Ask a Theologian IV

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That sounds hard! How do I do that?
Spoiler :
What do people want explained? (You don't mean climate change, do you? Cos if you do, I think I'd better give up now.)

edit: Frankly, now I come to think of it, you're being terribly unfair. None of the other religions that I've looked at (and I've looked at a few) do this. Why have you singled out mine? And when it's only 4 hours 17 min old. Mind you it's the mark of all truly great religions to suffer persecution at some stage in their history. But in its infancy! (not even that, this is barely after conception) This is too harsh.

edit2: This is harder than I thought. How can anyone explain the unexplainable? Can God* do that? That's the same as God making a rock so big he can't move it. But then God can do anything, so I suppose he can.
I thought I just had to come up with a bit of mythology and metaphysics, some commandments, a bit of dramatic waving about of the arms, a few recommendations for daily living, and maybe an insignia or two. I could do that alright. Oh yes, and some promises about what you get as a reward for doing some stuff.
*NB for some given value of "God"

edit3: I have thought long and hard. How's this for an explanation of the inexplicable passage of time? (I'll put it in a thingy, cause it's a bit technical and maybe of no interest.)

Spoiler :
As we all know, fundamental particles mediate nearly everything in the quantum world, so I see no reason why time should be an exception. I don't have a name for this particle yet, but I think it must be the Higgs time particle (bosun, quarky-type thing, with a strange spin of charm, or whatever).

Now, here comes the technical bit. (Of course what I really need is a decent Maths typesetting facility but there's never one around when you want one.) So you take the three spatial dimensions and integrate them, flexibly (flexibly see, because space is expanding?) and then pass the result through a digamma function (whatever one of those is. Think of it like a giant cosmological egg-timer, one of those shaped like an hour(!) glass with sand in it. So all the time particles are like the grains of sand. This of course is only an analogy*. There isn't really any giant egg-timer.).

And bob's your uncle. Well, that's the broad outlines anyway. You'll have to ask that Dr fella for the details; you know, the one with the sonic screwdriver. He knows lots about this sort of thing. He was on the TV quite recently, I am told.

* "an analogy" is one of those words that, once you start saying it, it's quite difficult to stop

What do you think? Where's a decent theologian when you want one?

I perhaps should point out that, though I present things somewhat (I like to think) humorously, I am seriously interested in how religions begin.

Yes, you have a point. On the other hand the use of the word is so widespread that it would seem to have some notional value to nearly everyone. What do you think it means?

Isn't religion "how" one explains it and not "what" is explained? The hard part is finding people who think like you do and agree with your "brand" of religion.

No one is asking you to be "god", they just want hope to endure life with.

I would assume that the more you promise people, the more you have to deliver. My suggestion would be to keep it as simple as possible, and build on that.
 
1. I understand that Matthew and Luke are generally believed to come from non-eyewitnesses since they draw so much from Mark and Q. What's the line of reasoning for thinking that Mark comes from a non-eyewitness as well?

2. How common are views other than Markan Priority among scholars?

3. If Jesus hadn't been killed would He have died a natural death?
 
I'm thinking of starting a new religion. Is there any law against it?
What does anyone think about it?

Shouldn't be too hard, the protestants have been in the business of creating new religions in an ever expanding number for centuries now ;)

From that observation, it would seem that most new religious movements that get off the ground are based on previous religions (like the japanese new religiions which are based on traditional shinto, or the new protestant church down the street based on some other form of protestant christianity).
 
Shouldn't be too hard, the protestants have been in the business of creating new religions in an ever expanding number for centuries now

Nonsense. Martin Luther just restored a religion that had been dormant for over 1000 years:p

Serious question: Which books did Luther remove from the canon, and were those books universally regarded as in the canon before him, and why did he remove them?
 
historical hogwash for the first part.

As for the second, he removed the deuterocanonical books, and attempted to remove Hebrews, Jude, James and Revelation (and IIRC correctly a few others in what is called Luthers Antilegomena) from the canon (since he percieved them to go against his doctrine of Sola Fide).

For this reason the four aforementioned books are to this day ordered last in german language Luther bibles.
 
To add to that, can you explain what exactly apostolic succession is and the theological reasons why one should and shouldn't believe in it (What arguments have been made)?
 
