R
runningdude
Guest
You are using the term brother too strictly.
You have not defined begotten or proceeding and explained how using one or the other is not consistent with the trinitarian God of Christianity, while then showing how the Mormon plurality of gods of flesh and bone is. Or the Mormon belief that God was once a man.So, I hope you can see that you shouldn’t say the Holy Spirit was BEGOTTEN and you should not reject the idea that a scriptural creed was dismissed at Nicea. These are pretty solid historical points.
That is one historical point, which means there was no Bible. Therefore no-one at Nicaea would have claimed they could “prove it from the Bible” like you and Joseph Smith have done. A second historical point is that you and Joseph Smith failed at your claim to prove the Mormon god(s) from the Bible.You are correct that the New Testament canon was not defined until after Nicea,……
RebeccaJ,The Church preserved documents of men she calls Fathers, precisely because they explain the Catholic faith. This includes Justin Martyr.
The Church existed before she canonized what we call the NT, and calls these writing scripture precisely because these writings contain the Apostolic faith that she preserves and hands on.
Also, you are not remotely correct in this assertion either. Tertullian calls the claims of primacy by the Bishop or Rome “usurpation.” Tertullian believed in continuing revelation and left what you call the Catholic faith to follow Montanist prophets. Origin believed in pre-mortal life and like Justin was no Trintarian. These and many other ECF have their writing preserved and yet in MANY areas they do not “explain the Catholic faith.”The Church preserved documents of men she calls Fathers, precisely because they explain the Catholic faith. This includes Justin Martyr.
Good. Because I am not a polytheist and I am not claiming Justin Martyr was a polytheist. I am claiming that he was a Monarchical Monotheist and that he was not an Augustinian Trinitarian. I claim this because that is how Justin Martyr presents his theology. But, you go ahead, don’t read him and merely assert that he is a Catholic because the early church must be Catholic and they preserved his writing.Justin Martyr is of our Catholic Faith. He believed in One God. No one in their right mind would think he was trying to convince a Jew of his time that there is more than one God. His dialogue is centered on convincing Trypho that Jesus is the Christ, and the Son of God.
Only a polytheist would try to extract polytheism out of Justin Martyr
I am not lying. I said that the Bishops at Nicea were reluctant to embrace Homoousian because it was connected with the modalist heresy. This is true.Can’t remember the source because I read it at least a decade ago. But the term homousian was used in different descriptions prior to Nicaea. A word used in different descriptions does not mean the same thing was being conveyed, and it wasn’t. What I’m saying is, you’re making a disengenuous point.
Your history is flawed here. Constantine was the one who proposed the word “homoousian” to rule out the Arians. Constantine was a hero of the Council of Nicea. That being said, it seems unlikely that Constantine was particularly concerned with the technicalities of the position of Arius and the position of Athanasius. As all “the world groaned to find itself Arian,” Constantine’s valid Bishop was an Arian (or to be more technically correct a semi-Arian as ALL of the particulars of the belief of Arius were not embraced by the semi-Arians). At Nicea, Constantine was solidly opposed to the Arian position. Constantine the Great is a Saint Constantine in the Orthodox Church.Of course the Arians rejected Athanasious, as he used homousian at Niacaea. Lol. The Arians were declared in error, by all the there except Arius and two others. Constantine by all historical accounts was in support of Arius, and was baptized on his deathbed by an Arian Bishop.
Not only did I not try to suggest this, I don’t believe it AND I believe the position of Arius was absolutely wrong. Arius believed the Christ was created ex nihilo. There were probably less than two to three dozen Bishops at Nicea (and maybe zero as this was a particularly unpopular position held by Arius) who were comfortable with this assertion.Trying to make a case that Arianism expressed the Catholic (universal) faith, has no legs to stand on.
Stephen,TOmNossor:![]()
You have not defined begotten or proceeding and explained how using one or the other is not consistent with the trinitarian God of Christianity,So, I hope you can see that you shouldn’t say the Holy Spirit was BEGOTTEN and you should not reject the idea that a scriptural creed was dismissed at Nicea. These are pretty solid historical points.
