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Scripture: the Communication of God’s Word

Discussion in 'Free-For-All Archives' started by Carson Weber, Nov 6, 2002.

  1. g_1933

    g_1933 New Member

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    I must tell you that I have never had anyone other than the Holy Spirit of God translate for me. When I have a problem with a scripture I pray about it and God has always supplied an answer. Trusting God IS simplistic and I rejoice in that.

    In Christ,
    G
     
  2. Carson Weber

    Carson Weber <img src="http://www.boerne.com/temp/bb_pic2.jpg">

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    Hi g_1933,

    You wrote, "I must tell you that I have never had anyone other than the Holy Spirit of God translate for me. When I have a problem with a scripture I pray about it and God has always supplied an answer. Trusting God IS simplistic and I rejoice in that."

    Are you a Mormon missionary?

    The reason I ask is because what you have just said is exactly what they will tell you. You almost represented a portion of a conversation I had with two LDS missionaries this past summer when in London, Ontario.

    It's interesting though how the same Holy Spirit has lead you and I to contrary conclusions regarding Luke 22:19; it seems like God apparently does hold the quality of duplicity. Or maybe not? Perhaps the Historical-Critical Method and authentic Christian Tradition are both necessary in order to ascertain the literal sense of Scripture. Perhaps your suggestion is possibly naive and simplistic?

    Blessings,

    Carson
     
  3. Australian Baptist Student

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  4. Bro. Curtis

    Bro. Curtis <img src =/curtis.gif>
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    I believe that verse to mean...

    We can only know God thru his word. That word came to us thru his workers, Moses, Isaiah...etc.

    His word is a promise of salvation.

    That promise of salvation is what became flesh.

    [ November 09, 2002, 12:35 AM: Message edited by: Bro. Curtis ]
     
  5. Carson Weber

    Carson Weber <img src="http://www.boerne.com/temp/bb_pic2.jpg">

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    Hi Colin, you wrote, "I know this sounds simplistic, but Jesus said Daniel spoke the words of Daniel. If Daniel didn't write his book, then Jesus is lying."

    If someone else wrote Daniel, that does not mean that the author did not faithfully record what Daniel had spoken.

    You wrote, "history is very important [to the Jews]."

    I did not deny that history was important for the Jews (why else would we have the Torah: b're-sheet/Genesis, sh'mot/Exodus, vayikra/Leviticus, b'midbar/Numbers, and d'varim/Deuteronomy as well as the K'tubim, esp. Y'hoshua/Joshua, shofetim/Judges, sh'muel/1&2Samuel, and mal'khim/1&2Kings). I wrote that "[t]heir worldview was not rational, chronological, and critical; it was mythic and poetic." This accounts for why the Gospels are arranged in different orders among the Synoptics. It also accounts for the difficulty that post-Enlightenment minds find with Genesis. The writer of Genesis proposed the who, what, and why of Creation in mythical/poetic language without ever intending to portray the critical, scientific, chronological, rational "how" of Creation.

    Regarding 2 Peter, in spite of its heavy stress on Petrine authorship, 2 Pet is nowhere mentioned in the second century. The Apologists, Irenaeus, Tertullian, Cyprian, Clement of Alexandria, and the Muratorian Canon are completely silent about it.

    Its first attestation is in Origen, but according to him the letter is contested. Eusebius lists it among the apocrypha. Even down to the fourth century 2 Peter was largely unknown or not recognized as canonical.

    Yet, you accept 2 Peter as canonical. You received the Bible from the Catholic Church. Catholic bishops decided to include 2 Peter in the canon of the New Testament and it has been a part of the Church's canon ever since. With the advent of Protestantism, the canon is retained (based as it is on the authority of the bishops), and thus, you regard 2 Peter as Scripture.

    If scholarship shows us that, most likely, it wasn't Peter who wrote 2 Peter, would you be willing to disregard it as Scripture? Or do you accept this particular tradition of the Catholic Church too much to be disregarded?

    I have not studied the authorship of the TaNaK enough to have formed an informed opinion regarding Mosaic authorship. Regarding excommunication, it is a very Biblical concept (e.g. Gal 1:5-8), and I believe that it is a good idea not to stray from the topic of the thread.