The best I've heard Catholics on here come up with is the verse that talks about following "The tradition we passed on to you." The problem is, I can't really see how anything is said that the tradition that Paul passed down is the same tradition that the Catholics follow today. Of course there's the "You are Peter and on this rock I shall build my church and the gates of Hell will not prevail against it." Catholics see this as saying that the Catholic Church will never be in doctrinal error. I simply see it as a declaration that Satan will not prevail against the Christian Church as a whole, its work will continue until the end of time. I see no reason particular theological truths could not be lost or in error but the gates of hell still not be prevailing, unless said errors prevented the church from following the Great Commission.

I'd be more inclined to see 2 Peter 1:20 as relevant to this:

First of all you must understand this, that no prophecy of scripture is a matter of one's own interpretation...

- which would seem to imply that just reading the Bible by oneself isn't enough.

Hi,
I have two questions I have been thinking about:

1. What do you think was Jesus' worst suffering?
Was it:
1. The physical pain on the cross.
2. That God did not save him.
3. That his disciples didn't get his true message.

I would say that we don't know enough about Jesus or his real motivations to be able to guess at his psychological state, especially at such an extreme point in his life.

2. Why did God let Job suffer, even tough Job was his most devoted worshipper?

The book of Job itself says that God let Job suffer in order to win a bet with Satan (Job 1:8-12). Rather unfairly, when Job complains about his treatment, God refuses to explain this to him, instead insisting that as God he can pretty much do as he likes and not have to explain himself to anyone (Job 38-41), even though it's been explained quite clearly to the reader. It often surprises me that this story is frequently held up as a profound answer to the problem of evil.

And do you think any man today would still believe in God if they would suffer as much as Job did?

I don't see why not. Plenty of people have suffered worse than that and not lost their belief in God. Think of the stories of devotion in Nazi death camps, for example.

What is the theological implications of Abraham continually reducing the number of righteous men needed? Was Abraham haggling with God, according to the views of most theologians? And was this problamatic, according to most theologians, or morally OK? If Abraham had bargained down to one man, would the city have been spared for Lot, or not?

I really don't know. Hypotheticals about Old Testament stories are very much not my area.

As a (I'm presuming) non-religious person yourself, what do you think of this?

http://atheism.about.com/od/atheismhistory/a/PrimitiveAtheismSkepticism.htm

"As Durant explains, certain Pygmy tribes found in Africa were observed to have no identifiable cults or rites. There were no totems, no gods, no spirits. Their dead were buried without special ceremonies or accompanying items and received no further attention. They even appeared to lack simple superstitions, according to travelers' reports.

I don't know about these specific examples, but I do know that the question whether religion is "natural" to human beings is much investigated at the moment. In fact there's currently a large research project going on in China to examine how "natural" religious beliefs are in an officially secular and atheist society, which should be interesting. This is on the basis of the apparent fact that religious beliefs are quite natural in children from western societies - the question is whether that's a feature of western societies or something more universal.

Personally I don't know whether religious beliefs are natural or not, but my guess would be that religious beliefs and practices arise from mental tendencies which really are hard-wired into us, such as the tendency to see patterns in things and impose value upon the world. These mental tendencies typically result in beliefs and behaviour that we call religious, but they needn't necessarily do so, which is why the existence - if they do exist - of societies without religion wouldn't disprove the notion that religion is the result of universal human tendencies and thought structures.

I'm thinking of starting a new religion. Is there any law against it?
What does anyone think about it?

What do you think it should, or must, have to qualify for a religion?

When I was working in TV I came up with the idea of a reality show where contestants had to start their own religion, and the winner would be the person with the most converts at the end of the series. Inexplicably this never got very far.

Plenty of people start new religions, although as has been pointed out, they tend to be modifications of existing religions rather than brand new ones. I suppose Mormonism would be a good example of a more dramatically different religion which was nevertheless based on an existing one. Perhaps the best example of a really new religion started pretty much by a single person is Wicca, founded by Gerald Gardner in the middle of the twentieth century. That wasn't wholly original, since Gardner used elements of older pagan religions and practices (and indeed claimed, quite spuriously, that the whole thing really was an ancient religion that he'd rediscovered), but much of it was completely original.

Presumably Joseph Smith and Gerald Gardner were sincere in their religious claims (if not all of their historical ones), but an interesting example of a religion that was apparently founded completely spuriously is the cult of the snake god Glycon, which according to Lucian was founded in the second century CE by Alexander of Abonutichus, who used a real snake with a mask and also a glove puppet to convince worshippers that the god was present at the altar. This religion apparently enjoyed some popularity and survived for a while. Some modern pagans have resuscitated it, notably Alan Moore.

