![]() |
| Welcome to Religious Forums |
| Welcome Guest to ReligiousForums.com . You are currently not registered. When you become registered you will be able to interact with our large base of already registered users discussing topics. Some annoying Ads will also disappear when you register. Registering doesn't cost a thing and only takes a few seconds. We provide areas to chat and debate all World Religions. Please go to our register page! |
|
|||||||
![]() |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#11
|
||||
|
||||
|
Stupid computer decided to log me out before I hit preview this time... had to re-write it from start this time. God does not want me saying this stuff or something?
![]() Quote:
Quote:
Quote:
(Of course, I'll still need your guys' help to give me some way of correctly interpreting the moment, when it does happen, if ever)Off to class... I'll get to everyone else later. |
|
#12
|
|||||
|
|||||
|
Quote:
.Quote:
The life of Christ exists within the individuals of the Church, and the Church works by consensus. While people are fallible, Christ has sway over the Church as a whole. The revelations accepted by the Church simply become accepted by everyone. After the people have said "yes, yes, yes" long enough, it simply becomes official (saints, for instance, are "glorified" only after the people have recognized them as such). Said revelation will almost never be the source of division. That can only occur with a revelation from a source other than God. Those are the basic principles by which the Church (and spiritual elders) determine these things. It gradually is accepted or rejected over time. That which is accepted is a standard I can measure myself against. Quote:
Orthodoxy refers to this sense's capacity as the "nous." It means "mind," but not a calculating mind. It also means "heart." It's our capacity to sense and know spiritual things. It is, however, largely inert in us and may be activated not just by God but also by the Adversary or even other people, but we believe it is supposed to be theocentric. That, however, is what we believe, and I can't prove it. And yes, I choose to believe that it has a supernatural origin. It seems to fit the situation in hand, but I can't pretend it's the only explanation. It may well be a physical sense or emotion I am completely misinterpreting. The interpretation I take, though, is the one that makes the most sense out of the experience. Quote:
Yes, there is a good bit of a hunch in it by that definition. I have to interpret what I feel in the general sense I have experienced. I've yet to hear a voice coming from heaven, see the future, know something impossible about someone around the world, work a miracle, or anything of the sort. All I've experienced is that perception and the thoughts that go with it. If any of those more miraculous things were to happen to me, I would be quick to check it against the Church. Indeed, I would be fearful that I was suffering some sort of deception. Quote:
![]()
__________________
And besides...your pulse canons ruined my bunny slippers. |
|
#13
|
|||
|
|||
|
Many Christians use revelation as a way to acquire belief. But the veracity of that belief still needs to be placed in a matter of personal faith regardless of whether it is promogated or not. Revelation is dicussed as a standard for deriving truth in http://www.religiousforums.com/forum/article.php?a=35 an article entitled Epistemology - Criteria of Truth.
|
![]() |
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |