Do modern Protestants know what they are protesting?

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OK: Post 136:

Nope, not there.
So when you said “Now, we believe that these translations are themselves theopneustos, and thus accurately convey the teachings of Christ. But that in itself is a revelation through the Church. (Other than Matthew 27:46)”

are you saying that that “through the church” is NOT infallible?
 
Nope. Not there, either.
Unless you believe you can’t “know” something that is “only” 99.99999999999999% sure. 🤷
So when you said, “Why? As for me, it is because I know that those to whom Christ entrusted Divine Authority have determined that. You can’t possibly deny that same Authority and yet have “absolute faith” in the very things that they, through the promised protection of the Holy Spirit, have determined.”

Are you claiming this Divine Authority is NOT infallible?
 
So when you said “Now, we believe that these translations are themselves theopneustos, and thus accurately convey the teachings of Christ. But that in itself is a revelation through the Church. (Other than Matthew 27:46)”

are you saying that that “through the church” is NOT infallible?
That’s not what I’m saying.

I believe that Jesus Christ is God with a diminishingly small error probability. From the same sources, and through the same methods, I rationally believe that the Catholic Church was empowered by Him, and protected by His promises.

So, IF I believe in Jesus, I also believe in the Church. The head and the body. Both, or neither.
 
So when you said, “Why? As for me, it is because I know that those to whom Christ entrusted Divine Authority have determined that. You can’t possibly deny that same Authority and yet have “absolute faith” in the very things that they, through the promised protection of the Holy Spirit, have determined.”

Are you claiming this Divine Authority is NOT infallible?
How can you misunderstand things so terribly?
 
That’s not what I’m saying.

I believe that Jesus Christ is God with a diminishingly small error probability. From the same sources, and through the same methods, I rationally believe that the Catholic Church was empowered by Him, and protected by His promises.
So if a Protestant says that he or she believes in the veracity of the Scriptures with a diminishingly small error of probability, without the need for an infallible church body to tell him so, your response will not be “But you don’t have infallible certainty, so you really can’t KNOW”?
 
I think that what PerCrucem is trying to say is that:

In our individual process of discernment, we (Catholics) reached the conclusion that the Catholic Church is the One Church. We still go through the individual process of discerning the truths and revelations given to us.

The biggest problem with the One Church argument with PerCrucem (And other Lutherans like him) is that he does not see himself [apart] from us, but just [not in communion] with us.

An Orthodox person will reach his/her own individual conclusion.

Others that don’t weight history and apostolic succession as we do, don’t really take into account these elements like we do.

Please be mindful that I am not advocating a relativistic Church. But that we go through an individual discernment process as much as they do.

PS - I have this whisper in my ear:

There can only be one

http://collider.com/wp-content/uploads/highlander-christopher-lambert-slice.jpg
 
So if a Protestant says that he or she believes in the veracity of the Scriptures with a diminishingly small error of probability, without the need for an infallible church body to tell him so, your response will not be “But you don’t have infallible certainty, so you really can’t KNOW”?
Well, they’d be lying.
To come up with a diminishingly small probability of error, they’d need to SEE the author write the scripture, and also to KNOW that they had witnessed the things they had penned.

Yet, they can’t even say with certainty in most cases, and even with plausible probability in quite a few cases, WHO the author was.
 
I think that what PerCrucem is trying to say is that:

In our individual process of discernment, we (Catholics) reached the conclusion that the Catholic Church is the One Church. We still go through the individual process of discerning the truths and revelations given to us.

The biggest problem with the One Church argument with PerCrucem (And other Lutherans like him) is that he does not see himself [apart] from us, but just [not in communion] with us.

An Orthodox person will reach his/her own individual conclusion.

Others that don’t weight history and apostolic succession as we do, don’t really take into account these elements like we do.

Please be mindful that I am not advocating a relativistic Church. But that we go through an individual discernment process as much as they do.

PS - I have this whisper in my ear:

There can only be one

http://collider.com/wp-content/uploads/highlander-christopher-lambert-slice.jpg
Exactly. It’s not that Catholics don’t have a good argument. It’s that the infallibility argument isn’t a good one because it works equally well against Protestants and Catholics. If your argument works against your own position, it probably isn’t a good argument.
 
Exactly. It’s not that Catholics don’t have a good argument. It’s that the infallibility argument isn’t a good one because it works equally well against Protestants and Catholics. If your argument works against your own position, it probably isn’t a good argument.
It’s not that it works against our position. But in the absence of an infallible declaration from Rome in regards to the Canon, all we have is an authoritative declaration.

