R
RNRobert
Guest
I’ve noticed that many Protestants, whether on these forums or in print, television and radio, often attack Catholic doctrines by saying “It’s not in the Bible.” According to them, Christianity began to become corrupted when Constantine legalized Christianity in the fourth century AD, and as a result pagan beliefs and practices crept into the Church, which resulted in “Catholicism,” a paganized form of Christianity which held sway until Martin Luther’s glorious “Reformation” (some extreme sects claim that Christianity started to go off the rails as soon as the last apostles died). Protestants like to point to various dogmas proclaimed throughout the centuries as “proof” that a Catholic teaching is “unbiblical” (Some Protestant works, like Lorraine Boettner’s book, Roman Catholicism, have lists of Catholic inventions- click here and this page to see some examples from the Catholic Answers website). However, I’ve noticed when I’ve asked a fundamentalist on this forum to ask where I can find the words “Trinity” or “Incarnation” in the Bible (doctrines held by the vast majority of Christians, including most Protestants), they either change the subject, accuse me of attacking Scripture, or otherwise evade the question.
I think the key problem with Protestantism (particularly the fundamentalist kind) is that they are fixated on the first century church. I remember seeing and hearing this reverence for first century Christianity in the Baptist Church I attended. To be sure, the first century church was the one that saw Jesus on this earth, that learned it’s faith from the apostles, and saw firsthand the writings that would later become the New Testament. However, if you read the New Testament carefully, you will notice that the first century church wasn’t perfect- it had its share of problems. Some churches were lax spiritually or were leading immoral lives (read Paul’s letters to the Corinthians or John’s letters to the seven churches in Revelation). Also, even in the first century false teachings were starting to pop up- read Galatians, or 1 John, or Jude. In any case, Protestants expect the Church to be static, to remain “frozen” as it was in New Testament times. The problem is, we no longer live in that era, and today’s Christians face problems that the early Christians could never have imagined (stem cell research, cloning, genetics, medical/moral issues like Terry Schiavo, to name a few).
This, I think, is also why the Protestant doctrine of “Sola Scriptura” is deficient. The New Testament is a first century document written primarily to address the problems of that era. Now, before some Protestant accuses me of “trampling on holy ground,” as I have been accused of before on this forum, let me explain that this in no way invalidates Scripture for the purposes of “teaching, for refutation, for correction and for training in righteousness, so that one who belongs to God may be competent, equipped for every good work” (2 Timothy 3:16-17). Also, the Catholic Church teaches that public revelation ended with the death of the last Apostle, and considers the magisterium the servant of Scripture (Dei Verbum 10, Vatican II documents).
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I think the key problem with Protestantism (particularly the fundamentalist kind) is that they are fixated on the first century church. I remember seeing and hearing this reverence for first century Christianity in the Baptist Church I attended. To be sure, the first century church was the one that saw Jesus on this earth, that learned it’s faith from the apostles, and saw firsthand the writings that would later become the New Testament. However, if you read the New Testament carefully, you will notice that the first century church wasn’t perfect- it had its share of problems. Some churches were lax spiritually or were leading immoral lives (read Paul’s letters to the Corinthians or John’s letters to the seven churches in Revelation). Also, even in the first century false teachings were starting to pop up- read Galatians, or 1 John, or Jude. In any case, Protestants expect the Church to be static, to remain “frozen” as it was in New Testament times. The problem is, we no longer live in that era, and today’s Christians face problems that the early Christians could never have imagined (stem cell research, cloning, genetics, medical/moral issues like Terry Schiavo, to name a few).
This, I think, is also why the Protestant doctrine of “Sola Scriptura” is deficient. The New Testament is a first century document written primarily to address the problems of that era. Now, before some Protestant accuses me of “trampling on holy ground,” as I have been accused of before on this forum, let me explain that this in no way invalidates Scripture for the purposes of “teaching, for refutation, for correction and for training in righteousness, so that one who belongs to God may be competent, equipped for every good work” (2 Timothy 3:16-17). Also, the Catholic Church teaches that public revelation ended with the death of the last Apostle, and considers the magisterium the servant of Scripture (Dei Verbum 10, Vatican II documents).
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