

- I belong to no denomination. I'm simply a bible-believing Christian. Yes, there are things I question about certain teachings coming from various Protestant churches, and it's based on what Scripture says (the word of God), not based on what a council of men declared (the Tradition of men). I don't know how many Protestant pastors became Orthodox, but I'm sure it happens the other way around too. I will say that if a Protestant pastor becomes Roman Catholic or Orthodox, then something is really, really wrong with their faith if they are turning to a church that teaches a different gospel than the Bible and actively promotes and even requires the practice and belief in rank heresy and idolatry. Again, if they are okay with bowing and praying to images and saying "Mary is the salvation of my soul", then it's quite possible that they never really were a true Christian.



You claim you're trying to argue for sola scriptura, but not solo, while simultaneously claiming man made tradition is a secondary interpretative authority...then you claim Orthodox theology is off limits because its "Man made tradition". Your logic isn't consistent.

I'm really trying to understand what you're saying here. You frequently do not make any sense. The claim is that Orthodox theology is not wholesale "off limits", but rather only that Orthodox theology which contradicts Scripture. So where's the "solO" scriptura here? No one is saying that NO other authority for a church is allowed. Sola scriptura means that all other authorities, i.e. "man-made tradition" that is outside of Scripture is always to be considered fallible, and therefore always correctable by Scripture, Scripture being the highest standard of authority, being the infallible word of God. There is absolutely no logical inconsistency here. Rather, your understanding is what's at fault.

The church councils of Roman Catholicism and Orthodoxy have been shown to be in contradition and thus in error, so there is no infallible authority of the "Church". This is a false belief that is NOWHERE in Scripture, and is rather a claim made by MAN, not by GOD.

Your are letting the fallibility of man bamboozle you into false beliefs, when you should be adhering only to the infallibe word of God which is Scripture.

Well first off, you've refuted absolutely nothing in Orthodox theology using scripture. Your understanding and interpretation of the text is WRONG.

If Orthodox theology says that Scripture says their councils are inerrant (it doesn't), then how did the councils err?

Also, I'm pretty sure that saying "Mary is the salvation of my soul" is quite unscriptural.

Orthodox theology does not claim ecumenical councils are inerrant in the way Scripture is. We claim that the Holy Spirit guides the Church into all truth, and that the received ecumenical councils: received and ratified by the whole Church over time, represent that guidance. The test is reception. A council that is rejected by the body of the Church doesn't carry that authority. This is a coherent ecclesiology.

Yours isn't because on sola scriptura, you have no mechanism to tell me which council, synod, or individual interpreter is reading Scripture correctly. You just pick the ones you agree with and call the rest errant. That's your judgment functioning as the final authority, not Scripture.

On "Mary is the salvation of my soul:" First, cite where any Orthodox Christian is required to say that as a doctrinal formula. You're likely pulling a line from a private hymn or prayer, not a conciliar dogma. Orthodox liturgical poetry uses elevated, typological language…and guess what, SO DOES SCRIPTURE! Scripture calls the Ark "the Lord's salvation" without meaning the wood saved anyone. I would stop if I were you…because now you're getting close to criticizing scripture as inerrant.
Doc Holliday
How long do you want to ignore this user?
BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

I keep hearing this claim that Scripture alone can give you a perfect definition of the Holy Trinity as defined by Nicea and Chalcedon which most Protestants affirm.

Thats absolute nonsense.

Aries made his case to deny the Trinity with texts like Proverbs 8:22 ("the Lord created me at the beginning of his work"), John 14:28 ("the Father is greater than I"), Colossians 1:15 ("firstborn of all creation"), and Mark 13:32 (the Son not knowing the day or hour).

The Trinity was not settled by a better proof text. It was settled by a council with binding authority. Which is the problem. You can't affirm Nicaea and Chalcedon as settled Christianity, but then reject other conclusions from that same tradition and that same authority. You cannot selectively invoke conciliar authority when it suits you and discard it when it doesn't or you have no way to bind everyone.

Nobody actually relies on scripture alone either. Yall need to cut out that nonsense. Total bs. When a Reformed Protestant settles a disputed question by appealing to Calvin, or a Lutheran defers to Luther's exegesis, or a Baptist cites the Second London Confession, they are functionally doing exactly what they accuse Catholics and Orthodox of doing: grounding theological conclusions in the authority of post biblical teachers and confessional documents rather than scripture alone.

You realize that you're arguing against solO scriptura, and not solA scriptura?

And the concept of the Trinity is fully derivable from Scripture, as I had already demonstrated to you. Besides, if it wasn't, how could have the councils come to that conclusion? Did they create a concept out of whole cloth?

Here's a question for you, as well as for everyone else: is the belief in the Trinity necessary for one's salvation?

If the Trinity were simply derivable from Scripture by careful reading, Arius would not have been a serious theological threat requiring an ecumenical council to resolve.

Councils have the authority of the sacrament of apostolic succession. That gives them guidance by the Holy Spirit.

Mainline prots wouldn't be gay and secular. People interpret text multiple ways. You interpret debt and slavery language in a 21st century lens vs me who took time to understand how Jews viewed what those concepts meant in their time.

Yes, Trinitarian faith is necessary.

Have you ever questioned your denomination? Is there anything you think your church is doing wrong?
Do you know that there are numerous Protestant pastors that have become Orthodox?

- so, you agree that you were arguing against solO scriptura, and not solA scriptura?

- I never said the Trinity was "simply" derivable. That's you adding words so you can validate your argument. It takes very careful reading and long, diligent study to derive the Trinity from Scripture. Therefore, it is not surprising that Christians, even true, saved Christians, would not be able to draw it from a simple reading. Arianism, on the other hand, is completely different. It says that Jesus is a created being, and therefore not God. However, Scripture CLEARLY indicates that Jesus is God. And therefore, no church council is needed to know that Arianism is false.

- So, you believe that a belief in the Trinity is necessary for salvation? You believe that if someone hears the gospel and believes and trusts in Jesus for their salvation, and they believe Jesus is God.... but they don't believe the Holy Spirit is God, but rather a kind of subordinate entity "sent" by God - then that means they are not saved? Does salvation depend on having a correct theology, especially one that is not explicitly taught in Scripture? And when did Jesus or his apostles every teach that?

- Look at what you're saying here: you're saying that the Trinity, which is 1) NOT derivable from Scripture but can only be known by the utterances of a council of men, and 2) is necessary for salvation - which is ultimately saying that the word of God is insufficient for our salvation!! Is this truly what you believe?

- I belong to no denomination. I'm simply a bible-believing Christian. Yes, there are things I question about certain teachings coming from various Protestant churches, and it's based on what Scripture says (the word of God), not based on what a council of men declared (the Tradition of men). I don't know how many Protestant pastors became Orthodox, but I'm sure it happens the other way around too. I will say that if a Protestant pastor becomes Roman Catholic or Orthodox, then something is really, really wrong with their faith if they are turning to a church that teaches a different gospel than the Bible and actively promotes and even requires the practice and belief in rank heresy and idolatry. Again, if they are okay with bowing and praying to images and saying "Mary is the salvation of my soul", then it's quite possible that they never really were a true Christian.



You claim you're trying to argue for sola scriptura, but not solo, while simultaneously claiming man made tradition is a secondary interpretative authority...then you claim Orthodox theology is off limits because its "Man made tradition". Your logic isn't consistent.

