F
Fiyero3305
Guest
Alisa, I hope you know that it was Jesus Himself who said that the Way is narrow.
And don’t forget the rest: “…few will find it”.Alisa, I hope you know that it was Jesus Himself who said that the Way is narrow.
Without the Jewish religion, we Christians would be Christians. Our religion comes from Christ, not from the Jews. Now the Old Testament points to Christ, provides overwhelming evidence of who Jesus really was. But those who remained Jews, rejected this evidence and in doing so rejected (and still reject) God. This is what Christ said about it. On the other hand, many who were never Jews became Christians. “He came unto his own and his own received him not. But as many as received him to them he gave the power to be made the sons of God.” (Saint John)I have always greatly admired the Jewish religion. Without it, where would we Christians be? Not in a Christian world, I suspect. …
Do you believe the Catholic Church is teaching heresy when it has said this:
Where does the Church teach “there is more than one way to be Catholic”? Why call yourself Catholic if you don’t profess what she professes? I know several people like this, and I still can’t figure it out.What do I believe about “the gate is narrow, etc.”? I think He meant it is hard to be a human being on this earth however God has been revealed to one, and that it is sometimes hard to live in the way God has asked of us. Sometimes it’s difficult to discern the specific path God has for each of us!
Speaking for myself alone, I am very happy to be a Catholic, a Christian, and a daughter of God on this earth. I’ve had a wonderful life so far. But I refuse to judge the sincere and honest faiths of others, to whom God has revealed Himself in different ways. I have enough on my plate trying to do God’s will in my own life without proselytizing to others (unless you say I’m proselytizing right now, and maybe I am – sorry!)
I ask God to guide me every morning as I wake up. I feel that He is.
Alisa
What do I believe about “the gate is narrow, etc.”? I think He meant it is hard to be a human being on this earth however God has been revealed to one, and that it is sometimes hard to live in the way God has asked of us. Sometimes it’s difficult to discern the specific path God has for each of us!
Alisa, Mulligan again. I have to say your light hearted, care free obstinance is stunning! You call yourself a Christian, but then say that the faiths of others, who deny Christ, in fact who truly hate Christ in the case of the Jews and the Moslems (don’t believe me read the Talmud or the Koran) are “revealed by God”. You don’t have to be a Bible scholar or a trained apologist to see the silliness of your position; you only have to be logical. Jesus could not have been more emphatic in saying that He was the only way, in saying that belief in him was absolutely necassary. If you reject this (as implicitly you do, there is no other way to interpret your attitude) you reject what Christ said. Why call yourself a follower of one you don’t even believe? Yes it is difficult to put yourself out there and “proselylize” as you say. But that is called Charity. Now you’re not obligated or even called to go around and try to convert everyone you meet. But you are obligated to defend the faith or to correct people when circumstances call for it. This is not arrogance on my part, rather it is more arroagant to call others arrogant (as you keep doing) who merely point out to you the meaning of the faith you claim to hold. Maybe you should be a Universalist Unitarian. They believe in nothing and everything at the same time.Speaking for myself alone, I am very happy to be a Catholic, a Christian, and a daughter of God on this earth. I’ve had a wonderful life so far. But I refuse to judge the sincere and honest faiths of others, to whom God has revealed Himself in different ways. I have enough on my plate trying to do God’s will in my own life without proselytizing to others (unless you say I’m proselytizing right now, and maybe I am – sorry!)
You should consider taking this to the Apologetics forum as neither this forum nor this thread are the appropriate place for you to be questioning the teaching authority of Catholic Church. It is an entirely different topic.
No, the Church is the “Mystical Body of Christ”.First, the Catholic Church is a Mystical Body that can only teach truth.
Now when you claim that Pope John Paul II is a fraud and that he together with the magisterium of the Church during the Vatican II taught heresy, you are claiming: That apostolic succession is illegitimate, (the same error proclaimed by the schismatic Society of Saint Pius X sect which FYI was condemned by the Church), and that the Holy Ghost abandoned the Church and allowed it to teach error.Therefore, when someone teaches a lie, you simply know that he isn’t a Catholic, and therefore is not the Church.
