"Non-denominational Christian" ?

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But I must say that the refusal among some Catholics to call their Church by the equally neutral word “denomination” is just as annoying…
The term denomination in religious context means a sub-species of the original.
To de-nominate is to break away from an original named entity and name oneself something different.

The Catholic Church is not a denomination. She is the original nomination – the Mother Church of all Christendom – the named entity from which all others have ultimately de-nominated – i.e., broken away and renamed themselves.

The Mother Church is not a denomination. Consequently, she can’t be identified as one.

Jim Dandy
 
Yeah become we all know that schism was unknown before A.D. 1517. 😉
It was known, sadly, but it was not the avalanche Protestantism has proven to be – thousands of conflicting and competing doctrines from thousands of denominations, all of them based on yet another interpretation of an incomplete Bible cut by Martin Luther, all of them claiming to teach the truth and nothing but the truth, but no two of them agree about what the Bible means.

This is the result of Sola Scriptura and its concomitant doctrine, the private interpretation of Scripture.

Oy veh!

Jim Dandy
Ex-Southern Baptist, ex-agnostic, ex-atheist, ecstatic to be Catholic!
 
Yeah become we all know that schism was unknown before A.D. 1517. 😉

There were controversies, heresies and schisms throughout history. The phenomenon of denominationalism, literally thousands of splintered groups divided from one another all originating from one (Luther’s reform), is unique in Christian history. The mechanism that allowed this, or rather the catalyst made this inevitable is the doctrine of sola scriptura. Luther complained in his lifetime that suddenly everyone thought he was his own authority on the meaning of scripture. The fracturing began immediately with the multiplication of denominations.

In the late sixties there was a World’s Fair in Noew York. At the time I had no interest and little knowledge about theological matters, church history, or the difference in belief of various cults and denominations. I was a young adult and went to see what the attraction of a World’s Fair was all about.

I remember seeing the Baptist’s pavillion. The structure was large. It had an impressive entryway with a large sign above the doors, as all pavillions and exhibits had to identify the organization presenting its exhibit.

The sign read, “The Baptist Church, 110 denominations strong”.

There is strength in unity. The reason our once Christian society is taken over by the enemies of religion is denominatationalism. It’s existence is explicitly disobedient to Christ’s commandment in scripture that His followers be one. Yet, those who find themselves part of it profess they take their authority to start their churches from scripture. Read the account of the Last Supper and count the times He uses the word one.

The sincerity and good will of those caught in these denominations is not questioned. When they encounter doctrinal questions they do their best to decide the rightness or wrongness of one position or the other using the Bible as a guide. But believing there is no church with authority to teach, speaking for Christ, as shown in scripture, it is inevidable that disputes end in more and more division as demonstrated by history, not theology.
 
It was known, sadly, but it was not the avalanche Protestantism has proven to be – thousands of conflicting and competing doctrines from thousands of denominations, all of them based on yet another interpretation of an incomplete Bible cut by Martin Luther, all of them claiming to teach the truth and nothing but the truth, but no two of them agree about what the Bible means.

This is the result of Sola Scriptura and its concomitant doctrine, the private interpretation of Scripture.

Oy veh!

Jim Dandy
Ex-Southern Baptist, ex-agnostic, ex-atheist, ecstatic to be Catholic!
Dear ecstatic Jim,

It is not true that all Protestant denominations claim to have all their doctrines correct. Many thnk they are doing their best and that no church has 100% doctrinal correctness.

I know a Baptist minister who believes no church has all of its doctrines correct, what Catholics call “fullness of truth”. He said the Catholic claim to have doctrinal truth is the height of arrogance. It made him angry that a religion would be so arrogant.

Truth can not be arrogant.

I asked him which of his doctrines, which things he believes about matters of faith, are false. He looked at me as if I were an idiot. If he knew which of his beliefs are false he would not believe them. My response is if you can not know which of your beliefs are false, but are sure some are, then neither can you know which are true.

