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The comments from non-Catholics in response to the article were brutal.BreitBart’s write up on Pope Francis’ latest address about Christian Unity, and its lack: The Devil Works to Divide Christians
The comments from non-Catholics in response to the article were brutal.BreitBart’s write up on Pope Francis’ latest address about Christian Unity, and its lack: The Devil Works to Divide Christians
And Catholics against the Pope and Vatican II…The comments from non-Catholics in response to the article were brutal.![]()
Thanks Kliska,BreitBart’s write up on Pope Francis’ latest address about Christian Unity, and its lack: The Devil Works to Divide Christians
Well, obviously we aren’t in “total” unity. We are divided on a range of issues. However, there are degrees of unity. There are degrees of fellowship and communion that can be experienced today between the various denominations. Some, such as say Charismatics and Pentecostals or Lutherans and Anglicans or Scotch Presbyterians and Dutch Reformed, enjoy greater unity in relation to each other than they do to less similar groups.Never said you did Itwin, quite the opposite. This thread is about Christian Unity and you showed where there are some Christians, and I agree they are Christians, consider other Christians to be teaching heresy, which is quite contrary to the Christian Unity as purported earlier in the thread within the non-Catholic realm of Christianity. Just using your example to prove my point. I don’t think you could ever show where using the word “heresy” to describe someone or a group, and at the same be convincing that the someone is in total unity with you in Christ.
As far as Pentecostals are concerned there is an invisible and visible aspect to Christian unity. There is the unity of the Spirit shared by all those who are born of the Spirit and then there is the visible unity shared by the members of each particular visible manifestation of the church, which includes people who have and have not been born of the Spirit.I will refer you back to my original post (#44) where I attempted to define/clarify what IS “Christian Unity” and WHO gets to decide?
We believe that having accepted the Lord Jesus Christ as personal Savior and King, and having thus been born into the family and invisible body or church of the Lord, it is the sacred duty of the believer, whenever this lies within his power, to identify himself with, and labor most earnestly for the upbuilding of God’s kingdom with the visible church of Christ upon the earth; and that such visible church is a congregation of believers, who have associated themselves together in Christian fellowship and in the unity of the Spirit, observing the ordinances of Christ, worshipping Him in the beauty of holiness, speaking to each other in psalms, and hymns and spiritual songs, reading and proclaiming His Word, laboring for the salvation of souls, giving their temporal means to carry on His work, edifying, encouraging, establishing one another in the most holy faith, and working harmoniously together as dear children who are many members but one body of which Christ is head.
Unity is not something that must be defined. If people are united, they know it. You know if something is dividing you from another person, whether it be a doctrine or a practice that keeps you separated. Closed communion is obviously one example. There are others. This points to areas of separation, and yet different churches that practice closed communion can still come together and have worship services that don’t feature sacraments/ordinances.~ Foursquare Church declaration of faith
“Unity is not something that must be defined.” No wonder there are areas of separation as you have pointed out.Well, obviously we aren’t in “total” unity. We are divided on a range of issues. However, there are degrees of unity. There are degrees of fellowship and communion that can be experienced today between the various denominations. Some, such as say Charismatics and Pentecostals or Lutherans and Anglicans or Scotch Presbyterians and Dutch Reformed, enjoy greater unity in relation to each other than they do to less similar groups.
As far as Pentecostals are concerned there is an invisible and visible aspect to Christian unity. There is the unity of the Spirit shared by all those who are born of the Spirit and then there is the visible unity shared by the members of each particular visible manifestation of the church, which includes people who have and have not been born of the Spirit.
Unity is not something that must be defined. If people are united, they know it. You know if something is dividing you from another person, whether it be a doctrine or a practice that keeps you separated. Closed communion is obviously one example. There are others. This points to areas of separation, and yet different churches that practice closed communion can still come together and have worship services that don’t feature sacraments/ordinances.
Once again, there are degrees of unity.
