Protestants and a Churchless Tradition: “Sola” vs. “Solo” Scriptura



The Crusades against the East were in response to the Byzantines persecuting Western Christians. Ironically, if the West had been successful in keeping Constantinople it may have never fallen into Islamic hands.


That's a remarkable thing to say, when it was Byzantium that kept the Muslims at bay for almost a thousand years from coming in from the East and taking over the West. In fact, many historians believe it was the sacking of Constantinople which paved the way for the eventual Ottoman Empire to make headway into Europe from the East.

It's unfortunate that as a Catholic you do not see how disproportionate the two tragedies are. But at least your Popes in recent time have acknowledged it and asked for forgiveness on behalf of the Catholic Church. Those are the Christians who will help heal the scars left over by the 4th Crusades, not the ones going around trying to justify the sacking of the greatest Christian city at the time as you are trying to do. For shame that you chose the first day of Orthodox Lent to pick at scabs, and it has revealed more about your disposition than any of the other posts you have made here so far.

With that, I am finished discussing the 4th Crusade with you and you may have the last word.
 
Is the splintering and fragmentation a clue and a hint to the Satanic corruption?

If Christ prayed on the night He was betrayed for the unity of all in God, so that they may be one, then it is very reasonable to say that splintering and fragmentation is a clue and hint to Satanic corruption.

tree_of_church_history.jpg
 
That's a remarkable thing to say, when it was Byzantium that kept the Muslims at bay for almost a thousand years from coming in from the East and taking over the West. In fact, many historians believe it was the sacking of Constantinople which paved the way for the eventual Ottoman Empire to make headway into Europe from the East.

It's unfortunate that as a Catholic you do not see how disproportionate the two tragedies are. But at least your Popes in recent time have acknowledged it and asked for forgiveness on behalf of the Catholic Church. Those are the Christians who will help heal the scars left over by the 4th Crusades, not the ones going around trying to justify the sacking of the greatest Christian city at the time as you are trying to do. For shame that you chose the first day of Orthodox Lent to pick at scabs, and it has revealed more about your disposition than any of the other posts you have made here so far.

With that, I am finished discussing the 4th Crusade with you and you may have the last word.

Look at these worldly disputes about war. Can you imagine something farther away from Christianity than fights about what church did what thing in some war?

The Bible rejects this worldly, murderous charade. Jesus said if His kingdom was from this world then his followers would fight as the world fights. Christianity rejects all of this.
 
That's a remarkable thing to say, when it was Byzantium that kept the Muslims at bay for almost a thousand years from coming in from the East and taking over the West. In fact, many historians believe it was the sacking of Constantinople which paved the way for the eventual Ottoman Empire to make headway into Europe from the East.

It's unfortunate that as a Catholic you do not see how disproportionate the two tragedies are. But at least your Popes in recent time have acknowledged it and asked for forgiveness on behalf of the Catholic Church. Those are the Christians who will help heal the scars left over by the 4th Crusades, not the ones going around trying to justify the sacking of the greatest Christian city at the time as you are trying to do. For shame that you chose the first day of Orthodox Lent to pick at scabs, and it has revealed more about your disposition than any of the other posts you have made here so far.

With that, I am finished discussing the 4th Crusade with you and you may have the last word.

For what it's worth, I actually watched Traditinalists video and it doesn't back up his claims. The cliff notes of the video is that the 4th crusade was a result of the crusaders choosing to back a supposedly legitimate claim to the Byzantine throne for which the claimant promised to provide money and soldiers for the crusade against Egypt but that all went to hell in a handbasket when their Byzantine ally was killed after being briefly installed on the throne. IMO that's just the natural results of trying to use war to further the Lord's work.
 
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Could be. Could also be intended to be by God.

The sword Christ is mentioning has to do with our warfare against Satan and evil, and the division and persecutions which would occur on account of people following Christ and joining His Body, the Church. It does not mean it is God's good will that there be schisms and divisions amongst the Churches, but rather, as Christ prayed in Gethesemane, the Lord's will (which is too the Father's will) is that they would all be one. Likewise, St. Paul and the other Apostles traveled far and wide to instruct the churches to be of one mind and one faith, that there may not be divisions amongst them, and to hold onto the teachings and traditions handed down to them by Apostles. Splintering and schisms are on account of the evil in this world and the devil trying to destroy the unity of the baptized Body of Christ.
 
