T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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846.1 | | CVG::THOMPSON | Who will rid me of this meddlesome priest? | Mon Feb 07 1994 16:39 | 5 |
| In an absolute sense? No.
Are his words in the Bible correct? Yes.
Alfred
|
846.2 | | AKOCOA::FLANAGAN | honor the web | Mon Feb 07 1994 16:39 | 19 |
| Well I'm starting my second Bible course this semester and get to study
Paul one more time. This time I will be studying all Paul's letters
along with the deutero-pauline letters, the other Epistles and
Revelations.
So in reviewing the biograghy of Paul I reviewed how his letters are
the letters to the specific churches over his 30 year career as an
Apostle. He was asked many questions and many of his answers are in
the letters. Questions about celebacy, eating meat sacrificed to
idols, methodology for taking the collection for Jerusalem, circumcism,
Styles of worship etc. He addressed his answers specifically to the
individual churches.
So was Paul infallible over his 30 year career in the answers he gave
to the churches. Did Paul ever make a mistake?
Patricia
|
846.3 | | JULIET::MORALES_NA | Sweet Spirit's Gentle Breeze | Mon Feb 07 1994 16:41 | 1 |
| I concur with Alfred.
|
846.4 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Honorary Lesbian | Mon Feb 07 1994 18:12 | 8 |
| How do you define...Paul?
*<8*}
Just kidding.
Richard
|
846.5 | | PACKED::COLLIS::JACKSON | DCU fees? NO!!! | Tue Feb 08 1994 09:05 | 1 |
| I concur with Nancy's concurring of Alfred. :-)
|
846.6 | | JUPITR::HILDEBRANT | I'm the NRA | Tue Feb 08 1994 09:26 | 3 |
| I just...concur.
Marc H.
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846.7 | | AKOCOA::FLANAGAN | honor the web | Tue Feb 08 1994 10:22 | 3 |
| So was all the answers Paul wrote in all his letters correct?
Patricia
|
846.8 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Acts 4:12 | Tue Feb 08 1994 12:29 | 10 |
|
Which brings us back to 2 Tim 3:16!
Jim
|
846.9 | | AKOCOA::FLANAGAN | honor the web | Tue Feb 08 1994 14:12 | 1 |
| It does not get me back to Timothy.
|
846.10 | (even the stuff Paul penned) | PACKED::COLLIS::JACKSON | DCU fees? NO!!! | Tue Feb 08 1994 15:37 | 3 |
| Re: .7
Everything God wrote was true.
|
846.11 | | APACHE::MYERS | | Tue Feb 08 1994 16:12 | 3 |
| > Everything God wrote was true.
... but not necessarily applicable to today's American culture.
|
846.12 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | Honorary Lesbian | Tue Feb 08 1994 16:28 | 10 |
| .11 Neither is the truth always factual in nature.
Further, neither "God-breathed" nor "inspired" necessarily mean
"written by God."
Paul of Tarsus probably didn't pen this particular letter, according
to the people whose scholarship I respect.
Richard
|
846.13 | | AKOCOA::FLANAGAN | honor the web | Tue Feb 08 1994 16:30 | 20 |
| The point is that the collection of letters that Paul wrote over his 30
years of missionary work were collected and included within scripture.
It is wonderful that he wrote his instructions and that they were saved
and are available to us. They provide us the most direct evidence we
have of early Christianity. Paul was an admirable missionary and did
some wonderful work for Christianity.
Paul was however human. As a human he made mistakes. He wasn't always
right. He did not always speak through the Holy Spirit even though he
always perceived himself with that capacity.
But to say every letter written by Paul
was breathed by God is to say that Paul was infallable in all his
written instruction to the churches contained in his letters. This
deifies Paul.
The only other possible alternative would be to say that God caused any
letter that Paul wrote that contained human errors to be destroyed. I
suppose I could understand someone making those assumptions.
|
846.14 | | PACKED::COLLIS::JACKSON | DCU fees? NO!!! | Wed Feb 09 1994 14:49 | 21 |
| >But to say every letter written by Paul
>was breathed by God is to say that Paul was infallable in all his
>written instruction to the churches contained in his letters. This
>deifies Paul.
I suppose that some would see it that way. The Scripture, however,
is replete with examples of God working through people (which does
not make them gods) as well as statements that Scripture is true
(another way of God working through people which does not make
them gods).
>The only other possible alternative would be to say that God caused any
>letter that Paul wrote that contained human errors to be destroyed. I
>suppose I could understand someone making those assumptions.
