Dear Protestant: Where Did You Get Your Bible?

  • Thread starter Thread starter Randy_Carson
  • Start date Start date
Status
Not open for further replies.
Would that have been possible? Although I do know there are numerous other rites in communion with Rome, these go a bit further back. Considering how the Catholic Church handled Luther, do you think they would have accepted in establishing a Lutheran rite or some “new” one?
Since the church has acknowledged wrong doing by Catholics took place, i think it was a possibility. Then again, it doesn’t really matter as someone, eventually, was going to jump ship. Catholics sometimes make Luther out to be some sort of villian…and i don’t think that’s accurate nor is it productive in our discussions.
 
Since the church has acknowledged wrong doing by Catholics took place, i think it was a possibility. Then again, it doesn’t really matter as someone, eventually, was going to jump ship. Catholics sometimes make Luther out to be some sort of villian…and i don’t think that’s accurate nor is it productive in our discussions.
Agreed
 
It is tied to the question of the thread. What is the basis upon which we have a bible? it seems to me the sources that we have that speak of the Gospel of Mark indicate the justification for it’s acceptance were because Mark was a follower of Peter (Irenaeus and Papias) and that it had been passed down throughout all the churches whereas other texts claiming to be Apostolic were fraudulent and didn’t have it’s pedigree (like the gospel of Thomas or other gnostic texts).

Authenticity is tied to the reason why we have a biblical canon and the church has worked with the tradition it has received concerning the ancient origins of it’s books. I believe the reason why certain books were disputed in the New Testament canon was due to it not being shown that certain works were Apostolic (The book of revelation for instance was not accepted for a long time in the eastern Church on that basis).

So while it might be a simple formula to say “The Catholic Church gave us the bible,” I think the essence of that saying (so long as it doesn’t mean only the roman Catholic church gave us the bible) isn’t wrong. Plenty of books can claim to be a true book but the Church was concerned to point out the reason why it accepts these books and not others.

(For my curiosity I would like to know what ancient authors said that the Gospel of Mark was written by a follower of Peter without saying Mark wrote it).
Agreed. A agree the catholic church gave it by the power of the Holy spirit. My problem comes in when Roman Catholics claim total jurisdiction over it with arguments right through this thread.

I know I said that part about Mark but you will have to excuse me. That was part of a book I read a very long time ago and really can’t remember exacts. Although it wasn’t just concerned with ancient authors but many new findings that point to whatever.
 
Agreed. A agree the catholic church gave it by the power of the Holy spirit. My problem comes in when Roman Catholics claim total jurisdiction over it with arguments right through this thread.
MichaelP3 there is no such thing as the “Roman Catholic Church” - it is an invention by the Anglicans when Henry VIII broke away from the Catholic Church. The term “Catholic Church” has its origins in the first century AD - the evidence is in the letter by the bishop of Antioch in 107 AD when he referred to “ekklesia katilikos” or the Church universal. There are about 22 rites which include the Latin (or Roman) rite, Chaldean, Maronite, to the Syro-Malabar in India.

The “jurisdiction” you refer to is probably related to the authority that the Christ gave to Simon Peter and his apostles. This authority has been handed down through apostolic succession to the current day bishops under the leadership of the bishop of Rome who is Peter’s successor.

It was not unilaterally assumed.

That authority concerns the teaching of the Church - this includes declaring the canon of the NT as the successors of Moses declared the canon of the Hebrew Scriptures.

This authority includes the definitive interpretation of the Scriptures and is generally only used when there is a major dispute in doctrine…
 
MichaelP3 there is no such thing as the “Roman Catholic Church” - it is an invention by the Anglicans when Henry VIII broke away from the Catholic Church. The term “Catholic Church” has its origins in the first century AD - the evidence is in the letter by the bishop of Antioch in 107 AD when he referred to “ekklesia katilikos” or the Church universal. There are about 22 rites which include the Latin (or Roman) rite, Chaldean, Maronite, to the Syro-Malabar in India.

The “jurisdiction” you refer to is probably related to the authority that the Christ gave to Simon Peter and his apostles. This authority has been handed down through apostolic succession to the current day bishops under the leadership of the bishop of Rome who is Peter’s successor.