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The sword Christ is mentioning has to do with our warfare against Satan and evil, and the division and persecutions which would occur on account of people following Christ and joining His Body, the Church. It does not mean it is God's good will that there be schisms and divisions amongst the Churches, but rather, as Christ prayed in Gethesemane, the Lord's will (which is too the Father's will) is that they would all be one. Likewise, St. Paul and the other Apostles traveled far and wide to instruct the churches to be of one mind and one faith, that there may not be divisions amongst them, and to hold onto the teachings and traditions handed down to them by Apostles. Splintering and schisms are on account of the evil in this world and the devil trying to destroy the unity of the baptized Body of Christ.

I just checked my study bible, and you're right. Previous comment withdrawn. ~hugs~
 
The sword Christ is mentioning has to do with our warfare against Satan and evil, and the division and persecutions which would occur on account of people following Christ and joining His Body, the Church. It does not mean it is God's good will that there be schisms and divisions amongst the Churches, but rather, as Christ prayed in Gethesemane, the Lord's will (which is too the Father's will) is that they would all be one. Likewise, St. Paul and the other Apostles traveled far and wide to instruct the churches to be of one mind and one faith, that there may not be divisions amongst them, and to hold onto the teachings and traditions handed down to them by Apostles. Splintering and schisms are on account of the evil in this world and the devil trying to destroy the unity of the baptized Body of Christ.

There's no division among Christians. Every Christian believes the same thing about Jesus and salvation. The warring man made churches you defend have nothing to do with Christianity or Jesus.
 
I know enough about Lutherans to know that in the U.S. thre are at least two branches, Lutheran church Missouri Synod and Evangelical Lutherans.
By "Evangelical Lutherans" I take it you mean the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America (ELCA), which is the largest "Lutheran" body in the US. It is the most liberal. I previously belonged to LCMS which is the second largest.
There are at least dozens in total and probably hundreds, and each exists for the very reason I'm highlighting: there is no doctrinal oversight of any of the Lutheran bodies.
When a disagreement occurs, there is no teaching on the matter other than perhaps what can be done in a standard 2-minute presentation at a voters' assembly. Then it's put to a show of hands, and the majority wins. The minority can suck eggs or take a hike. So they either suck eggs, join one of the other synods, form a new one if they're feeling industrious, or, once in a while, they wise up and realize that this is a systemic problem within protestantism in general, which is not isolated to Lutheranism.

For your edification, the third largest is the Wysconsin Evangelical Lutheran Synod (WELS) which is known as being the most "conservative", and by "conservative" it is meant that they don't allow women to vote in their assemblies. In other words, the false holy tradition they follow (each church has one whether you want to recognize it or not) manifests itself in ways that are ugly to the casual observer who isn't carrying any of the group's baggage.

From what you described there was indeed hierarchy, as you took it to a higher branch, but you didn't get the result you wanted. Guess what? That happens in churches that don't subscribe to sola scriptura. I didn't bring this example up since you Orthodox and not Catholic, but since you are making this about sola scriptura, and EO and RCC believe the same on this regard, the example fits. With the pedophile priest scandal the problem was taken up the hierarchy all the way to the Vatican and nothing was done​. Priests were transferred to other parishes where the molested other children. So simply "appealing to hierarchy" is not enough.

I understand what argument you're making, but I need to state outright that I do not carry Rome's baggage, that I am a casual observer, and that I therefore can see this for what it is.

I will simply say that no, the two are not the same, because there is no Orthodox Vatican.

By contrast, at least in the Seventh Day Adventist church, there is a check and balance going up the hierarchy.
Ok I get where you're going (I would point out that your SDA issue seems to be poor money skills, which AFAIK is not really a sin, let alone a bad one) and I will refine my position. I am not arguing in favor of hierarchy per se. What I'll point out is that
1) There is always some hierarchy, even if it's just the church council or whoever it is who organizes keeping the lights on
2) The question then becomes how good a job that hierarchy does at nurturing and defending the true faith.

