S
sterryfamily
Guest
In the council of Jerusalem, it is when Peter finally speaks that all fall silent. This closed the matter.
Really? Peter and Paul had some very real disagreements… And Peter, not once, but three times, said ‘I never knew him’. Don’t misunderstand me, I love Peter, but what was correct teaching among the apostles was always what was agreed collectively in the context of the church - not just ‘Peter said this, therefore it’s right’. They discerned in the context of the groups experience and sense of God.
According to the early Church fathers, the Spirit guided the heirarchy to lovingly shepherd us. The idea that the Spirit guides each individual into “all truth” would have been laughable. (Ask any two or three or hundred people with differing interpretations of a scriptural passage how they know their interpretation is true and they will tell you it comes from the Holy Spirit. - Clearly not.).
Of course it isn’t. The Bible without the Holy Spirit would be nothing but a collection of historic writings. We need the involvement and inspiration of God. I just don’t reckon God reserves his inspiration to a hierarchy. If GOd wants to speak to a Anglican archbishop, or a Mennonite volunteer worker, and reveal God’s truth to them, God will. I don’t believe God limits Godself to one institution.