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pablope
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With permission from his bishop and the latin bishop…obedience is important.Can a Orthodox priest preside at Mass in the RCC?
Calvinism is Calvinism…Traditions may differ
With permission from his bishop and the latin bishop…obedience is important.Can a Orthodox priest preside at Mass in the RCC?
Calvinism is Calvinism…Traditions may differ
The answer you’re looking for is “no”, that permission would be illicit.With permission from his bishop and the latin bishop…obedience is important.
Believe me, this is just the tip of the ice berg, actually! Unfortunately!Thank you for your thoughts and insight on this subject. I didn’t think whether a church was a denomination or a single church would be as interesting or confusing as it is or at least seems to me to be as I read the posts. Thank you and blessings to all.
Apostles’ Creed
I believe in God, the Father Almighty, maker of heaven and earth.
And in Jesus Christ, His only Son, our Lord , who was conceived by the Holy Spirit, born of the virgin Mary, suffered under Pontius Pilate, was crucified, died and was buried. He
descended into hell. The third day He rose again from the dead. H ascended into heaven
and sits at the right h and of God the Father Almighty. From thence He will come to judge
the living and the dead.
I believe in the Holy Spirit, the holy Christian Church, the communion of saints, the
forgiveness of sins, the resurrection of the body, and the life everlasting. Amen.
At least the important basis for our faith is that Christ was incarnate, died as a sacrifice for our sins, was resurrected 3 days later and is returning to take us Home.Christian: the ancient text reads “catholic, ” meaning the whole
Church as it confesses the wholeness of Christian doctrine
The RCC and the Orthodox Churches are not fully united.Can a Orthodox priest preside at Mass in the RCC?
I’m really not sure what you are saying at this point. Calvinism is a very broad category, and as I think has been demonstrated there are people who could broadly be described as “Calvinist” who are not in union with each other.Calvinism is Calvinism…Traditions may differ
I know. I was making a point. Maybe a bad one.The RCC and the Orthodox Churches are not fully united.
A Byzantine Catholic priest, on the other hand, could.
I’m really not sure what you are saying at this point. Calvinism is a very broad category, and as I think has been demonstrated there are people who could broadly be described as “Calvinist” who are not in union with each other.
I would put it the other way round–Calvinism is a broad tradition, not a denomination.
At any rate, it isn’t true that “Calvinism is Calvinism.” Some Calvinists say that other Calvinists aren’t really Calvinists, or even Christians.
Well they would be entitled to their opinion just like you and I. Calvinism is Calvinism just like Catholicism is Catholicism and Arminianism is Arminianism. What changes is simply a group’s tradition. Where it gets tricking is Reformed Anglicans. I would call them Calvinist and not Anglican. Make sense? It is obvious that we view denominations differently.Edwin
This faith I believe and profess…Believe me, this is just the tip of the ice berg, actually! Unfortunately!
But, seriously, the majority of the Protestant churches would be comfortable with stating the Apostles Creed:
At least the important basis for our faith is that Christ was incarnate, died as a sacrifice for our sins, was resurrected 3 days later and is returning to take us Home.
The stuff we disagree on will not affect whether or not we will be in Heaven - it’s between the person and Christ as to how this will end up …
Yes, I too have heard of this 30K denominations idea. The thing is, most Protestants belong to the more prominent denominations. I’ve lived in Florida for a few years too and I’ve noticed a few of these street side churches. I’m reasonably sure that these churches are either Independents or part of larger groups: I’ve often driven by this quaint little church on the way to Lifetree Café meetings when I lived in the area:allsoulsjax.org/.Greetings to all,
The last few years as my wife and I travel from ny to fla to visit family I’ve noticed small churches often extremely small buildings the size of a small house. The signs for these churches read things such as >the church of prophecy, the church of the living god< or any number of other things. I’m familiar with major denominations and churches that have signs that read Baptist of some sort or Pentecostal.
I’ve heard that there are 30,000+ denominations of Protestantism in the world. Would these little churches be considered a denom or would they be considered something else?
Thank you for any help clearing this up. Blessings to all-stay safe.
Calvinism may be Calvinism… but Catholicism is not Eastern Orthodoxy, and no one here ever claimed anything otherwise.Can a Orthodox priest preside at Mass in the RCC?
Calvinism is Calvinism…Traditions may differ
So… you think it’s possible to get into Heaven without God’s approval?At least the important basis for our faith is that Christ was incarnate, died as a sacrifice for our sins, was resurrected 3 days later and is returning to take us Home.
The stuff we disagree on will not affect whether or not we will be in Heaven - it’s between the person and Christ as to how this will end up …
They are both Calvinist, yet have differing traditionsCalvinism may be Calvinism… but Catholicism is not Eastern Orthodoxy, and no one here ever claimed anything otherwise.
I’m pretty sure Reformed Anglicans and Reformed Baptists don’t share worship/clergy.