It was not unilaterally assumed.

That authority concerns the teaching of the Church - this includes declaring the canon of the NT as the successors of Moses declared the canon of the Hebrew Scriptures.

This authority includes the definitive interpretation of the Scriptures and is generally only used when there is a major dispute in doctrine…
I’m calling it the Roman Catholic Church to show I see a difference between the current one, and the first one. I can backtrack and refer to Catholic (those in communion with Rome) and catholic (Greek for universal) which is 2 different entities if you prefer.

I wouldn’t say that is entirely what I meant with Jurisdiction (Although that’s a topic I rather like to witness between Orthodox and Catholics). More to the common argument “only the Catholic Church can truly say correctly what is meant in the Bible and sometimes it’s added, because it’s a Catholic book”.

And that about using authority only when needed never did it for me. Things being said and then it becomes different and then it is said but the authority was never invoked or it was not on morals or doctrine and the story goes on. It rather just sounds like “We are always right, except when we are not, but we will tell you when that is”.
 
I would maybe if I meet an Orthodox individual who claims him. But I’d rather like to see the Catholic and Orthodox have a conversation/argument about whether Mark would agree with Catholicism or Orthodox.
But what else could they say he was? In their view, Ps didn’t exist until 1517, RCs didn’t exist until 1054, and OOs didn’t exist until 451.
 
But what else could they say he was? In their view, Ps didn’t exist until 1517, RCs didn’t exist until 1054, and OOs didn’t exist until 451.
Yes I agree that can be stated from various directions. But the fact that that can even be asked is my concern given the absolute belief of “infallibility for the church” and things never changed and “Catholicism has always been right” and all the dogmas has always been believed and so on. Protestants don’t (And if you find one that does, I don’t agree with him) claim this. Therefore the fact that if 1517 is thrown at me, it isn’t much of a concern.

And yes, saying Roman Catholic was confusing from side. I am aware of those differences.
 
I’m calling it the Roman Catholic Church to show I see a difference between the current one, and the first one… More to the common argument “only the Catholic Church can truly say correctly what is meant in the Bible and sometimes it’s added, because it’s a Catholic book”.

And that about using authority only when needed never did it for me. Things being said and then it becomes different and then it is said but the authority was never invoked or it was not on morals or doctrine and the story goes on. It rather just sounds like “We are always right, except when we are not, but we will tell you when that is”.
The argument that there **was **an authoritative agency in the ancient church (opening the canon, identifying the books, closing the canon, identifying Early Church Fathers and “Heretics”, identifying Sacred Tradition from mere traditions) seems undeniable. You might make a case that that this ancient Magisterium did its job, then either closed its shop, or was overthrown by a modern, unreliable magisterium, which attached to the same words “Catholic Church” that were used by the reliable, ancient one.

Protestants vary wildly in estimating when the authoritative Magiserium ceased, anywhere from 350 AD up to 1400. The Old Catholic movement says authoritative till the 1800s. I am unaware of documentation to show the forced termination, or fading away, of the ancient Magisterium. Did the new, non-authoritative magisterium (now headed by Pope Francis) begin right away, or was there a period of a few centuries without any claimed magisterium? Who started the current one?
 
The argument that there **was **an authoritative agency in the ancient church (opening the canon, identifying the books, closing the canon, identifying Early Church Fathers and “Heretics”, identifying Sacred Tradition from mere traditions) seems undeniable. You might make a case that that this ancient Magisterium did its job, then either closed its shop, or was overthrown by a modern, unreliable magisterium, which attached to the same words “Catholic Church” that were used by the reliable, ancient one.

Protestants vary wildly in estimating when the authoritative Magiserium ceased, anywhere from 350 AD up to 1400. The Old Catholic movement says authoritative till the 1800s. I am unaware of documentation to show the forced termination, or fading away, of the ancient Magisterium. Did the new, non-authoritative magisterium (now headed by Pope Francis) begin right away, or was there a period of a few centuries without any claimed magisterium? Who started the current one?
I have absolutely no problem with you believing in a Catholic Magisterium. I don’t personally from my side believe it will do anything to your salvation just like I don’t believe a Baptist or a Anglican is doing something “wrong”. Well wrong is I guess a matter of perspective (Obviously not for those obvious ones). And I really mean this sincere and not sarcastic.