This same man as a pastor, a shepherd of souls, told me that when single pregnant women came to him for advice he told them if they wanted to have abortions it was ok as long as the pregnancy was under three months along. He said that he thought about this and personally could not be sure that a fetus under three months was a person. I asked him what scripture he used to make this determination for himself, the young women in his congregation and their babies. Was his line drawn at 89 days, 90, 91?

I said if you are not sure, can not be sure after thinking about it to make your personal determination about life and death, whether an 80 day old unborn is a real person, why would you tell her it is ok to kill it? If you were backing your car out of your driveway and glanced in the mirror and thought you saw a flash of a child behind you, but were not sure, would you hit the gas or play it safe?

This man is sincere. He ended up so muddled in his thinking, going so off track, by believing a false doctrine that says he and everyone else should determine truth about faith and morals through their personal views of the meaning of scripture.

This same doctrine is responsible for the evil known as denominationalism the division of Christians in oppostion to Christ’s commandment to be unified. Without unity our society can no longer figure out that men marry women and murdering babies and old people is reprehensible. In the news recently the new authorities accpeted by our society, groups of psychologists, the claim is made that children are sexual beings.

What is the origin of relativism, the notion that all people define their own truth?
 
What is the origin of relativism, the notion that all people define their own truth?
I think we’re forced to say that Satan is the origin of relativism. God said that Adam and Eve would surely die if they ate of the tree of knowledge of good and evil… Satan said they wouldn’t. God gave an objective command, and satan contradicted Him.
 
Dear ecstatic Jim,

It is not true that all Protestant denominations claim to have all their doctrines correct. Many thnk they are doing their best and that no church has 100% doctrinal correctness.
Hmmm. I’ve never heard of a Protestant organization that says: “Join our congregation. We don’t teach the truth, there is no truth, but you’ll like it here. We’re friendly folks. So give us your money so we can keep on teaching our not-true religion.”
What is the origin of relativism, the notion that all people define their own truth?
I consider Protestantism the epitome of relativism… Since all the conflicting and competing doctrines are true, as their advocates claim, “truth” has no meaning.

Jim Dandy
 
Hmmm. I’ve never heard of a Protestant organization that says: “Join our congregation. We don’t teach the truth, there is no truth, but you’ll like it here. We’re friendly folks. So give us your money so we can keep on teaching our not-true religion.”

Jim Dandy
I believe you are generalizing your experience on other groups. Grandfather’s description is more prevalent except in strongly evangelical or fundamentalist churches.
 
Hmmm. I’ve never heard of a Protestant organization that says: “Join our congregation. We don’t teach the truth, there is no truth, but you’ll like it here. We’re friendly folks. So give us your money so we can keep on teaching our not-true religion.”

I consider Protestantism the epitome of relativism… Since all the conflicting and competing doctrines are true, as their advocates claim, “truth” has no meaning.

Jim Dandy
In antiquity and medieval times it never occured to Christian people that they could define truth for themselves, decide what they wanted to personally believe about this doctrine or that. They believed that God revealed truth and it was the Church’s responsiblity guided by the Holy Spirit to be the gaurdian of the deposit of faith. The disputes were about trying to get the Church to approve one doctrine or another, or settle a doctrinal argument by supporting this side or that. You can see this in history. For example follow the history of the Arian heresy. You see two sides vying to have their viewpoint defined as correct.

It never occured to the medieval mind to set up one’s own church. Christ founded a Church. There is only one and no one has authority to start a church and claim the Bible legitimizes their action dividing the Body of Christ.

This was the novelty, what was new and radical in the Protestant Reformation. When you listen to Protestant Christian talk shows on radio there is a common theme when various tenets of faith are discussed. The moderator will discuss both sides of an issue, whether salvation can be lost, for example. He might say why he personally believes one side or another, or that he used to believe X, because of a particular scripture passage, but now he believes why, because of some other reason. I have heard this often.

Behind it all is the belief that individuals determine truth for themselves. There is no thought that maybe the Church has Christ’s promise that her doctrines are true and has any say in the matter. All opinions are weighed and considered and I decide for myself what I want to believe about anything.

I am not taught. I do not receive the truth. I am not a follower or disciple. I consider what the Bible says and define my own truth. This is the recipe for denominationalism, continuous fracturing and dividing, and also for non-denominationalism, which is an oxymoron.
 
