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To: Forest Keeper; irishtenor; the_conscience; wmfights; Dr. Eckleburg; Kolokotronis; stfassisi; ...
Well, I know that the Latins rely on a handful of verses for the immense power they claim for their Magisterium. Do I take it that the Orthodox rely more on early extra-scriptural documents for the powers ascribed to your clergy?

I am not sure I am following you? What "powers" do the clergy have that are extrascriptural? And while we are on the subject of 'extrascriptural," please find where do the scriptures talk about the "power" ascribed to "sola scriptura?" 

I agree that worship is why we go to church, but I don't know how proper worship can be done without knowing the word of God

How is it that the Church could canonize the NT, yet not understand it, FK? or, worse, how could it know the truth of the NT and express something other than that in its liturgical prayers?

The Apostolic Church knew the word of God from the beginning because the Apostles were there when it was received and the Apostles were there when their successors were ordained to carry on the worship which expresses our belief, and their successors' successors were there and so on to this day.

Our worship comes form Judaism. Our fasting twice a week comes from Judaism. Our scripture readings come from Judaism. Our bowing  to God and kissing of holy objects comes from Judaism. Our incens comes form Judaism. The Eucharist, as a form of offering, comes from Judaism. Our giving thanks before the meals comes from Judaism. Our standing when the Gospels are read comes from Judaism (the Jews stand when the Torah is read). Our singing in the church comes from Judaism. Our calling churches temples (in orthodoxy) comes from Judaism.  Our lighting of candles comes from Judaism. Our priests come from Judaism. Our liturgy comes form Judaism.

The Jews did not have lecture halls; they had synagogues, places of liturgical worship. They distinguished religious classes and study groups from synagogues. Our churches are not lecture halls either. They are places of worship. Our churches are built architecturally to resemble the Temple, not lecture halls. In other words, we are a continuum; not an innovation.

We have the same worship as the Church when it canonized the Bible 1,700 years ago. If the Church was capable of infallibly choosing the Christian canon, then the same faith must have been expressed in that Church's Divine Liturgy. Lex orandi, lex credendi. We believe how we pray.

And nothing is more telling of that truth then to actually attend a Divine Liturgy and pay attention to everything that is sung and said. Whatever is in it, was in it when the Church proclaimed the canon. One mind. One faith. One Church. Unchanged in the East to this day

2,191 posted on 02/17/2008 6:44:54 PM PST by kosta50 (Eastern Orthodoxy is pure Christianity)
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To: kosta50; Forest Keeper; irishtenor; the_conscience; wmfights; Dr. Eckleburg; Kolokotronis; ...
The Apostolic Church knew the word of God from the beginning because the Apostles were there when it was received and the Apostles were there when their successors were ordained to carry on the worship which expresses our belief, and their successors' successors were there and so on to this day.

No doubt you base this upon incontrovertible empirical data, using the same methodology as your Bible criticism, and have all the evidence to prove that all the rituals and dogma of the Greek church is directly handed down from the Apostles. (BTW, that would exclude any indirect references to old testament Jewish customs)

I'll be waiting.

2,200 posted on 02/17/2008 10:22:45 PM PST by the_conscience ('The human mind is a perpetual forge of idols'.)
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To: kosta50; Alamo-Girl; irishtenor; the_conscience; wmfights; Dr. Eckleburg; Quix; Kolokotronis; ...
I am not sure I am following you? What "powers" do the clergy have that are extrascriptural?

All supernatural powers claimed by Apostolic clergy that are related to Apostolic succession are extra-scriptural. No where does the Bible state that the Apostles transferred their unique powers to "forgive sins", or raise the dead, or physically heal, etc. In current Orthodox practice, the extra-scriptural banner would include the clergy ONLY requesting without fail that the bread and wine be transformed, the clergy ONLY requesting without fail that the Holy Spirit enter a specific individual, the clergy ONLY requesting without fail that sins be forgiven, etc.

