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Emjay66
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Thank you Abu.As God the son founded His own Church, as Catholicism, She has been empowered by Him to teach the fullness of His Truth…
Thank you Abu.As God the son founded His own Church, as Catholicism, She has been empowered by Him to teach the fullness of His Truth…
At one time i believed the Catholic Church was full of error and absolutely wrong.Hello Patrick (or anyone else!)
May I ask a personal question? I’m always more interested in ‘real life’ faith than apologetics, so may I ask whether you ever have any doubts about Catholicism being absolutely true and error-free?
Thank you fbl. Can you talk a little more about what you mean by doubting your own faithfulness? I’m not sure what you mean by that. Thanks!At one time i believed the Catholic Church was full of error and absolutely wrong.
I no longer have any doubts about the Truth of Catholicism, rather i doubt my own faithfulness now.
When Katrina blew through here we say at the front door and listened to the trees as they fell. After the storm we discovered that the pine trees were all there but the oak,pecan & hickory trees were all wdown. The difference? Deep roots.Thank you for that. I like the phrase ‘deeply rooted’. And I respect such faith. But must deeply rooted faith (be it Catholic, Islamic or Jewish) necessary be beyond doubt? Or could deeply rooted faith actually be more aware of the questions and uncertainties of faith?
That’s a nice story. Are you saying with that story that the deep-rooted person can indeed have doubts and uncertainties, but they are more likely to live through them?When Katrina blew through here we say at the front door and listened to the trees as they fell. After the storm we discovered that the pine trees were all there but the oak,pecan & hickory trees were all wdown. The difference? Deep roots.
If you added the word “Good” after “nothing” you’d be FAR closer to the truthPerhaps….nothing is impossible with God.
It is MY understanding that God will raise everyone, and give them a Now Glorified Body. That Body and Soul will THEN spend eternity if merited by ones life choices in heaven or in Hell. AMEN!I don’t understand what you are saying here. The question of 1 Cor 15:52-54 was framed around the view that this is referring to two groups of “saints”. The “dead” group is raised and changed, the “living” group is changed. So what group is the “dead who do not return at this time?”
See aboveGod created man with immortal and incorruptible bodies envisioned united with our incorruptible and immortal spirit made in his image and likeness. Jesus says that after the resurrection we will be “as the angels of God in heaven” (Matt 22:28-31). Granted, he is only speaking of those resurrected to eternal life in heaven. However, there are other angels who are immortal who are not in heaven. What separates the “good” angels from the “evil” angels? Both good and evil people will all be resurrected (Daniel 12:2, John 5:29). Some will be with God in heaven; others will be with the devils in hell when he separates the sheep from the goats. Both groups will be “alive”, but one group will be spiritually dead, the “second death”. Even now, people who are “alive” physically are still dead spiritually due to sin (Ephesians 2:1-5), except they still have time to repent and become alive in Christ.
I’m temped to say NO, but because of the words you chose, I’m not sure.Hello Patrick (or anyone else!)
May I ask a personal question? I’m always more interested in ‘real life’ faith than apologetics, so may I ask whether you ever have any doubts about Catholicism being absolutely true and error-free?
Thank you!I hope I don’t get into hot water over this answer. I have never met Patrick except through our exchanges here. I am sure he is deeply rooted in his faith as I am in mine.
Originally Posted by Emjay66
My Faith is that Jesus Christ is God. He proved it historically by rising from the dead. If that’s not true, then nothing he did or said matters and all Christianity is pointless. But if Jesus is God, then based on that one element on who Jesus is; Catholicism must be absolutely true because it is the only Church built by God for mankind. So for me, there is only one article of faith that is even an option to doubt and that is “Is Jesus God?” I don’t doubt that, so I don’t doubt any other article of the Faith.I’m always more interested in ‘real life’ faith than apologetics, so may I ask whether you ever have any doubts about Catholicism being absolutely true and error-free?
Originally Posted by blanchardman
The “first resurrection” (Rev. 20:5) refers to baptism where we are “born again” and given new life through Christ Jesus (Titus 3:5, Col 2:12-13, Rom 6:4-11). This is a spiritual resurrection from sin and not a bodily resurrection. The second resurrection is the bodily resurrection. The first death is bodily death, the second death is spiritual death. If we have spiritual resurrection through Jesus, the second death has no power. There is only one bodily resurrection of the dead and that occurs at the second coming of Christ on the “last day” at the end of time (John 6:39, 40, 54; John 11:24, John 12:48, John 5:29).After the first resurrection we will spend eternity on earth.
Hebrews 9:27 “And as it is appointed unto men once to die, but after this the judgment.”Those in the second resurrection are still mortal and could die the second death.
Jude Verse 6 “And the angels which kept not their first estate, but left their own habitation, he hath reserved in everlasting chains under darkness unto the judgment of the great day.”The “bad” angels are held in chains until the judgment. Their holding place could be in heaven.