Or maybe they just can’t find any existing denomination whose beliefs match their own.
I know that there are Lawyers in the midst and one of the things that Lawyers do is present multiple options.

Maybe they cannot find any existing denomination whose beliefs match their own is a possibility and I doubt that many examine the statement of Faith of the Non-denominational Church.

In my experience, most if not all of the people that join believe that they are “just Christians” in an attempt to distance themselves from what they think they know. Many do not know about the history of Christianity and only know what they are told.

In my experience many are not doing their due dilligence in examining what it is they are joining. They usually are invited by a friend to " a church". I often see signs and the like directing people to these churches with statements like “a church for those that don’t like church”.

It is my belief and opinion that they join what they don’t know befause they don’t know what they don’t know and in time when they discover what they do know sooner or later they realize that they are Protestant.👍
 
Yeah become we all know that schism was unknown before A.D. 1517. 😉

Ugh I know. “Religion” is a totally neutral English term used to denote any belief system. Maybe you like to say your pretty phrase about having a Personal Relationship With Jesus, but it’s not very helpful for census-takers.

But I must say that the refusal among some Catholics to call their Church by the equally neutral word “denomination” is just as annoying…
1054 schism:eek:

You may want to go to a Library in an older city and look at the Dictionaries. Dictionaries that are older define Christian as one adhering to the beliefs of the Catholic Church. Open a recently published dictionary and you will see that the Catholic Church is not mentioned.🤷

The Catholic Church is not a denomination. All systems of thought denominated from the OHCAC. It was these priests see and a Catholic lawyer. Knox, Luther, Calvin and other Catholics that denominated. The OHCAC stayed the same.👍
 
Dear ecstatic Jim,

It is not true that all Protestant denominations claim to have all their doctrines correct. Many thnk they are doing their best and that no church has 100% doctrinal correctness.

I know a Baptist minister who believes no church has all of its doctrines correct, what Catholics call “fullness of truth”. He said the Catholic claim to have doctrinal truth is the height of arrogance. It made him angry that a religion would be so arrogant.

Truth can not be arrogant.

I asked him which of his doctrines, which things he believes about matters of faith, are false. He looked at me as if I were an idiot. If he knew which of his beliefs are false he would not believe them. My response is if you can not know which of your beliefs are false, but are sure some are, then neither can you know which are true.

This same man as a pastor, a shepherd of souls, told me that when single pregnant women came to him for advice he told them if they wanted to have abortions it was ok as long as the pregnancy was under three months along. He said that he thought about this and personally could not be sure that a fetus under three months was a person. I asked him what scripture he used to make this determination for himself, the young women in his congregation and their babies. Was his line drawn at 89 days, 90, 91?

I said if you are not sure, can not be sure after thinking about it to make your personal determination about life and death, whether an 80 day old unborn is a real person, why would you tell her it is ok to kill it? If you were backing your car out of your driveway and glanced in the mirror and thought you saw a flash of a child behind you, but were not sure, would you hit the gas or play it safe?

This man is sincere. He ended up so muddled in his thinking, going so off track, by believing a false doctrine that says he and everyone else should determine truth about faith and morals through their personal views of the meaning of scripture.

This same doctrine is responsible for the evil known as denominationalism the division of Christians in oppostion to Christ’s commandment to be unified. Without unity our society can no longer figure out that men marry women and murdering babies and old people is reprehensible. In the news recently the new authorities accpeted by our society, groups of psychologists, the claim is made that children are sexual beings.

