Fredricks,
I’m typing quickly and will seem short with you. My frustration, brother, is with the fact that I came down this morning expecting answers and read the post you left. Go back and read the OP. The burden of proof in this thread is on you, but you refuse to accept it. Also, you have never, ever addressed my earlier point, which you said was worthy, that Oral Tradition is not “additional revelation”, but an interpretive authority.
Fredricks:
Apostolic era
Are you also talking about Jude? According to us, and early history, he is the brother of Christ, to you guys Step-brother, then cousin 400 years later. Which by the way IS NOT what early Christian history teaches…
Okay, see, this is what I’m talking about. I didn’t even mention Jude - on purpose. I mentioned the two gospels not authored by apostles. Rather than respond to that, you mention Jude and argue against it instead of answering my question. This is the type of straw man tactic that you keep using to avoid the question. WHO CARES, for purposes of this discussion, Jude’s relationship with Christ - I didn’t mention him. Please respond to my question, not the question you wished I would have asked.
Fredricks:
Okay … so … answer it then. I mean, it keeps coming up because you keep avoiding it. You keep talking about how well this thread is going for you (as your “pm” friends suggest), but you dance around the burden of proof for your own beliefs. By the way, the term for this is “anonymous choir” - the stating of a supposed group of anonymous people who agree with you as proof for your argument, put forth instead of real logic - another fallacy.
Fredricks:
Apostolic origin is provided by early Christian history. Which we have never rejected. Moderate Protestants would throw in biblical scholarship. You cannot expect me to define the the criteria for good biblical scholarship on a discussion board!! I suppose that WOULD take too long. Perhaps we agree and it will not be necessary.
See … I asked you not to take the “perhaps we agree and it will not be necessary” approach. I’m trying to get you to tell me why you agree. The difference in our theologies will be exposed when each of us lays out the foundation for our beliefs. We may agree, but one of us may be doing so for the wrong reasons. Many of us have laid out the Catholic foundation, but you avoid … over and over … to lay out yours. You aren’t being fair.
Incidentally, I asked you to define the criteria for good Biblical scholarship because
you offered to do so! Quote from your post, to which I had responded: “No one argues that Hebrews is not written in the era of the Apostles. That aside, that is when the other areas of Protestant theology kick in. Are you familar or not familiar with Protestant theology on this matter?
I will explain if you are unfamiliar.” So fine, I asked you to explain and you respond in “*disbelief”??? *It would
“take too long”??? I’m sorry, but either we are here to discover the truth or we are not. If you aren’t going to assist in that, how about you quit wasting our time with this. You stated earlier in the thread that you weren’t interested in “proof”, but in “debate”. That seems very clear now. God will not judge us by the number of fallacies, or logical tricks we can throw into an argument. If you have the truth, you owe it to us to lay it out, no matter how much time it takes.
Fredricks:
Disagree if you will. The Bible is our teaching authority. The Holy Spirit does interpret for all Christians… BEFORE YOU SAY that the Holy Spirit is respnsible for all the denominations, remember Catholicism has only one right interpretation even if Catholics do not agree. Likewise for the Bible and the Holy Spirit. I would contend that the majority of Catholics, Protestants, and Orthodox AGREE( I paused to think) 75% of the time, even though we look different.
that was brief, I am going to bed but should give you enough for your follow up.
But we *disagree *on some essential points. Is baptism necessary or isn’t it? Must children be baptized or not? Can salvation be lost or not? It’s about quality, not quantity. God would not have left us a religion that allows confusion on such fundamental issues, even if they are just 25% (can you qualify that number?) of the doctrine. Jesus didn’t pray that we would be 75% a whole, as he and the father are 75% of a whole. Paul didn’t ask that there be no divisions among us 75% of the time or that we be 75% of the same mind.
I love your energy, man, but you have got to defend your position a little here instead of playing dodgeball.
God bless,
Spencer