It sounds like you're assuming that God breathed everything Paul
wrote since his conversion (or else it was not preserved).
Scripture doesn't make this claim, but I can see why some people
might.
Collis
|
846.15 | | AKOCOA::FLANAGAN | honor the web | Thu Feb 10 1994 10:42 | 11 |
| All the letters that Paul wrote that are available are included in
scripture.
That means that every piece of written advice that he gave that has
been preserved in considered innerrant.
If he were not also considered infallible, the only possibility would
be that any written advice that he gave that was fallible has been
lost.
Patricia
|
846.16 | makes sense, actually! | JUPITR::MNELSON | | Fri Feb 18 1994 17:49 | 42 |
| Paul was directly commissioned by Jesus at his conversion and he
presented himself to Peter and was accepted as an apostle. The
Church was formed by Jesus Christ from the Apostles and certain
promises were given to them; primarily, Jesus gave them the Holy
Spirit who was promised to lead the Church and preserve Her in
the Truth.
When Paul wrote to the different new churches answering their
questions, he was acting in an apostolic 'office' and therefore
had the counsel of the Holy Spirit on what he wrote. Where there
were different views on matters [such as given in Acts], the
Apostles resolved it in counsel together, guided by the Holy
Spirit. During the time of discussion there could be differences,
but once it was discerned, it was given with infallible authority.
Peter took leadership and authority and even Paul came to him. Yes,
Acts does show that Paul corrected Peter, but what resulted from
that was a definate discernment, and it was this which became
the infallible church teaching on the matter.
ALL writings that are in scripture were discerned at a Council of
Bishops of the Church who, under the guidance of the Holy Spirit
and the authority given to the Church by Jesus Christ, discerned
which books were inspired by God and Truth.
The Truth which was proclaimed was that of the Revelation of God.
Is the Revelation contained in the book a True Revelation of God?
This was the question, and only the Holy Spirit guiding the Church
which Jesus commissioned could do such a discernment without error.
Since Paul was annointed and ordained by Jesus into this holy
office of the Church, perhaps it is only consistant with this
annointing that the latter council affirmed all his writings as
being scriptural!
Peace of Jesus,
Mary
|
846.17 | | HURON::MYERS | | Sat Feb 19 1994 09:57 | 20 |
| // Paul was directly commissioned by Jesus at his conversion...
Although I'm not a Mormon, the conversion and authority given to Paul
seems remarkably similar to the Joseph Smith story. How do we decide?
Obviously the Mormons feel there is as much biblical support for Joseph
Smith as there is for Paul.
// Peter took leadership and authority...
I always thought that he was *given* that authority by Jesus.
Mat 16:18 And I say also unto thee, That thou art Peter, and upon this
rock I will build my church; and the gates of hell shall not prevail
against it.
Mat 16:19 And I will give unto thee the keys of the kingdom of heaven:
and whatsoever thou shalt bind on earth shall be bound in heaven: and
whatsoever thou shalt loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven.
Eric
|
846.18 | Peter and his keys | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | I'm 2 sexy 4 my chair | Sat Feb 19 1994 12:39 | 19 |
| Note 846.17
> Mat 16:18 And I say also unto thee, That thou art Peter, and upon this
> rock I will build my church; and the gates of hell shall not prevail
> against it.
> Mat 16:19 And I will give unto thee the keys of the kingdom of heaven:
> and whatsoever thou shalt bind on earth shall be bound in heaven: and
> whatsoever thou shalt loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven.
Eric,
Last summer I visited an exhibition entitled Vatican Treasures in
Denver (The Pope was going to be in town, you know).
In the artists' renditions of Peter, he was always depicted a bearing
exactly two keys. They were the two keys mentioned above.
Peace,
Richard
|
846.19 | | AKOCOA::FLANAGAN | honor the web | Mon Feb 28 1994 09:39 | 13 |
| Paul was an apostle and a letter writer.
Peter was an apostle and not a letter writer.
Throughout the undisputed letters of Paul there is ample evidence of
disputes(often bitter disputes) between these two apostles. Paul
certainly did not accept Peter as being infallible.
If Paul's writings are infallible than certainly Peter's preaching
cannot be accepted as infallible.
Patricia
|
846.20 | | CVG::THOMPSON | An other snowy day in paradise | Mon Feb 28 1994 10:40 | 10 |
|
> Throughout the undisputed letters of Paul there is ample evidence of
> disputes(often bitter disputes) between these two apostles. Paul
> certainly did not accept Peter as being infallible.
Can you give me an example? Thanks.
