John Charles sStorer wrote in #38
Regarding all the protestant sects, do you think you are in the right one?
For a start, I prefer to call them denominations, although there are some sects.
Secondly, I am very comfortable being an Anglican, especially in this Diocese and Province.
Thirdly, unlike the Romans who deny validity of other denominations, I am happy to accept that there are Many Many Christians in other denominations. Tonight I held a Bible Study, at which we had representatives from the Anglican, Church of Christ and Salvation Army denominations. We had a few differences of opinions, but just as the Romans like to distinguish between doctrine and discipline, so I can distinguish between things that are essential and those things which we can have a variety of opinions about.
For to me, much of the theology presented in the Bible appears at odds with itself. For instance, is God one? So how can the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit all be God? Then we look at the nature of Christ- Man? God? Somehow both? Then we can see the Bible - God’s word? Man’s word? Both?; predestination v free will… etc etc etc (including Genesis 1 cf Gensis 2-3).
The way I have been shown to keep my brain from frying over these is not to run to the pope for his opinion (although I can do that), but to see that the Bible does not give narrow, sharp-point-of-the-pin type answers, but more often gives limits beyond which we cannot go. So instead of the narrow pushing that Roman Catholics often want us to have, we can have table-top theology. We see the limits as rather like the sides of the table, beyond which is falling off area.
However within the limits there is some legitmate room to have slightly different positions, and over which the history of the church has seen awful heartache & disgusting fights and splits.
I can accept another denomination as having a Christian basis of belief, and yet still argue that some of the greyer issues are not quite right.
We see this sort of a process occuring in the historical Godhead & Nature of Christ debates and councils. First came the major claims, which were then discussed, argued about, the Scriptures checked & then a statement made as to what was OK and therefore what was not OK. These limits then brought another round of discussion as people wanted to push it a bit further & try to figure it out a bit more.
The 3 major creeds are the results. If you notice the creeds, they not only say what is true, but they also very carefully define what is not valid. The Athanasian creed does this especially. It has narrowed the table to a fairly specific area, which is important due to the importance of understanding who God is and what he has done for us.
However, on other areas either the narrowing cannot be so specific, or it has not been of such a horrendously important area that people have split well before consensus was agreed upon.
Thus I can accept the 2 Baptist Pastors down the road as my Christian brothers, and we fellowship and work together during the week. Yet on Sundays we meet separately, but not with accusing hateful spirits, content that we know the Lord, love him dearly, are saved by grace through faith and want people to grow in Christ. The same is true of the Unting Church female minister over there, the several charismatic pastor couples over there, the non-charismatic independant minister over there, and the former Catholic priest over there (former because he has moved, and I have not met the new one… he doesn’t come to our minister’s’ fraternal (yes we still use the old name) so I cannot even publicly state what he tells me his standing is with the Lord… although I pray he is in the Kingdom too)
For my protestant friends who are fixated on Assurance & the Roman Catholics, let me reassure you that there are many many Anglicans who have no assurance… which is why I also talk with them & help them to grasp onto the sweetest doctrine to calm our lurking fears & nagging doubts which is the death and resurrection of our Lord who died for us so that as we trust in him, he saves us, & his Spirit is the seal and downpayment of his promised eternal salvation. To God be the Glory, for He alone is our saviour, nothing in my hand I bring, simply to the cross I cling, naked come to Thee for dress, helpless… (to quote someone famous, with music ting- ting - tinging in my head).