OT: Intriguing article on digital Bibles
Comments
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Butters said:
All I have to say about Pope Francis is: In the short term, he is about as close to an unmitigated disaster as we can get;
Well first Pope I have really liked since John the XXIII, yes J23 is before my time, but JP I was too short to get much of an opinion and as charismatic as JP II was, he near reversal of most of V II was a disaster in my mind.
-dan
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Butters said:
All I have to say about Pope Francis is: In the short term, he is about as close to an unmitigated disaster as we can get; however, it should be admitted that we've been through worse and this too shall pass. Think in centuries, not decades.
Wow! So much misinformation floating around I don't know where to begin! Even among Logos users who are supposed to be well read. Instead of turning this thread into a debate about popes, may I suggest that personal opinions about them (and implicit to that by extension the teachings of the Catholic church) be kept that way (i.e. personal), please? Thank you.Dan Francis said:as charismatic as JP II was, he near reversal of most of V II was a disaster in my mind.
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Dan Francis said:Butters said:
All I have to say about Pope Francis is: In the short term, he is about as close to an unmitigated disaster as we can get;
Well first Pope I have really liked since John the XXIII, yes J23 is before my time, but JP I was too short to get much of an opinion and as charismatic as JP II was, he near reversal of most of V II was a disaster in my mind.
-dan
If I understand you correctly, Dan, you're saying that JPII nearly reversed Vatican II? Well, that's just not true - except for some superficial gestures, JP II was an essentially an apologist for Vatican II. Incidentally, despite even more public gestures to the contrary, so was Pope Benedict.
In my opinion, we are going in the wrong direction as a Church.
However, I must also acknowledge that the college of Cardinals were indeed inspired by the Holy Spirit; in part, because the choice of Pope Francis will lead inexorably, I think, to a renewal of traditional doctrine and liturgy.
~Butters [:)]
“To love means loving the unlovable. To forgive means pardoning the unpardonable. Faith means believing the unbelievable. Hope means hoping when everything seems hopeless.” ~Chesterton
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Butters said:
All I have to say about Pope Francis is: In the short term, he is about as close to an unmitigated disaster as we can get; however, it should be admitted that we've been through worse and this too shall pass. Think in centuries, not decades.
~Butters
Pardon my ignorance on the subject (being protestant myself), but is a RC permitted to have this kind of opinion about the Pope? Given his relationship regarding Christ in the Church, I wouldn't expect to see opinions like this.
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Sleiman said:
Even among Logos users who are supposed to be well read. Instead of turning this thread into a debate about popes, may I suggest that personal opinions about them (and implicit to that by extension the teachings of the Catholic church) be kept that way (i.e. personal), please? Thank you.
Well said...
Orthodox Bishop Alfeyev: "To be a theologian means to have experience of a personal encounter with God through prayer and worship."; Orthodox proverb: "We know where the Church is, we do not know where it is not."
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William Gabriel said:
a RC permitted to have this kind of opinion about the Pope? Given his relationship regarding Christ in the Church, I wouldn't expect to see opinions like this.
RC is held together primarily by worship not theology or Christian perfection. We acknowledge that the assembly is populated by faillible humans who embody all sorts of wisdom and idiocy, generosity and stinginess, empathy and narcissism ... The result should be a high level of tolerance for stupidity ... we pray beside the blithering idiot.[;)] Seriously, the kinds of interaction and differences of opinion that often result in divisions in some Protestant circles are same-old-same-old family infighting in a Catholic parish.
Orthodox Bishop Alfeyev: "To be a theologian means to have experience of a personal encounter with God through prayer and worship."; Orthodox proverb: "We know where the Church is, we do not know where it is not."
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William Gabriel said:Butters said:
All I have to say about Pope Francis is: In the short term, he is about as close to an unmitigated disaster as we can get; however, it should be admitted that we've been through worse and this too shall pass. Think in centuries, not decades.
~Butters
Pardon my ignorance on the subject (being protestant myself), but is a RC permitted to have this kind of opinion about the Pope?
Simple answer to a complicated question: yes.
