Alexis Jacobi wrote: ↑Sat Nov 06, 2021 9:59 pm
...are there other Early Church sources you refer to? Who?
Well, really, one does not need
any.
There may be some such sources that say the right thing, and some that spout arrant nonsense, like the Gnostics did, for example. The important fact is whether or not the
Torah and the Christian Scriptures support any belief in what a particular religious organization is saying. If they do not, then what is being suggested is not inherently Christian in any way, regardless of how long-standing it has been or how many people have claimed it.
I would assume...that you believe that Catholics are not Christians (or are only semi-Christians or partial Christians).
I would never speak about an individual Catholic. Only they know what they believe, and a person does not necessarily have to have perfect theology in order to be genuinely Christian. If they did, there would be no such thing as a Christian; for which of us is perfect?
However, if one refers to what the Catholic hierarchy has taught historically and teaches now, and compare it to Scripture, one sees the profound departure for oneself. And one can only conclude that if "Christian" is now taken to mean "Catholic," then it no longer means "somebody who follows the way taught by Jesus Christ Himself," and by His personally-designated followers. There is no other conclusion to which an informed and reasonable person can come, really.
We must make of that fact the obvious, I think.
Yet I assume that you might also not favor Luther as a source.
I think we can all pause for a minute to be grateful for some of what Luther achieved, not only in terms of the emancipation of religion but also in terms of his contribution for secular freedoms as well. However, anybody who knows the whole story of Luther also knows that he was a flawed human being. Some things he said I would praise; some, I wish he had never said.
But is it necessary to admire
everything about a man before we can listen to
anything from a man? Because if that's the standard we use, then most of the great people in history are really going to turn out to be people we have to refuse to listen to. So I think we can be judicious and selective in what we approve of what a man says and does.
Who are the Protestant Christian philosophers and theologians that helped develop the 'non-denominational' position you hold to?
I would start with the canon of Scripture itself.
If a man (or woman) agrees with it, then great. But if he/she only speaks from his/her own opinions, and makes no connection to Scripture, then we are thrown back on merely our own preferences, with no authoritative source by which to judge the the varous pronouncements he or she makes.
Do you read Protestant theology? Do you read any Catholic theologians/philosophers?
Yes, actually. But both are non-authoritative to me. As the
Tanakh puts it, we must always turn first
"to the Law and to the testimony! If they do not speak in accordance with this word, it is because they have no dawn." (Isaiah 8:20) So a theologian or philosopher is only as good as his ideas are compatible with the Word of God.
That said, I think you're really trying to find out what some of my theological-philosophical influencers might be. And if that's right, then I'm happy to comply.
Among them would certainly be Soren Kierkegaard, John Locke, Alfred Edersheim, David Gooding, C.S. Lewis, G.K. Chesterton, Martin Buber, Carl Henry, Jacques Ellul, and paradoxically, perhaps, Friedrich Nietzsche, Jurgen Habermas, and Thomas Hardy, among other Atheist and agnostic writers. More recent influences would include Oliver O'Donovan, Craig Gay, Michael Polanyi, Lesslie Newbiggin, Nicholas Wolterstorff, Alvin Plantinga, Roger Lundin, W.L. Craig, John Lennox, Jordan Peterson, D.B. Hart...how many do you want?