That God was embodied we have discussed with Origin and Augustine witnesses that this was a common CHRISTIAN belief during their time. In fact Augustine (whose mother was/is a Catholic Saint) refused to become Christian because Christians believed that God was embodied.… while then showing how the Mormon plurality of gods of flesh and bone is. Or the Mormon belief that God was once a man.
I thought this was clear from my last post to you, but I will offer another way of looking at this.TOmNossor:![]()
That is one historical point, which means there was no Bible. Therefore no-one at Nicaea would have claimed they could “prove it from the Bible”You are correct that the New Testament canon was not defined until after Nicea,……
No, I was not and have never suggested that the Athanasian Creed was composed at Nicea. I was and am suggesting that you claimed you believe something contrary to the Catholic faith. I used the Athanasian Creed to demonstrate what the Catholic faith was in contrast to what you believe.Another historical point. You seem to be suggesting that the Athanasian Creed came out of the Council at Nicaea. It did not.
So you are not able to define them. Neither could gazelam.You are the one claiming that the Holy Spirit was “begotten.”
The Athanasian Creed says that the Holy Spirit is “not begotten.”
I am just pointing out the contradiction in what you are claiming relative to what the Catholic Church accepts as documented in the Athanasian Creed and numerous other documents of varying providence.
Perhaps you fancy yourself a speculative theologian and you wish to reform Catholic teaching here, but my guess is you go lost in the complexity of the Catholic Church’s (sometimes CONFLICTING) statements over the years.
Pondering up the meaning of proceeding and begotten.I love theology. I love pondering God and these questions.
Prove it. Quote the Church Fathers; yes plural. Prove they believed that God has a body of flesh and bone.That God was embodied we have discussed with Origin and Augustine witnesses that this was a common CHRISTIAN belief during their time.
Again, how can you know if you don’t understand the meaning of the words.As a LDS, I do not think God is very concerned that you believe that the Holy Spirit was begotten and Athanasius believed the Holy Spirit was not begotten, but this is a big deal in Catholicism. Eastern Orthodox and Roman Catholics both agree that the Holy Spirit is proceeding.
Cool, prove the following from the original documents:You have probably not read much of the primary literature concerning Nicea (and I have found 2-3 authors who mention precisely what I am saying in the secondary literature, but these authors are scholars not Catholic apologists).
In addition to quotes and references from the original documents:Someone … noted that the Arians were “whispering” and “winking” at the prospect of this scriptural creed. It was unacceptable that the Arians would be able to remain in communion with the orthodox so this creedal definition was rejected.
It was the word homoousian that was the bridge too far for the Arians. This word was proposed by Emperor Constantine. Many of the Bishops knew that homoousian had been condemned as modalist and it was difficult for them to coalesce around this word too, but some willingly and others under threat from the Emperor accepted the creedal statement with homoousian in it (leaving a small number who rejected the creed).
Steven,TOmNossor:![]()
So you are not able to define them. Neither could gazelam.You are the one claiming that the Holy Spirit was “begotten.”
The Athanasian Creed says that the Holy Spirit is “not begotten.”
I am just pointing out the contradiction in what you are claiming relative to what the Catholic Church accepts as documented in the Athanasian Creed and numerous other documents of varying providence.
If you don’t know the meaning of the words, you don’t know if you were pointing out a contradiction, a synonym, or something in between.
We have talked in a previous thread where Mormons clearly do not understand the meaning of those words.
It is simple logic. You said “begotten” Catholic belief is “not begotten.”You are the one claiming that the Holy Spirit was “begotten.”
The Athanasian Creed says that the Holy Spirit is “not begotten.”
Stephen,Pondering up the meaning of proceeding and begotten.
I didn’t say what you are asking me to prove. I wasn’t TRYING to confuse you. I truly wasn’t. I said what is true and thus will not show you what you ask for which I did not claim.TOmNossor:![]()
Prove it. Quote the Church Fathers; yes plural. Prove they believed that God has a body of flesh and bone.That God was embodied we have discussed with Origin and Augustine witnesses that this was a common CHRISTIAN belief during their time.
Stephen,TOmNossor:![]()
Cool, prove the following from the original documents:You have probably not read much of the primary literature concerning Nicea (and I have found 2-3 authors who mention precisely what I am saying in the secondary literature, but these authors are scholars not Catholic apologists).
