I posted the following as a response to a post in "Monasteries and the Monastic Life" but felt, for a proper response, that it should be included here:
chrsstms wrote:CGW wrote:Kollyvas wrote:Without proof, you cannot found your claims, and it is kind of hard to maintain I do not have a voice on the topic when your star witness says that I AM a FIRSTHAND witness and confidant of his.
... I am increasingly bothered by the practice of using this forum as a vehicle for attacking people who aren't here. Mr. Kapner has done this, you have done it, and now I see that Vladimir Moss has appeared to do it...
Personally, I would think than only ignorance would attempt to tie these two names together. Firstly, the subject of which Mr. Moss speaks in these posts is a tried-and-true heresy, from the more United Church (more united than today, anyhow.)
Mr. Moss is one of the few (although the only one I can think of) modern theologians who can truly give the other side a fair shake. And this is coming from one who accepts the "Dogma of the Redemption" and "The River of Fire" to the point where he allowed himself out of the Church! (This last statement shall go unexplained, however.)
Mr. Moss at least allows the other side of his argument tell their side of the story fairly, without characterization and ad hominem attacks. In other words, he appears to me to be a very fair and thorough theologian. He is the only one who has seriously caused me to question the above (by his article "THE MYSTERY OF REDEMPTION" http://romanitas.ru/eng/The%20Mystery%2 ... mption.htm ), and for that I would like to ask him to elaborate on the conclusion one could take from such teachings:
1) If there are tollhouses, how could one who is a great sinner like myself find any hope for salvation if he had to be tried by his sins? I know there are attempts to answer this question, but they seem unsatisfactory to me. Remember, I have left the Church (over a decade ago).
2) If a large part of the pain of hell (according to the "River of Fire" theory) is the anguish of separation from God and the hatred caused by such a sentence, what of those who know they are horrible sinners and expect Hell anyway, and would praise God for a just decision in sending them to where their mind is at anyway, and would realize that it is their own weak will that landed them there in the first place?
(Also, the Lamians left for administrative purposes, NOT Heresy, which, as far as I can determine, is the only canonical excuse to seperate from your Bishop.)
Thank you.
Chrysostomos