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ahimsaman72
Guest
Let’s look at this first part of your argument above. Nobody can agree…some believe this, some believe that…some believe Jesus was God, some don’t, etc. etc.Let’s look at the state of Christianity today. Basically, we have hundreds, if not thousands of churches(not local churches, denominations) in existence. All claim to be Christian. Then we have the various “sola scriptura” churches and branches of Protestantism. The interesting thing is that all claim to believe in the Bible alone, and that you can personally interpret the Bible for yourself with the power of the Holy Spirit. However, these churches can’t even agree on what the Bible says!!! One church/individual says that the Bible says that God is one, not a trinity, while the other says that God is a Trinity. One person says that the Bible says that Jesus is God, while the other says that Jesus isn’t God! Yet they all claim to believe that the Bible told them this, by the power of the Holy Spirit. This is where the confusion occurs, and clearly why the Bible alone is not the sole authority or the sole place from where doctrine is derived. Clearly the early Church didn’t rely on the Bible alone, and the Bible itself never says that it is the sole authority. Rather, it tells us that the CHURCH is the “pillar and ground of Truth”(1 Timothy 3:15)
Out of all churches in existence today, the Catholic Church(and to an extent, the Orthodox Church) is the oldest, most ancient Church, that can historically trace its beliefs and authority back to the Apostles.
First, as far as I know, Jehovah’s Witnesses are the only ones who deny the divinity of Christ. Even if there are 10 others just like them, and there are 30,000 plus denoms that catholics claim exist, then you do the math. 10 out of 30,000 don’t agree. .01% of 30,000 would yield 300 denoms that can’t agree out of 30,000. Let’s take it further. Since that’s not the case, let’s get it closer. .001% would yield 30 denoms out of 30,000 that don’t agree that Christ was divine. We still need to go further, don’t we? Okay, so if we go with .0001% out of 30,000 that can’t agree that Christ is divine and the trinity is real, then that’s a pretty small number. Look at the 29,998 that agree with everything in the Apostles Creed and not the one or two or three fringe groups that are just plain nuts.