M
works, prayer and avoiding idleness were not oral tradition. Firstly they are not doctrine, and secondly they were clearly taught in the Old Testament Scriptures. In the New Testament different churches worshiped in different ways with no Bog Daddy breathing down their necks. In the New Testament baptism was simply a matter of going down into water and having and being submerged in it in the Name of Jesus (or of the Triune God). There was no special liturgy. As far as we know marriage was a contract between two families called a betrothal, with a seven day celebration taking place when the time come. Oaths had already been made when the betrothal took place. Whether different areas followed different methods we do not know but it is not part of being a Christian. All that matters is that local law is satisfied and the married could dedicated to God. Fasting is nowhere taught as necessary for Christians in the New Testament in the original Greek manuscripts.
None of these things were ritualised in the early church. They were certainly not passed down in oral tradition. Christians were free to follow their own customs. You have absolutely NO PROOF at all that the Apostles passed on supposed liturgies about these things. It is all in your mind. And certainly there is no hint that they passed on anything to 'successors'. That is church gobbledegook.
The heart of the king is in the hand of the Lord and He turneth it wither so ever He willeth. You attribute to men the workings of God.Furthermore, I read you didn't approve of Constantine the Great. Do you realize he commissioned the first distribution of Sacred Scripture in history 331AD. Must be a hate love relationship eh?
you mean you know what Big Daddy tells you
The heart of the king is in the hand of the Lord and He turneth it wither so ever He willeth. You attribute to men the workings of God.
For the cause of Christ
Roger
you mean you know what Big Daddy tells you
By the way, how did i go from member to senior member?
There was a heiarchy in the Early Church, that's undesputed. Read the Didache and "the role of bishops" by St. Ignatius of Antioch.
If you don't believe in oral tradition your nuts brother.
The Gospel of Christ in the Binle put into hours in a day roughly equates to only 17 days. He was ministering for three years! And we know that "if everything were written down the whole world couldn't contain all of it (a John 21:25).
You misunderstood me, I wasn't stating any doctrine. I was paraphrasing 2 Thess. Dang your defensive.
Jesus himself said, "...and when you fast (Matt 6:16)".
Christians were all able to follow their own customs....ok, well most were Jewish and they just translated those customs to practice their Christianity which was extremely liturgical guy!
By the way, how did i go from member to senior member?
Why are you putting words in my mouth? I did not say that and dont know who Big Daddy is. Yes, i follow the Catechism of the church. I have studied it for myself and i believe it. I dont pretend to be an expert as you assert that you are. Pride is a sin and i have witnessed to much here to know I have the truth. If i didnt, i would drink the koolaid with yall
Big Daddy is the Pope LOL All popes appear to be fat and they all like to be called PAPA (POPE) contrary to the teaching of Jesus (a mere minor matter to you seemingly).
mattpGalahad- Mike quoted from the RCC catechism. It is the official representation of our logic- if you are curious to understand us
And by that logic, not by Scripture, the Roman Catholic Church made (ex-cathedra, "from the chair"Jim,
KJV says highly favored by God instead of full of grace. Perhaps slightly different.
Since God is omnipotent, and He had a plan, wouldn't He have known from the beginning Mary would be worthy, without sin, to receive the Holy Spirit and potentially conceive sinless Jesus with her consent?
As much as you say the Orthodox Church (or RCC for that matter) doesn't have proof for oral tradition or Apostolic succession, you have virtually no evidence to the contrary. We at least have documents to prove otherwise dating back to 50AD.
Furthermore, I read you didn't approve of Constantine the Great. Do you realize he commissioned the first distribution of Sacred Scripture in history 331AD. Must be a hate love relationship eh?
Even St. Paul said consider me your father in Christ. Was St. Paul wrong and are you gonna tell him?
Even St. Paul said consider me your father in Christ. Was St. Paul wrong and are you gonna tell him?
mattp
Where did he quote it? I would like to see it.
Thank you
The only genuine letter we have before 100 AD, apart from Scripture, is Clement's letter in c 95 AD. There is no proof for oral tradition. No one ever wrote down, 'this is oral tradition received from the Apostles' within a period in which it could be acceptable. Indeed the early church made clear that so called oral traditions incorporated in writings were unacceptable and heretical. That is why they limited authoritative books to be read in churches to the Apostolic writings.
Hope Savas replies.Apostolic succession was a device by which certain teachers tried to combat heresy by pointing to those teachers who were in churches which had been founded by the Apostles. (there is absolutely no hint of preference for Rome). But it was not a doctrine, it was practical evidence. It had no divine backing. It was a theory of men useful in the first hundred years after the Apostles when men lived who had known the Apostles. Some came from those very churches who were heretics. Take Alexandria for instance. Both Clement and Origen were heretics as both espoused Gnostic views. Were they in the Apostolic succession?
I'm not the only one who disapproved of him for interfering with church affairs. Both the bishops of Alexandria and Antioch rejected his request at Nicea to give Rome precedence. He may have distributed Scripture (possibly he believed in sola scriptura?) but he also introduced paganism into the Roman church from which it never recovered. And he also introduced the idea of using violence to force people to conform, a lesson the Roman church learned exceedingly well.