cksalmon wrote:In this particular instance, m, the old one commands near-universal agreement. Outliers are outliers.
It never ends
But agreement with what is the question ;)
cksalmon wrote:In this particular instance, m, the old one commands near-universal agreement. Outliers are outliers.
I'm more interested in what bcspace means by "ancient equivalent."
Is this a moment of intellectual honesty where the Mormon finally acknowledges that Mormonism is Hermetic/Esoteric Christianity and not, as it loudly claims to be, genuine mainstream Christianity?
We certainly are not traditional Christianity which is the apostate result of the universal apostasy of the early Christian Church.
We certainly are not traditional Christianity which is the apostate result of the universal apostasy of the early Christian Church.So all the Christian Churches in AD 325 were already apostate.
For the record, you don't get to call yourself "Christian" if you throw out the Council of Nicea. There are rules.
cksalmon wrote:Sudduth, a well-respected, articulate, oft-cited, and, by all accounts, a genuinely-friendly, formerly-Reformed-Protestant Christian, now presents himself as one who is definitionally in a state of open apostasy vis-à-vis Christianity. He's an apostate, for now.
bcspace wrote:The early orthodox Christians would have considered the trinity a heresy
bcspace wrote:Not even Theophilus or Tertullian can be considered trinitarian.
Samantabhadra wrote:Tertullian invented (or at least was the first Latin author to use) the term Trinitas to refer to the union of the three persons of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit. To claim that he "cannot be considered trinitarian" is like claiming that a tapir... oh, never mind.