    God bless,

    Carson

    [ November 09, 2002, 01:11 AM: Message edited by: Carson Weber ]
     
  6. Bro. Curtis

    Bro. Curtis <img src =/curtis.gif>
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    I accept 2 Peter as scripture simply because it's right after 1 Peter in my KJV. I completely trust that version, I stake my very salvation upon the words I have read between it's covers.

    Sound's narrow minded, but that's how much I trust God in preserving his word for me.

    The best arguments for 2 Peter being the same author as 1 Peter, in my opinion, is

    1:1 "Simon Peter, a servant and an apostle of Jesus Christ, to them that have obtained like precious faith with us through the righteousness of God and our Saviour Jesus Christ"

    and 3:1 "This second epistle, beloved, I now write unto you; in both which I stir up your pure minds by way of remembrance"

    Petrine authorship has been bitterly debated by folks a lot smarter than me, and I have heard very convincing arguments. I don't believe any Book in the Bible has been attacked more, maybe James.

    I won't be able to convince anybody with my limited intelect, and my 200 word vocabulary, but I believe 2 Peter to be scripture, just as inspired as the Old testament.

    [ November 09, 2002, 01:18 AM: Message edited by: Bro. Curtis ]
     
  7. Carson Weber

    Carson Weber <img src="http://www.boerne.com/temp/bb_pic2.jpg">

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    Hi Curtis,

    You wrote, "I accept 2 Peter as scripture simply because it's right after 1 Peter in my KJV. I completely trust that version, I stake my very salvation upon the words I have read between it's covers. Sound's narrow minded, but that's how much I trust God in preserving his word for me."

    All I can say is "Wow". What you have just said, Curtis, represents fundamentalism at its core, and it's a system that I find quite antithetical to the God-given faculty of reason.

    your bro in Christ,

    Carson
     
  8. Bro. Curtis

    Bro. Curtis <img src =/curtis.gif>
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    Then I guess I'm unreasonable. ;) [​IMG]

    And let's not forget the first recorded error to result from somebody reasoning...

    [ November 09, 2002, 02:09 AM: Message edited by: Bro. Curtis ]
     
  9. Bro. Curtis

    Bro. Curtis <img src =/curtis.gif>
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    And just to clarify T2U' question,

    no, I don't worship the book called the Bible. But I believe everything I need to know about God, including the demonstration of our need for salvation, the promise of salvation, the method of salvation, and the end result of salvation, is in the Bible. To me. the Bible, from beginning to end, paints a complete picture of Jesus Christ, pointing to him as the source, and the sum of salvation.
     
  10. swaimj

    swaimj <img src=/swaimj.gif>

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    Carson,
    Thanks for posting your paper on the board. I found it to be very interesting. Putting your writing in the public domain for the scrutiny of others is evidence of bravery on your part. I commend you for it! Of course, I want to comment on it too!

    First, I hope you can clarify a statement you made in the fourth paragraph of the paper. First you said that the Magisterium interprets the Word of God
    Then you said
    Is the one single deposit scripture, tradition, or both? I was not sure what you meant.

    Secondly, I found myself in agreement with the descriptions and definitions of, what I would call, a literal hermeneutic. You speak of dual authorship, both human and divine. I agree that there is dual authorship. You said
    Evangelical/Fundamental writers would concur with this statement. You also quoted Pope Leo XIII in his affirmation of inerrancy:
    Evangelical/Fundamentalist interpreters in the traditon of B.B. Warfield would agree with this statement as well. You quote Pope Pius XII with a clear definition of the term "literal" as applied to interpretation:
    Again, I agree with this statement. And you speak to the importance of leterary analysis as an important ingredient of a literal approach:
    Again, agreed.

    Now that I have stated what I agree with, let me point out the problems I see in your argument. There are two.

    First, you make a false argument against evangelicals/fundamentalists when you accuse us of holding to a dictation theory of inspiration. You said, quoting another:
    The fact is, we hold to literalness in the same sense in which you hold it as I demonstrated above by agreeing with your definitions. B.B. Warfield did not hold to a dictation theory of inspiration, in fact, he refuted such a theory. Contemporary evangelical seminaries do not teach dictation theory. Also, I know of no fundamental seminary which holds to a dictation theory and I challenge you to find a fundamental seminary with even a single faculty member who holds to dictation theory. If you are going to accuse us of holding this position, please provide primary source evidence of such; i.e. quotes from an evangelical/fundamentalist who holds this view. Quoting a non-evangelical/fundamental author who accuses us of holding to dictation theory indicates inadequate research on your part and constitutes a "strawman" argument.

