I would like to make two observations.
Every time a response is made, I come back with something from scripture and it is responded to as I do not understand or with something written by man. It is never rebutted by scripture
I did not come to this site to convert anyone but to ask and respond to questions to better understand the Catholic faith to help me better understand my faith. If you read all my posting they where honest question and I tried not to be condescending if I disagreed on something, I tried to point out the difference in scripture. I see that with each response to me it comes out that this has been said before, deaf ears; you are a heathen, and any other remark to make you feel you stand on higher ground. God bless you and good-bye.
My brother in Christ,
Catholics (Practicing Catholics) acknowledge has authority because Jesus established a Church through Peter and His Apostles. This authority was pass down throughout history to their successors the bishops. Jesus gave authority to His Church. He granted the Apostles to bind and loose, to forgive the sins of others, when Jesus breath on his Apostles.
Am I a heathen? What kind of charity is that? It isn’t Christian at all. I have not accused you of such. Clearly you are in violate of CAF Rules of Conduct: # 7. **Non-Catholics **are welcome to participate but must be
respectful of the faith of the Catholics participating on the board.
You show no Respect at all.
I find your posts regarding Church authority completely distorted and dishonest. Martin Luther was not a great man nor was any of the Reformation Fathers.
Here are some information you want want to look at:
Mark 3:16; John 1:42 – Jesus renames Simon “Kepha” in Aramaic which literally means “rock.” This was an extraordinary thing for Jesus to do, because “rock” was not even a name in Jesus’ time. Jesus did this, not to give Simon a strange name, but to identify his new status among the apostles. When God changes a person’s name, He changes their status.
Gen. 17:5; 32:28; 2 Kings 23:34; Acts 9:4; 13:9 - for example, in these verses, we see that God changes the following people’s names and, as a result, they become special agents of God: Abram to Abraham; Jacob to Israel, Eliakim to Jehoiakim, Saul to Paul.
2 Sam. 22:2-3, 32, 47; 23:3; Psalm 18:2,31,46; 19:4; 28:1; 42:9; 62:2,6,7; 89:26; 94:22; 144:1-2 - in these verses, God is also called “rock.” Hence, from these verses, non-Catholics often argue that God, and not Peter, is the rock that Jesus is referring to in Matt. 16:18. This argument not only ignores the plain meaning of the applicable texts, but also assumes words used in Scripture can only have one meaning. This, of course, is not true. For example:
1 Cor. 3:11 - Jesus is called the only foundation of the Church, and yet in Eph. 2:20, the apostles are called the foundation of the Church. Similarly, in 1 Peter 2:25, Jesus is called the Shepherd of the flock, but in Acts 20:28, the apostles are called the shepherds of the flock. These verses show that there are multiple metaphors for the Church, and that words used by the inspired writers of Scripture can have various meanings. Catholics agree that God is the rock of the Church, but this does not mean He cannot confer this distinction upon Peter as well, to facilitate the unity He desires for the Church.
Matt. 16:18 - Jesus said in Aramaic, you are “Kepha” and on this “Kepha” I will build my Church. In Aramaic, “kepha” means a massive stone, and “evna” means little pebble. Some non-Catholics argue that, because the Greek word for rock is “petra”, that “Petros” actually means “a small rock”, and therefore Jesus was attempting to diminish Peter right after blessing him by calling him a small rock. Not only is this nonsensical in the context of Jesus’ blessing of Peter, Jesus was speaking Aramaic and used “Kepha,” not “evna.” Using Petros to translate Kepha was done simply to reflect the masculine noun of Peter.
Moreover, if the translator wanted to identify Peter as the “small rock,” he would have used “lithos” which means a little pebble in Greek. Also, Petros and petra were synonyms at the time the Gospel was written, so any attempt to distinguish the two words is inconsequential. Thus, Jesus called Peter the massive rock, not the little pebble, on which He would build the Church. (You don’t even need Matt. 16:18 to prove Peter is the rock because Jesus renamed Simon “rock” in Mark 3:16 and John 1:42!).
scripturecatholic.com/the_church.html