goout:
If a Christian community says yes to the Incarnation but gives no credence to the visible, real, and continuous Tradition of the one Church founded by Christ, then that “yes” is lip service.
Source.
You’re asking for a source for really basic Christian ideas.
The Tradition of the Church is sourced in Christ himself. How do I give a source for this? It permeates everything about Christianity and makes Christianity unique among all beliefs.
First you can look to God’s self identification as “I Am”. The people of the covenant know God
personally. The Law is from a God who can be known personally. The idea of covenant is one of relationship with a person, not mere adherence to a book.
Christ embodies this covenant. God’s full and final revelation is now in and through God’s own son, made flesh and blood, fully human and fully divine.
Ok, this is basic Christian doctrine. Does your denomination not believe these things?
What does it mean? For starters, it means the book is not God. The book is not enough. The bible points to Christ, not the other way around. And Christ is incarnate in the human condition, not contained in the pages of the Bible. (you will now accuse me of denigrating the Inspiration of Scripture. Can you get past that now please?)
And not to belabor the point but: this means that Christ has formed a community among human beings. If God did not intend this, then there is no need for Christ.
We already had a book.
And so if you claim belief in Christ but do not recognize a continuous Tradition started by Christ, that is lip service to Christ. It sees Christ as simply a great teacher who started a book. And that’s simply not reality Jon. Christ didn’t write a book, he founded a community of persons.
And so you have to ask yourself, did Christ form a durable community, or one that is subject to decay?
And you also are confronted with a question about the resurrection. Is Christ alive? Or is he dead in the pages of the bible? If Christ is resurrected then Christ is still active in the community he founded.
(and you will probably say yea to everything here, but say “but I’m not required to give obedience to the bishop of Rome”. But Jon, in all of this discussion
I have not mentioned the Bishop of Rome once. YOU bring up the Pope.)