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10-08-2008, 01:04 PM | #41 | ||
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10-08-2008, 01:11 PM | #42 | |
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However one could argue that the claims of Biblical inspiration and authority made by Origen and Augustine are different from modern claims of Biblical inerrancy. (Particularly in the case of Origen.) The modern claims IIUC put more emphasis on the authority of the literal sense of the text than did the ancient claims. (I'm not sure why Spurgeon is mentioned above. He is after all 19th century). Andrew Criddle |
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10-09-2008, 01:30 AM | #43 | |||||
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10-09-2008, 06:18 AM | #44 | |
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Who indeed that has understanding will suppose that the first and second and third day, both the evening and the morning, came into being without a sun and moon and stars? And that the first was, as it were, also without a sky? And who is so foolish as to suppose that God, after the manner of a husbandman, planted a paradise in Eden toward the east, and placed in it a visible and palpable tree of life, so that one tasting of the fruit through his bodily teeth might take on life? And again that one took hold of good and evil from masticating what was taken from the tree? And if God is also said to walk about in the paradise at evening and Adam [is said] to hide himself under a tree, I do not suppose that any one doubts that these things figuratively disclose certain mysteries, the history having happened in seeming and not bodily. But Cain also, going out from the face of God, certainly appears to learned men as moving the reader to seek out what the face of God is and what someone going out from him is. And why must one say more, since those who are not wholly sightless can gather together myriads of such kinds of things recorded as having happened, but which did not happen literally? But the gospels too are filled with the same form of words, the devil leading Jesus up into a high mountain in order to show him thence the kingdoms of the whole world and their glory. For who is there of those who do not read such things carelessly that would not condemn those who suppose that with the eye of the body, which requires a height so as to perceive things lying under and adjacent, the kingdom of the Persians and that of the Scythians and that of the Indians and that of the Parthians were seen, and the way in which their kings are glorified by men? And fully along with these there are other myriads from the gospels to convince the accurate man that, among the histories that happened literally, other things that have not transpired have been placed.His understanding of the scriptures to me seems altogether incompatible with that of most of those who espouse inerrancy in our day. Yet he seems to have treated the scriptures as authoritative in some way. (My question being: In what way exactly?) Ben. |
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10-09-2008, 06:31 AM | #45 |
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Is there a distinction between how he treats the OT and the NT, I wonder?
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10-09-2008, 06:45 AM | #46 | |
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But it is not only concerning those [scriptures] before the advent [of Christ] that the spirit performed these things, but rather, since it happened to be the same [spirit] and from the one God, he has done the same thing both with the gospels and with the apostles, and not even these [texts] hold a wholly unmixed history, things having been interwoven according to the bodily, but not having happened; nor even do the lawmaking [books] and the commandments wholly make apparent what is reasonable.By scriptures before the advent I gather he means the Old Testament; by the gospels and the apostles I gather he means the New. This seems to be why he gives examples both from Genesis and from the gospels. Ben. |
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10-09-2008, 01:23 PM | #47 | |
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Andrew Criddle |
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10-09-2008, 02:43 PM | #48 | |
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I know that in the Latin translation of his Homilies on Luke he calls the four gospels approved (probata, with no parallel in the Greek). Ben. |
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10-09-2008, 04:13 PM | #49 | |||||
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10-09-2008, 05:37 PM | #50 | |
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