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AmateurPianist
Guest
Although I list Assembly of God as my denomination, I am not hard-core Assembly of God. Neither is my church for that matter. As a matter of fact I am not totally comfortable with some aspects of hard-core Assembly of God if you know what I mean.I grew up Pentecostal, my father is ordained in the Assemblies of God (more properly, it’s Italian branch, the Assemblee di Dio in Italia), so I can see where you’re coming from.
I am Assembly of God in the sense that the church in my community where I believe God would have me is Assembly of God. If I lived in a different community it might be different for me.
So I have no particular interest in keeping you “Assembly of God” as a Catholic might have in reverse to a Catholic that is considering “defecting”. But allow me to share my heart a little here.
Ah the study of history thing. I have studied it too, although I am by no means an expert of history.I’ve a passion for history. I have a personal theory that the key to understanding anything and everything is by studying its history.
But I am sure you have encountered what I call the “standard Protestand spin” and the “standard Catholic spin” of history.
Have you considered the possibility of false dichotomy, that being that some sort of variant between the standard spins is actually what is closest to the truth.
And of course that being the standard “Protestant Spin”. I really don’t like the word “corrupted” though. There is a much softer version that I from my personal study of Scripture find more defensible. And that would be that there have always been (both Old and New Testament) periods of time where God’s people have drifted from God’s design and periods where God brings them back closer to his design…followed by drifting from His design followed by bringing back closer to his design.If Christianity really was corrupted and needed reform, then there must have been a period in which it was true, accurate, and pure. A corruption must have occurred then several hundred years after its onset.
Serious question here. Does Assembly of God believe “purely symbolic” in a “hard” sense (those organizations that believe in any type of “Real Presence” are wrong and heretical and any belief in any real presence is just not compatible with Assembly of God. Or is it a “soft” sense (we find no reason to believe in a Real Presence but we do not hold this as an essential and neither do we condemn other organizations that believe in a “Real Presence” as heretical. I sort of sense it is in a “soft sense”. I do know that in my local church it is a topic that has not been addressed either way.To give a banal example - if Communion is purely symbolic, like the Assemblies of God teaches - then the early Church must have believed that, and a corruption like the real presence must have been an addition hundreds of years later.
For the record I do not believe the “real presence” to be a “corruption”. On the contrary I find it possible, maybe true in a sense, but difficult to prove either way. From my study I find the earliest church and Scripture both “approach” the communion table as though in “some sense” it “is” the body and blood of Jesus Christ. This “some sense” though might be as minimal as just the approach itself or possibly (but unproven) as large as some type of physical and/or chemical transformation. Hard to say. So I go with the minimal (that being the approach itself) as that being which is truly important in this all and the rest being possible but not essential.
The way I have reconciled this with Assemblies is that I do not sense/believe they find my beliefs wrong/heretical. So as long as that is the case I will not blow out of proportion any differences of nuances of belief we may have here.
Well this gets back to the issue of metrics…and what is the right question to ask as far as what church I attend. To me the right question is "When God looks at the various “churches” in my community which ones are closer to his design and which ones might have drifted somewhat. For metrics I find basically two…doctrine and practice.It’s not so. Zwingli asserts the first real major defense of memoralism. That made me ask serious, serious questions. So while living our lives in a Christian way is an imperative (which I often fail), accuracy I feel is a must, too. Sound doctrine.
I tend to sort doctrine into three categories: (1) Doctrine about the Godhead, (2) Moral Doctrine (3) Other. You may come to different conclusions but from my study of history and Scripture (Jude - 2 Peter) that what is really important here both in Scripture and history is 1 and 2. Thus I can kick off the island morally relative liberal Protestant and groups that teach new inventions concerning Jesus Christ and the Godhead. Remaining on the island are the conservative and Evangelical Protestants, the Catholics, and the Orthodox. The stuff in “other” needs further research and prioritization.
But I also find practice to be equally as important in the gospels (at least the red letter words leave me to this conclusion). And I think our church is pretty good at it, at least taking the Great Commission to out community and to the planet. which as I recall is “red letter words”. For me anyway the default is stay where you are at unless a compelling reason otherwise. And I have just not found a compelling reason.
Anyway…that is my heart.
That is my heart anyway.