~Butters [:)]
“To love means loving the unlovable. To forgive means pardoning the unpardonable. Faith means believing the unbelievable. Hope means hoping when everything seems hopeless.” ~Chesterton
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MJ. Smith said:Sleiman said:
Even among Logos users who are supposed to be well read. Instead of turning this thread into a debate about popes, may I suggest that personal opinions about them (and implicit to that by extension the teachings of the Catholic church) be kept that way (i.e. personal), please? Thank you.
Well said...
It seems to me as if it's okay to hold and express certain opinions on this forum; while others are frowned upon - and the latter are then called out as being contrary to forum rules, and the former are not.
For example, this was said on the previous page:
alabama24 said:alabama24 said:I'm not Catholic, but the Pope continues to surprise me (mostly in good ways).
Here is an example in today's news: 'Hello, it's Pope Francis': Italian teenager gets surprise phone call
One paragraph was particularly interesting to me:
Article: said:Pope Francis told the student to address him as 'tu' rather than use the much more formal 'lei' during the conversation. "He said to me, do you think the Apostles would have used the polite form with Christ? "Would they have called him your excellency? They were friends, just as you and I are now, and with friends I'm accustomed to using 'tu'."
Now, see - I find that a bit offensive and, to my way of thinking, exemplifying innumerable misconceptions about the Pope, and Pope Francis, etc. I would and could argue this at great length; but I won't out of deference to the rules, and out of respect for all of you. But please, I do need to respond in some small way. It's not really quite fair to expect me not to.
Peace.
~Butters [:)]
“To love means loving the unlovable. To forgive means pardoning the unpardonable. Faith means believing the unbelievable. Hope means hoping when everything seems hopeless.” ~Chesterton
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Personally, I believe that most of this thread is outside Logos guidelines ... but there are currently threads that bother me even more which I would be obligated to call out before this thread ... but I don't want to bump such offensive threads ... dilemma, dilemma, dilemma ... if no one needs protection from personal attacks, is one obligated to step in?
Orthodox Bishop Alfeyev: "To be a theologian means to have experience of a personal encounter with God through prayer and worship."; Orthodox proverb: "We know where the Church is, we do not know where it is not."
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William Gabriel said:Butters said:
All I have to say about Pope Francis is: In the short term, he is about as close to an unmitigated disaster as we can get; however, it should be admitted that we've been through worse and this too shall pass. Think in centuries, not decades.
~Butters
Pardon my ignorance on the subject (being protestant myself), but is a RC permitted to have this kind of opinion about the Pope? Given his relationship regarding Christ in the Church, I wouldn't expect to see opinions like this.
Incidentally, papal infallibility is one of the most deeply misunderstood of the Church's teachings. Not appropriate to elaborate upon here, I suppose...but there are plenty of places to read about it elsewhere. I'd be glad to post up something if it's allowed.
~Butters [:)]
“To love means loving the unlovable. To forgive means pardoning the unpardonable. Faith means believing the unbelievable. Hope means hoping when everything seems hopeless.” ~Chesterton
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MJ. Smith said:
Personally, I believe that most of this thread is outside Logos guidelines ... but there are currently threads that bother me even more which I would be obligated to call out before this thread ... but I don't want to bump such offensive threads ... dilemma, dilemma, dilemma ... if no one needs protection from personal attacks, is one obligated to step in?
I suppose the outer limits are found when the thread becomes a major distraction.
~Butters [:)]
“To love means loving the unlovable. To forgive means pardoning the unpardonable. Faith means believing the unbelievable. Hope means hoping when everything seems hopeless.” ~Chesterton
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Butters –
I am utterly confused. As someone who has done nothing but to seek understanding in this thread from others who are of a different mind and practice from myself, I made a simple comment about how I have been impressed with the Pope. Why would you take offense at that?
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alabama24 said:
Butters –
I am utterly confused. As someone who has done nothing but to seek understanding in this thread from others who are of a different mind and practice from myself, I made a simple comment about how I have been impressed with the Pope. Why would you take offense at that?
I don't and didn't take ANY personal offense alabama24 - not even a smidgeon.
I certainly did NOT mean to imply that. And I'm sorry if that was what I conveyed (accidentally).
However, it's true that I disagreed emphatically with your post - and so was only saying that I felt the need to respond somehow.
