T
TOmNossor
Guest
I will acknowledge that what you say is fair enough. I have not attempted to describe what Jane may have thought co-substantation (consubstantiation) means.No, you entered this conversation to start a tangent to deflect the conversation away from Jane having to explain what co-substantation means to her.
You are famous for saying that you alone of the world’s greatest authority on knowing what Tom believes; which is true. But you are not the world’s greatest authority on knowing what Jane believes. Only Jane knows what she means by co-substantation.
And you have not even tried to explain what she might have meant by it, but again that is her responsibility not yours.
I have suggested that there was virtually no words she could have chosen which would not have been met with “a ha! you do not know!!!”
That was my point and my purpose for posting.
In responding to me a Catholic has denied Catholic dogma and others have said many things that had Jane said them she would have been met with, “a ha! you do not know!” I am sure she would have handled that just like she ultimately handled what came anyway in a slightly modified form. I do not believe Jane’s faith is based on the foibles of Catholic doctrine, so my purpose was really not altruistic.
Instead, if there was “hay” going to be made about “consubstantial” I wanted to present some of the history. And even after doing that folks have continued to demand a Catholic definition from a LDS who claims it doesn’t make sense. Why do you think that is?
Charity, TOm