What is the origin of relativism, the notion that all people define their own truth?
One thing you may want to ask this pastor is this:

Were Adam and Eve created out of nothing?😃

Was there a time when Jesus was not the God/man from the moment of the incarnation?😃

If Jesus is the new adam and there was never a time when the God/man was not God and at the moment of incarnation was not man and we are created in the image and likeness then how could he advise any abortion at any time?👍

You may be surprised to read that our very own Supreme Court, bright lawyers, in ruling on Partial Birth Abortion, state that they could not determine when life begins in the womb because of lack of scientific certainty?🤷
 
One thing you may want to ask this pastor is this:

Were Adam and Eve created out of nothing?😃

Was there a time when Jesus was not the God/man from the moment of the incarnation?😃

If Jesus is the new adam and there was never a time when the God/man was not God and at the moment of incarnation was not man and we are created in the image and likeness then how could he advise any abortion at any time?👍

You may be surprised to read that our very own Supreme Court, bright lawyers, in ruling on Partial Birth Abortion, state that they could not determine when life begins in the womb because of lack of scientific certainty?🤷
But doesn’t medical science say that life begins at conception? Sperm + ova = life.
 
There are some pretty odd ideas in this thread about what it means to be non-denominational, and what it means to be Protestant in general.

Non-denominational really means a belief in a particular way the Church is meant to be structured - it is essentially congregational, with the local Christian church community being the highest level of structure in each place. That’s really all. A lot of people think of it simply as saying "I’m a Christian, and putting another name on top of that is simply following something man-made. It sees people aligning themselves with organized bodies as trying to add something that shouldn’t be there.

Of course the non-denominational movement does grow out of a particular tradition of Christianity, whether it likes it or not, and so it often has many other beliefs that come out of that same tradition. A loose kind of worship, sola scriptura, or whatever. Though some are Calvinists of a sort and others are more like baptists, and some manage to be both.

As for the idea that most Protestants do not claim the fullness of truth - that is kind of a subtle point, and a few people have managed to give totally bizarre versions of it. Certainly most Protestants would agree that all Christian groups have erred on some items, be they theological or practical or whatever. But they would also likely say that most are correct on the most basic essentials we need to know. As for the stuff in between, some are more perfect in their teaching than others.

Saying that is the same as teaching complete relativism is silly.🤷
 
The term denomination in religious context means a sub-species of the original.
To de-nominate is to break away from an original named entity and name oneself something different.

The Catholic Church is not a denomination. She is the original nomination – the Mother Church of all Christendom – the named entity from which all others have ultimately de-nominated – i.e., broken away and renamed themselves.

The Mother Church is not a denomination. Consequently, she can’t be identified as one.

Jim Dandy
👍 👍 👍
 
The Catholic Church is not a denomination. All systems of thought denominated from the OHCAC. It was these priests see and a Catholic lawyer. Knox, Luther, Calvin and other Catholics that denominated. The OHCAC stayed the same.👍
👍 I Share The Same Thoughts As You.
 
I’ll ask my ex-husband what “non-denominational” means to him. He was raised devout, strict Seventh-day Adventist and now goes to a “Fort God” non-denom church. It’s my understand he simply likes to “melt into the crowd” and likes their “celebration-style” worship (read: LOUD!).

I understand the Catholic belief that there is supposed to be one true church. But, I wonder genuinely if that is 100% correct. I know people who cannot stand liturgical worship. They are bored, don’t understand it. But… they are devout, faithful people. Me, if the only option was a loud, celebration church… I doubt I would be reading a Bible or trying to have anything to do with Christianity. I found an Episcopalian church years ago and was like, “Wow! I am in a church and I’m not freaking out!!!”

A old friend of mine, who literally owned the “I’ve Had an Abortion” tee shirt that’s popular now, hated, hated church. She was raised conservative Lutheran. When she was in this town she went to a friend’s church where the pastor wears jeans and centres his sermons around pop culture in order to be more accessible to his congregation. She now considers herself a Christian, does service projects, and reads the Bible/prays daily.
 
The term denomination in religious context means a sub-species of the original.
To de-nominate is to break away from an original named entity and name oneself something different.

The Catholic Church is not a denomination. She is the original nomination – the Mother Church of all Christendom – the named entity from which all others have ultimately de-nominated – i.e., broken away and renamed themselves.

The Mother Church is not a denomination. Consequently, she can’t be identified as one.

