P
Peter_J
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My bad. What I meant to ask was: do you have a source for claiming that the protection of infallibility is Peter’s alone?Christ.
Mat.16.
You want me to A, B, C, it as well?
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My bad. What I meant to ask was: do you have a source for claiming that the protection of infallibility is Peter’s alone?Christ.
Mat.16.
You want me to A, B, C, it as well?
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Pray tell, WHO among you possessed the AUTHORITY to declare any text erroneous?? Pray tell???I think you are a little behind the times. I study primarily with the New American Standard Bible, and it doesn’t include those erroneous texts.
No doubt. And pray tell, by who’s authority are those “notes” given credence?It has many marginal notes about certain manuscripts.
By “whom”…those who wrote it and those who have embraced the illicit deviations from pure scripture?It is considered to be the most faithful to the Greek and Hebrew of any Bible.
No problems at all, mate…nary a one…What is your problem?
I would clearly scream that to the skies!!Are you saying that God’s word has not been preserved in Scripture in purity and truth?
Sorry, Pete.My bad. What I meant to ask was: do you have a source for claiming that the protection of infallibility is Peter’s alone?
Amazing. So they were praying to dead guys and didn’t know they were praying to dead guys?The Catholic take on the matter is that we always prayed to the saints, i.e. we always asked them to pray for us, even in the early centuries of Christianity, but we didn’t realize that we were “praying to the saints” until St. Thomas Aquinas came along and explained it to us.
My understanding is that the Catholic Church claims responsibility for preserving Scripture. If it couldn’t preserve God’s written word in purity and truth, how can we trust it to preserve a more nebulous oral Tradition?I would clearly scream that to the skies!!
Who said baptism has nothing to do with water? You do know that there is water baptism and there is the baptism of the Holy Spirit that Paul talks about a lot, right?You mean like baptism has nothing to do with water, and John ch. six has nothing to do with the Lord’s Supper?
Or maybe that Tim 3:16 = sola scriptura?
Do you want to learn? I was talking about the texts mentioned in the link Realcatholicgk provided in the post. Maybe you didn’t read them. It pointed to texts that had late additions in them. The notes I refer to are done by guys like the scholars mentioned in the articles at those links. Guys like F.F. Bruce and Bruce Metzger. Brilliant NT scholars. You couldn’t find a hair’s worth of significant difference between the NASB and the Douay. So that is a meaningless point. Can you name an ‘illicit deviation’ from Scripture that is not handled in the NASBPray tell, WHO among you possessed the AUTHORITY to declare any text erroneous?? Pray tell???
No doubt. And pray tell, by who’s authority are those “notes” given credence?
By “whom”…those who wrote it and those who have embraced the illicit deviations from pure scripture?
No problems at all, mate…nary a one…
Really…by whom
Then I don’t think you read it very much.I would clearly scream that to the skies!!
I’m sorry…I probably should have answered a little differently.My understanding is that the Catholic Church claims responsibility for preserving Scripture. If it couldn’t preserve God’s written word in purity and truth, how can we trust it to preserve a more nebulous oral Tradition?
I probably shouldn’t generalized so much… I did read them, and I looked at the Douay and the NAB, and the only actual difference was some minor changes in wording…modernization of the language.Do you want to learn? I was talking about the texts mentioned in the link Realcatholicgk provided in the post. Maybe you didn’t read them. It pointed to texts that had late additions in them. The notes I refer to are done by guys like the scholars mentioned in the articles at those links. Guys like F.F. Bruce and Bruce Metzger. Brilliant NT scholars. You couldn’t find a hair’s worth of significant difference between the NASB and the Douay. So that is a meaningless point. Can you name an ‘illicit deviation’ from Scripture that is not handled in the NASB
No problem, I’m not in any hurry.Sorry, Pete.
Just so ‘we’ do not argue unnecessarily, I mean that infallibility is for St. Peter ‘alone’ because Our Lord DEFINED it as being so!
"Blessed are you, Simon Bar Jonah, for it is not flesh and blood that reveals this to you, but my Father in Heaven who reveals this to you.
Clearly, “the Father” reveals things to Peter outside of dreams, angelic visitations, suggestive smoke signals, talking bush, et al.