This was the real point of my earlier post. Lutheranism does a horrible job at nurturing and defending faith (ELCA was where the abortion doctor welcomed with open arms: he may not have been the congregation president, it's been six years since I was reading on him). I don't see Anglicanism doing a good job (clown and dog communion), nor Presbyterianism, nor Methodism, nor any other group claiming itself to be a church. I see all of them flushing the faith down the toilet. The point of my "list" of abuses was to show that this flushing of the faith is not isolated to LCMS. It is pervasive within groups that claim Sola Scriptura - and also as I've already said, this is also why there are 30,000 denominations and counting. Any one of these offenses will lead to other offenses, or will lead to a new fracture, or very likely both.

As for point #3, Lutheranism got started because Luther was excommunicated. And Huss and Jerome were Catholics that the Catholic church burned at the stake for speaking their mind. So....I'm not at all sure why you are linking that to sola scriptura.

Again, not carrying Rome's baggage. But none of them was excommunicated as the first response, none of them was not given a reason for their excommunication, and (again not carrying Rome's baggage, just calling it like it was) each of them would have been welcomed back to the RC if they recanted. Excommunication is not and never was intended to be a permanent action (at least not until protestants got a hold of it). It is simply withholding the Sacraments from those who refuse to recant a heresy.

Again, not carrying Rome's baggage here. I know there is plenty to pick apart in the preceding paragraph. I already said we shall know them by their fruits.

It's that those of us that don't agree with you don't believe that scripture can be turned on its head simply because of some argument made, not from scripture, but from "church history."

You should at some point recognize that you can't turn Holy Tradition on its head in order to make it into something that contradicts Scripture.

Cool. I'm glad the hierarchy that you are in so far hasn't pissed you off. (Seriously). But that has nothing to do with sola scriptura.
As I've already explained, yes, it has everything to do with Sola Scriptura.
The problem isn't the Scriptura - it's the Sola!
The common thread with all those protestant groups who ask nothing of their adherents is this. They don't need to do any of it, as long as they have the Scriptures.
I'm not saying you believe this. I'm not saying Sola Fide or FF believes this. I'm just calling it like it is.
Its manifestation has already come up from Sola's keyboard in the last few days. Lent? LENT? Works-righteousness devil worship, that is!
Can't possibly be useful. Can't possibly teach anything about abstinence or help us focus our minds on what really matters.
It's a work, so to hell with it.

That is simply not true. Not unless you believe the Bible doesn't teach you to repent or to forgive or to love. It was a non sola scriptura tradition that allowed Catholics to kill Orthodox Christians during one of the crusades and believe they were doing God a favor.
So, let me ask you a question: can you play the piano?
If not, I challenge you: go read a book on how to play the piano but don't actually touch a piano. Let me know how well your piano playing goes at your first recital.

You have a binary option there: either playing the piano is not something that the contents of that book alone can convey, or, the unthinkable - that playing the piano is something intangible and outside that book. Playing the piano is not the contents of that book. You actually have to do something to make it happen.

I've known an awful lot of people in the Sola Scriptura tradition (again, IT IS A TRADITION) who thought a lot about playing piano, owned more than a few books on playing piano... and stood up in front of a group of voters and took their two minutes to tell them that it was time to put things to a vote so we could all get past this proximate issue and get started on the next fracture. The pianos were all banned some time between 1530 and 1600 or so, and it shows.

so you would have left a non sola scriptura church for the same reason you left a sola scriptura church. As I said from jump, you're mistaking your own personal experience for a bigger picture that may or may not exist.

And I repeat - none of this was my personal experience. I would like to type more but I need to go back to work now.
 
So basically you'res saying the Eastern Orthodox church was just as corrupt as the Roman Catholic church. Okay. Protestantism FTW!


If by defending Western civiilization by attacking an invading Islamic force is "corrupt" then I would be glad to sit in that category. You can prefer a world full of conspiracy-tards and Libertardian Christians who live under Islamic rule, but I don't see the logic in that.
 
If by defending Western civiilization by attacking an invading Islamic force is "corrupt" then I would be glad to sit in that category. You can prefer a world full of conspiracy-tards and Libertardian Christians who live under Islamic rule, but I don't see the logic in that.

"Libertardian"? I reject your worldview of force and the Bible rejects it also:

Christ said, “My kingdom is not of this world. If my kingdom were of this world, my servants would fight, so that I should not be delivered to the Jews; but now my kingdom is not from here.”

It follows from this statement that those who fight to establish some earthly religious kingdom are not of Christ’s kingdom.