Using a definition and “stamping” it where we believe it goes just doesn’t do it for me.

It’s like this:

Isaiah45_9: I am infallible.
PerCrucem: What have you declared to be infallible?

Isaiah45_9: Well infallible means _______________.
PerCrucem: Ok. But what have you infallibly declared?

Isaiah45_9: The guidelines to determine infallibility are _____________.
PerCrucem: I get that. But what have you infallibly declared?

Isaiah45_9: Are you challenging my infallibility?
PerCrucem: I don’t know what to challenge!

Or something like that 😃
 
It’s not that it works against our position. But in the absence of an infallible declaration from Rome in regards to the Canon
You don’t? Isn’t Trent considered an infallible declaration on the canon?
 
Would you rather join the Church that AUTHORED that Bible, or one that came along 1800 years later and said: hey, let me tell you what it really means?
I don’t see how compiling books necessarily leads to infallibility forever in matters of all faith and morals. So if after prayer and study I were convicted to believe by faith that Christ has needed to reform aspects of His Church to ultimately keep the gates from prevailing due to human leaders straying, then I’d rather join the one coming along 1800 yrs later if I believe it’s the one where Christ is leading me to at a given time. Rather than the one just because it may have compiled the books properly so many centuries ago.
 
It’s not that it works against our position.
It is, only inasmuch as relying on the statement “I have certainty about the canon because X is infallible,” only moves it back one step. You’d still have to demonstrate that X is infallible without referring to a fallible authority. Otherwise you’d be in the same position as the Protestant who relies on fallible authorities.
 
Exactly. It’s not that Catholics don’t have a good argument. It’s that the infallibility argument isn’t a good one because it works equally well against Protestants and Catholics.
Seriously? Equally well?

Please see my post 223.

Your picking and choosing which doctrine to believe, and the probability of Christ being God are equally valid?

When a person is going to be able to choose doctrines, and then find a church to fit those beliefs, don’t you think that personal desires and biases are going to come into play?

That’s why so many sinners are able to find a church that will tolerate, if not encourage, their particular sin. [It shouldn’t need to be said, but I’m not saying that we shouldn’t love the sinner, but we should discourage the sinful behavior.]

It takes humility to submit to God’s will. It takes pride to think that we can discern that will all by ourselves.
 
I don’t see how compiling books necessarily leads to infallibility forever in matters of all faith and morals.
I didn’t say compiled. For the NT, the Catholic Church authored it.

Bishops Matthew, Mark, Luke, John, Paul, James, Jude, and of course Pope Peter were all Catholics.
So if after prayer and study I were convicted to believe by faith that Christ has needed to reform aspects of His Church to ultimately keep the gates from prevailing due to human leaders straying, then I’d rather join the one coming along 1800 yrs later if I believe it’s the one where Christ is leading me to at a given time. Rather than the one just because it may have compiled the books properly so many centuries ago.
Hey, that sounds like Muhammad’s story. And Joseph Smith’s.

Seriously, if anyone, even an angel, were to give you a different gospel, you should reject it.

Jesus founded ONE Church. He promised to be with that Church for ALL ages.
 
It is, only inasmuch as relying on the statement “I have certainty about the canon because X is infallible,” only moves it back one step. You’d still have to demonstrate that X is infallible without referring to a fallible authority. Otherwise you’d be in the same position as the Protestant who relies on fallible authorities.
Seriously? The same position?

If I have one or two pieces of fallible evidence, that’s one thing.
If I have hundreds of pieces of extremely strong evidence, that’s a different thing.

Trying to say there’s an equivalence is disingenuous.
 
It takes humility to submit to God’s will. It takes pride to think that we can discern that will all by ourselves.
And it takes pride to think that every other Christian simply chooses what to believe and then picks a church that conforms to those beliefs, and especially to confirm them in their sin. But oh humble you have truly submitted to God’s will.
 
Seriously? The same position?

If I have one or two pieces of fallible evidence, that’s one thing.
If I have hundreds of pieces of extremely strong evidence, that’s a different thing.

Trying to say there’s an equivalence is disingenuous.
I’m not saying that dronald’s evidence is equally as strong as yours. I’m just saying that both your evidence and his evidence is equally fallible.
 
And it takes pride to think that every other Christian simply chooses what to believe and then picks a church that conforms to those beliefs, and especially to confirm them in their sin. But oh humble you have truly submitted to God’s will.
People who choose their faith community based entirely on their own beliefs are making God in their image.
 
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