I am currently doing some research into the Orthodox Church and I must say I am more inclined to there belief. I am still a far way so I am not converting pretty soon 🙂 . But just something like having no distinction between sins. Although yea, one can argue murder is worse than telling a lie, but that’s not the point. In Catholicism there is a clear cut distinction and even literally a list of mortal sins. Where it seems that with Orthodoxy, they rather leave this question to God and dare not interfere. I have a hard time taking the current Catholic Church as the absolute truth given basically everything. And even if some may be the truth, the claim to infallibility would make even one contradiction the catalyst for denying all the other. That is making me very skeptical.

Being a Protestant makes a lot more sense to me, as we also have many controversies but we don’t claim infallibility.

So asking when it ended is a very valid question and I would love to see a current infallible institution.

During all my comments I hope I didn’t sound like " I am right, come and be Protestant". I was rather just asking “Why be Catholic?”. As to me Catholicism comes forth as infallible as every other Protestant denomination (including my own) and thus I cannot say you are wrong. But I cannot say I feel Catholicism is right either.
 
I have absolutely no problem with you believing in a Catholic Magisterium. I don’t personally from my side believe it will do anything to your salvation just like I don’t believe a Baptist or a Anglican is doing something “wrong”. Well wrong is I guess a matter of perspective (Obviously not for those obvious ones). And I really mean this sincere and not sarcastic.

I am currently doing some research into the Orthodox Church and I must say I am more inclined to there belief. I am still a far way so I am not converting pretty soon 🙂 . But just something like having no distinction between sins. Although yea, one can argue murder is worse than telling a lie, but that’s not the point. In Catholicism there is a clear cut distinction and even literally a list of mortal sins. Where it seems that with Orthodoxy, they rather leave this question to God and dare not interfere. I have a hard time taking the current Catholic Church as the absolute truth given basically everything. And even if some may be the truth, the claim to infallibility would make even one contradiction the catalyst for denying all the other. That is making me very skeptical.

Being a Protestant makes a lot more sense to me, as we also have many controversies but we don’t claim infallibility.

So asking when it ended is a very valid question and I would love to see a current infallible institution.

During all my comments I hope I didn’t sound like " I am right, come and be Protestant". I was rather just asking “Why be Catholic?”. As to me Catholicism comes forth as infallible as every other Protestant denomination (including my own) and thus I cannot say you are wrong. But I cannot say I feel Catholicism is right either.
So then, what part does the promised Holy Spirit play in all of this controversy. It just seems to me that Protestant’s confess the Holy Spirit, but deny its power.
 
I have absolutely no problem with you believing in a Catholic Magisterium. I don’t personally from my side believe it will do anything to your salvation just like I don’t believe a Baptist or a Anglican is doing something “wrong”. Well wrong is I guess a matter of perspective (Obviously not for those obvious ones). And I really mean this sincere and not sarcastic.

I am currently doing some research into the Orthodox Church and I must say I am more inclined to there belief. I am still a far way so I am not converting pretty soon 🙂 . But just something like having no distinction between sins. Although yea, one can argue murder is worse than telling a lie, but that’s not the point. In Catholicism there is a clear cut distinction and even literally a list of mortal sins. Where it seems that with Orthodoxy, they rather leave this question to God and dare not interfere. I have a hard time taking the current Catholic Church as the absolute truth given basically everything. And even if some may be the truth, the claim to infallibility would make even one contradiction the catalyst for denying all the other. That is making me very skeptical.

Being a Protestant makes a lot more sense to me, as we also have many controversies but we don’t claim infallibility.

So asking when it ended is a very valid question and I would love to see a current infallible institution.

During all my comments I hope I didn’t sound like " I am right, come and be Protestant". I was rather just asking “Why be Catholic?”. As to me Catholicism comes forth as infallible as every other Protestant denomination (including my own) and thus I cannot say you are wrong. But I cannot say I feel Catholicism is right either.
C. S. Lewis addresses many of your questions well, as does G. K. Chesterton. What I like about them (their writings) is that they are close enough to our time to understand the world we live in, yet a little distant so they are not too caught up in the arguments of the moment.