The servants of Muhammad fight, just as Muhammad did, because his kingdom is of this world. The servants of the papacy fight, just as the popes do, for their kingdom is of this world. The servants (not children) of Abraham fight, just as the Maccabees fought, for their kingdom is of this world.

- See more at: http://www.trinityfoundation.org/journal.php?id=226#sthash.FFhKGXtb.dpuf
 
"Libertardian"? I reject your worldview of force and the Bible rejects it also:

Thankfully the Protestant empires of the colonial era didn't have such a pacifistic attitude, otherwise this nation itself wouldn't be formed. But I guess we're stepping into politics now.
 
That's a remarkable thing to say, when it was Byzantium that kept the Muslims at bay for almost a thousand years from coming in from the East and taking over the West. In fact, many historians believe it was the sacking of Constantinople which paved the way for the eventual Ottoman Empire to make headway into Europe from the East.

I'm a Romanist, and I mean that in the sense of being a big fan of the Roman Empire. The Byzantine civilization was great, probably one of my favorite ever. But that doesn't deny the corruption and mismanagement that took place. I don't see what Byzantines holding off Muslims has to do with the massacre of the latins.
 
Thankfully the Protestant empires of the colonial era didn't have such a pacifistic attitude, otherwise this nation itself wouldn't be formed. But I guess we're stepping into politics now.

You're right. But you are assuming that "Protestant" means "Biblical Christian". Also, you are assuming that all of the colonists were Christians to begin with, and that is obviously not true as well.

But to get it back to the question of the Bible, what do you think Jesus meant when He said this:
John 18:36

Jesus answered, “My kingdom is not of this world. If my kingdom were of this world, my servants would have been fighting, that I might not be delivered over to the Jews. But my kingdom is not from the world.”
 
Thankfully the Protestant empires of the colonial era didn't have such a pacifistic attitude, otherwise this nation itself wouldn't be formed. But I guess we're stepping into politics now.

Sure it would've. The US already existed with its own distinctive culture. The "Founder Worshippers", as I call them over-romanticize that era and most of the people alive at the time. When you look at it objectively, it's not nearly so pretty. What the "Revolutionaries" did to Loyalists during the war was the kind of stuff we RPFers routinely criticize as war crimes and general crimes against humanity.
 
I'm a Romanist, and I mean that in the sense of being a big fan of the Roman Empire. The Byzantine civilization was great, probably one of my favorite ever. But that doesn't deny the corruption and mismanagement that took place. I don't see what Byzantines holding off Muslims has to do with the massacre of the latins.

I don't think I have seen anyone here defending the massacres of the Latins or proclaiming that the Eastern Roman Empire was not corrupt or mismanaged, so I don't think we have to think someone is denying it. I just find it in bad taste to try to justify the Fourth Crusade and don't believe we should minimize the evils perpetrated in them, evils which were made possible by the actions of the Pope. Pope John Paul II asked for forgiveness because, while the sacking of the Constantinople may have not been directly ordered by Pope Innocent III, it was facilitated by the Papal promises of glory, indulgences and forgiveness of monetary debts, tactics which he campaigned for and used to attract enlistees into the ranks who were not there for a holy cause and defend Christendom, but as a means to rape, pillage, and destroy. The Pope played with fire, and Constantinople burned for it. The Bishop should be proclaiming the Gospel as the shepherd of the flock and not playing the role of Commander and Chief of armies.
 
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I don't think I have seen anyone here defending the massacres of the Latins or proclaiming that the Eastern Roman Empire was not corrupt or mismanaged, so I don't think we have to think someone is denying it. I just find it in bad taste to try to justify the Fourth Crusade and don't believe we should minimize the evils perpetrated in them, evils which were made possible by the actions of the Pope. Pope John Paul II asked for forgiveness because, while the sacking of the Constantinople may have not been directly ordered by Pope Innocent III, it was facilitated by the Papal promises of glory, indulgences and forgiveness of monetary debts, tactics which he campaigned for and used to attract enlistees into the ranks who were not there for a holy cause and defend Christendom, but as a means to rape, pillage, and destroy. The Pope played with fire, and Constantinople burned for it. The Bishop should be proclaiming the Gospel as the shepherd of the flock and not playing the role of Commander and Chief of armies.
"By their fruits, ye shall know them."
 
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