Former Christian,
"Well, as for me, this is what I believe -
Whatever I read from the Bible or whatever I listen to, from any man, I may privately interpret in my mind as man myself. It will be very flawed when it's my interpretation - because of unsound translations, incomplete knowledge of man or my own lack of wisdom in interpretation.
If left to myself, it would definitely remain misunderstood. But the Spirit of grace in me teaches me the truth - either as I read or after I have read and made my interpretations. The Spirit corrects my interpretations by teaching me the lies to reject and the truths to embrace. Who does this - the Spirit in me. How is it done - by leading me to other parts of Scripture to confirm the truth or to reveal the inconsistency of the lie. "
FC, the question still stands.
“is there any belief that you hold presently that you attribute to being taught by the Spirit in you but cannot make a case for it from any of the Scriptures?â€
Also, I was keen on getting this answered but it seems you may have overlooked it - I'm quoting it here -
" How does one justify his own conviction that what he believes as true is indeed absolutely true? Does he say his own conviction of it being from God is the basis for his believing it to be true. Then man(his own conviction) becomes the authority of that belief. Or does he seek consistency and confirmation from Scripture (led by the Spirit)? There Scripture(revealed as God's Word) becomes the authority. I am unable to see how else you could learn truth. Fill in on your process of increasing in the knowledge of God and coming into all truth. "
Note, when I claim Scriptures to have authority, I do not mean that it is the end in itself. We need Christ to open Scriptures to our hearts and without Him one may read the Bible but many times and yet not come to any true knowledge. What I need to know is how do you arrive at whatever you now believe, if not for truth revealed by God in the Scriptures?
Not to make this a debate - where Paul says we are no longer under the law, the 'law' could mean the Law of Moses, or the entire OT , or a single governing rule. How does one 'interpret' which of these is referred to here? The moment anyone concludes upon a meaning, has he not interpreted the verse ie has he not made clear the meaning of that verse to himself? In this context, explain to me how you do not practice interpretation.
I didn't say that these groups were Christian groups. In light of that, would you be for group Z ?Former Christian said:... no. I am not a third group. I am outside of Christianity altogether.ivdavid said:Regarding the authoritative basis for doctrinal beliefs, I think you're saying that you are against group X who claim that man has such authority and you're against group Y who claim that the Bible has such authority and that you are for group Z who claim that Jesus is the authority. Have I got this much right?
I think I have already answered that in my earlier post - I'll quote it here again -Former Christian said:In the end, are you trusting in Jesus to teach you what the Bible is actually saying, or are you trusting in your own ability to interpret the Bible correctly?
"Well, as for me, this is what I believe -
Whatever I read from the Bible or whatever I listen to, from any man, I may privately interpret in my mind as man myself. It will be very flawed when it's my interpretation - because of unsound translations, incomplete knowledge of man or my own lack of wisdom in interpretation.
If left to myself, it would definitely remain misunderstood. But the Spirit of grace in me teaches me the truth - either as I read or after I have read and made my interpretations. The Spirit corrects my interpretations by teaching me the lies to reject and the truths to embrace. Who does this - the Spirit in me. How is it done - by leading me to other parts of Scripture to confirm the truth or to reveal the inconsistency of the lie. "
FC, the question still stands.
“is there any belief that you hold presently that you attribute to being taught by the Spirit in you but cannot make a case for it from any of the Scriptures?â€
Also, I was keen on getting this answered but it seems you may have overlooked it - I'm quoting it here -
" How does one justify his own conviction that what he believes as true is indeed absolutely true? Does he say his own conviction of it being from God is the basis for his believing it to be true. Then man(his own conviction) becomes the authority of that belief. Or does he seek consistency and confirmation from Scripture (led by the Spirit)? There Scripture(revealed as God's Word) becomes the authority. I am unable to see how else you could learn truth. Fill in on your process of increasing in the knowledge of God and coming into all truth. "
Note, when I claim Scriptures to have authority, I do not mean that it is the end in itself. We need Christ to open Scriptures to our hearts and without Him one may read the Bible but many times and yet not come to any true knowledge. What I need to know is how do you arrive at whatever you now believe, if not for truth revealed by God in the Scriptures?
Not to make this a debate - where Paul says we are no longer under the law, the 'law' could mean the Law of Moses, or the entire OT , or a single governing rule. How does one 'interpret' which of these is referred to here? The moment anyone concludes upon a meaning, has he not interpreted the verse ie has he not made clear the meaning of that verse to himself? In this context, explain to me how you do not practice interpretation.
The Church is a community and God is sufficient to lead His people into all knowledge and truth. Irrespective of denominations, God is finishing His work in all He is working in. Can denominations foil His plan - can man's interpretations overrule His teaching us. I don't believe so.And don’t look at these things just in the light of yourself as an individual. Consider them in the light of a community.
Not the sufficiency of man's interpretation. I'm saying that it is inevitable that man interprets but it is God who sufficiently teaches truth into his heart.You obviously believe in the legitimacy of the practice of interpretation in relation to the Bible.
Agreed. You have stated here what believing in Christ is not. I have seen your argument on differentiating between 'in' and 'into'. For me to know the implications of it, kindly add to the above, what you mean by 'faith into Christ'.Faith into Christ and baptism into Christ is how we become “in Christâ€. We are not to believe in Christ as if he is just some religious philosopher from the past, like Aristotle or Marcus Aurelius.
The moment you say 'our own' - doesn't it fall under our flesh? And how can anything we do by our flesh amount to anything good. Besides, 'our faith' has to be qualified with an object of faith - and if that object of faith is God, then we cannot say we are saved by something we do or think but rather that God has worked something to save us. Else, we still are under the law where we've made 'our faith' yet another work to merit salvation. So I'd agree with you to disagree that our own faith justifies us.I don’t believe that it is our own faith that Justifies us.