English Deutsch Français Italiano Español Português 繁體中文 Bahasa Indonesia Tiếng Việt ภาษาไทย
All categories

Not making fun, just trying to find out information.

The different denominations formed because of difference in opinion correct? Like someone didn't agree with one part of what their previous church said, so they made their own church where that one part was ok

But that stuff doesn't matter right, because the Bible is the ultimate source correct?

So then what if this person's church values contradict the Bible's? Does this then make the church void because it teaches something as tolerable when it should be sin? Then this would make all the followers of that denomination go to hell right?

I know it's a lot of questions at once, but thanks for your patience and answering :)

2006-08-30 04:22:08 · 11 answers · asked by Southpaw 7 in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

aww...no one's answering..

2006-08-30 04:29:06 · update #1

11 answers

I don't think that the sort of differences you are talking about usually make the difference in where a person spends eternity. If you are a Christian, then you need to believe that Jesus died for your sins on the cross, and that the only way to heaven is to accept that gift and confess your faith in Him.

If you do that sincerely then you will spend eternity in the presence of God.

Now from there you start to get into differences of opinion, like Should we ordain gay pastors? Well, I think if a church decides that's okay, it doesn't condemn its followers to hell, but it does provide false teaching, and for that, the teachers and pastors may pay a heavy price.

Honestly, I couldn't tell you the differences between Methodist and Presbyterian, and I don't think they would make one group Saved and the other Condemned. But I do believe that the governing bodies of these churches, when they approve false teaching that directly contradicts the Bible, will be held accountable for their deeds.

2006-08-30 04:34:16 · answer #1 · answered by newbie 4 · 2 0

1. The different denominations formed because of difference in opinion correct? Like someone didn't agree with one part of what their previous church said, so they made their own church where that one part was ok.

Yes.

2. But that stuff doesn't matter right, because the Bible is the ultimate source correct?

In a way. Basically, some people have misinterpretated the bible, in which it can be misunderstood. That, and more often than not, people don't read the bible. They just go along with what people tell them. I read the New American Bible for Catholics from cover to cover. It is much easier, however, to understand the bible if you concentrate on studying certain aspects of it first. I read three of the Psalms and parts of the Gospels every day, through a book called "Christian prayer", also known as the "Liturgy of the Hours".

3. So then what if this person's church values contradict the Bible's? Does this then make the church void because it teaches something as tolerable when it should be sin? Then this would make all the followers of that denomination go to hell right?

We cannot judge who goes to Heaven or Hell. Only God can do that. As a Catholic, I believe that those who seek to live Christian values (even non-Christians), could go to Heaven.

2006-08-30 04:36:20 · answer #2 · answered by me 2 · 1 1

New denominations start because people see errors in the existing ones or they see a truth in the Bible that the existing ones do not want to accept.

I think EVER denomination has some errors in them. What they teach is a good starting point, but at some point WE become responsible for what we believe. We need to be lead by the Holy Spirit and listen to what He is trying to teach us about what is right and wrong.

2006-08-30 04:46:45 · answer #3 · answered by tim 6 · 1 0

A lot of it is different interpretations of the same Bible...One person interprets the Bible one way, another another way, etc. Also, leadership of the churches caused denominations. A few people didn't like the way the leader was leading, or his/her interpretation of the Bible, so they left. Just like what's going on with the episcopal church now, some don't agree with the gay bishop guy, so they're leaving the church and creating independent churches.

2006-08-30 04:35:38 · answer #4 · answered by GLSigma3 6 · 1 0

Yes, denominations are made that way. It is all in interpreting the bilbe for yourself. And you should do what you believe the bible says. That is all Christianity.

You are mistaken by what it takes to get to hell.
You do noting - you go to hell.
You accept Jesus as the atoning sacrifice for your sins, you go to heaven.
No work or deed will change that. On that 99% of Christians agree.

No church is perfect. It is a great goal to strive for, but never would be attainable.
All 7 churches in revelation has a problem with it.

2006-08-30 04:33:47 · answer #5 · answered by Slave to JC 4 · 1 0

Excellent, well thought-out question.
From my studies of church practices and The Bible, I concur that just about every one of the modern-day Protestant denominations have fallen away from the direct teachings of the Word of God they say they support, sometimes "literally."
None of them that I have found, so far, are following it exactly;
only in rare, individual cases, such as Mother Teresa.
The rest of your question can be answered most truthfully, and correctly, by this: no-one is going to "hell." That was a concept created by the medieval church fathers, and is not---repeat, not-- supported by any authority found in The Bible.
"Sin," in the original sense, was punished by death, but we stopped killing everyone for breaking the Commandments ("sin") a long, long time ago. Are we better off? Now there's a question for the sociologists!...

2006-08-30 04:37:24 · answer #6 · answered by Angele Kore 2 · 1 1

It relies upon in case you incorporate the early church, there have been a variety of of Christian communities back then which does no longer be seen Christian in the event that they sprang up on the instant (The Gnostic cosmology grew to become into notably diverse on how they seen the god of Abraham). maximum might trust Jesus as "'son' of 'god'" and 'messiah', yet nonetheless, there is a few on the sides that don't. The resurrection is likewise an quite uncomplicated perception. Virgin delivery isn't that important. And what "unique sin" potential varies a great deal. it truly is a complicated taxonomy. it truly is like attempting to assert what's in uncomplicated between an Reform Judaism, Orthodox Judaism, and Judaism as practiced till now King Josiah. If I had to place it into words, i might say that all of them believe that Jesus, a Jewish dude who lived in first century Levant, grew to become into uniquely important, divinely so, in forgiving mankind of their incorrect nature. i think of that covers even the early gnostics. Oh, additionally he have been given accomplished by using the government, undesrvingly so.

2016-11-06 01:49:38 · answer #7 · answered by Erika 4 · 0 0

They won't go to hell, but if believers in a religion that claims to be based upon the Bible find out that it does not follow its source correctly, then yes, it makes it a false religion for all those who are aware of it or not.

2006-08-30 04:28:58 · answer #8 · answered by da chet 3 · 1 0

Yes denominations formed because of differences of opinion. But mostly they are theological differences or differences in worship style, not disagreement about sins.

2006-08-30 04:38:50 · answer #9 · answered by cnm 4 · 1 0

Read Revelation 2 and 3 for your answer.

2006-08-30 04:35:35 · answer #10 · answered by tina 3 · 0 0

fedest.com, questions and answers