T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
548.1 | | DPDMAI::DAWSON | t/hs+ws=Formula for the future | Mon Nov 09 1992 09:31 | 8 |
| RE: .0
Perfect sense...but then again I am a Baptist. FWIW,
Baptists do not stem from the Protestant movement.
Dave
|
548.2 | I Check the Bible | MACNAS::BHARMON | KEEP GOING NO MATTER WHAT | Mon Nov 09 1992 10:19 | 12 |
| Marc,
I am a practicing catholic. I do not take the pope/bishops meaning
about the bible. I look it up and study it myself. I have
being doing this for years. In fact, it was a priest who came
into my school years ago, who told us to look up the bible and
check it out for ourselves. I know this maybe an unusual practice
for most catholics. I do not find anything wrong with it.
Bernie
|
548.3 | | JUPITR::HILDEBRANT | I'm the NRA | Mon Nov 09 1992 10:36 | 10 |
| RE: .2
Bernie,
That's the way that I would do it too.....but...what would happen
if *YOUR* meaning was different than the pope's or say the local
bishop's?
I.E. Birth Control
Marc H.
|
548.4 | | MACNAS::BHARMON | KEEP GOING NO MATTER WHAT | Mon Nov 09 1992 11:31 | 13 |
| Marc,
Some of my meanings do disagree with the pope/bishops. I go along
with my own meaning. If it is wrong, well that will be between
me and God.
Regarding birth control, yes I agree with it. I do not believe God
wants children to suffer, where they might have been born to homes
that could not afford them/did not want any more, etc. I do not
believe in abortion.
Bernie
|
548.5 | | JUPITR::HILDEBRANT | I'm the NRA | Mon Nov 09 1992 12:55 | 5 |
| RE: .4
Thanks for the reply Bernie.
Marc H.
|
548.6 | Uh...I don't know... | CSC32::KINSELLA | it's just a wheen o' blethers | Mon Nov 09 1992 13:55 | 30 |
| Marc,
I know what you're saying but I don't think it's limited to the Catholic
Church. Take heart Bernie! I too had a discussion this weekend, but
it was with my sister-in-law. We were talking about narrow-mindedness
and how it's a tag often relegated to conservative Christians. She
talked about narrow-mindedness is also a trait of liberal Christians.
Anyone can sit in a church or any kind of meeting and blindly accept what
you are told as truth. I firmly believe that it is my job to submit to the
Holy Spirit and it is His job to interpret the Scripture for me. Also
remember that God gave us His Word to test for truth. We must remember
that leaders of the church are people too. They are under attack by Satan
more than any other Christian because revival starts with the leadership.
Individuals in a congregation must come under God's authority to discern
whether the preaching is in accordance with His meaning. I have been in a
church where the pastor and deacons were lead astray by Satan and it was a
very destructive force splitting our church. He was finally asked to
resign because of questions of heresy. It's what caused me to stop going
to church for a total of 6 years. Our church had gotten too focused on
people, and people will always let you down. God doesn't.
I don't necessarily buy into premise that because one person sits in
church and accepts things as truth and another seeks to find the meaning
for themselves that therein lies the conflict. I believe most conflict
is born out of people not submitting to the Holy Spirit to interpret the
Scripture, but using their own interpretation and thus creating disagreement
on the meaning of Scripture.
Jill
|
548.7 | | AKOCOA::FLANAGAN | waiting for the snow | Mon Nov 09 1992 15:15 | 10 |
| I see a world being torn apart by people trying to force there brand
of authoritarianism on each other.
God gave us all reason to let us discern the truth.
It is idolatry to think the truth for all women and men can be
contained in any one book: The Bible, the Koran, or the Constitution
of the United States.
Patricia
|
548.8 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Strength through peace | Mon Nov 09 1992 18:18 | 17 |
| .0
Your question is one I've posed myself, internally and externally.
I think some of the conflict arises out of fear and insecurity, some of
the conflict is rooted in a sense of fidelity to a worldview or faith
structure, and some of the conflict arises out of unrestrained missionary
zeal. I believe for many, particularly in this conference, conflict is
about the struggle for power, though the ones involved in conflict may
not be consciously aware of it. This is by no means meant to be a
comprehensive answer.
Also, I want to be quick to add, I don't see every conflict as something
negative. I would go so far as to say that without conflict there is no
growth.
