J
joe370
Guest
Hey Jon.Ok, I’ll bite, only because I’m the curious type. Why give assent to the Magisterium?
Jon
Hey Jon.Ok, I’ll bite, only because I’m the curious type. Why give assent to the Magisterium?
Jon
Actually, I am in no way saying that Protestants are ignorant of Theology. There have been good Theologians in the Protestant camp. Even Calvin, was a great Theologian though tended to take the opposite position from the Church.Firstly, I invoke the disclaimer at the bottom of my signature.
Second, I think it’s naive to assert that all Protestants are ignorant. Karl Barth, one of the most important theologians of the 20th century (next to Henri DeLubac) was a Reformed theologian–one that even Pope Pius XII acclaimed. Theological systems are ultimately the point of contention, not the moral-intellectual character of a person (although there is some of that, too).
I do not realize any such thing. As a Lutheran I remian a member of the one Holy Catholic and Apostolic Church. Let me put forth my caveat: there are three (positive)circumstances whereby I will submit to the Bishop of Rome and the Magisterium:=Eufrosnia;10111125]Well, before we proceed, there is something very important that you need to understand. If Protestantism has no reason and it does turn out that there is no reason to assent to the Magisterium as well, then it does not mean you can remain Protestant. Do you realize that?
I honestly do not know what you are talking about here. My position is simple. If religion X cannot provide reason to think that it contains knowledge of the Transcendent, then it is not worthy of assent.I do not realize any such thing. As a Lutheran I remian a member of the one Holy Catholic and Apostolic Church. Let me put forth my caveat: there are three (positive)circumstances whereby I will submit to the Bishop of Rome and the Magisterium:
Jon
- The reconciliation of our communions.
- The reconciliation of the Bishop of Rome with the Orthodox patriarchs
- A simple acceptance by the Bishop of Rome that the Augsburg Confession is a truly Catholic confession of the catholic faith.
This is why most non-catholics (not Jon) assent and defer to their bible alone, in terms of discerning truth. This of course makes each and every sola scriptura advocate the final authority which is not scriptural or logical, in terms of discerning truth. Can you imagine if this same approach was used with the Constitution of the United States?Well, before we proceed, there is something very important that you need to understand. If Protestantism has no reason and it does turn out that there is no reason to assent to the Magisterium as well, then it does not mean you can remain Protestant. Do you realize that?
You and I will simply have to start searching for the truth.
I think it all comes down to having faith that you have located the church established by God, as opposed to a mere man. Seems reasonable I suppose…:twocents:I honestly do not know what you are talking about here. My position is simple. If religion X cannot provide reason to think that it contains knowledge of the Transcendent, then it is not worthy of assent.
All these points above are honestly irrelevant. Especially (1) and (2). These would just be arbitrary theological constraints that you constructed.
So in the event that Lutheran faith cannot give reason for assent, it is simply unworthy of assent by anyone. Catholic False does not equal Lutheran True.
Well, one could say the US constitution is starting to use something similar these days.This is why most non-catholics (not Jon) assent and defer to their bible alone, in terms of discerning truth. This of course makes each and every sola scriptura advocate the final authority which is not scriptural or logical, in terms of discerning truth. Can you imagine if this same approach was used with the Constitution of the United States?![]()
Sadly, I cannot envision those 3 things happening…I do not realize any such thing. As a Lutheran I remian a member of the one Holy Catholic and Apostolic Church. Let me put forth my caveat: there are three (positive)circumstances whereby I will submit to the Bishop of Rome and the Magisterium:
Jon
- The reconciliation of our communions.
- The reconciliation of the Bishop of Rome with the Orthodox patriarchs
- A simple acceptance by the Bishop of Rome that the Augsburg Confession is a truly Catholic confession of the catholic faith.
Well this position is actually not reasonable. Because all religions are important for their Transcendent knowledge. No one embraces religion because it can predict the weather tomorrow. Rather, people accept religion for its truths regarding salvation, sin, heaven, hell etc all of which are not verifiable in this life.I think it all comes down to having faith that you have located the church established by God, as opposed to a mere man. Seems reasonable I suppose…:twocents:
Or vise versa. And mine are not arbitrary in the least, particularly #2. A reconciliation of Rome and the east would be confirmation, regardless of its outcome, that the understanding of Nicea canon 6 is confirmed. Either it says that the primacy of the bishop of Rome is one of honor, or it is universal. But either way, you posed the claim that I am following the dumb layman as opposed to the learned Doctor, so proceed if you wish.I honestly do not know what you are talking about here. My position is simple. If religion X cannot provide reason to think that it contains knowledge of the Transcendent, then it is not worthy of assent.
All these points above are honestly irrelevant. Especially (1) and (2). These would just be arbitrary theological constraints that you constructed.
So in the event that Lutheran faith cannot give reason for assent, it is simply unworthy of assent by anyone. Catholic False does not equal Lutheran True.
Ok Jon, I have no clue what you are talking about.Or vise versa. And mine are not arbitrary in the least, particularly #2. A reconciliation of Rome and the east would be confirmation, regardless of its outcome, that the understanding of Nicea canon 6 is confirmed. Either it says that the primacy of the bishop of Rome is one of honor, or it is universal. But either way, you posed the claim that I am following the dumb layman as opposed to the learned Doctor, so proceed if you wish.
Jon
Actually, as a Lutheran, I accept the premise that the undivided Church compiled and determined thatc which is attested, disputed, and rejected. in fac, Lutheran use of scripture reflects this historic tension regarding the disputed books, in a very conservative way. Is this where you are going?Well, one could say the US constitution is starting to use something similar these days.
