G
GaryTaylor
Guest
No-one argued this point.I’m sorry but we are not the one with the misunderstanding. Even today 75% of Roman Catholics here in the US believe that the Holy Spirit is not a person! .
No-one argued this point.I’m sorry but we are not the one with the misunderstanding. Even today 75% of Roman Catholics here in the US believe that the Holy Spirit is not a person! .
Is this a result of false teaching? Or simply a lack of teaching? What you pose is a non sequitur.I’m sorry but we are not the one with the misunderstanding. Even today 75% of Roman Catholics here in the US believe that the Holy Spirit is not a person!
Like you, they have left the sphere of influence of the Catholic Church. Until you both return, there is not much we can do for you other than pray.And about the same percentage of Protestants, who themselves were born from Roman Catholic thought, believe the same.
I’ve argued about this at length with Baptists in the Apologetics subforum. We can dance if you think you can keep up. :nope:And I don’t think it’s any coincidence that all of the changes that occurred in Roman Catholicism, from abandoning immersion for baptism,
Catholic children are confirmed and receive the Eucharist, and the Catholic laity receive the cup.to delaying the reception of children and denying them the Eucharist, to denying the Sacred Cup to the laity,
The loss of entire…do you think this was by choice or by force? Perhaps you would benefit from reading about what happened to Catholics under the might of the English crown.all of the post schism dogmas and even to breaking communion with every single ancient Apostolic see and the loss of entire Western nations to the Reformation.
I will acknowledge that the architecture of the 70’s and 80’s was pretty bad…perhaps driven by the desire to create a big space for little money. But Catholic architecture is back. Here’s the new Cathedral we’re building in Raleigh:All of this happened after this addition into the Creed. And that spirit continues to this day with the complete rewrite of the liturgy and modern day iconoclasm, with parish after parish ripping out sacred images or putting up new, plain white washed buildings. In fact, quite to our astonishment, you continue to make your churches and liturgies look more and more like Protestant buildings and services.
The Fathers would walk into your churches and be truly amazed at their beauty. After all, they met in secret in private homes, in the catacombs, and by the banks of rivers where there was water for baptizing their converts, so our churches, yours and mine, would amaze them equally.You say a saint could walk into a church and immediately recognize it. Not only would a saint from the first millennium not recognize a modern Roman Catholic church a Catholic from 1950 wouldn’t recognize it. And the most amazing thing of all, not only is that not considered a problem, it’s considered a virtue! You have to look at the fruits and in this case the fruits simply are not good.
.Seraphim73;12541073]I’m sorry but we are not the one with the misunderstanding. Even today 75% of Roman Catholics here in the US believe that the Holy Spirit is not a person! And about the same percentage of Protestants, who themselves were born from Roman Catholic thought, believe the same
Why do you spread such fallacy against the Latin Church? I know first hand of a Franciscan priest, who goes alone into the jungles in South America continuing the practice of Water Immersion for baptism of unreachable local tribes there, where no plumbing exists. The Catholic Church still practices water baptism by immersion. This Franciscan priest Missionary always visits our parish once a year without shoes. We send him back with shoes and clothing and he gives his own shoes away when he arrives back to the indigenous tribes.And I don’t think it’s any coincidence that all of the changes that occurred in Roman Catholicism, from abandoning immersion for baptism,
Disciplines are not doctrine and have always been subject to change.to delaying the reception of children and denying them the Eucharist, to denying the Sacred Cup to the laity,
.all of the post schism dogmas and even to breaking communion with every single ancient Apostolic see and the loss of entire Western nations to the Reformation
No, your schism with Peter’s Chair began when the Eastern Emperor placed a Patriarch in his new capital in the new Rome, when there never was an apostolic successor of Constantinople.All of this happened after this addition into the Creed. And that spirit continues to this day with the complete rewrite of the liturgy and modern day iconoclasm, with parish after parish ripping out sacred images or putting up new, plain white washed buildings. In fact, quite to our astonishment, you continue to make your churches and liturgies look more and more like Protestant buildings and services.
