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FabiusMaximus
Guest
You won’t receive an answer because there is no answer.I’ve not gotten a real response to this (or other questions) from Evangelicals–such as which text of the Bible is the authoritative one, and how they know it–but here’s my take on it.
One of the most popular positions is that the Church strayed from the truth, and then the Reformers restored the true faith, under the guidance of the Holy Spirit.
Which, of course, begs the question as to why the Spirit did not do a better job of guiding the Church in those intervening centuries, or how they know they were (and are) guided by the Spirit in their actions.
Most Evangelicals will reject the Mormon notion of a “Great Apostasy” because there is an unexplainable gap in history that Mormons must deal with. What happened to salvation? Why is it that you would know better? Why would God allow this tremendous void without truth?
What about all the Church Fathers? Am I going to say that I know better than they? That my interpretation is more correct than their interpretation, even those of them who had a direct correspondence with the Apostles? That’s a supreme arrogance I’m not willing to have.
Additionally, historically, this supposed falling away happened way too rapidly. For something to become distorted historically, it generally takes centuries. To suggest that in a couple of decades after Jesus’ death the Church became suddenly corrupted is absurd. There is no explanation of why. And to me, if we can trust a biography of Alexander the Great that was written 800 years after his death, we can trust what the Church Fathers said about the Christian faith.