bmerr said:
Darron,
bmerr here. I did not lie, Darron, nor did I engage in "creative misrepresentation", whatever that is. Please pardon the offence.
I pointed out the phrase, "as I see it" to emphasize the standard most people use to determine truth, even from the Bible.
Can one narrow down the teaching of the NT to a few "essential doctrines" with Biblical authority, or do we determine a thing is improtant or not based on whether or not we're in compliance with what the Bible says about it?
For example, if church A baptizes by immersion, but will fellowship with those who practice baptism by sprinkling, they have made the mode of baptism a "non-essential" without regard for what the NT teaches about it. Other examples could be used as well.For example, if church A baptizes by immersion, but will fellowship with those who practice baptism by sprinkling, they have made the mode of baptism a "non-essential" without regard for what the NT teaches about it. Other examples could be used as well.
Do you see what I'm getting at? So much of the division in the religious world is caused by people deciding for themselves which things are important and which are not. If church A decides the mode of baptism is a "non-essential", but church B holds that baptism must be by immersion to be in concert with the NT teaching and practice, then a break in fellowship is the result. A new denomination, or division, is born.
Didn't mean to ruffle your feathers, Darron.
In Christ,
bmerr
Bmerr: you and I would get nowhere with arguing over what you tried to do. I see it done all the time to others by people in some parts of the Churches of Christ, and it has been done to me by others as well. If the person is put on the defensive, you folks dig in; if the person sees that the `misunderstanding' was deliberate, the Church of Christ person goes `oops -- I didn't mean to.'
I am used to these tactics, and here, I get a fair opportunity to challenge such misrepresentations. My "feathers" were not "ruffled." I simply used it to show the worst part of the Churches of Christ: their approved unethics.
Now, you and I are at a major impasse. You assume, without Scriptural merit, that disagreement = division. It does not. The New Testament church spoke Greek, and different words were used for "division" and "difference in thought." It is a non-biblical belief that difference in thought means division. It is contra-Scriptural to believe that Christian unity depends on everyone agreeing `enough' with any of us.
You are also failing to distinguish between essential and important doctrines. Essential doctrines are those doctrines absolutely necessary to make an individual a follower of Christ. Important doctrines are doctrines about how to follow Jesus Christ correctly.
Do you see what I'm getting at? So much of the division in the religious world is caused by people deciding for themselves which things are important and which are not.
Actually, much of the division in the church is caused by divisive people dividing from those with whom they disagree.
For example, if church A baptizes by immersion, but will fellowship with those who practice baptism by sprinkling, they have made the mode of baptism a "non-essential" without regard for what the NT teaches about it. ....
Actually, Church A is putting their common Christ above the disagreement.
If church A decides the mode of baptism is a "non-essential", but church B holds that baptism must be by immersion to be in concert with the NT teaching and practice, then a break in fellowship is the result.
Again, the assumption you have made is that disagreement means division. The two are different things.
Galatians 5:19-21 has an interesting list about fleshly inclinations. Galatians 5:19-21 has a list of “works of the flesh” (ASV) = “wrong things the sinful self does” (ICB) that starts with “fornication” (ASV), includes διχοστασια, and ends with “drunkenness|, orgies” (ASV|TNIV). The Greek word means "standing apart"* which means a conscious effort to put oneself in a separation from others. Our churches often like to preach against fornication, and drunkenness, and they are right to do so -- but they want to encourage the divisive behavior. To divisive Christians, that passage refers to `everyone else' who do not agree with them.
Divisive people are unable to think of, or bear, the thought of serving alongside those with whom they disagree. Hence, when others 'fail' to agree with them, they view this as forcing them to divide. Hence, they indulge their fleshly carnal inclination to divide -- and blame the others for their own sin.
Divisive Christians often lack humility. They believe that unity in the Lord's church depends upon how much everybody else agrees with them. In other words, they believe that they dictate the terms for unity in Christ's church. They are not fully aware of Whose church it really is. As far as they are concerned, failure to agree with them justifies them their own engagement in divisive activity.
Another problem we have in the church is people who think they are `God's little helpers.' Never mind that God does not need nor authorize `little helpers' -- they have to `punish' those out of conformity and make sure their disapproval is made known. In other words, they want to sit in judgment on His servants in violation of Romans 14:4 -- and sin with the sanction.
The reasons for division in the church are indulgence in our carnal natures to be divisive. It is that simple.