    Second, your own view of the principles of interpretation, as stated, are internally inconsistent and self-contradictory. I say this because of a short statement in paragraph eight which reads:
    Carson, the "analogy of faith" is the allegorical method. In your paper, you spend three paragraphs giving a beautiful defense of literal interpretation, then you insert the method of allegory. Carson, if
    as you say, then allegorical interpretation has no place in interpretation. Allegorizing does not tell us what was in the mind of the author (either the human or the divine author), but it tells us what is in the imagination of the reader/interpreter. The Roman Catholic Church's problem is that much of Church tradition cannot be found in the scripture if the literal method us used exclusively. To defend itself in these areas, the Church reserves the right to allegorize the scriptures to make them fit their unbiblical traditions. Carson, you cannot utilize both methods and come to an accurate understanding of the scriptures.

    With sincerity and charity,
    swaimj [​IMG]
     
  11. Carson Weber

    Carson Weber <img src="http://www.boerne.com/temp/bb_pic2.jpg">

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    Hi Swaimj,

    You are welcome, and thank you for finding my paper interesting and your commendation.

    You asked, "Is the one single deposit scripture, tradition, or both? I was not sure what you meant."

    The single deposit is everything that has been revealed in Jesus Christ, Who is God's final Word to mankind. Jesus did not come to Earth and compose a New Testament. He lived, formed a faith community with his life, truth, and authority, died, was buried, rose from the dead, and ascended into heaven. Everything about Jesus Christ - his life, deeds, words, etc. - comprise the deposit and it is handed on within the Church as (1) Tradition and (2) as Scripture (which itself was Tradition before it was written down according to form criticism).

    You commented, "B.B. Warfield did not hold to a dictation theory of inspiration, in fact, he refuted such a theory."

    I apologize for the ambiguity in my paper on this particular issue.

    I further quote Keating for the context of my quote, "Fundamentalists regard the Bible as the keystone of their faith. Their understanding of inspiration and inerrancy comes from Benjamin Warfield's notion of plenary-verbal inspiration, meaning that in the autographs all of the Bible is inspired and the inspiration extends not just to the message God wished to convey, but to the very words chosen by the sacred writers. For many fundamentalists, particularly those not of an intellectual bent, this reduces the dictation theory of inspiration - the human authors were mere stenographers, their only task being to record what the Voice said. This of course, implies not only a Bible free from error, which is also the orthodox Catholic position, but also a Bible free from abiguity.."

    As you are well aware, there are numerous theories of Biblical inspiration and the dictation theory is only one of these that presents the far right fundamentalist; it is not descriptive of the position held by all fundamentalists.

    The paper I presented contrasts two schools: 1. The school that accepts the Historical-Critical methods and 2. The school that does not accept these methods. "Biblical Fundamentalism" is a catch-all term that describes the latter school. It is a subdivision of evangelicals.

    Regardless of whether one holds to the Dictation Theory of Inspiration, if one fails to acknowledge that the Word of God has been phrased in human language and distinct literary genres, if one neglects to take into account styles of human thought and the fact that the Biblical texts express language that covers long periods of time in multifarious historical situations, if one tends to regard as historical everything that is narrated in the past tense without respect for what may have been expressed primarily in symbolic or figurative language - all of these qualities of Scripture require historical criticism - then such a person would be a Biblical Fundamentalist.

    It was a reaction against the assault of rationalist criticism initially launched by German scholars whose intent was to undermine the Christian belief in the inerrancy of the Bible. Some Protestant denominations sought refuge in a semantic literalism that appeared to shelter the Bible from this onslaught from agnostic scholars. It engages in a rigid literalism that creates a false tension between the truth of divine revelation and scientific truth.

    You wrote, "Carson, the "analogy of faith" is the allegorical method.

    No, this is not what I mean by the "analogy of faith". I am using the term as used within the context of the Catholic Tradition, as it is spelled out in the Catechism of the Catholic Church in paragraph 114:

    "By 'analogy of faith' we mean the coherence of the truths of faith among themselves and within the whole plan of Revelation."

