The authority of the Church comes from Jesus. He gave first to Peter (the papacy) then the Apostles (the bishops) the power to bind and loose on heaven and earth. This authority rests in the church through the succession of the bishops.
Most Christians read those passages and see no grant of authority by Jesus to the Church at all. What other evidence do you have for the authority of the Councils, let alone the Church?jrico2727 said:
The authority of the Church comes from Jesus. He gave first to Peter (the papacy) then the Apostles (the bishops) the power to bind and loose on heaven and earth. This authority rests in the church through the succession of the bishops.
Pope John Paul II kissing the Koran sent me the wrong signal, as does Pope Francis' apparent desire to be a politician.Jabin said:Most Christians read those passages and see no grant of authority by Jesus to the Church at all. What other evidence do you have for the authority of the Councils, let alone the Church?jrico2727 said:
The authority of the Church comes from Jesus. He gave first to Peter (the papacy) then the Apostles (the bishops) the power to bind and loose on heaven and earth. This authority rests in the church through the succession of the bishops.
The RCC arguments for the authority of the Church seem to be circular and contradicted by the historical conduct of the Church and Peter's successors themselves.
How did discovering the Eucharist change your mind? To be clear, I am asking out of genuine curiosity and not argumentation.jrico2727 said:
I felt the same and then I discovered the Eucharist.
The Church is the Body of Christ, and the Head of the Church is God Himself. How can you pit these things against each other?Quote:
The danger is in the Church placing itself in a position of authority equal to or even higher than God.
I'm telling you what the people who used the word meant by it. There was no standard, you're coming at this completely backwards - taking your modern concept and trying to force them into it. When the church began there was no NT. There was no formal OT either! Judaism (or properly the Judaisms) of the day had no consensus of scripture - the Sadduccees and Pharisees had different views (Sadduccees accepted only the Torah, Pharisees included the Psalms and Prophets). Essenes differed from them. It seems certain early Christian converts were from both parties - indeed, we have a reference from Papias that John the Elder wore the ephod of the priest, making him almost certainly a Sadduccee at the time.Quote:
Next, you say that the word Canon merely means that it may be read in Church. But that status must carry an immense amount of significance. What standards are or were used to determine if something could be read in Church? I am not familiar at all with EO doctrine, but presumably the significance of that decision must be that what is read is the Word of God or something like that, no?
Councils have no authority in and of themselves, I said this quite clearly. They only has authority insofar as what they say is true, and that true is referenced only to Truth, who is a Person, who is the sole Head, Pastor, Priest, and Teacher of the Church. The Church is the Body of Christ - of course it is self-authenticating, because head is the God-Man Christ Jesus.Quote:
What evidence do you have for the authority of church councils? Isn't the only evidence the writings of Church figures after those councils? In effect, isn't the Church acting as its own proof of authority? In prior posts, you have argued that the Bible is not self-authenticating. Aren't you contending instead that the Church is self-authenticating?
Yes. I've linked you to several, as have others. And they don't stand in a vacuum. Nor are they equivalent to the Constitution of the United States. A constitution of a government establishes that government. It serves to form and guide the function and very existence of the government. The ecumenical councils did no such thing for the Church. The Church existed for three centuries before the first one. The councils only illumine and codify what is already the established faith and practice of the Church, which is the expression of the Apostolic Tradition. This of course includes the scriptures.Quote:
Do we even have the acts of those councils? If memory serves, we do not, but rather we have only what people wrote centuries later.
Jabin said:Most Christians read those passages and see no grant of authority by Jesus to the Church at all. What other evidence do you have for the authority of the Councils, let alone the Church?jrico2727 said:
The authority of the Church comes from Jesus. He gave first to Peter (the papacy) then the Apostles (the bishops) the power to bind and loose on heaven and earth. This authority rests in the church through the succession of the bishops.
The RCC arguments for the authority of the Church seem to be circular and contradicted by the historical conduct of the Church and Peter's successors themselves.
I don't know but I suspect that the EO do not agfee at all with that statement.Quote:
He gave first to Peter (the papacy) . . . the power to bind and loose on heaven and earth.
I am not. I said that the EO and RCC are in danger of doing so.Quote:
The Church is the Body of Christ, and the Head of the Church is God Himself. How can you pit these things against each other?
They may argue the nature and the extent of authority of the papacy, not that Our Lord gave him that grace first, nor the fact that he gave Peter the keys, which are a further sign of his authority.Jabin said:I don't know but I suspect that the EO do not agfee at all with that statement.Quote:
He gave first to Peter (the papacy) . . . the power to bind and loose on heaven and earth.
Sorry for being unclear. What part wasn't clear? I'm not sure where I said anything that was EO specific?Quote:
And, quite frankly, I have a hard time understanding most of your post. Unlike your posts on other boards, which are quite clear and concise, here you seem to lapse into EO jargon which is difficult for non-EO members to understand and not very persuasive.
jrico2727 said:
I certainly appreciate your question. When I was younger and a whole lot more prideful, I became disillusioned with a lot of the churches that we attended. We moved around a lot so I sat on a lot of different congregations and so I never felt in allegiance to anyone specifically. Ultimately I believed in Jesus and I believed in the Bible by the time I was in high school I thought that's all I needed and I attended the Church of me. I read scripture told myself I was good.
By the time I got into college and began taking history, and I came across the early Christian belief and something called the Eucharist. My initial opinion was that this was something that was medieval and ridiculous and there's no way that God would be asking me to eat his body and drink his blood. After that it's stuck with me and I was challenged to prove it wrong. I read scripture then I started reading the church fathers, and ultimately I prayed. Through God's grace I came to the correct understanding that out of God's mercy and love he does feed us with his body and blood to sustain us, to bring us into communion with him and his Church, and to transform our nature into his. After that there was no going back.