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Teflon93
Guest
I’m sorry, but you’ll need to show me where respect for other’s opinions is required. I don’t respect falsehood; thus I am Catholic.No … you are the one being disrespectful of other opinions.
Paul did not feel circumcision was of any value to salvation … and said as much in scripture. The fact he allowed Timothy to undergo it does not prove he put any ‘salvation value’ in it. Paul taught he was willing to submit himself to accepting various practices of Hebrews … if it would promote the cause of Christ.
Indeed, this is the reason why he did it, which St Augustine among others held.He probably believed circumcision would make Timothy’s life among the Jews less confrontational … and enable Timothy to have a greater witness among them for Christ.
But let’s not lose sight of the implication for the Fundamentalist argument in that reasoning.
For if St Paul on the one hand (Galatians 5) holds that circumcision binds you to the Law, and that the Law damns, but circumcises Timothy, what precisely does it mean for doctrine?
Is St Paul inconsistent?
Is he a hypocrite?
The Catholic would answer, “Neither.” We must view the Epistles in context, and drop the 19th century dispensationalist baggage.
A reminder of the ECFs on Romans:
Cyril of Alexandria ( fl 412-444):
Paul did not say that he had no sin apart from the law but rather that he was unaware of it. Therefore the law is not the cause of sin but rather the instrument which points it out, making it clear to those who did not know what it was. It did not do this in order that, once sin was made known, those who committed it should continue in what they were doing…On the contrary, its intention was to convert people to better things by making their sins known to them. (Explanation of the Letter to the Romans)
Chrysostom (fl 386-407):
Note how Paul gradually shows how the law was not merely an accuser of sin but to some extent its producer as well. This was not from any fault in it but from the disobedience of the Jews…for he has taken care to guard against the attacks of the Manichaeans, who accuse the law of being evil in itself. (Homilies on Romans 12)
The difference in the equation is not that the Commandments are null and void, but that God’s grace and the sacraments institued by Christ through his Church enable us to keep them, thereby avoiding the consequences of unrepentant mortal sin and allowing us to complete the good works for which we were created and by which we shall be judged, per Matthew 25.