Richard
|
548.9 | Another thought | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Strength through peace | Mon Nov 09 1992 21:08 | 19 |
| .0
Also, I've observed there is variance among Christians as to Who or what
possesses the highest possible authority (admittedly over-simplified):
Collectivity Primary Authority
============ =================
Most Protestants, Fundamentalists The Holy Bible
Traditional Roman Catholics The Holy Roman Catholic Church
Christian mystics The Holy Spirit
At the same time, all the above recognize God as Supreme Authority.
Peace,
Richard
|
548.10 | clarifying idolatry | PACKED::COLLIS::JACKSON | Pro-Jesus | Tue Nov 10 1992 10:16 | 9 |
| Re: 548.7
>It is idolatry to think the truth for all women and men can be
>contained in any one book:
Is it idolatry to believe that God through the Holy Spirit and
humans wrote the Bible?
Collis
|
548.11 | | AKOCOA::FLANAGAN | waiting for the snow | Tue Nov 10 1992 11:42 | 20 |
|
Collis,
God inspires all great works of art and of Wisdom. Human beings decide
which of those works will become scripture and which will not.
Freezing scripture at a historic period biases truth and meaning.
There are many things in the Bible that are immoral and unworthy of being
declared divinely written. It is idolatry to declare these to be the
word and demand of Goddess/God. Genocide, Homophobia, Discrimination based
of Sex, or Race, Slavery are all immoral. To use the bible to declare
these evils good and divinely ordained is idolatry or perhaps even
worse. To declare the bible to be the eternal unalterable word of
Goddess/God is idolatry. To use the bible as a weapon of hatred is Sinful.
Patricia
|
548.12 | There is conflict because people make wrong choices | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Tue Nov 10 1992 12:30 | 12 |
| >To declare the bible to be the eternal unalterable word of
>Goddess/God is idolatry.
To refer to "Goddess/God" is disobedience to the First Commandment.
It is _certainly_ not a Christian Perspective.
>To use the bible as a weapon of hatred is Sinful.
Correct; all hatred is sinful. Correcting those in error is not hatred,
but the love to which Christ calls us.
/john
|
548.13 | | JURAN::VALENZA | The Terminoter. | Tue Nov 10 1992 12:55 | 14 |
| Patricia,
I agree with your comments.
I am reminded of Tillich's writings on the subject of idolatry, which
he related to his concept of the Ultimate Concern. I am admittedly
not an expert in Tillich, but I do believe that what he described in
this way applies here. As I understand his point, when God/Goddess is
not our Ultimate Concern, their our concern becomes idolatrous instead.
Of course, I believe that God/Goddess even forgives the idolatrous
among us for their sin. :-)
-- Mike
|
548.14 | What is your Ultimate Concern? | AKOCOA::FLANAGAN | waiting for the snow | Tue Nov 10 1992 13:10 | 14 |
| Mike,
Good point. Idolatry is an "Ultimate Concern" to prove the authority of
a bible rather than a dedication to a Universal Goddess/God available to
all humankind.
Paul Tillich did write some good stuff.
He did consider himself Christian didn't he.
Patricia
|
548.15 | Dear God, help me now... | CSC32::KINSELLA | it's just a wheen o' blethers | Tue Nov 10 1992 14:05 | 18 |
|
Richard, God is my highest authority. I believe He left me His Word as
a guide, but I do not worship the Bible, but God. I believe most, if
not all Protestants and Fundamentalists would agree. I can't believe
you made those stereotypes. I pray to God and ask for intervention of
the Holy Spirit much more than I read the Bible. I think that's the
balance needed. I use the Bible as a guide and rely on the Holy
Spirit to make it's truths come to fruition in my life.
I pray on a daily basis for God to forgive my anger at people for the
things they say about God and His truths. It's something I have to
constantly ask for victory over. I don't pray to my Bible. I pray
to God and ask that the Holy Spirit changes my attitudes.
Jill
|
548.16 | | AKOCOA::FLANAGAN | waiting for the snow | Tue Nov 10 1992 14:34 | 8 |
| Jill,
Then we have much more in common than you think.
I too use the bible and other scriptures as my guide and then rely on
the Holy Spirit to discern the truths from the texts.
Patricia
|
548.17 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Strength through peace | Tue Nov 10 1992 14:38 | 6 |
| I would ditto .16. And I *did* admit upfront what I was saying was an
over-simplification. To list all the possible nuances would certainly
exceed our 100 line conference guideline.
