C
Contarini
Guest
Eden,
You are being less than candid about your original remarks. You said “Alfie’s comments have as much substance as evangelical theology.” Now you’re trying to claim that I’m upset because you say evangelicals are in error or that Alfie’s remarks reveal typical evangelical weaknesses. But that is not what you said. You said, “Alfie’s comments have as much substance as evangelical theology.” Either you defend that remark, or you apologize for it. Those are your only two options.
I doubt that you’ve ever read a single page of serious evangelical theology in your life.
I’m going to say this for the last time: my problem is not with your view that evangelicalism is in error. My problem is with the argument that because we have much superficiality therefore we have no substance. One might as well argue that because Catholics have many banal liturgies they have no reverence, or because they have many evil priests therefore they have no sanctity. Both banal liturgies and immoral priests are evils bemoaned by many good Catholic writers. This is the violation of the Golden Rule to which I’m referring. This is the “nasty game” into which I don’t want to be drawn–listing the faults of the other side and trying to prove that they are relevant to an examination of the other side’s truth, while the faults of one’s own side are irrelevant to the truth claims one wants to make.
Edwin
You are being less than candid about your original remarks. You said “Alfie’s comments have as much substance as evangelical theology.” Now you’re trying to claim that I’m upset because you say evangelicals are in error or that Alfie’s remarks reveal typical evangelical weaknesses. But that is not what you said. You said, “Alfie’s comments have as much substance as evangelical theology.” Either you defend that remark, or you apologize for it. Those are your only two options.
I doubt that you’ve ever read a single page of serious evangelical theology in your life.
I’m going to say this for the last time: my problem is not with your view that evangelicalism is in error. My problem is with the argument that because we have much superficiality therefore we have no substance. One might as well argue that because Catholics have many banal liturgies they have no reverence, or because they have many evil priests therefore they have no sanctity. Both banal liturgies and immoral priests are evils bemoaned by many good Catholic writers. This is the violation of the Golden Rule to which I’m referring. This is the “nasty game” into which I don’t want to be drawn–listing the faults of the other side and trying to prove that they are relevant to an examination of the other side’s truth, while the faults of one’s own side are irrelevant to the truth claims one wants to make.
Edwin