Here is your problem of understanding the Latin Church. She is compose of many different languages, nations, peoples, tribes and tongues. She does not convert these to remove their identity, she gives them gospels in order to keep their identity of who they are in God, one cannot say the same thing for the Greek Side of Church , which remains stagnant in history.You say a saint could walk into a church and immediately recognize it. Not only would a saint from the first millennium not recognize a modern Roman Catholic church a Catholic from 1950 wouldn’t recognize it. And the most amazing thing of all, not only is that not considered a problem, it’s considered a virtue! You have to look at the fruits and in this case the fruits simply are not good.
You’re right. There is no argument. But yet somehow 75% of Catholics here in the US have this grave misunderstanding. Is that because the Catholic Church has subordinated the Spirit both in the Creed and institutionally? I certainly think it’s a possibility.No-one argued this point.
Dead. Wrong.from abandoning immersion for baptism,
You ever read St Basil Against Eunomius? You should read his understanding of the Trinity. Anyway I’m not sure what your talking about, the conversation went from a very common terminology of the three persons of the Trinity to blaming Catholics and Protestants for your cultural natural issues. We have to use this terminology so you can understand.You’re right. There is no argument. But yet somehow 75% of Catholics here in the US have this grave misunderstanding. Is that because the Catholic Church has subordinated the Spirit both in the Creed and institutionally? I certainly think it’s a possibility.
Then the lack of teaching is absolutely staggering. But that’s not really the case. The liturgy and the Creed themselves are didactic. When you water down the liturgy and alter the Creed you can’t help but get incorrect beliefs. In fact it can’t be any other way.Is this a result of false teaching? Or simply a lack of teaching? What you pose is a non sequitur.
And yet you accept no possibility at all that Catholic teaching had anything to do with the Reformation.Like you, they have left the sphere of influence of the Catholic Church. Until you both return, there is not much we can do for you other than pray.
Luckily the steps are easy to follow. John baptized by immersion. The Apostles baptized by immersion. The early Church baptized by immersion. The Roman Church baptized by immersion. Now you’ve changed that.I’ve argued about this at length with Baptists in the Apologetics subforum. We can dance if you think you can keep up. :nope:
In the Latin Church infants are not chrismated and do not received Communion. And for many many centuries the Cup was never offered to the laity. Now it is a option, one that the pastor is free to not exercise.Catholic children are confirmed and receive the Eucharist, and the Catholic laity receive the cup.
The fruits are our faithfulness to the Apostolic faith and practice.However, in making these claims, you admit that you deny the authority of the Church to make such decisions. That is the fruit of your denial of the Papacy. See my signature for more details.
But where were the seeds of that movement? Subordinate the Holy Spirit and elevate a man in His place. The Protestants simply took that principle and applied it generally to every man instead of just one man in Rome.The loss of entire…do you think this was by choice or by force? Perhaps you would benefit from reading about what happened to Catholics under the might of the English crown.
It’s not just that the architecture was bad. It was a modern day iconoclasm that was directed by the bishops themselves. And again its genesis was the subordination of the Holy Spirit and the elevation of the human mind. It makes our thinking about God to be the highest value. It is a dis-incarnate philosophy. Unfortunately it’s not a coincidence that many Catholic churches are all but indistinguishable from your typical Calvinist church.I will acknowledge that the architecture of the 70’s and 80’s was pretty bad…perhaps driven by the desire to create a big space for little money. But Catholic architecture is back. Here’s the new Cathedral we’re building in Raleigh:
Considering many saints including Doctors of your Church spent parts of the ecclesiastical career out of communion with Rome this claim falls quite flat.The Fathers would walk into your churches and be truly amazed at their beauty. After all, they met in secret in private homes, in the catacombs, and by the banks of rivers where there was water for baptizing their converts, so our churches, yours and mine, would amaze them equally.
