Marcia
Active Member
It leaves the door open for "hey -- I just saw another one of those non-normative events, only instead of Samuel - it was my deceased uncle".
Or "it was Mary".
There is no Bible "doctrine" on how many "non-normative exceptions" can exist.
True, but to take a non-normative position has no credibility except with the gullible or those who want to believe it.
I think there is other criteria with Mary, however.True - which is why I was very interested to see how you were going to close the door on Marian apparations. You seem to be left with 'well if they are occuring - they are non-normative like the case of Samuel".
Certainly that is an interesting solution.
First of all, there are supposed repeated apparitions of Mary whereas with Samuel you have one appearance, and same with Moses and Elijah.
Additionally, both of these were recorded in the Bible whereas nothing about Mary appearing after death, or stating that she would appear in the future is recorded. So we can take God's word that Samuel appeared and Moses and Elijah appeared; but there is no authority of God's word for the Mary appearances. I think this leaves a big hole for the Mary appearances. God's word is not behind them.
It affirms that it happened with Christ, not that it can happen with anyone. It is certainly exceptional since I think this is only spoken of as far as Jesus is concerned.Narrative is confirmation that the event in question "did occur" and also eliminates the objection "according to the bible that can not occur". For example - Christ passed through the crowd that tried to stone him. That is "the narrative" - and that is "non normative" because in most cases when a crowd tried to stone someone (like Stephenen or like Paul) they simply grabbed them and stoned them.
So while Christ's example is "non normative" it still does not allow us to argue "no one else can claim that God enabled them to simply pass through the mob without harm because it is non-normative". In fact the Bible affirms that such a thing can happen - though it is certainly "non-normative" as you say.
Here again, we have it recorded in God's word. So if John Smith down the street tells me he "passed through a crowd" trying to kill him as Jesus did, I might believe him or not, but he does not have God's word behind him.
I don't argue with people's experiences, such as saying an angel appeared to them or they saw Elijah.I would argue that in the case of the "really translated" Elijah and the really raised-and-assumed into heaven Moses, standing and speaking with Christ in Matt 17 "in living color" that that too is "non-Normative". So also is the case of an Angel speaking to Zachariah about the birth of John the baptizer - a "non-normative" event.
But if someone claims that an angel came and spoke to them, or that they saw Elijah -- I would be very skeptical, but I would not declare that "The Bible forbids it" or that the Bible states "that can not happen".
At best I can say "it happend in the Bible but it was non-normative".
Which falls far short of "it can not have happened to you" and totally misses 'The bible says that can not happen".
I do think angels, both fallen ones and good ones, can show up today, though I think it's rare. However, to say they saw a dead person is another category for me. That's the case where I would say "I'm sorry, but I don't believe it was a dead person."
In too many instances of this, it is in the context of occult activities, so the evidence is that it is demonic (such as going to a medium and then "hearing" or "seeing" the dead person then or later).
Here's the bottom line for me for all of this: Anyone with a claim to a non-normative event that seems contrary to scripture or has no basis in scripture has the burden on him or her to give evidence. If they can't, then we are not at fault for disbelieving it.
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