I'm really trying to understand what you're saying here. You frequently do not make any sense. The claim is that Orthodox theology is not wholesale "off limits", but rather only that Orthodox theology which contradicts Scripture. So where's the "solO" scriptura here? No one is saying that NO other authority for a church is allowed. Sola scriptura means that all other authorities, i.e. "man-made tradition" that is outside of Scripture is always to be considered fallible, and therefore always correctable by Scripture, Scripture being the highest standard of authority, being the infallible word of God. There is absolutely no logical inconsistency here. Rather, your understanding is what's at fault.

The church councils of Roman Catholicism and Orthodoxy have been shown to be in contradition and thus in error, so there is no infallible authority of the "Church". This is a false belief that is NOWHERE in Scripture, and is rather a claim made by MAN, not by GOD.

Your are letting the fallibility of man bamboozle you into false beliefs, when you should be adhering only to the infallibe word of God which is Scripture.



Where does the Old Testament define the seat of Moses? It doesn't. Nowhere. Not in the Torah, not in the Prophets, not in ANY writings. The phrase doesn't exist in the Hebrew Bible. It's an extrascriptural institution of oral, traditioned authority. Jesus validated it without citing a single verse to justify it. If you applied sola scriptura prior to the time of Jesus to establish the seat of Moses...you couldn't establish it as an authority because the Seat of Moses is not written down or defined whatsoever.

You DO know that Jesus lambasted them for adhering to their traditions as if they had equal authority with written Scripture, even adhering to them at the expense of Scripture - don't you?


If Mark 7 condemns all tradition, it condemns the seat of Moses too and then Jesus contradicts Himself in Matthew 23.
He left standing in Matthew 23 a tradition that has no scriptural basis at all and commanded obedience to it.

You don't want that conclusion. The only coherent reading is that Jesus condemns tradition that nullifies Scripture, not tradition that carries and transmits authority alongside it.

You cannot flatten those two passages into one anti-tradition principle without ignoring that Jesus gave the command to obey the seat of Moses in the same breath He criticized the men sitting in it. He drew a precise distinction: obey the office, don't imitate the hypocrisy. That is not the logic of sola scriptura.

No one is saying "all tradition is condemned". You are reallly bad at misrepresenting the argument. What's condemned is holding man-made tradition on par with the written word of God. Jesus called them out on it.

Do you really think if the ones in Moses' seat told people to bow down and worship idols, that Jesus would tell them to obey them?
You just conceded that not all tradition is condemned, only tradition placed on par with or above Scripture. That's actually the Orthodox position. That's what we've been saying the entire time. Holy Tradition doesn't compete with Scripture. It's the living context within which Scripture was written, canonized, and has always been correctly interpreted. So thank you for abandoning the original objection.

Your hypothetical is describing tradition that nullifies Scripture, which is exactly the Mark 7 category we already established is condemned. Idol worship is explicitly forbidden in the written Torah. That would be tradition overriding Scripture.

The only thing left is to ask is who is the authorized interpreter? And Matthew 23 already answered that. Office. Succession. Not your private judgment.
BusyTarpDuster2017
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Doc Holliday said:

BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

I keep hearing this claim that Scripture alone can give you a perfect definition of the Holy Trinity as defined by Nicea and Chalcedon which most Protestants affirm.

Thats absolute nonsense.

Aries made his case to deny the Trinity with texts like Proverbs 8:22 ("the Lord created me at the beginning of his work"), John 14:28 ("the Father is greater than I"), Colossians 1:15 ("firstborn of all creation"), and Mark 13:32 (the Son not knowing the day or hour).

The Trinity was not settled by a better proof text. It was settled by a council with binding authority. Which is the problem. You can't affirm Nicaea and Chalcedon as settled Christianity, but then reject other conclusions from that same tradition and that same authority. You cannot selectively invoke conciliar authority when it suits you and discard it when it doesn't or you have no way to bind everyone.

Nobody actually relies on scripture alone either. Yall need to cut out that nonsense. Total bs. When a Reformed Protestant settles a disputed question by appealing to Calvin, or a Lutheran defers to Luther's exegesis, or a Baptist cites the Second London Confession, they are functionally doing exactly what they accuse Catholics and Orthodox of doing: grounding theological conclusions in the authority of post biblical teachers and confessional documents rather than scripture alone.

You realize that you're arguing against solO scriptura, and not solA scriptura?

And the concept of the Trinity is fully derivable from Scripture, as I had already demonstrated to you. Besides, if it wasn't, how could have the councils come to that conclusion? Did they create a concept out of whole cloth?

Here's a question for you, as well as for everyone else: is the belief in the Trinity necessary for one's salvation?

If the Trinity were simply derivable from Scripture by careful reading, Arius would not have been a serious theological threat requiring an ecumenical council to resolve.

Councils have the authority of the sacrament of apostolic succession. That gives them guidance by the Holy Spirit.

Mainline prots wouldn't be gay and secular. People interpret text multiple ways. You interpret debt and slavery language in a 21st century lens vs me who took time to understand how Jews viewed what those concepts meant in their time.

Yes, Trinitarian faith is necessary.

Have you ever questioned your denomination? Is there anything you think your church is doing wrong?
Do you know that there are numerous Protestant pastors that have become Orthodox?

- so, you agree that you were arguing against solO scriptura, and not solA scriptura?

- I never said the Trinity was "simply" derivable. That's you adding words so you can validate your argument. It takes very careful reading and long, diligent study to derive the Trinity from Scripture. Therefore, it is not surprising that Christians, even true, saved Christians, would not be able to draw it from a simple reading. Arianism, on the other hand, is completely different. It says that Jesus is a created being, and therefore not God. However, Scripture CLEARLY indicates that Jesus is God. And therefore, no church council is needed to know that Arianism is false.

- So, you believe that a belief in the Trinity is necessary for salvation? You believe that if someone hears the gospel and believes and trusts in Jesus for their salvation, and they believe Jesus is God.... but they don't believe the Holy Spirit is God, but rather a kind of subordinate entity "sent" by God - then that means they are not saved? Does salvation depend on having a correct theology, especially one that is not explicitly taught in Scripture? And when did Jesus or his apostles every teach that?

- Look at what you're saying here: you're saying that the Trinity, which is 1) NOT derivable from Scripture but can only be known by the utterances of a council of men, and 2) is necessary for salvation - which is ultimately saying that the word of God is insufficient for our salvation!! Is this truly what you believe?

- I belong to no denomination. I'm simply a bible-believing Christian. Yes, there are things I question about certain teachings coming from various Protestant churches, and it's based on what Scripture says (the word of God), not based on what a council of men declared (the Tradition of men). I don't know how many Protestant pastors became Orthodox, but I'm sure it happens the other way around too. I will say that if a Protestant pastor becomes Roman Catholic or Orthodox, then something is really, really wrong with their faith if they are turning to a church that teaches a different gospel than the Bible and actively promotes and even requires the practice and belief in rank heresy and idolatry. Again, if they are okay with bowing and praying to images and saying "Mary is the salvation of my soul", then it's quite possible that they never really were a true Christian.



You claim you're trying to argue for sola scriptura, but not solo, while simultaneously claiming man made tradition is a secondary interpretative authority...then you claim Orthodox theology is off limits because its "Man made tradition". Your logic isn't consistent.

I'm really trying to understand what you're saying here. You frequently do not make any sense. The claim is that Orthodox theology is not wholesale "off limits", but rather only that Orthodox theology which contradicts Scripture. So where's the "solO" scriptura here? No one is saying that NO other authority for a church is allowed. Sola scriptura means that all other authorities, i.e. "man-made tradition" that is outside of Scripture is always to be considered fallible, and therefore always correctable by Scripture, Scripture being the highest standard of authority, being the infallible word of God. There is absolutely no logical inconsistency here. Rather, your understanding is what's at fault.

