E
edward_george
Guest
Where do I begin…
Fundamentalists: Worship in a building
Ancient Pagans: Worship in a building
Fundamentalists: Use rings in marriage
Ancient Pagans: Use rings in marriage
Fundamentalists: Have a set of sacred writings
Ancient Pagans: Have a set of sacred writings
Fundamentalists: Worship a deity
Ancient Pagans: Worship a deity
Does this mean that modern Fundamentalists are pagan? No. It merely means that there are similarities between modern Fundamentalists and Ancient Pagans. Your logic fails here. Correlation does not prove causation.
If you read little bits and pieces of the Bible, you get part of the picture. Truth is like a puzzle–you can draw all sorts of conclusions about a few pieces here and there, but once you take it all in at once you have a complete and beautiful picture.
If we conclude that Jesus established a church, that’s one piece. If we conclude that Jesus’s church is the pillar and foundation of truth, that’s another. If we look at the whole picture presented by both Sacred Scripture and first-century writings like the Didache (available at New Advent) and others that provide a look at the first century Christians, we see that there is only one church that believes the same way as the first-century Christians. Furthermore, if we look at history, we see only one church that has maintained those beliefs throughout history, never changing them, never deviating from them. From time to time, things were more clearly defined, but never has the Church contradicted itself. Sure, you can take bits and pieces of the Bible and sling them all day long. Never will you find Scripture that defeats any premise of the Catholic Church. Take verses out of context, misinterpret them, and it may seem like you have disproved some part of Catholicism. But understood properly, it can’t be done.
I will answer you on the NAB/DRB inconsistency in the morning. I need sleep…have a Calc final tomorrow.
Pax Tecum
-ACEGC
Hmmm…okay let’s do this.In my search I found these similarities. Now please do not get upset, however they are true:
Fundamentalists: Worship in a building
Ancient Pagans: Worship in a building
Fundamentalists: Use rings in marriage
Ancient Pagans: Use rings in marriage
Fundamentalists: Have a set of sacred writings
Ancient Pagans: Have a set of sacred writings
Fundamentalists: Worship a deity
Ancient Pagans: Worship a deity
Does this mean that modern Fundamentalists are pagan? No. It merely means that there are similarities between modern Fundamentalists and Ancient Pagans. Your logic fails here. Correlation does not prove causation.
If you read little bits and pieces of the Bible, you get part of the picture. Truth is like a puzzle–you can draw all sorts of conclusions about a few pieces here and there, but once you take it all in at once you have a complete and beautiful picture.
If we conclude that Jesus established a church, that’s one piece. If we conclude that Jesus’s church is the pillar and foundation of truth, that’s another. If we look at the whole picture presented by both Sacred Scripture and first-century writings like the Didache (available at New Advent) and others that provide a look at the first century Christians, we see that there is only one church that believes the same way as the first-century Christians. Furthermore, if we look at history, we see only one church that has maintained those beliefs throughout history, never changing them, never deviating from them. From time to time, things were more clearly defined, but never has the Church contradicted itself. Sure, you can take bits and pieces of the Bible and sling them all day long. Never will you find Scripture that defeats any premise of the Catholic Church. Take verses out of context, misinterpret them, and it may seem like you have disproved some part of Catholicism. But understood properly, it can’t be done.
I will answer you on the NAB/DRB inconsistency in the morning. I need sleep…have a Calc final tomorrow.
Pax Tecum
-ACEGC