1. I understand that Matthew and Luke are generally believed to come from non-eyewitnesses since they draw so much from Mark and Q. What's the line of reasoning for thinking that Mark comes from a non-eyewitness as well?

Basically because form criticism and other analytic techniques indicate that the material in Mark already had a fairly long oral history before it was written down. Each story has been passed down as an independent tradition in the Christian community, and been shaped by the telling, and the author of the Gospel has collected them, written them down, and done a bit of editing. That indicates that he didn't just write it all from memory. In fact it's even more complicated than that, as there's also good reason to think that some of the stories were written down as shorter "proto-Gospels" before the author of Mark ever got his hands on them. E.g. Mark 2:1-3:6, a cycle of stories about Jesus' conflicts with scribes and Pharisees, may have been a short written text that existed before the Gospel did, which the author incorporated into his work. The same thing is true of the Passion narrative, the section of the Gospel which forms the longest integrated story.

Finally, it's pretty clear from the text that the author was unfamiliar with Palestinian geography. In Mark 11:1 he gets the order of the two villages the wrong way round. And Mark 7:31 is geographical gibberish. To go from Tyre to Galilee via Sidon and the Decapolis is ridiculous, as you can see from this map:

First_century_palestine.gif


2. How common are views other than Markan Priority among scholars?

Very rare, I think. The major rival to Markan Priority is the Griesbach Hypothesis, according to which Matthew was written first, and Mark is a sort of epitome of Matthew. But that view is so full of holes that I don't think many people defend it today. The biggest problem with it is that if you make an epitome of a longer work, you normally include all the important bits but cut down on the details. Whereas if Mark is an epitome of Matthew, he did the opposite - he left out lots of stories, and lengthened the ones he did include.

That's not to say that there are no problems with Markan Priority too - in particular the many passages where Matthew and Luke agree with each other disagree with Mark, which is odd if Matthew and Luke are independently basing their work on Mark. Two plausible solutions to this are to suppose that Matthew used Mark and then Luke used Matthew and Mark (i.e. to abandon the two-source hypothesis and Q, but retain Markan priority) or to retain Q but suppose that the version of Mark that Matthew and Luke both used was slightly different from the one we've got. Either way there's no real doubt about Markan priority, just over the details.

3. If Jesus hadn't been killed would He have died a natural death?

Presumably so.

Nonsense. Martin Luther just restored a religion that had been dormant for over 1000 years:p

I hope you don't really think that!

Serious question: Which books did Luther remove from the canon, and were those books universally regarded as in the canon before him, and why did he remove them?

Jehoshua already answered this regarding the New Testament books, which Luther removed because he disagree with their teaching, not because of any serious historical issues. Some of these books were marginal in the early church - not many churches in the first couple of centuries used the book of Revelation, for example, and not many used Hebrews. After the fourth century, though, the lists were standardised.

Regarding the Old Testament books, the "deuterocanonical" texts are those found in the Septuagint but not in the canon specified by the Jewish scholars at Jamnia in the late first century CE. Jews came to use the Jamnia canon, while Christians universally used the Septuagint canon, which was larger. Christians in antiquity were aware of this discrepancy and tended to view the extra books as scriptural but somewhat less important than the others, hence "deuterocanonical". This continued to be the view into the Middle Ages. The Reformers removed the deuterocanonical books entirely, on the basis that the Christian Old Testament ought to be the same as the Jewish canon - although the Jewish canon was based on the canon of Jamnia, which postdated Christianity.

To add to that, can you explain what exactly apostolic succession is and the theological reasons why one should and shouldn't believe in it (What arguments have been made)?

The Catholic notion of apostolic succession is simply the idea that the apostles ordained successors for themselves to lead the churches, and these successors later ordained their own successors, and so on all the way down to the present day. And it is this line of unbroken succession from the apostles to today's church leaders that gives them their authority and ensures that they teach true and authentic Christianity. Some churches (in the sense of local churches) have direct apostolic succession - e.g. the church in Rome can trace its bishops back to St Peter, while that in Alexandria can trace it back to St Mark. Some churches do not have this direct succession - e.g. any church in America - but they enjoy apostolic succession nevertheless by being in communion with churches that do. So, for example, a Catholic church in America is reliable because it is part of the same church organisation as the one in Rome.

