Posted on 01/18/2002 6:11:04 AM PST by 1stFreedom
An astute observation, but not applied universally enough.
This article has no argument; simply unsupported premises leading to a preset conclusion.
The bible can be considered a fascinating historical document and analyzed and discussed rationally and endlessly from a secular perspective.
The word "apostasy" has no role in such a discussion.
The alternative, using the bible as a religious document and using the circular argumentent of endlessly quoting from it as a way to "prove" a point, is a waste of time.
I enjoy learning new things and being exposed to new perspectivesm so long as the discussion is limited to historical facts, the players, the opposing arguments, the material in question and the conclusions. History is an endless fascinating thing, but there can never be a "hobby" interest that can sustitute for a lifetime of real and scholarly research.
And that's what I see here. There is no need to prove any one Christian variant is "better" than another and any attempt to go there just dooms the discussion to become another pointless exercise.
Right after you prove that Luther started his own religion, which is what you posted yesterday and how this all got started. Please post facts (not RC sources and propaganda), don't just spout off.
Peace.
Yes, exactly right.
What part of historical context can't you understand?
The combination of ignorance and arrogance can lead to silly posturing.
Just as today we live in a constitutional republic, but the congress makes laws that do not apply to themselves, and criminals like Clinton manipulate power to commit what would be for the rest of us crimes plain and simple.
You might ask, what part of the constitution do they believe does not apply to them? Nothing new here.
Is there a point you are trying to make? Why not be explicit about it?
I think the postee understood the point, even if you didn't, which is: murder was murder then, just as it is now. If he or you doesn't choose to agree that Constantine was guilty, is another matter. In historical terms, does the real definition of murder change or is it constant?
I do not disagree with you. It is how some Protestants define heresy that creates problems that need not be. If you have sound reference material available, look up "heresy." Many of these minor doctrines that create such friction are not heresy.
After all, what is our purpose here on the earth? And how are we to accomplish that? Shall we approach the unregenerate with the Gospel only after forcing him to confess and renounce every doctrine with which we disagree? That is not a requirement for salvation unless the doctrine in question is heresy. Correct teaching is extremely important and itself is a prominent NT (Pastoral Epistles esp) teaching but you only have to get a few things right to get right with Christ:
Christ is God made man.
All have sinned and fall short of God's standard.
The wages of sin is death.
Only Christ's sacrifice can make us right with God and save us from the penalty of sin.
"If your lips confess that Jesus is Lord and if you believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, then you will be saved. By believing from the heart you are made righteous; by confessing with your lips you are saved. (Romans 10:10 ff, Jerusalem Bible).
When the Jews asked Peter what they had to do to be saved, he said, " You must repent and evey one of you must be baptized in the name of Jesus Christ for the forgiveness of your sins and you will receive the gift of the Holy Spirit (Acts 2:37ff.)
Can any Catholic or non-Catholic disagree?
Hi Wordsmith, first time we've met,(cordially held out my hand in friendship) Lol
None of us are able to judge the heart of Constantine, God will take care of that part, but we are to judge sin, and condemn it where we see it, and on the outside it appears he had an evil streak as well as a good one as is true with most people, but a ruler's sins are recorded for everyone to see, whereby ours go un-noticed by history.
To me these legal executions as you call them appear to be more vengeful then mechanical as most executions are, such as scalding his wife to death, or strangling someone, that points to a revengeful murder and a certain pleasure taken in the act.
If a man's life is 50% decent or good, and is 50% evil, and he dies, his life is looked at as an evil life, since the effects of his evil are remembered, more then hi acts of good.
If a man's life is 50% good, and 50% evil, and on his death bed, he repents and is converted, he is forgiven by God for all his past sins, but God does not then give him credit for those 50% good things he did with out God's Spirit in him, which with the bad thing's forgiven him, all that was left were the good things, therefore it is deemed he will be rewarded for his 50% good he did in the kingdom, and the 50% evil is no more.