No, the whole thing is true, not just the first part (the church does not lie). Someone knowing the teachings of the One, Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic Church to be true, and who chooses to reject them, rejects the Church. This does not apply to those deprived, through no fault of their own and through invincible ignorance, of the teachings of the Church.As to the specific statement you picked out, no it is not heretical, but ambiguous. The first part is true, the children are not guilty of the sin of separation. In fact, if they are baptized, they are defacto Catholics. However at some point, as they grow up past the age of reason, many (the learned ones anyway), will become formal heretics (and thus fall outside the Church). All of them will suffer from the inability to have their sins forgiven (since they disdain sacramental confession instituted by Christ).
You posed a questioned, and made a conclusion depending on the answer to the question. Your conclusion does not follow. (further it is incorrect).huh?
Sorry, you don’t get to pick who the Holy Father and visible head of the Church is. You can either choose to belong to the Church or reject it.I’m owe obedience to everything that every real Pope ever taught.
I don’t claim to belong to a Church where the Pope can manifest heresy. I belong to the Holy Catholic Church instituted by Christ. It is impossible that the Pope could promulgate heresy, otherwise the Holy Spirit is a liar. Stop the blasphemy.My Church, the one you claim to belong to, teaches that if a Pope ever manifests heresy, he falls immediately from office and out of the Church, ipso facto WITHOUT NEED OF DECLARATION.
Pope John Paul II, isn’t (wasn’t) the Pope? Who does your personal church claim to be its leader?He teaches error, because HE ISN"T THE POPE.
Speaking for some of usI forgot to ask: Do some of you actually feel Vatican II was heretical?
Alisa
Quite true. In fact the Holy Spirit knows exactly what He is doing. Since the Church is a “living Magisterium” it is constantly evolving for the better.Speaking for some of usI would say we “actually” feel VC2 was meritorious and holy.
Further, it is those who misinterpret the teachings of the Holy Vatican Councils (and all Church Councils) who are in grave error, not the Church or Holy Spirit that are in error.The bastardization and twisting of the Council’s findings and directives is where the heterodox is found.
Sadly many are easy prey for the teachings of the numberous schismatic sects since Vatican II which are the devil’s way of attacking the Church from within. he has been very successful in leading many astray by leading them to question and attack the authority of the Church. Our Lady of Fatima in fact has warned that the Holy Father would have much to suffer.The notion that we can somehow be at odds with Church teaching and God’s law is the folly of fools. Those who are too lazy and complacent to stand up for the Church of Rome, and too cowardly to leave it, are the stuff of which heresy is made…
nor this thread are the appropriate place for you to be questioning the teaching authority of Catholic Church. It is an entirely different topic.
.
Ah ha ha ha! Good one!There likely is no Pope. The Church has had over 40 acknowledged (by the authorities you would respect) anti-Popes in her history as well as very long interregnums.
I
know there are many ways to be Catholic, and it simply isn’t in me to be a narrow-viewing, fundamentalist Catholic. Many Catholics are broad-minded and view people of other persuasions with love and respect. In that setting, there is room for an interesting exchange of ideas. We can learn from Islamic and Jewish people and they from us, for instance. Many of the people who post on CAF don’t seem to have ecumenical feelings at all.
Alisa;5198083:
Mulligan, just wanted to point out that just because a woman is the heart of the home doesn’t mean we don’t think. Sure, some of us don’t. But neither do some men.I
Alisa, I just promised mapleoak I was done on this thread. But I can’t leave without saying goodbye to you. You are so cute in a feathery sort of way. You may in fact be the first case of one truly “invincibly ignorant” or perhaps an argument against the 19th amendment, that I have ever seen.
The Church teaches that man is the head of the family, but the woman is the heart. You are quintessentially feminine. You don’t think, you only feel!
But again IN CHARITY, take the advice of that guy who told you to get a catechism. (I recommend Trent).
Mulligan![]()