The church councils of Roman Catholicism and Orthodoxy have been shown to be in contradition and thus in error, so there is no infallible authority of the "Church". This is a false belief that is NOWHERE in Scripture, and is rather a claim made by MAN, not by GOD.

Your are letting the fallibility of man bamboozle you into false beliefs, when you should be adhering only to the infallibe word of God which is Scripture.

Well first off, you've refuted absolutely nothing in Orthodox theology using scripture. Your understanding and interpretation of the text is WRONG.

If Orthodox theology says that Scripture says their councils are inerrant (it doesn't), then how did the councils err?

Also, I'm pretty sure that saying "Mary is the salvation of my soul" is quite unscriptural.


Orthodox theology does not claim ecumenical councils are inerrant in the way Scripture is. We claim that the Holy Spirit guides the Church into all truth, and that the received ecumenical councils: received and ratified by the whole Church over time, represent that guidance. The test is reception. A council that is rejected by the body of the Church doesn't carry that authority. This is a coherent ecclesiology.

Yours isn't because on sola scriptura, you have no mechanism to tell me which council, synod, or individual interpreter is reading Scripture correctly. You just pick the ones you agree with and call the rest errant. That's your judgment functioning as the final authority, not Scripture.

On "Mary is the salvation of my soul:" First, cite where any Orthodox Christian is required to say that as a doctrinal formula. You're likely pulling a line from a private hymn or prayer, not a conciliar dogma. Orthodox liturgical poetry uses elevated, typological language…and guess what, SO DOES SCRIPTURE! Scripture calls the Ark "the Lord's salvation" without meaning the wood saved anyone. I would stop if I were you…because now you're getting close to criticizing scripture as inerrant.

Even the "accepted" councils by the Orthodox church have been errant. You haven't escaped your problem.

Your Akathist hymn is part of your liturgy, which your church considers to be infallible, no? That's where that marian idolatry comes from.

Scripture does NOT engage in typological language that elevates a human being to that of Jesus. Your "Ark" argument doesn't work, because the "Ark" - Noah's ark, the ark of the covenant, and Jesus - were all indeed the Lord's salvation of his people. Noah's ark saved humanity, the ark of the covenant saved Israel from her enemies, and Jesus was the final salvation for man for all of eternity.
BusyTarpDuster2017
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Doc Holliday said:

BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

I keep hearing this claim that Scripture alone can give you a perfect definition of the Holy Trinity as defined by Nicea and Chalcedon which most Protestants affirm.

Thats absolute nonsense.

Aries made his case to deny the Trinity with texts like Proverbs 8:22 ("the Lord created me at the beginning of his work"), John 14:28 ("the Father is greater than I"), Colossians 1:15 ("firstborn of all creation"), and Mark 13:32 (the Son not knowing the day or hour).

The Trinity was not settled by a better proof text. It was settled by a council with binding authority. Which is the problem. You can't affirm Nicaea and Chalcedon as settled Christianity, but then reject other conclusions from that same tradition and that same authority. You cannot selectively invoke conciliar authority when it suits you and discard it when it doesn't or you have no way to bind everyone.

Nobody actually relies on scripture alone either. Yall need to cut out that nonsense. Total bs. When a Reformed Protestant settles a disputed question by appealing to Calvin, or a Lutheran defers to Luther's exegesis, or a Baptist cites the Second London Confession, they are functionally doing exactly what they accuse Catholics and Orthodox of doing: grounding theological conclusions in the authority of post biblical teachers and confessional documents rather than scripture alone.

You realize that you're arguing against solO scriptura, and not solA scriptura?

And the concept of the Trinity is fully derivable from Scripture, as I had already demonstrated to you. Besides, if it wasn't, how could have the councils come to that conclusion? Did they create a concept out of whole cloth?

Here's a question for you, as well as for everyone else: is the belief in the Trinity necessary for one's salvation?

If the Trinity were simply derivable from Scripture by careful reading, Arius would not have been a serious theological threat requiring an ecumenical council to resolve.

Councils have the authority of the sacrament of apostolic succession. That gives them guidance by the Holy Spirit.

Mainline prots wouldn't be gay and secular. People interpret text multiple ways. You interpret debt and slavery language in a 21st century lens vs me who took time to understand how Jews viewed what those concepts meant in their time.

Yes, Trinitarian faith is necessary.

Have you ever questioned your denomination? Is there anything you think your church is doing wrong?
Do you know that there are numerous Protestant pastors that have become Orthodox?

- so, you agree that you were arguing against solO scriptura, and not solA scriptura?

- I never said the Trinity was "simply" derivable. That's you adding words so you can validate your argument. It takes very careful reading and long, diligent study to derive the Trinity from Scripture. Therefore, it is not surprising that Christians, even true, saved Christians, would not be able to draw it from a simple reading. Arianism, on the other hand, is completely different. It says that Jesus is a created being, and therefore not God. However, Scripture CLEARLY indicates that Jesus is God. And therefore, no church council is needed to know that Arianism is false.

- So, you believe that a belief in the Trinity is necessary for salvation? You believe that if someone hears the gospel and believes and trusts in Jesus for their salvation, and they believe Jesus is God.... but they don't believe the Holy Spirit is God, but rather a kind of subordinate entity "sent" by God - then that means they are not saved? Does salvation depend on having a correct theology, especially one that is not explicitly taught in Scripture? And when did Jesus or his apostles every teach that?

- Look at what you're saying here: you're saying that the Trinity, which is 1) NOT derivable from Scripture but can only be known by the utterances of a council of men, and 2) is necessary for salvation - which is ultimately saying that the word of God is insufficient for our salvation!! Is this truly what you believe?

- I belong to no denomination. I'm simply a bible-believing Christian. Yes, there are things I question about certain teachings coming from various Protestant churches, and it's based on what Scripture says (the word of God), not based on what a council of men declared (the Tradition of men). I don't know how many Protestant pastors became Orthodox, but I'm sure it happens the other way around too. I will say that if a Protestant pastor becomes Roman Catholic or Orthodox, then something is really, really wrong with their faith if they are turning to a church that teaches a different gospel than the Bible and actively promotes and even requires the practice and belief in rank heresy and idolatry. Again, if they are okay with bowing and praying to images and saying "Mary is the salvation of my soul", then it's quite possible that they never really were a true Christian.



You claim you're trying to argue for sola scriptura, but not solo, while simultaneously claiming man made tradition is a secondary interpretative authority...then you claim Orthodox theology is off limits because its "Man made tradition". Your logic isn't consistent.

I'm really trying to understand what you're saying here. You frequently do not make any sense. The claim is that Orthodox theology is not wholesale "off limits", but rather only that Orthodox theology which contradicts Scripture. So where's the "solO" scriptura here? No one is saying that NO other authority for a church is allowed. Sola scriptura means that all other authorities, i.e. "man-made tradition" that is outside of Scripture is always to be considered fallible, and therefore always correctable by Scripture, Scripture being the highest standard of authority, being the infallible word of God. There is absolutely no logical inconsistency here. Rather, your understanding is what's at fault.

The church councils of Roman Catholicism and Orthodoxy have been shown to be in contradition and thus in error, so there is no infallible authority of the "Church". This is a false belief that is NOWHERE in Scripture, and is rather a claim made by MAN, not by GOD.

Your are letting the fallibility of man bamboozle you into false beliefs, when you should be adhering only to the infallibe word of God which is Scripture.



Where does the Old Testament define the seat of Moses? It doesn't. Nowhere. Not in the Torah, not in the Prophets, not in ANY writings. The phrase doesn't exist in the Hebrew Bible. It's an extrascriptural institution of oral, traditioned authority. Jesus validated it without citing a single verse to justify it. If you applied sola scriptura prior to the time of Jesus to establish the seat of Moses...you couldn't establish it as an authority because the Seat of Moses is not written down or defined whatsoever.