And my general point was only that posts seem to be called out only if they are expressing certain kinds of opinions, and not others.
Peace.
~Butters [:)]
“To love means loving the unlovable. To forgive means pardoning the unpardonable. Faith means believing the unbelievable. Hope means hoping when everything seems hopeless.” ~Chesterton
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alabama24 said:
Butters –
I am utterly confused. As someone who has done nothing but to seek understanding in this thread from others who are of a different mind and practice from myself, I made a simple comment about how I have been impressed with the Pope. Why would you take offense at that?
You need to keep in mind that Butters declared that he is a Trad, i.e., a traditionalist who is opposed to Vatican II and the change from Latin to the vernacular, etc. Believe me, Butters is all sweetness and light compared to another Trad that I encountered on a different list. Be nice to him.
george
gfsomselיְמֵי־שְׁנוֹתֵינוּ בָהֶם שִׁבְעִים שָׁנָה וְאִם בִּגְבוּרֹת שְׁמוֹנִים שָׁנָה וְרָהְבָּם עָמָל וָאָוֶן
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George Somsel said:
Believe me, Butters is all sweetness and light compared to another Trad that I encountered on a different list.
Gosh, am I that bad? Sorry. [:$]
EDIT: The Bad Trad in me can't resist: it's not the change from the Latin to the Vernacular that's the fundamental problem....lol. See, I guess Trads are just incorrigibly argumentative. Ugh. Bred. Into. Me. Very. Bones.
~Butters [:)]
“To love means loving the unlovable. To forgive means pardoning the unpardonable. Faith means believing the unbelievable. Hope means hoping when everything seems hopeless.” ~Chesterton
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Thanks for clarifying. [:)]
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“To love means loving the unlovable. To forgive means pardoning the unpardonable. Faith means believing the unbelievable. Hope means hoping when everything seems hopeless.” ~Chesterton
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MJ. Smith said:
Personally, I believe that most of this thread is outside Logos guidelines ... but there are currently threads that bother me even more which I would be obligated to call out before this thread ... but I don't want to bump such offensive threads ... dilemma, dilemma, dilemma ... if no one needs protection from personal attacks, is one obligated to step in?
I agree, though I sense that Logos cares more about the spirit of the guidelines. This has been a very civil, delightful discussion that reflects well on the culture of Logos users. I'm sure they don't mind having such OT threads a long as it remains that way.
(Though maybe it's personally interesting to them since they're a progressive company trying to interface with a largely traditional crowd and they're allowing the rules to bend for their own curiosity)
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Butters said:
Incidentally, papal infallibility is one of the most deeply misunderstood of the Church's teachings. Not appropriate to elaborate upon here, I suppose...but there are plenty of places to read about it elsewhere. I'd be glad to post up something if it's allowed.
~Butters
Yeah, I avoided that word--infallibility--on purpose. As you and MJ have indicated, there's some deeper stuff involved that we don't need to get into here. If you want to post a link to something, I'd be happy to peruse, but I don't want anyone killing themselves writing a dissertation.
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William Gabriel said:
but I don't want anyone killing themselves writing a dissertation.
Actually, the easiest answer is to male you think for yourself The real issue behind the concept of infallibility is --- in a world with limited communication and only very expensive handwritten Bibles, how is the truth necessary for salvation preserved? Or, the same issue from a different perspective --- given that humans struggle to make sense out of the ways of God and in their struggles pursue paths that turn out to be false, how does a simple, working bloke know which competing theory is right ... or at least not dangerously misleading? In either case, under what circumstances must Christians be able to have confidence in the teachings of the Church absolutely rather than generally?
Orthodox Bishop Alfeyev: "To be a theologian means to have experience of a personal encounter with God through prayer and worship."; Orthodox proverb: "We know where the Church is, we do not know where it is not."
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Thought of an interesting question.
What happens when most of the printing houses close, and Bible printing becomes an artisan occupation?
Would the fact of a printed Bible costing many times more than a tablet change the equation?
"As any translator will attest, a literal translation is no translation at all."
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Paul Golder said:
Thought of an interesting question.
What happens when most of the printing houses close, and Bible printing becomes an artisan occupation?
