csuguy
Well-known member
You know better than that.
What do you claim happened that changed the promise of Jesus?
I'm not saying Jesus' promised changed - I'm just disagreeing with your interpretation of it.
You know better than that.
What do you claim happened that changed the promise of Jesus?
Well, I would say No to that. The faith "once for all delivered to the saints" is still unfolding in understanding of it. Going deeper, but not a wholly new train of thought. Each rung of the ladder stands on the rungs below, each in ascending order.
This is how we now what is validly passed on.
The breaking of bread and feeding the 4,000 and the 5,000 show a definite heirarchy. Jesus was teaching Apostolic church governance those days and others I am sure. He fed the Apostles always first: not globally. Globally leads to divisions. Unity is fostered by visible Church Authority.
In no way does this deter personal seeking, far from it! Each one must feed himself. But Jesus set up the Divine Example, if you will: Jesus, Apostles, Laity.
Well, they are guaranteed against error. That is, they are maybe imperfectly expressed, yet they are not erroneous. In other words, they lead us in the correct direction in which to go deeper. It is not a chaotic free-for-all. Basics can be known wth clarity and precision.
We actually agree here. Rather than imperfect, I should have said: incomplete.
You do not make the mistake some do in thinking infallible is impeccable. You are correct here.
God is transcendent and immanent. He indwells the believer by the Spirit. We have the Holy Spirit and the Word and relationship with Christ. Outward symbols do not convey, but illustrate, spiritual reality. We do not need Mass, sacrament of infant baptism, last rites, etc. We need the Spirit of the Living God, His Word, and a vital connection to Christ. Evangelicals know God intimately and do not find Him transcendent because we do not attend Catholic rote rituals week in a week out. We value the ordinances of the Lord's Supper (memorial) and believer's baptism (symbolic), but our joy comes from the immediate presence of God and His self-revelation in the Word. Prayer and worship is the key, not outward rituals that many people observe and yet remain far from knowing God. Knowing 'about' God also falls short.
I'm not saying Jesus' promised changed - I'm just disagreeing with your interpretation of it.
Is that God's revelation to the Hebrews on Mt. Siani: that the Tent and ordinances and statutes did not convey holiness to them?God is transcendent and immanent. He indwells the believer by the Spirit. We have the Holy Spirit and the Word and relationship with Christ. Outward symbols do not convey, but illustrate, spiritual reality.
The Reformers took away all sacramentalism because why? It requires the sacrificing priesthood at the core of it!We do not need Mass, sacrament of infant baptism, last rites, etc. We need the Spirit of the Living God, His Word, and a vital connection to Christ. Evangelicals know God intimately and do not find Him transcendent because we do not attend Catholic rote rituals week in a week out. We value the ordinances of the Lord's Supper (memorial) and believer's baptism (symbolic), but our joy comes from the immediate presence of God and His self-revelation in the Word.
Prayer and worship is the key, not outward rituals that many people observe and yet remain far from knowing God. Knowing 'about' God also falls short.
I think you grossly misunderstand the purpose of ritual within the Catholic tradition. Rituals are one of the few ways in which finite creatures may approach an infinite being. Otherwise approaching God would always be a crap-shoot.
I was raised Baptist and fell away and when I turned my life over to Christ was Protestant for 14 years. If Jesus Himself had not enlightened my understanding as to the reality of Mass, I never could have embraced the Church. But, He did, and I will happily die a faithful daughter of Holy Mother church.Sheila: this is my body/blood is a metaphor, not Mass!?
Herein lies the difference: as Protestants, we necessarily had to deny the body because sacramentalism is a touching of the material being, not spirit-alone.OT shadows/types are fulfilled in the reality of Christ/presence of Spirit;
NT is priesthood of believers; too many Catholic things come from pagan influence, including a hierarchical priesthood/clergy-laity separation.