
"I believe that the Bible is the Word of God and the only source of doctrine and belief, but the Church who gave us the canon of scriptures became apostate right after Paul and the real church didn't resurface in its pure form until over 1500 years later." So you trust the Bible you have but not those who gave it to you? Save the seals, Kill the babies?
Which came first; the Bible or the Church? The Church. What did Paul say was the "Pillar and foundation of all truth? The Bible? No-The Church. ..."I write to you so that you will know how you ought to conduct yourself in the house of God, the pillar and foundation of the truth." (1 Timothy 3:15) While the Scriptures are the inspired truth of God in human words, the Church is the pillar and ground of that truth (OSB p489)- the keeper, the preserver, the mainstay, the protector. The Bible in its present form didn't come into existence until about 400 years after the birth of the Church.
So here is the skew ideology, theology, methodology:
Premise One: The Church went apostate, dark, fell into sin and error and stayed that way until Martin Luther (Lutheren) or Alexander Campbell (Church of Christ) or John Smythe (Baptist) came to reestablish the purity of the faith some 1600 or 1800 years later.
Premise Two: We believe every word of the Bible and it is the sole source of doctrine and faith.
Conclusion: You trust a Bible that was birthed, collected, maintained and canonized by men that were apostate, dark, fell into sin and error.
Question: If you accept and trust the Bible why can't you trust the men who gave it to you? And if these men are trustworthy, why can't you trust their interpretations of the Bible they gave you?
It always seems elementary to say, but the Bible didn't just fall out of the sky in leather back or hardback form. The Bible was birthed, interpreted and preserved by breathing men of faith, many of whom went to a martyr's death. These same men, you consider to be erroneous, sinful men who were not the real or pure church...yet you accept their Bible. Save the seals, kill the babies. Does that really make sense?

A dependable rule of thumb for determining truth is to look for "what was believed at all times, in all places, by all people." Where does it say in the Bible or in history that the Church that Christ said "the gates of hell shall not prevail against" died less than 30 years after his ascension into heaven and that He would send a man later on in the 1600's or the 1800's to make all things right? Let's just start with the 7 ecumenical counsels (Free podcast on the Counsels). These are the meetings where all the Bishops of the church met to define and defend the faith from heretics. Read and hear what these men said and did. Point out where they were in error. Was it the first counsel, the second? If the Church went astray only to surface another day, where
and when did it happen? Read the volumes on The Early Church Fathers, some of whom were discipled by the Apostles themselves. Read their own words. Where did they go astray? To keep from throwing the seals out with the babies don't just rely upon partial historical interpretations such as "Constantine humanized the church and there it was lost." So one man had the power to kill the church? If this and other presuppositions cannot be validated in your study of history, perhaps the authentic Church is found in a place other than you thought-The Orthodox Church. "To be deep in history is to cease to be Protestant. "

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