[quote:e73f706c78][i:e73f706c78]Originally posted by kceaster[/i:e73f706c78]
[quote:e73f706c78]inscripturated? I am not familiar with the term, and couldn't find it in the dictionary. I assume it deals with scripture.[/quote:e73f706c78]
To be inscripturated means that a particular historical narrative or circumstance is placed into Scripture. Thus, the practice of the early Church is inscripturated because it is recorded for us in Acts.
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Ok, I didn't know that you meant the apostolic church.
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Now, theology aside, we can from a plain reading of the words, see that the Church met on the first day of the week. We also know what they did during their meetings. We also know how they practiced the ordinance of communion. We can find out all of this from historical narrative. Thus the early Church may serve as a testimony against any Church who practices differently or does anything contrary to that pattern.
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Ok, well I see more where you are coming from, but would you agree that you must apply the regulative principle to conclude that Rome violates the practices in Acts?
[quote:e73f706c78]Are any of Rome's doctrines objectivly declared as heresy in the Early Church?[/quote:e73f706c78]
[quote:e73f706c78]The early Church did not know about Rome's doctrines, so how could they declare them as heresy?
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JW doctrine is declared as heresy (Arianism) way before they were around.
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Paul does give us a glimpse of what is coming though, in his words to both Titus and Timothy. This is not theology. From a plain reading of his words, we can see what he says is coming.
It also does not take theology to see that the Romish mass is quite different from the ordinance of communion. Just by using the narrative, we can see that the RCC does not agree with the early church practice. This is not my opinion. It is just bare bones comparing one tradition to the other. Where Rome does not like this is where the Reformation has said that there are traditions upheld in Scripture, just not the ones they hold to.
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It is a mere semantical exercise to say that scripture is so clear it is not your view of scripture that declares Rome as false. Many educated men would disagree. I agree it is objective, but it is still you personal view.
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So it takes no interpretive prowess to see that the mass and the ordinance are two separate things. Where everyone got confused in the middle ages is when they started accepting extra-biblical historical tradition instead of the inscripturated tradition. But just a cursory look can defeat the comparison. If it doesn't line up, it is not valid.
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A sidebar: Do you believe communion to be an ordinance rather than a sacarament?
[quote:e73f706c78]In fact, it is less objective since it is your view of history, not the Church's. The Roman CHurch puts forth a very good case of their historicity. Why is theirs wrong and yours correct?[/quote:e73f706c78]
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Because it doesn't line up with the early church and what the Reformation returned to..[/quote:e73f706c78]
But there is not objective standard before the reformation directly saying that the Eucharist as Rome believes it is wrong. In fact many reformed today view John 6 in the same light as do Roman Catholics. It still boils down to our interpretation. I can find plenty of ECFs to support Rome on this issue, and the Bible speaks against only in a deductive form.
I agree that their view is heresy, but only by the standard of the Gospel, not by any direct statement in scripture.
[quote:e73f706c78]In fact, even Protestants disagree on which creeds are right, and which are wrong. Anglican accepts the 7th, while reformers typically don't.[/quote:e73f706c78]
Now we get into theological debates. It gets tougher. That is where I will argue as my forbears. Remember, I follow them. They don't follow me.
[quote:e73f706c78]Also, the tradition of inventing new doctine started very early in the Church. Just ask Tertullion. Therefore, the early Church is not a capable judge on Roman doctrine where it is silent (Eucharist). They certainly didn't deny the ROman view, they just didn't teach it.[/quote:e73f706c78]
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Paul said this as well, so did James. But the early Church is judge where innovations have been made. It doesn't really matter if they didn't see it coming. The fact is that it came, and therefore, since it is both new and divergent, it must be false. After the Apostles, there is no new revelation. Whatever light shines, must be in accord, or it is no light at all.
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But, there is development of doctrine, right?
[quote:e73f706c78]So, Rome is not true because they are not Biblical. I agree. At least that is my own view on it.
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If you are not the first to view it this way, then I say you are submitting to the Reformed Church on the matter. It all depends on your perspective. Do I come first, or do they? Since we did not fight the original fight, how can we say it is our opinion. Do we own it if it is true? What do we have we have not received?
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First of all, it was introduced to me by tradition, and I had to verify it by scripture. We have no doctrine we haven't recived, but we have more fully developed doctrine due to necessity.