B
benjohnson
Guest
My church has definite answers to all these questions, and they are correct except I think only the number of sacraments in not to Catholic standards as we consider some of them to be Rites.And what does the Church of Christ proclaim regarding baptism? Justification? Are there 2 sacraments or 7 or none? Are women to be ordained? What about sin–can sins be forgiven without a priest? Is Mary ever-virgin or only a virgin until Christ’s birth?
I understand the need to submit: I have submitted myself to those teachings and I am all the better for it. My church’s teachings are more strict that I would be, but their straitness let me center my own life to what is important, after being centered it allows me the freedom to love others. This freedom to love others only happened for me because I could finally respect the love that God has for me.
Now let us go back to our non-hypothetical North Korean prisoner who has a scrap of the Bible - he doesn’t even know about the trinity, hasn’t been baptized, but he loves God. Is he correct enough to be considered in God’s universal church?
This is a conundrum!
Do we say we exclude those with imperfect discipline and imperfect knowledge and imperfect love?
On the other side - do we keep allowing heresy in those that could know better? Are we encouraging them in their error by not drawing a sharp line? Are we encourage error in ourselves by not rebuking?
The only thing I can think of is to keep correcting our fellow Christians and others, and keep loving them. Never condemn them, only keep gently showing them the errors of their ways, equipping them to make the right choice, and encouraging them when they do.
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I remember that first time I “got” the Trinity - it was like I were holding to opposing thought in my mind at the same time. In the same way, the problem of being ‘strict’ and ‘embracing’ is sort of the same thing. One without the other, in my opinion would almost be meaningless.
Being Lutheran, I think one of Luther’s sermons is appropriate:
“As for example when we feel in our conscience that God rebukes us as sinners and judges us unworthy of the kingdom of heaven, then we experience hell, and we think we are lost forever. Now whoever understands here the actions of this poor woman and catches God in His own judgment, and says, Lord, it is true, I am a sinner and not worthy of Thy grace; but still Thou hast promised sinners forgiveness, and Thou art come not to call the righteous, but, as St. Paul says in 1 Timothy 1:15, ‘to save sinners.’ Behold, then must God according to His own judgment have mercy upon us.”