Another word fit from Tom

You didn’t answer my questions Tom. You picked out a sentence and disregarded the rest. Typical Mormon tactic.
If I didn’t answer your question I didn’t mean to fail. I choose not answer what I will say to Christ on judgment day, but if that was what I neglected to answer then I would be willing to think about it.
I thought your message and Rebecca’s message was that Christ was the “final revelation” and that it is obvious that there would be no more revelation after Christ. Perhaps you were more interested in something I considered tangential. I commented on Catholic understanding. I said concerning “Christ being the final revelation”:
The Catholic Church came to that understanding in the ABSENCE of revelation, but did not have that understanding for quite a while.
Many books were purported to be inspired that were written after the Apostles. The Shepard of Hermas was one of the most widely accepted as inspired and was called divine by Clement of Alexandria and quoted by Irenaeus in the same way as scripture was quoted. It was widely read in churches. Other writings were treated as scripture less widely.
Tertullian was quite clear that revelation continued. His “Catholic” and some of his post “Catholic” writings and his intellect were respected and are respected to this day. “Continuing revelation” in the 2nd Century lead to Tertullian’s departure from what Catholics call the church.
Pope Eluetherius also initial approved of continuing revelation, but later rejected it at least in the specific continuing revelations of Montanism.
Aside from how the Bible is NOW interpreted there are no writings that claim revelation ended for over a century after Christ’s resurrection.
Note: I have no intention of defending Montanus revelation in its content. I only include it to illustrate that the Catholic Church decided LATE that revelation ended. It was not like the Apostles made it CLEAR that revelation was to end.
So, as I said, I understand the response of Catholics. If revelation ended, it took the church a long time to “figure it out.” I think the historical record shows most clearly that the absence of revelation that is considered authentic by “the church” leads to the understanding that revelation ceased; not that God planned and “the church” understood revelation would cease. At the very least, “the church” didn’t UNDERSTAND. I submit that the church that became Catholic didn’t receive revelation and feared revelation purportedly received by others SO they declared revelation ceased. Tertullian criticizes the Catholic Church for just this “lack of spirit.” His criticism IMO is well founded. The Catholic Church MUST believe that revelation ceased and would NEVER continue else the Catholic Church is not God’s church because revelation DID cease for Catholic leaders (again for revelation the purpose of leading Christ’s Church).
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As long as you agree with all I said here I could perhaps explore the other directions possible from your post, but this was the most Catholic of your points (or so I though) that is why I addressed it. And what I claim above is all that I think needs to be true to point strongly toward my thesis EVEN when Catholics claim, “but Christ is the final revelation, obviously there will be no more revelation.”
Charity, TOm