M
MiserereMei
Guest
Indeed.the Council of Rome, a few years before.
From a time with relatively spotty records anyway? And when history is written by and for the rich and powerful in every age? No. However, we know that the common man has a greater influence in all epochs of history than is ascribed to him in most texts. This is my point. It is doubtful, for example, that a bishop would have continued using a text in a period of competing versions of Christ if the people did not approve of, or were at least not outraged by, its use.Do you have any historical quotes on the laity being involved in the canon?
Indeed it is not. I was using this as an example from a more fully-documented time of what influence the common man can have in theological matters. I assumed such examples were permissible.Florence isn’t relevant in any way to the canon
It is readily apparent your issue is with my use of the word “compromise.” I think the only difference is that I am thinking on a merely historically apparent level here (the various canons becoming one, with some books in those community canons being excluded IS the evidence of compromise), and I think we would agree that a compromise took place if this conversation were about the scriptures of any other religion, providing similar events are in the record. If that is indeed the case, then my use of “compromise” is justified.Contending that the canonization process involved “Compromise” rather than uniting to and giving affirmation to what was true would need evidence
To be sure, Lutherans don’t have an official list in our Confessions. Personally, I refuse to use a Bible without the full Eastern Orthodox canon.Agree, especially as those late 4th century synods affirmed 27 NT books and 46 OT books.
Where have I said I do not trust them? While they were human, so of course had their own interests and made mistakes, as your church even admits, I trust them and their compromise, as I have said previously.And if I can’t trust them on the OT canon, why should I trust them on the NT canon?
Yep. That is my favorite point to make to friends and family who view the liturgy as unessential or false. Divina liturgia adiaphoron non est.One criteria for canonicity was whether or not a writing was widely being read at Mass.
I am beginning to think our differences are ones of deference and semantics, not of actual substance. I apologize. Let me be clear and pious: A compromise between differing Church traditions and communities which is lead by the Holy Spirit has the effect of all parties coming to the truth, or at least as much of the truth as can be expressed at that time in human words.