Yes, there are many small, unaffiliated protestant ecclesial communities which are a denomination unto themselves. Most of them die out or continue for a generation or two when the founder and his children die.Greetings to all,
The last few years as my wife and I travel from ny to fla to visit family I’ve noticed small churches often extremely small buildings the size of a small house. The signs for these churches read things such as >the church of prophecy, the church of the living god< or any number of other things. I’m familiar with major denominations and churches that have signs that read Baptist of some sort or Pentecostal.
I’ve heard that there are 30,000+ denominations of Protestantism in the world.
Do you know the dividing issues that the people of Corinth were having problems with? You say “obviously” it was different doctrines but I don’t see that. Maybe someone else can help there.So… you think it’s possible to get into Heaven without God’s approval?
This Bible Christian Society newsletter makes some good points. In summary:
Consider 1 Cor 11:18-19: “*In the first place, I hear that when you come together as a church, there are divisions among you, and to some extent I believe it. No doubt there have to be differences among you to show which of you have God’s approval.”
*So, there were divisions among the Corinthian congregation. And, these divisions were such that they helped to reveal who had God’s approval. Which means, on the flip side, that there were those among the Corinthian congregation who did not have God’s approval.
Believers in an “invisible church of true believers” tend to also be believers in the notion that there are “essential” and “non-essential” doctrines and as long as we agree on the “essentials,” then we can have union with one another and we’re all saved. Problem is, who gets to decide what is an essential and what is a non-essential doctrine? And, since doctrines come from the Word of God, which part of the Word of God does one actually dare to call “non-essential?”
The notion that that we can be in union with those we have doctrinal disagreements with…that there can be true unity among those with doctrinal differences…those with different versions of what is and is not truth… is a false notion. 1 Cor 11:18-19 shows that divisions among Christians - the Corinthians being written to by Paul were all members of the Church… they were all Christians - cannot simply be ignored by using a contrived theological system which divides doctrines into essential vs. non-essential. Differences among Christians are serious matters that lead to some being approved by God and some not being approved by God.
Did the Apostles teach different doctrines to different people? The answer, of course, is “No.” The Apostles all taught the same doctrines…ALL the same doctrines. After all, Jesus tells us that the Holy Spirit was to guide them into all truth. If they are guided into all truth, then they cannot help but teach identical doctrines…they cannot help but teach the same truths…to all the different peoples they came across. Again, from 1 Cor 11:18-19, it is obvious that there were those among the Corinthians who believed different doctrines. Who taught them these different doctrines, the Apostles? I don’t think so.
Well, if the Apostles didn’t teach different doctrines, then why is it okay for the pastors of today’s thousands upon thousands of Protestant denominations to teach different doctrines one from another? And, if it wasn’t okay for the Corinthians to hold to different beliefs…beliefs that caused division within the Christian congregation…then why is it okay today for Protestants to hold to different beliefs…beliefs that cause division within Christianity?
Thanks!At least the important basis for our faith is that Christ was incarnate, died as a sacrifice for our sins, was resurrected 3 days later and is returning to take us Home.
Paul himself, in vv. 20-34, tells us what the dividing issues were. His main message is not to receive Communion in a state of sin, but he clearly also refers to the Eucharist as the actual body and blood of Christ.Do you know the dividing issues that the people of Corinth were having problems with? You say “obviously” it was different doctrines but I don’t see that. Maybe someone else can help there.
And in John 6, Christ Himself tells us:I rely on the scripture that tells us that Christ was the only way to enter heaven.
Are you suggesting that Paul is condemning the idea that the Eucharist is “the Lord’s Supper”?Paul himself, in vv. 20-34, tells us what the dividing issues were. His main message is not to receive Communion in a state of sin, but he clearly also refers to the Eucharist as the actual body and blood of Christ.
For him to say, in v. 20, “When you come together, it is not the Lord’s Supper you eat,” it should be pretty obvious that some in Corinth thought otherwise.
You keep saying this. But your usage is idiosyncratic and doesn’t match ecclesiological reality.They are both Calvinist, yet have differing traditions
For me, you have Calvinism and within Calvinism you have different faith traditions.You keep saying this. But your usage is idiosyncratic and doesn’t match ecclesiological reality.
Calvinist Anglicans and non-Calvinist Anglicans regularly worship together and share the same ecclesial structures (I mean organizational structures, but obviously it applies to buildings too).
It makes no sense to say that two Anglicans with different theologies are of different “denominations,” while two people who worship separately, celebrate the sacraments differently, and have no organizational connection at all belong to the same “denomination” just because they agree on certain points of soteriology.
In other words, I’d reverse your usage entirely. Calvinism is a “tradition,” not a denomination or a church. It is a theological tradition–often attenuated in modern usage to the “five points” relating to soteriology and predestination, though really it encompasses far more than that.
Edwin
Actually the word “theos” (God) is not mentioned in the Greek text, which may not be important, but I think the “dynamic equivalence” translation you are citing lends itself to your misreading of the text. A more “formal equivalence” translation would be “so that those who are approved/tested/trustworthy” may be manifest." The word you’re putting weight on is “dokimoi.” You are taking it to mean that the divisions make it clear that one side is right and the other sides are wrong. But Paul’s language about those belonging to Paul, Peter, Apollos, Christ, etc. indicates that in his view all sides are wrong. He never suggests that one particular group is in the right. The “dokimoi” are more likely to be those who show their true faith by working against division and resisting the splitting into factions. It’s highly unlikely that he’s saying that one faction is really “the true Church” and not a faction at all.So… you think it’s possible to get into Heaven without God’s approval?