Jim Dandy
:clapping::yup::tiphat::bowdown2::highprayer:
 
Bluegoat;8292831:
So they are unaffiliated Christians. They do not belong to any group beyond the people with whom they spend Sunday’s. There is no association beyond thie immediate congregation, but they belief Protestant doctrines of one form or another, whatever seems to make sense locally.
Well, they would say they belong to the church universal, as instantiated within their own local group. So if they were really living out their congregational philosophy, they would understand all Christian groups to be part of the same body, but each a kind of organ. It would actually be very similar to the way the Catholic Church understands individual parishes to all be part of the one Catholic Church. They don’t though see the unity being created by an external political structure - rather, they see the unity being through faith in Christ.
Is it immpossible to tell what a given local simply Christian group believes about anything then, other than they are unaffiliated, not part of a greater body?
Not impossible - you could ask them.🙂 Which is actually part of the point from their perspective - you have to engage with the community. But the term non-denominational in itself doesn’t say a lot. They do come out of a particular tradition of teaching, so it is possible to make some educated guesses.
But what about Jesus’s promises to send the Holy Spirit to be with His Church, never abandon her, lead her into ALL truth, bind in heaven what she teaches on earth?
I don’t see that this promise is actually very specific though. For one thing, what makes you think differences in what are considered non-essential teachings mean that the Holy Spirit has abandoned them? And when is it that we will be led into all truth? In the Church militant? Most of these groups would probably say that this is to be expected in the Church Triumphant, but not before.

This is actually a little difficult for a Catholic to argue to a non-denominational, because on the face of it, all groups have erred and even taught things falsely or in a confusing way. And it is pretty difficult to prove that isn’t the case. And even in the Catholic Church there are questions left unanswered (the status of particular personal revelations, for example, or whether evolution is true.) So it seems obvious to such a person that on Earth, no Church has ALL truth, and no church it totally free of error. So they understand the promise to be saying that the Holy Spirit will prevent the Church Militant from falling into error on essentials.
This is true. Most Protestants agree on this. Who defines what a basic essential is? Wouldn’t it seem that a doctrine on salvation is essential? If some say salvation can be lost and others say no matter what sin a person commit, once they have “been saved”, accepted Jesus as their personal savior, or whatever other non-scriptural formula, they can never lose salvation even if they murder, rape and torture. I know Protestants who believe in transubstantiation, or consubstantiation, other say it is all symbolic. The claim they agree on the basics is simply not true, unless the basics is a statement that the Bible is the word of God.
I think most would say, for example, a belief in salvation through Jesus Christ is essential; a theory about just how that works is not essential. A theory is just our attempt at an explanation of how it works, and to think it is essential to our salvation is incorrect. A lot would say the essentials are belief and acceptance of Christ and our salvation in and through him; belief in the Bible as the inerrant word of God which contains everything required for salvation; and belief in the Trinity.
Secondly, if the only things they dispute are nonessential things that don’t matter that much, that constitute their differences, then they took pretty drastic action over them. They disobeyed Christ’s unity command and split themselves into thousands of denominations over petty matters.
Well, since non-denominationals are congregationalists, this argument is likely to fall flat with them - they think the Church is meant to be instantiated in many local congregations. Although they would agree with you that denominations are a bad thing, they would also think the claims of the Catholic Church and its political structure is also wrong. They would support a movement from what they would see as false claims of unity to a model where every congregation is self-governing, and they would probably see the move away from the Catholic model to denominations as an attempt to move in that direction.
I think what was said is the origins of relativism come from Protestant thought. The nondenominational phenomenon certainly reflects relativism. They believe whatever their local folks teach, but maybe are not right about it, and decide for themselves what they believe. Protestantism descends into relativism, because it lacks any mechanism to discern truth. The Bible alone doctrine most Protestant’s hold is what makes this descent inevitable as the history of denominationalism reveals.
No, I think relativism was around long before Protestantism (man is the measure of all things), and some Protestants are much more strict about the objectivity of truth than Catholics are - that is where you get Biblical literalists and fundamentalists.

Now, I think what you are talking about here is not so much relativism as individualism, which may have its origins in Catholicism rather than Protestantism IMO, with the development of humanism and perhaps the move to a system with an individual at the top. But it is of course always hard to pin a whole movement on a single cause like this.
 
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