Sorry, but scripture contradicts you.Well, obviously we aren’t in “total” unity. We are divided on a range of issues. However, there are degrees of unity. There are degrees of fellowship and communion that can be experienced today between the various denominations. Some, such as say Charismatics and Pentecostals or Lutherans and Anglicans or Scotch Presbyterians and Dutch Reformed, enjoy greater unity in relation to each other than they do to less similar groups.
As far as Pentecostals are concerned there is an invisible and visible aspect to Christian unity. There is the unity of the Spirit shared by all those who are born of the Spirit and then there is the visible unity shared by the members of each particular visible manifestation of the church, which includes people who have and have not been born of the Spirit.
Unity is not something that must be defined. If people are united, they know it. You know if something is dividing you from another person, whether it be a doctrine or a practice that keeps you separated. Closed communion is obviously one example. There are others. This points to areas of separation, and yet different churches that practice closed communion can still come together and have worship services that don’t feature sacraments/ordinances.
Once again, there are degrees of unity.
Greetings Itwin,Well, obviously we aren’t in “total” unity. We are divided on a range of issues. However, there are degrees of unity. There are degrees of fellowship and communion that can be experienced today between the various denominations. Some, such as say Charismatics and Pentecostals or Lutherans and Anglicans or Scotch Presbyterians and Dutch Reformed, enjoy greater unity in relation to each other than they do to less similar groups.
As far as Pentecostals are concerned there is an invisible and visible aspect to Christian unity. There is the unity of the Spirit shared by all those who are born of the Spirit and then there is the visible unity shared by the members of each particular visible manifestation of the church, which includes people who have and have not been born of the Spirit.
Unity is not something that must be defined. If people are united, they know it. You know if something is dividing you from another person, whether it be a doctrine or a practice that keeps you separated. Closed communion is obviously one example. There are others. This points to areas of separation, and yet different churches that practice closed communion can still come together and have worship services that don’t feature sacraments/ordinances.
Once again, there are degrees of unity.
But do you agree that the way that Roman Catholics see unity is by having everyone convert to Catholicism? Isn’t it true that unity with Protestants can only come about, in the Catholic view, only if Protestants believe in the infalliblity of the Roman Pontiff when speaking ex cathedra on faith and morals and other Catholic teachings. Protestants would have to believe in the Catholic teaching that artificial contraception, practiced by married couples with 5 children for example, is a mortal sin, when you have a situation where, according to polls, many American Roman Catholics don’t even believe what the Catholic Church infallibly teaches about artificial contraception. If many American Catholics don’t believe the infallible Church teaching on artificial contraception, is it reasonable to demand that a Protestant believe the teaching?The comments from non-Catholics in response to the article were brutal.![]()
Tomdstone, last I saw it was the Protestants who broke communion with the Catholic Church, not the other way around. Considering the Catholic Church has not changed its doctrine in its 2,000 year history (i.e. it has faithfully handed down the faith as taught by the original Apostles) why is it unreasonable to expect the Protestants to return to restore unity?But do you agree that the way that Roman Catholics see unity is by having everyone convert to Catholicism? Isn’t it true that unity with Protestants can only come about, in the Catholic view, only if Protestants believe in the infalliblity of the Roman Pontiff when speaking ex cathedra on faith and morals and other Catholic teachings. Protestants would have to believe in the Catholic teaching that artificial contraception, practiced by married couples with 5 children for example, is a mortal sin, when you have a situation where, according to polls, many American Roman Catholics don’t even believe what the Catholic Church infallibly teaches about artificial contraception. If many American Catholics don’t believe the infallible Church teaching on artificial contraception, is it reasonable to demand that a Protestant believe the teaching?
Are the Roman Catholic requirements for unity of all Christians reasonable? From the Catholic standpoint, yes. But Protestants do not see things the same way.
This Bible Christian Society newsletter makes some good points. In summary:My view is that I’ll accept you as a fellow member of Christ’s church because we are both followers of Christ, even though we have different views on some doctrinal issues. You don’t need to agree with me on every doctrinal point. Therefore, we have unity in Christ.