But then they would ask your bishops and patriarchs about their communion with the See of Peter, and hearing the negative responses, they would walk out because knowing that you are separated from Rome, they would not think they were in a true church at all.
End. Of. Story.
They [the Eunomians] assign the words ‘from whom’ to God the Father as if this expression was his one special allotment; for God the Son they select the phrase ‘through whom’, and for the Holy Spirit ‘in which’, and they say that this assignment of prepositions must never be interchanged, in order that… one prepositional phrase is always made to indicate a corresponding nature.
Of course the corresponding nature isn’t in question, but as we see it very well could be.Cf.On the Holy Spirit 1.4; English text used, trans. David Anderson (Crestwood, NY: SVS Press,1980). Indeed, much of this treatise deals with the interchangeability of prepositions with reference to the three Persons. In this way, he was able to justify his preferred doxology. Whereas the Eunomians believed that specific prepositions had to be used when referring to Father, Son and Holy Spirit respectively, St Basil argued, based on the Scriptures, that there were no such laws since the Bible uses different prepositions to depict the intra-Trinitarian relations.
I’m not upset with anybody about anything. I’m simply pointing out the bad fruits of the addition of the filioque. That has to be part of the discussion or the discussion is pointless.You ever read St Basil Against Eunomius? You should read his understanding of the Trinity. Anyway I’m not sure what your talking about, the conversation went from a very common terminology of the three persons of the Trinity to blaming Catholics and Protestants for your cultural natural issues. We have to use this terminology so you can understand.
Im sorry your upset with Catholics and Protestants but you have your own issues as we all do. We shouldn’t look outside ourselves in this regard but within
And if you will notice, Randy, that is the third option only if the others are not available. You don’t take the exception and make it the rule. For many, many centuries the rule in the Roman Church was immersion as witnessed by the baptismal pools in many ancient Roman churches.Dead. Wrong.
The Didache
After the foregoing instructions, baptize in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit, in living [running] water. If you have no living water, then baptize in other water, and if you are not able in cold, then in warm. If you have neither, pour water three times on the head, in the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit. Before baptism, let the one baptizing and the one to be baptized fast, as also any others who are able. Command the one who is to be baptized to fast beforehand for one or two days (Didache 7:1 [ca. A.D. 70]).
Do you see that, Joey?
This ancient document reveals that in the Early Church - which you claim to be preserving while accusing Catholics of abandonment - baptism was performed by immersion in running water (a river) or a pool or by pouring if necessary.
Today, Catholics recognize that immersion, pouring or sprinkling are all valid forms of baptism, and your assertion that the Catholic Church has abandoned the practice of the Early Church is proven to be false.
Then the lack of teaching is absolutely staggering. But that’s not really the case. The liturgy and the Creed themselves are didactic. When you water down the liturgy and alter the Creed you can’t help but get incorrect beliefs. In fact it can’t be any other way.Is this a result of false teaching? Or simply a lack of teaching? What you pose is a non sequitur.
And yet you accept no possibility at all that Catholic teaching had anything to do with the Reformation.Like you, they have left the sphere of influence of the Catholic Church. Until you both return, there is not much we can do for you other than pray.
Luckily the steps are easy to follow. John baptized by immersion. The Apostles baptized by immersion. The early Church baptized by immersion. The Roman Church baptized by immersion. Now you’ve changed that.I’ve argued about this at length with Baptists in the Apologetics subforum. We can dance if you think you can keep up. :nope:
In the Latin Church infants are not chrismated and do not received Communion. And for many many centuries the Cup was never offered to the laity. Now it is a option, one that the pastor is free to not exercise.Catholic children are confirmed and receive the Eucharist, and the Catholic laity receive the cup.
The fruits are our faithfulness to the Apostolic faith and practice.However, in making these claims, you admit that you deny the authority of the Church to make such decisions. That is the fruit of your denial of the Papacy. See my signature for more details.
