Shifting sand:
Fundamentalism
- (idolatry)
Modernism
- (banality)
Relativism
- (individualism)
Solid Rock:
Catholicism
I thought perhaps you just wanted cheerleaders, but I am guessing that did want debate.
To the extent that Christ is the Rock, the Rock is great. To the extent that Peter is the rock, the rock is great. To the extent that revelation is the rock, the rock is great.
To the extent that the rock is the position that revelation ended with the apostles and the deposit of faith is fixed, the rock is particularly problematic. There are problems in this world that concern faith and morals and in their ancient manifestation appeared solved (to every Catholic thinker who put pen to paper without being condemned as a heretic), but in their modern manifestation are so clearly not solved that either the original solution was WRONG or there is a need for change to respond.
I can see the appeal of fixed truth, and I think there is fixed truth. I even believe that God could have inspired the Apostles to write scripture that applied to problems that would be and have been in small Catholic country AND similar problems that would be and have been in large secular societies. But God didn’t do that.
God also didn’t do that for the Jews. He could have inspired ancient Jews to write that if your brother dies marry his wife (even if you already have a wife) until a future time when this will no longer be necessary and as good Christians you will help take care of her and any children. God’s chosen people before Christ received truths that do not align with the truths Christians received in the first century. This was/is revelation. It is my position that “solid rock” without revelation is nowhere evident in the Bible and is thus not a mark of the true church.
So, I think the first century Christians were lead by Peter. He had a vision concerning clean and unclean food. The gospel was extended to the gentiles. This is the model that I think is God’s model and is thus the “mark of the true gospel” not solid-rock-ness. It is also not idolatry, banality, or individualism. I choose God’s way not solid-rock-ness.
Charity, TOm