Peace,
Richard
|
548.18 | | CSC32::KINSELLA | it's just a wheen o' blethers | Tue Nov 10 1992 15:33 | 14 |
|
RE: .16 & .17
Good. I pray for both of you that God does reveal His truth to you,
as I also pray for myself.
As for an over-simplification, I disagree. I think it was simply
an incorrect observation. There are many people in all religions
who rely too much on what they read or are told...including mystic
Christians. And there are plenty of Protestants, Fundamentalist
Christians, and Catholics who rely on the Holy Spirit and not so
totally on the Bible and Church as you stated.
Jill
|
548.19 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Strength through peace | Tue Nov 10 1992 16:00 | 7 |
| Re: .18
I concede the possibility, but we're really too close to agreement to
quibble about it any further or in greater detail.
Peace,
Richard
|
548.20 | | MAGEE::FRETTS | learning to become a mystic | Tue Nov 10 1992 17:23 | 8 |
|
Hi Jill,
How do you or would you handle a situation where you are guided by
the Holy Spirit, but the guidance is not in agreement with scripture?
Thanks,
Carole
|
548.21 | Good question. | CSC32::KINSELLA | it's just a wheen o' blethers | Tue Nov 10 1992 18:24 | 16 |
|
Hi Carole,
Not a problem. I don't believe God, and therefore the Holy Spirit,
contradicts Himself. Since I believe the Bible is God-breathed,
I don't believe the Holy Spirit would ever ask me to do something
that contradicts Scripture. I have never had that experience.
When I have something in my life that contradicts with the Bible,
it's of my own self-desire, not of the Spirit. I repent of it
and ask for God to open my eyes to other traps and to give me
the grace to make the right choice the next time. It's a learning
process. I haven't yet obtained the perfection God promises us
when we get to heaven, but I'm working on being less imperfect
by submitting to His will.
Jill
|
548.22 | | PACKED::COLLIS::JACKSON | Pro-Jesus | Wed Nov 11 1992 09:50 | 18 |
| Re: 548.11
>There are many things in the Bible that are immoral and unworthy of being
>declared divinely written. It is idolatry to declare these to be the
>word and demand of Goddess/God.
Then, indeed, many of the 40 human authors of the Bible practiced
idolatry for this is exactly what they did. It wouldn't surprise
me at all to find that almost all of these 40 authors practiced this
idolatry by your definition (if we include implication as well as
explicit acceptance).
>To declare the bible to be the eternal unalterable word of
>Goddess/God is idolatry.
Thank you for clarifying what you believe.
Collis
|
548.23 | one reason for conflict | PACKED::COLLIS::JACKSON | Pro-Jesus | Wed Nov 11 1992 09:54 | 15 |
| To answer the base note,
One obvious reason why there is conflict is because we disagree
on the foundation. I accept the cornerstone to be Jesus
Christ. I accept His revelation which, along with us, will
last forever. Others reject (much of) His revelation. Some reject
certain aspects of Jesus Himself. I personally find Jesus
to be wholly consistent with His revelation. Others believe
there is inconsistency there and therefore feel compelled
to reject one or the other (or both).
Those who start with a different basis are going to reach
different conclusions. The result is conflict.
Collis
|
548.24 | | JUPITR::HILDEBRANT | I'm the NRA | Wed Nov 11 1992 10:17 | 12 |
| RE: .23
Hummmmmm......I don't think that the conflict I'm talking about
is along the lines of disagreement on the foundation. I think that
the disagreement is along the lines of just "who" interprits the
Bible.....an individual with the supporting structure of the church/
minister/fellow christains/holy spirit or just the church( bishops
/popes/priests).
I feel that both sides except Jesus.
Marc H.
|
548.25 | | CARTUN::BERGGREN | drumming is good medicine | Wed Nov 11 1992 10:39 | 10 |
| My opinion: I don't think Richard's characterization in .9 is
stereotypical at all. It edifies the basic dilema and observations
Marc has made in .0, and reiterated in his last note.
There is no doubt each group is seeking and worshipping God, they
just take different routes to do so. The "conflict" arises when people
choose to make an issue out of this difference in approach, insisting
theirs is the absolutely correct one.
Karen
|
548.26 | Right | JUPITR::HILDEBRANT | I'm the NRA | Wed Nov 11 1992 11:10 | 5 |
| RE: .25
Correcto Mondo....
