Let us know how the nailing process goes. :laugh:
You have lumped alot of people in together.
He wont get past the 1st security level @ Osteen's house.
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Let us know how the nailing process goes. :laugh:
You have lumped alot of people in together.
He wont get past the 1st security level @ Osteen's house.
Let us know how the nailing process goes. :laugh:
You have lumped alot of people in together.
He wont get past the 1st security level @ Osteen's house.
You are probably right--I may have to nail it on his church house doors instead while one of this televised services are going on. (Thanks for the heads up :thumbs
It is what it is....they would probably shoot you as a "Peeping Tom"......wouldnt Doubt it!:laugh:
What are you asking, exactly?Matt....we are both connected to Constantine .... so boil it down. Your a Anglican & were raised as RC....you know this content & you know the issues.
Thanks
What are you asking, exactly?
Whats the big difference between RC & Anglicans? Then what are the advantages?
While considering the debate between those who posit that the extent of the atonement is for the world and those who posit that the atonement is limited to the elect, I stumbled across this vital scripture passage that made me stop in my tracks:
"I have been crucified with Christ; it is no longer I who live but Christ lives in me; and the life which I now live in the flesh I live by faith in the Son of God, who loves me and gave Himself for me." Galatians 2:20
This changes the whole debate. Here, in this crystal clear, highly specific Scripture passage we see that Christ died for Paul and loves Paul. There is no mention of Him loving or dying for anyone else, nor of anyone else being crucifed with Christ or having Christ living in him. Therefore, based on this clear passage,we must conclude that Paul is the only one that Christ died for and that any other unclear passages that seems to us to suggest He died for anyone else--ie the world, elect, the sheep, etc--must be interpreted in this light. In fact Paul is 'the elect'--he's the one sheep whom Christ died for. And since he himself he was all things to all people--to the Jews, a Jew, to the Greeks, a Greek--he embodies in himself all nations and 'kinds of people' of the world. Paul is the world of 'all kinds of people' whom Christ died for.
If this seems unfair and unjust, remember that as Paul wrote that only one can win the race (1 Corinthians 9:24-27)--all run, but only one gets the prize.
Be careful that you're not guilty of reading back your theology into Paul's words.
The only way that atonement is limited is that it is limited to those who will call on the Lord in repentance, which means that anyone CAN be saved. Unfortunately most turn away from the Lord--including many who have tried Christianity but never accepted Christ. They tasted and for some reason didn't like what they tasted, and the world drew them away before they could fully taste of Christ and accept Him.
It's like many foods I've tasted and didn't like and didn't eat enough to learn to like it. I was one who needed more than just one taste before I accepted Christ, and it was nearly a year after my first taste before I actually accepted Christ as my Saviour. Had I just taken that one bite on June 1 and turned away, I would probably still be lost. However, I kept going back because I liked what I had tasted 49 years ago and wanted more, and on May 18 of the following year I called on the Lord for forgiveness and salvation.
One taste was not enough, and my continuing to go back until I realized my need for a Saviour. However, many only take the one taste and then walk away--never looking back. There's a verse that says something like "Taste and see that I am good", but I can't find it. I tasted and found that it was good and wanted more, but many taste and don't like what they taste.
Oooh, lots! For a start, we don't have Papal Supremacy or indeed any other supremacy (some acknowledge the Pope as Patriarch of the West but only as equal to the other Four (Five if you count Moscow) of the Orthodoxen); this of course has weaknesses as well as strengths, chief of which is that no-one can tell TEC to go jump in a lake, much as most of us would like to. We are however episcopal in church government, susbcribing to the threefold ministry of bishops, priests and deacons which we believe was established by Christ through the Apostles. For us, though, the priest is less of a 'magic man' than s/he is for Catholics. We do howevere believe in Apostolic Succession.Whats the big difference between RC & Anglicans? Then what are the advantages?
Oooh, lots! For a start, we don't have Papal Supremacy or indeed any other supremacy (some acknowledge the Pope as Patriarch of the West but only as equal to the other Four (Five if you count Moscow) of the Orthodoxen); this of course has weaknesses as well as strengths, chief of which is that no-one can tell TEC to go jump in a lake, much as most of us would like to. We are however episcopal in church government, susbcribing to the threefold ministry of bishops, priests and deacons which we believe was established by Christ through the Apostles. For us, though, the priest is less of a 'magic man' than s/he is for Catholics. We do howevere believe in Apostolic Succession.
That's ecclesiology. In terms of theology, we base our doctrine on Scripture, Tradition and Reason, and there needs to be a word or two said about each. Scripture is supreme out of the three but we recognise it needs interpreting by the whole Church through the other two 'legs' of our 'theological stool'. By 'Tradition' we mean the Tradition of the Undivided Church prior to the Great Schism of 1054, in particular the great Creeds and Ecumenical Councils, and we therefore reject Western innovations such as transubstantiation and purgatory. 'Reason' is the one which is most tricky since it has arguably led to the sort of deviations one sees in TEC but, put simply, it recognises that all Christians as human beings bring human reasoning ie: our minds to the table when we study Scripture and, to the extent that those minds are created and regenerated by God through the Holy Spirit, our interpretation of Scripture can be guided by that sort of reasoning. Naturally, the evangelical wing of the Church emphasis Scripture, the Anglo-Catholic wing Tradition and the liberal wing Reason.
Soteriologically, we are Reformed, by and large - and that's the big difference between us and the RCs. However, there are one or two caveats to be attached to this. We don't tend to be as Limited Atonement-y as Calvinists. We also stress the importance of good works as marks of a 'true and lively faith' (Cranmer) and therefore stress James and the Gospels as much as Paul. There is also quite a strong 'participatory' emphasis in our take on justification rather than mere 'juridical' or 'forensic'; we can talk about 'putting on Christ' rather than just 'having faith in Christ' and hence we stress the importance of the sacraments of baptism and communion as means of grace to the Christian.
we can talk about 'putting on Christ' rather than just 'having faith in Christ' and hence we stress the importance of the sacraments of baptism and communion as means of grace to the Christian.
So in-other words a Sacrament provides Grace
Sreiously the only advantage I see to your church is "Pub Night"
:laugh:Exactly, Matt. If God chose to save one guy out of the whole 'massa damnata', leaving the rest as vessels fitted for destruction, who are we to question? Can the pot talk back to the potter that made it?