You missed some in there. How about: what He has taught, for example?
He taught such things as
Lu 10:16 “He who hears you hears me, and he who rejects you rejects me, and he who rejects me rejects him who sent me.”
If you don’t follow those teachings, then you don’t follow Christ.
That doesn’t speak to my point, we are talking about if there is any other name by which man has to be saved.
Of course that is your opinion.
However, Jesus did NOT say:
“He who hears Kliska hears me, …”
Of course not. I make it clear when I teach anything that people better go check it out for themselves in scripture with much prayer and study, and they need to be convinced and convicted in what they believe.
It kinda sounds to me that you do not need a pastor or a church and all you need it the Bible to tell you what you think you need to know. At least that is how I am understanding it.
No, without the Holy Spirit, the word can’t be properly understood. I do, however, believe that if a person has a Bible (and God is guiding him) and can read it and comprehend whatever language it was written in, he has the information he needs to work out his own salvation with fear and trembling.
Well…actually…you are already a denomination…only the name of your denom is “non” denom.
No, I literally don’t belong to any denomination. My name is on no church congregational membership.
And so, you are your own pastor/priest/bishop/pope? Do you determine yourself what to believe and what not to believe?
I follow the Holy Spirit, which includes being able to read and comprehend the scriptures. We indeed are a priesthood, as per scripture.
No…it is not Scripture that is the final measuring stick
I do indeed hold to the five sola’s, so Scripture is indeed the final measuring stick in my POV. A teaching that is held forth as truth cannot contradict scripture, the RCC also agrees with that.
Would you agree to this quote below:
‘Tradition’ becomes whatever one agrees with in the history of the Church, such as the Nicene Creed or Chalcedonian Christology…What makes it ‘authoritative’ for Mohler is that it agrees with his interpretation of Scripture. If he encounters something in the tradition that seems extra-biblical or opposed to Scripture he rejects it. For that reason, tradition does not authoritatively guide his interpretation. His interpretation picks out what counts as tradition, and then this tradition informs his interpretation.
Not and be comfortable with his conclusions, no. We are to work out our own salvation with fear and trembling and check the scripture to see if what we are being told or taught is accurate. There is interpretation, and then there is truth.
But you yourself believe in yourself, in what you says Scripture says…
By no means, I don’t trust myself, I do trust God absolutely, however.
Violation of Scripture according to whom? Are you the authority to actually say what Scripture says?
This isn’t a game I’m trying to play, I’m simply pointing out an issue that has developed from one who has always been outside of the RCC, looking in and studying the issue and the dogmas of the RCC. I can assure you, any denomination that claims to be the one true church, I do take their claims seriously and look into it.
God is the final authority, but He did indeed give us the word and the Spirit and leads us into understanding it. If He says there is no other name by which I must be saved, I believe Him. If someone says there’s another name by which I must be saved, I don’t believe them.
If you have really studied them, you will see that Marian Dogmas actually point to Christ, not the other way around.
Never-the-less it introduces things about another human being that I must confess if I’m to become a part of the RCC. It isn’t even a question of if someone believes those things or not, it is now a question of what must be affirmed before salvation. The RCC has now added a name and facts connected to that name that I must confess if I’m to become a member of the RCC itself. If I believed all other dogmas, and what they represent, but those, I still could not join.
All you have to do is to study the works of converts to the CC who grappled with the Marian dogmas, one of the most difficult things they had to overcome.
I have heard and studied many on TV, radio, and through books and websites. It is indeed a large sticking point for many, and if interviewed, I’m sure it turned many away from the RCC while studying it, and hence never joined.