BjornFree
New Member
Hi Oz,
I ought not to have made my post personal to you.
For which reason I did not use the forum's standard 'quote' facility......but then I spoiled it all by adding parenthesise around the bit that I extracted mainly from your prior post.
So, I apologise for that and, in the knowledge that many such people do post to forums along the lines which I described, I rephrase my post as follows:
What a tragedy when those who regard believers whose faith does not accord with their own as being heretics, and infiltrators, who come into the church, bringing postmodern, multicultural, metaphorical, metaphysical worldview and baggage with them, and sometimes even go so far as to expect a forum to ban such people.
Insular bigotry barely describes such an attitude.
Many such believers are hooked on creeds such as that of the Council of Nicaea, which originated at Constantine's instigation, and was introduced because of his fear of uncontrollable insurgence if the growth of Christianity were allowed to continue without 'definition'. All of the many divergent Christian beliefs that Constantine felt the need to rationalise were addressed by the resultant Creed.
The Council of Nicaea was instigated centuries after Christ, after the end of the apostolic era and, being comprised of secular as well as religious dignitaries, does not carry much weight with me.
The spirit of Constantine still lives on in Christianity today.
I ought not to have made my post personal to you.
For which reason I did not use the forum's standard 'quote' facility......but then I spoiled it all by adding parenthesise around the bit that I extracted mainly from your prior post.
So, I apologise for that and, in the knowledge that many such people do post to forums along the lines which I described, I rephrase my post as follows:
What a tragedy when those who regard believers whose faith does not accord with their own as being heretics, and infiltrators, who come into the church, bringing postmodern, multicultural, metaphorical, metaphysical worldview and baggage with them, and sometimes even go so far as to expect a forum to ban such people.
Insular bigotry barely describes such an attitude.
Many such believers are hooked on creeds such as that of the Council of Nicaea, which originated at Constantine's instigation, and was introduced because of his fear of uncontrollable insurgence if the growth of Christianity were allowed to continue without 'definition'. All of the many divergent Christian beliefs that Constantine felt the need to rationalise were addressed by the resultant Creed.
The Council of Nicaea was instigated centuries after Christ, after the end of the apostolic era and, being comprised of secular as well as religious dignitaries, does not carry much weight with me.
The spirit of Constantine still lives on in Christianity today.