LESSON 31 HOW DO WE DETERMINE GOD’S WORD?

In: Basic Christian Doctrine

1 Jun 2010

Throughout our history the Church has determined what it accepts as the Word of God by balancing many elements of tradition: charisma, canon, creed, clergy, ceremony, custom, and community. She is constantly correcting the problems that develop when one or more of these gets out of balance. For instance, the Reformation attacked the Roman Church’s use of custom in a way that ignored the canon. Martin Luther tried to correct this by giving canon authority over custom. The problem was he, too, upset the balance by speaking of scripture “alone”.

Many of our modern problems stem from failing to appreciate the need for appropriate balance. Let’s take a few weeks to examine the problem. First, definitions are necessary.

Charisma: inspiration such as people feeling they are filled with God’s Spirit when they speak to either a one- time event or an ongoing issue.

Canon: the approved sacred writings from the past (The Bible) that are used as standards for judging claims for God’s Words in the present.

Creed: statements summarizing the very basic beliefs about God’s Word.

Custom: practices and teachings that have proved their value for a long time.

Clergy: officers given authority to proclaim and supervise God’s Word.

Ceremony:  ritual that regularly repeats proven practices.

Community: the gathering of believers that Jesus defines as two or three gathered in his name.

If you understand these 7 “cs” work together, you can readily see the limitations of our modern denominations that limit our ability to speak God’s Word in unity. The Pentecostal churches promote undisciplined charisma, the Lutherans undisciplined canon, the Fundamentalists an undisciplined version of a modern creed, the Roman Catholics undisciplined clergy, the Episcopalians undisciplined ceremony, the Baptists undisciplined community, and everyone of us undisciplined custom.

Of course, my take is far, far too general. I simply want to emphasize that we have problems when we elevate one element of this tradition in a way that minimizes or ignores the others. My use of “undisciplined” simply points to this. I’ll get more precise about how each of these elements function in the coming weeks. Feel free to ask questions, make corrections, and expand my observation in the “comments”.

1 Response to LESSON 31 HOW DO WE DETERMINE GOD’S WORD?

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bob nordvall

June 1st, 2010 at 9:43 pm

From a very concise statement last week of what are the essential things that Christians are called to do, we now move to the elements that constitute Christianity as a complex and often contradictory (at least among various groups of adherents) religion. However simple and direct Christianity may have been in its early years, there is no going back to that era. For better or worse we are saddled with a range of elements that constitute and define Christianity. A minor quibble. As a member of a Lutheran Church who is also a Vestry member of a Episcopal Church in another location, I would not think of Episcopalians as purveyors of “undisciplined ceremony.” I find Lutheran, Episcopal, and Roman Catholic ceremonies to be quite similar.

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