This Bible Christian Society newsletter makes some good points. In summary:
Consider 1 Cor 11:18-19: “*In the first place, I hear that when you come together as a church, there are divisions among you, and to some extent I believe it. No doubt there have to be differences among you to show which of you have God’s approval.”
*So, there were divisions among the Corinthian congregation. And, these divisions were such that they helped to reveal who had God’s approval. Which means, on the flip side, that there were those among the Corinthian congregation who did not have God’s approval.
The essential/non-essential distinction is obviously correct. Everyone makes it, in one way or the other, and Catholic polemic against it is self-defeating. It doesn’t depend on the problematic notion of “an invisible church of true believers.” One of my problems with Catholic ecclesiology is that, at least as promulgated on this forum, it seems to involve exactly such a notion (people whom you guys judge to be unorthodox are regularly declared not to be “true Catholics,” and Protestants are sometimes spoken of as members of the “soul” but not the “body” of the Church, which is obviously an invisible-Church theology). Rather, the major alternative to Catholic ecclesiology (leaving aside Orthodox ecclesiology) is a robustly visible view of the Church. All who are baptized and have not openly renounced the faith are part of the Church, with all their warts. To say that a person is a Christian believer but not part of the Church is, in this view, to speak nonsense.Believers in an “invisible church of true believers” tend to also be believers in the notion that there are “essential” and “non-essential” doctrines and as long as we agree on the “essentials,” then we can have union with one another and we’re all saved.
The Catholic Church has done that by saying that those who were baptized in the name of the Trinity and hold to the ancient Creeds are brothers and sisters in Christ.Problem is, who gets to decide what is an essential and what is a non-essential doctrine?
It’s not the Word that is nonessential, but interpretations thereof. The fundamental Protestant criticism of Catholicism is that Catholicism blurs the line between the two. I think that the issue actually gets obscured when phrased in “Scripture vs. tradition” terms.And, since doctrines come from the Word of God, which part of the Word of God does one actually dare to call “non-essential?”
Only because you are smuggling in a circular definition of “doctrine.” That is to say, you are using “doctrine” to mean “teachings that must be held by all Christians as a condition of unity.”The notion that that we can be in union with those we have doctrinal disagreements with…that there can be true unity among those with doctrinal differences…those with different versions of what is and is not truth… is a false notion.
That reverses Paul’s point–Paul is criticizing the Corinthians for being divided from each other over things that shouldn’t divide them. He is not saying, “all those other groups are heretics and you, one true group, are right in being divided from them.” So yes, Paul is clearly endorsing an essential/inessential distinction. He is clearly saying that the things dividing the “Paul,” “Peter,” “Apollos,” and “Christ” factions do not need to divide them. Nowhere does he single out one of these factions as the correct one.1 Cor 11:18-19 shows that divisions among Christians - the Corinthians being written to by Paul were all members of the Church… they were all Christians - cannot simply be ignored by using a contrived theological system which divides doctrines into essential vs. non-essential. Differences among Christians are serious matters that lead to some being approved by God and some not being approved by God.
Again, this begs the question. You need to define “doctrine” first, so that we can see whether your statement is or is not simply a tautology, and if it isn’t, what exactly it means.Did the Apostles teach different doctrines to different people? The answer, of course, is “No.” The Apostles all taught the same doctrines…ALL the same doctrines.
You’re assuming, as Catholic apologists routinely assume, that this “guiding” was a short-term affair which resulted in everyone having the fullness of the truth. This blatantly contradicts the reality of doctrinal development and Catholic teaching on that subject, as well as the historical evidence for confusion and disagreement within the Church from the beginning.After all, Jesus tells us that the Holy Spirit was to guide them into all truth. If they are guided into all truth, then they cannot help but teach identical doctrines
…they cannot help but teach the same truths…to all the different peoples they came across. Again, from 1 Cor 11:18-19, it is obvious that there were those among the Corinthians who believed different doctrines. Who taught them these different doctrines, the Apostles? I don’t think so.
I would reverse this:Well, if the Apostles didn’t teach different doctrines, then why is it okay for the pastors of today’s thousands upon thousands of Protestant denominations to teach different doctrines one from another? And, if it wasn’t okay for the Corinthians to hold to different beliefs…beliefs that caused division within the Christian congregation…then why is it okay today for Protestants to hold to different beliefs…beliefs that cause division within Christianity?
Of course a Reformed Baptist is a subdivision of the broader Calvinist tradition.For me, you have Calvinism and within Calvinism you have different faith traditions.
A Reformed Baptist is a Calvinist first and Baptist second. Look at it like a tomato plant. There is one plant (Calvinism) with many different tomatoes, yet still one plant.