T
Teflon93
Guest
lol–so your qualifications would be, “None”.As I figured, Teflon93, you can’t deliver.
Just about anyone you contact on this list should be more qualified than you are and offer helpful guidance to you.
lol–so your qualifications would be, “None”.As I figured, Teflon93, you can’t deliver.
And apparently that’s quite a bit more than you have!Augustine had little, if any knowledge of the Greek and Hebrew.
You can’t deliver.lol–so your qualifications would be, “None”.
Just about anyone you contact on this list should be more qualified than you are and offer helpful guidance to you.
Calm down, Sandusky—you’re going to have an aneurysm.You can’t deliver.
I believe when you perceive others do be doing what you are now doing, you refer to that as
"a dodge?" Isn’t that the term you used?
You can’t deliver.Calm down, Sandusky—you’re going to have an aneurysm.
Deep breaths…slow breaths…good.
Is he allowed to watch me dance?You can’t deliver.
Moondweller, when you get the chance, come watch Teflon93 dance.![]()
Here’s what you said:I simply pointed out that you don’t have any authority on this issue…
Here’s my request in response to what you said:Absolutely—I’ll take the scholarship over centuries of men who are fluent in the languages and steeped in the theology of the Church over your Internet search any day. They’ve devoted their lives to this task, and have been scrutinized by their peers and the Pope in so doing.
With respect to my query concerning your assertion, it’s time for you, in the vernacular, toList all of those centuries of men who were fluent in the Greek and the Hebrew, Teflon93, and then list all of the men who wrote anything, so that we can compare the number of those fluent in the Greek and Hebrew, with the number of those who were not.
I’m certain moondweller’s Church would encourage him to watch you dance around this, and I’m equally certain that moondweller will enjoy watching you dance around this.Is he allowed to watch me dance?
You’d better check to see which flavor Fundamentalist he is, lest you incite him to sin.![]()
Yes, you want the phone book for The Vatican, 33 A.D. - 2008.Here’s what you said:Here’s my request in response to what you said:With respect to my query concerning your assertion, it’s time for you, in the vernacular, to
“put up, or shut up.”
I say that in Love.![]()
Exactly…Augustine had little, if any knowledge of the Greek and Hebrew.
Yes, my unwillingness to list the bona fides of every Catholic clergyman since Pentecost has really put me in a tough spot.I’m certain moondweller’s Church would encourage him to watch you dance around this, and I’m equally certain that moondweller will enjoy watching you dance around this.![]()
Yes, it is a tough spot into which you’ve put yourself, Teflon93.Yes, my unwillingness to list the bona fides of every Catholic clergyman since Pentecost has really put me in a tough spot.
Need I remind you that the silliness of my request is in direct proportion to the silliness ofAnyone can see how silly your request is…
Those who want to be “justified by law” were never saved, never “justified as a gift through the redemption which is in Christ Jesus” (Rom. 3:24). Fallen from grace means they rejected the gospel of divine grace through Christ Jesus that was delivered to them by Paul and instead embraced LAW, thereby severing themselves from Christ.moondweller;3938269 said:Thank you!
Are you saying that someone who was saved and baptized in a local, scriptural, new testament church IAW the prevailing doctrine (faith/trust alone in the work of Christ Jesus) and belief in that doctrine at that time, who then becomes Catholic and subscribes to their beliefs, is no longer saved or never was saved?
Paul also teaches the real possibility of being called by the grace of God, receiving the Holy Spirit and becoming a son and heir and yet deserting God, returning to bondage, being severed from Christ and falling from grace (Galatians 1:6, Galatians 3:3, Galatians 4:7-11, Galatians 5:1-4). There is also the real possibility of having one’s inheritance being taken away:IOW, his commonwealth, or citizenship prior to, and, at the time of the judgment, is in heaven (Php 3:20).25 “Truly, truly, I say to you, an hour is coming and now is, when the dead will hear the voice of the Son of God, and those who hear will live.This further squares with Paul (Eph 2:5; Col 2:13), and Luke (Lk 15).26 “For just as the Father has life in Himself, even so He gave to the Son also to have life in Himself;
27 and He gave Him authority to execute judgment, because He is the Son of Man.Earlier, in v21, Christ asserts that the Father has given Him the authority to give life to whom He wishes, as well as to execute judgment (Jn 5:21; cf 1 Cor 15:45).
