D
dzheremi
Guest
Yes, but as I wrote earlier, it is the financial aspect of it, not the familial, that I am hesitant about.No. Its a family analogy.
I wrote that I have no opinion on the use of this familial analogy with reference to the treasury of merit idea, not that I am not a child of God.You don’t believe you are a child of God?
Just as you see no reason to reject HH Pope Shenouda’s interpretation of Matthew 6:20 as they do not preclude the RC understanding of the same, I see no reason to accept your interpretation of these quotes because they do not align with the Orthodox understanding of the same, which has not led to the understanding that Catholics embrace. While I can certainly see why you would think that these quotes support your idea (perhaps Ignatius of Antioch especially, as he also uses a sort of financial metaphor), I do not see them this way. Again, in keeping with the viewpoint I expressed earlier (that what the treasury is isn’t the point), I don’t really even see these as necessarily connected to the doctrine which they are brought up to support. “Let your works be as your deposited withholdings, so that you may receive the back-pay which has accrued to you” could just as easily be understood as “you get what you give” without reference to or support for the treasury of merit (or, rather, that could also support the treasury of merit, but doesn’t have to; as I have written several times to Joe370, what it boils down to for me is that this is an unnecessary concept, like purgatory which it supports/relies on).Patristic quotes
Huh? We’re discussing the same passage. Obviously I have no problem with the passage itself, but I do disagree with your interpretation of it because I think it is focusing on the wrong aspect of our Savior’s words in focusing on the treasury itself rather than its location.So, instead of a treasury, which is the metaphor used in Scripture, the Word of God, you would prefer a metaphor of your own.
Perhaps (again, this idea has not come up among the Orthodox I know, but I will ask my priest about it next time I have the opportunity to talk to him). If I had to guess, in advance of being able to talk to Fr. Marcus, I would bet that any objections to this concept would be the way it is intimately tied to purgatory, which the Orthodox do not believe in.That’s fine. But you still have something to store. And if you are Orthodox, then you also believe you are storing works.
I disagree with your interpretation of those passages as supporting the RC treasury of merit idea.I posted a few Patristic witnesses above.
You are wrong. Those apostolic churches which broke with the Catholic Church, REJECTED one or another aspect of Christ’s teachings. That is all.
These are your beliefs, and I respect your right to hold them and voice them, but I very much disagree.The fullness of Truth, is in the Catholic Church.