jmdrake
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- Joined
- Jun 6, 2007
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TER how about joining Deb and others in going through the Bible? Seriously? I know myself that I have a lot more Bible study I need to do. Have you exhausted everything it is that you could possibly learned from the earliest church fathers, namely the apostles? If so, good for you.
As for your statement that "We can confess we are so full of the Holy Spirit to think we know better than the early martyrs and Church Fathers, but chances are unfortunately, we probably aren't." my response is this. The earliest church fathers longed for us to be so full of the Holy Spirit that we would depend upon the Holy Spirit and not them.
1 John 2:27 But the anointing which ye have received of him abideth in you, and ye need not that any man teach you: but as the same anointing teacheth you of all things, and is truth, and is no lie, and even as it hath taught you, ye shall abide in him.
Christians are not supposed to be "Ever learning but never coming into the knowledge of the truth." I don't think I have "arrived" so that I am "wiser than all Christians before me". I don't know why whenever this conversation comes up that's the type of response I get. But I don't believe God is so limited in 2014 that He cannot explain His truth to His children without them having to rely on 2nd hand information. The writings in the Bible are first hand accounts of God's working through creation to the establishment of the Christian church. Writings after that are helpful for history. I like reading Josephus and he wasn't even Christian! But he is helpful for understanding history.
As for your statement that "We can confess we are so full of the Holy Spirit to think we know better than the early martyrs and Church Fathers, but chances are unfortunately, we probably aren't." my response is this. The earliest church fathers longed for us to be so full of the Holy Spirit that we would depend upon the Holy Spirit and not them.
1 John 2:27 But the anointing which ye have received of him abideth in you, and ye need not that any man teach you: but as the same anointing teacheth you of all things, and is truth, and is no lie, and even as it hath taught you, ye shall abide in him.
Christians are not supposed to be "Ever learning but never coming into the knowledge of the truth." I don't think I have "arrived" so that I am "wiser than all Christians before me". I don't know why whenever this conversation comes up that's the type of response I get. But I don't believe God is so limited in 2014 that He cannot explain His truth to His children without them having to rely on 2nd hand information. The writings in the Bible are first hand accounts of God's working through creation to the establishment of the Christian church. Writings after that are helpful for history. I like reading Josephus and he wasn't even Christian! But he is helpful for understanding history.
I wish you did read more of the Church Fathers and put more energy in studying the actual history of Christianity from the first century and after my brother, especially on how the baptized men and women in the world have labored from the beginning in order to pass down the traditions handed down by the apostles and those who succeeded them.
There is no conflict with the Scriptures and the Church. There is interpretation of the Scriptures within the Church. And not the interpretation of one man or one person, but the interpretation as deliberated and defended and clarified through the milieu of the catholic Church. Not in fantasy or in thoughtful imagination, but in concrete reality, in a blessed water of baptism, a spoken confession and creed, a written declaration or canon of Scripture, in true succession of the laying of the hands and anointing of the oil and Holy Spirit. These traditions go back in form and development for 2000 years and lead us to the life of the early Church. This is the concrete working of the Holy Spirit, not having sprung up a hundred years ago, but 2000 years ago, not starting from the day I was born or the day I thought something up or agreed to something else, but what is the historical, liturgical, and sacramentally sealed witness which has been faithfully handed down, through good times and bad, through persecution and state protection, and demonstrating the power of God and the proofs of the Holy Spirit by the lives of the saints. The tradition of the Church is the life of the Church, guided by God Himself in the Holy Spirit.
We can confess we are so full of the Holy Spirit to think we know better than the early martyrs and Church Fathers, but chances are unfortunately, we probably aren't. At least, I know that applies to me acknowledging my sinfulness and having really read their writings and studied their lives and the unimaginable circumstances and challenges they faced in order to pass down faithfully the traditions and teachings handed down by the Apostles. I wish to be in communion with those who I know indeed were 'Holy Spirit filled' saints instead of putting so much weight in my own mind's capabilities. Nor do I put my faith in people who taught completely innovative teachings 15, 17, or 19 centuries later, apart from the body of Christians who have worshiped in unity since the beginning. If Christ truly did create a Church on earth empowered by the Holy Spirit, which He promised that the gates of Hell would never overcome, then I want to find THAT Church, which can show itself through history AND through the blessed sacrament to go back to the Upper Room on the Day of Pentecost.
This is why I am an Orthodox Christian. Not because I am great, or because I am something, but because I know how badly fallible and sinful I am, and even though I can just as easily trust in myself above all and claim to be 'learning from the Holy Spirit' , I know by the way I live and the sins I do that I am only fooling myself to believe such a thing.

My point about Josephus is that he is a good reference for historical understanding. That's the same way I would look at St. Ignatius. That's not to say that Ignatius wasn't inspired. He very well could have been. But there are people who could have been inspired and have gotten something dreadfully wrong. Joan of Arc for instance. (I'll post a thread on that soon.) Anyway, I've got to get ready for church. Have a blessed day!
Who threw sand in your vagina?