But where were the seeds of that movement? Could it be in the subordination of the Spirit and the elevation of man?The loss of entire…do you think this was by choice or by force? Perhaps you would benefit from reading about what happened to Catholics under the might of the English crown.
It’s not just that the architecture was bad. It was a modern day iconoclasm. And again its genesis was in the elevation of the human mind. It makes our thinking about God to be the highest value. It is a dis-incarnate philosophy. Unfortunately it’s not a coincidence that many Catholic churches are all but indistinguishable from your typical Calvinist church.I will acknowledge that the architecture of the 70’s and 80’s was pretty bad…perhaps driven by the desire to create a big space for little money. But Catholic architecture is back. Here’s the new Cathedral we’re building in Raleigh:
Considering many saints including Doctors of your Church spent parts of the ecclesiastical career out of communion with Rome this claim falls quite flat.The Fathers would walk into your churches and be truly amazed at their beauty. After all, they met in secret in private homes, in the catacombs, and by the banks of rivers where there was water for baptizing their converts, so our churches, yours and mine, would amaze them equally.
But then they would ask your bishops and patriarchs about their communion with the See of Peter, and hearing the negative responses, they would walk out because knowing that you are separated from Rome, they would not think they were in a true church at all.
End. Of. Story.
The problem of catechesis is more complex than this thread should bear. If you really want to discuss what happened, start another thread.Then the lack of teaching is absolutely staggering. But that’s not really the case. The liturgy and the Creed themselves are didactic. When you water down the liturgy and alter the Creed you can’t help but get incorrect beliefs. In fact it can’t be any other way.
Formal teaching? No, not at all. Sorry, that’s simply not what happened and even Lutherans would acknowledge this.And yet you accept no possibility at all that Catholic teaching had anything to do with the Reformation.
Oops. John’s baptism was not Christian Baptism.Luckily the steps are easy to follow. John baptized by immersion. The Apostles baptized by immersion. The early Church baptized by immersion. The Roman Church baptized by immersion. Now you’ve changed that.
Technically, it is up to the Bishop. But so what? to ALL or these points. Either the leadership of the Church has authority in these disciplines or not.In the Latin Church infants are not chrismated and do not received Communion. And for many many centuries the Cup was never offered to the laity. Now it is a option, one that the pastor is free to not exercise.
No, you are faithful to your interpretation of them.The fruits are our faithfulness to the Apostolic faith and practice.
Really? The Pope is now part of the Trinity supplanting the Holy Spirit? What websites have YOU been visiting?But where were the seeds of that movement? Subordinate the Holy Spirit and elevate a man in His place. The Protestants simply took that principle and applied it generally to every man instead of just one man in Rome.
Careful. You’re going to hurt the feelings of all the Calvinists following this thread.It’s not just that the architecture was bad. It was a modern day iconoclasm that was directed by the bishops themselves. And again its genesis was the subordination of the Holy Spirit and the elevation of the human mind. It makes our thinking about God to be the highest value. It is a dis-incarnate philosophy. Unfortunately it’s not a coincidence that many Catholic churches are all but indistinguishable from your typical Calvinist church.
Of course it does, Joey. Of course it does.Considering many saints including Doctors of your Church spent parts of the ecclesiastical career out of communion with Rome this claim falls quite flat.
I don’t see it, and the reformation had nothing to do with the Trinity. Thus the burden of proof remains yours. Basically as others have indicated.I’m not upset with anybody about anything. I’m simply pointing out the bad fruits of the addition of the filioque. That has to be part of the discussion or the discussion is pointless.
But you agree that it was permitted. And valid.And if you will notice, Randy, that is the third option only if the others are not available. You don’t take the exception and make it the rule. For many, many centuries the rule in the Roman Church was immersion as witnessed by the baptismal pools in many ancient Roman churches.