Marc H.
|
548.27 | Conflict...the fodder of Grace | CARTUN::BERGGREN | drumming is good medicine | Wed Nov 11 1992 12:07 | 45 |
| My own thoughts on this Marc...
Conflict, like most things is paradoxical. One inherent aspect is that
of it is divisive. On a personal level, when conflict arises it
inherently serves to cleave one away (at least momentarily) from
one's own beliefs, behavior and faith - conflict urges one to re-examine
and reflect upon these things which have become so dear to the heart
and mind.
This divisive aspect of conflict is very healthy. By initially serving
to faciliate this periodic self-examination, it has the potential to
further one's learning and deepen one's faith; it also has the ability
to point out areas where perhaps our beliefs need to grow and change.
It is this very real potential for change inherent in conflict that,
imo, is the most threatening for people to deal with, for change is not
easy, especially a change in one's beliefs. If one is sincere
and an "honest seeker" of truth, then conflict requires a *great*
deal of courage and understanding to engage in it. Courage to be
willing to question one's own beliefs and behavior and understanding
that fears automatically come up in oneself and others engaging in
conflict.
What's very difficult is that this divisive quality of conflict can
drive wedges into friendships and family relations, those whom we love
and care about and whom we want to support. And I sense in your
basenote, Marc, that this is what you're feeling and struggling with.
All I can say is I truly empathize with you.
But conflict has a unitive aspect too. And that is, that greater
learning and wisdom and faith is not possible without the reflection and
self-examination that conflict compels us to do. This unitive aspect
of conflict is much more subtle. It exists in the quiet shadows and
hidden pools of conflict, away from the fireworks and flashy displays
of emotionalism that tend to command our attention. But if we can
enter into conflict with a courage and willingness to look at ourselves
honestly, it has the capacity to reveal rich insights into ourselves,
others and life in general. And through these insights, we can come
to experience a greater unity, with ourselves, others, and ultimately
-- with God.
In addition, Grace would be impossible, and unnecessary, without the
experience of conflict.
Karen
|
548.28 | | MAGEE::FRETTS | learning to become a mystic | Wed Nov 11 1992 12:47 | 14 |
|
RE: .21
Thanks for your reply Jill. I wonder, though, based on what you have
shared in .21, how you can say that you follow the Holy Spirit rather
than the Bible if everything has to fit what the Bible says. Doesn't
that lock the Holy Spirit into a certain timeframe and culture? I'm
really trying to understand this, as it is something I find quite
confusing.
Thanks again,
Carole
|
548.29 | dimly but face to face | AKOCOA::FLANAGAN | waiting for the snow | Wed Nov 11 1992 14:13 | 45 |
| Your welcome Collis.
My faith demands that I be clear, particularly with myself.
Karen's comments are very perceptive to this point.
My conclusion have grown out of the conflict within this file and my
internalization of that conflict and finding meaning within that
conflict.
There are many things in the bible that are truly inspirational but
there are also many things that are not holy. They are stories and they
had meaning to the people who wrote them and to their worldview.
It has been inferred or outright stated that I am a heretic, a
hedonist, and a great evil for using my intellect to discern what I
know from the bible and from my relationship with Goddess/God.
I am too sensitive not to be hurt by those inference but ultimately it
required a profound examination of my own faith. Goddess/God for me is
perfect goodness. My human capacity to define goodness is limited but
qualities such as violence, jeolousy, anger that leads to destruction
and the like are not goodness and are not worthy to be attributed to
Goddess/God. A belief in the God breathed or inerrant quality of the
bible forces one to accept these negative qualities as Godlike and then
forces all kinds of mental gymnastics to prove that what is bad is
really good because the bible attributes them to the divine.
My criticism is not a criticism of Goddess/God, nor is it really a
criticism of the bible, but it is a criticism of freezing the bible in
a point of time and not recognizing the human and historical elements
that created it.
I am clear that it is idolatry to attribute to Goddess/God those elements
that are not Godlike, just because they are defined as characteristics of
God in the Bible. To do so requires us to worship a God as defined by a
book and not the transcending mystery of the divine that we can only
experience dimly, but then perhaps face to face.
love and peace
Patricia
|
548.30 | | PACKED::COLLIS::JACKSON | Pro-Jesus | Wed Nov 11 1992 16:41 | 24 |
| Re: 548.25
>There is no doubt each group is seeking and worshipping God, they
>just take different routes to do so. The "conflict" arises when people
>choose to make an issue out of this difference in approach, insisting
>theirs is the absolutely correct one.