Not all, but for our purposes, yes.But do you agree that the way that Roman Catholics see unity is by having everyone convert to Catholicism?
Yes to everything. The Catholics who disagree with the Church’s position on ABC are poorly informed.Isn’t it true that unity with Protestants can only come about, in the Catholic view, only if Protestants believe in the infalliblity of the Roman Pontiff when speaking ex cathedra on faith and morals and other Catholic teachings. Protestants would have to believe in the Catholic teaching that artificial contraception, practiced by married couples with 5 children for example, is a mortal sin, when you have a situation where, according to polls, many American Roman Catholics don’t even believe what the Catholic Church infallibly teaches about artificial contraception. If many American Catholics don’t believe the infallible Church teaching on artificial contraception, is it reasonable to demand that a Protestant believe the teaching?
You have said it.Are the Roman Catholic requirements for unity of all Christians reasonable? From the Catholic standpoint, yes.
I understand. Which is why I am here helping them understand why Catholicism is right and Protestantism is wrong…one person at a time.But Protestants do not see things the same way.
When we speak of the “prosperity gospel”, we’re not speaking of their interpretation of the entire gospel, but that one facet of it. They still believe that Jesus is the Son of God, the savior, died on the cross for our sins, rose from the dead, etc. Of course, if they follow Christ, they are our christian brothers and sisters. For many, that’s a stage in their journey towards becoming more complete followers of Christ. We’re all at different points in our process of sanctification.Greetings Lek, In another thread I noticed a non-Catholic post something relevant to this thread. Can you tell us which of these are fellow Christians, the ones who are denouncing or the ones who are being denounced?
forums.catholic-questions.org/showthread.php?p=12393181#post12393181
Is the “we” in the bold statement above not inclusive of all protestants? Can you denounce the gospel of another Christian church and still consider them as our brother in Christ?
Peace!!!
Hi meherdmann, and welcome to CAF.=meherdmann;12398591]Tomdstone, last I saw it was the Protestants who broke communion with the Catholic Church, not the other way around. Considering the Catholic Church has not changed its doctrine in its 2,000 year history (i.e. it has faithfully handed down the faith as taught by the original Apostles) why is it unreasonable to expect the Protestants to return to restore unity?
The catholic church accepts non-catholic christians as part of Christ’s church, even though they don’t accept every doctrine of the church. They even recognize their baptism, which is our entry into the church, to be valid to the point that they don’t need to be re-baptized upon entry into the catholic church. See the quote below.This Bible Christian Society newsletter makes some good points. In summary:
Consider 1 Cor 11:18-19: “*In the first place, I hear that when you come together as a church, there are divisions among you, and to some extent I believe it. No doubt there have to be differences among you to show which of you have God’s approval.”
*So, there were divisions among the Corinthian congregation. And, these divisions were such that they helped to reveal who had God’s approval. Which means, on the flip side, that there were those among the Corinthian congregation who did not have God’s approval.
Believers in an “invisible church of true believers” tend to also be believers in the notion that there are “essential” and “non-essential” doctrines and as long as we agree on the “essentials,” then we can have union with one another and we’re all saved. Problem is, who gets to decide what is an essential and what is a non-essential doctrine? And, since doctrines come from the Word of God, which part of the Word of God does one actually dare to call “non-essential?”
The notion that that we can be in union with those we have doctrinal disagreements with…that there can be true unity among those with doctrinal differences…those with different versions of what is and is not truth… is a false notion. 1 Cor 11:18-19 shows that divisions among Christians - the Corinthians being written to by Paul were all members of the Church… they were all Christians - cannot simply be ignored by using a contrived theological system which divides doctrines into essential vs. non-essential. Differences among Christians are serious matters that lead to some being approved by God and some not being approved by God.
Did the Apostles teach different doctrines to different people? The answer, of course, is “No.” The Apostles all taught the same doctrines…ALL the same doctrines. After all, Jesus tells us that the Holy Spirit was to guide them into all truth. If they are guided into all truth, then they cannot help but teach identical doctrines…they cannot help but teach the same truths…to all the different peoples they came across. Again, from 1 Cor 11:18-19, it is obvious that there were those among the Corinthians who believed different doctrines. Who taught them these different doctrines, the Apostles? I don’t think so.
