Ecclesiology Part 1: Systematic Theology

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 19 окт 2024

Комментарии • 4

  • @belovedxtempest
    @belovedxtempest 4 года назад +2

    Late to The Remnant Radio but, gosh do I LOVE Michael Mitchell episodes. I listen to them on Spotify constantly! I love (almost) every episode but I love all the giggles and education from him! Hoping he’ll be featured more in the future.

  • @alexfelic1264
    @alexfelic1264 6 лет назад +2

    Michael mitchell episodes >>>> everything on RUclips

  • @haileylindberg4365
    @haileylindberg4365 2 года назад

    So good!

  • @barelyprotestant5365
    @barelyprotestant5365 5 лет назад

    I am very pleasantly surprised by this one! I've never heard a Charismatic Dispensationalist speak so highly of the Catholic Tradition! I praise God that charismatic theologians are moving away from mere memorialism. I think it might depend on what theological circles one runs in, but at least in mine and the ones I know (I admittedly don't know too many charismatic evangelical theologians), the theology of the Eucharist that the gues speaker called "Real Presence" is generally known as "Receptionism", at least if he's espousing the understanding that Calvin gave (which he seems to be doing). As an Anglo-Catholic, I hold to what's known as Real Presence, but It is a physical, objective Presence (distinct from Transubstantiation, but that's a whole other ball of wax). Finally, with all love and respect, I do want to correct a misunderstanding that was made of Transubstantiation in the talk (and it presumably would be similarly aimed at all who hold to a real, physical, objective Presence): we are not re-sacrificing Jesus, in thought or action. We hold to the Once-for-all Sacrifice of Christ; in fact, in the Anglican Liturgy we explicitly refer to It as the Once-for-all Sacrifice. What we understand is happening is a concept of "anamnesis"; a re-joining to that one night, to that One Sacrifice. It is the same concept that the Jews understood themselves doing in the Passover, where they weren't simply "remembering" in an "Oh, I forgot that happened; now I remember" sort of way, but in a mystical, God-powered way. In fact, the word "remembrance" in Jesus' Words of Institution is translated directly from the word "anamnesis".
    Anyway, once again, I'm incredibly thankful for what ya'll are doing here! Peace, brothers!