GodsGrace
CF Ambassador
This is under Bible Study because we should be studying the bible.
Instead some study other books which seem to me to be taking the place of the bible.
They are, for instance:
The Institutes of John Calvin 1536 (John Calvin's Institutes of the Christian Religion, about 1,000 pages long)
The Westminster Confession of Faith 1647 (450 pages)
The Catechism of the Catholic Church 1992 (about 750 pages)
The above are books written by men to explain their particular view of God and Christianity.
Bible verses are listed - but can we trust how they are interpreted?
Is it really necessary to have a book as long as the bible to explain what God wants us to know?
I hear from some that, for instance, calvinism is really difficult to understand.
It seems to me that there is no problem in understanding the bible as far as for salvific purposes....
Of course, the more one reads the O.T. and the N.T., the more one learns.
I'm slightly familiar with The Institutes, not very much with the WCF, but I'm very knowledgable
regarding the CCC and I can say with certainty that, even though some bible references are give,
there is much in the book that is tradition which was started by the Catholic Church and is practiced
to this day.
Can anyone defend those books?
Are they really necessary?
Is the bible not sufficient?
Should we be quoting other men instead of the writers of the bible and, possibly, the Early Church Fathers who, at least,
knew one or two of the Apostles and learned from them?
It 's difficult to have a conversation about Christianity with someone who quotes one of the above
books, or a theologian they particularly like and agree with - and in doing so, distort the Christian Faith
even more than the above books do.
I believe the bible is sufficient and should be our only source for theology.
What God wants us to know is in the O.T. and the N.T.
Instead some study other books which seem to me to be taking the place of the bible.
They are, for instance:
The Institutes of John Calvin 1536 (John Calvin's Institutes of the Christian Religion, about 1,000 pages long)
The Westminster Confession of Faith 1647 (450 pages)
The Catechism of the Catholic Church 1992 (about 750 pages)
The above are books written by men to explain their particular view of God and Christianity.
Bible verses are listed - but can we trust how they are interpreted?
Is it really necessary to have a book as long as the bible to explain what God wants us to know?
I hear from some that, for instance, calvinism is really difficult to understand.
It seems to me that there is no problem in understanding the bible as far as for salvific purposes....
Of course, the more one reads the O.T. and the N.T., the more one learns.
I'm slightly familiar with The Institutes, not very much with the WCF, but I'm very knowledgable
regarding the CCC and I can say with certainty that, even though some bible references are give,
there is much in the book that is tradition which was started by the Catholic Church and is practiced
to this day.
Can anyone defend those books?
Are they really necessary?
Is the bible not sufficient?
Should we be quoting other men instead of the writers of the bible and, possibly, the Early Church Fathers who, at least,
knew one or two of the Apostles and learned from them?
It 's difficult to have a conversation about Christianity with someone who quotes one of the above
books, or a theologian they particularly like and agree with - and in doing so, distort the Christian Faith
even more than the above books do.
I believe the bible is sufficient and should be our only source for theology.
What God wants us to know is in the O.T. and the N.T.