Well, if the Apostles didn’t teach different doctrines, then why is it okay for the pastors of today’s thousands upon thousands of Protestant denominations to teach different doctrines one from another? And, if it wasn’t okay for the Corinthians to hold to different beliefs…beliefs that caused division within the Christian congregation…then why is it okay today for Protestants to hold to different beliefs…beliefs that cause division within Christianity?
When we speak of the “prosperity gospel”, we’re not speaking of their interpretation of the entire gospel, but that one facet of it. They still believe that Jesus is the Son of God, the savior, died on the cross for our sins, rose from the dead, etc. Of course, if they follow Christ, they are our christian brothers and sisters. For many, that’s a stage in their journey towards becoming more complete followers of Christ. We’re all at different points in our process of sanctification.
“However, one cannot charge with the sin of the separation those who at present are born into these communities [that resulted from such separation]
and in them are brought up in the faith of Christ, and the Catholic Church accepts them with respect and affection as brothers… All who have been justified by faith in Baptism are incorporated into Christ; they therefore have a right to be called Christians, and with good reason are accepted as brothers in the Lord by the children of the Catholic Church.”
I do understand your concern about what authority a non-catholic would use to determine who is a heretic. At what point does a person go from being a fellow christian, who has a disagreement or misunderstanding, to becoming heretical? If we allow for different interpretations of the bible how could we say that a person who perhaps interprets scripture to say that Jesus is not God is actually a heretic? We would have to rely on the power of the Holy Spirit working through that congregation to come together and make a decision about whether to expel him or her from the congregation. Jesus did say the following:
Matthew 18:20New International Version (NIV)
Again20 For where two or three gather in my name, there am I with them.”
:tiphat: Yes, there is much to ponder!If Jesus is present, then the Holy Spirit is also present to guide the decisions and actions of the church–that congregation as well as his whole church. I will say, though, that you have motivated me to look more thoroughly into this question since it’s something I haven’t specifically thought a lot about.
Alright. Who’s that? (Er, I mean BreitBart, not Pope FrancisBreitBart’s write up on Pope Francis’ latest address about Christian Unity, and its lack
Breitbart is a “who” but passed away (conservative blogger/journalist/publisher), so now “Breitbart” is a what; an online conservative news outlet.Alright. Who’s that? (Er, I mean BreitBart, not Pope Francis.)
Yes, it is possible, and some saints have been restored to communion posthumously, but this is when there was a mistake made and it was discovered they should not have been excommunicated. Luther’s case has been studied and reviewed by church authorities and theologians for 500 years, and no mistake has been found.Precisely. Thanks, Guano.
As you noted above, it doesn’t really matter to Lutherans, but I’m curious. Why not? If the pope has the power to bind and loose, why couldn’t the current man in that office (who is an infinitely better theologian and person than Leo X was) undo the excommunication?
It is true that calling names to people does not serve Charity. It is equally true that we have an obligation to seek unity without letting small mindedness and bigotry interfere, that includes coming from inside our ourselves (if we say we have no sin, we lie), in our opponents, and in those with whom we feel we are already in unity.The way that you caracterise me as a person and my views by calling me names makes any further correnspondance meaningless to be honest.
I dont see how calling people “small minded and bigoted” are helpful or even fulfilling the purpose of this site as its strickly written in the rules of this forum that we are to discuss with Charity.
IOW, from Luther’s commentary on the 8th Commandment:It is true that calling names to people does not serve Charity. It is equally true that we have an obligation to seek unity without letting small mindedness and bigotry interfere, that includes coming from inside our ourselves (if we say we have no sin, we lie), in our opponents, and in those with whom we feel we are already in unity.
Small mindedness and bigotry are realities that exist in every nook and corner. We have to find a way to identify our prejudices, and surmount them.