Obviously with the entrustment of The Church UPON him,(Peter) and The Promise of sending His Holy Spirit to guide Her (The Church) and protecting her from error, verifies the Apostolic illumination that Peter’s succesors ‘have’ the same moments when necessary.
Hmm…I probably messed that up a bit, but I am a bit poorly at the mo’.
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Oh I do… but to clarify, please read my post at #1003, that should clear it up.Then I don’t think you read it very much.
Exactly! (I’d prefer the phrase “saints in heaven” rather than “dead guys”, but other than that you just hit the nail on the head.) Pre-Aquinas, Christians just called it “asking the saints for prayers” and such like – which, come to think of it, we still do sometimes.Amazing. So they were praying to dead guys and didn’t know they were praying to dead guys?
The links she had talked about were on 1 John 5: 7-8I probably shouldn’t generalized so much… I did read them, and I looked at the Douay and the NAB, and the only actual difference was some minor changes in wording…modernization of the language.
What late additions were there? I’m always willing to learn. I’m an old dog, but I can still learn new tricks!Now, I may not agree with you, but I can accept your position and agree to disagree with you, and still be a nice guy.
I haven’t done a comparison.between the NASB and the Douay, so truthfully…I’m not able to comment.
Peace!
Do you know how Paul defines a saint?Exactly! (I’d prefer the phrase “saints in heaven” rather than “dead guys”, but other than that you just hit the nail on the head.) Pre-Aquinas, Christians just called it “asking the saints for prayers” and such like – which, come to think of it, we still do sometimes.![]()
Acts 9:5-6:The links she had talked about were on 1 John 5: 7-8
Rev 22:19 and
Act 9:5-6
drbo.org/cgi-bin/d?b=drb&bk=57&ch=4&l=21&f=s#xDo you know how Paul defines a saint?
The portions I have put in bold are the parts that differ from the earliest extant manuscripts now known. In Acts and 1 John, they are added words, while in Revelations the difference is book of life instead of tree of life.Acts 9:5-6:
drbo.org/chapter/51009.htm
5 Who said: Who art thou, Lord? And he: I am Jesus whom thou persecutest. I**t is hard for thee to kick against the goad.
6 And he trembling and astonished, said: Lord, what wilt thou have me to do? **
Here is verse 7:
7 And the Lord said to him: Arise, and go into the city, and there it shall be told thee what thou must do. Now the men who went in company with him, stood amazed, hearing indeed a voice, but seeing no man.
biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Acts%209:5-6;&version=49;
Acts 9:5-6 (New American Standard Bible)
5And he said, “Who are You, Lord?” And He said, "I am Jesus whom you are persecuting,
6but get up and enter the city, and (A)it will be told you what you must do."
I guess you could say they are essentially the same, though numbered differently, and worded differently, though there is a different meaning in it…
Revelations 22:19 (Douay = Apocalypse)
drbo.org/chapter/73022.htm
19 And if any man shall take away from the words of the book of this prophecy, God shall take away his part out of the book of life, and out of the holy city, and from these things that are written in this book
biblegateway.com/passage/?search=Revelations%2022:19&version=49
Revelation 22:19 (New American Standard Bible)
19and if anyone (A)takes away from the (B)words of the book of this prophecy, God will take away his part from (C)the tree of life and from the holy city, (D)which are written in this book.
Quite similar.
1 John 5:7-8
drbo.org/chapter/69005.htm
7 And there are three who give testimony in heaven, the Father, the Word, and the Holy Ghost. And these three are one. 8 And there are three that give testimony on earth: the spirit, and the water, and the blood: and these three are one.
biblegateway.com/passage/?search=1%20John%205:7-8;&version=49;
1 John 5:7-8 (New American Standard Bible)
7For there are (A)three that testify:
8[a]the Spirit and the water and the blood; and the three are in agreement.
Footnotes:
Here is the greatest difference that I see…and it appears that a later amendment to the text was made…to correct it, and bring it in line with the original scriptures textually. Am I correct?
- 1 John 5:8 A few late mss add …in heaven, the Father, the Word, and the Holy Spirit, and these three are one. And there are three that testify on earth, the Spirit
Illuminate please?![]()