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mcq72
Guest
Agreed, but it hasnt stopped you from critiquing.I’m sorry. I have no idea what you are saying
Quoting Bishop Sheen, you “hate what you wrongly perceive…”
Agreed, but it hasnt stopped you from critiquing.I’m sorry. I have no idea what you are saying
Hmm… I think you’re mistaken on both of these points. The Catholic Church had the “Catechism of Trent” in the 1500’s, and various Protestant denominations have statements of the elements of their faith (Luther’s Catechisms and the Augsburg Confession come to mind immediately).I guess the problem is that no Protestant denomination has a catechism. Mind you the Catholic faith didn’t until 1993.
I bought a golf swing trainer once. It’s a hinged club and it has a grip that’s built up (so that I place my hands on the club correctly). The whole purpose of the club is that, if I swing in a way that’s not optimum, the hinge will cause the club to fold into two… but, if I swing in a way that has all the elements of form which will maximize my swing’s power and efficiency, then the club will stay in one piece.I play piano and wearing a jacket while playing doesn’t allow me the freedom to fully express the music. I can still produce the notes in the right order wearing a jacket but there is a certain lacking in musicality. Spiritually I find all the rules laid down by the Church to be like the jacket.
I do not see invisible in that. You and many others claim we follow visible men (Luther, Calvin etc), yet we are also criticized mistakingly for purporting an invisible church/heirarchy…The Lutheran Church is quite visible, as is the Anglican Church and others.I am 1000% confused, as the plain Aramaic that Christ spoke clearly commands the Apostles to be visible.
Yet, if you somehow see “invisble” in that, it only shows once again that you have free will.
I don’t mind rules either. However, I think your analogy would go more like this, that you play the real game with your hinged club.I bought a golf swing trainer once. It’s a hinged club and it has a grip that’s built up (so that I place my hands on the club correctly). The whole purpose of the club is that, if I swing in a way that’s not optimum, the hinge will cause the club to fold into two… but, if I swing in a way that has all the elements of form which will maximize my swing’s power and efficiency, then the club will stay in one piece.
And where does He say or act so that "Tradition’’ may be fulfilled ?Once again, where did Christ teach bible alone?
The “real game” is played in heaven. Our “practice” happens here on earth.I don’t mind rules either. However, I think your analogy would go more like this, that you play the real game with your hinged club.
So… a baptism without water is really a baptism?As an example, when you baptize the water must be plentiful for sprinkling , enough to progress partly down the face. If not it may not be valid.
So… we’re not supposed to honor the Body & Blood of Christ?Then there are all the rules for a proper communion and vessels for elements , and disposal etc etc., or confession.
They can, of course, but that wouldn’t be sacramental. That wouldn’t be following Jesus’ commands to his Church. You could decide to ignore His directives to us, but… why would you?i think where two or three are gathered, they can do things in order, or that one can confess one to another, or even to God, in a valid orderly fashion.
Actually… it was. The “breaking of the bread” only happened when an apostle/bishop was present to lead the assembly. If you read the earliest documents we have available, you’ll find that they speak to this point…It is interesting that two of the most spiritual gratifying experiences (communion /confession) requires a priest for some churches. I don’t think it was this way for the first church.
That’s the point, someone has written down just how much water is needed, almost to the drop, for a valid baptism.So… a baptism without water is really a baptism
So daily the apostles broke bread in hundreds of homes in Jerusalem? Could a disciple minister, was it to specifically a bishop?Actually… it was. The “breaking of the bread” only happened when an apostle/bishop was present to lead the assembly. If you read the earliest documents we have available, you’ll find that they speak to this point…
Actually, the Bible doesn’t say that it was “in hundreds of homes.” Rather, the description in Acts 2:42 implies exactly what you doubt – that is, that the apostles led this worship: “they devoted themselves to the teaching of the apostles and to the communal life, to the breaking of the bread and to the prayers.”So daily the apostles broke bread in hundreds of homes in Jerusalem? Could a disciple minister, was it to specifically a bishop?
Matthew was a tax collector. He knew money and likely had whatever technology existed to weigh coins accurately. Being Jewish he likely knew the Old Testament prophets better than you or I.Let me propose a far simpler explanation of Matthew’s reference, one which doesn’t require us to assume the technology in Jeremiah’s time to standardize the weight in silver of then-circulating currency, nor to assume that Matthew expected his readership to perform the same calculations you are trumpeting as a justification for his reference. It is this: Matthew simply made a mistake. He could have trudged a few miles down to the synagogue to check the Scrolls, but decided to go from memory instead. Why is that a problem?
No, what i doubted and goes unanswered, was the assertion that only the apostles were presiding over the breaking of bread.Actually, the Bible doesn’t say that it was “in hundreds of homes.” Rather, the description in Acts 2:42 implies exactly what you doubt – that is, that the apostles led this worship: “they devoted themselves to the teaching of the apostles and to the communal life, to the breaking of the bread and to the prayers.”
Actually, I addressed it and asked you: if Paul talks about the various ministries, and mentions ‘apostle’ as one of them – and, it is mentioned in addition to teaching and preaching and healing – then what, exactly, is the distinct ministry of ‘apostle’?No, what i doubted and goes unanswered, was the assertion that only the apostles were presiding over the breaking of bread.
I appreciate that this is your opinion. Here’s the thing, though: if the early fathers talked about the Lord’s Supper, and asserted that only the ‘bishop’ performed this ministry, and they also asserted that they followed what the Church had always practiced… then on what basis do you hold a contrary opinion?It is not explicit but I suppose the apostles ministered, but also many other disciples, not bishops/priests, also ministered (breaking bread) in the hundreds of households.
The apostles did not lead all the worship (and bread breaking)n my opinion, and the bible is not explicit.
No… it follows the witness of the early church fathers. I mean, I really do get it that, from a Reformation perspective, it’s necessary (for internal consistency of logic) to suggest it was otherwise.To say only they did is just another opinion.
Cute, i know what you mean…but…the consequences, stakes are much higher for all involved here and now. The battle(s), the war , against principalities is now, not later. Hence do not want a hinged club/sword now.The “real game” is played in heaven. Our “practice” happens here on earth.![]()
yes, in truth and spirit. Paul was more concerned not about the vessels that might hold the consecrated elements of bread and wine, but consecrating the receiving participant…as one forefather wrote, we are His monstrance.So… we’re not supposed to honor the Body & Blood of Christ?
There’s nothing Jesus said directing only apostles/preists to break bread.They can, of course, but that wouldn’t be sacramental. That wouldn’t be following Jesus’ commands to his Church. You could decide to ignore His directives to us, but… why would you?
That’s not our battle, though. It’s God’s.The battle(s), the war , against principalities is now, not later. Hence do not want a hinged club/sword now.
He only said it to His apostles.There’s nothing Jesus said directing only apostles/preists to break bread.
That’s a matter of administration, not of Jesus’ command. How they implemented it was up to them – remember “what you loose and bind on earth will be loosed and bound in heaven”?There is no evidence from Jesus that the apostles were to hold confessional times .
That’s interesting… because the Bible says precisely the opposite!no specific confessing
Touche but we still wrestleThat’s not our battle, though. It’s God’s.
Our ‘battle’, having accepted Christ and having received His grace, is living in His will for us.
Well they were Jesus’s disciples, as we are of the apostles and their successors, and a disciple is trained to do as his master/teacher.He only said it to His apostles.