Originally posted by blanchardman (Post #802)
True when speaking of “God” it could be any of the three persons, but we also use the term “Trinity” to somewhat define that unity of the three persons. When speaking of man, by default it means the whole being, but we can then break it down by specifying physical “flesh” versus the spiritual. But there are separate terms that can be used to specify the “whole” or the “part”.When you say God are you speaking of the Father, the Son, the Holy Spirit or all three? It could be any of these. When you speak of man do you mean just the flesh or the whole being. It could be either. There is no need for a unifying term for soul and spirit when either one will suffice.
Post #736 by Blanchardman
Man is triune as described in 1 Thes 5:23 ‘spirit and soul and body’.
The spirit returns to God at death. Ecclesiastes 12:7
The spirit and soul can be separated. Hebrews 4:12
The soul can be destroyed. Matthew 10:28
The spirit can be saved from this destruction. 1 Corinthians 5:5
What happens to the spirit when it returns to God?Post # 802
Only statements addressing the final judgment speak of them as separate. Otherwise they are joined.
Thank you Spiderweb. I appreciate your reply.My Faith is that Jesus Christ is God. He proved it historically by rising from the dead. If that’s not true, then nothing he did or said matters and all Christianity is pointless. But if Jesus is God, then based on that one element on who Jesus is; Catholicism must be absolutely true because it is the only Church built by God for mankind. So for me, there is only one article of faith that is even an option to doubt and that is “Is Jesus God?” I don’t doubt that, so I don’t doubt any other article of the Faith…
The historian Eusebius in his Church history, 4.3, 1.2, tells us that writing about 123 A.D., apologist Quadratus cited those in his day who had been cured or raised from the dead by Jesus of Nazareth – prime witnesses – long after the miracles, crucifixion and death of the Son of God. No other religious founder claimed to be God and proved it – not Mohammed of Islam, not in Hinduism, not in Buddhism, not in Taoism, not in Confucianism.Emjay66 #819
how can you be really sure Jesus rose from the dead? I mean ‘sure’ as opposed to thinking it ‘likely’?
What prevents you doubting that Jesus’s resurrection is possibly mythological?
The evidence which I have provided is a small part of the reality, and my faith is based on the reality of Christ Himself, His Resurrection, the foundation of His Catholic Church, the reality of His miracles, and the faith and morals which He taught and which His Church continues to teach throughout the world.Emjay66 #821
Thank you Abu. Can I just check before we go down that line, that really is the evidence that convinces you? So if there were any doubt about that evidence you would doubt your faith?
Emjay66 #823
We can usually quite clearly see the mythological nature of other religions’ sacred texts, and yet it seems much harder to accept the possible mythological nature of our own favoured relgious texts. That, again, does not mean the bible can’t be factual, but surely we should allow some room for the possibility that it, like other religious texts, may contain key elements of mythsos.
It is not a question of mere “texts”, and the attitude of evading the reality of history is quite common. Beliefs stem from all sorts of situations, but only the Catholic Church has what God, through his Son, Jesus, has mandated, and has demonstrated in reality through the miracle of the Sun at Fatima, the medically attested miracles that take place at Lourdes, and the Eucharistic miracles.As you can see it is the certainty of truth I struggle with, as it seems to rely on favouring texts in a way that other religions must be denied.
The persistent attempts to discredit the reality that is Christ and His Church starkly reveal the inability to discredit the miracles which occur to this day which testify to the divinity through His Church.Emjay66 #825
So we have four Gospels and four resurrection accounts that can’t be fully aligned.
This must cast some doubt on the Gospels as history. I think it at least shows they can’t all be exact descriptions of what really happened. Either one or all are wrong in their details (except Mark who doesn’t describe a resurrection).
Well, if you go down the proof-by-miracle route every faith claims ‘verified miracles’, so I tend to see scripture as much stronger than miracle claims.The persistent attempts to discredit the reality that is Christ and His Church starkly reveal the inability to discredit the miracles which occur to this day which testify to the divinity through His Church.
THE REPLYEmjay66 #825
So we have four Gospels and four resurrection accounts that can’t be fully aligned.
This must cast some doubt on the Gospels as history. I think it at least shows they can’t all be exact descriptions of what really happened. Either one or all are wrong in their details (except Mark who doesn’t describe a resurrection).
I have been following this very well done dialog with great interest; might I ask of question for consideration?The persistent attempts to discredit the reality that is Christ and His Church starkly reveal the inability to discredit the miracles which occur to this day which testify to the divinity through His Church.
A series of identical accounts of the same event would indicate that the witnesses conferred, or were trained so as to agree in all respects, whereas divergences are quite natural where different people recount memories as occurred with these accounts. Recognising that each account is not claiming to present the whole picture, that they differ, they are not mutually exclusive, but supplementary to each other.
The testimony of incredulous but honest witnesses, the success which attended the preaching of the Apostles reflect the reality that Christ claimed to be God, that He foretold that he would rise from the dead – He did – which proves His claim.