Mt 25:34 squares with Paul’s teaching concerning the timing of the sheep’s selection by the Father, as well as Paul’s teaching concerning one of the purposes of the sheep’s selection.
The teaching of the two intersect in many places (man’s deadness in sin, the necessity of the Father’s drawing to Christ those whom He gave to the Son in eternity past; the necessity and sufficiency of grace and faith in God’s testimony concerning the Son cf Jn 1, 5, 6, 10; Rom 9, Eph 2, etc.) thus reinforcing Paul’s assertion that it’s Christ who taught Him the gospel.
God does not only expects His saints to do good works, he requires them to do so:I’ve said it before, and say again that the Lord certainly expects His saints to do good works; He also expects them to know that it’s not those good works which provide their entrance into His kingdom—but grace.
Amen!Moreover, Christ is a far greater Savior, than I am a sinner (Heb 7:25; cf 1 Cor 1:21).
I’m with you on those points.Indeed, the word “judgement” in the Bible is used in more than one sense, as you point out in a later post. So when I say that a person will be judged, I don’t necessarily mean damnation. I’m using judged in the sense it is used in the following verses:
Those who are in Christ have passed from death into life because life is in the Son and those who are in the Son have life. Those who have abided in the Son will not suffer condemnation (John 15:6, Matt. 10:22, 2 Timothy 2:12, Rev. 2:11, 26), but will enjoy the consummation of that spiritual life they enjoyed through their incorporation into Christ while they were on earth:
It’s no coincidence that Jesus mentions the deeds of the righteous and the lack of good deeds of the wicked in his passage on the Last Judgement. Moreover, in this judgement, there is no mention of rewards. It’s a simple division between those who will enter eternal life and those who will enter eternal punishment:
This scenario confirms what other passages in Scripture have said concerning judgement according to works:
God does not only expects His saints to do good works, he requires them to do so:
We also know that being in Christ does not automatically result in good deeds:
Mike, you know I disagree with you on that.Paul also teaches the real possibility of being called by the grace of God, receiving the Holy Spirit and becoming a son and heir and yet deserting God, returning to bondage, being severed from Christ and falling from grace (Galatians 1:6, Galatians 3:3, Galatians 4:7-11, Galatians 5:1-4). There is also the real possibility of having one’s inheritance being taken away:
Welcome to CAF Wild Bill. I just want to note that you did not respond to the topic in any way at all. However, thank you for sharing.The Catholic church is the only, repeat, only church which can prove they were in exixtance from the time of Jesus. All the other religions have come from those spliting off and starting their own religions, because they dissagreed with the leaders of the Catholic Church.
Peter was the rock, upon which Jesus started Mother Church, Peter was the first Pope and the 11 Disciples were the first Bishops. The Pope is the leader of Mother church. God gives him divine grace to lead the entire church. Just like the US has the constitution and needs the Supreme Court to interpet the laws, the Bible needs a Supreme Being (The Pope and his Cardinals) to correctly interpet Word of God.
Every religion which is splintered off of the One Catholic and Apostolic Church is heading down the wrong roads. We all want to have Eternal Life in Heaven so we must all seek the truth and not try to misinterpet the word. His Will be done, not ours.
Wild Bill
Well now, since you have made it clear that you have no respect for his point of view, and that you don’t even consider him a Christian, how is that relevant?Teflon93 told me it was.