You DO know that Jesus lambasted them for adhering to their traditions as if they had equal authority with written Scripture, even adhering to them at the expense of Scripture - don't you?


If Mark 7 condemns all tradition, it condemns the seat of Moses too and then Jesus contradicts Himself in Matthew 23.
He left standing in Matthew 23 a tradition that has no scriptural basis at all and commanded obedience to it.

You don't want that conclusion. The only coherent reading is that Jesus condemns tradition that nullifies Scripture, not tradition that carries and transmits authority alongside it.

You cannot flatten those two passages into one anti-tradition principle without ignoring that Jesus gave the command to obey the seat of Moses in the same breath He criticized the men sitting in it. He drew a precise distinction: obey the office, don't imitate the hypocrisy. That is not the logic of sola scriptura.

No one is saying "all tradition is condemned". You are reallly bad at misrepresenting the argument. What's condemned is holding man-made tradition on par with the written word of God. Jesus called them out on it.

Do you really think if the ones in Moses' seat told people to bow down and worship idols, that Jesus would tell them to obey them?

You just conceded that not all tradition is condemned, only tradition placed on par with or above Scripture. That's actually the Orthodox position. That's what we've been saying the entire time. Holy Tradition doesn't compete with Scripture. It's the living context within which Scripture was written, canonized, and has always been correctly interpreted. So thank you for abandoning the original objection.

So... you're saying that Scripture is the highest authority then, right? Over church authority, right?

The orginal objection was not that all tradition was condemned. You just aren't good at keeping track of the argument, or actually understanding the argument, and you have a strong propensity to mischaracterize what was argued.
BusyTarpDuster2017
How long do you want to ignore this user?
BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

I keep hearing this claim that Scripture alone can give you a perfect definition of the Holy Trinity as defined by Nicea and Chalcedon which most Protestants affirm.

Thats absolute nonsense.

Aries made his case to deny the Trinity with texts like Proverbs 8:22 ("the Lord created me at the beginning of his work"), John 14:28 ("the Father is greater than I"), Colossians 1:15 ("firstborn of all creation"), and Mark 13:32 (the Son not knowing the day or hour).

The Trinity was not settled by a better proof text. It was settled by a council with binding authority. Which is the problem. You can't affirm Nicaea and Chalcedon as settled Christianity, but then reject other conclusions from that same tradition and that same authority. You cannot selectively invoke conciliar authority when it suits you and discard it when it doesn't or you have no way to bind everyone.

Nobody actually relies on scripture alone either. Yall need to cut out that nonsense. Total bs. When a Reformed Protestant settles a disputed question by appealing to Calvin, or a Lutheran defers to Luther's exegesis, or a Baptist cites the Second London Confession, they are functionally doing exactly what they accuse Catholics and Orthodox of doing: grounding theological conclusions in the authority of post biblical teachers and confessional documents rather than scripture alone.

You realize that you're arguing against solO scriptura, and not solA scriptura?

And the concept of the Trinity is fully derivable from Scripture, as I had already demonstrated to you. Besides, if it wasn't, how could have the councils come to that conclusion? Did they create a concept out of whole cloth?

Here's a question for you, as well as for everyone else: is the belief in the Trinity necessary for one's salvation?

If the Trinity were simply derivable from Scripture by careful reading, Arius would not have been a serious theological threat requiring an ecumenical council to resolve.

Councils have the authority of the sacrament of apostolic succession. That gives them guidance by the Holy Spirit.

Mainline prots wouldn't be gay and secular. People interpret text multiple ways. You interpret debt and slavery language in a 21st century lens vs me who took time to understand how Jews viewed what those concepts meant in their time.

Yes, Trinitarian faith is necessary.

Have you ever questioned your denomination? Is there anything you think your church is doing wrong?
Do you know that there are numerous Protestant pastors that have become Orthodox?

- so, you agree that you were arguing against solO scriptura, and not solA scriptura?

- I never said the Trinity was "simply" derivable. That's you adding words so you can validate your argument. It takes very careful reading and long, diligent study to derive the Trinity from Scripture. Therefore, it is not surprising that Christians, even true, saved Christians, would not be able to draw it from a simple reading. Arianism, on the other hand, is completely different. It says that Jesus is a created being, and therefore not God. However, Scripture CLEARLY indicates that Jesus is God. And therefore, no church council is needed to know that Arianism is false.

- So, you believe that a belief in the Trinity is necessary for salvation? You believe that if someone hears the gospel and believes and trusts in Jesus for their salvation, and they believe Jesus is God.... but they don't believe the Holy Spirit is God, but rather a kind of subordinate entity "sent" by God - then that means they are not saved? Does salvation depend on having a correct theology, especially one that is not explicitly taught in Scripture? And when did Jesus or his apostles every teach that?

- Look at what you're saying here: you're saying that the Trinity, which is 1) NOT derivable from Scripture but can only be known by the utterances of a council of men, and 2) is necessary for salvation - which is ultimately saying that the word of God is insufficient for our salvation!! Is this truly what you believe?

- I belong to no denomination. I'm simply a bible-believing Christian. Yes, there are things I question about certain teachings coming from various Protestant churches, and it's based on what Scripture says (the word of God), not based on what a council of men declared (the Tradition of men). I don't know how many Protestant pastors became Orthodox, but I'm sure it happens the other way around too. I will say that if a Protestant pastor becomes Roman Catholic or Orthodox, then something is really, really wrong with their faith if they are turning to a church that teaches a different gospel than the Bible and actively promotes and even requires the practice and belief in rank heresy and idolatry. Again, if they are okay with bowing and praying to images and saying "Mary is the salvation of my soul", then it's quite possible that they never really were a true Christian.



You claim you're trying to argue for sola scriptura, but not solo, while simultaneously claiming man made tradition is a secondary interpretative authority...then you claim Orthodox theology is off limits because its "Man made tradition". Your logic isn't consistent.

I'm really trying to understand what you're saying here. You frequently do not make any sense. The claim is that Orthodox theology is not wholesale "off limits", but rather only that Orthodox theology which contradicts Scripture. So where's the "solO" scriptura here? No one is saying that NO other authority for a church is allowed. Sola scriptura means that all other authorities, i.e. "man-made tradition" that is outside of Scripture is always to be considered fallible, and therefore always correctable by Scripture, Scripture being the highest standard of authority, being the infallible word of God. There is absolutely no logical inconsistency here. Rather, your understanding is what's at fault.

The church councils of Roman Catholicism and Orthodoxy have been shown to be in contradition and thus in error, so there is no infallible authority of the "Church". This is a false belief that is NOWHERE in Scripture, and is rather a claim made by MAN, not by GOD.

Your are letting the fallibility of man bamboozle you into false beliefs, when you should be adhering only to the infallibe word of God which is Scripture.

Well first off, you've refuted absolutely nothing in Orthodox theology using scripture. Your understanding and interpretation of the text is WRONG.

Open your Bible to Matthew 23:1-3. Jesus says the scribes and Pharisees "sit in Moses; seat" and commands obedience to them on that basis. Not on the basis of their personal holiness. He explicitly acknowledges they're hypocrites. Not on the basis of their accurate exegesis in any given moment, but on the basis of the office they occupy.

But would you say that the scribes and Pharisees in "Moses seat", who rejected Jesus, were infallible in their authority and intepretation of their Scripture?

