Z
zerinus
Guest
I know the history of my Church well enough. There is no sin in that, I can assure you!I’m admitting nothing. You haven’t proven anything, just denied, denied, denied…
You go ahead and cling to your feelings, thoughts, and impressions. And by all means, don’t bother to do any research into your church’s history. It would be a sin.
As for me, I’ve got to rotate the tires on my car.
You had referenced that article in response to my question of how the Catholic Church today exercises the power the Lord gave to Peter, to “bind on earth and it would be bound in heaven; and loose on earth and it would be loosed in heaven”. That article was written mainly to justify the Catholic position against the Protestant one; and in the main I tend agree with what it says. I think that the Catholic teaching regarding sin and its remission is theologically more correct than the Protestant one. However, as I read that article, there were a couple of passages that jumped at me as being contrary to the LDS position, and they are these:Now if you want to discuss a different topic than what we’ve already exhausted, by all means bring it up. On a JW thread you mentioned you had disagreements with what you read in the Catholic Answers tract, Forgiveness of Sins. That should be interesting…
This is the one point where we disagree. We believe that baptism only washes away our own personal sins, not the sin of Adam. We believe that the sin of Adam is automatically taken care of by the Atonement. Nobody in this life or in the next will ever be punished for the sin of Adam. They will only be punished for their own sins—which they have not repented of. The other is this passage:Baptism was given to take away the sin inherited from Adam (original sin) and any sins we personally committed before baptism . . .
We believe that this is not the correct application or interpretation of the “keys of the kingdom” the Lord gave to Peter that “whatsoever he would bind on earth would be bound in heaven, and whatsoever he would loose on earth would be loosed in heaven”. Whatsoever implies more than just forgiving sins. It is much broader in scope. Also, although the act of binding on earth may, with some stretch of the imagination, be made applicable to the remission of sins, the act of loosening cannot be. To loose here means to undo something that you have already done; or to reverse it. So how can you reverse the forgiveness of sins? Can you “unforgive” someone after he has already been frogiven? How can you “undo” the forgiveness of sins once it has been granted? So clearly, the act of “binding and loosing” one earth, which will be equally “bound or loosed” in heaven, must have a different meaning than the power to forgive (or retain—i.e. not forgive) sins on earth and in heaven.Christ told the apostles to follow his example: “As the Father has sent me, even so I send you” (John 20:21). Just as the apostles were to carry Christ’s message to the whole world, so they were to carry his forgiveness: “Truly, I say to you, whatever you bind on earth shall be bound in heaven, and whatever you loose on earth shall be loosed in heaven” (Matt. 18:18).
Why don’t you let him speak for himself!(Side note to Allweather: Maybe rmcmullen is re-thinking his religious position and returning to his Catholic roots.)
zerinus