Keep raising your issues on CAF. You, like me, sometimes will feel like no one is reading your posts except a couple looking for ammo to refute you, but I find some of what other people wrote has sunk in with me, and some of what I wrote was absorbed by others.
 
The argument that there **was **an authoritative agency in the ancient church (opening the canon, identifying the books, closing the canon, identifying Early Church Fathers and “Heretics”, identifying Sacred Tradition from mere traditions) seems undeniable.
I’m reminded of a conversation I had, back in my preforum days, with a fairly learned Lutheran, who reframed the question as “Was there one?”
 
Originally Posted by commenter View Post
The argument that there was an authoritative agency in the ancient church (opening the canon, identifying the books, closing the canon, identifying Early Church Fathers and “Heretics”, identifying Sacred Tradition from mere traditions) seems undeniable.
I’m reminded of a conversation I had, back in my preforum days, with a fairly learned Lutheran, who reframed the question as “Was there one?”
There were several Christian agencies. But only one - the ancient Magisterium supported by some Christians - was and is regarded as authoritative in the Reformation, and today, by Catholics (explicitly follow it) and by Protestants (implicitly follow it).

The other Christian agencies and their scriptures were either beaten down by the Magisterium, or else they lost credibility and faded into obscurity as the mass of Christians later joined the Christians of the Magisterium.

Catholics and Protestants today are all hoping the right side won.
 
Originally Posted by commenter View Post
The argument that there was an authoritative agency in the ancient church (opening the canon, identifying the books, closing the canon, identifying Early Church Fathers and “Heretics”, identifying Sacred Tradition from mere traditions) seems undeniable.

There were several Christian agencies. But only one - the ancient Magisterium supported by some Christians - was and is regarded as authoritative in the Reformation, and today, by Catholics (explicitly follow it) and by Protestants (implicitly follow it).

The other Christian agencies and their scriptures were either beaten down by the Magisterium, or else they lost credibility and faded into obscurity as the mass of Christians later joined the Christians of the Magisterium.

Catholics and Protestants today are all hoping the right side won.
When we actually find out will it be too late? :o
 
When we actually find out will it be too late? :o
The post I responded to said that it’s undeniable that “there was an authoritative agency in the ancient church”, but I’d like to hear a protestant view. Certainly we all agree that there was a Pope of Rome, and a Patriarch of Constantinople, and a Pope of Alexandria, and so on, but would Protestants truly see one singular authoritative agency? I doubt it, particularly since you don’t regard one see (Rome) has having “supremacy” over Constantinople, Alexandria etc. (I’m also very much aware of what Protestants say about the Council of Jerusalem, and in particular St. James.)
 
I’m calling it the Roman Catholic Church to show I see a difference between the current one, and the first one. I can backtrack and refer to Catholic (those in communion with Rome) and catholic (Greek for universal) which is 2 different entities if you prefer.
Yours is a misunderstanding of what the Catholic Church is. It includes all Christians - ie universal! Those that do not practise their faith within the Catholic Church are our separated brothers and sisters. There is only one Catholic Church as declared in the Apostle’s creed.

If the Catholic Church ceased to exist (as some wish to claim), then the Christ who promised "… I will build my Church, and the gates of hell will not overcome it. And to you I will give the keys of the kingdom of heaven . . . " [Matt. 16:18–19] was wrong. That would imply that He was a false prophet
I wouldn’t say that is entirely what I meant with Jurisdiction (Although that’s a topic I rather like to witness between Orthodox and Catholics). More to the common argument “only the Catholic Church can truly say correctly what is meant in the Bible and sometimes it’s added, because it’s a Catholic book”.

