A
Arandur
Guest
Imperfect humans Divinely Inspired to transmit a true message. You may believe there are untruths written in the Scriptures (in terms of faith and morals), but very few Christians I know of would agree. The Spirit preserved and guided their message. It does so with the Church, as well, under certain circumstances.Of course, like you said, they were imperfect humans. But I don’t think that’s a bad thing at all.
So you believe that an organization’s foundational/central teachings are wrong because at times parties within the organization don’t live up to them?See what I wrote above in response to estesbob on this issue.
You also said you didn’t think it would do harm to reverse positions. Here you admit that the Anglican/Episcopalian church has suffered harm–and it doesn’t have the kind of claims that the Catholic Church has, so its harms are less.I think the Anglican/Episcopalian church has absolutely gained credibility. If you mean “has it gained credibility from conservative churches?” then of course not. But credibility from those outside the church like me? You bet, my friend.
Are you Episcopalian? Do you look to them for guidance? What value has their newfound credibility from you and others gained? When an organization compromises its principles, how does that really gain them credibility? I believe the modern terminology for that is “sell out.”
I wasn’t meaning to disparage your opinion. I was trying to say that an individual’s ideas and opinions can’t change truth. They are good insofar as they correspond to truth, wrong insofar as they disagree. So the point of a pursuit of truth, and an organization devoted to truth, should be to discover and adhere to it, not conform to individual beliefs and ideas.Well, I know of many people in the Church who are willing to listen to those on the outside as they believe it is a humble exercise in the faith. If you think my little truth has nothing to say to Big Truth, then, well, keep on truckin’…