Doc? Answer?
Doc Holliday
How long do you want to ignore this user?
BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

I keep hearing this claim that Scripture alone can give you a perfect definition of the Holy Trinity as defined by Nicea and Chalcedon which most Protestants affirm.

Thats absolute nonsense.

Aries made his case to deny the Trinity with texts like Proverbs 8:22 ("the Lord created me at the beginning of his work"), John 14:28 ("the Father is greater than I"), Colossians 1:15 ("firstborn of all creation"), and Mark 13:32 (the Son not knowing the day or hour).

The Trinity was not settled by a better proof text. It was settled by a council with binding authority. Which is the problem. You can't affirm Nicaea and Chalcedon as settled Christianity, but then reject other conclusions from that same tradition and that same authority. You cannot selectively invoke conciliar authority when it suits you and discard it when it doesn't or you have no way to bind everyone.

Nobody actually relies on scripture alone either. Yall need to cut out that nonsense. Total bs. When a Reformed Protestant settles a disputed question by appealing to Calvin, or a Lutheran defers to Luther's exegesis, or a Baptist cites the Second London Confession, they are functionally doing exactly what they accuse Catholics and Orthodox of doing: grounding theological conclusions in the authority of post biblical teachers and confessional documents rather than scripture alone.

You realize that you're arguing against solO scriptura, and not solA scriptura?

And the concept of the Trinity is fully derivable from Scripture, as I had already demonstrated to you. Besides, if it wasn't, how could have the councils come to that conclusion? Did they create a concept out of whole cloth?

Here's a question for you, as well as for everyone else: is the belief in the Trinity necessary for one's salvation?

If the Trinity were simply derivable from Scripture by careful reading, Arius would not have been a serious theological threat requiring an ecumenical council to resolve.

Councils have the authority of the sacrament of apostolic succession. That gives them guidance by the Holy Spirit.

Mainline prots wouldn't be gay and secular. People interpret text multiple ways. You interpret debt and slavery language in a 21st century lens vs me who took time to understand how Jews viewed what those concepts meant in their time.

Yes, Trinitarian faith is necessary.

Have you ever questioned your denomination? Is there anything you think your church is doing wrong?
Do you know that there are numerous Protestant pastors that have become Orthodox?

- so, you agree that you were arguing against solO scriptura, and not solA scriptura?

- I never said the Trinity was "simply" derivable. That's you adding words so you can validate your argument. It takes very careful reading and long, diligent study to derive the Trinity from Scripture. Therefore, it is not surprising that Christians, even true, saved Christians, would not be able to draw it from a simple reading. Arianism, on the other hand, is completely different. It says that Jesus is a created being, and therefore not God. However, Scripture CLEARLY indicates that Jesus is God. And therefore, no church council is needed to know that Arianism is false.

- So, you believe that a belief in the Trinity is necessary for salvation? You believe that if someone hears the gospel and believes and trusts in Jesus for their salvation, and they believe Jesus is God.... but they don't believe the Holy Spirit is God, but rather a kind of subordinate entity "sent" by God - then that means they are not saved? Does salvation depend on having a correct theology, especially one that is not explicitly taught in Scripture? And when did Jesus or his apostles every teach that?

- Look at what you're saying here: you're saying that the Trinity, which is 1) NOT derivable from Scripture but can only be known by the utterances of a council of men, and 2) is necessary for salvation - which is ultimately saying that the word of God is insufficient for our salvation!! Is this truly what you believe?

- I belong to no denomination. I'm simply a bible-believing Christian. Yes, there are things I question about certain teachings coming from various Protestant churches, and it's based on what Scripture says (the word of God), not based on what a council of men declared (the Tradition of men). I don't know how many Protestant pastors became Orthodox, but I'm sure it happens the other way around too. I will say that if a Protestant pastor becomes Roman Catholic or Orthodox, then something is really, really wrong with their faith if they are turning to a church that teaches a different gospel than the Bible and actively promotes and even requires the practice and belief in rank heresy and idolatry. Again, if they are okay with bowing and praying to images and saying "Mary is the salvation of my soul", then it's quite possible that they never really were a true Christian.



You claim you're trying to argue for sola scriptura, but not solo, while simultaneously claiming man made tradition is a secondary interpretative authority...then you claim Orthodox theology is off limits because its "Man made tradition". Your logic isn't consistent.

I'm really trying to understand what you're saying here. You frequently do not make any sense. The claim is that Orthodox theology is not wholesale "off limits", but rather only that Orthodox theology which contradicts Scripture. So where's the "solO" scriptura here? No one is saying that NO other authority for a church is allowed. Sola scriptura means that all other authorities, i.e. "man-made tradition" that is outside of Scripture is always to be considered fallible, and therefore always correctable by Scripture, Scripture being the highest standard of authority, being the infallible word of God. There is absolutely no logical inconsistency here. Rather, your understanding is what's at fault.

The church councils of Roman Catholicism and Orthodoxy have been shown to be in contradition and thus in error, so there is no infallible authority of the "Church". This is a false belief that is NOWHERE in Scripture, and is rather a claim made by MAN, not by GOD.

Your are letting the fallibility of man bamboozle you into false beliefs, when you should be adhering only to the infallibe word of God which is Scripture.

Well first off, you've refuted absolutely nothing in Orthodox theology using scripture. Your understanding and interpretation of the text is WRONG.

If Orthodox theology says that Scripture says their councils are inerrant (it doesn't), then how did the councils err?

Also, I'm pretty sure that saying "Mary is the salvation of my soul" is quite unscriptural.


Orthodox theology does not claim ecumenical councils are inerrant in the way Scripture is. We claim that the Holy Spirit guides the Church into all truth, and that the received ecumenical councils: received and ratified by the whole Church over time, represent that guidance. The test is reception. A council that is rejected by the body of the Church doesn't carry that authority. This is a coherent ecclesiology.

Yours isn't because on sola scriptura, you have no mechanism to tell me which council, synod, or individual interpreter is reading Scripture correctly. You just pick the ones you agree with and call the rest errant. That's your judgment functioning as the final authority, not Scripture.

On "Mary is the salvation of my soul:" First, cite where any Orthodox Christian is required to say that as a doctrinal formula. You're likely pulling a line from a private hymn or prayer, not a conciliar dogma. Orthodox liturgical poetry uses elevated, typological language…and guess what, SO DOES SCRIPTURE! Scripture calls the Ark "the Lord's salvation" without meaning the wood saved anyone. I would stop if I were you…because now you're getting close to criticizing scripture as inerrant.

Even the "accepted" councils by the Orthodox church have been errant. You haven't escaped your problem.

Your Akathist hymn is part of your liturgy, which your church considers to be infallible, no? That's where that marian idolatry comes from.

Scripture does NOT engage in typological language that elevates a human being to that of Jesus. Your "Ark" argument doesn't work, because the "Ark" - Noah's ark, the ark of the covenant, and Jesus - were all indeed the Lord's salvation of his people. Noah's ark saved humanity, the ark of the covenant saved Israel from her enemies, and Jesus was the final salvation for man for all of eternity.
You just argued that Noah's ark saved humanity, the Ark of the Covenant saved Israel, and Jesus is the final salvation, and all three legitimately carry the title of salvation in their respective contexts. You proved typological escalation is biblical. Each type points forward to and participates in the salvific reality it prefigures.

Now apply that same logic to Mary. She is the new Ark of the Covenant, the vessel that carried the incarnate God in her body, the one of whom Gabriel says "the power of the Most High will overshadow you," using the same Greek word used for the cloud overshadowing the Tabernacle. If the physical Ark that carried the presence of God could be called Israel's salvation, then the living Ark who carried God incarnate occupies an even higher typological position. You built the argument for us. We're just following it to its conclusion.