In worshiping God of God we profess the distinction of persons- St Basil, The Holy Spirit, 375-AD The Faith of the Fathers pg 18 Vol-II Jergens
Oh come on! This false information has been dealt with before… The fallacy of composition remember? I can guarantee you that not even 2% of American Catholics were polled in that survey and yet you continue to sprout that flawed survey as if its infallible.I’m sorry but we are not the one with the misunderstanding. Even today 75% of Roman Catholics here in the US believe that the Holy Spirit is not a person! And about the same percentage of Protestants, who themselves were born from Roman Catholic thought, believe the same. And I don’t think it’s any coincidence that all of the changes that occurred in Roman Catholicism, from abandoning immersion for baptism, to delaying the reception of children and denying them the Eucharist, to denying the Sacred Cup to the laity, all of the post schism dogmas and even to breaking communion with every single ancient Apostolic see and the loss of entire Western nations to the Reformation. All of this happened after this addition into the Creed. And that spirit continues to this day with the complete rewrite of the liturgy and modern day iconoclasm, with parish after parish ripping out sacred images or putting up new, plain white washed buildings. In fact, quite to our astonishment, you continue to make your churches and liturgies look more and more like Protestant buildings and services.
You say a saint could walk into a church and immediately recognize it. Not only would a saint from the first millennium not recognize a modern Roman Catholic church a Catholic from 1950 wouldn’t recognize it. And the most amazing thing of all, not only is that not considered a problem, it’s considered a virtue! You have to look at the fruits and in this case the fruits simply are not good.
No hypocrisy Randy. The Apostolic practice was to baptize by triple immersion. And it was the practice of the Roman Church for over a millennium. That’s the bottom line. Second this is not about discipline. Lex orandi lex credendi. When you change how you worship you change the belief. There is a reason these things that seem so insignificant to those who aren’t in the Church are guarded so carefully. A small deviation today leads to massive deviation tomorrow. I think again this is shown quite clearly in the direction the modern Catholic Church is going. You ask what is “valid” or “necessary.”But you agree that it was permitted. And valid.
So, you argue for an ancient custom which is a church discipline and not a doctrine. Disciplines can and do change because the Church has real authority.
Do all Orthodox Churches have rivers flowing past them? The one not far from my home doesn’t. So, were YOU baptized in a cold, running river or stream? Or in a indoor pool of some sort? If you were baptized inside a Church in a pool, then YOU accepted the second option as your rule, and it is hypocritical for you to claim that Rome has not adhered to ancient practice when you have not chosen baptism in cold, living water, either.
We both know that our Churches have valid forms of baptism…you just want something to hold against Rome, but this dog won’t hunt.
Discipline changes. And our new disciplines have their own meanings for why they are the norm now.No hypocrisy Randy. The Apostolic practice was to baptize by triple immersion. And it was the practice of the Roman Church for over a millennium. That’s the bottom line. Second this is not about discipline. Lex orandi lex credendi. When you change how you worship you change the belief. There is a reason these things that seem so insignificant to those who aren’t in the Church are guarded so carefully. A small deviation today leads to massive deviation tomorrow. I think again this is shown quite clearly in the direction the modern Catholic Church is going. You ask what is “valid” or “necessary.”
That is the exact same questions the Protestants asked, they just came up with a slightly smaller list that you have. It’s not about that, it’s about how do we worship God and proclaim His kingdom. Take baptism in particular. When we are baptized we die to this world. We are dead and buried. That’s why being immersed in the water is so important. You place so little significance on why things were done the way there were. The Church had a good reason for adopting the patterns of worship it did. Those patterns safeguard the Apostolic faith. And Rome followed every single one of those practices when it was still a bastion of orthodoxy. So we’ll never view these variations as some small and unimportant deviation in practice.
Rome did not add the filioque to the Creed until after 1054 my friend.Discipline changes. And our new disciplines have their own meanings for why they are the norm now.
secondly when Rome was the bastion of orthodoxy, she taught the filioque
… A teaching your church today denies or at least misunderstands … Some in your communion teach it while others deny it with rigorist heretical positions.