    You wrote, "The Roman Catholic Church's problem is that much of Church tradition cannot be found in the scripture if the literal method us used exclusively. To defend itself in these areas, the Church reserves the right to allegorize the scriptures to make them fit their unbiblical traditions.

    You are imputing the doctrine of Sola Scriptura onto the Catholic Church. The Church does not claim that her Sacred Tradition is found in the Scripture. It is a distinct transmission of the deposit of divine revelation.

    Dei Verbum, the Church's Dogmatic Constitution on Divine Revelation, promulgated at the Second Vatican Council, summarizes this doctrine that the Christian Church has practiced for nearly 2,000 years now:

    "Hence there exists a close connection and communication between Sacred Tradition and Sacred Scripture. For both of them, flowing from the same divine wellspring, in a certain way merge into a unity and tend toward the same end. For Sacred Scripture is the word of God inasmuch as it is consigned to writing under the inspiration of the divine Spirit, while sacred tradition takes the word of God entrusted by Christ the Lord and the Holy Spirit to the Apostles, and hands it on to their successors in its full purity, so that led by the light of the Spirit of truth they may in proclaiming it preserve this word of God faithfully, explain it, and make it more widely known. Consequently it is not from Sacred Scripture alone that the Church draws her certainty about everything which has been revealed. Therefore both sacred tradition and Sacred Scripture are to be accepted and venerated with the same sense of loyalty and reverence."

    As a Christian, I am not beholden to demonstrate every article of my faith from the Old or New Testaments. Like the first Christians, I am beholden to hold to the faith of God's family, which is a sacred Temple, built upon the foundation of Jesus Christ in the Holy Spirit.

    God bless,

    Carson

    [ November 10, 2002, 02:41 PM: Message edited by: Carson Weber ]
     
  12. DHK

    DHK <b>Moderator</b>

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    The dictation theory is not even a theory held by most fundamentalists. Your quoting of Keating in this regard seems to be a deliberate slam or misrepresentation of Fundamental Baptists. I also agree with Swaimj's remarks in this regard.
    DHK
     
  13. blackbird

    blackbird Active Member

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    Scripture's proper home ain't(golly, a Southern Baptist Doctoral Prof will sure knock off a couple of letter grades for that word, too!!) Sure! Ole Blackbird can't hang in there in doctoral school--too much sophistication--Doctoral school is like to me--a little boy looking at the cockpit of a Boeing 767!! Look at all those switches and gauges, and knobs, and little TV screens--I'll never make that paper "fly" for the Professor--but anyway--back to the subject--

    Scripture's proper home ain't in the bosom of the Catholic church---scripture's home is in the heart of every born-again believer! Jesus said that man shall not live by bread(physical self) alone--but by every word that proceeds from God(spiritual)---bread is there to feed me physically--the word of God is there to feed me spiritually. The book of Psalm says over and over again that we can take the word of God--scripture--and eat the words and they will be satisfaction for the soul! Of course, our Catholic buddies get their minds "boggled" trying to figure out how to take what is meant there in the spiritual sense--physcially!

    No! Scripture's proper home is in the heart of the believer---our Catholic buddies have a hard time extending the "Believing Blanket" over to us Protestants---seems like they want to "hog" all of the cover that God gives!!

    Carson, lets answer the question posed above!! When you die--do you know beyond a shadow of a doubt that you will go to heaven??

    Let me ask you to ask the Holy Spirit--not the Dean of your school--not the priest at your church--but ask the Holy Spirit right now---"Holy Spirit! Am I saved? Am I born-again?"--Carson, that school professor will lie to you to keep you in his school! That priest will lie to you to keep you in his church!! The Holy Spirit is God Almighty---he ain't gonna lie to you! He's gonna tell you the truth!! What is the truth He's tellin' you right now about you being born from above?? What is the Holy Spirit telling you when you ask Him if you are born again??

    Your friend,
    Blackbird
     
  14. g_1933

    g_1933 New Member

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    Amen to this!

    Certainly not! That is just another false teaching leading people to hell.

    Maybe we have different conclusions because you are not trusting that God could provide His Word without need of someone else to clarify it for Him. Is God not "God" enough to do this?

