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Hesychios
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The Habits of Highly Effective Bible Readers
** What we can learn from the church fathers that will enrich our own Bible study.**
A conversation with Christopher A. Hall, author of *Reading Scripture with the Church Fathers
The phrase Tom Oden taught me is “The Holy Spirit has a history.” The church does not thrive in the first century, fail in the second, then revive in the sixteenth. The Spirit never deserts the church as it reads the Bible.
He is present in every century, guiding bishops and pastors of the church, particularly as they encountered readings of the Scripture that at first glance might have seemed plausible, but in light of the larger tradition—the Rule of Faith, the liturgical tradition, and so on—didn’t make sense. It is the Fathers who provided the framework to protect that apostolic tradition down through the years.
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** What we can learn from the church fathers that will enrich our own Bible study.**
A conversation with Christopher A. Hall, author of *Reading Scripture with the Church Fathers
- In recent years, more and more evangelical Protestants have been looking at the early church fathers—that group of Christian teachers stretching from just after the apostles through approximately the first five centuries of the church—to see how they read their Bibles and did their theology.
The phrase Tom Oden taught me is “The Holy Spirit has a history.” The church does not thrive in the first century, fail in the second, then revive in the sixteenth. The Spirit never deserts the church as it reads the Bible.
He is present in every century, guiding bishops and pastors of the church, particularly as they encountered readings of the Scripture that at first glance might have seemed plausible, but in light of the larger tradition—the Rule of Faith, the liturgical tradition, and so on—didn’t make sense. It is the Fathers who provided the framework to protect that apostolic tradition down through the years.
More…
View attachment 589