Albion wrote:Well, Tobin, we come full circle. Prove your point with scripture. You'll forgive me if I don't just take your brain as evidence. You say authority and MP are the same thing.... so again, any scriptural reference for the giving of the MP to anyone will settle the debate. Mormonism makes the claim...where is the evidence?
The evidence is in the scripture. I have long argued that people should not read the Bible, they are unprepared for it. My brother and I got into a disagreement over it, but my position is that most simply assume that a text is in English, so they will automatically understand it, which is completely wrong. To read the Bible one must be well versed in culture, linguistics, history, religion (moreso), etc...
This is the problem with the understanding above, it is void of cultural context.
Hebrews was written to, surprise…surprise, Hebrews. It was written to a Jewish audience that understood things in a Jewish context. As such the language is interesting. When the text refers to the "order of Aaron", a known, established, a largely populated organization, it refers to something very well known, and something that was recently a subject of significant conflict. The recent Maccabean revolt involved, among other things, questions about priestly issues. So a reference to the "order of Aaron" had significant context.
Now when an "order of Melchizedek" is mentioned, it must be understood in light of this context. The same language is used, same etymology. The “order” in both cases is the same word. It is a word that denotes membership. It is completely unthinkable that a reference would be made to an organization that has numerous and established membership without assuming the same from the superior order of Melchizedek. In short, the wording and cultural context matters.
The argument you, and Mittens before you, are making is simply wrong because it is unsupported by any cultural or religious, or linguistic, understanding. It is a simplistic argument made by superimposing Protestant theology back on the Bible, rather than reading the text in light of a full understanding of the culture to begin with.
An Order of Melchizedek must have more members than 1 or 2. It is an order.
This is not really debatable.
This does not necessarily prove Mormonism, it simply interprets the text correctly. Mormons could be completely incorrect about the Order of Melchizedek, but they at least recognize that the order needs membership.