    2Tim 3:16 All scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness:

    Scripture is the 66 books of the Bible, nothing else.

    1Jn 4:6 We are of God: he that knoweth God heareth us; he that is not of God heareth not us. Hereby know we the spirit of truth, and the spirit of error.

    In Christ,
    G
     
  15. Carson Weber

    Carson Weber <img src="http://www.boerne.com/temp/bb_pic2.jpg">

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    Hi Blackbird,

    You wrote, "Scripture's proper home ain't in the bosom of the Catholic church"

    Scripture is a collection of writings that were created in and for a living faith community. The same household of faith that existed at Pentecost exists today. To take Scripture from the community is like ripping a fetus from her mother's room and handing her to any individual who "wants a baby".

    You wrote, "Scripture's proper home is in the heart of the believer"

    And the believer's proper home is the household of God, the covenant family established in the blood of Jesus Christ. It is this household, which is "the pillar and foundation of truth" (1 Tim 3:15)

    You wrote, "When you die--do you know beyond a shadow of a doubt that you will go to heaven??"

    If I were to die at this moment, I can tell you that I have a moral assurance that I will go to heaven because I stand in the grace of my Saviour, Jesus Christ. If I were to die tomorrow, I can tell you that if I do not separate myself from Christ (Gal 5:4), if I do not continue in His goodness(Rom 11:22), if become entagled again in the pollutions of the world (2 Pet 2:20f), if I am not moved away from the hope of the Gospel (Col 1:22f), if I do not crucify the Son of God again for myself (Heb 6:4-6), if my name is not blot out from the Book of Life (Rev 3:5), if I do not commit a deadly sin willingly (Heb 10:26f), if I do not hold steadfast to the end (Heb 3:14), then I will not "go to heaven".

    I also think that this is not the place to pursue this topic. This thread is devoted to Sacred Scripture as the communication of God's Word.

    You asked, "Let me ask you to ask the Holy Spirit Am I born-again?"

    I've already asked him when I renewed my baptismal vows numerous times. I am truly born from above. I experience the Holy Spirit every day of my life in deep prayer. The Spirit of God is very alive in my life.

    The term "born again" is actually a misconception that Nicodemus had in John 3. Jesus meant "born from above", and Nicodemus, a man of the flesh, did not understand Jesus.

    I "washed" my robes and made them white in the blood of the Lamb (Rev 7:14), my heart has been "sprinkled clean" from an evil conscience and my body "washed with pure water" (Heb 10:22), I have been "washed", sanctified, and justified in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ and in the Spirit of our God (1 Cor 6:11), I have been "cleansed" by the "washing of water" with the word (Eph 5:26), and I have been born of "water and the Spirit" (John 3:5).

    I don't think that we should pursue this subject on this thread, which is devoted to Sacred Scripture as the communication of God's Word.

    Hi g_1933,

    You wrote, "2Tim 3:16 All scripture is given by inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for correction, for instruction in righteousness"

    Have you read this verse within the immediate context of chapter 3? Turn back a couple of verses with me, if you would to verses 14 and 15.

    V. 14, "But as for you, continue in what you have learned and have firmly believed, knowing from whom you learned it"

    Paul instructs Timothy to continue in what Timothy has learned and believed from Paul because he learned and believed it from Paul ("knowing from who you learned it"). Notice, at this time, Paul is not speaking of Scripture. Paul is speaking of what he has handed on to Timothy (1 Tim 6:20 - "O Timothy, Guard what has been entrusted to you"). This is the new revelation given in Jesus Christ apart from the law, the writings, and the prophets (the TaNaK). We call this "Tradition". It is the faithful handing on of the Christian faith, whole and entire; this would not be possible without the assitance and guidance of the Holy Spirit.

    v. 15, "and how from childhood you have been acquainted with the sacred writings which are able to instruct you for salvation through faith in Christ Jesus."

    When Paul wrote this epistle to Timothy, the New Testament did not exist. The only sacred writings that Timothy knew of since his childhood are the writings of the Old Testament. It is the Old Testament that Paul speaks of that are able to instruct Timothy for salvation through faith in Jesus Christ.