Churches that can't trace their history back to the apostles and which aren't in communion with churches that do lack apostolic succession and therefore lack the stamp of authenticity. They've basically been founded by dubious later characters with no authoritative claim to be the apostles' successors, and therefore they are not part of the true church that Christ founded and entrusted to the apostles. From a Catholic viewpoint, this means all Protestant churches.

The Orthodox churches, including the non-Chalcedonian ones, also claim apostolic succession, which I think Catholics would not deny. Anglicans, through a rather tortuous logic that I don't understand, also claim apostolic succession, which Catholics do deny. Some Protestants, particularly some Lutheran churches, claim apostolic succession, but of course Protestants are typically less bothered about such issues, arguing that the truth and validity of a church's teaching depends on whether it's true to the Bible, not on its historical roots.

The main theological reason for thinking that apostolic succession is important is a strong ecclesiology, that is, theology of the church. If you think that the church structure and organisation itself has spiritual significance then you will think that it matters which church organisation you belong to. If, furthermore, you think that Christ deliberately founded a church organisation, you will think that that's the correct one. In which case apostolic succession becomes very important, because it's the criterion that shows whether you belong to that same historical organisation or not.

The notion of apostolic succession originally developed more as a means of distinguishing between orthodoxy and heresy. Its main advocates, Irenaeus and Tertullian, were very concerned about how to tell true from false doctrine, and they thought that one of the main ways of telling was whether a church was teaching the same things that the apostles taught, since the apostles were taught directly by Christ and were therefore reliable. And the main way to tell whether a church was doing this was by seeing whether it (a) had received its teaching from the apostles originally, (b) agreed with other churches that had received their teaching from the apostles originally, (c) agreed with the writings of the apostles, i.e. the New Testament. For the church fathers, the Bible and church tradition were part of a seamless whole, not rival authorities as they would become after the Reformation.

You can see Tertullian's original presentation of the argument here and in the subsequent chapters.

Tertullian said:
From this, therefore, do we draw up our rule. Since the Lord Jesus Christ sent the apostles to preach, (our rule is) that no others ought to be received as preachers than those whom Christ appointed; for “no man knoweth the Father save the Son, and he to whomsoever the Son will reveal Him.” Nor does the Son seem to have revealed Him to any other than the apostles, whom He sent forth to preach—that, of course, which He revealed to them. Now, what that was which they preached—in other words, what it was which Christ revealed to them—can, as I must here likewise prescribe, properly be proved in no other way than by those very churches which the apostles founded in person, by declaring the gospel to them directly themselves, both vivâ voce, as the phrase is, and subsequently by their epistles. If, then, these things are so, it is in the same degree manifest that all doctrine which agrees with the apostolic churches—those moulds and original sources of the faith must be reckoned for truth, as undoubtedly containing that which the (said) churches received from the apostles, the apostles from Christ, Christ from God. Whereas all doctrine must be prejudged as false which savours of contrariety to the truth of the churches and apostles of Christ and God.
 
Do you think there's any real significant differences between Philosophy and Religion, or is the distinction mostly arbitrary?
 
Do you think there's any real significant differences between Philosophy and Religion, or is the distinction mostly arbitrary?

Philosophy is a particular activity and way of thinking. Religion is a complex social phenomenon which may incorporate all kinds of activities, beliefs, social structures, art, and so on. Philosophy is certainly one of the elements that a religion may include. But that doesn't mean it is religion. That would be like saying that kicking a ball around is the same thing as sport. Kicking a ball around is certainly something that you do in some sports, but not all sports, and even in the sports where you do it, it's just one element. You have to kick the ball around in a certain way for it to count as playing football, for example.

So my view is that religion and philosophy are just different kinds of things, which means that to equate them would be a category mistake.

A harder question is the distinction between philosophy and theology. The traditional answer to that is that in philosophy you don't assume anything and have to prove everything, whereas in theology you're allowed to assume all kinds of things. But of course philosophers assume things too, just not quite the same things. There is certainly an overlap between philosophy and theology, although perhaps it's not a very big overlap - you can usually tell which one you're dealing with.
 
