Moderator: Dave Roberts
Haruo wrote:This is a thread to continue and develop a discussion between me and Tim Bonney (mainly) that has most recently been cropping up as a weed along the roadways of a couple of other threads:
Dave Roberts wrote:I would be interested in participating in these discussions. I hope I have matured over the years in some of these. I wold recommend trying to deal with one issue at a time. Frankly, it would be good to have some substantive concerns voiced.
Dave Roberts wrote:I would be interested in participating in these discussions. I hope I have matured over the years in some of these. I wold recommend trying to deal with one issue at a time. Frankly, it would be good to have some substantive concerns voiced.
KeithE wrote:I’ll join the discussion.
My view is that somehow people have gotten the idea that they can meaningfully define (set boundaries) who are true Christians and who aren’t. I leave that declaration to God. As far as our human understanding, being a Christian is a fuzzy class whose boundary cannot be perfectly set in a binary (in or out) mode. And there is no necessity to make the classification (Christian or Non-Christian, saved or not saved). We are playing God if we do so, be the boundaries theological beliefs or more behavioral.
Haruo wrote:Well certainly as Tim has couched the issue, the question is largely, what are your "core values", and are they the same as those of the Church Universal (or at least the historic, orthodox Church)?
Bruce Gourley wrote:Good discussion. I would add that:
* Creeds are by nature imperfect and have too frequently been used by (almost always) men with their own personal agendas to kill, maim, exclude, banish, etc. those who are deemed unorthodox (of course, many Baptists of the 17th and 18th centuries were thus treated by orthodox authorities). Not to mention that orthodoxy is continuously changing, and that even in the early church, many Christians never agreed with the major creeds.
Hence, historic Baptist opposition to creeds and openness to a variety of theological beliefs, resulting in their harsh persecution by those of orthodox certainty.
Big Daddy Weaver wrote:I do have respect for folks such as yourself Timothy who leave the Baptist fold, following your individual convictions!, to join another tradition more in line with their sincerely held beliefs.
I'm not a fan of folks who try to radically change a tradition to make that tradition something it has historically never been.
I think its a positive when Baptists, Methodists, Catholics, etc. attempt to stay true to the best of our respective histories.
Tim Bonney wrote:Are you suggesting (without mentioning his name) that Steve Harmon is seeking to change Baptist tradition? Or are you just speaking generically?
I would argue that Baptist tradition has shifted from being comfortable with faith statements such as the London Confession, the New Hampshire Confession etc. and now in recent history Baptists (particularly moderate Baptists) want to consistently and carefully proclaim that Freedom is the number one doctrine. Yet I'd say that declaring freedom as the number one doctrine isn't historically Baptist. It is a recent development in reaction to fundamentalism and the SBC takeover.
Tim Bonney wrote:Bruce Gourley wrote:Good discussion. I would add that:
* Creeds are by nature imperfect and have too frequently been used by (almost always) men with their own personal agendas to kill, maim, exclude, banish, etc. those who are deemed unorthodox (of course, many Baptists of the 17th and 18th centuries were thus treated by orthodox authorities). Not to mention that orthodoxy is continuously changing, and that even in the early church, many Christians never agreed with the major creeds.
Hence, historic Baptist opposition to creeds and openness to a variety of theological beliefs, resulting in their harsh persecution by those of orthodox certainty.
Bruce I always hesitate to disagree with you because you are such a consumate historian. But surely there is a center, a foundation, a seed of Christian doctrine that is essential? Are you saying there are no doctrinal essentials at all? There are no Christian beliefs that are essential to be a Christian? If that is the case what indeed is Christianity?
By the way most of the mainline denominations (UMC, PCUSA, ECUSA, ELCA, and UCC) have statements of faith which represent the official position of the denomination. Can you tell me that any of these denominations have problems with oppressing people based on doctrine? I've certainly not seen it. In fact I see a lot more theological freedom in the above denominations than I do in many Baptist churches.
Bruce Gourley wrote:
No human-penned Christian creeds or statements are essential to being a Christian; scripture alone - in and of itself, not interpretations of scripture - is a written authority, while Christ is the center of Christianity and following Christ the living of Christianity. Freedom of conscience (Williams called it "soul liberty"), necessary for voluntary (uncoerced) faith, is the prerequisite for genuine faith. These were the core convictions of early Baptists.
Tim Bonney wrote:Bruce Gourley wrote:No human-penned Christian creeds or statements are essential to being a Christian; scripture alone - in and of itself, not interpretations of scripture - is a written authority, while Christ is the center of Christianity and following Christ the living of Christianity. Freedom of conscience (Williams called it "soul liberty"), necessary for voluntary (uncoerced) faith, is the prerequisite for genuine faith. These were the core convictions of early Baptists.
Bruce you know as well as I do that scripture didn't drop out of the sky already written but that the early church decided what books would be in the canon. How do you factor this into the "scripture alone" ideal? Doesn't the work of the creation of the canon factor into what is Christian doctrine since the people who decide what ended up in thy canon obviously effected the canon itself?
Also I've noticed that basically you've still not answered my question about any essential doctrines. Are there no areas of required agreement for the faith beyond "Christ is the center of Christianity" and "scripture is a written authority?" Are there valid guides for interpretation? Or do you just hand someone a Bible and say "good luck, I can't tell you what any of this means because I might be stepping on your 'soul freedom' you are all on your own."
Bruce Gourley wrote:Of course scripture did not arrive in a vacuum. And of course early learned Baptists were versed in Christian tradition, and learned from it. Yet they chose not to place their faith in such tradition. Again, it was a scandalous proposition at the time.
So, among early Baptists and today, yes ... there are valid guides for interpreting scripture ... but no one authoritative guide.
Now, I am curious why you would (if you do) place your faith in a fourth-century politicized and politically-policed religious statement that was largely penned by two brothers and a friend and designed to flush out theological opponents and persecute them as heretics? (I am speaking, of course, of the Nicene Creed.)
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