M
Mlon
Guest
The relationship is a result of faith. Abraham believed God by faith and was saved. Clearly he had a relationship with God through the covenant. Moses had a relationship with God as the one appointed to deliver Gods chosen people out of Egypt. The disciples had a relationship with Christ as their teacher, friend and savior. A example of relationship is in the books of Acts:What was asked of you, Mlon, was to provide some Scriptural support for your belief that “whether or not one is forgiven for their sins is by their relationship with Christ.” Chapter and verse for this please.
And for verses which state that your verses constitute the “overall message” of the gospel.
NB: I am not asking for verses which you think are the “overall message”. For another Christian could pick and choose an entirely different set of Scripture verses and state, “These are what encompass the overall message of the Bible”.
I am asking for verses which state: “This is the overall message of the gospel”.
That the “overall message” is 'implied" is fine. As long as you are ok with Catholics using this paradigm to say that “Doctrine A” is also implied.
A group of Jews was traveling from town to town casting out evil spirits. They tried to use the name of the Lord Jesus in their incantation, saying, “I command you in the name of Jesus, whom Paul preaches, to come out!” But one time when they tried it, the evil spirit replied, “I know Jesus, and I know Paul, but who are you?” Then the man with the evil spirit leaped on them, overpowered them, and attacked them with such violence that they fled from the house, naked and battered. (Acts 19:13, 15, 16 NLT)
The above story indicates these men did not have a relationship with Jesus. They were using His name as a magic spell instead of having a true heart felt relationship. I have used the word “implied” throughout this discussion. In hindsight implied gives the impression the message is not clear. Nevertheless, that is not the case in my examples the message is pretty straight forward that there is a relational aspect to faith.
Back to your point of giving slack in regards to the RC implied doctrine of priestly intercession. There is a difference of exegesis vs. eisegesis of scripture. Clearly the message of relationship is throughout the scripture; however, building doctrine around vague references that cannot be supported scriptural is not proper exegesis.
Clearly we can go back and forth regarding this with either of changing each others mind. With that said I will let you have the last word.
Thanks