Posted on 01/27/2008 7:56:14 PM PST by Manfred the Wonder Dawg
Amen, amen, amen.
Yes, it is. And it’s wonderful.
You’re a sad case, Kolo, if you think you have ‘the truth.’ God will have the final say to all of us but loving Him and having a relationship with Him here on earth beats any church hierarchy and some of the rites you claim bring salvation. It comes by faith in Him and Him alone, not baptism, not the eucharist, not any rites. We will always disagree on those things but I trust my God to bring all of us to the truth.
You are so wrong, but you will never see it.
If I am correct in assuming that you include us calf-licks among the "apostolic", this testifies to me that we have done a downright HORRIBLE job of communicating.
Last night at Mass (the Gospel reading was the anointing at Bethany; the sermon was in invitation to give your "best stuff", to squander it, on paying attention to the Love of God) I was thinking that the Great Battle of the Passion was not just about humans and human souls and salvation (as though that weren't enough), but about wresting the entire cosmos from Satan's grasp.
TO be totally and geekily ridiculous, the death of Christ is like the bomb that Luke Skywalker is able to send right into the heart of the death-star. Sorta kinda as kosta said, Satan expected a corpse and got a nuke!
IN the dark ages, when I was very young and toys weren't designed for children, I got a present that involved winding something up. Being a southpaw (and very very young) I wound it up backwards and fried the spring completely.
The Passion and death fried Satan's clockwork. Without Jesus, evil leads to evil. WITH Jesus, Joseph's betrayal by his brothers saves God's promise to Abraham and saves their own lives.
Death is no longer an end but a beginning ...
I could go on and on. Let us all glorify the miracle of Easter!
As a Dominican whose excellence as a writer is exceeded only by his modesty wrote a dozen years ago:
Always mind that though Lent lasts forty days, the holy season of Easter lasts a full fifty days, from Easter Day until Pentecost, and is followed by still more feasts, those of the Holy Trinity and of the Sacred Body and Blood of Our Lord. It is as though, after a time of sorrow, our Joy -- even our merriment -- should continue until we can celebrate no more. We are spent before our Joy is done.Of course, in my household we don't say that last word until Easter. We say "A-word", so we can save up the whoopee.And must it not be so: that though our sin gives grave cause for great and lengthy sorrow, yet the great Triumph of the Love of God, made plain in the rising of The Son, gives weightier cause for greater and more lengthy Joy? We ought to grieve and to be abashed for a season, because our sin required so dreadful and doleful a remedy. But much more ought we to make merry because Our Sweet Lord so willingly paid the price of our sin and now is risen gloriously.
And much more still ought we to rejoice because He carries us as captives in His climbing train and bears us as precious trophies to lay before the Fathers throne. Alleluia!
Both were inspired by God, "God Breathed".
Not that it should matter, but I’m with FK on this. I think “Abba” means “Papa” which in most of the US translates as “Daddy”.<p.And it is the very terror of the “consuming fire” of the OT that makes the divine permission to think of Him as “Papa”, that is the miracle, I think.
You wrote:
“So is worshipping the church...”
Thank goodness we’ve never done that. We just worship God.
I know that the scripture is inspired by God and do not dispute that. I am Catholic, you know.
Are you familiar with the people called St. Matthew, St. Mark, St. John, St. Luke, St. Paul, St. Peter, St. James and St. Jude?
MD: I'm sure it's the handicap of my up-bringing, but I sure never heard THAT one before.
I don't feel like playing softball so I'll let that one go.
MD: Are there any other instances in Scripture where Scripture and being "born of water" are in that kind of metaphorical relationship?
Yes.
Eph.5:26 that he might sanctify and cleanse her with the washing of water by the word
IPet.1:23 having been born again, not of corruptible seed, but incorruptible, through the word of God which lives and abides forever,
I am sure Kosta is referring to the modern goofy connotation of "daddy" nonstop promoted by the secular media, and not the sense of familial intimacy with God that Christ gave us in His Church.
Rings a bell .... Um, didn't the last one start a hospital or something?
One of the reasons we fail to communicate is that when I read "word", usually my first (not my only thought, just my first) thought is "Jesus", while I think you guys think "Bible" first.
I suddenly got booked, but I'll muse upon these texts.
Where do you find this in the scriptures? There is nothing that says they were ordained or that they were anything but laity exercising the gifts given to everyone in the church.
Fine, if +Mark is not included, +Matthew was the real witnessed. He heard the Commission. +Luke had to “research” it and all he could come up with is eleven plus women (I suppose the women who discovered the empty tomb, and even that is controversial as to how many were there).
But Luke says he got his information from eyewitnesses to the events he was reporting. A simple solution to the problem could be there were to Great Commissions; one taking place indoors and the other outdoors with the makeup of the audience including the same people along with others in the different audiences.
In fact, Matthew's Genealogy of Joseph and Luke's differ on very crucial points: Jospeh’s own father's name and the number of generations and names involved.
Matthews genealogy is of Joseph and Lukes is of Mary; both being from the tribe of Judah.
+Luke's account of +Paul's “event” on the way to Damascus doesn't agree with +Paul's own, or +Paul's account abut the division that boiled up in Jerusalem with the party of +James.
Where is there a disagreement?
My point exactly. +Paul is adamant about women being silent in the church.
There is no evidence that Priscilla was teaching in the church. It says she and Aquilla took him unto them and expounded unto him the way of God more perfectly. They took him aside and taught him privately. There is no disagreement with Paul or the early church.
kosher magicsterical
IF
it affirmed one of the many strange perspectives postulated hereon. LOL.
Certainly, at the very least . . . it shows that DADDY is not at all a far fetched translation that only 'ignorant non-Greeks' would think of.
Have often thought of the issue.
I think INTIMATE RELATIONSHIPS influence behavior wholesale.
We wouldn't dream of offending a beloved wife or hubby we were intimately enraptured with and devoted to.
I think satan makes much hay with all of us when he can emphasize even a perceived distance between us and God . . . whether through a large, pontifical, encrusted, gilded, processional, hierarchically elaborately constructed magicsterical and RELIGIOUS CLUB or 'merely' through trying to shred the SCRIPTURAL ABBA FATHER, DADDY.
Christ shed HIS BLOOD that I might have intimacy with DADDY. Far be it from me to mangle that effort, intent, reality . . . or to try and define it out of existence . . . or to layer all manner of rital and hogwash between, in the middle of it.
merely illustrative of man-made theologies.
= = =
I certainly recognize the RC reps and magicsterical trumping the rest of us on being masters of that phenomena.
BRACE YOURSELF.
i AGREE!
goofy connotation of “daddy”
= =
Had I felt that close to an earthly Daddy,
I would certainly not have considered it goofy! Sheesh!
Blessed,
Treasured,
God-sent,
Protective,
Thrilling,
Redemptive,
Guiding,
Supportive,
Loving,
Righteous,
Godly,
. . .
. . .
NOT goofy, at all.
I did have some cousins who could do goofy quite well, however.
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