    Bless you,

    Carson

    [ November 11, 2002, 12:06 PM: Message edited by: Carson Weber ]
     
  16. g_1933

    g_1933 New Member

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    Exactly, Paul is instructing Timothy to continue in what he learned from scripture, sacred writings(Old Testament) not some prieasts discourse on how to understand the Word. Or an added "Biblical" document. "Knowing from whom you learned it" Is Paul speaking of himself here or maybe of God?

    Personally I call the New Testament Scripture, along with the Old Testament. My problem with the Catholic Church is that along with passing on these traditions, they have added their own traditions which are not Biblical, With the Holy Spirit truely guiding this false teaching can be overcome through the power of Jesus Christ.

    In Christ,
    G
     
  17. blackbird

    blackbird Active Member

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    Carson,
    How come you don't want to pursue the subject of being born again on this thread?? How come you don't want to pursue the subject of asking the Holy Spirit if you are saved on this thread?? To us Protestants--salvation is an open field--I can talk about being born again at an LSU football game--I can talk about asking the Holy Spirit if I am saved at a Braves game or just wherever--it would seem that any ole likely spot to talk about salvation was an alright spot for folks like Nicodemus and Zaccheus--one saved at night--in an unnamed location--the other saved in the broad daylight of Jericho up a Sycamore tree!! Whether it be a Sycamore tree--a prison cell--or this thread---tell us!! Lets talk about it!! Heck! If you came over to my house--and I took you fishing with me on the lake--and you were in my boat--would that be a good place to talk about salvation and being saved and being born again!!??

    The moderator ain't gonna get mad at you or suspend me if the thread gets kinda sorta off the subject--if they do--no skin off my back--and life will go on!! I'll miss being here like I miss Bill Clinton in the White House!! So lets talk about being saved!! I know beyond a shadow of a doubt that I have been saved---and that Jesus is giving me His word--and that He's gonna keep me saved throughout all eternity--what about it, Carson??

    Your friend,
    Blackbird
     
  18. Carson Weber

    Carson Weber <img src="http://www.boerne.com/temp/bb_pic2.jpg">

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    Hi g_1933,

    You wrote, ""Knowing from whom you learned it" Is Paul speaking of himself here or maybe of God?"

    Considering that Paul discipled Timothy and taught Timothy the Christian faith, I would say that Paul is either speaking of (1) himself or (2) God in the sense that Paul taught Timothy what Jesus Christ taught when he was on Earth.

    You wrote, "Personally I call the New Testament Scripture, along with the Old Testament."

    Catholics do too, of course. The problem occurs when the deposit of faith given to the Church in the person and work of Jesus Christ is limited to the lowest common demoninator: New Testament writings. Jesus did not found a book. He founded a Church by teaching disciples orally. The New Testament writings emerged from this faith community, which is the household of God.

    You also wrote, "My problem with the Catholic Church is that along with passing on these traditions, they have added their own traditions which are not Biblical"

    And I would disagree with you. I would also attribute the continuation of authentic Tradition in the Church to the person and work of the Holy Spirit.

    Hi blackbird,

    You asked, "How come you don't want to pursue the subject of being born again on this thread??"

    Because the topic of this thread is Scripture: the Communication of God's Word, which entails an analysis of the difference between Catholic and Fundamentalist approaches to interpreting the divine literature.

    God bless,

    Carson
     
  19. Dualhunter

    Dualhunter New Member

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    God set apart a people for Himself in the Old Testament too, yet Scripture, not Tradition was Law for them. With many issues the Catholic church is still in the Old Testament and it seems as if this is the only Old Testament concept that Rome rejects.
     
  20. DHK

    DHK <b>Moderator</b>

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    Then this is left entirely open for opinion and interpretation by anyone. If what you call "authentic Tradition" continues as inspired works of the Holy Spirit, then who is there that can authenticate it, and on what basis can it be authenticated. To have belief in an open and continuing revelation is not only not plausible but it is ridiculously infeasible. Would you care to collate all the "revelations" given to all the individuals throughout the past 2,000 years so that we can really sit down and study God's revelation. God promised to preserve His Word. He is a God of order, not a God of chaos and confusion. To try to record every person's claim to a word of knowledge or a prophecy, or an interpretation of tongues, is an impossibility. But if revelation is an on-going process that is what you will have to do. Let me know when you are finished.
    DHK
     
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