Benhur. I placed a post concerning St. Augustine
here.
QUOTE:
ST. AUGUSTINE "If you believe what you like in the gospels, and reject what you don’t like, it is not the gospel you believe, but yourself.” St. Augustine. Sermons [inter A.D. 391-430]
You
replied. . . .
Poor application. Faustus plainly said he did not believe in the gospels as written or orally told, especially Matthew. He did not believe in the Incarnation etc .
I have no problem with your assertion concerning “Faustus” benhur (I differ on St. Augustine though).
The problem is,
the quote I used, doesn’t concern Faustus.
The quote I used is from collected writings of St. Augustine usually titled “Sermons”,
not St. Augustine’s letter to the Manicheans and Faustus which
you cited.
(This illustrates yet another reason why
we are not Bible Lone Rangers–we all get it very wrong sometimes. See the Lone Ranger
HERE)
But let’s look at the quote (pretending this WAS to Faustus) with common sense.
Let’s pretend St. Augustine WAS talking to Faustus when he said:
ST. AUGUSTINE **"If you believe what you like in the gospels, and reject what you don’t like, it is not the gospel you believe, but yourself.” **
St. Augustine would be explaining a PRINCIPLE here to Faustus.
**
St. Augustine would explain this standard to Faustus to emphasize the
principle of authority. Not to encapsulate Faustus’ own beliefs.**
But as it stands, St. Augustine is talking to all of us in a sense when he says . . . .
QUOTE:
ST. AUGUSTINE "If you believe what you like in the gospels, and reject what you don’t like, it is not the gospel you believe, but yourself.” St. Augustine. Sermons [inter A.D. 391-430]
St. Augustine is teaching about the PRINCIPLE of authority as it relates to the Gospels.
And THAT was the whole
Cafeteria Christianity point that Justin61790 alluded to.
Cafeteria Christianity as it relates to the Gospels is the Cafeteria “customer” picking and choosing what he/she will and won’t affirm—all based upon their own personal “interpretation” of Scripture of course.
And I just extended that same thought to
the McChurch devotees.