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You're cherry picking your creeds to suit your needs!
I have a a question for you if I may . If the risen Christ was standing before you would you bow down and worship him ?I’m a Jewish monotheist. I believe in God. I believe also in Jesus Christ. That should be sufficient to establish me as a Christian. It did for them in the first century. Why would that not be sufficient for me In the twenty-first century?
I have a a question for you if I may . If the risen Christ was standing before you would you bow down and worship him ?
That was an unexpected answer. Can you elaborate on why you would consider it appropriate to worship the risen Christ, please? And would it be a different answer for the pre-resurrection Christ?Yes.
That was NOT completed in the days of the Apostles.I believe Jesus is God, figuratively, not literally.
Check and check.
I’ve agreed with that.
Jesus told his fellow Jewish monotheists that they believe in God. He commanded them to believe also in him. Right?
I’m a Jewish monotheist. I believe in God. I believe also in Jesus Christ. That should be sufficient to establish me as a Christian. It did for them in the first century. Why would that not be sufficient for me In the twenty-first century?
The answer seems to be, because I don’t affirm the post-biblical creeds. If we are to consider them Christians - you do and so do I - then why the additional requirement for me?
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As I see it, that was completed in the days of the Apostles.
Thus, Polycarp agrees with the teachings of the apostles that Jesus is God.Now may the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, and the eternal High Priest himself, the Son of God Jesus Christ, build you up in faith and truth and in all gentleness and in all freedom from anger and forbearance and steadfastness and patient endurance and purity, and may he give to you a share and a place among his saints, and to us with you, and to all those under heaven who will yet believe in our Lord and God Jesus Christ and in his Father who raised him from the dead.
In 19:3 he states:For our God, Jesus the Christ, was conceived by Mary according to God’s plan...
In 7:2 he states:Consequently all magic and every kind of spell were dissolved, the ignorance so characteristic of wickedness vanished, and the ancient kingdom was abolished, when God appeared in human form to bring the newness of eternal life...
And in 1:1:There is only one physician, who is both flesh and spirit, born and unborn, God in man, true life in death, both from Mary and from God, first subject to suffering and then beyond it, Jesus Christ our Lord.
In his letter to the Smyrnaeans 1:1 over whom Polycarp was Bishop he states:Being as you are imitators of God, once you took on new life through the blood of God you completed perfectly the task so natural to you.
Thus, Ignatius and Polycarp both referred to Jesus as God.I glorify Jesus Christ, the God who made you so wise...
He left orthodox Christianity to join a sect.I see that I need to clarify my position: They didn’t have to leave the Jewish faith. They didn’t leave the Jewish faith. They eventually had to leave the synagogues.
Where I can agree with your point is that Christianity later did leave the Jewish faith.
Christianity began as a sect of Judaism. The earliest Christians still met at the Temple and in synagogues. The home churches became the meeting places for the Jewish sect after they were “booted out” by the other sects of Judaism.
Jewish monotheism in the Church came before the post-biblical creeds. Harold O.J. Brown (another in your theological camp, this time a Protestant) poses a brilliant question to readers in his book Heresies: Heresy And Orthodoxy In The History Of The Church. I’ll have to think about whether or not posting it as a rhetorical question would be a problem.
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I thought about. I think it will be okay.
”Was the transition from the personal monotheism of Israel to the tri-personal theism of Nicaea a legitimate development of Old Testament revelation?”
When Dr. Brown says “personal monotheism” he is referring to Jewish monotheism. I don’t think I need to explain what he means when he says “tri-personal theism”. You know what that is.
Everyone should be able to acknowledge that a theological shift / transition has occurred in the history of the Church and then ask themselves the question Dr. Brown posed.
My position is that Christianity is fully defined in the first century. Further definition happened after the days of the Apostles, as history attests.
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Thanks. Do you accept then Tertullian as an ECF?
After 325 -> The Nicene Creed had to be modified in 381. (Again, the comment by Gregory of Nyssa is truly remarkable.) The Hypostatic Union comes to us from 451. I‘ve presumed that you accept these as valid developments. Please let me know if I’m mistaken about that.
That’s an interesting distinction that you’re drawing. I would say that the people in the first century are Christian by definition.
Yes, including the Apostles.
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It’s fine for this forum to make that a litmus test but in doing so, if enforced, puts out all who lived without ever knowing in their lifetimes that years after there day - as much as three hundred years later - such a creed would even come into existence. They didn’t meet the litmus test in their day - the litmus test didn’t even exist - and they were still Christians.
The connotation, perhaps unintended, is that what they believed is in some way lacking.
Why didn’t they know any better? You commented earlier that you would still believe what you do even if the post-biblical creeds had never been formulated. They weren’t affirming what you’re affirming.
This is becoming repetitive...I’m with them.
My road, my destination, ends in the first century.
No Matthias....What is my need? My need is to abide by the current board policy. I “cherry picked” the Apostles’ Creed because I believe it is the only post-biblical creed that we can discuss and remain in compliance with the policy.
I still believe that to be the case but I’m beginning to think that you may not.
No Matthias....
