
Can you please tell us then what is the word used for 'appointing' in ordination in the original Koine Greek Bible? Because as far as I understand, the word mean literally 'laying of the hands'.
You make the claim that there were 'various process', even ascribing that this was done by the laity, but so far you have not provided any evidence or proof for that. You have provided conjecture based on your speculations.
That is precisely the point of contention. And the evidence available says you're wrong.
Well, I would disagree. I think the available evidence is that those mentions in the New Testament is invariably a literal understanding and not an innovation in the faith.
Find me one example in the New Testament that this word meant 'rise hands in a vote' or be 'ordained' or selected.
In the Church, we know him very well.
In fact, we pray with him every Divine Liturgy.![]()
Do you pray to him or pray to an icon of him?
I pray to him for help. Can you pray for me as well, Sola?
Did you know that prayer is an act of worship? Why do you perform acts of worship to anything other than God?
There is prayer for worship, and there is prayer that is a solemn request. Pray tell, do you understand the difference?
In fact, the first time the word is described (in the only meaning it is EVER used in the New Testament) it means to lay hands on, in the ordination of the twelve Deacons in Acts 6:6
ους εστησαν ενωπιον των αποστολων και προσευξαμενοι επεθηκαν αυτοις τας χειρας
It says they layed their hands on them.
TER and erowe-I just want to thank you for the interesting and thoughtful discussion. You've given me a great deal to think and read about.![]()
Those mentions of what in the NT? Can you please cite the verses you are referring to?
You know, I'm fascinated by the history we're never taught. There's actually quite a lot of history we're not taught. Mostly because it falls squarely outside the statist narrative.....
You know, I'm fascinated by the history we're never taught. There's actually quite a lot of history we're not taught. Mostly because it falls squarely outside the statist narrative.... but also because for Reformed Christians, history stops recording some time around 50 AD and picks back up on October 31, 1517.
Rome regularly placed rulers under interdict in the Medieval period. This means that if a ruler was being a jackass, the pope could sent a letter to all his bishops in that kingdom saying that nobody within that kingdom could receive the Sacraments. I know it's going to be hard for you to picture how big a deal that was, since you don't practice them, but it was a BIG DEAL. The objective was to put the ruler under pressure from his subjects, because everyone's immortal soul was in jeopardy for as long as he didn't repent.
This is one of the reasons the Knights Templar became so prosperous (and also hated by rulers). They got special dispensation to administer the Sacraments during interdict. Well of course if they're the ones having Communion after six months of nothing, and they're supposed to have it every week, then donations are going to roll in afterward... making for a very wealthy order, and a very envious king.
(Look up King Philip IV of France some time... he was a real piece of work, a good example of what Earthly rulers are like.)
What does this tell us about how Roman Catholics felt about the state in the times leading up to the Reformation?
1) That they obviously thought the Church was more important than individual states.
2) That they had no problem turning subjects against their rulers.
3) That there were instances in which they would show outright scorn for the state in place.
So on the RC side, your claim does not bear scrutiny.
On the EO side.... dude, there's this tiny little detail called the USSR that you should look up some time if you want to get the EO perspective on the state.
Just want to add two more things to this passage:
Acts:8:14-17
Now when the apostles who were at Jerusalem heard that Samaria had received the word of God, they sent Peter and John to them, who, when they had come down, prayed for them that they might receive the Holy Spirit. For as yet He had fallen upon none of them. They had only been baptized in the name of the Lord Jesus. Then they laid hands on them, and they received the Holy Spirit.
In this wonderful passage we see two things. First, being baptized does not confer the Holy Spirit. Although it is to mean our death and burial with Christ of the old man and rebirth into the new man and the newness of life. It is purification and illumination, however not the completion. They had not yet received the Holy Spirit. And the Apostles were praying for them. (and probably fasting!)
'He had fallen upon none of them'. Who? The Holy Spirit. So to grace them with the Holy Spirit, it required the very actual laying of hands. This is the rudiment of Chrismation into the Church, the transferrence of the Holy Spirit through physical and spiritual, created and uncreated, earthly and divine.
So to be a complete Christian, not only born 'of water' but 'of spirit', requires both Baptism AND Chrismation, at least according to Acts 8:14-17
The understanding that these words in the NT simply meant 'to vote upon' is found NOWHERE in Christian writings before the Reformation
So far, from my understanding, the Apostles layed hands as the means of transference of the Holy Spirit (whether for healing, entrance into the Church in the Holy Spirit, or ordaining into the clergy).
The history of the Church is filled with such examples of Bishops standing up to the Statist authorities at the risk of their lives. Many paid for it by banishment and exile, others with their limbs and their lives. St. Ignatius was one of the early ones, but the list is very long.
I agree, this was the very point erowe was trying to make. The laying on of hands does not make one a "Bishop" as the EO/RCC defines it.Sorry to butt into your conversation with erowe1, but there were times in Acts when the Holy Spirit fell without laying on of hands.
Acts 11:15 "As I began to speak, the Holy Spirit came on them as he had come on us at the beginning.
That said, most Protestant churches I know lay on hands to ordain pastors, deacons and elders, and some lay on hands specifically for member, office holder or otherwise, to receive the Holy Spirit. I'm not sure what you two are debating but there's been a lot of posts.