Alfred
|
846.21 | | JULIET::MORALES_NA | Sweet Spirit's Gentle Breeze | Mon Feb 28 1994 11:12 | 3 |
| I'd like very much to see an example of this as well. It's the first
hypothesis of this nature I've ever heard... and I've read both peter
and paul... now if only I could find the book of mary. :-)
|
846.22 | | AKOCOA::FLANAGAN | honor the web | Mon Feb 28 1994 11:14 | 9 |
| THe book of Galatians is the best example. The best way to read that
brief letter though is to fully recognize that it is written by Paul
and therefore presents Paul's perspective of the conflict and not a
unbiased presentation. Galatians 5:12 where Paul states that those who
are unsettling the Galatians by suggesting circumcisn should castrate
themselves suggests the bitterness of the dispute? Is Peter one of
those who Paul is suggesting castrate himself?
Patricia
|
846.23 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Mon Feb 28 1994 11:49 | 17 |
| >Galatians 5:12 where Paul states that those who are unsettling the Galatians
>by suggesting circumcisn should castrate themselves suggests the bitterness
>of the dispute?
While I will not argue that the dispute was bitter, Paul is using high sarcasm
directed at the Judaizers; it is a reference to the fanatical worshipers of
the goddess Cybele who did in fact castrate themselves in her honor.
>Is Peter one of those who Paul is suggesting castrate himself?
No. The Galatian Church's founding is chronicled in Acts 16:6; it must
therefore be the case that the Letter to the Galatians was written later
than the Council of Jerusalem chronicled in Acts 15. Thus by the time
that Galatians was written, Peter and Paul would have reached agreement
by godly counsel on the issue of circumcision of Gentile converts.
/john
|
846.24 | | AKOCOA::FLANAGAN | honor the web | Mon Feb 28 1994 14:01 | 28 |
| The particular perspective taken in the book of acts is to minimize the
differences between the Jerusalem Church and the Gentile church and to
emphasize Paul's allegience with the Jerusalem church. I think in
truth, the Jerusalem church regarded Paul as a renegade off doing his
own thing outside the bounds of the Jerusalem church.
Scholars consider Acts a literary document more than a historic
documents. There are significant descrepencies between Acts and Paul's
letters. Where there is disagreement, Scholars accept the undisputed
letters whose authorship is clear and which predate the writing of
Acts. Paul openly discusses his disagreement with Peter in his letters
and feels that Peter reneged on some of the agreement reached in the
council. If we read between the lines of Paul's biased view of the
concil we can see that clear agreement was not reached at the council.
The council did not insist that Titus be circumsized but then the
council did not like it too much either. The collection for the
Jerusalem church which occupied a lot of Paul's attention was geared to
help the saints everywhere as well as to patch up some of the
disagreement between the two factions. We clearly have a situation
where either Peter or Paul, but most likely both were fallible.
Any other opinions whether Peter was one of whom Paul was refering in
Gal 5:12? Was James?
Patricia
Of course anyone who starts out with the assumption that there are no
discrepencies between Acts and Paul's letters will have to mask the
obvious differences.
|
846.25 | | JULIET::MORALES_NA | Sweet Spirit's Gentle Breeze | Mon Feb 28 1994 15:56 | 41 |
| Patricia,
Intellectual reasoning of the scriptures profits very little. It does
profit the intellect, but does nothing for spirit of man.
The obvious discrepancies that you speak about are seamless to me.
I've read the book of Acts in its entirety as a collective study
approximately one year ago.
IMHO, both Peter and Paul were right. Not everyone can teach children,
not everyone can teach senior saints... and not everyone can teach the
manifestation of Christ in Judaism. Peter was GREAT at this. Paul was
not. Paul's transformation was like night and day to the Jews. He
became a fanatic to them with teachings that took the church's control
away. Many Jews believed in Christ, but weren't baptized, many Jews
believed in Christ, but held onto the legalism of the Law... it was
Christ + the Law that saved in their reasoning. Why? Because they
wanted the *control* of the people left in tact.
I see Peter's role in leading the Jews into Grace without lawlessness
[in the sense of chaos] as being a calling that Paul himself desired.
But Paul's calling was not to Jerusalem, but to the Gentiles. Paul
*loved* the Jews so much that he disobeyed the Spirit to go to
Jerusalem, where he ended up suffering.
The fallacy of the humanity of Peter and Paul, does not discredit the
inerrancy of the word of God. As a matter of fact, it heightens the
credibility of the Bible as being a book of Truth, as it doesn't
whitewash over the sinfulness of *any* man.
