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Roman_Catholic_1
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Thank you for that AlegreFe
God Bless
Thank you for that AlegreFe
What would help us to understand if something was or was not would be to determine itâs origins. If something started with ancient pagan religions and then were âchristianizedâ- that would go against Godâs commands.How does Sola Scriptura help us to decide what is a âgood and godly traditionâ and what is not?
Personally I believe the Divine Office, the Rosary, making the sign of the cross with holy water, novenas, genuflection and many other things are âgood and godly traditionsâ. I know that none of them are found in Scripture but I donât see them as being contrary to Scripture.
But many others think theyâre not good at all. Some would even call them pagan and evil.
I also think Christmas is a good and godly tradition.
In deciding what is a good tradition and what is not, are we making a second rule of faith or practice alongside Scripture?
We do base our faith on Scripture. But I know what you mean. The written Word of God as in Scripture is not the only thing on which we base our Faith.Catholics do not base their faith on the Bible, but on Jesus. The Bible is based upon the Catholic faith.
-How is the bible based upon the Catholic faith?The Bible is based upon the Catholic faith.
Did the early Christians base their faith on the Bible or on the oral teachings of the Apostles and their followers?
âŚand to be consistant not use drivers licenses or any pictures as that would be against a consistant understanding of modern Bible only followers.
:yup: On the oral teachings of Jesus Christ, the Apostles and their disciples!Did the early Christians base their faith on the Bible or on the oral teachings of the Apostles and their followers?
I also think this was the opâs point.The strict Bible only, (not sola scriptura) followers who follow the King James version(or something similar with the 66 books that were decided upon by Martin Luther and finalized about 150 or so years ago.)
If they do not do anything related to religion outside the Bible, they shouldnât celebrate Christmas, Easter, have wedding rings or funerals and to be consistant not use drivers licenses or any pictures as that would be against a consistant understanding of modern Bible only followers.
This is the point of the original post.
In Christ
Scylla
Because your logic is saying if God has not got it written down then it shouldnât be done, just in case He disapproves of it.Well, I guess you have tto look at what the bible says about that. If what the bible discribes is what you are doing- then it is what God wanted⌠and if it is not, then perhaps it is not what God wanted⌠How is that logic flawed?
Iâll just point you back to my post.Why did he have to die?
Without His Resurrection we would not have been set free. But He had to die first in order to rise. And since death is part of our lives because of Adam & Eve, He had to destroy our death with His death. He also restored our lives with His Resurrection.But without His dying, He would not have resurrected.
What came first? The Bible as we know it today, or the Church? The Church!-How is the bible based upon the Catholic faith?
Iâm not going to touch on the marriage part (because I agree with you that God insititued it with Adam and Eve), but this second part is kind of wrong.There is no Pagan tie to the Jewish passover or marriage- so there could not be pagan motivation for Jesus attending those.
Although I am not a Presbyterian but a Lutheran, I consider this useful and accurate and would urge you to become familiar with it before you ask any more questions about Sola Scriptura.The whole counsel of God concerning all things necessary for His own glory, manâs salvation, faith and life, is either expressly set down in Scripture, or by good and necessary consequence may be deduced from Scripture: unto which nothing at any time is to be added, whether by new revelations of the Spirit or traditions of men. Nevertheless, we acknowledge the inward illumination of the Spirit of God to be necessary for the saving understanding of such things as are revealed in the Word: and that there are some circumstances concerning the worship of God, and government of the Church, common to human actions and societies, which are to be ordered by the light of nature, and Christian prudence, according to the general rules of the Word, which are always to be observed.
My point entirely - there are many formulations of sola scriptura. It know for a start that the page I quoted wasnât typical. However, it IS a formulation of sola scriptura. Iâm very sorry if some Protestants would have what other Protestants would view as a false conception of the doctrine and that there is no unity in Protestantism on this, one of the main points of the entire Protestant Reformation.Asteroid,
The website you got that defintion of Sola Scriptura from does NOT represent the classical Protestant understanding of the doctrine.
A much clearer presentation can be found in the Westminster Confession of Faith which is the defining confessional document for Presbyterians (nearly identical formulations have been crafted for Baptists {London Baptist Confession 1689} and Congregationalists {Savoy Declaration}.
Although I am not a Presbyterian but a Lutheran, I consider this useful and accurate and would urge you to become familiar with it before you ask any more questions about Sola Scriptura.
Is ok. you do your thing, is ok.Maybe the Puritans, the Adventists, the Jehovahâs Witnesses, some Anabaptists and others were right on this one - you canât combine Christmas and Sola Scriptura theology.
