C
ckempston
Guest
Are you denying that technical terms used by the Catholic church find their origin with Aristotle? That would be a shock.Assertions without basis, to be accepted on your authority I suppose? As I recall, the Bible says nothing about guaranteeing the correct rendering of scripture by each and every believer. In fact, the Bible doesn’t even identify itself as the measuring rod of Christian truth.
Wow, a lot of condemnation without substance.
That list wasn’t actually meant to be a blanket accusation against Catholicism, so sorry if it came across that way. I was simply illustrating what we can gather from what Jesus condemned in the Asian churches; specifically, I pointed out the Nicolaitians in reference to the Catholic church. I probably could have worded that more clearly.We’ve forsaken our first love? How exactly has the Catholic Church forsaken Jesus Christ?
Becoming rich in the world? The Catholic Church operates at a budget deficit in most years.
See above. Didn’t mean anything specific about Catholicism in this comment.Holding to the teachings of Balaam is just too vague to address, but if you’re calling us pagans by reference, you’re gonna have a steep hill to climb, since I know of no pagans worshipping Jesus Christ.
Do you deny gnostic influences on Catholicism? This one actually fits quite well.Learning deep secrets of the faith? That’s a reference to secret knowledge like that of heretical sects (Gnostics and the like).
This one seems to apply as well. You can write all you want about repentance, but in my personal experience, most Catholics don’t take it seriously.Not maintaining repentance? The Bible and Catechism are full of references to the importance of repenting, changing our ways and following Christ. Pick up your cross daily and all that… But if you mean that there are people in the Catholic Church who fail to repent, so what? Why is the Catholic Church called to account for what exists in every single Christian church on earth? Can leaders harass their members until they all manifest a lifestyle of repentance? What an absurd claim!
I’d tend to agree with you here. Another one I didn’t mean as a direct criticism of Catholicism.Being lukewarm? You mean there are non-Catholic churches where each and every single member is totally, 100% fired up about being Christian every moment of every day? I’ve yet to find a church like that. Our Church as an institution is about as far from lukewarm as one could possibly imagine.
Read 1 Corinthians 10 and 11 and riddle me this: How do some “get drunk” while others go hungry if it’s not a meal?You’re twisting what I’ve said. First, you’re claiming that the Eucharist was a full meal, while there’s no evidence of that.
yes, it was. See above.Second, you’re extrapolating that false belief about the Eucharist to what’s practiced today (in accord with Scripture and 2000 years of divine tradition). Third, I never said “doesn’t matter what the Jews or first Christians did.” I was illustrating that your claim that the Eucharist consisted of a full meal (which, need I remind you, has no evidence in Scripture) is beside the point that Jesus commanded only two things about that meal: eat this, which is my flesh, and drink this, which is my blood. So if you’re using Scripture alone, that’d be the Eucharist - not a full-on banquet as you’re claiming.
Let’s clarify the point of bringing up the Jews and the early Christians: The Jews had the Passover meal. Christ instituted the Eucharist at a Passover meal. You claim that since it was a Jewish Passover meal, wine must have been used, so nothing else is acceptable. I’m simply pointing out that if you’re going to be dogmatic about the exact substance used, you should also be dogmatic about the fact that it was indeed a meal. You’re not. Therefore, you’re inconsistent, but making accusations against Evangelicals on the very basis of your inconsistency. Your position is unsupportable.So the tradition matters, and thus I repeat: ask a Jew if the bread is leavened, and if the cups on their Passover table contain wine or Welch’s.
Again, you have no evidence that it was a full meal. EDIT: by ‘it,’ I mean the Eucharist. Certainly the Passover was a full meal, but Jesus replaced it by commanding two things… consumption of His flesh and blood.
Again, ask a Jew what’s meant by “fruit of the vine.” It ain’t grape juice, and they’d be the ones to know. You’re employing the anachronism of modern food processing technology (that which is capable of producing grape juice that doesn’t ferment) to 1st century Palestine, and are losing credibility in so doing.
Let’s get it straight: substance and accidents are Aristotlean philosophy, not Christian philosophy. Jesus said do both, Catholics say do one. I choose Jesus.Further, you reject Christian philosophy out of hand with respect to substance and accidents, thus there’s really not much else anyone can say to you on the subject. Suffice it to say, if you consume the flesh of a living being, you consume its blood as well. Dismiss that as mere human philosophy if you want, but it’s an unavoidable fact.
I haven’t updated my profile in some time. All I did was make a visit when I saw an interesting topic, in which I was sure a Catholic would make some outlandish, false accusations against evangelicals (which he did).You have a strange attitude toward Catholic theology (and Catholic believers) for someone who claims to be ‘reverting’…
I have yet to see his apology.