Only being dubbed an atheist on a poor substitute test really.mitsuki lover wrote:Has anyone gotten an answer that they totally were shocked with and disagreed with the result?
Bobtheduck wrote: What the heck does that mean? I guess I'm not all that familiar with Church history, not enough to know all those terms...
Um... It was amazing that there were like 6 questions on there that related to beliefs that John said flat out meant you were following satan... Jesus being only a spirit, that the entire physical world is corrupt (material world made by satan?!)
Suicide is a good way to get rid of the evil of the body: There are people who believe this? Eiri Masami's influence spreads beyond anime! O_o
Having been the first creation of the Father, the Son then created the Holy Spirit: Except that The Holy Spirit is mentioned in the Old Testament... a number of times...
A baptism is invalid if performed by a minister who later renounces his faith: Doesnt' that mean that your fate (given this likely means that person believes babtism is a requirement for salvation) rests upon the personal choices of someone other than you? Um... I'll say straight out, relax... Don't worry about your salvation in the event your pastor sticks his hand in the cookie jar or runs away with the organist (or worse) because if you believe in Jesus and give your life to him and confess your sins and confess Jesus as your savior, you're saved... Has nothing to do with the heart of anyone else involved in the process... Man, what a silly thing to create paranoia about...
Article on Donatism wrote:The effectiveness of the baptism or administration of the Lord's supper does not cease to be effective if the moral character of the minister is in question or even demonstrated to be faulty. Rather, the sacraments are powerful because of what they are, visible representations of spiritual realities. God is the one who works in and through them and He is not restricted by the moral state of the administrant.
Puritan wrote:Karl Barth was a Reformed theologian from Switzerland who founded the Neo-Orthodox school of theology in the early 20th century.
Personality quiz? That wouldn't say anything about theology, particularly with a more limited focus like base orthodoxy.mitsuki lover wrote:To be honest a perfect personality quiz of any type would have to be more than 20 pages long and have hundreds of questions with each question having more than
5 or 6 possibilites.However such a test would be impossible to administer on the
internet considering bandwidth involved.
Also you have to remember that such quizzes will more or less reflect the creators personal bias in some subtle way.
GhostontheNet wrote:Personality quiz? That wouldn't say anything about theology, particularly with a more limited focus like base orthodoxy.
These days it seems it's generally agreed base orthodoxy would be agreement with the Apostolic, Nicene, and Chalcedonian creeds, and since these aren't themselves very long or complex (though the Chalcedonian is the most complex), it doesn't take long to test.AnimeHeretic wrote:It's a good point. Though I'm sure there are many who would disagree on what consisted of orthodoxy too. It would be rather hard to create a test everyone would be satisfied with.
GhostontheNet wrote:These days it seems it's generally agreed base orthodoxy would be agreement with the Apostolic, Nicene, and Chalcedonian creeds, and since these aren't themselves very long or complex (though the Chalcedonian is the most complex), it doesn't take long to test.
Ah yes, the root of the occasional outbreak of spiritual McCarthyism in some churches where woe is you if you disagree with some of their positions - you will get seriously censured or kicked out. Whence all this accursed factionalism in the Church? This isn't what Yeshua prayed for! Arrghh.AnimeHeretic wrote:Ah, that orthodoxy. I was thinking of the different understandings between denominations and their definitions of orthodoxy. Yes I would think those creeds would be a good place to start.
GhostontheNet wrote:Ah yes, the root of the occasional outbreak of spiritual McCarthyism in some churches where woe is you if you disagree with some of their positions - you will get seriously censured or kicked out. Whence all this accursed factionalism in the Church? This isn't what Yeshua prayed for! Arrghh.
In context the passage is about one who transgresses against their brother. Getting kicked out for holding to systems like partial/orthodox preterism (as has happened to some of us), or getting kicked out for playing styles of music they don't like, etc. would hardly count as not being spiritual Mcarthyism. Getting kicked out for denying the terms of the creeds which have been the cornerstone of apostolic Christianity for centuries is an entirely different thing altogether though.AnimeHeretic wrote:I don't think it's all Spiritual McCarthyism. There are some elements that are seen as crucial for the faith. People who want to reject that can't expect to be seen as members in good standing. Even Christ made reference to treating the people who will not hear the Church as if they were a tax collector.
GhostontheNet wrote:In context the passage is about one who transgresses against their brother. Getting kicked out for holding to systems like partial/orthodox preterism (as has happened to some of us), or getting kicked out for playing styles of music they don't like, etc. would hardly count as not being spiritual Mcarthyism. Getting kicked out for denying the terms of the creeds which have been the cornerstone of apostolic Christianity for centuries is an entirely different thing altogether though.
So too a good deal of Christians have very little inkling of the importance and meaning of our history at any stage of it - a pity. The serious downside of denying articles of the classic creeds is that it greatly diminishes the elegant beauty of the Biblical narrative and leaves major aspects of God's nature to be essentially half-baked. A lot of churches will at least teach the contents of the creeds though not in the form of the creeds.mitsuki lover wrote:And while the Creeds are considered the basis of Orthodoxy it should be pointed out that not all Christians necessarily agree with the importance of the Creeds these days.
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