Lots to chime in on here ~
AgLiving06 said:
It's absolutely true and germane to the discussion.
There is a recognition of tiers among all kinds of groups understand and acknowledge that though books may be "part of the canon," that does not make them "equal."
This is where is gets very dicey for your position. You attempt to nuance and qualify your position as if it was the clear, historical position of Christians and that the "disputed books" are sort of scripture but when push comes to shove you side with the position of not equal to Scripture so NOT SCRIPTURE.
Of course you admit the books were in the Bible for more than 1,000 years but they were not actually IN the Bible. They were just printed in the Bible but everyone just knew they were not Scripture because Jerome used the word "apocrypha" to describe them before he translated them and included them with the real Scriptures in the same Bible.
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AgLiving06 said:
Redstone said:
Seriously, why are you avoiding this ESSENTIAL meta question?
WHO decided Revelation was in and Enoch out, and WHEN? What was the process?
"essential meta question." Who decided it? God did! Why is that complicated. The Holy Spirit guides and protects the Church.
Your answer here begs the question of HOW and WHEN did GOD decide Revelation was in and Enoch out? What was the process and how do WE KNOW was GOD decided? Please be specific with this answer.
AgLiving06 said:
That Rome tries to take authority from God and give it to man is always something that is just baffling to me. Would you really want man acting our own? What a terrifying thought.
This is where your preconceived animosity toward Rome interferes with your ability to be objective, and is why you are unable to provide a direct, logical, coherent response to what are simple, straightforward questions.
Furthermore, you fail to see that it is YOUR position (not the Catholic or Orthodox) that places YOU in the terrifying position of relying on the actions of man acting on their own.
AgLiving06 said:
And before you try to claim that's what you mean, you don't get it both ways. Either man and these councils acted actively of their own free will, or it is God who's will was active. It can't be both. I'll always default to God's will.
Jesus promised he would send the Holy Spirit to guide the CHURCH. The church is comprised of fallible men. In the same way the Holy Spirit guided the men leading the church who wrote Scriptures (Paul, Luke, Matthew, etc.)
and protected them from error (infallibility), the Holy Spirit guided the men leading the same church to collect, discern, and recognize which of these writings would be included in the Bible
and protected them from error in that process (infallibility).
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AgLiving06 said:
Redstone said:
Yes, the founder via St. Peter and St. John the leader of His ordained priests at the Pascal celebration, the Mass, before His holy passion did exist before the Church.
So your claim is that the Church existed before Jesus established the church? It's a bold claim, but I guess it's the hole you dig when you need an authoritative church to exist.
Yet another example of your twisting the meaning of what others are saying. Jesus established his NT Church ON Peter and the Apostles and through them the NT Church came to be. It was the precise reason Jesus chose them to follow him. Jesus breathed on them commanding them to receive the Holy Spirit. So yes, Peter and the Apostles did exist before the NT Church was born so to speak.
AgLiving06 said:
Simply put, the Word of God existed before the Church. The Scriptures are the Word of God guided and protected by the Holy Spirit. So the Word of God existed prior to the Church. That the accidental form came into existence later does not change that.
In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God. He was in the beginning with God; all things were made through him, and without him was not anything made that was made.
Yes, the Scriptures are the Word of God. However, the Scriptures are not the complete and exhaustive Word of God. The issue I have with your position is that you conflate the two as if ONLY the Scriptures are the Word of God and nothing else or nothing more. You are confining the Word of God to the Scriptures alone. You are in error by doing so.
---------------------------AgLiving06 said:
Because it causes significant issues for you and Redstone. Restone's claim is that "the Church established the canon in an active role with councils and what not.
This is not what Redstone has claimed. You are putting words into Redstone's mouth. You have twisted his words to mean something slightly different in an attempt to make a point. Typical straw-man.
Redstone has made the case that in the same way God guided and protected the process of writing Scripture, God also guided and protected the process of collecting and recognizing Scripture. All of this from beginning to end was done THROUGH the Church, not by individual men.
AgLiving06 said:
However, history shows that the vast majority of the canon did not require councils or anything of that nature. So then we see that there is a historical understanding, that differs within groups, that some books took longer to be accepted and their acceptance comes with a "second tier status."
Are you saying that some of the cannon required councils or something similar? Again, WHO decides/decided? Why isn't Enoch considered Scripture? It was treated as Scripture by many in the early days, and was referenced by Jesus himself THE WORD. How is it that Enoch can be excluded from the canon using your "historical" view?
------------------AgLiving06 said:
Yes, we agree that Jesus Christ is the Word. Kind of the point of John 1.
But to claim that the Scriptures are not the Word of God, and were not seen as such in the early church is just nonsense.
NOBODY on this board, Catholic or Protestant, has claimed, said or implied that the Scriptures are NOT the Word of God.
The debate we are having is the disagreement on WHAT is Scripture. The Protestant position is the most restrictive and rejects books currently and historically held as Scripture by both Catholics and Orthodox going back more than 1,500 years. The support offered for rejecting these books is tenuous at best, and your need to avoid the necessary implications of your position (such Enoch, Revelation, etc.) is obvious.