The Orthodox Church does not claim liturgical texts are infallible in the same sense Scripture is. Liturgical texts are authoritative expressions of the Church's theological mind, but they operate within a dogmatic framework defined by the ecumenical councils.
Doc Holliday
How long do you want to ignore this user?
BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

I keep hearing this claim that Scripture alone can give you a perfect definition of the Holy Trinity as defined by Nicea and Chalcedon which most Protestants affirm.

Thats absolute nonsense.

Aries made his case to deny the Trinity with texts like Proverbs 8:22 ("the Lord created me at the beginning of his work"), John 14:28 ("the Father is greater than I"), Colossians 1:15 ("firstborn of all creation"), and Mark 13:32 (the Son not knowing the day or hour).

The Trinity was not settled by a better proof text. It was settled by a council with binding authority. Which is the problem. You can't affirm Nicaea and Chalcedon as settled Christianity, but then reject other conclusions from that same tradition and that same authority. You cannot selectively invoke conciliar authority when it suits you and discard it when it doesn't or you have no way to bind everyone.

Nobody actually relies on scripture alone either. Yall need to cut out that nonsense. Total bs. When a Reformed Protestant settles a disputed question by appealing to Calvin, or a Lutheran defers to Luther's exegesis, or a Baptist cites the Second London Confession, they are functionally doing exactly what they accuse Catholics and Orthodox of doing: grounding theological conclusions in the authority of post biblical teachers and confessional documents rather than scripture alone.

You realize that you're arguing against solO scriptura, and not solA scriptura?

And the concept of the Trinity is fully derivable from Scripture, as I had already demonstrated to you. Besides, if it wasn't, how could have the councils come to that conclusion? Did they create a concept out of whole cloth?

Here's a question for you, as well as for everyone else: is the belief in the Trinity necessary for one's salvation?

If the Trinity were simply derivable from Scripture by careful reading, Arius would not have been a serious theological threat requiring an ecumenical council to resolve.

Councils have the authority of the sacrament of apostolic succession. That gives them guidance by the Holy Spirit.

Mainline prots wouldn't be gay and secular. People interpret text multiple ways. You interpret debt and slavery language in a 21st century lens vs me who took time to understand how Jews viewed what those concepts meant in their time.

Yes, Trinitarian faith is necessary.

Have you ever questioned your denomination? Is there anything you think your church is doing wrong?
Do you know that there are numerous Protestant pastors that have become Orthodox?

- so, you agree that you were arguing against solO scriptura, and not solA scriptura?

- I never said the Trinity was "simply" derivable. That's you adding words so you can validate your argument. It takes very careful reading and long, diligent study to derive the Trinity from Scripture. Therefore, it is not surprising that Christians, even true, saved Christians, would not be able to draw it from a simple reading. Arianism, on the other hand, is completely different. It says that Jesus is a created being, and therefore not God. However, Scripture CLEARLY indicates that Jesus is God. And therefore, no church council is needed to know that Arianism is false.

- So, you believe that a belief in the Trinity is necessary for salvation? You believe that if someone hears the gospel and believes and trusts in Jesus for their salvation, and they believe Jesus is God.... but they don't believe the Holy Spirit is God, but rather a kind of subordinate entity "sent" by God - then that means they are not saved? Does salvation depend on having a correct theology, especially one that is not explicitly taught in Scripture? And when did Jesus or his apostles every teach that?

- Look at what you're saying here: you're saying that the Trinity, which is 1) NOT derivable from Scripture but can only be known by the utterances of a council of men, and 2) is necessary for salvation - which is ultimately saying that the word of God is insufficient for our salvation!! Is this truly what you believe?

- I belong to no denomination. I'm simply a bible-believing Christian. Yes, there are things I question about certain teachings coming from various Protestant churches, and it's based on what Scripture says (the word of God), not based on what a council of men declared (the Tradition of men). I don't know how many Protestant pastors became Orthodox, but I'm sure it happens the other way around too. I will say that if a Protestant pastor becomes Roman Catholic or Orthodox, then something is really, really wrong with their faith if they are turning to a church that teaches a different gospel than the Bible and actively promotes and even requires the practice and belief in rank heresy and idolatry. Again, if they are okay with bowing and praying to images and saying "Mary is the salvation of my soul", then it's quite possible that they never really were a true Christian.



You claim you're trying to argue for sola scriptura, but not solo, while simultaneously claiming man made tradition is a secondary interpretative authority...then you claim Orthodox theology is off limits because its "Man made tradition". Your logic isn't consistent.

I'm really trying to understand what you're saying here. You frequently do not make any sense. The claim is that Orthodox theology is not wholesale "off limits", but rather only that Orthodox theology which contradicts Scripture. So where's the "solO" scriptura here? No one is saying that NO other authority for a church is allowed. Sola scriptura means that all other authorities, i.e. "man-made tradition" that is outside of Scripture is always to be considered fallible, and therefore always correctable by Scripture, Scripture being the highest standard of authority, being the infallible word of God. There is absolutely no logical inconsistency here. Rather, your understanding is what's at fault.

The church councils of Roman Catholicism and Orthodoxy have been shown to be in contradition and thus in error, so there is no infallible authority of the "Church". This is a false belief that is NOWHERE in Scripture, and is rather a claim made by MAN, not by GOD.

Your are letting the fallibility of man bamboozle you into false beliefs, when you should be adhering only to the infallibe word of God which is Scripture.



Where does the Old Testament define the seat of Moses? It doesn't. Nowhere. Not in the Torah, not in the Prophets, not in ANY writings. The phrase doesn't exist in the Hebrew Bible. It's an extrascriptural institution of oral, traditioned authority. Jesus validated it without citing a single verse to justify it. If you applied sola scriptura prior to the time of Jesus to establish the seat of Moses...you couldn't establish it as an authority because the Seat of Moses is not written down or defined whatsoever.

You DO know that Jesus lambasted them for adhering to their traditions as if they had equal authority with written Scripture, even adhering to them at the expense of Scripture - don't you?


If Mark 7 condemns all tradition, it condemns the seat of Moses too and then Jesus contradicts Himself in Matthew 23.
He left standing in Matthew 23 a tradition that has no scriptural basis at all and commanded obedience to it.

You don't want that conclusion. The only coherent reading is that Jesus condemns tradition that nullifies Scripture, not tradition that carries and transmits authority alongside it.

You cannot flatten those two passages into one anti-tradition principle without ignoring that Jesus gave the command to obey the seat of Moses in the same breath He criticized the men sitting in it. He drew a precise distinction: obey the office, don't imitate the hypocrisy. That is not the logic of sola scriptura.

No one is saying "all tradition is condemned". You are reallly bad at misrepresenting the argument. What's condemned is holding man-made tradition on par with the written word of God. Jesus called them out on it.

Do you really think if the ones in Moses' seat told people to bow down and worship idols, that Jesus would tell them to obey them?

You just conceded that not all tradition is condemned, only tradition placed on par with or above Scripture. That's actually the Orthodox position. That's what we've been saying the entire time. Holy Tradition doesn't compete with Scripture. It's the living context within which Scripture was written, canonized, and has always been correctly interpreted. So thank you for abandoning the original objection.

So... you're saying that Scripture is the highest authority then, right? Over church authority, right?

The orginal objection was not that all tradition was condemned. You just aren't good at keeping track of the argument, or actually understanding the argument, and you have a strong propensity to mischaracterize what was argued.
Your exact words were: "You DO know that Jesus lambasted them for adhering to their traditions as if they had equal authority with written Scripture." That is a claim about tradition as a category being subordinate to Scripture. If that wasn't your argument, clarify what your argument actually was…because that's what the words said. I engaged what you wrote.

