I had relegated myself to just “lurker” status on this discussion, but in reading your further comments, I am beginning to wonder exactly what you mean. You threw out I Tim 4:1-5 originally, to which I questioned whether you wanted to apply that passage to this issue considering the context.
(Despite my earlier comment linking the passage context to Acts 10+11, I can see these verses as forward-looking to Gnosticism - might be a better view - but this doesn’t change the application of the passage to the issue at hand)
I wasn’t offended that you didn’t respond to that directly. However, in reading your further comments, I’m seeing an interesting thread in your logic:
“…So obvious to me that you are denouncing an aspect of God’s creation that he declared good…”
“…I am responsible before God to protect those under my care from such dualistic thinking that declares certain things bad what God created good…”
“…You men if you are not careful will actually be guilty of heresy - being schismatic over man-made standards and traditions - which means we more contemporary fundamentalists will have to mark you as disobedient and encourage others to stay away from you”
“If an institution has a standard and that standard is not consistent to Scripture - and yet you treat that as consistent with the same level of authority as Scripture the best I can say about you is you remind me of a pharisee…if you take a liberty issue and demand that the rest of us follow your idea to be a legitimate fundamentalist - you probably are a neo-pharisee.”
As I noted in my previous comment, the type of person Paul is speaking about in I Tim. 4 are unbelievers. They are teaching the “doctrines of demons”. When you are accusing “traditional fundamentalists” of committing the errors described in this passage (as you did in the first two quotes above), in effect you are saying we have “departed from the faith”. Because of your subsequent statements, I’ll ask again: Is this really what you mean?
In the third quote, you bring up heresy. Seems to point toward that conclusion…
In the last quote, you basically equate someone taking a dogmatic stand on music with a Pharisee. Not being “pharisaical” - but an actual Pharisee. Since those were the men who demanded Jesus’ death, and since those where the men on which Christ pronounced the “woes” in Matt. 23, inquiring “how can ye escape the damnation of hell?”, this is a pretty heavy accusation.
So then, if I were to say to you that I disagree with your application of I TImothy 4, and furthermore that I would teach and preach that the stylings of the rock/hip-hop genres of music are fleshly and sinful, and that I would separate from those who consistently include such styles in worship, would you then mark me as a heretic, a Pharisee, and an unbeliever destined for hell?
Discussion