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[MENTION=387]Andrew[/MENTION]
Exactly the identical position to Luther.... And the Anglican Church.
The point applies even more to the topic here: Whether Mary had other children.
The key thing in your post is, "THE SCRIPTURE IS INCONCLUSIVE ON THE MATTER." Ah.... let that soak in to us all. So when people (as in this thread) state, "The Bible clearly states Mary had other children".... "The Bible says these are the children specifically of MARY" Calvin would disagree, would he not? As would Luther. It's called honesty. It's called humility. It's called making Scripture the ultimate authority. BTW, Luther said "Humility is the foundation of all sound theology." John Wesley said, "We must be bold where Scripture is clear and silent where it is not." Perhaps there's some wisdom there?
Now, Luther was more embracing of ancient, ecumenical Tradition than most of the Protestants that followed him; he welcomed people to voice that Mary had no other chilldren - as long as they did not do so dogmaticallty, and as long as they admitted this is their chosen Tradition. It's .... interesting.... for me (as now Lutheran) to see SO many Protestants ranting against Tradition and then embracing it dogmatically in a way that would make Cathollics blush, even doing what Catholics tipically don't: Insisting that SCRIPTURE STATES IT when everyone who can read sees it does not (but these Protestants CLAIM what they dogmatically teach IS what the Bible says, so if they teach it - the Bible MUST teach it too, then make the mistake of quoting Scripture and proving themselves wrong about that). Jesus' "log/speck" thing at times comes to mind.....
Andrew, as a staffer here, perhaps you can see that often discussions get nowhere. Perhaps if you read post 152, you can understand one possible reason. There is at times a lack of h0nesty and humility.... there is at times a demand for two different rule books (one for self, the opposite rules for everyone else), and at times some Protestants (because of their embrace of Scripture as Authority and often a distain for Tradition) will dogmatically SHOUT (endlessly!) "The BIBLE says" then prove it does not, it's the Tradition they echo that says it. Andrew, I'm NOT by any means disallowing Tradition in our discussions (that's some other Protestants here - the ones that use it most of all).... just don't lie about that. And don't insist others cannot do what they do (often, most of all). And for heaven's sake, don't insist "The Bible says" and then shoot self in the foot by proving it does not. See my point? Ah, I think this is one reason why discussions so often just don't get anywhere.
-Josiah
.
Andrew said:Calvin seemed to have found it possible for Mary to remain a virgin but that the scripture is inconclusive on the matter.
Exactly the identical position to Luther.... And the Anglican Church.
The point applies even more to the topic here: Whether Mary had other children.
The key thing in your post is, "THE SCRIPTURE IS INCONCLUSIVE ON THE MATTER." Ah.... let that soak in to us all. So when people (as in this thread) state, "The Bible clearly states Mary had other children".... "The Bible says these are the children specifically of MARY" Calvin would disagree, would he not? As would Luther. It's called honesty. It's called humility. It's called making Scripture the ultimate authority. BTW, Luther said "Humility is the foundation of all sound theology." John Wesley said, "We must be bold where Scripture is clear and silent where it is not." Perhaps there's some wisdom there?
Now, Luther was more embracing of ancient, ecumenical Tradition than most of the Protestants that followed him; he welcomed people to voice that Mary had no other chilldren - as long as they did not do so dogmaticallty, and as long as they admitted this is their chosen Tradition. It's .... interesting.... for me (as now Lutheran) to see SO many Protestants ranting against Tradition and then embracing it dogmatically in a way that would make Cathollics blush, even doing what Catholics tipically don't: Insisting that SCRIPTURE STATES IT when everyone who can read sees it does not (but these Protestants CLAIM what they dogmatically teach IS what the Bible says, so if they teach it - the Bible MUST teach it too, then make the mistake of quoting Scripture and proving themselves wrong about that). Jesus' "log/speck" thing at times comes to mind.....
Andrew, as a staffer here, perhaps you can see that often discussions get nowhere. Perhaps if you read post 152, you can understand one possible reason. There is at times a lack of h0nesty and humility.... there is at times a demand for two different rule books (one for self, the opposite rules for everyone else), and at times some Protestants (because of their embrace of Scripture as Authority and often a distain for Tradition) will dogmatically SHOUT (endlessly!) "The BIBLE says" then prove it does not, it's the Tradition they echo that says it. Andrew, I'm NOT by any means disallowing Tradition in our discussions (that's some other Protestants here - the ones that use it most of all).... just don't lie about that. And don't insist others cannot do what they do (often, most of all). And for heaven's sake, don't insist "The Bible says" and then shoot self in the foot by proving it does not. See my point? Ah, I think this is one reason why discussions so often just don't get anywhere.
-Josiah
.
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