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Slaying sacred cows-- the myth of essential Christian beliefs

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I like the Didache too. It's pretty much been determined that the dating is about 90AD.
It was thought in the past that it might go to 120AD.
I'm sorry it doesn't describe more than it does.


FWIW, I just finished this scholarly book, which just came out. He dates virtually every book in the NT to pre-70 AD, including the Gospel of John and Revelation. He dates the Didache to "no earlier than 45 and no later than 125."

 
I think we can recognize it exists but accept that we can only hold our best-informed convictions as to what it is.

But I don't believe in everything. I've eliminated many, many things in which I don't believe. And I definitely do believe in something - while accepting I could be wrong.

Well, we simply don't know. We have to live according to our convictions. On this issue, I try to err on the side of what the overall thrust of the NT seems to me to be, as well as what the majority of Christians have always believed. If I'm wrong, and the other view is correct, I've lost nothing. If I'm correct, and some of them have lived as though it were irrelevant to their salvation - well, that could be a problem.

You - like me - might be a good candidate for the Orthodox Church. Easy for me to say since there isn't an Orthodox Church within 300 miles of me, but their theology strikes me as the most solid, and I do believe they have the strongest claim to being the One True Apostolic Church. The Reformation had a very legitimate basis insofar as the excesses of the Catholic Church were concerned, but I believe what it launched has been a disaster for Christianity. It's too bad so many people think Christianity is divided into Protestants and Catholics and scarcely realize the Orthodox Church exists.
I have a question for you. Did Jesus merely have convictions or did he know?
 
You know, Jesus promised that if we keep his teachings we will come to know the truth. Was he not telling the truth?

I see the problem as this. A man has a strong belief inside but not so strong that he would say he knows. Because he cannot say this of his faith, he assumes no one else can either.

But Jesus promised we would know the truth AND obviously know we have the truth. How is this measured? Not by verbal argument alone but by character, the fruit of one’s philosophy. This is where modern man is left without tools.
 
Then there's the reformed church.
It believes basically what John Calvin taught but they're using a softer compilation of doctrine known as the WCF.
Westminster Confession of Faith.
They believe it's God that does the choosing as to who shall be saved and who shant. (shant?)
Why Jesus wasted His time for over 3 years, I just don't understand.
If you embrace Calvinism, there will be a powerful lot you won’t understand. No Calvinist can explain it either.
 
What are essential beliefs?

That term "essential" means very different things to different people and groups of people (denominations). What a Southern Baptist considers to be essential is different from what a Seventh Day Adventist or a Calvinist or a Preterist would insist as being fundamental or foundational belief. Ahhhh... there's the rub. It's the belief part that remains the same for ALL of them.

These individuals or groups might consider something to be essential to believe in order to fellowship with them or to be a member in good standing with them-- but there confidence and convictions remain firmly on things they believe. (tongue in cheek).

So this thread is dedicated to discussing some of the sacred cows that some people insist are these firm foundations upon which they construct their paradigms of faith. I'll propose that where it comes to beliefs that are truly essential- there are few.

Jesus taught-- "Have faith in God" (Mark 11) -and he left it pretty open-ended.

He said- "Believe in God, believe also in me." (John 14:1)

He said- "This is the work of God-- that you believe in him who He sent." (John 6:22)

What that exactly means is otherwise undefined by him. In other words, everything else is up for debate. You might not think so, but he did. In fact much of his time here was spent trying to convince people that most of the things they were so convinced of were completely wrong. Yet most of those people couldn't set aside what they believed in exchange for what he taught.

So bring your sacred cow. Let's kill it.
You ain't killing this one...
The resurrection.
 
Of course not. The point is that the truth is completely unaffected by your beliefs. And it will always remain so.

The truth is the truth and remain so even if you don't believe it at all. The truth remains the truth always.

484830-gatlinburg-pigeonforce.jpg
Truth isn't subject to faulty perceptions of truth. How does that prove anything about our relationship with truth?
 
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It just proves that everyone believes they know the truth...whether or not they really do.
I think there are some who are genuinely not sure what they on some matters, at least is true. IOW, there are some who know the difference between knowing the truth and merely having formed a rather limited opinion. They would say “they think….” instead of “they know” and the difference is clear to them.
 
A sacred point to many Christians is the inborn sin nature doctrine. They cannot imagine life without believing everyone is born with a sin nature. That this doctrine was invented by Augustine would be a scattering revelation. But anyone can see why it was embraced by him and others since. At its root, it’s an excuse for sin…you cannot help it.
 
He said- "This is the work of God-- that you believe in him who He sent." (John 6:22)

What that exactly means is otherwise undefined by him. In other words, everything else is up for debate. You might not think so, but he did. In fact much of his time here was spent trying to convince people that most of the things they were so convinced of were completely wrong. Yet most of those people couldn't set aside what they believed in exchange for what he taught.

So bring your sacred cow. Let's kill it.

The operative word being " sent " .
The reason He was "sent" was clearly specified by Him for our belief .

Unchecked Copy Box
Mar 10:45
For even the Son of man came not to be ministered unto, but to minister, and to give his life a ransom for many.
 
Jn 14:6 Christ is the way the truth and the life!
We must follow, believe, and live in Him

It is forbidden to reject a truth or doctrine reveled by Christ to His apostles and taught to all men. Matt 28:19 Lk 1:4
 
What are essential beliefs?
•Jesus is Lord
•The gospel message/apostolic kerygma that was proclaimed
•Historically speaking, the origin of Christianity was founded on the essential, non-negotiable 'good news' proclamation of Christ's atoning death & bodily resurrection, which to the earliest Christians evidenced Christ's vindication and exaltation as Lord by God the Father

E.g., Pre-Pauline Creed of 1 Corinthians 15:3-5 ("For I delivered to you of first importance...)

•Importantly, the most essential Christian tenet is not so much a tenet or doctrinal statement, as it is an event (i.e., the bodily resurrection). Theologically, everything else (e.g., the Torah, salvation, kingdom of God, eschatology, final judgment, corporate membership in the Body of Christ, ethics/morality, Jewish monotheism/the Shema expansion to include Christ alongside Yawheh, while denying all other gods, etc., etc.) is reframed in light of this one, single history-altering event of the resurrection.

*In different periods of history, the church has overemphasized certain theological aspects at the expense of others as well as added doctrines that have detracted from the centrality of the gospel message/apostolic kerygma. Any discussion of essentials, would necessitate having to weed through those traditions and imbalances that have developed in Catholicism, Protestantism, and East Orthodox traditions.

*The classic academic work on the subject that is credited with first bringing scholarly attention to the historical centrality of the crucifixion-resurrection event in origins of Christianity studies was:

CH Dodd's The Apostolic Preaching And Its Developments
 
•Jesus is Lord
•The gospel message/apostolic kerygma that was proclaimed
•Historically speaking, the origin of Christianity was founded on the essential, non-negotiable 'good news' proclamation of Christ's atoning death & bodily resurrection, which to the earliest Christians evidenced Christ's vindication and exaltation as Lord by God the Father

E.g., Pre-Pauline Creed of 1 Corinthians 15:3-5 ("For I delivered to you of first importance...)

•Importantly, the most essential Christian tenet is not so much a tenet or doctrinal statement, as it is an event (i.e., the bodily resurrection). Theologically, everything else (e.g., the Torah, salvation, kingdom of God, eschatology, final judgment, corporate membership in the Body of Christ, ethics/morality, Jewish monotheism/the Shema expansion to include Christ alongside Yawheh, while denying all other gods, etc., etc.) is reframed in light of this one, single history-altering event of the resurrection.

*In different periods of history, the church has overemphasized certain theological aspects at the expense of others as well as added doctrines that have detracted from the centrality of the gospel message/apostolic kerygma. Any discussion of essentials, would necessitate having to weed through those traditions and imbalances that have developed in Catholicism, Protestantism, and East Orthodox traditions.

*The classic academic work on the subject that is credited with first bringing scholarly attention to the historical centrality of the crucifixion-resurrection event in origins of Christianity studies was:

CH Dodd's The Apostolic Preaching And Its Developments
What is apostolic kerygma?
 