Yes, I know this. However, Paul is clear that the Spirit of the Law is the Law of Christ (love). To the extent that we fail in love toward God and one another, we fall short.FYI, Paul first wrote that (Rom 4:23; 15:4; 1 Cor 10:11).
guanophore, the NT is not one of the Letter (Law), but of the Spirit.
The Spirit convicts the world ”concerning sin, and righteousness, and judgment” (Jn 16:8)
Indeed, and one of the ways that the Spirit does this is through the unchanging witness of God’s revelation of HImself from the beginning of creation until now. His moral precepts for man have not changed.
sandusky;3957948:
Are you suggesting that one should disregard the Holy Writings, and “each one do what is right in his own eyes”?the Spirit is given to the believer as an anointing to teach the believer (Jn 14:16; 1 Jn 2:20, 27), and so on.
Do you think that it was not the same Spirit that engraved the stones, as the one that is shed abroad in our hearts? The Spirit does not say one thing, then change His tune, does He?The NT is a ministry of the Spirit, and not the Letter (2 Cor 3:4-11 linger on that passage for as long as it takes you to understand, guanophore).
Well, I think not, but that is a matter from another thread. I understand that you did not experience the grace of God sacramentally, but that you did outside of the sacraments and that this experience was a powerful one that changed your life.I completely understand the Catholic view of the sacraments (that’s one of the many reasons I’m no longer Catholic).
LOL. Well, I do not find such a position entirely defensible either. However, the text does not indicate otherwise. Unlike the Jew who went to temple and “justified himself” praying, this man was not referred to as such. I just note that Jesus told him (accruately in my view) that if he kept the commandments, he would have eternal life. The young man probably kept them as much as he believed he could. As a prosperous Jew of his day, he would have believed that his wealth was a blessing from God, and was a sign of his favor in the sight of God. Jesus challenged him to let go of this, and follow. I wonder if he ever did?If you believe that the young man had successfully kept all of the commandments up to the moment in which he declared that he had, there’s nothing I can say that would, in any way, be meaningful to you concerning anything having to do with the law.
LOL. I think you are misunderstanding me here. A gift is put out for someone. That someone for whom it was given, who may have even asked for it, leaves it by the side of the road. The giver does not come and take it back, but waits for the intended recipient to claim it. God does not “rescind” HIs gifts, even if those for whom they are intended spurn them.In order for something to be “rescinded,” it must have been “given and accepted” in the first place; however, thank you for stringing all of those words together in your post.
to come to Him, no one, in himself “has the ability to do so” (Jn 6:37, 44, 65). That’s because they’re dead (Eph 2; Col 2).In fact, I believe exactly what the apostles, and the Lord taught concerning one’s freedom in coming to Christ.
What Christ taught is that while everyone is “free”
So we see that not only can’t dead man dance, they also can’t come to Christ.
I think you misunderstand the meaning of “dead” here. Obviously, these people have life to the extent that they are able move, and breathe, and make decisions. We are all under a death sentence due to original sin, not to mention our personal sins.However God does not ask us to do things that are not possible for us. He gives us sufficient grace so that we can choose between right and wrong.
—so too is prevenient grace.You would do well to consider that in light of your idea of “prevenient grace”—to paraphrase Monty Python, a nod’s as good as a wink to a dead man
I guess I cannot understand this. You maintain that a person is regeneration before they choose, and that is what makes them able to choose. That is what Catholics call prevenient grace. I cannot see the difference, at that point. Granted, there are differences later…
People cannot be regenerated or justified unless grace meets with faith. But, that is also the subject of another thread.Without being alive, nothing avails a dead man; once God regenerates him, God justifies him; and those justified by God, are also glorified by God (Rom 8:30).
I will agree, however, getting back to the topic, that no amount of commandment keeping will avail one if he is not in a state of grace. So, if the rich young ruler kept all the commandments to the best of his understanding, yet lacked faith in Christ (as seems to be the case) what benefit would it give him?