Tzephanyahu
Member
So therefore, one has to take cultural influences, the times, the language, the meanings of symbols, etc. All of those were the vehicles of expression of something Transcendent, yet put into those symbols, for those people, of that day.
All this to say "I believe in God, until specific commandments and details are given by Him" - am I right in my conclusion? Apologies if I'm not. But it seems you like the idea of YHWH rather than YHWH Himself - as He has recorded Himself in the Scriptures.
I might have drawn a wrong conclusion though. Please forgive me if that's the case.
You do see different voices within scripture, from Genesis to Revelation, which pretty much mirrors what we see today with the progressive leaning, and more conservative voices vying back and forth together. When society pushes too far forward, conservative voices pull the other opposite direction. Those different voices in scripture, very much mirrors the stage we are at right now in our society in that struggle.
Do you have examples you can give me?
When I say Paul's voice is liberal, I mean he very much pushing the envelope, and not being a conservative. His views are rather radical, once you examine them.
I'm sorry but I can't agree with you on this. It just doesn't match who he was, what he stood for and what he wrote.
It sounds more like the Paul as modern Christianity likes to interpret him. That is to say - Paul minus the Old Testament and even some of the words of Messiah. That isn't a solid base for understanding Paul in my view.
That was the "Judaizers", trying to get the gentiles to be circumcised and follow all the rest of the law after conversion. So Paul's voice was liberal here, and the Judaizers were the conservatives.
Yes and no. Paul was indeed trying to stop an influence from the Circumcision party on new believers. But not to stop following the Law. "God Forbid!" as Paul even writes on the matter.
The concern was that the Circumcision Party were saying you need to be circumcised and keep the Law IN ORDER to be saved. Hence, undoing the work of Messiah and making it all about works.
However, if a believer lives a lawless life after his conversion - what reception can he expect from the Messiah on Judgement Day? A pleasant one?
Surely, as the Scriptures say, all will have to give account for the works they do, good and bad, and for every idle word they have uttered.
But you also see those different voices throughout scripture. They're both in there. Each side, speaking "Thus saith the Lord."
I can't think of an example of this. Can you share one?
I hear that as an expression set against a backdrop of culture and social changes that it has a particular meaning to them.
Well then, you have missed the very purpose of Scripture and the words of YHWH. The Bible has become simply a historic book for you.
I suppose the real advantage in this understanding is that you end up escaping all the judgements therein because, as you say...
So I'm guessing you take all the "nice bits" and leave the "bad bits", right?The power of scripture, is in its openness to find meaning. I don't limit the meaning to one view of it.
But I'm open to be proven wrong, always. So perhaps you may be able to share an example of when you have corrected your ways and character because of Scripture? Or an instance where you were living your life one way, and then changed because of what you read in the Bible.
It is curious to me how you characterize it as a hodgepodge mess. In what ways do you mean? Isn't diversity of beliefs within the community, all held with a common love of each other as the body of Christ, what creates unity? Isn't it's love that creates unity, not uniformity of beliefs? If you only love those who love you, what does that benefit you, Jesus might ask.
My friend, I would love it if we could all get along. And I, for one, happily do - whether the person proclaims their JW, Catholic, Methodist, Baptist, SDA, Messianic - the list goes on and on. But unfortunately, that is not the case for a lot of others - who prefer to be divisive for the sake of adhering to their theology.
So yes, for the Atheist coming along to Christianity with an interest to learn more - it can seem like a mess and be very confusing on "how to start", "who to join" and "who is right".
Just being honest on the matter.
Are you saying that don't tell them they need to get circumcised and obey all the law of Moses at first, but ease them into it, and when they are mature they will be obeying the law and following all its observances? That is not at all the meaning I read in Romans 14. The very opposite of that is what I read in fact. I hope that is not what you are saying, as there is an abundance of scripture that negates that.
Yes, that's pretty much what I'm saying. But if you have an "abundance of Scripture" that negates that, I challenge you to provide it to me. With one caveat...
As the Apostle Peter says in 2 Peter 3, Paul is hard to understand and many people misinterpret him. So, seeing as you and I can't agree on Paul - let's assume one of us is wrong.
Therefore, in the remaining 53 books of the Bible, please present your case. You have more than enough Scripture remaining to cite. You can of course quote the words of YHWH and the Messiah to back your case.
I read that chapter to say
Hey, I know you love Romans 14 right, but it's part of a long letter in a long book.
I could easily make you seem to say something my quoting only a fraction of all your posts on this forum. Context is everything.
(I over replied... sorry... continued next post. )
Not at all! It's an interesting discussion. And I over reply too..