I praise God that despite my sinfulness I can still do things for Him
that are pure. When I teach my Sunday School Class, when I hold the
hand of a Sr. Saint and aid a disabled person. God still works through
me, though I'm not a clean vessel... just a surrendered one.
And that is why Peter and Paul though fallible, could infallibly write
the word of God.... *surrender*.
In His Love,
Nancy
|
846.26 | | CSLALL::HENDERSON | Friend will you be ready | Mon Feb 28 1994 20:45 | 8 |
|
Amen, Nancy....
Jim
|
846.27 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | I'm 2 sexy 4 my chair | Mon Feb 28 1994 23:00 | 10 |
| I prefer not to leave my God-given brain (intellect) in neutral whilst
reading the Bible.
I would agree that Christianity is a more emotional and less cerebral
religion than, say, Buddhism.
It's not a "no-brainer," either.
Richard
|
846.28 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | I'm 2 sexy 4 my chair | Mon Feb 28 1994 23:01 | 10 |
|
Amen, Richard....
And Awomen, too!
Richard
|
846.29 | | HURON::MYERS | | Tue Mar 01 1994 08:10 | 10 |
| RE: Note 846.25 by JULIET::MORALES_NA
> Intellectual reasoning of the scriptures profits very little. It does
> profit the intellect, but does nothing for spirit of man.
Lack of an intellectual understanding of the truth of the Bible leads
to a faulty understanding of the Truth of the Bible.
Eric
|
846.30 | | JULIET::MORALES_NA | Sweet Spirit's Gentle Breeze | Tue Mar 01 1994 11:49 | 10 |
| Knowledge is a wonderful thing, God reveres those who learn, but warns
those that have knowlege without wisdom is ignorant.
Wisdom comes from the application of God's word in one's life.
"They word have I hid in my heart, that I might not sin against thee."
|
846.31 | | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | I'm 2 sexy 4 my chair | Tue Mar 01 1994 11:56 | 5 |
| Nobody here advocates the mere absorbtion of information and empirical
facts.
Richard
|
846.32 | | JULIET::MORALES_NA | Sweet Spirit's Gentle Breeze | Tue Mar 01 1994 12:22 | 7 |
| .31
Richard don't take it personally... this is a *public* forum, for
consistancy's sake, I entered the position of our Lord regarding
knowledge...
|
846.33 | Lay up your Treasures in Heaven | JULIET::MORALES_NA | Sweet Spirit's Gentle Breeze | Tue Mar 01 1994 12:27 | 10 |
| P.S.
Knowledge = the intellectual absorption [sp] of God's Word
Wisdom = the application of God's word
Knowledge and intellect in God's estimation of worldly things is not
our goal, they can be a byproduct of a keen mind. However, goal of
knowledge is to follow through into wisdom...
|
846.34 | | AKOCOA::FLANAGAN | honor the web | Tue Mar 01 1994 13:17 | 2 |
| Widsom = the intuitive absortion of God's Word
Works/Deeds = the application of God's word
|
846.35 | I didn't take it personally | CSC32::J_CHRISTIE | I'm 2 sexy 4 my chair | Tue Mar 01 1994 13:34 | 5 |
| .32 This is a public forum. I shall continue to faithfully represent
Christ's spirit and teachings, as well.
Richard
|
846.36 | | JULIET::MORALES_NA | Sweet Spirit's Gentle Breeze | Tue Mar 01 1994 14:13 | 10 |
| >Widsom = the intuitive absortion of God's Word
>Works/Deeds = the application of God's word
Interesting break down Patricia. I actually think I like it. :-)
However, it is not by works in which we obtain eternal life.
Works is the result of wisdom.. which is not just intuitive, but
intellectual...
:-)
|
846.37 | | AKOCOA::FLANAGAN | honor the web | Tue Mar 01 1994 14:32 | 4 |
| So then we agree that Works are the result of both intellect and
intuition, knowledge and wisdom.
Patricia
|
846.38 | ?????? | JULIET::MORALES_NA | Sweet Spirit's Gentle Breeze | Tue Mar 01 1994 16:18 | 4 |
| We agree that works *will* result from wisdom... which I believe begins
with knowledge and/or intellect.
:-) Is that understandable.
|
846.39 | | PACKED::COLLIS::JACKSON | DCU fees? NO!!! | Tue Mar 01 1994 17:17 | 9 |
| I read what you wrote about the differences (around
reply .20), Patricia -
but it seems to be filled with speculation and assumptions
rather than facts. I think that if you enter the
Scriptures that these arguments are based on, you'll
come to the same conclusion.
Collis
|