Howdy, it is me! said:Zobel said:
what I did when I heard John 6 at a bible study and it struck me: pray and go all in.
I wrote this before on here -- you should believe that you are practicing the faith of the Apostles, in its generalities and its particulars, and you should strive in every way to take hold of what they passed on, and to do what generations of Christians before you did, in unity of confession and faith. If you don't think that what you do in worship, in prayer, and in practice is exactly the same as what St Paul taught, you should reconcile that.
I believe that what I have been taught has a full participation in the experience and teaching of the Apostles. I believe that the teaching of the Church is the same as what St Jude described, and that our confession is fundamentally identical to the confession made by St Timothy in front of many witnesses.
I believe that when Acts 2:42 says that they devoted themselves to the Apostle's teaching, to the communion in the breaking of bread, and to the prayers, that my Church is devoted to and maintains all three of those specific things, again in generalities and particulars.
I'm not sure what to say other than I feel the same way about my faith and church.
And that is probably because you have many people in your church that really know they need Jesus as their savior and want to follow Him. All of us, including yall, are doing the best we can with the knowledge we can. The amazing thing about where we are today in history is that we have access to the original teachings that our parents, grandparents and pretty much all of our ancestors never had unless they were church scholars. For the first time in human history we can test our faith against those that held the faith first. This is both a blessing and a burden and I wouldn't blame you at all for just wanting to keep it simple.
But know that if you want to look at what the earliest church looked like in more detail than the few passages in the Bible that give it a passing mention, it's there. The NT, in all its glory, is a collection of documents exhorting people to stay in the faith and follow Jesus. It was not and was never meant to be an exhaustive narrative on what the church should look like.