And that about using authority only when needed never did it for me. Things being said and then it becomes different and then it is said but the authority was never invoked or it was not on morals or doctrine and the story goes on. It rather just sounds like “We are always right, except when we are not, but we will tell you when that is”.
The Bible is indeed a universal and Catholic Book!
That is not an argument - it is a Scriptural commitment from the Christ as in Mt 16:18 - 19 and Mt 18:18. While there are those that will attempt to explain that away, let’s look at a few examples of what was understood within what you call the “catholic Church”:
Tertullian:
“Was anything withheld from the knowledge of Peter, who is called ‘the rock on which the Church would be built’ [Matt. 16:18] with the power of ‘loosing and binding in heaven and on earth’ [Matt. 16:19]?” (Demurrer Against the Heretics 22 [A.D. 200]).

“[T]he Lord said to Peter, ‘On this rock I will build my Church, I have given you the keys of the kingdom of heaven [and] whatever you shall have bound or loosed on earth will be bound or loosed in heaven’ [Matt. 16:18–19]. . . . What kind of man are you, subverting and changing what was the manifest intent of the Lord when he conferred this personally upon Peter? Upon you, he says, I will build my Church; and I will give to you the keys” (Modesty 21:9–10 [A.D. 220]).

The Letter of Clement to James:
“Be it known to you, my lord, that Simon [Peter], who, for the sake of the true faith, and the most sure foundation of his doctrine, was set apart to be the foundation of the Church, and for this end was by Jesus himself, with his truthful mouth, named Peter” (Letter of Clement to James 2 [A.D. 221]).

There are many more letters from the early Church fathers that attest to that…
 
When we actually find out will it be too late? :o
We may resort to Scripture: “You are Peter, and on this rock I will build my Church, and the gates of hell will not prevail against it” (Matt. 16:18).
 
Yours is a misunderstanding of what the Catholic Church is. It includes all Christians - ie universal! Those that do not practise their faith within the Catholic Church are our separated brothers and sisters. There is only one Catholic Church as declared in the Apostle’s creed.

If the Catholic Church ceased to exist (as some wish to claim), then the Christ who promised "… I will build my Church, and the gates of hell will not overcome it. And to you I will give the keys of the kingdom of heaven . . . " [Matt. 16:18–19] was wrong. That would imply that He was a false prophet

The Bible is indeed a universal and Catholic Book!
That is not an argument - it is a Scriptural commitment from the Christ as in Mt 16:18 - 19 and Mt 18:18. While there are those that will attempt to explain that away, let’s look at a few examples of what was understood within what you call the “catholic Church”:
Tertullian:
“Was anything withheld from the knowledge of Peter, who is called ‘the rock on which the Church would be built’ [Matt. 16:18] with the power of ‘loosing and binding in heaven and on earth’ [Matt. 16:19]?” (Demurrer Against the Heretics 22 [A.D. 200]).

“[T]he Lord said to Peter, ‘On this rock I will build my Church, I have given you the keys of the kingdom of heaven [and] whatever you shall have bound or loosed on earth will be bound or loosed in heaven’ [Matt. 16:18–19]. . . . What kind of man are you, subverting and changing what was the manifest intent of the Lord when he conferred this personally upon Peter? Upon you, he says, I will build my Church; and I will give to you the keys” (Modesty 21:9–10 [A.D. 220]).

The Letter of Clement to James:
“Be it known to you, my lord, that Simon [Peter], who, for the sake of the true faith, and the most sure foundation of his doctrine, was set apart to be the foundation of the Church, and for this end was by Jesus himself, with his truthful mouth, named Peter” (Letter of Clement to James 2 [A.D. 221]).

There are many more letters from the early Church fathers that attest to that…
Too many assumptions in this piece (especially the first paragraph) to respond.

Regards
 
The post I responded to said that it’s undeniable that “there was an authoritative agency in the ancient church”, but I’d like to hear a protestant view. Certainly we all agree that there was a Pope of Rome, and a Patriarch of Constantinople, and a Pope of Alexandria, and so on, but would Protestants truly see one singular authoritative agency? I doubt it, particularly since you don’t regard one see (Rome) has having “supremacy” over Constantinople, Alexandria etc. (I’m also very much aware of what Protestants say about the Council of Jerusalem, and in particular St. James.)
My scepticism would rather be attributed to the fact that these seats failed to work in unison. It ended with one seat claiming supreme authority without the others buying into it.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top