•Jesus is Lord
•The gospel message/apostolic kerygma that was proclaimed
•Historically speaking, the origin of Christianity was founded on the essential, non-negotiable 'good news' proclamation of Christ's atoning death & bodily resurrection, which to the earliest Christians evidenced Christ's vindication and exaltation as Lord by God the Father

E.g., Pre-Pauline Creed of 1 Corinthians 15:3-5 ("For I delivered to you of first importance...)

•Importantly, the most essential Christian tenet is not so much a tenet or doctrinal statement, as it is an event (i.e., the bodily resurrection). Theologically, everything else (e.g., the Torah, salvation, kingdom of God, eschatology, final judgment, corporate membership in the Body of Christ, ethics/morality, Jewish monotheism/the Shema expansion to include Christ alongside Yawheh, while denying all other gods, etc., etc.) is reframed in light of this one, single history-altering event of the resurrection.

*In different periods of history, the church has overemphasized certain theological aspects at the expense of others as well as added doctrines that have detracted from the centrality of the gospel message/apostolic kerygma. Any discussion of essentials, would necessitate having to weed through those traditions and imbalances that have developed in Catholicism, Protestantism, and East Orthodox traditions.

*The classic academic work on the subject that is credited with first bringing scholarly attention to the historical centrality of the crucifixion-resurrection event in origins of Christianity studies was:

CH Dodd's The Apostolic Preaching And Its Developments
Must Jesus be Lord,
or must He be GOD?
 
That term "essential" means very different things to different people and groups of people (denominations).

This is the problem: Denominations; divisions and sects in the body of Christ.

Now I plead with you, brethren, by the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, that you all speak the same thing, and that there be no divisions among you, but that you be perfectly joined together in the same mind and in the same judgment. 1 Corinthians 1:10

What is essential is the truth.


Jesus Christ is the Truth; every word that proceeds out of His mouth is the truth.

His Gospel
His Commandments
His Doctrine.


His Gospel:

in flaming fire taking vengeance on those who do not know God, and on those who do not obey the gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ.
2 Thessalonians 1:8


His Commandments:

Now by this we know that we know Him, if we keep His commandments. He who says, “I know Him,” and does not keep His commandments, is a liar, and the truth is not in him.
1 John 2:3-4


His Doctrine:


Whoever transgresses and does not abide in the doctrine of Christ does not have God. He who abides in the doctrine of Christ has both the Father and the Son. 2 John 9


These are the essentials if you want to avoid the lake of fire.





JLB
 
What is apostolic kerygma?
Good question. Sorry, should have explained that. Kerygma is the Greek word for "preaching/proclamation" (not church preaching, but in evangelism) and in NT studies refers specifically to the apostles' proclamation of the gospel message. Because of this the "apostolic kerygma" (apostles preaching) has become shorthand for the content of the gospel message. There is no single comprehensive statement in the NT, but scattered references throughout the NT like the opening of Romans, the Pre-Pauline Creed of 1 Corinthians 15.3-5, the Pre-Pauline "Christ Hymn" in the second chapter of Phillipians. About 15 direct references and 40 indirect to the gospel message proclamation in the NT. The early church kerygma (gospel proclamation) is distinguished from the early church *didache* ("teaching").
 
Good question. Sorry, should have explained that. Kerygma is the Greek word for "preaching/proclamation" (not church preaching, but in evangelism) and in NT studies refers specifically to the apostles' proclamation of the gospel message. Because of this the "apostolic kerygma" (apostles preaching) has become shorthand for the content of the gospel message. There is no single comprehensive statement in the NT, but scattered references throughout the NT like the opening of Romans, the Pre-Pauline Creed of 1 Corinthians 15.3-5, the Pre-Pauline "Christ Hymn" in the second chapter of Phillipians. About 15 direct references and 40 indirect to the gospel message proclamation in the NT. The early church kerygma (gospel proclamation) is distinguished from the early church *didache* ("teaching").
I know the didache.
Scholars now date it at about 70 to 90AD.

I like it. It's simple and direct
And yes, 1 Corinthians 15 is often referred to as The Gospel message, but I agree that it's not complete. Although Christianity does rest on the resurrection.

Thanks.
 
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