Faithful Ag said:The underlying question that is not being acknowledged or addressed is the question of WHO can rightly decide or declare a teaching is contrary to the "Word of God.. According to whose interpretation?AgLiving06 said:BluHorseShu said:I would agree that any traditions or teachings cannot be contrary to the word of God. The problem arises among men about what they think is contrary.AgLiving06 said:Faithful Ag said:According to whose interpretation?AgLiving06 said:
I think you're stretching the language of binding and loosing. Nothing in that makes them infallible or able to speak infallible, without the help of God (Father, Son, or Holy Spirit).
So any traditions needs to be tested against the Word of God. If it holds, then it is conforming to the Word of God, if it is against, it should be tossed aside.
The rules of logic?
If a tradition is in error against the Word of God....there seem to be possibilities....
Either the tradition is wrong.
Or the Word of God is wrong...
I'll place my money on the Word of God.
Just a for instance that's overtly Catholic or Protestant. The teaching that contraception does not go against the Word of God didn't exist until the 1930s (and I mean man made contraception, not natural family planning). This teaching never exists in the church prior to this time. But many will argue this is not contrary to Gods Word.
And I would agree with you. If a teaching is contrary to the Word of God, then we should ignore it. We have Scriptural support for Jesus saying just that in Mark 7
"And he said to them, "Well did Isaiah prophesy of you hypocrites, as it is written,
" 'This people honors me with their lips,
but their heart is far from me;
7 in vain do they worship me,
teaching as doctrines the commandments of men.'
8 You leave the commandment of God and hold to the tradition of men."
Let's take the issue of Baptismal Regeneration for example. Or we could use the Eucharist and the real vs. symbolic nature of what is being professed. Good and well meaning Christians have very different interpretations and teachings that they follow, and there is a wide variance among Protestants on who is following the Word of God and who is not. There is only one Truth and God cannot lie, therefore some Christians must be wrong on these issues - but how are we to know who is right vs. who is wrong? Are these Christians not relying on the same "Word of God"?
The topic of this thread was Mary is the New Ark of the Covenant. Do you deny that this is true? Is it your position that the Catholics and Orthodox are creating this teaching in opposition to what the apostles and earliest Christians believed and understood?
You're constantly trying to create an argument that just isn't there.
The entire premise of my posts have been that interpretations need to be challenged against the Word of God. I'm not sure you're in such violent in your agreement with me? Are you afraid we might agree on something?
You're trying to make a big deal of "who" which is the standard Roman Catholic argument to justify the Pope.
I already pointed out out that Ignatius of Loyola said: "What seems to me white, I will believe black if the hierarchical Church so defines."
The simple fact, as I said several posts ago, is that the Word of God is perfect, by definition. The Scripture tells us this fact and we can believe it. It has to be because it is from God. When our salvation is on the line, do we really think God is hiding things from man?
So who can can rightly decide and declare? The simplest answer is that with the Holy Spirit, can understand the way to salvation. We know this is true simply because millions have come to know Christ without needing a pope. We know this because a church does not save anybody. Only Christ does. No pope has saved anyone.
I know this will dissatisfy you, but it's the simple truth. The Word of God has always been what matters, not a pope.
Edit: I wanted to add this as well. What I'm not saying is "nuda Scriptura" or solo Scriptura. We come to understand Jesus as our Savior by God alone. Our salvation is from God alone, but the Scriptures are also extremely clear we are not to try and go about our salvation alone. We cannot honor our neighbor as our self. We cannot participate in the Lord's Supper alone, and we almost certainly cannot understand the Word of God alone. So I and many Protestants honor the Fathers. We learn from the Councils. We read the history (in most cases better than our Roman Catholic brothers), but we understand that the Word of God is always superior to man and that anytime there is a dispute, we must turn to the Word as our source.
------------------
So to your last question. Is Mary the "New Ark of the Covenant?" I don't know, but my test is this.
Does Scripture make this claim? The answer is no, Even the source that Thaddeus poaches from acknowledges its a typological argument
Does my salvation hinge on this claim? No. The Scriptures do not claim it, nor do any of the Ecumenical Creeds consider this necessary.
Could I choose to hold to this? Sure, there's a wide range of adiaphora topics that we can comfortably hold to.
We should have the debate, but as I said above, we should be willing to risk being wrong, and Thaddeus has been wrong a lot in this thread, whether in his historical (lack of) sourcing of fathers, or claims about a council that do not hold up to any level of scrutiny.