I do believe the bible is the absolute standard as well.
But if the quotes that come directly by the apostles mentioned in name, or a direct understudy of theirs then they can not be passed off as false teaching just because we may feel it contradicts what we have been taught by those of now days.
Barnabas was an apostle and he is mentioned in the bible, and is never referred as a false teacher.
He is shown to work side by side with Paul, Mark, and John, so if one considers his writings false then those who he taught with were false teachers as well. We know that Paul, Mark, and John were not, and Barnabas was with them in the same teaching.
Polycarp another one who had many quotes and books that show opposite of the once saved always saved doctrine, was a direct understudy of the Apostle John. So if one is saying his writings are false, then they are saying John was a false teacher, because Polycarp was taught by John.......
i've only read a little of poly, and it is good, and if what i read was right about him
he is definitely AGAINST OSAS(as is TORAH and yahweh).
i would never never never call poly nor clement an ecf, as it looks like they both were true and not false,
and
the false came shortly after them in the ecf that the heresy uses to pretend it is okay....
all subject to testing and verification in TORAH and yahweh's spirit of truth.
little from quiksearch>> on the web >>
"It is impossible in the context of these verses for chadash to mean "new." Isaiah 61:4 also uses chadash to refer to those in Mashiyach who: "...
chadash (repair) the waste cities, the desolations of many generations." The word
"chadash" is so instrumental to "replacement theology" that the James Strong's Concordance (a popular Christian resource), chose to give this term two reference numbers: renew #2318 and new #2319. Theologians have long used this term to steer "the church" away from Torah. As mentioned previously, Marcion, a post-apostolic church founder who was actually considered a heretic by the early Church, coined the terms "Old Testament" and "New Testament" suggesting, in effect, that the "new" replaced the "old." Polycarp referred to him as the "firstborn of the Devil," yet his false anti-Torah theology is still being honored by nearly every Christian on earth.
YHWH did not torture and kill His own son to establish the Renewed Covenant; it was man's religious "justice system" that put the perfection of Y'shua Mashiyach on the torture stake. If sin is condemned by means of the Commandment, how much more is it condemned by being responsible for putting to death YHWH's own likeness? Man's sin put Mashiyach on the torture stake; therefore, the Renewed Covenant upholds the Word of YHWH (Torah) which defines sin and love.
"And walk in love; as the Mashiyach also has loved us and has given up himself for us, an offering and a sacrifice to Elohim, for a sweet aroma." (Ephesians 5:2)
The term and definition of "New Testament" is anti-Mashiyach; it was coined by a Christo-Pagan named Marcion who viewed Y'shua as akin to one of the Greek gods of his own culture. Marcion taught that the G-d of the Jews was an evil god of wrath, judgment and terror, but that Je-Zeus was a kind and loving god. Marcion coined the terms "Old and New Testament" to demarcate YHWH and Y'shua as two separate Gods who were at war with each other; hence, the dualism in Christian churches that use the terms Old and New Testament to uphold replacement and dispensational theology. The consequences of the fatal anti-Torah and anti-Mashiyach deception is very far reaching; so much so, in fact, that permissiveness of Covenant breaking is commonplace throughout Christendom."