The Catholic notion of apostolic succession is simply the idea that the apostles ordained successors for themselves to lead the churches, and these successors later ordained their own successors, and so on all the way down to the present day. And it is this line of unbroken succession from the apostles to today's church leaders that gives them their authority and ensures that they teach true and authentic Christianity. Some churches (in the sense of local churches) have direct apostolic succession - e.g. the church in Rome can trace its bishops back to St Peter, while that in Alexandria can trace it back to St Mark. Some churches do not have this direct succession - e.g. any church in America - but they enjoy apostolic succession nevertheless by being in communion with churches that do. So, for example, a Catholic church in America is reliable because it is part of the same church organisation as the one in Rome.

Churches that can't trace their history back to the apostles and which aren't in communion with churches that do lack apostolic succession and therefore lack the stamp of authenticity. They've basically been founded by dubious later characters with no authoritative claim to be the apostles' successors, and therefore they are not part of the true church that Christ founded and entrusted to the apostles. From a Catholic viewpoint, this means all Protestant churches.

The Orthodox churches, including the non-Chalcedonian ones, also claim apostolic succession, which I think Catholics would not deny. Anglicans, through a rather tortuous logic that I don't understand, also claim apostolic succession, which Catholics do deny. Some Protestants, particularly some Lutheran churches, claim apostolic succession, but of course Protestants are typically less bothered about such issues, arguing that the truth and validity of a church's teaching depends on whether it's true to the Bible, not on its historical roots.

The main theological reason for thinking that apostolic succession is important is a strong ecclesiology, that is, theology of the church. If you think that the church structure and organisation itself has spiritual significance then you will think that it matters which church organisation you belong to. If, furthermore, you think that Christ deliberately founded a church organisation, you will think that that's the correct one. In which case apostolic succession becomes very important, because it's the criterion that shows whether you belong to that same historical organisation or not.

The notion of apostolic succession originally developed more as a means of distinguishing between orthodoxy and heresy. Its main advocates, Irenaeus and Tertullian, were very concerned about how to tell true from false doctrine, and they thought that one of the main ways of telling was whether a church was teaching the same things that the apostles taught, since the apostles were taught directly by Christ and were therefore reliable. And the main way to tell whether a church was doing this was by seeing whether it (a) had received its teaching from the apostles originally, (b) agreed with other churches that had received their teaching from the apostles originally, (c) agreed with the writings of the apostles, i.e. the New Testament. For the church fathers, the Bible and church tradition were part of a seamless whole, not rival authorities as they would become after the Reformation.

You can see Tertullian's original presentation of the argument here and in the subsequent chapters.

OK, so the Apostles pass their teaching down, then the people that they passed it down to passed it down as well, then they passed it down, exc. After 1500 years is it that inconceivable that those people weren't still teaching the same doctrine as the apostles?

How can one determine which apostolic churches have more validity? Or do ANY of them have validility?

As for the Luther comment, I was kidding, though, as I said above, do we actually know what the Apostles taught other than what the Bible says?
 
The Catholic notion of apostolic succession is simply the idea that the apostles ordained successors for themselves to lead the churches, and these successors later ordained their own successors, and so on all the way down to the present day. And it is this line of unbroken succession from the apostles to today's church leaders that gives them their authority and ensures that they teach true and authentic Christianity. Some churches (in the sense of local churches) have direct apostolic succession - e.g. the church in Rome can trace its bishops back to St Peter, while that in Alexandria can trace it back to St Mark. Some churches do not have this direct succession - e.g. any church in America - but they enjoy apostolic succession nevertheless by being in communion with churches that do. So, for example, a Catholic church in America is reliable because it is part of the same church organisation as the one in Rome. ... The Orthodox churches, including the non-Chalcedonian ones, also claim apostolic succession, which I think Catholics would not deny

If you mean the original 3rd century Catholics in Roman Africa, then this seems to be what Tertullian argues, in your helpful link. However, if you mean contemporary Roman Catholics, isn't their argument a little different? It doesn't mention the role of local churches, but emphasizes the "whole church" and Rome. The effect is that Antioch and Alexandria have no special claim over Seattle and Sydney.

Anglicans, through a rather tortuous logic that I don't understand, also claim apostolic succession, which Catholics do deny. Some Protestants, particularly some Lutheran churches, claim apostolic succession, but of course Protestants are typically less bothered about such issues, arguing that the truth and validity of a church's teaching depends on whether it's true to the Bible, not on its historical roots.