In addition to quotes and references from the original documents:Someone … noted that the Arians were “whispering” and “winking” at the prospect of this scriptural creed. It was unacceptable that the Arians would be able to remain in communion with the orthodox so this creedal definition was rejected.
It was the word homoousian that was the bridge too far for the Arians. This word was proposed by Emperor Constantine. Many of the Bishops knew that homoousian had been condemned as modalist and it was difficult for them to coalesce around this word too, but some willingly and others under threat from the Emperor accepted the creedal statement with homoousian in it (leaving a small number who rejected the creed).
What do you really mean when you say, “ It was unacceptable that the Arians would be able to remain in communion with the orthodox so this creedal definition was rejected.” Did the Arians hold that point of view or the opposite?
And what is meant by "the bridge too far for theArians?”
When I studied into cults (and I consider almost ALL non-Creedal ‘Christian’ ‘churches/religions/faiths’ to be a cults), I noticed that they all have a common foundation in which they build from; LIES (specifically: false history, fake news, fabricated myths, and various fables).That God was embodied we have discussed with Origin and Augustine witnesses that this was a common CHRISTIAN belief during their time. In fact Augustine (whose mother was/is a Catholic Saint) refused to become Christian because Christians believed that God was embodied.
You have not defined begotten or proceeding and explained how using one or the other is not consistent with the trinitarian God of Christianity, while then showing how the Mormon plurality of gods of flesh and bone is. Or the Mormon belief that God was once a man.
That God was embodied we have discussed with Origin and Augustine witnesses that this was a common CHRISTIAN belief during their time.
Prove it. Quote the Church Fathers; yes plural. Prove they believed that God has a body of flesh and bone.
Yes, you lead people to believe something is true but in fact it is not. You lead people to believe the Mormon god can be found in the early church, but it can not. Origen may have believed in a pre-existnce, but not the Mormon belief in pre-existance. Christians may believe they “become gods” but not a Mormon belief in gods. Some of the early church fathers may have had heretical understands of Christian orthodoxy, but to be a heretic you must get most things right. Mormons are not heretics, there are a different religion. The Mormon god has never been believed by the Christian Church.I didn’t say what you are asking me to prove. I wasn’t TRYING to confuse you. I truly wasn’t. I said what is true and thus will not show you what you ask for which I did not claim.
You don’t know what proceeds or begotten mean, so you are not qualified to know what Catholic belief is.It is simple logic. You said “begotten” Catholic belief is “not begotten.”
Yes, I gotcha, Tom. You cherry pick and parrot authors without understanding, then invent conclusions.You either do not know what these words mean or you are only trying to present a “gotcha.”
But did you understand.I have read all the Dialogue with Trypho and perhaps everything St. Justin has written that survives to today, we know some of it is lost.
Another appeal to authority. I’m sure true scholars know the meaning of words before they try to make an argument from them.My opinion (shared by scholars) is that the precise definition of “begotten” with respect to the Son in Trinitarian thought is elusive.
None of whom is the strictest sense are truly ChristiansCan I add to that tier Jehovah’s Witnesses?
Then when we conclude that tier ask your thoughts on 7th Day Adventist, Christian Science, and oneness Pentecostalism?
Cool, prove the following from the original documents:
I am not sure I want to reproduce quotes from books
When I wrote the words “original documents” I meant the documents written by the men who attended the Council. You can use digital reproductions of the original documents, because I’m sure it would be very difficult to get your hands on the “original” documents. Primary sources would be good because that is what I meant when I wrote “original documents.” Most scholars agree that copies of original documents are just as informative as the original documents. I have read many books about stuff, and they were all copies. In fact, I have read everything I’ve ever written. Now that I think about it, much of what I have written, and then read, were original documents, and they were easy to get my hands on. Well, do your best.what I claimed is supported by the primary and secondary sources
How so? They aren’t Christians.The Mormon s I have known have been an inspiration.
LDS are Christians of course, just not according to you.thanksgiving:![]()
How so? They aren’t Christians.The Mormon s I have known have been an inspiration.