Agapooka wrote:An oddity... you claim that adherence to the Bible is not necessary to constitute a Christian, yet you insist that one must adhere to the Bible to obtain the definitions required to know who is and who isn't a Christian.
where is the oddity?
one does not need to know psychology to be paranoid, yet a knowledge ("adherence") of psychological writings is needed to define him as such.
one does not need to be a scholar of philosophy to be a rationalist, yet knowledge of philosophy is needed to define him as such.
similarily, one does not need to read the scriptures to be a christian (as, BTW, this comic and the like of it states repeatedly), however knowledge of the scriptures is required to define him as such.
Agapooka wrote:Furthermore, you only repeat your claim that your definition of a Christian as an individual who believes that Jesus Christ is the messiah is universally accepted and you attempt to draw a distinction between a religious Christian and simply a Christian, whereas we are both likely to agree that Christianity *is* a religion. I know some who disagree.
this is true. however, in every religion, every person chooses his level of religiousnes. just as there are jews who believe in god, yet eat pig's meat, and just as there are muslims who believe in god, yet drink alcohol, there are christians who believe jesus is the messiah, yet fail to adhere to his teaching.
Agapooka wrote:On another note, you failed to address my most relevant criticism of your definition of a Christian, which is that it is incomplete. It remains that, as a complete definition, it is far from universally accepted.
why? you failed to provide one point to justify this.
Agapooka wrote:My original claim was that a major distinction between Roman Catholicism and many Evangelical movements is that one claims that the Pope is the ultimate earthly representation of religious authority and the other claims that the ultimate representation of earthly authority is the Bible.
true. however, representation of religious authority is not sinonymus with religious believe. catholics, protestants, evangelical, Jehowa witnesses and messianic jews (which, despite their name, are christians), all have different takes on the religious authority. all also consider jesus to be son of god, a part of the holy trinity, and the messiah.
Agapooka wrote:Not to be nitty picky, but the two don't compare.
The Pope is believed to be infallible, whereas the Protestant church leaders are not. Many times, the Pope can supersede the scriptures, for what he says is of higher importance to a Catholic than what is written.
this is actually derived from jewish tradition. in the jewish tradition, once the bible was given at mount sinai, it is permitted to be interpreted, and those interprtation are considered to be just as valid as god's own words.
Agapooka wrote:Nowhere did I claim that the apparent norm is more logical.
no you didn't. i, however, claimed it to be true,
by definition.
as we're talking
logical methodology and
theological substance, the norm doesn't have to be rigidly logical.
Agapooka wrote:It is quite clearly stated that papal infallibility is a dogma of the Catholic Church, whereas there is no similar dogma of Pastoral infallibility in mainstream Protestantism. I never claimed that the Catholic Church ignores the Bible completely, but if the Catholic's interpretation must first pass through the Pope, is the Pope's religious authority not greater than the text's if the average Catholic must accept the Pope's interpretation and not form their own from the text? Note the "if".
no. it is, as thriller very clearly explained, greater than the laymen's authority.
Agapooka wrote:If he cannot be questioned, the final interpreter is, for all practical purposes, the final authority, because his interpretation overrides anyone else's, including direct examination of the text. If one's conclusions from directly examining the text can override anyone else's interpretation, then, the ultimate authority is the text.

that's false. say you are in a multi national military unit, where the commander only speak czech, and you only speak russian. the russian intreprater will be, for all practical purposes the final authority, because his interpretation overrides anyone else's, including direct examination of the text. this, however, does not mean he is the commander of the unit.
Thriller wrote:I was raised catholic, just so you know pooka.
Agapooka wrote:My father used to be a protestant pastor and I grew up literally living in a church, but hey, I'm not condemning either group here. I currently consider myself an agnostic, if you haven't been able to gather that from my particular view of reality as unknowable with the tools we have as humans.

while were in the bussines of making personal statements, i'm a secular jew, my father was religious until he was 18, his family still is, i have some knowledge of judaism, and consider myself an atheist.