Anglo-Catholics claim tactile succession, also known as 'pipeline theory', on the principle of ex opere operato. There is a special teaching office which is communicated by the laying on of hands. Think of it like genetic inheritance. It's the right church because its teachers were taught and authorised by the right teachers.

Reformed Anglicans point to a symbolic (emotional???) continuity with the ancient churches through that pipeline, but deny that it carries any weight in determining right churches.

Both have laid stressed on the fact that they hold the same faith as the apostolic churches, i.e. the first/second century churches in the East Mediterranean. This is more important to them than to other Protestants. Hence your ex-Anglican university has a much stronger heritage in patristics than its ex-Presbyterian equivalents north of the border.[/QUOTE]
 
That link is on Apostolic Tradition and on the deposit of faith, not apostolic succession...
 
OK, so the Apostles pass their teaching down, then the people that they passed it down to passed it down as well, then they passed it down, exc. After 1500 years is it that inconceivable that those people weren't still teaching the same doctrine as the apostles?

Of course not, but if you look at the link to Tertullian that I gave, his answer to that is that the fact that there are different churches with apostolic founding guards against this. Because if any of them did start to change the teaching, the others would correct it. It's not conceivable that they would all go wrong in precisely the same way. Moreover, the apostles' doctrines are written in the New Testament, which also acts as a guard.

In addition to that, Catholics believe that the church was founded by Christ and remains guided by the Holy Spirit, which preserves it from error at least in the important things. If you follow the link that bras0778 gave you'll see that the catechism talks about how the Holy Spirit continues to operate within the church and guides people to the truth.

How can one determine which apostolic churches have more validity? Or do ANY of them have validility?

As bras0778 said, in modern Catholic thought it's more the church as a whole rather than the individual congregations. The church as a whole has validity because of its dominical founding and apostolic establishment, and it retains this validity because of authoritative succession, not to mention the continued action of the Holy Spirit and the correction of scripture.

As for the Luther comment, I was kidding, though, as I said above, do we actually know what the Apostles taught other than what the Bible says?

Certainly the New Testament is the main source for the teachings of the apostles, primarily the letters of Paul, since those are the only primary texts by an apostle that we possess. But other early Christian writings are also important witnesses, including the works of the apostolic fathers (Ignatius, Polycarp, etc.), Justin Martyr, and Irenaeus, as well as odd bits and bobs such as the Didache, the Shepherd of Hermas, and so on. To what degree one regards these as preserving apostolic teaching will depend to a large extent on (a) when one dates them, and (b) how reliably one thinks they report the doctrines of the first generation of Christians. But that applies equally to any New Testament writing too, of course.
 
That's not an answerable question. First, even if you assume the usual canon of the New Testament, it doesn't portray a uniform picture. Just to take a simple example, the book of 1 Corinthians appears to envisage a church system where there is no formal leadership at all and where church services consist of people basically doing whatever they feel like in the moment. But the Pastoral epistles (1 Tim, 2 Tim, Titus) envisage a very different system where there are formal leaders including bishops, presbyters, and deacons, with strict qualifications and rules governing them. (That, incidentally, is one of the things that indicate that the Pastoral epistles were probably not written by the same person who wrote 1 Corinthians.) Now a person who wants to emulate the church of the New Testament will act very differently depending on whether she bases her understanding of that church on 1 Corinthians or on the Pastorals.

In fact the church of the first century was very diverse, just as it has been ever since. Our picture of what the church of the first couple of generations was like is distorted, because we have only partial evidence, namely what made it into the New Testament, and it would be a mistake to assume that the New Testament gives an accurate and objective picture of that time. Nevertheless, there is still evidence of this diversity even in the New Testament as it stands. One might, perhaps, try to emulate the church of Paul's letters, or the church of the early chapters of Acts, or the church of Matthew, or the church of Revelations, but to try to emulate the church of the entire New Testament is impossible because there's no such thing.

The second major reason why your question is unanswerable is that, as Traitorfish said, what people see in a text like the Bible is partially determined by their own cultural predispositions. Here's a simple example. When western Protestant missionaries came to west Africa in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries they had some success converting people there. And being good proto-evangelicals they told them that the Bible contained everything they needed to know. But when the west Africans read the Bible, they saw in it the three following teachings:

(1) Polygamy is a good thing.
(2) Dreams are a common and reliable source of divine inspiration.
(3) Miracles happen all the time and should be expected on a daily basis.