Scripture did not fall from heaven in a leather binding. The Church wrote it, recognized it, canonized it, and has always been its custodian. You cannot place Scripture over the Church as an independent authority because without the Church you don't have a Scripture. The canon itself is a product of church authority. Which books are in your Bible? Who decided? A council. By what authority? Not Scripture…Scripture doesn't contain a table of its own contents.

So when you ask "is Scripture the highest authority over church authority" you are smuggling in a Protestant assumption about the relationship between the two that has to be established before the question even makes sense. You haven't established it. Matthew 23 argues directly against it. And your own canon depends on the very church authority you're asking me to subordinate.

The question isn't Scripture vs. Church. The question is: what is the Church, and how does it read its own book?
BusyTarpDuster2017
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Doc Holliday said:

BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

I keep hearing this claim that Scripture alone can give you a perfect definition of the Holy Trinity as defined by Nicea and Chalcedon which most Protestants affirm.

Thats absolute nonsense.

Aries made his case to deny the Trinity with texts like Proverbs 8:22 ("the Lord created me at the beginning of his work"), John 14:28 ("the Father is greater than I"), Colossians 1:15 ("firstborn of all creation"), and Mark 13:32 (the Son not knowing the day or hour).

The Trinity was not settled by a better proof text. It was settled by a council with binding authority. Which is the problem. You can't affirm Nicaea and Chalcedon as settled Christianity, but then reject other conclusions from that same tradition and that same authority. You cannot selectively invoke conciliar authority when it suits you and discard it when it doesn't or you have no way to bind everyone.

Nobody actually relies on scripture alone either. Yall need to cut out that nonsense. Total bs. When a Reformed Protestant settles a disputed question by appealing to Calvin, or a Lutheran defers to Luther's exegesis, or a Baptist cites the Second London Confession, they are functionally doing exactly what they accuse Catholics and Orthodox of doing: grounding theological conclusions in the authority of post biblical teachers and confessional documents rather than scripture alone.

You realize that you're arguing against solO scriptura, and not solA scriptura?

And the concept of the Trinity is fully derivable from Scripture, as I had already demonstrated to you. Besides, if it wasn't, how could have the councils come to that conclusion? Did they create a concept out of whole cloth?

Here's a question for you, as well as for everyone else: is the belief in the Trinity necessary for one's salvation?

If the Trinity were simply derivable from Scripture by careful reading, Arius would not have been a serious theological threat requiring an ecumenical council to resolve.

Councils have the authority of the sacrament of apostolic succession. That gives them guidance by the Holy Spirit.

Mainline prots wouldn't be gay and secular. People interpret text multiple ways. You interpret debt and slavery language in a 21st century lens vs me who took time to understand how Jews viewed what those concepts meant in their time.

Yes, Trinitarian faith is necessary.

Have you ever questioned your denomination? Is there anything you think your church is doing wrong?
Do you know that there are numerous Protestant pastors that have become Orthodox?

- so, you agree that you were arguing against solO scriptura, and not solA scriptura?

- I never said the Trinity was "simply" derivable. That's you adding words so you can validate your argument. It takes very careful reading and long, diligent study to derive the Trinity from Scripture. Therefore, it is not surprising that Christians, even true, saved Christians, would not be able to draw it from a simple reading. Arianism, on the other hand, is completely different. It says that Jesus is a created being, and therefore not God. However, Scripture CLEARLY indicates that Jesus is God. And therefore, no church council is needed to know that Arianism is false.

- So, you believe that a belief in the Trinity is necessary for salvation? You believe that if someone hears the gospel and believes and trusts in Jesus for their salvation, and they believe Jesus is God.... but they don't believe the Holy Spirit is God, but rather a kind of subordinate entity "sent" by God - then that means they are not saved? Does salvation depend on having a correct theology, especially one that is not explicitly taught in Scripture? And when did Jesus or his apostles every teach that?

- Look at what you're saying here: you're saying that the Trinity, which is 1) NOT derivable from Scripture but can only be known by the utterances of a council of men, and 2) is necessary for salvation - which is ultimately saying that the word of God is insufficient for our salvation!! Is this truly what you believe?

- I belong to no denomination. I'm simply a bible-believing Christian. Yes, there are things I question about certain teachings coming from various Protestant churches, and it's based on what Scripture says (the word of God), not based on what a council of men declared (the Tradition of men). I don't know how many Protestant pastors became Orthodox, but I'm sure it happens the other way around too. I will say that if a Protestant pastor becomes Roman Catholic or Orthodox, then something is really, really wrong with their faith if they are turning to a church that teaches a different gospel than the Bible and actively promotes and even requires the practice and belief in rank heresy and idolatry. Again, if they are okay with bowing and praying to images and saying "Mary is the salvation of my soul", then it's quite possible that they never really were a true Christian.



You claim you're trying to argue for sola scriptura, but not solo, while simultaneously claiming man made tradition is a secondary interpretative authority...then you claim Orthodox theology is off limits because its "Man made tradition". Your logic isn't consistent.

I'm really trying to understand what you're saying here. You frequently do not make any sense. The claim is that Orthodox theology is not wholesale "off limits", but rather only that Orthodox theology which contradicts Scripture. So where's the "solO" scriptura here? No one is saying that NO other authority for a church is allowed. Sola scriptura means that all other authorities, i.e. "man-made tradition" that is outside of Scripture is always to be considered fallible, and therefore always correctable by Scripture, Scripture being the highest standard of authority, being the infallible word of God. There is absolutely no logical inconsistency here. Rather, your understanding is what's at fault.

The church councils of Roman Catholicism and Orthodoxy have been shown to be in contradition and thus in error, so there is no infallible authority of the "Church". This is a false belief that is NOWHERE in Scripture, and is rather a claim made by MAN, not by GOD.

Your are letting the fallibility of man bamboozle you into false beliefs, when you should be adhering only to the infallibe word of God which is Scripture.

Well first off, you've refuted absolutely nothing in Orthodox theology using scripture. Your understanding and interpretation of the text is WRONG.

If Orthodox theology says that Scripture says their councils are inerrant (it doesn't), then how did the councils err?

Also, I'm pretty sure that saying "Mary is the salvation of my soul" is quite unscriptural.


Orthodox theology does not claim ecumenical councils are inerrant in the way Scripture is. We claim that the Holy Spirit guides the Church into all truth, and that the received ecumenical councils: received and ratified by the whole Church over time, represent that guidance. The test is reception. A council that is rejected by the body of the Church doesn't carry that authority. This is a coherent ecclesiology.

Yours isn't because on sola scriptura, you have no mechanism to tell me which council, synod, or individual interpreter is reading Scripture correctly. You just pick the ones you agree with and call the rest errant. That's your judgment functioning as the final authority, not Scripture.

On "Mary is the salvation of my soul:" First, cite where any Orthodox Christian is required to say that as a doctrinal formula. You're likely pulling a line from a private hymn or prayer, not a conciliar dogma. Orthodox liturgical poetry uses elevated, typological language…and guess what, SO DOES SCRIPTURE! Scripture calls the Ark "the Lord's salvation" without meaning the wood saved anyone. I would stop if I were you…because now you're getting close to criticizing scripture as inerrant.

Even the "accepted" councils by the Orthodox church have been errant. You haven't escaped your problem.

Your Akathist hymn is part of your liturgy, which your church considers to be infallible, no? That's where that marian idolatry comes from.

