Was it this one Ps104_33?
http://www.baptistboard.com/cgi-bin/ultimatebb.cgi?ubb=get_topic;f=52;t=000042;p=5#000073
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No scripture is a matter of one's own interpretation but "Men moved by the Holy spirit Spoke from God" 2 Peter 1:20-21Carson W
My question remains: How can the Church come to reject this spoken Tradition as the authoritative Word of God, united as it is with the Apostles and their bishops?
Having the writings of the Apostles for a start -Carson
And, my deeper point is that Scripture is only rightly employed within the context of the living, breathing New Covenant household of God. Without the apostolic leadership and the apostolic Tradition (the liturgy, esp.), Scripture is utilized outside of its breeding ground, outside of its proper context.
Not all believers of today rely solely upon theOriginally posted by Carson Weber:
Apparently, the post that began this thread
has not been answered.
The first Christian churches, for at least 20
years . . . were without one iota of New
Testament Scripture. . . .Tradition clearly
preceded New Testament Scripture. . . .
How can Christians today rely completely
upon New Testament Scripture and deny
Tradition outright as the Word of God when
Tradition was all that the first Christians knew
and, simultaneously, were completely
ignorant of any and all New Testament
Scripture?
Where does the information come from whichOr, even more so, how could that early
Christian church founded with the Tradition of
the Apostles as the Word of God come to
reject Tradition altogether?
Again, they had the Tanakh. They had theAnd, if the Apostles were dying off in these
first 20 years, then how did the Church
continue to survive without Scripture?
Originally posted by Carson Weber:
[QB]Apparently, the post that began this thread has not been answered.
Hi Carson, just a few questions to get me up to speed here.
Do you believe that church tradition is of equal authority as the Scripture?
Do you believe that everything that the Church Fathers wrote (every word and phrase) is as eternally true and pure and inspired and authoritative as the Bible?
Have fun, Colin
Philip was an eye-witness, and he was still using the Scriptures to back up what he was teaching.Originally posted by Carson Weber:
Hi Dualhunter,
You wrote, "Building on what Abiyah said, Philip converted the Ethiopian eunuch using Isaiah."
Philip converted the Ethiopian using the divine revelation granted him through Jesus Christ, which unveils the hidden meaning of the Old Testament Scriptures (Or as Abiyah refers to them: the TaNaK).
The mode of transmission of this new divine revelation is what is the central aspect of our discussion. This new revelation granted through the deeds and words of the Incarnate Second Person of the Blessed Trinity is not contained in Isaiah. Did Philip resort to his New Testament?
God bless,
Carson
12 Apostles, all with the same Gospel which is why we do not require all of them to give an account, they were teaching the same things.Originally posted by Carson Weber:
Philip was an eye-witness
Very good!
And so I'll bet that you have Philip's Gospel or at least one of his epistles in your New Testament, right? Jesus did found his Church on 12 Apostles, didn't he?
God bless,
Carson
Do you think that which Jesus told the Apostles to preach the Gospel to all the nations that they went around reciting Matthew, Mark, Luke and John? The accounts that those 4 gave all describe the one Gospel from each of their 4 different perspectives, the message is still the same though unless you think there each Apostle had his own Gospel.Originally posted by Carson Weber:
12 Apostles, all with the same Gospel which is why we do not require all of them to give an account, they were teaching the same things.
Then why do you have 4 Gospels in your Bible?
It sure does seem superfluous to instruct 12 disciples to teach when all one needs is a single perpetual written account upon which for Christianity to be based (one that doesn't even begin to exist for 2 decades).[/QB]
Four gospels: four eyewitnesses of Jesus.Originally posted by Carson Weber:
Then why do you have 4 Gospels in your Bible?
Are you speaking of the “Qu’ran?” If so, recognize that there are about 87 different sects of Islam. The fanatics like Osama Ben Laden have there own interpretation, which is different than the Sunnis, different again from the Shiites. The Qu’ran is open for interpretation.Oh no. I think they all preach the same Gospel. The question is how that Gospel in its integrity is transmitted to us.
If it's only through Scripture, then it was quite superfluous for Jesus to spend a couple of years with these guys teaching and instructing them, when all he had to do was construct the Christian version of the Qumran.
This is one of the areas in which we disagree,Originally posted by Carson Weber:
I'm referring to the new divine revelation that emerged with the life, death, resurrection, and ascension of the Messiah.
No! This was NOT merely political! It wasThis provides for political protection, but
the question that begins this thread is quite
separate from any political necessity.
Well, that is your opinion, but neither I nor manyCatholic traditions are of great value instrinsically to non-Catholic congregations while simultaneously are denied by these self-same communities. The example par excellence entails that of the canon of New Testament Scripture.
Well, what you call "'tradition"' and what I callI wrote, "They had the teachings in the
synagogues, in houses, and upon the hillsides."
You responded, "You hit the nail right on the
head!