I was asking when is the first time an interpretation of John's statements about "baptism with the Holy Spirit and fire" shows up in Christian writers in church history?
Someone was suggesting that interpreting it as a spiritual fire that is part of the baptism of the Holy Spirit was a denominational view, but if it shows up in the early church fathers it would not be true that it is a denominational view but rather it is an interpretation first presented in Christian literature by ??? in date ???
Why does it matter? Because the fact that different people can read it and come to different conclusions is sometimes because they were taught it by their denomination but sometimes it is because they found reason to interpret that way from the scriptures themselves and if the earliest commentaries on the passage in extant precede denominations then it is not true that it is a denominational view. It cannot be dismissed so easily. We have to use a different reason than "it is a denominational view" to dismiss it.
Someone was suggesting that interpreting it as a spiritual fire that is part of the baptism of the Holy Spirit was a denominational view, but if it shows up in the early church fathers it would not be true that it is a denominational view but rather it is an interpretation first presented in Christian literature by ??? in date ???
Why does it matter? Because the fact that different people can read it and come to different conclusions is sometimes because they were taught it by their denomination but sometimes it is because they found reason to interpret that way from the scriptures themselves and if the earliest commentaries on the passage in extant precede denominations then it is not true that it is a denominational view. It cannot be dismissed so easily. We have to use a different reason than "it is a denominational view" to dismiss it.
By the way, my posting of this isn't my complete agreement with what he is saying. It's just for our discussion.
The Fathers of the Church by St. Hilary of Poiters, Commentary on Matthew, Translated by D.H. Williams and written some time before before his exile in 356 AD.
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