Scripture does NOT engage in typological language that elevates a human being to that of Jesus. Your "Ark" argument doesn't work, because the "Ark" - Noah's ark, the ark of the covenant, and Jesus - were all indeed the Lord's salvation of his people. Noah's ark saved humanity, the ark of the covenant saved Israel from her enemies, and Jesus was the final salvation for man for all of eternity.

You just argued that Noah's ark saved humanity, the Ark of the Covenant saved Israel, and Jesus is the final salvation, and all three legitimately carry the title of salvation in their respective contexts. You proved typological escalation is biblical. Each type points forward to and participates in the salvific reality it prefigures.

Now apply that same logic to Mary. She is the new Ark of the Covenant, the vessel that carried the incarnate God in her body, the one of whom Gabriel says "the power of the Most High will overshadow you," using the same Greek word used for the cloud overshadowing the Tabernacle. If the physical Ark that carried the presence of God could be called Israel's salvation, then the living Ark who carried God incarnate occupies an even higher typological position. You built the argument for us. We're just following it to its conclusion.

The Orthodox Church does not claim liturgical texts are infallible in the same sense Scripture is. Liturgical texts are authoritative expressions of the Church's theological mind, but they operate within a dogmatic framework defined by the ecumenical councils.

No, Mary being the "Ark of the New Covenenant" is NOWHERE in Scripture, never taught by Jesus or the his apostles, never taught by the early church. It is a late development that arose after Christianity compromised with pagan Rome, and incorporated all of Rome's pagan gods by recasting them as Christian figures. The Mary you "venerate" is nothing more than the same pagan mother goddess of ancient times, re-awakened.

Jesus even downplayed her role when people tried to uplift it. It's right there in Scripture. He never even called her his "mother" in Scripture.

Typology can be used to argue almost anything, if one is creative enough to twist Scripture to support it, like your church does for its marian idolatry. Same with Roman Catholicism.

By the way, JESUS is the Ark of the New Covenant. Do you remember Scripture, where it had two angels, one where the head of Jesus lay in the tomb, and the one at the feet, just like the cherubim on the Ark of the Covenant? Jesus is the new Noah's ark - all who enter him are saved. The "Ark" typology was FOR JESUS, not Mary. This is just yet another example of Roman Catholicism and Orthodoxy trying to give Mary the role and characteristics that belong to Jesus and him alone.
Mothra
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Realitybites said:

Mothra said:

You just don't like the possibility he ended up in heaven because the thief on the cross destroys your little narrative:


What part of there is zero possibility he ended up in heaven don't you understand?

You raised that possibility despite Jesus directly shutting that down with his own words in scripture.

I said I don't know what happened to Christ because scripture is silent on this point. The assumption that he didn't go to some portion of Heaven is merely your assumption and nothing more. Is it possible that Christ went to Heaven, but did not see his father? Is it possible he went to a place called Paradise that wasn't Heaven but wasn't Hades? Or is it possible that he went to Sheol?

Indeed, all of these things are possible. Scripture lacks the certainty that you are apparently willing to attribute to it.
Mothra
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BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

BusyTarpDuster2017 said:

Doc Holliday said:

I keep hearing this claim that Scripture alone can give you a perfect definition of the Holy Trinity as defined by Nicea and Chalcedon which most Protestants affirm.

Thats absolute nonsense.

Aries made his case to deny the Trinity with texts like Proverbs 8:22 ("the Lord created me at the beginning of his work"), John 14:28 ("the Father is greater than I"), Colossians 1:15 ("firstborn of all creation"), and Mark 13:32 (the Son not knowing the day or hour).

The Trinity was not settled by a better proof text. It was settled by a council with binding authority. Which is the problem. You can't affirm Nicaea and Chalcedon as settled Christianity, but then reject other conclusions from that same tradition and that same authority. You cannot selectively invoke conciliar authority when it suits you and discard it when it doesn't or you have no way to bind everyone.

Nobody actually relies on scripture alone either. Yall need to cut out that nonsense. Total bs. When a Reformed Protestant settles a disputed question by appealing to Calvin, or a Lutheran defers to Luther's exegesis, or a Baptist cites the Second London Confession, they are functionally doing exactly what they accuse Catholics and Orthodox of doing: grounding theological conclusions in the authority of post biblical teachers and confessional documents rather than scripture alone.

You realize that you're arguing against solO scriptura, and not solA scriptura?

And the concept of the Trinity is fully derivable from Scripture, as I had already demonstrated to you. Besides, if it wasn't, how could have the councils come to that conclusion? Did they create a concept out of whole cloth?

Here's a question for you, as well as for everyone else: is the belief in the Trinity necessary for one's salvation?

If the Trinity were simply derivable from Scripture by careful reading, Arius would not have been a serious theological threat requiring an ecumenical council to resolve.

Councils have the authority of the sacrament of apostolic succession. That gives them guidance by the Holy Spirit.

Mainline prots wouldn't be gay and secular. People interpret text multiple ways. You interpret debt and slavery language in a 21st century lens vs me who took time to understand how Jews viewed what those concepts meant in their time.

Yes, Trinitarian faith is necessary.

Have you ever questioned your denomination? Is there anything you think your church is doing wrong?
Do you know that there are numerous Protestant pastors that have become Orthodox?

- so, you agree that you were arguing against solO scriptura, and not solA scriptura?

- I never said the Trinity was "simply" derivable. That's you adding words so you can validate your argument. It takes very careful reading and long, diligent study to derive the Trinity from Scripture. Therefore, it is not surprising that Christians, even true, saved Christians, would not be able to draw it from a simple reading. Arianism, on the other hand, is completely different. It says that Jesus is a created being, and therefore not God. However, Scripture CLEARLY indicates that Jesus is God. And therefore, no church council is needed to know that Arianism is false.

- So, you believe that a belief in the Trinity is necessary for salvation? You believe that if someone hears the gospel and believes and trusts in Jesus for their salvation, and they believe Jesus is God.... but they don't believe the Holy Spirit is God, but rather a kind of subordinate entity "sent" by God - then that means they are not saved? Does salvation depend on having a correct theology, especially one that is not explicitly taught in Scripture? And when did Jesus or his apostles every teach that?

- Look at what you're saying here: you're saying that the Trinity, which is 1) NOT derivable from Scripture but can only be known by the utterances of a council of men, and 2) is necessary for salvation - which is ultimately saying that the word of God is insufficient for our salvation!! Is this truly what you believe?

- I belong to no denomination. I'm simply a bible-believing Christian. Yes, there are things I question about certain teachings coming from various Protestant churches, and it's based on what Scripture says (the word of God), not based on what a council of men declared (the Tradition of men). I don't know how many Protestant pastors became Orthodox, but I'm sure it happens the other way around too. I will say that if a Protestant pastor becomes Roman Catholic or Orthodox, then something is really, really wrong with their faith if they are turning to a church that teaches a different gospel than the Bible and actively promotes and even requires the practice and belief in rank heresy and idolatry. Again, if they are okay with bowing and praying to images and saying "Mary is the salvation of my soul", then it's quite possible that they never really were a true Christian.



You claim you're trying to argue for sola scriptura, but not solo, while simultaneously claiming man made tradition is a secondary interpretative authority...then you claim Orthodox theology is off limits because its "Man made tradition". Your logic isn't consistent.

No one is saying that NO other authority for a church is allowed. Sola scriptura means that all other authorities, i.e. "man-made tradition" that is outside of Scripture is always to be considered fallible, and therefore always correctable by Scripture, Scripture being the highest standard of authority, being the infallible word of God. There is absolutely no logical inconsistency here. Rather, your understanding is what's at fault.

Well said. This is an issue that Doc and the other Orthodox on this board consistently misunderstand about Protestant theology.
 
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