It is indeed true that their are people in each group who seek and
worship God. It is not so clear that each group as a whole
does this (since most groups tend to include many more inactive
members than active members).
Their certainly can be (and often is) a different emphasis on a
wide range of issues including the primary authority. However,
their are indeed defining differences between those who worship
God as He has revealed Himself and those who claim to worship God
without knowing Him. Of course, as an Evangelical, I accept the
authority of the Bible in defining these differences.
It continues to perplex me why people accept the authority and
revelation of the Bible on some subjects while denying its authority
on its own correctness. The logic of this escapes me.
Collis
|
548.31 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Strength through peace | Wed Nov 11 1992 16:49 | 23 |
| Note 548.28
> Thanks for your reply Jill. I wonder, though, based on what you have
> shared in .21, how you can say that you follow the Holy Spirit rather
> than the Bible if everything has to fit what the Bible says.
Carole,
I do not care to argue the rightness or wrongness of what I'm
about to share. I merely wish to present it, and do so without being obliged
to defend it.
The Christian mystic does not forsake the Bible. At the same time,
if one believes one is being led by the Holy Spirit and the leading is either
unsupported by or at variance with traditional understandings of the Bible,
then the mystic must decide whether to act on that leading or not. Sometimes
the mystic will fail. Sometimes the leadings are ingenuine, as has been
suggested. And sometimes failure, that is, what we tend to identify as
failure, utterly defies rationalization. The Christian mystic chooses the
most hazardous and least trodden path; the road less traveled.
Peace,
Richard
|
548.32 | | AKOCOA::FLANAGAN | waiting for the snow | Wed Nov 11 1992 17:11 | 31 |
|
*. However their are indeed defining differences between those who worship
*God as He has revealed Himself and those who claim to worship God
*without knowing Him. .
THat statement defines why there is conflict. It can be easily read "I
worship God as he has revealed himself in the bible. Those who don't agree
with me only claim to worship God. That statement has to cause
conflict.
*It continues to perplex me why people accept the authority and
*revelation of the Bible on some subjects while denying its authority
*on its own correctness. The logic of this escapes me.
On all subjects I accept the authority and revelation of the Bible when
it is consistent with experience, reason, and tradition. My experience
of Goddess/God and Reason are the primary sources of authority to me.
Reason include a critical analysis of the thoughts and opinions of
others as expressed in Historical and other analytical works.
Collis, you may not agree with the logic but it should not excape you.
I accept that there is much great wisdom in the Bible. That does not
mean I accept the bible as ultimately authoritative.
Now what does Evangelical mean anyways?
love and peace
Patricia
|
548.33 | Well, here's an attempt at explaining... | CSC32::KINSELLA | it's just a wheen o' blethers | Wed Nov 11 1992 17:30 | 32 |
| RE: 28
Thanks for another great question, Carole. Think of this for a minute
in human terms...kind of like a parable. Say you have a leader that
you want to follow. You believe everything that he tells you is
true. But there comes a time when he has to take a trip and you're
going to be separated for some time. You worry about how to follow
him when he's not right there. So to help you he writes down his
beliefs so that you don't forget them and then he leaves you with a
special counselor that is in complete agreement with him and acts
accordingly. They counselor has a special connection to the leader
even after he's gone. Say, private fax machine #s or something. ;^)
So, time goes by and you kind of start forgetting stuff because you're
leader isn't there, so you consult his writings so that you can
remember. Then there are times when it's been so long seen you've had
a situation arise and there has been so much other input from those
around you that when you read his writings, you don't really remember
exactly what he intended, so you go and ask the counselor and he helps
you remember. The writings he left enable you to follow him. They
don't limit him because he wrote them. He's always been and always
will be and his truth cut across timeframes and cultures. They are
basic truth that defy time and the peoples of them. Some things that
the leader wrote down were exact and others were principles to help in
how you should want to act when a situation arises that he didn't
specifically record. Sometimes you goof up because you've forgotten
what the leader said and the counselor remembers you and you try to
remember that lesson for the next time the situation arises.
Is this a little clearer?
Jill
|
548.34 | problem is with logic, not with facts | PACKED::COLLIS::JACKSON | Pro-Jesus | Thu Nov 12 1992 09:49 | 63 |
| Re: 548.32
>>However their are indeed defining differences between those who worship
>>God as He has revealed Himself and those who claim to worship God
>>without knowing Him. .
