A belief is something which is believed – an opinion; something you personally have trust in and hold to be true.
A doctrine is a teaching – taught by a church or other entity.
So maybe you mean belief as in conviction, or trust in something. But if you believe something, there must be a source to that belief, whether it be a church and its doctrines with the Bible, or the Bible alone. So I can say that James had a certain doctrine he wished to teach to his hearers. For example, when James says the following :James 1:27 Religion that is pure and undefiled before God and the Father is this: to care for orphans and widows in thier affliction and to keep onself unstained by the world." he is not just providing a statement of belief. He is providing a precept, or a doctrine by which Christians are to adhere to. When Peter stated that the Gentiles did not have to observer Mosaic laws, he was making a doctrinal statement.
Generally, organizations have doctrines. Individuals have beliefs.
Ok then. Following this description, I see nothing by doctrinal statements being produced throughout the new testament. No statements of belief. When Peter says this 2 Peter 20 “Know this first of all, that there is no prophecy of scripture that is a matter of personal interpretation…” he know saying that there must be some kind of corporate oversite, because anyone who interprets the scriptures alone is by definition doing so privately. I’m sure you will try to turn this around by saying you are not alone, that you have the Holy Spirit to guide you, so the question then becomes, to whom did God leave his spirit? To private individuals, or to a group of individuals?
Actually, I would say that the apostles never considered doctrine when teaching others. They were wholly concerned with the belief of the individuals they were teaching, and not with the teaching itself.
Again, I would point to the letter of James for a clear contradiction to this. James specifically says that faith (or belief) is not sufficient without works.
If the individuals they spoke to did not believe, they wrote to them, imploring them to hold proper beliefs. I suppose you could say they taught doctrines, in some regard – but that’s not what they stressed as important.
If this were the case, they would never have called the council of Jerusalem because this was a doctrinal issue. To say that Gentiles need not follow Mosaic law is a doctrinal statement, therefore it is clear to me that doctrinal unity was necessary.
They were concerned with common belief, not with having a common teaching of doctrine.
I still do not see the distinction. The apostles taught something, their hearer could chose to believe, or not believe. You cannot teach someone belief. You teach someone doctrines such as, Christ is Lord, then you elaborate…by Lord we mean he is God, etc… You have the first seeds of doctrinal development, wholly sufficient for the salvation of the apostles, but not fully elaborated in all its profundity.
If I were out evangelizing, I’d be a fool not to consult with those of great spiritual maturity, and this is precisely what Paul did.
The council was called, there was long debate. Peter stood up, and spoke, and the matter was settled. It was the apostles who settled the debate. When they spoke, all other descenting voices were silenced. This is obviously because they were eye witnesses to Jesus, and appointed Apostles by Jesus. This appointment not only gave them spiritual maturity, but unquestioned authority to make such pronouncements.
As an individual man he was fallible. But consulting with others who he believed to be guided by the holy spirit confirmed his teaching – not because those men were important…but because they listened to the holy spirit, and thus ensured that Paul wasn’t being self-deceptive.
And this is exactly what the church does when confronted with issues such as this. Councils are called. The bishops debate amongst themselves, then votes are made, the bishop of Rome ratifies the doctrinal decision, or endorses the counciliar text. Through it all, they are guided by the Holy Spirit. The Holy Spirit is given to the Church as a whole, but always through the apostles first. The Holy Spirit decended on the Apostles at Pentacost. Note that in Acts 2, the Holy Spirit descendes on the Apostles first. They they teach the crowd who ask Peter what they must do to be saved. Peter gives them a doctrinal statemet as follows Acts 2:38
Repent and be baptised every one of you, in the name of Jesus Christ for the forgiveness of your sins; and you will receive the first of the holy spirit. This is not a statement of belief, but a doctrinal teaching. Was there room for debate? No.
The authority they had to teach was passed on through elders which begins the chain of apostolic succession. The laying on of hands has clear precedence in the succession of Joshua from Moses. In Joshua`s case, it conveyed the authority of Moses. In the same way for the elders (bishops) it conveys authority to them.
These same elders have emulated this model throughout the centuries in the Catholic Church, and so doctrinal unity is preserved, and the Catholic Church can continue to preach one faith because it can propose one body of doctrines.
If Paul were convinced that the apostles and elders of Jerusalem were listening to the holy spirit (which is why he presumably went there in the first place), I would like to think he’d be willing to set aside his own beliefs. It’s all about God’s will, not our own, after all.
Paul held out the possibility that he could be running in vain if the Apostles were to refute his teachings.
They’re tied together, yes, but still distinct. Doctrine is about what is taught (by a hierarchy, generally). Belief is about what the individual holds true. The latter is clearly more important, especially when speaking of unity.
I would propose that you cannot have belief without doctrines.
Unified doctrine should be a result of unified belief. It’s a by-product, not a goal.
That is putting the horse before the cart. Now, I can agree with you that doctrinal statements in themselves do not produce belief. I think it is Christ alone who produces faith, and who is the object of faith or belief. But understanding Christ and his revelation rightly is key to be in right relation with him and with each member of his body.
God bless,
Ut