Lanman87
Well-known member
- Joined
- Dec 30, 2020
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- Married
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- Yes
When conversing with some Catholics they point out that Protestant Doctrine is all over the place. There is no church unity in Protestantism and so forth.
Here is my perspective.
Faith and Doctrine are not the same thing. Faith is believing in and trusting God. Doctrine is believing things about God and how He works.
Protestants believe that we saved by Grace Through Faith. Therefore our Unity doesn't come from uniform doctrine (understanding things about God and How he works) but a uniform Faith(Believing and Trusting in Christ). The fact that, by the Grace of God, we share the same Faith in Christ and are all partakers of the same Spirit of God unifies us far more than doctrinal difference could ever divide us.
That is why pretty much every Protestant denomination's statement of faith defines the church as "All True Believers in Christ, wherever they are found". It is often worded differently, my own church words it this way. "The Church is made up of those who have become genuine followers of Jesus Christ and have personally appropriated the gospel." but the meaning is the same.
We believe the Universal Church is made up of all true believers and that those believers can be found in a wide variety of traditions and denominations.
The visible church is wheverever those true believers gather to worship, serve, study the Word, and partake in the sacraments/ordinances of God.
I believe that being wrong about doctrine (and let's face it, we all can't be right) doesn't invalidate either unity with Christ or the Spiritual Unity that all True Believers find by being "In Christ".
That means, (just to pick a doctrine) while I believe that believers baptism in the scriptural mode of Baptism. I also believe that people who practice infant baptism that are genuine followers of Christ are members of the Church, co-laborers in the Kingdom of God, and we will one day be together in Heaven for all eternity.
What are your thoughts on doctrinal difference and church unity?
Here is my perspective.
Faith and Doctrine are not the same thing. Faith is believing in and trusting God. Doctrine is believing things about God and how He works.
Protestants believe that we saved by Grace Through Faith. Therefore our Unity doesn't come from uniform doctrine (understanding things about God and How he works) but a uniform Faith(Believing and Trusting in Christ). The fact that, by the Grace of God, we share the same Faith in Christ and are all partakers of the same Spirit of God unifies us far more than doctrinal difference could ever divide us.
That is why pretty much every Protestant denomination's statement of faith defines the church as "All True Believers in Christ, wherever they are found". It is often worded differently, my own church words it this way. "The Church is made up of those who have become genuine followers of Jesus Christ and have personally appropriated the gospel." but the meaning is the same.
We believe the Universal Church is made up of all true believers and that those believers can be found in a wide variety of traditions and denominations.
The visible church is wheverever those true believers gather to worship, serve, study the Word, and partake in the sacraments/ordinances of God.
I believe that being wrong about doctrine (and let's face it, we all can't be right) doesn't invalidate either unity with Christ or the Spiritual Unity that all True Believers find by being "In Christ".
That means, (just to pick a doctrine) while I believe that believers baptism in the scriptural mode of Baptism. I also believe that people who practice infant baptism that are genuine followers of Christ are members of the Church, co-laborers in the Kingdom of God, and we will one day be together in Heaven for all eternity.
What are your thoughts on doctrinal difference and church unity?