B.H. wrote:So in Genesis ! when it said the Spirit was hovering over the waters there was in reality a giant Bible hovering over the waters?????
The Spirit inspired the Apostles to write the books in the Bible. So the Bible inspired the Apostles to write the Bible?????
I know the typical Church of Christ preacher has a low intellectual calibre but geesh that was stupid.
That's not quite what he meant. In Genesis, the Spirit was actually hovering over the waters. In the NT, the Spirit caused miraculous spiritual gifts in the apostles and the people that the apostles laid hands on. The Spirit also inspired the authors of the NT. Once the miraculous spiritual gifts ceased (I guess when the last person died who had had the apostles' hands on them), the Spirit stopped interacting directly in people's lives in that manner. So today, when the Spirit is talking to us, it's doing so by us reading the Bible and seeing what the Spirit said via the physical hands of the apostles (why the Spirit couldn't directly write these things, I don't know?). Now, the preacher also said that he does believe the Spirit works in our lives today. That's why we pray. But it's not done the way it happened in the NT. Or something like that. Really, I'm fuzzy on how he thinks the Spirit works in our lives today. None of it makes much sense.
It dawned on me that the coc is very anti-spiritual... like they don't believe you feel the presence of God or are physically indwelled with the Holy Spirit, there are no miracles performed today... They believe all that stuff happened in Bible times, but now if someone is healed, it's got to be fake (and I agree that it's fake). They pray to God but don't believe in miracles. They don't seem to expect God to actually do anything. It's like they don't really believe in supernatural, but you need to follow the rules of the ancient book so you don't go to hell. Because heaven and hell are totally real when all this other stuff isn't.
Reminds me of a meme my Catholic friend posted... It's a quote from the pope (I haven't verified that it's a real quote) and it says something like how you pray for God to feed the poor, then you go feed the poor yourself. That's how it works. I agree with the sentiment of the quote (that you should go feed the poor instead of just praying that God do it), but it strikes me as odd that you'd pray for something and then not expect it to happen? If you're the one feeding, do you even need to bother praying? Is it that you don't believe God will feed the poor? Just stuff to ponder...