>THat statement defines why there is conflict. It can be easily read "I
>worship God as he has revealed himself in the bible. Those who don't agree
>with me only claim to worship God. That statement has to cause conflict.
If you wish to interpret the statement this way, then indeed there
will be conflict. :-)
Perhaps the issue is the two assumptions:
1) God has revealed Himself
2) There are those who claim to worship God who do not know Him
However, I expect that practically everyone in this conference agrees
with these assumptions (and, as for myself, these are clearly revealed
as truth by prophets of God), so this is probably not the issue.
>>It continues to perplex me why people accept the authority and
>>revelation of the Bible on some subjects while denying its authority
>>on its own correctness. The logic of this escapes me.
>Collis, you may not agree with the logic but it should not escape you.
What escapes me is not the truth that people accept from the Bible what
they believe is consistent with their experience, reason and tradition.
This makes perfect sense. People believe what they want to believe.
What escapes me is the *logic* in this. I find it (like Mr. Spock :-) )
illogical to believe that which is consistent with experience, reason
and tradition using as a source for that belief the Bible while
equally authoritative information given by the Bible is denied - because
it is inconsistent with experience, reason and tradition. In other
words, using the Bible as authoritative in some areas while denying
its authority in other areas as illogical - especially in light of
the consistent claims of the Bible of authority and inerrancy.
Is it that people do not accept the authority of the Bible at all?
Some would say this - and then quote the Bible to back up their
position. Is it authoritative or isn't it? This is illogical as
I understand it. I wrestled with this conflict and decided, on the
preponderance of the evidence, that the Bible was authoritative.
Others don't seem to even understand this issue much less struggle
with it.
>Now what does Evangelical mean anyways?
This gets back into Church History. I've entered long explanation of
this several times. Put simply, Evangelicals accept the Bible as
authoritative (typically accept it as inerrant) but often do not have
the personal restrictions that Fundamentalist churches do (such as
no smoking, no dancing, no drinking, etc). This explanation leaves
a lot to be desired, so do put too much weight in it (although it
is accurate as a generalization). Billy Graham was a major force
in starting the Evangelical movement being involved in starting
publications such as Christianity Today as well as the merger of two
seminaries into the one I attended, Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary.
Collis
|
548.35 | incredible | LGP30::FLEISCHER | without vision the people perish (381-0899 ZKO3-2/T63) | Thu Nov 12 1992 10:36 | 30 |
| re Note 548.34 by PACKED::COLLIS::JACKSON:
> 1) God has revealed Himself
> 2) There are those who claim to worship God who do not know Him
>
> However, I expect that practically everyone in this conference agrees
> with these assumptions (and, as for myself, these are clearly revealed
> as truth by prophets of God), so this is probably not the issue.
I would agree with the above statements as far as they go,
but my agreement depends upon the following reservation:
3) God is far beyond complete human comprehension or
knowledge, thus God's revelation is limited by human
limitations and no human knows God very well in absolute
terms (although some humans may have a level of understanding
God that is very close to human capacity).
> In other
> words, using the Bible as authoritative in some areas while denying
> its authority in other areas as illogical - especially in light of
> the consistent claims of the Bible of authority and inerrancy.
Even though you offer the above as highly illogical, I find
it highly logical -- name one other source of information in
this world recognized as authoritative -- much less inerrant
-- in all it says. Your claim is literally incredible.
Bob
|
548.36 | | JURAN::VALENZA | To note me is to love me. | Thu Nov 12 1992 11:09 | 9 |
| My own view is very similar to Bob's. I would add, from my own
perspective, that I personally don't view knowing God to be a binary
condition; I think that each of us "knows" God in *some* sense, because
I believe there is that of God in everyone, and because God is
omnipresent and influences all of us by His/Her presence; but none of
us, as finite beings, can fully "know" or comprehend God in His/Her
infinity, as Bob pointed out.
-- Mike
|
548.37 | Orthodoxy | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Thu Nov 12 1992 11:35 | 32 |
| "Anyone who is so "progressive" that he does not remain rooted in the teaching
of Christ does not possess God, while anyone who remains rooted in the
teaching possesses both the Father and the Son." --II John 9
Many Christians, even priests, are not orthodox. They believe and teach
things not in accord with the teachings of the Church. Many don't even care
whether their teachings are orthodox.
