I see plenty of evidence in the plain reading of the text to refute this doctrine, which is why it never should have been declared a dogmatic teaching of the Church.
So, on one hand, we have Hodos’ “plain reading of the text”, and on the other, the teaching authority of the Church, granted by Jesus Himself. Hmm… which should we go with…
the Church created schism over what should have been seen as adiaphora since NONE of the apostles preached this.
How do you know that? All you can say is “it isn’t in the Bible”. That’s a far cry from “none of the apostles preached this.” It’s just not part of the ‘biography’ of Jesus that we find in the Gospels, and (as Basil preached) not strictly necessary for the teaching of the Incarnation found there.
The issue is not whether this is a doctrine of the Roman Catholic Church, but whether it is a correct doctrine of the Roman Catholic Church.
And just as you believe that your personal interpretation of the Bible is without error, Catholics believe that the Holy Spirit protects the Church from teaching error. So… there’s that.
Thank you for demonstrating the very circular nature of this doctrine. The doctrine was declared, therefore we have to read into the text the most unnatural and speculative meaning possible to justify the doctrine.
No, not circular – it moves in one direction only. The doctrine clarifies the proper interpretation of the text. The text doesn’t ‘justify’ the doctrine, per se.
The word 'ews means until. It is a dependent clause that says that some action will continue up to a point where the dependency is fulfilled.
Right. And that’s the end of it. No “and therefore, here’s what happens afterward”… just “up till this point.” When you claim “at that point the dependency is fulfilled and the action will occur”, you’re talking about common usage of
the English preposition until, not the Koine Greek preposition
heos. That’s why your “plain interpretation of the text” fails – it depends on your 21st century American English sensibilities…
There are many other instances in which
heos is used, and which do not imply a change
after the referenced time.
Again, another circular argument assumed, not proven from the writings of the apostles themselves.
Again, despite your breast-beating and pleas to the contrary, your sole standard is “proven from Scripture”. Catholics don’t see Scripture as the
sole source of teaching (after all, John tells us that Jesus taught more that was never recorded, and we know that the apostles spent three years with Jesus, night and day, hearing Him teach and receiving personal teaching as well). Any claim that “the apostles never taught that” is, on its very face, specious.