M
Man.0
Guest
I try to let God tell me who He is rather than vice versa.
Yes, we should have knowledge of God through revelation, not interpretation.
I try to let God tell me who He is rather than vice versa.
my paradigm is catholic
that tells you a lot about myself
Because that is what most people identify as being a follower of Christ since the time the Way spread to Antioch, which is how I view myself.so why would you call yourself christian?
Wow... the English G word which comes from Gott. I prefer to think of God in Hebrew words which give Hebraic connotations or meanings. But possibly to answer your question I believe although Jesus is not El Elyon, the Most High "God," He is JHWH Elohim with Him.we won't know if you believe Jesus is God
Not all "Christians" seem to ie Calvinist. I believe we can choose between the good and the bad, but that there are aspects of our lives which are not necessarily "free." ie Read the story of Job.we won't know if you believe in free will
That is a word whose meaning can have several different connotations. Let's just say I believe I am presently saved, but I am a work in progress....we won't know if you are saved
My personal take is that none of us do that perfectly. But if we are giving our true effort that is accounted as righteousness, and His atonement makes up the difference, which is how we are saved by grace.we won't know if you say the Lord's prayer
so
what does it mean to follow Christ?
Sort of. You're the only Catholic I know who believes in reincarnation and pantheism.
is that a show stopper?
if so
please explain why
Your paradigm isn't a Catholic paradigm.
It's uniquely your paradigm, but it's not an archetypal Catholic paradigm.
how is it inconsistent with the catholic paradigm?
I'm not faulting you. It's your paradigm, and if you need it to make sense of the world you live in, and it works for you, I'm glad.no one else needs to believe this
I need it to make sense of the world I live in
few need to do that
Because Catholicism doesn't teach either reincarnation or pantheism.
I'm not faulting you. It's your paradigm, and if you need it to make sense of the world you live in, and it works for you, I'm glad.
It's just that when you say you're Catholic, most people will assume that you believe in neither of those two things.
Yes, we should have knowledge of God through revelation, not interpretation.
How do you tell the difference?
Yes, we should have knowledge of God through revelation, not interpretation.
How do you tell the difference?
good question
do you have an answer for that?
I will give anyone my pair of dimes in exchange for a quarter.
anyone?
How do you tell the difference?Originally Posted by Man.0
Yes, we should have knowledge of God through revelation, not interpretation.
By the very nature of language we interpret the revelations of God we read.
Revelation is certainly needed before one can correctly interpret.
I'm not sure you understood the question.Interpret means to 'to explain the meaning of (something). : to understand (something) in a specified way' (Merriam-webster dictionary)
Revelation means: 'a : an act of revealing or communicating divine truth. b : something that is revealed by God to humans.' (Merriam-webster dictionary)
I'm not saying there's anything wrong with interpretation of the Scriptures. I believe it is only wrong when the interpretation is devoid of Divine understanding - which comes via revelation. And that's one way you can tell the difference. If your understanding has come from God, it is revelation. But if your understanding has come from yourself, your own reasoning, then it is your own interpretation.
How do you know this?And what does the bible say about such interpretation?
'...knowing this first of all, that no prophecy of Scripture comes from someone's own interpretation. For no prophecy was ever produced by the will of man, but men spoke from God as they were carried along by the Holy Spirit.' (1 Peter 1:20-21)
Revelation, I believe, is necessary, to understand the spiritual meanings of Scripture. Would Philip have been able to correctly interpret the Scriptures, to the Ethopian, without having had revelation from God?
Revelation is certainly needed before one can correctly interpret. But what many carnal men are doing - through such practices as exegesis and hermeneutics - is trying to interpret the Word of God, without God. And in doing so, they arrive at many dreadfully wrong conclusions.
Are you saying that you've heard God speak to you audibly and that He personally told you the your doctrine was correct?One of the main differences between revelation and personal interpretation is that revelation is objective, and comes from God; while personal interpretation is subjective, and comes from one's own mind.
You believe its because of revelation or you know that it is?If you are reading the bible and arrive at a conclusion through your own reasoning; then that is surely due to personal interpretation. On the other hand, have you arrived at a conclusion which you could not have reached by yourself? Then that is, I believe, because of revelation.
Yes, I do. I'll get there.good question
do you have an answer for that?
Would you say that what you've said in the above post is absolutely true?Is God righteous? Yes. The scriptures tell us so. But understanding that righteousness is probably different for different people - hence different paradigms or "boxes" of understanding. I think it is quite important to understand that we are interpreting what God has told us, and that it is possible that we have done so incorrectly, and that God doesn't fault us for that if our efforts have been sincere. If not how is anyone to find truth? If we are not open to understanding a new concept, how can we learn? From the moment we are born we start learning - trying things, failing, and learning from our experiences.
My earliest paradigm was everything my parents told me was the truth. But I soon learned they were imperfect. As I learned about God in Church, I began to form a paradigm of Him. But I eventually read things in the Bible which seemed to conflict with the doctrine of the trinity which declares Christ as co-equal with the Father. Christ did not know all things, and therefore was not omnipotent. Christ said it was not His to give to sit on His right or His left, but that would be given to whom it is prepared - indicating the Father knew others He would give that right to. The traditional paradigm I was taught just did not explain these things.
So I was willing to listen to missionaries from a new church I had never heard of before, and many of my questions were answered using the Bible. This is why I say the Bible converted me to the LDS Church when I talk about it.
How is that better or to use your word - "superior"? I am able to have a testimony that I am indeed following God in truth, and not just by the teachings of men. Yet, I developed further questions about the gospel while in the LDS church. I came to feel I did not understand the atonement, and feel that I eventually developed an understanding of it which was another paradigm shift for me. Rather than being just something that Jesus was doing for us, it is something He was teaching us. He is a teacher of example rather than force.
So by being willing to reexamine my own paradigms, I believe my understanding of God has grown over the years. When people bash me for not believing like them, I turn them off. When people invite me to believe like them, or to examine their paradigm, I am much more willing to believe it is of God, and to examine it for myself.
Christ is the way to the holiest of all. But what the "holiest of all" is can be quite different for a MAD vs Calvinist vs etc.
I see God as being in His own paradigm, which He teaches us in His Word. He is trying to teach us His paradigm. But I also believe there are things He has taught which are not in His Word, or at least weren't at one time. So I see Him as continuing to teach us. I see the Son as His revelation of Himself to us, so to understand Jesus is to understand the Father. That is basically my present paradigm.