Is it a matter of law? Or is it a matter of faith?
Let me reiterate what I stated:
[SIGN]…for a true believer, that is enough, some even do not need examples to believe.
To the unbeliever, to those with closed eyes…they are indeed shaky and nothing will ever convince an unbeliever…he will always look for something else to justify his state of unbelief. There will always be a never ending set of conditions.[/SIGN]
Besides, the choices you have supplied are vague at best, and left to interpretation by both sides!
I did not provide those examples. I only cited them to you to ponder as these have been in the Bible, part of Scripture for several thousand years. These are God’s examples. For you to say they are vague…means you are saying that what God provided, via my pointing them out to you, is also vague.
So, what is vague about 2sam12:
13 Then David said to Nathan, “I have sinned against the LORD.”
Nathan replied, “The LORD has taken away your sin. You are not going to die.
It is very clear, isn’t it…David admits a sin (the mortal sin of adultery) and Nathan provides absolution. This is what occurs in the CC sacrament of confession. It seems you cannot accept this fact, that is why it is vague.
Listen to what David says in Psalms 5:32,“Finally, I confessed all my sins to You, and stopped trying to hide my guilt. I said, I will confess my rebellion to the Lord. And You forgave me. All my guilt is gone.”
And you are clinging on one verse justify what you believe confession should be?. This verse does not say that clearly either. It just states a confession, but the manner or the how of confession is not stated clearly.
Psalms 5:32,"Finally, I confessed all my sins to You, and stopped trying to hide my guilt.
This verse says the psalmist had confessed, it does not say the manner of confession. The psalmist had already confessed and is expressing the grace he recieved by not hiding his guilt anymore. A good jew, would have followed the Law of Moses for his atonement, and did the animal sacrifiec as stated in Leviticus, which, I pointed out in a post, is a forerunner of the CC sacrament.
I said, I will confess my rebellion to the Lord. And You forgave me. All my guilt is gone
Sin is a rebellion against the Lord indeed, and speaks of going to confession when sinning. It does not state the manner of confession, just the willingness to confess and God’s mercy to forgive. A good Jew will follow the Law of Moses in Leviticus.
We Catholics chose to follow the manner Jesus commanded…that is contained in the teachings of the Apostles via Sacred Tradition in the manner of confession…and is how the early/first Christians did it.
On occasion, the eyes, and ears of catholics are closed to the truth, also.
This is about you…not any Catholic, so what does a catholic with closed eyes and ears have anything to do with you? So, you are justifying your closed eyes and ears because some catholics have closed eyes and ears also?
And, as a believer, and member of the Body of Christ, how can I impose my own conditions on the Bible?
When you are asking for more examples, more proof, saying the proof is vague, then you are imposing your own conditions, and you are not taking the Bible for what is already contained therein.
Let me repeat…
God provided you only those examples…To the unbeliever, to those with closed eyes…they are indeed shaky and nothing will ever convince an unbeliever…he will always look for something else to justify his state of unbelief. There will always be a never ending set of conditions.
In the crux of the matter…you will have to convince yourself…that what is in the Bible, the example of David, Job 42, is enough…to believe. It is a matter of faith.