Dear Gadgeteer, please forget about Calvin and RT interpretations, etc. It doesn’t matter one whit what he or the Calvinists think this verse or that verse or whole books mean. Why? Because they have no authority to interpret them.
Hi, Della. Again, thank you for your reply.
When a Calvinist, or any other person, does
not have “the authority to interpret Scriptures”, how will you convince them they do not? That’s what I am trying to convey. If we consider a particular verse, then what if we list all of the “possible understandings”?
With such a list, we then look for other verses on the same subject; if an “other verse” plainly states something
opposite to one of those understandings, would you not say “the understanding/interpretation has been overturned” (therefore, he who made that interpretation, has been proven to not have had authority)? I used a Calvinistic example, because it was easiest and clearest to demonstrate. A person (in my example, a Calvinist) feels authoritative about 1Cor2:14. But then someone (perhaps you!) holds up verse 12, and in plain words Paul places “receive-the-Spirit”, absolutely before “getting-that-understanding”. What authority exists there? Certainly not the Calvinistic. But you held up the verse – are YOU asserting “authority”? No. Paul said, “receive-the-Spirit-SO-THAT (hina, in-order-that!) we may know the things”. It’s rock-solid, no authority on Earth can change what Paul said. Do you understand now what I’ve been trying to convey?
The point is simple. Calvin had NO authority to decide matters of doctrine based on anything at all–not Scripture or little blue fairies or himself. None of us do.
While you are right, is there any way that what Paul said in verse 12, can be reversed? “Receive-the-Spirit, IN-ORDER-THAT we may know the things”.
All that’s left to show everyone (including your Calvinistic friend), is that “receive-the-Spirit”, 100% denotes salvation. Unsaved people do not lambano-receive the Spirit, not ever.
Okay — “no one has authority to interpret Scripture”. You’re right. AND — “saved people receive the Spirit and THEN are taught the things that natural men do not understand”. Here Paul writes specific conspicuous words, they are not ambiguous, they are not interpretable. Where does the “authority”, lie? With Calvin? With me? With you?
When a verse is unambiguous, the authority of the verse is 100%. How could such a statement be rejected? I’m also not being “combative”. Paul said “receive-the-Spirit”, which (by Acts10:47 & 11:15-17 and others), absolutely denotes salvation. Paul said “the received Spirit THEN teaches those VERY THINGS”. It’s unambiguous, inflexible, undeniable. No question of authority, to deny “salvation-then-things”, one would have to dispute Acts10 & 11, Rom8:15, and many others.
This is the whole issue – are there absolutes given in Scripture, or is every point negotiable?
St. Paul didn’t have any authority of his own to speak about anything, either. His authority came from Christ, when he was called to be an Apostle, and from his ordination/confirmation in that calling. An Apostle wasn’t merely another elder in a local church–he had the authority, from Christ, to speak in Christ’s name.
I agree with that. And now we have Christ’s intent, written down for us by the Apostles. Can any teaching from them be clear, or do we consider that we “do not have the authority to discern clear positions from what they wrote”?
That same authority now lies in all the bishops of the Church in union with the pope–the Magisterium of the Catholic Church. Magisterium means “teaching body.” They only have their authority to teach in Christ’s name because he gave it to them–they don’t have it in themselves otherwise.
And if “all the bishops” state that “salvation and receive-the-Spirit precedes getting the THINGS which natural men do not understand”, then everyone accepts that it is “correct teaching”.
What if one bishop says, “No, receive-the-Spirit does NOT denote salvation” — or, “there are different things so that SOME things like Jesus’ Gospel must be imparted first before salvation is possible”, would anyone else (like you or me) be able to question his authority, based on Paul’s wording “receive-the-Spirit-SO-THAT-we-get-the-things”? Paul in absolute words writes of the same things in verses 9-14; the “deeper thoughts of God”. The words are simple and direct, there is no question of “authority”.
You see, Della — without the ability to discern clear teaching from Scripture, we become subject to being “tossed to and fro by every wind of doctrine”. And we have no defense against the charge, “I reject your AUTHORITY to tell anyone what the words meant to say”. When I wrote the book, I listed every verse specific views claimed; and then the reader follows in the journey to examine each of those verses in context with very specific OTHER verses.
Take the idea of “Pre-Trib Rapture” (an appendix in my book) — Pre Tribbers think Rev3:10 indicates “we the saved will be removed FROM the Tribulation”. The reader is asked to read Jesus’ words in John17:15:
“Father, I ask that You not
remove-them-from the Earth, but that you would
keep-them-amidst the evil one.”
“Remove-them-from”, is airo autos ek. “Keep-them-from” (meaning “guard-them-amidst”), is tereo autos ek. The question is simply when Rev3:10 states “He will TEREO-EK them from the hour of testing” — how can it
reverse meaning from what Jesus said in John17:15? Why did John write “tereo” in Rev3:10, and not “airo”?
Without the ability to discern clear teachings from the Apostles, what good does it do to even discuss anything?