B
BigJack1
Guest
Sonseeker,
Philthy adequately answered most of your rebuttal to my post. One thing I would like to hit on though is the council of Jerusalem. You say that the council was held by Apostles and no such Apostles are around today. Do you really think God has no forsight? Do you think God didn’t know or didn’t care that this wouldn’t be the only thing disputed among believers going in to the future? Do you really think he said, "Okay, as long as the apostles are here, you will have answers to the questions that you have, but after they are all gone, you are on your own (except for the Holy Spirit who will lead each of you to whatever truth you would like to believe)? That is certainly not the example we get from scripture. We see that the 11 passed on their authoirty to Matthias, not one of the 12 picked by Jesus. This obviously shows that they had the authority to pass on their authority to their successors. We see the same thing with Paul to Timothy and Titus. That line of Apostolic succession, unbroken for 2000 years from the Apostles themselves all the way down to the present Catholic clergy should be evidence enough that God did not leave us without a solution to the problem of determining truth. If you ask for evidence that the sky is blue and someone takes you outside and asks you to look up to the blue sky, and you still demand that the sky is green, then not much more can be done. When you ask for evidence, you must be ready to accept it when presented. Otherwise you are using your own preconceived notions of the way things are and are trying to force them to make sense, against the light of evidence and reason. You are therefore your own authority, your own Pope in fact. Hopefully this illustration makes you realize that the indvidual cannot be the authority nor can Scripture alone (because each individual’s interpretation of the Scriptures are not infallible. The Scriptures themselves are infallible, thus the need for an infallible Church to help us derive at their true meaning.)
You’re right that OSAS was not an issue at the council of Jerusalem. Neither was the divinity of Christ, the dual nature of Christ, the cannon of Scripture, etc. etc. etc. We know clearly however that these things (and countless) others did come into question as the Church grew. Therefore, subsequent councils were held as the need arose to clarify these matters infallibly. Funny, you accept the councils that established the cannon of the New Testament but you reject that same Church’s authority on other things. How do you know they got the cannon right? You’re obviously the authority on these things if you are able to pick and choose among the things settled by councils over the years, deciding which of them are true and which are not.
Take a long, hard, objective look and you’ll see that evidence for Catholicism is light years ahead of evidence for any other explanation.
BigJack
Philthy adequately answered most of your rebuttal to my post. One thing I would like to hit on though is the council of Jerusalem. You say that the council was held by Apostles and no such Apostles are around today. Do you really think God has no forsight? Do you think God didn’t know or didn’t care that this wouldn’t be the only thing disputed among believers going in to the future? Do you really think he said, "Okay, as long as the apostles are here, you will have answers to the questions that you have, but after they are all gone, you are on your own (except for the Holy Spirit who will lead each of you to whatever truth you would like to believe)? That is certainly not the example we get from scripture. We see that the 11 passed on their authoirty to Matthias, not one of the 12 picked by Jesus. This obviously shows that they had the authority to pass on their authority to their successors. We see the same thing with Paul to Timothy and Titus. That line of Apostolic succession, unbroken for 2000 years from the Apostles themselves all the way down to the present Catholic clergy should be evidence enough that God did not leave us without a solution to the problem of determining truth. If you ask for evidence that the sky is blue and someone takes you outside and asks you to look up to the blue sky, and you still demand that the sky is green, then not much more can be done. When you ask for evidence, you must be ready to accept it when presented. Otherwise you are using your own preconceived notions of the way things are and are trying to force them to make sense, against the light of evidence and reason. You are therefore your own authority, your own Pope in fact. Hopefully this illustration makes you realize that the indvidual cannot be the authority nor can Scripture alone (because each individual’s interpretation of the Scriptures are not infallible. The Scriptures themselves are infallible, thus the need for an infallible Church to help us derive at their true meaning.)
You’re right that OSAS was not an issue at the council of Jerusalem. Neither was the divinity of Christ, the dual nature of Christ, the cannon of Scripture, etc. etc. etc. We know clearly however that these things (and countless) others did come into question as the Church grew. Therefore, subsequent councils were held as the need arose to clarify these matters infallibly. Funny, you accept the councils that established the cannon of the New Testament but you reject that same Church’s authority on other things. How do you know they got the cannon right? You’re obviously the authority on these things if you are able to pick and choose among the things settled by councils over the years, deciding which of them are true and which are not.
Take a long, hard, objective look and you’ll see that evidence for Catholicism is light years ahead of evidence for any other explanation.
BigJack