Even now I can't decide if I think the secularized "Holiday season" is good... because it can have the effect of pulling people in, or bad because it's such a disgusting deformation of what Christmas is.
Christmas is about Jesus.
Even now I can't decide if I think the secularized "Holiday season" is good... because it can have the effect of pulling people in, or bad because it's such a disgusting deformation of what Christmas is.
We have the advantage of taking disciplinary action when needed, priests can be censured and defrocked if they cross the line, but the congregation is preserved- you don't have to walk away to look for something else, at least that's the design.you will find a fair share of criticism from conservative Protestants towards the Charismatic movement due it's lack of emphasis on Scripture.
Unless they're staying under the radar, the Church always investigates these matters and cautions the people. Mystics face scrutiny and are always treated with suspicion, there have been many declared false mystics. Those in good standing have been vetted and the faithful should have no reservations about them. People do visit mystics to ask for prayers and counsel but it's not a public spectacle, even though there may be crowds and a lot of attention on their persons. To Protestants it's all fakery from start to finish of course.You can find similar quackery in the mystical sides of RCism
Here's a brief input from Grok on the topic:
This is what I had suspected. I believe it also applies to icons, crosses, and Christian symbols. Before that, people had to keep any such items out of the view of nosy neighbors for fear of denunciation. And then the Church sprang up from the underground with full force.The first formal celebration of Christmas on December 25 as the birth of Christ occurred in Rome in 336 AD, during the reign of Emperor Constantine, who had effectively made Christianity the favored religion of the Roman Empire
My own take on the matter is that it falls under Romans 14:
In the Catholic Church every Sunday is really Easter Sunday. Every priest is also required to celebrate mass every day- the charismatic priest I mentioned said the daily attendance is about 1.5 million people in the US, iirc. The Easter Sunday mass actually lasts three days- from Thursday to Sunday, excluding Good Friday since that's when Jesus died, and therefore no celebrations.5 One person judges one day above another, another judges every day alike. Each person must be fully convinced in his own mind. 6He who regards the day, regards it for the Lord, and he who eats, eats for the Lord, for he gives thanks to God; and he who does not eat, for the Lord he does not eat and gives thanks to God.
I think what he was getting at is that there is an inconsistent conception of God amongst the numerous Protestant sects, specifically this idea of predestination versus free will as stated.ake a slight issue with the statement that Protestants have a different God in their mind. Maybe. That's difficult to say. I think it's extremely difficult to explain/understand subtle concepts of theology and most Christians have no idea in their own mind beyond: "I love Jesus". I actually think that's probably fine, with a caveat.
yeah, that specific one is very hard for me to wrap my head around, sometimes it seems like these subtle explanations of each merge. I should probably listen to the rest of the video.I think what he was getting at is that there is an inconsistent conception of God amongst the numerous Protestant sects, specifically this idea of predestination versus free will as stated.
Personally, I'm fine with not knowing. I actually think it's kinda weak "needing assurances" about salvation. In fact, I think the assurance stuff is the origin of pretty terrible ideas that are damaging to the soul.
1 John 5:13
These things I have written to you who believe in the name of the Son of God, so that you may know that you have eternal life.
Scripture is the lens for everything else.Which lens do you trust?
There is always a lens. If you’re going to put it in that context, I’d say Protestantism as a whole is like someone took a pair of glasses and smashed them on the ground, and there are a dozen people picking up the shards trying to piece them back together to make sense of the images before them. Perhaps some have better shards than others, but there is no cohesive vision. I would trust someone who had seen through the lens before it was broken, if that answers your question. And perhaps mine.That being said, Orthodox also have a lens. Their lens is the church fathers, the early ecumenical councils, and the continuation of fathers and saints. I wish he would have mentioned that because I think this is the crux of the issue. Which lens do you trust?
Or, do you think there is no such thing as a lens. I think a lot of modern Protestants just believe they are in a direct line when they read scripture. No lens. (And that "other Christian" is simply an idiot he can't read such an obvious thing.)
Agreed but this too requires an explanation and guidance from a consistent and reliable source.Scripture is the lens for everything else.
Scripture is the consistent and reliable source. Why do you assume Scripture is unintelligible but that all of these auxiliary sources are intelligible? See that trick for what it is.Agreed but this too requires an explanation and guidance from a consistent and reliable source.
You also have verses like "I am the door" "I am the vine." Anyone can recognize figurative language when they read it in it's own context. If they import an external context, such as their church forces them to do, they will miss it.^ because we have verses like "this is my body ... this is my blood" where people can't even decide when "is" means "is".
If you believe you are not importing an external context to arrive at your interpretation that is where I'd disagree with you. I'm claiming if we are honest with ourselves, we all import external context.You also have verses like "I am the door" "I am the vine." Anyone can recognize figurative language when they read it in it's own context. If they import an external context, such as their church forces them to do, they will miss it.
Sure. Everyone has their own presuppositions they bring along with them (that's a Reformed concept by the way). The difference is that we do not elevate our presuppositions onto the level of Scripture. The Scripture is meant to correct our presuppositions, not the other way around. This is why the Reformed do not elevate their confessions to the same authority as Scripture. None of the confessions claim to be infallible.If you believe you are not importing an external context to arrive at your interpretation that is where I'd disagree with you. I'm claiming if we are honest with ourselves, we all import external context.
Aren't the writings of the church fathers subject to the same difficulty?^ because we have verses like "this is my body ... this is my blood" where people can't even decide when "is" means "is".
I'm not sure if the Fathers questioned that the body and blood were just that (although I don't know specifics, and I'm biased as my heritage is Lutheran). But I have been recently reading commentary from various Fathers and they are absolutely addressing people who would have had similar ideas as some Protestants today. Like Jerome and Chrysostom explaining why the verse about Mary being a virgin "until" Jesus birth doesn't mean she wasn't a virgin after too. So, people were asking that question at the time.Aren't the writings of the church fathers subject to the same difficulty?
Jerome in particular was known for being an apologist for the Perpetual Virginity of Mary. His main opponent was a man named Helvidius, none of who's writings are extant. Since Jerome was an ascetic, this is to be expected.Jerome and Chrysostom explaining why the verse about Mary being a virgin "until" Jesus birth doesn't mean she wasn't a virgin after too. So, people were asking that question at the time.
Penitent, take the time to read this:Agreed but this too requires an explanation and guidance from a consistent and reliable source.
“Pay attention, therefore, to what I shall record out of the holy Scriptures, which do not need to be expounded, but only listened to” (Justin Martyr, Dialogue with Trypho, Chapter 55).
Penitent, take the time to read this:
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The Perspicuity of Scripture in the Early Church
I have written before on sola Scriptura in the early church, but now I want to give you some quotations on the perspicuity or clarity of Scripture in the writings of the early church fathers in con…jamesattebury.wordpress.com
The guys you are listening to, and the line you're falling for, is the imperspicuity of Scripture. No one in the early Church believed the Scriptures were unclear. Just the opposite, they all believed the Scriptures are indeed clear. This is one proof among many that the guys you're listening to are not the guys "who were there before the lens broke" nor are they a "consistent and reliable source."
Here's a guy who was actually there "before the lens broke" saying the opposite of what you're saying above: