Posted on 10/15/2001 6:54:40 AM PDT by malakhi
Statesmen may plan and speculate for liberty, but it is religion and morality alone which can establish the principles upon which freedom can securely stand. The only foundation of a free constitution is pure virtue. - John Adams |
This does not sound good, Dave. Would Jude, verse 3 be appropriate here?
I don't know, let's look it up.
3 Beloved, being very eager to write to you of our common salvation, I found it necessary to write appealing to you to contend for the faith which was once for all delivered to the saints.
Hmmm. I see your point. You think that a faith "delivered once" to the saints couldn't possibly develop in undertanding.
I'm sorry you feel that way. Could you take a swipe at the question I tried to get Reggie to answer yesterday? And non-Catholic is welcome to answer this, cause I would really like an asnwer from someone. Is your understanding of God and Christ and the Truth different now than when you first became a Christian?
If you "saved" a new Christian would you teach him what you understand now, or only what you understood when you were first saved?
SD
I don't see that I can be a portrait artist and be obedient in God's Commandments.
Also if you take Ex 20:4, and De 4:16 to mean you can't make ANY image of a man or woman, than you have to include photos as well, and tv and film. They are all made by us and they are all images. I find it odd that you say you likes the Ten Commandments but you wouldn't like a painting or statue of Moses.
I wonder how ALL the other Proddies take your interpretation of Scripture?
Congratulations, you've won Sentence of the Day!
SD
Breathtakingly anti-intelectual. I'm sure your proud of this. But why should we read your posts or entertain your ideas when you won't reciprocate. Are you afraid of learning something that counters your swollen sense of being the Lord's personal messenger?
SD
Wow. Again we see the selfish Protestant individualism rear its ugly head. To even think that one could be so selfish and uncaring about the rest of the Christian family while in the very presence of God Himself in Heaven.
SD
This comes awfully close to blasphemy of the Holy Spirit. Isn't that sin unforgivable? I'll pray for you, for what it's worth.
Actually it comes awfully close to "thou shalt not but the Lord, your God, to the test" Think about it.
SD
SD
This is the RC version of the liberal's line that the Constitution is a "living, breathing document". Thus allowing them to make up, out of thin air, anything that they so desire, as long as the magisterium, er... high court agrees to it. A very edifying post SD.
Care to take a stab at my question du jour? Is your understanding of God the same now as it was when you were first saved? Does that mean God or the Truth changed or does it mean you understanding grew?
SD
Also if you take Ex 20:4, and De 4:16 to mean you can't make ANY image of a man or woman, than you have to include photos as well, and tv and film. They are all made by us and they are all images. I find it odd that you say you likes the Ten Commandments but you wouldn't like a painting or statue of Moses.
I wonder how ALL the other Proddies take your interpretation of Scripture?
May I add my 2 cents? Havoc, why would you consider a gift from God something that goes against God? If you are as good as you say you are, it seems to me you could do some good with that talent.
Ignatius learned from John. I do not know how long he was with him, perhaps we can find that information for you. But in the meantime, consider that the Eucharist is the thing for Christians. It and Baptism are our schtick, so to speak. It is what we do that makes us different from others. Especially the Eucharist.
Given this centrality do you really expect that someone learning diretly from a disciple of the Lord would get it so wrong, so fast? Completely misunderstand?
SD
Contrast this with:
I haven't seen anyone on this thread claiming inerrancy!
I would guess you don't know Havoc? He pontificates about the true meaning of Scripture all the time. He doesn't claim only inerrancy, he claims to speak the Word of God.
We all at times speak to the "true" meaning of Scripture, like you above. You are sure that you know the true meaning of this passage. If you are not claiming inerrancy here, you are certainly claiming "errancy" on our part.
SD
Oh really? When did the 10 commandments get thrown out? I wonder. This is awful big news to the Lord, I'm sure.
Jesus internalized the 10 Commandments. He made them not about outward shows and legalistic adhereing to minutiae and every jot and tittle. He was all about spiritualizing. He doesn't want the foreskin from our penises, he wants the foreskin of our hearts. Your obsession with this carnal matter of statues totally misses the point. It is about what we worship with our hearts and minds and actions.
I need you to clarify your answer to TRD. I'm sure you thought it was a clear answer, but we know how that goes. Do you not wear mixed linen and wool? Do you follow every jot and tittle of the Law? You said to ignore any was to ignore all of it, I took this to mean that you try your best to obey the whole Law. Is this true?
Also, are you still an artist, and if yes, what is the type of art you produce?
SD
But He did want the sacrifice of Jesus, and He does want the sacrifice of the eucharist? I don't see how removing leaven from our homes during Passover is any different than abstaining from meat during Lent or fasting on Good Friday. I take that back: the commandment against the use of leaven during Passover is scriptural; the abstention from meat is not.
Dave, I'm surprised that a Catholic would have such a negative view of the "carnal", as you put it. Doesn't your church believe in the sacramental nature of physical creation? In the idea of the sanctifying of the ordinary bread, wine, oil etc? By criticizing the Jews as a "carnal" people "obsessed" with a "carnal" law, you first forget that it was God who gave the Law to Israel! What should the Jews have said? "Sorry, God, but your Law is just too carnal. We won't obey it, because we know you're more interested in what's "inside" us." In other words, you forget that part of showing our "devotion" to God is through obedience. Second, by focusing on the spiritual rather than the physical, you undermine your own case for allowing physical representations.
It's OK. We all get carried away and speak unkindly sometimes. It's important that we try to recognize when we do. You are forgiven.
SD
This is basically a matter of your splitting hairs over word use to say a statue is not a graven image because you call it an icon rather than an image. Your point's gone dull Alfalfa. Here's a clue, an icon is an image. If you haven't figured it out, I was going to school to become a professional artist before I left college. Your semantics may work on someone that's ignorant of art or the English language; but, not on someone who knows the terms. In other words "Pull the other one!"
I do think it is worth noting that MOST of the Law in the Torah pertains to the Jews only, not to gentiles.
Consider it "performance art." I was just copying the wording of someone here and showing how easy it is to say "carnal" to mean "bad" and "spiritual" to mean "good." I may have gotten carried away. You are right, "carnal" is the wrong word. "Legalistic" is better.
SD
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