Would the fact of a printed Bible costing many times more than a tablet change the equation?
That is an interesting question indeed; I have often thought that we are going towards a world where printed books are rare, very high quality, and affordable only to the few.
“To love means loving the unlovable. To forgive means pardoning the unpardonable. Faith means believing the unbelievable. Hope means hoping when everything seems hopeless.” ~Chesterton
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Paul Golder said:
Thought of an interesting question.
What happens when most of the printing houses close, and Bible printing becomes an artisan occupation?
Maybe one hint is: http://www.logos.com/product/7565/evangelical-exegetical-commentary
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William Gabriel said:Butters said:
Incidentally, papal infallibility is one of the most deeply misunderstood of the Church's teachings. Not appropriate to elaborate upon here, I suppose...but there are plenty of places to read about it elsewhere. I'd be glad to post up something if it's allowed.
~Butters
Yeah, I avoided that word--infallibility--on purpose. As you and MJ have indicated, there's some deeper stuff involved that we don't need to get into here. If you want to post a link to something, I'd be happy to peruse, but I don't want anyone killing themselves writing a dissertation.
Maybe hints to resources or suggested resources would help educate us to this situation?
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Logos is too advanced for most users. They want a simple Bible with different translations and that is what YouVersion gives them. The advanced Bible Study User (scholarship) use the Logos app or similar apps, or people who want to go deeper than just reading.
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David Taylor Jr said:
Logos is too advanced for most users. They want a simple Bible with different translations and that is what YouVersion gives them. The advanced Bible Study User (scholarship) use the Logos app or similar apps, or people who want to go deeper than just reading.
If that were true there would be tens of millions more people using the other software.
Oh wait...never mind [:$]
"As any translator will attest, a literal translation is no translation at all."
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Bill Coley said:
I get that some distractions cross the line (e,g, audio sources played sans hearing devices), but where is the line? What about the responsibility the "distracted" people to support the worship needs of those who allegedly "distract" them?
Are, you talking to me or to Super Tramp?
Okay, I brought up the terms Walkman and ipod are those really devices that contribute to the worship needs of congregants? Perhaps they do? I do not know, but I was under the impression that they were used for storing and playing personal music and video. That is why I said "that might be distracting" and if someone where listing to music "without head phones that would create some issues." I did not say that I absolutely would be distracted. This was and still is hypothetical. In fact I have no idea as I do not go to a congregation where people bring digital music players into worship.
חַפְּשׂוּ בַּתּוֹרָה הֵיטֵב וְאַל תִּסְתַּמְּכוּ עַל דְּבָרַי
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Not a comprehensive list, but a sample of my search results: from Logos resources:David Ames said:William Gabriel said:Butters said:Incidentally, papal infallibility is one of the most deeply misunderstood of the Church's teachings. Not appropriate to elaborate upon here, I suppose...but there are plenty of places to read about it elsewhere. I'd be glad to post up something if it's allowed.
~Butters
Yeah, I avoided that word--infallibility--on purpose. As you and MJ have indicated, there's some deeper stuff involved that we don't need to get into here. If you want to post a link to something, I'd be happy to peruse, but I don't want anyone killing themselves writing a dissertation.
Maybe hints to resources or suggested resources would help educate us to this situation?
- Infallibility of the Church and Pope from the Ecclesiastical Dictionary
- The actual dogma of the infallibility from the Fundamentals of Catholic dogma
- Infallibility from New Dictionary of Theology
- Catechism of the Catholic Church: Glossary, 92 and 891 (Catechism can be found on the Vatican website for free if you don't have it in Logos)
Opposing view:
Outside Logos:
- The Catholic Encyclopaedia
- Catholic Answers tract (good tract, tries to clear up misconceptions)
In general, papal infallibility means that the pope is protected from error when he "proclaims by a definitive act a doctrine pertaining to faith or morals" (CCC 891). This does not mean that he is impeccable (incapable of sin) or inerrant (incapable of error).
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Several folks at church use iPods which has their Bibles. They use wifi to connect. All of them have error protection.
"If myth is ideology in narrative form, then scholarship is myth with footnotes." B. Lincolm 1999.
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