This attack against orthodox teaching has been going on for centuries.
Paul commanded Timothy to "stay on in Ephesus in order to warn certain people
there against teaching false doctrines" (I Tim 1:3). We are to "guard the
rich deposit of faith with the help of the Holy Spirit Who dwells within
us" (II Tim 1:14). A Christian leader "must hold fast to the authentic
message, so that he will be able both to encourage men to follow sound
doctrine and to refute those who contradict it" (Ti 1:8). "People will not
tolerate sound doctrine, but, following their own desires, will surround
themselves with teachers who tickle their ears. They will stop listening
to the truth and will wander off to fables" (II Tim 4:3-4).
Therefore, "pray for us that the word of the Lord may make progress and
be hailed by many others, even as it has been by you. Pray that we may be
delivered from confused and evil men. For not every man has faith, but the
Lord keeps faith; He it is Who will strengthen you and guard you against
the evil one" (II Thes 3:1-3).
Father, purify Your Church. May we repent of holding and teaching
unorthodox beliefs.
"Whoever tries to preserve his life will lose it; whoever loses it
will keep it." Lk 17:33
From "One Bread, One Body"
|
548.38 | | SDSVAX::SWEENEY | Patrick Sweeney in New York | Thu Nov 12 1992 11:46 | 4 |
| I'd rather hold fast to a Church that holds fast to what it believes to
be eternal truth that to a Chruch that is running to be point of
exhaustion to catch up with its members believe to the trend of the
moment.
|
548.39 | | MAYES::FRETTS | learning to become a mystic | Thu Nov 12 1992 12:23 | 12 |
|
RE: .31 Richard
No problem with me Richard. Thanks for your thoughts. Did you think
I was going to argue your rightness or wrongness?
RE: .33 Jill
Thanks for the clarification. I understand how you work with this now.
Carole
|
548.40 | | JUPITR::HILDEBRANT | I'm the NRA | Thu Nov 12 1992 13:29 | 5 |
| RE: .38/37
Could you folks comment with regards to the base note?
Marc H.
|
548.41 | a contrast | AKOCOA::FLANAGAN | waiting for the snow | Thu Nov 12 1992 13:51 | 49 |
| The affirmation read at my church Sunday inspired me to remember how
enriching this covenant is to me. There is conflict here because we
are all different and each of us finds inspiration from different
sources. in note 548.38 Patrick states his preference for a church
that holds fast to its understanding of eternal truth. My preference
is for a church that embraces the greatest diversity in the expression
of eternal truths. What Patrick finds essential for a church I would
find stiffling. What I find inspirational, Patrick would find
heretical. This covenant for me embodies essential eternal truths.
Covenant of the traditions that inspire UU churches as enacted by the UUA
General Assembly in 1986.
These are:
o Direct experience of that transcending mystery and wonder,
affirmed in all cultures, which moves us to a renewal of spirit and
an openness to the forces that create and uphold life;
o Words and deeds of prophetic women and men which challenge us to
confront powers and structures of evil with justice, compassion,
and the transforming power of love;
o Wisdom from the world's religions which inspires us in our
ethical and spiritual life;
o Jewish and Christian teachings which call us to respond to God's
love by loving our neighbors as ourselves;
o Humanist teachings which counsel us to heed the guidance of
reason and the results of science, and warn us against idolatries
of the mind and spirit.
Grateful for the religious pluralism which enriches and ennobles
our faith, we are inspired to deepen our understanding and expand our
vision. As free congregations we enter into this covenant, promising
to one another our mutual trust and support.
Patricia
Mike
Thank you for saving me from the typing. I checked
first to see if they were in the UU notes file and there they were.
|
548.42 | | JURAN::VALENZA | To note me is to love me. | Thu Nov 12 1992 14:00 | 6 |
| Patricia, I think you have hit the nail on the head. I suspect that as
long as people have such fundamentally different ideas about how truth
is understood, and how that understanding evolves or doesn't evolve,
there will be conflict.
-- Mike
|
548.43 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Strength through peace | Thu Nov 12 1992 16:41 | 10 |
| Note 548.39
> No problem with me Richard. Thanks for your thoughts. Did you think
> I was going to argue your rightness or wrongness?
It's rarely you who does that, Carole. I just didn't want to get 'embroiled'
in an exchange as I have in the past.
Peace,
Richard
|