In addition, while I understand that in Orthodoxy nothing the hierarchy comes up with stands without the consent of the laity, however, it seems just a fact that the hierarchy has taken it upon itself to DECLARE what God means by His own word, IN CONTRADICTION to God's own word. Therefore, the claimed power to do that must be extra-scriptural. When Philip taught the eunuch, I presume that when he told the Good News that he only told what would later become the NT, not the extra-scriptural interpretations of the Apostolic Church. For example, I presume that Philip taught the eunuch that he must understand that he is a sinner because all people are sinners and need forgiveness and a Savior. I can't imagine Philip explaining this and adding "that is, except for this woman named Mary". That would have been an extra-scriptural addition:

Prov 30:5-6 : 5 "Every word of God is flawless; he is a shield to those who take refuge in him. 6 Do not add to his words, or he will rebuke you and prove you a liar.

Philip was directly being led by the Spirit when he taught the eunuch so no doubt he was aware of this verse (truth).

And while we are on the subject of 'extrascriptural," please find where do the scriptures talk about the "power" ascribed to "sola scriptura?"

Well, as I understand it we don't agree on what the "scriptures" even ARE as portrayed in the scriptures. So on this subject I would assume you throw out the entire NT. But even so, there are plenty of OT verses that talk about the power of God's word, such as the above. Here are a few of others:

Deut 4:2 : Ye shall not add unto the word which I command you, neither shall ye diminish ought from it, that ye may keep the commandments of the Lord your God which I command you. KJV

Deut 12:32 : What thing soever I command you, observe to do it: thou shalt not add thereto, nor diminish from it. KJV

Ps 119:160 : All your words are true; all your righteous laws are eternal. [i.e., as opposed to the words of men]

I don't know of any scripture that says that we should follow the later teachings of men that are not found in the scriptures, and which are equal with scriptures. That is an extra-scriptural authority created and claimed by men.

I'll bet you'll want to throw at me some verses having the Apostles saying that we should "follow these teachings". You will assume that includes your unspoken-of-in-scripture-Tradition, and I will say it doesn't. My evidence is that those Apostles knew the OT and the verses I quoted above. Your argument would have to be that they were completely unaware of those verses or ideas [that God's word should not be added to, or that it was singularly true].

How is it that the Church could canonize the NT, yet not understand it, FK?

Well, I think you see the writing and Canonizing of the Bible to be mostly a work of men. I judge by how often your side claims personal human credit for both. STF even insists that my side agrees that we owe thanks to your men. :) However, we actually believe that God determined what His own word would be and that He controlled what the correct books were to be for His revelation (our Bible). Therefore, whether any particular Bishop understood it or not is not really relevant. What was relevant is what the Church as a whole understood, including the laity, led by God, at the time.

I disagree with the Orthodox contention that what you believe today is the same as what "the Church" always and everywhere believed. You can probably show me liturgies that show what was preached in some churches was the same, but I'm not sure how you can conclude that is what "all good Christians" believed. As Harley, WM, and others say and show all the time, there were Church Fathers who wrote and taught things very different from what you believe today. Depending on what you mean by "the Church" (the definition seems to change every time the term is used :), that would break "always and everywhere believed".

[continuing:] ... or, worse, how could it know the truth of the NT and express something other than that in its liturgical prayers?

You have stated a few times before your belief that the actual books that were to be included in the Bible were literally horse-traded among men. Obviously this process would be wholly apart from God, so on that basis I cannot vouch at all for what level of truth the hierarchical "voters" held at the time.

The Apostolic Church knew the word of God from the beginning because the Apostles were there when it was received and the Apostles were there when their successors were ordained to carry on the worship which expresses our belief, and their successors' successors were there and so on to this day.

You assume perfect transfer of belief ALONG with perfect transfer of supernatural powers, and we both know that history does not reveal that, in fact, in shows something VERY different. We have all those Bishops' skulls, etc. :) We know for a fact that laying on of hands, or whatever ritual is used to transfer power, does NOT do so perfectly in faith and is NO guarantee at all that what the student teaches will be anything like what the master taught.

2,612 posted on 02/21/2008 11:40:46 PM PST by Forest Keeper (It is a joy to me to know that God had my number, before He created numbers.)
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