You picked the Apostles Creed because you don't agree with the Nicene Creed....
Which just BUILDS on the Ap Creed.
Do the Covenants, beginning with the Edenic,,,,build on each other or do they each abolish the previous one to
create a brand new covenant?
They build on each other.
Which is what the creeds do.
That was NOT completed in the days of the Apostles.
Was Jesus God?
Was Jesus man?
Was He 50% of each?
THIS was completed by the time of the Apostles?
No.
It took a lot of time to sort this type of doctrine....
which is what makes us Christians today.
You want to go just by the bible?
Good.
Then please explain Titus Our savior AND God
Or Thomas' assertion My Lord AND My God
And many statements Jesus made.
The Nicene Creed came at the tail end of many heresies that required a final and authoratative statement
to STOP them.
As I've said...you've turned the Apostles Creed into your bible.
Why? Because you don't like how the Nicene Creed is worded...
because it doesn't match YOUR understanding of scripture.
I'm going to have to side with the Early Church Fathers who either were taught by one of the Apostles OR
by one of those who learned from them....
Ignatius and Polycarp
Two of the earliest Church Fathers, Polycarp and Ignatius taught the deity of Christ. The early Church father, Irenaeus (circa AD 120–190) wrote that Polycarp was "instructed" and "appointed" by the apostles, and "conversed with many who had seen Christ...having always taught the things which he had learned from the apostles."[2] Irenaeus also wrote that he clearly remembered "the accounts which [Polycarp] gave of his intercourse with John and with the others who had seen the Lord. And as he remembered their words, and what he heard from them concerning the Lord, and concerning his miracles and his teaching, having received them from eyewitnesses of the ‘Word of life’."[3] So his view of Jesus is very important. In The Letter of Polycarp to the Philippians, he mentions "the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ" and "our Lord and God Jesus Christ."[4]
Thus, Polycarp agrees with the teachings of the apostles that Jesus is God.
Ignatius was the Bishop of Antioch at the same time Polycarp was the Bishop of Smyrna. He wrote seven letters to the Churches while en route to his execution in Rome around the year AD 110. In Ignatius’ Letter to the Ephesians 18:2 he states:
In 19:3 he states:
In 7:2 he states:
And in 1:1:
In his letter to the Smyrnaeans 1:1 over whom Polycarp was Bishop he states:
Thus, Ignatius and Polycarp both referred to Jesus as God.
There's much more...
source: The Early Church Fathers on Jesus
You can disagree with Ignatius and Polycarp...
But I cannot.
AND, they made the above statement by about 100AD......
MUCH BEFORE the Nicene Creed of 325AD.
He left orthodox Christianity to join a sect.
He has differing opinions about orthodox Christianity that is in opposition to what other ECFs believed.
So I don't use him for support for any doctrine that I would question.
Because I believe THE NEW TESTAMENT First and Foremost.
The creeds just explain, as best they can, the NT.
This is becoming repetitive...
Let alone the fact that I don't usually post re one topic for this length of time...
That was an unexpected answer. Can you elaborate on why you would consider it appropriate to worship the risen Christ, please?
And would it be a different answer for the pre-resurrection Christ?
This is what you stated in your post 790:You’ve defined orthodoxy as afiirmation of the Nicene Creed. The Nicene Creed didn’t exist at the time Tertuallian became a Montanist.
Language is important.Jesus is the Messianic King. David wasn’t the Messianic King but had I lived when he did I would have worshipped both he and God (1 Chronicles 29:20).
No.
This is what you stated in your post 790:
If the Apostles didn’t “complete“ them it is because they didn’t hold them. That is Father Fortman’s point. He uses the term “elemental trinitarianism” to describe their writings -> what they wrote doesn’t contain the doctrine but did contain the material which others could (and gradually over the centuries did) use to formulate the doctrine.
I see that we both agree that the IDEA/CONCEPT of what the Nicene Creed affirms were held from the beginning....starting with the NT.
Over time, a doctrine was formulated and authorized to stop heresies.
This is what I've been affirming from the beginning.
I think we should end on this note.
So both you and @APAK believe that JOSEPH is the biological father of Jesus?Does the Apostles’ Creed suggest to others the idea that God interacted miraculously / supernaturally with the virgin to breed a God? It doesn’t to me.
Language is important.
Worship, as it is understood TODAY, means something something different than what it meant in both the OT and even at the times of the NT.
So what are you going to do?
Give a definition of the word WORSHIP every time you mention it so that it can pertain also to a person?
Or is it easier to go by the definition of TODAY....
meaning that only God can be worshipped....and no man should be.
Again, you're adapting even this word to what You wish to believe....
So, then, it's OK to WORSHIP Mary?
By your definition it IS.
By common parlance it is NOT OK to worship Mary.
Doesn't matter Matthias.I don’t agree that the concept / idea of what the Nicene Creed affirms were held from the beginning.
So both you and @APAK believe that JOSEPH is the biological father of Jesus?
Well then....you better explain it every time you use the word...I’m a first century Christian living in the twenty-first century. What worship meant then is what worship means now to me.