WE will be judged on what we do after conversion, not before, and if he died immediately after conversion before he had time to make any changes in his life, then the only credit he will receive in heaven is that he repented, such as the thief on the cross, but he will receive no rewards, as others who spend their life bearing fruits.
His rewards may simply be that he attained eternal life, but he may have no other rewards, or be given any real responsibilities compared to the patient Christian who didn't have the opportunities that Constantine had to accomplish great things, but they multiplied their talents a 100 fold, so now we have a man who at one time was the most powerful ruler on earth, and in the kingdom he will have no rewards, meaning he may be under any one of us.
If he's under me, I'm sure going to let him know how he blew it. Lol JH
True, Martin was a Catholic until he created his own religion...
"Religion", not church. Yes it is different, and I am just asking her to prove her assertion, which started a long discussion of Constantine.
Once you realize that you must have a divinely-guided interpreter to escape from such a morass, you are ready for a fuller faith in God's providential plan.
God bless you.
Or "cannon" and "canon". This is another illustration of the intellectual quality of people like this.
You are also simply wrong when you claim that the entire Old Testament as translated into Greek by the pre-Christian Jews of Alexandria was not the canonical scripture of the Church "until Trent". The Council of Trent is regarded by the Holy Orthodox Church as a conventicle of the Latin heretics and has no ecclesiological force for us, and yet, on the basis of the actions of local councils at Carthage and Laodicea, as confirmed by the Holy Ecumenical Councils of Chalcedon and Constantinople (4th and 6th), we have regarded the books in question (in particular with reference to prayer for the dead, the Books of First and Second Maccabees, which also contain the only explicit OT statement of the doctrine of the resurrection) as canonical ever since.
Trent merely restated for the Latins the canon which the Church had always held, and did so only out of necessity enforced by Luther's absolutization of the opinion of St. Jerome that the books not found in the Masorete were of lesser worth than those retained by the Jews. Neither St. Jerome nor Luther seem to have been aware that the Jewish canon was shortenned by anti-Christian rabbis at Jamnia in 90 A.D. Luther seem to have been under the misapprehension that the Masorete was an urtext, when in fact extant manuscripts of the Greek Old Testament, which include the complete Christian OT accepted by the Ecumenical Councils predate the earliest extant Hebrew text. In fact, all extant Hebrew OT's are redactions made by anti-Christian rabbis.
What part of my post did you consider to be a stone? JH
All "Christians" are part of the universal (catholic-small "c") church.
It is UNScriptural (false teaching) to tell people that a "work" (such as baptism or circumcision) must be performed or a person cannot be saved.
You can read all about it especially in Romans and Galatians.
In light of the fact that the blackest darkness forever is reserved for those who teach a different Jesus and a different gospel (Jude 12-13). I would think people would fear to teach works + grace is REQUIRED for salvation.
False teachers lead people to "spiritual death", therefore theirs is the greater punishment.
Abortionists (for instance) only deal in "physical death".
the point ... is: murder was murder then, just as it is now.Murder was, and is, the killing of an innocent person. Killing another person is not per se murder -- it is only murder if the person killed is innocent. In the case of war, the person who is killed (the enemy) is not innocent -- he is an unjust aggressor. In the case of capital punishment, the person who is killed (the capital offender) is not innocent -- he has violated a just law of the state, and the state is justified in protecting itself from the offender.
... Crispus was executed on the charge of immorality made against him by Constantine's second wife, Fausta. The charge was false, as Constantine learned from his mother, Helena, after the deed was done.Constantine killed Crispus (either directly or by mandate), and Crispus was apparently innocent. Is that murder? Objectively and materially, yes -- Constantine killed an innocent man. Does that mean that Constantine is a murderer? If Constantine knew beforehand that Crispus was innocent but killed him anyway, he would be not only objectively a murderer but subjectively one as well. But if he didn't know that Crispus was innocent, he would only be a murderer objectively, not subjectively. It's the subjective part -- Constantine's intention when he killed his son Crispus and the circumstances that informed Constantine's decision -- that is debatable.
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