Christains celebrate The Birth of Christ , His Death and Resurrection as an act of love for Him.Well⌠is it? Has anyone done the research so we can know for sure whether it is or isnât?
I think that there is a tendency to want to stick so loyaly to what we have always believed that we risk not seeing the forrest for the trees.
If the origins are pagan, I want to know. And if there is information in scripture that says that Christmas is something we should all be celebrating, I want to know that too⌠or if it indicates that God disapproves of it- that is also good to know.
I would not be willing to stick to a belief- just because it is Catholic- if the bible indicated it was wrong. That would be placing my thinking in opposition to God would it not?
Did you read the article by James Swan?I have been reading the article that you posted and it does look like Luther did decide the canon. I did make a mistake in saying 66 books as he left 73 books in the Bible but lowered the status by denigrating some books and this helped influence others to eventually kick out 7 books entirely.
As I said, about 150 years ago they took out the books that many people call apocryphal. I have a King James Version of the Bible which contains the 73 books, before they were taken out. It is over 150 years old.
Thanks for the link, I will read more of it. I see not too much need to defend Luther as he did repent many times of the horrible and vulgar things he said. He was passionate.
LMW
Others explained that the Bible wasnât around for the early Christians.
The reason why having a drivers license would be wrong for many Bible only adherents is they split the 1st commandment and then interpret the 2 commandment as having no images. This also makes their wifeâs into objects but that is another subject.
To consistantly follow that no images rule, no images would be able to be possessed by any followers of those groups.
Catholics have an authority which says that it isnât interpreted that way, this is why we can possess nativity sets, statues, pictures of our kids and even drivers licenses without contradicting out belief system.
In Christ
Scylla
No, that wasnât your point at all. Your point was to construct a strawman from a false understanding of Sola Scriptura and then to ask why âProtestantsâ donât defend it.My point entirely - there are many formulations of sola scriptura. It know for a start that the page I quoted wasnât typical. However, it IS a formulation of sola scriptura. Iâm very sorry if some Protestants would have what other Protestants would view as a false conception of the doctrine and that there is no unity in Protestantism on this, one of the main points of the entire Protestant Reformation.
I donât know where youâve been, but I can justly suggest that you spend your time with those churches which have confessional standards since the rest are likely to change with their pastors.Then again, Iâve been in lots of Protestant churches. Could any of them be said to be âclassicâ Protestantism?
Wonderful, youâre educated. Then why do you come here and ask us to defend something which is really representative of only an extremely small minority of (arguably heretical) Christians and present it as âProtestantâ as though it was the general confession?Your urging is appreciated. However, I would ask you to understand that Iâve looked at the Westminster Confession of Faith before. Thatâs the sort of thing you do when taking two theology degrees at a university college that also combines as the training college for the Presbyterian Church of Wales. Several years ago I read the 1689 Baptist Confession after buying a copy from the Metropolitan Tabernacle Bookshop while I was a baptist lay preacher and deacon. I confess I havenât read the Savoy Declaration even though the college where I took my degrees worked very closely with the college training up Welsh Congregationalist ministers.
Not me, I donât. The only âfalse traditionsâ are the ones that undercut grace with works.The Westminster Confession for example states:
The whole counsel of God concerning all things necessary for His own glory, manâs salvation, faith and life, is either expressly set down in Scripture, or by good and necessary consequence may be deduced from Scripture: unto which nothing at any time is to be added, whether by new revelations of the Spirit, or traditions of men.
It later states:
The supreme judge by which all controversies of religion are to be determined, and all decrees of councils, opinions of ancient writers, doctrines of men, and private spirits, are to be examined, and in whose sentence we are to rest, can be no other but the Holy Spirit speaking in the Scripture.
I wonât quote the Baptist Confession as it is identical in this section to the Westminster Confession.
Ok, hereâs a controversy of religion. A tradition of man states that we should celebrate a festival commemorating the birth of Jesus on December 25th. Some Christians say this is a false tradition.
Because the Puritans were uptight, some of them anyway, and as i am sure youâre aware, they didnât all reject Christmas.The supreme judge of this controversy can only be the Holy Spirit speaking in the Scripture.
So what does this judge say? Can we deduce this festival from Scripture? If so how? How do we deduce that we should have a special day in December (or January) called Christmas? And how do we do so without introducing anything like a tradition of men? And if such a festival can be deduced from Scripture then why didnât the Puritans, famous for their love of and exposition of Scripture, celebrate it?