But the problem again for Protestants is that they must give reason for assenting to a particular book (books to be accurate) as THE Word of God. This not possible under Protestantism.
Something quiet humorous though is that if you ask this question, you will find many Protestants start quoting Scripture passages to prove it is the Word of God. The problem however is that until the authority of Scripture is proven, the quotes themselves mean nothing.
Then, perhaps, you should lay out your premise, since it appears we are talking past each other.Ok Jon, I have no clue what you are talking about.
To speak of Rome as anything important is meaningless unless you already give assent to a certain theological framework. I am arguing here about justifying ones assent to a theological framework when you are arguing theology.
I did not know that…Eufrosnia;10111159]Well, one could say the US constitution is starting to use something similar these days.
You know, atheists say the same thing to me, as a practising catholic e.g. the problem for catholics is that they must give a reason for assenting to a particular book (books to be accurate) as THE Word of God.What would you say to those folks? I certainly cannot prove it…But the problem again for Protestants is that they must give reason for assenting to a particular book (books to be accurate) as THE Word of God. This not possible under Protestantism.
Agreed. As I have mentioned before, the sola scriptura advocate (again, not Jon) does not believe that anyone has the authority, via the guidance of the Holy Spirit, to inerrantly interpret scripture, discern truth, or resolve doctrinal differences when they occur, just as the CC did so long ago e.g. Trinitarian dogma, the codification of the holy Bible etc…These things weighed heavy on me as a former non-catholic……Protestants start quoting Scripture passages to prove it is the Word of God. The problem however is that until the authority of Scripture is proven, the quotes themselves mean nothing.
I know you came to this conclusion, Joe, and as you know, in some ways, knowing you came out of Lutheranism, I kind of envy you.Hey Jon.Well, the main reason I do is because I came to believe that the CC is the one church established by Jesus circa 33 AD, on Pentecost, in Jerusalem. If I am right and the CC is Jesus’ church (“I will build my church…”) and He continues to ineffably guide His church in matters of faith and doctrinal truth, as per the NT, then naturally I would want everyone to belong to Jesus’ catholic church. I could be wrong but it just feels so right…Of course, you know me, I love all churches.
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Well this position is actually not reasonable. Because all religions are important for their Transcendent knowledge. No one embraces religion because it can predict the weather tomorrow. Rather, people accept religion for its truths regarding salvation, sin, heaven, hell etc all of which are not verifiable in this life
.
Makes sense. Perhaps church affiliation is irrelevant? All churches, regardless of denomination, are also important for their transcendent knowledge.
What this means is that to give assent, one must indeed be sure of the authority of the person/book one is giving assent to. In the Protestant case, things are somewhat nice in that they have chosen to give assent to Christ. BUT, Christ lived among us physically in 33 AD. He no longer walks around us teaching us directly. So a Protestant cannot know anything about what Christ taught let alone whether he wanted there to be a book called the Bible.
Oh and they are absolutely spot on.You know, atheists say the same thing to me, as a practising catholic e.g. the problem for catholics is that they must give a reason for assenting to a particular book (books to be accurate) as THE Word of God.What would you say to those folks? I certainly cannot prove it…
Yes. So ideally, a seeker will have to trace some reasons to transfer the authority/reasons for assent from Jesus → Apostles → Apostolic Successors. At that point one can assent to the Catholic Church plus all its teachings (Scripture, Traditions, Laws) etc.Agreed. As I have mentioned before, the sola scriptura advocate (again, not Jon) does not believe that anyone has the authority, via the guidance of the Holy Spirit, to inerrantly interpret scripture, discern truth, or resolve doctrinal differences when they occur, just as the CC did so long ago e.g. Trinitarian dogma, the codification of the holy Bible etc…These things weighed heavy on me as a former non-catholic…
Jon,I do not realize any such thing. As a Lutheran I remian a member of the one Holy Catholic and Apostolic Church. Let me put forth my caveat: there are three (positive)circumstances whereby I will submit to the Bishop of Rome and the Magisterium:
Jon
- The reconciliation of our communions.
- The reconciliation of the Bishop of Rome with the Orthodox patriarchs
- A simple acceptance by the Bishop of Rome that the Augsburg Confession is a truly Catholic confession of the catholic faith.
Eufrosnia;10111219]Oh and they are absolutely spot on.
Very true.First a word about the position of Atheism is unreasonable in that they give assent to the proposition “There is no transcendent”. Such a thing is not worthy of assent without reason. Ironically, Atheist claim such is true due to development of Science. But since Science cannot verify the Transcendent by definition, Science cannot prove or give reasons for its non-existence. At this point, the Atheist might say that “we can ignore the transcendent till there is direct evidence for it”. But that too is a foundation of Science. Since the transcendent is outside of Science, such scientific philosophies do not apply.
:yup:Now as for the question, it is most certainly valid. The reason why most Atheist are scandalized away from religion is because so many people try to insist that they must just have faith. That is unreasonable and hence turns people off.
That was the path that I took…Yes. So ideally, a seeker will have to trace some reasons to transfer the authority/reasons for assent from Jesus → Apostles → Apostolic Successors. At that point one can assent to the Catholic Church plus all its teachings (Scripture, Traditions, Laws) etc.
So ok. You have all these theological frameworks on the planet that claim knowledge on the Transcendent. Lutheranism, Catholicism, Buddhism, Islam, Hinduism etc.Then, perhaps, you should lay out your premise, since it appears we are talking past each other.
Jon