They interpreted the Bible as teaching these things because they reflected what they already believed, because all of these ideas were already embedded in their own cultures. The western missionaries were completely baffled. They didn't see these ideas in the Bible when they read it, not simply because they didn't believe them, but because these ideas weren't part of their own culture and they'd never had to handle them. When their African converts asked them why they shouldn't expect God to speak to them in their dreams every night, given that he does so frequently in the opening chapters of Matthew (for example), the missionaries had no answer because they'd never even considered the question before.

This illustrates that there is no blanket answer for what an unbiased person will see in the Bible, or any other text for that matter, because there is no such person.

There is a third reason why, quite apart from these contingent considerations, it's necessarily impossible to emulate the early church faithfully, which is that any attempt to reconstruct something from the past will be an imperfect reconstruction simply in virtue of being a reconstruction. Suppose for the sake of argument that a clear and consistent picture of the contemporary church were presented in the New Testament and that it were possible to replicate that church today without cultural bias getting in the way. Even then, it would be radically different from the early church simply because it was a copy. The first Christians were not interested in replicating the early church - they were the early church. They had no notion of an ancient form of Christianity that they had to follow. They were just making it up as they went along. Christians today who think it important to do what the early church did will be failing to do what the early church did precisely in their attempt to emulate them. It's a bit like someone my wife knew at university who was obsessed with Nick Cave and tried to be like Nick Cave in every way. No matter how like him he managed to be, he had to fail, because one of the defining features of Nick Cave is the fact that he's not trying to be someone else.



That's also impossible, because why would anyone believe that the New Testament is going to tell them the truth if they weren't already committed to some kind of specific version of Christianity? Such a person has already ruled out liberal Protestantism, for example.

As I've said before, I admire the way you're asking questions of this kind, but I think they're the wrong questions because they're still based on assumptions that you're drawing from your own religious tradition. Perhaps we all do that and it's impossible not to, but but one can make the effort to avoid it. In this case you're still assuming that the New Testament does give a fairly straightforward picture of the early church and that modern churches can be evaluated according to how closely they resemble it.

OK, I get what you are getting at. As seems to be the case, I really do want to understand the historrical roots of my own faith, but obviously, everyone I know IRL has a bias towards Evangelical Christianity, and most of the people on here are biased against it:p

So, you are saying that what theology you develop would depend on which NT books you try to build it on? So how would a viewpoint of Biblical infallibility play into that? Do you think you *Can* hold to Biblical infallibility without being internally inconsistent?

From most of what I have heard from Evangelicals, the Catholic Church was more or less theologically accurate initially (Not completely so) but gradually drifted, and dramatically so after Augustine. Is there any historical support for this view? Against it?

How do most Evangelicals who are knowledgable about church history (And aren't cherry picking, or at least not intentionally so) explain the shift from the church of the NT to Catholicism and to the Reformation?

If the Apocryphal books were viewed as "Secondary" until Luther, isn't that at least a reasonable reason to remove them, even if not "Clear cut" as it were? You said Luther had no good reason to remove them, then you said they were only secondary canon before Luther, which seems at least a decent reason to remove them.
 
Yeah, it wasn't clear enough. I meant specifically through the lens of Evangelical Protestantism, in other words as it applies to the doctrines that are central to Evangelical Protestantism (In fact, it would be helpful to address each of the major ones individually, I'd imagine such a viewpoint would make more sense for some issues than others.

And to add to it, if the answer is "That wouldn't be plausible" would it be more plausible if you think the Catholic Church "Fell away" at a different date? (Earlier or later.)
 
From most of what I have heard from Evangelicals, the Catholic Church was more or less theologically accurate initially (Not completely so) but gradually drifted, and dramatically so after Augustine. Is there any historical support for this view? Against it?
Go nuts.
 
Yeah, it wasn't clear enough. I meant specifically through the lens of Evangelical Protestantism, in other words as it applies to the doctrines that are central to Evangelical Protestantism (In fact, it would be helpful to address each of the major ones individually, I'd imagine such a viewpoint would make more sense for some issues than others.

And to add to it, if the answer is "That wouldn't be plausible" would it be more plausible if you think the Catholic Church "Fell away" at a different date? (Earlier or later.)

Key point bolded.
 
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