Mar 05 2010

The Scriptures are Like Christ: Truly Divine and Truly Human

Category: InerrancyPolycarp @ 11:59 am

Even if you aren’t a Lutheran, and I am not, you might enjoy this:

The Holy Scripture is God’s Word, written and, so to speak, lettered and put into the form of letters (gebuchstabet und in Buchstaben gebildet), just as Christ, the eternal Word of God, is clothed in humanity. And men regard and treat the written Word of God in this world just as they do Christ. It is a worm and no book compared with other books. (Martin Luther, WA 48, 31 [1541]; quoted in What Luther Says [Saint Louis: Concordia Publishing House, 1959], p. 71)

Read the rest here:

CyberBrethren-A Lutheran Blog » The Scriptures are Like Christ: Truly Divine and Truly Human.

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Jan 27 2010

Scripture Does Not Speak of Christ

Category: TheologyPolycarp @ 11:59 am

TC has a post up of an essay written by someone else. This is a part of it, but read the whole thing:

For most of Protestantism Scripture has become a book of rules to be followed, a set of principles to inform how we reshape the world, a set of practical tools to better your life, or a road map to lead you from here to eternity. But that is just plain wrong. Scripture is the voice of God. Scripture is the discourse of God in human words. This Word is powerful and can do what it claims and keep all its promises. This Word has the power to call and gather the Church.

via “Scripture Does Not Speak of Christ” by Pr. Peters « Taking Thoughts Captive….

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Jan 21 2010

How the Early Church Read the Bible

Category: Church FathersPolycarp @ 11:59 am

The early church was as thoroughly convinced of the Bible’s historical reliability as modern evangelicals are. Yet, thought Bob, those Christians were in better tune with the way the Bible tells its own story: focusing on images that reveal the repeated patterns of God’s activity.

Interesting, but ‘reliability’ might be open to interpretation.

via How the Early Church Read the Bible | Christianity Today | A Magazine of Evangelical Conviction.

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Dec 26 2009

Is Inerrancy an Essential Christian Doctrine?

Category: InerrancyPolycarp @ 8:59 am

Henry posted something the other day which is a continuing conversation which I have not only with others, but with the Scriptures.

Continue reading “Is Inerrancy an Essential Christian Doctrine?”

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Dec 07 2009

The New Living Translation is a Valid Translation

Category: Bible Translation, KJV, NLTPolycarp @ 2:18 pm

Read the entire post here, but Joel summarizes it here:

The flaw in the reasoning seems so clear to me that I have to wonder why people are so attracted to the idea that “all translations are equally valid.”

Continue reading “The New Living Translation is a Valid Translation”

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Nov 02 2009

The Bible Justifies Slavery (0-1865)

Category: Debate/DiscussionPolycarp @ 7:43 pm

Paula, with whom I don’t always agree, and might not agree fully here, has an excellent point that I believe we should take to heart. The bible has been used for a variety of reasons, but it generally comes down to two things:

  • To become justified
  • To justify your actions

Continue reading “The Bible Justifies Slavery (0-1865)”

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Nov 02 2009

Scriptural Testimony to Preservation and the Need to have a Critical Text

Category: CriticismPolycarp @ 1:00 pm

Textual Criticism is a necessary enterprise for the Church. Since the very beginning, men (women are off the hook here as for the longest, women simply weren’t allowed even power to pull stunts like these) have tried to change the Scriptures, what some of us call the Word of God.

Continue reading “Scriptural Testimony to Preservation and the Need to have a Critical Text”

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Jul 24 2009

100 of BibleGateway's Most Read Verses

Category: Debate/DiscussionPolycarp @ 7:51 pm

It’s a pretty amazing list – and gives some insight into the verses that mean something to people (at least those using BibleGateway).

Check it out:  BibleGateway.com – News & tips from 100 .com.

David Ker @ Think Christian finishes he post, with

Thomas Jefferson is famous for having cut out all the parts of the Bible he didn’t like and creating his personal Bible. I wonder if we don’t do the same thing just without the scissors. Are all Scriptures equally inspired? And if so, what do we do with the tough stuff in the Old Testament?

That is an important question – especially looking over the list of verses.

What are some of your favorite verses?

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Jul 23 2009

Brennan Manning On Idolatry Of The Scriptures

Category: QuotesPolycarp @ 11:59 pm

I am deeply distressed by what I only can call in our Christian culture the idolatry of the Scriptures. For many Christians, the Bible is not a pointer to God but God himself… God cannot be confined within the covers of a leather-bound book. I develop a nasty rash around people who speak as if mere scrutiny of its pages will reveal precisely how God thinks and precisely what God wants. HT.

And another quote -

“The greatest single cause of atheism in the world today are Christians who acknowledge Jesus with their lips and walk out the door and deny Him by their lifestyle,”

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Jul 07 2009

Can you explain away Christianity?

Category: DevotionalPolycarp @ 7:59 pm

Two posts which are somewhat related – two questions for you to think about.

Let’s set it up:

Let’s say that Christianity is an imagined community from the ground up. No Resurrection of a political Jesus. No miracles. No signs and wonders. No fulfillment of prophecies. Let’s say that the earliest written accounts of this myth called  the Son of God, Jesus, was made by a disenchanted Pharisee who took up the rallying cry of a dead Jew. Let’s just say that the biblical accounts of the Resurrection of Christ and the beginning of the Church from Pentecost onward is little more than children’s fairy tales, told to urge rebellion against Nero.

But, we have to answer the history provide for in the Talmud and in other secular sources. Further, while we may discount the miracles of Acts, let’s say we take for a moment the life of Paul – that disenchanted, no good, Pharisee. He preached a risen Christ 30 years after it was said to have happened. He was there, after all, then Stephen had his life exercised from him for speaking in that name of Jesus Christ. He must have known that Jesus was alive and well or dead and buried.

Yet, something happened to that Pharisee where he not only took up the banner of that dead rebel, but began to move it away from the Jewish roots to a combined system of Jew and Gentile, Male and Female, Bond and Free. And others joined him.

Of course, he met only a few of the close followers of the dead man. Surely, he would have not mistaken their deep seated ‘he is still with us’ mythology for an actual account of the Resurrection – not enough to rehearse it to a physician.

How can we explain away Christianity if there was a sudden explosion of this new myth which not only saw people willing die – those people that had heard the message of the rebellion from others – but also the closest followers of the decaying man? And what about this Paul fellow? He died too. He killed to prevent the message from being spread. Then he died to spread it.

We can explain away a few hundred people believing a man is a god or a lord, but can we explain thousands to tens of thousands of people who heard the message, who turned from killing to dying for it?

Here are those two articles -

So we are left with options. Either take the NT as it is, more or less; accept an historical analysis that raises more questions than it answers; . . . . or or or . . . .

And

Assuming its true, He’s God. He offers you a life that is radically different; he offers you the opportunity to live forever; he offers you the ability to live to the fullest imaginable extent, IF you buy into his presentation, assuming he really is who he says he is.

We hear an awfully lot about what the message of Christ cannot be true, why He was a really a political rebel, and ever increasing attacks upon our faith – yet, even if you take away the Scriptures, how can you explain away Christianity?

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