Originally Posted by jrtrent
Mine is simply that we have scriptural warrant for asking one another to pray for us, but lack that example in scripture for asking the same of those who have died.
The problem one runs into with this line of thinking is that we then must do away with ALL things that Scripture doesn’t explicitly mention, such as our concept of the Trinity itself.
I think there is adequate scriptural support for recognizing God the Father, Jesus Christ, and the Holy Ghost as having distinct personalities and all being divine. Whether the doctrine of the Trinity as set forth at Nicaea is perfectly adequate I can’t say, though I don’t dispute it.
On the other hand, I see no scriptural support for asking Mary and the saints to pray for us.
Also, this line of thinking ignores the fact that the Bible itself is A. The product of tradition, and was never intended to be the final and only authority of God’s Church,
I’d say that what you take as fact, Protestants would describe as erroneous opinion.
and B. written in the understanding that the reader realizes all of the history and context in which the Bible exists.
Jesus was a good, faithful Jew, and it was never once written that he condemned the extremely normal and common Jewish practice of praying to and for the dead.
I’m curious about this. I haven’t been able to find anything definitive on the topic; do you know of sources I could look at? One item I found makes it seem that praying
to the dead anyway is a disputed and perhaps more recent (more recent, that is, than Christ’s time) phenomenon.
The Midrash records for us that when Moshe sent the twelve spies on their mission to bring back intelligence on the state of the Canaanites in the Land of Israel, Calev went to Chevron to the Tomb of the Patriarchs and prayed there for their help in making his mission successful. The Talmud records for us that Yirmiyahu the prophet also visited the Tomb of the Patriarchs in Chevron to beg them to somehow prevent the impending destruction of the Temple and Jerusalem. Nevertheless,
there is a biblical injunction “not to turn to the dead [for help.]” Praying to the dead was seen in the Torah as being an idolatrous practice. There has always been a tension in the Jewish world regarding praying at graves.
Jewish law books stress that one should never pray to the dead but rather one should gain inspiration by recalling their righteousness and thereby pray to the Lord more intensely and effectively. [emphasis added]
rabbiwein.com/blog/graves-and-monuments-674.html