phil_20686, on 2011-February-05, 10:15, said:
I could go on, but there is no point. Indeed, for nearly 17 centuries the position of all the major Christian churches (although for most of that there was really only one) was summed up as "The bible contains within it all the information necessary for the salvation of souls, but its inerrancy should not be considered to spread beyond these matters."
Agreed... Not much reason to go on because this last statement is ludicrous on multiple levels
1. What was this "one" Christian Church of which you speak? The Roman Catholics? The Eastern Orthodox? The Copts? The Georgians? The Armenians? The Western Schism? The list goes on...
2. Exactly which 17 centuries did this church exist? I assume that your "17 centuries" terminates with the Protestant reformation which is generally accepted to have started in the early 1500s... I don't think that you can really claim that there was anything approaching a unified concept of Christianity prior to the first Council of Nicea in 325. Indeed the entire purpose of this council was to attempt to agree upon niggling little details like "the Trinity"... I'm hard pressed to understand just where this figure came from
3. As for the whole Biblical Inerrancy statement: There's a reason that the Evangelicals had to issue the Chicago Statement and Vatican II issued Dei Verbum... No one could agree whether their churches advocated Biblical innerancy, Biblical infallibility, or something altogether different. Its ludicrous to presume that the early church, struggling with primitive communication systems and vast geographical differences had anything approaching a unified position on this topic. The history of Christian church is a history of a 1,001 different heresies.
Given that you are so blindingly ignorant about the basic history of your church - and this is basic stuff that I recall from confirmation classes and high school history 25+ years ago - why should we pay any attention to your attempts at more sophisticated analysis?