L
ltwin
Guest
I’m confident in what I believe, but I’m open to being proven in error by the Scriptures.So you are not 100% sure what you were taught is correct? Maybe other Protestants think as you do.
I’m confident in what I believe, but I’m open to being proven in error by the Scriptures.So you are not 100% sure what you were taught is correct? Maybe other Protestants think as you do.
Then I pray you find the truth.I’m confident in what I believe, but I’m open to being proven in error by the Scriptures.
Then forgive me. I actually knew that and meant to add “except for educated Pentecostals”.Your knowledge of Pentecostalism is what is rediculous. I, and the majority of Pentecostals throughout world, don’t believe what you claim we believe.
Some of us believe that the normative physical sign of being baptized with the Holy Spirit is that one will speak in unknown tongues. Many more of us believe that speaking in tongues is just one gift among many and not a sign of Spirit baptism or empowerment.
However, that is not the same thing as denying that other Christians have the Holy Spirit. We believe that all born again Christians are indwelt by the Holy Spirit and are members of the Church. We believe, as other Protestants believe, that justification is by faith alone. Those who have faith and repentance will be saved, whether they speak in tongues or not.
I was raised in a very fundamentalist sect and I deffinately think they are the wrong ones. I was taught that anything done in church had to have ‘permission’ from the bible to be valid even flowers candles and organs were forbidden by them.I was once a liberal Protestant and my family is starting to lean toward liberal Protestantism although my extended family is far more fundamentalist. I was just wondering if liberal Protestants were hypocrites. For instance, my father would state believes we should interpret the Bible in light of the creeds but nevertheless, still feels the need to write up the notion of Mary as Theotokos completely unnecessary and keeps referencing some sort of turtle. My family meets with a couple of friends of ours every weekend to discuss different current issues and how Christians should deal with them. Penal substitutionary atonement is always enforced. Statements about the Catholic faith are brought up that I look up afterward and find out were eggregious errors (Catholics struggle with works, Catholics added the “apocrypha” into the Bible, Catholics added to the traditions). Statements are made about homosexuals and they insist one moment that it’s all right and the next moment that it’s not all right. Of course, they maintain to conservative viewpoints on the historical Jesus as well and fight for women in ministry (which for them means women pastors, priests, bishops, etc.). All based on their criticisms of Biblicism which they seem to still maintain.
It makes no sense. Are liberal Protestants hypocritical in this sense? Are they actually living up to their own standards?
Apology accepted. But you would still be incorrect even saying that “uneducated” Pentecostals “typically” believe that anyone who doesn’t speak in tongues isn’t or can’t be saved. Whether they are educated or not, most Pentecostals agree that speaking in tongues is not a “sign,” “requirement” or “work” in any way necessary for salvation.Then forgive me. I actually knew that and meant to add “except for educated Pentecostals”.
For example?I wouldn’t say hypocritical, but rather most protestants like to cherry-pick the Bible verses that fit their world view and ignore the ones that don’t.
There was one Lutheran fella on here who is from Minnesota I believe. He said his rite was good with homosexual marriage, it baffled me and I said “I wonder what JonNC would say.” Someone chimed in and said your group of Lutherans are against it.For example?
Jon
Agreed. This is reinterpreting scripture in order to fit a social or political belief.There was one Lutheran fella on here who is from Minnesota I believe. He said his rite was good with homosexual marriage, it baffled me and I said “I wonder what JonNC would say.” Someone chimed in and said your group of Lutherans are against it.
The one thing I see as hypocritical is a protestant thinking other protestants are wrong in their interpretation and that they are correct.
I second that question. The aforementioned example – regarding one’s own beliefs as correct – doesn’t fit any definition of hypocritical that I’ve ever learned. Perhaps there’s a new definition.Why would that be hypocritical?