C
Contarini
Guest
That’s bunk. Not because Scripture is written in code, but because it is a complex set of texts written in a variety of historical contexts long ago. Your naive hermeneutical confidence would ill serve you in interpreting Shakespeare, let alone the Bible.The Catholic Church can only speculate as to what was going through the heads (and hearts) of the Apostles as the words of Scripture came together at their dictate. I do not believe that the Scriptures were written in some hard-to-decipher Bible Code, and if one has the context, the Word, and the intellect, the Scriptures are in most areas quite clearly defined.
Sure. The question is, to whom and under what circumstances is the Holy Spirit given? The Holy Spirit clearly does not guide all sincere believers to a correct understanding, since many sincere believers contradict each other. It is of course possible that the Holy Spirit is guiding you and not those with whom you differ. But one has to ask why you are so certain of this?And with the Holy Spirit, the Word can be applied.
What on earth do you mean by “unbroken lineage”? There is no unbroken lineage that non-denominational Protestants can claim. And calling oneself simply “Christian” is arrogant and misleading. It’s far more honest and honorable to admit your lineage.I do not consider myself a Protestant, *per se. *It is a tricky subject, given that non-denominationalism is a Protestant movement, yet the churches themselves are independently governed and profess no allegiance to the realm of Protestantism, but prefer the appropriate dub of “Christian,” their main reasoning drawn from the fact that the Word is their unbroken lineage.
And there is no “realm of Protestantism.” That’s a straw man.
How does the Word “seem to attest” these things if not via a persuasive argument? When someone says that water baptism is in no way necessary, don’t you have a persuasive argument to the contrary?Make of that as you wish. I may attend a Baptist church, but I believe in the equality of the Church (the Body of Believers) and Christ, the necessity of water baptism with few exceptions, the antiquity of the universe, and the losibility of salvation, which makes me something of an odd-ball at First Baptist.But I believe this not because of some persuasive argument or eloquent creed, but because the Word itself seems to attest to these things.
And the eloquence of a Creed is totally irrelevant. If you choose to ignore the Creeds, it’s your loss.
If you look at serious Catholic theologians such as Aquinas, they don’t teach that blood is literally being consumed. They teach that the substance of Christ’s real glorified Body is received in the Eucharist and is the reality underlying the physical manifestations of bread and wine. Catholic apologists over-literalize because they don’t themselves understand medieval theology very well–which is the strongest argument against transubstantiation I know (if its own defenders don’t understand it).They do have plenty of arguments calling for transubstantiation, yet I remain unconvinced due to the context of the passages. Heck, the Noahide laws, which were reinforced by Paul, strictly condemn the consuming of blood.