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prots have a hard time dealing with this...
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What was the contexf of when the above declaration was made? Was it directed at lapsed Catholics? Because I have a hard time believing that anyone besides Catholics would be likely to read it at the time it was written.prots have a hard time dealing with this...
prots have a hard time dealing with this...
How can somebody affirm or say that I'm out of the church?
Somebody said that l'm Lutheran, other, crypto-Calvinist, because I recognize the Wittenberg Concordia (1536), as the dogmatic end of the Nicene creed's true explanation. In fact, I receive the original Nicene creed and the Bible as historic Holy Ghost testimony, according to Ac.5/33-42, Jd.3, Eph.4/4-7 or Heb.13/8-9. So, according to the scriptures alone, Nicene creed must be explained. There is four issues in this creed, One God and the Trinity, resolved between 325-381, One Lord and Incarnation, between 431-681, One baptism and Sola Fide, by the unaltered Augsburg confession, in 1530, and One church, unity in faith, by the Wittenberg Concordia, agreed by Calvin, Bucer, Luther and Melanchthon, between 1536-1538. I'm a little bit buceran, nor plainly Lutheran nor Calvinist. Is choice an obligation?...
How can somebody affirm or say that I'm out of the church?
We Orthodox would certainly not have expressed it that way. We know that salvation is found through being united to Christ's body which is the Orthodox Church (others may disagree with the last bit), but we in no way limit how God may work out the salvation of those who are not members of the Orthodox Church.
I didn't use the notion of Sola scriptura but of juxta scriptura, because we must confirm the creed ACCORDING TO the scriptures, like the Jesus-Christ's resuscitation in the creed. If you don't agree with this principle, so you must revoke the creed too...I'm not sure about any of that (though I find a certain irony in requiring "scripture alone" in regards to the Creed) ...
I didn't use the notion of Sola scriptura but of juxta scriptura, because we must confirm the creed ACCORDING TO the scriptures, like the Jesus-Christ's resuscitation in the creed. If you don't agree with this principle, so you must revoke the creed too...
First, if we believe that Jesus-Christ rose again from death, ACCORDING TO the scriptures, I cannot understand, if we admit the canonical book list's existence, how we can deny for Gospel, what it's necessary for his base, the resuscitation?
Secondly, Sola fide is the unique coherent explanation, at my sight, of the baptismal article of the creed. In fact, if we aknowledge ONE baptism for the forgiveness of SINS, so, we must understand that this is the Trinitarian faith, or faith in Jesus-Christ, God and saviour, which save us all the time, even after baptismal act, if we shall sin again. That is the meaning of the Augsburg confession, in its article XII, according to the Paul's teaching, in Romans and Galatians. So, that's not the baptism as bath but as faith given in this bath which saves us: Mk.16/16. So, if we fall again in sin, we can be forgiven, again and again, if we repent, by the baptismal faith, or the gospel, which is the same thing. This is how I've found the sola fide in the creed...
This expression comes from the writings of Saint Cyprian of Carthage, a bishop of the 3rd century. The axiom is often used as shorthand for the doctrine that theChurch is necessary for salvation. It is a dogma in the Catholic Church and the Eastern Orthodox churches in reference to their own communions.What was the contexf of when the above declaration was made? Was it directed at lapsed Catholics? Because I have a hard time believing that anyone besides Catholics would be likely to read it at the time it was written.
We Orthodox would certainly not have expressed it that way. We know that salvation is found through being united to Christ's body which is the Orthodox Church (others may disagree with the last bit), but we in no way limit how God may work out the salvation of those who are not members of the Orthodox Church.
I hope you won't consider it argumentative if I point out that it is the overlayment of your interpretation of the Scriptures (or those from the Augsburg Confession) that puts sola fide into the Creed for you.
Indeed .... I think it could be put from AnyTheology-ian to AnyOtherTheology-ian ...Miaphysits may serve the same argument to chalcedonians, or Nestorians to Cyrillians...
Obviously, only the Holy Ghost can convince and create faith...Indeed .... I think it could be put from AnyTheology-ian to AnyOtherTheology-ian ...
That's something that I've noticed with regards to the Orthodox Church, and to the merit of your hierarchy. We Catholics are quite obsessive with our need to account for everything, we need to say precisely what sort of divine mystery is going on or precisely what our relationship is to this or that sect/religion. The Orthodox Church makes it its business not to comment on such things.What was the contexf of when the above declaration was made? Was it directed at lapsed Catholics? Because I have a hard time believing that anyone besides Catholics would be likely to read it at the time it was written.
We Orthodox would certainly not have expressed it that way. We know that salvation is found through being united to Christ's body which is the Orthodox Church (others may disagree with the last bit), but we in no way limit how God may work out the salvation of those who are not members of the Orthodox Church.
I've always felt that scripture must first and foremost be liturgical. I think that when it formed the basis of the prayer and celebration of the Eucharist then it functioned as the Scripture of the Church.From a historic standpoint, I don't see the absolute necessity of resting the Creed upon the Scriptures, though. It seems more to me as though the faith - once for all delivered to the Saints - was what informed both the recognition of writings as Scripture as well as the Truth found within the Creed. However, I think there was a bit of synergy going on from the earliest days, into the time of the council as well.
I would say that when Trullo and Nicea II made decisions which endorsed apparently contradictory canon listings they were in fact endorsing the Orthodoxy and Catholicity of the various communions in question. For whom some particular books or another had a part to play in their liturgies.The irony (to me) was the rather late date (relative to the formation of the Creed) of the canonization of Scripture.
I've always felt that scripture must first and foremost be liturgical. I think that when it formed the basis of the prayer and celebration of the Eucharist then it functioned as the Scripture of the Church.
You should accustom yourself to use the correct theological terminology. Jesus was resurrected, he was raised to a new existence, transformed, not simply resuscitated.If we believe that Jesus-Christ rose again from death, ACCORDING TO the scriptures, I cannot understand, if we admit the canonical book list's existence, how we can deny for Gospel, what it's necessary for his base, the resuscitation: the "juxta scriptura"?...