Here is your chance Protestants!

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oriel36:
You are a modern form of the Alogi or those people who made a nuisance of themselves by trying to deny the Johannine works and subsequently it shows up in your views of the Church as dictating faith and morals.

"But to those who did accept him he gave power to become children of God, to those who believe in his name, who were born not by natural generation nor by human choice nor by a man’s decision but of God."usccb.org/nab/bible/john/john1.htm

You became a Catholic by your own decision but I am a Catholic who became an Apostolic Christian by the gift of God.This is why there are always two Christians within the ranks of Apostolic Christianity.While I treaure my Catholic heritage from the community,the ground in which God chooses to bestow the gift,just as the Johannine Word says is non denominational Love.

Anyone on either denominational side who works towards baiting is not a Christian,Catholic or otherwise.

Go serve your master - the devil.
You know, you are not going to win any friends by calling people names.

Also, it not very tolerant of you. As an Apostolic Christian you should be able to be tolerant “over things which are flexible to more discerning Christians.”

BTW you never answered my question:

Should Protestants be allowed to recieve communion in the Catholic Church?

Peace
 
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wabrams:
I see nothing wrong with a Protestant taking communion in a Catholic Church. By doing so, we are praising Jesus and His sacrifice for us. It has nothing to do with accepting the teaching of the Church, but merely sharing our faith in Jesus.
I’m sorry, wabrams, I don’t see it that way. St. Justin spoke of the mass in 150AD. The Eucharist has always been and remains communion with Jesus and with the church.

Protestants “celebrate” communion as symbollic. It is a mockery when one who does not believe that Jesus is truly present in the Eucharist receives Him in the Host. He isn’t present for Catholics and not present for non-catholics, but the non-catholic does not see Him there. On the road to Emmaus, the two disciples did not recognize Jesus until He broke the bread and blessed it. In the breaking of the bread, they knew it was Him. It is the same for Catholics. Jesus is truly present whether you “see” Him or not.

That prostestants should not receive is not my opinion but official church teaching though it is not meant to exclude. It is not the church who excludes, it is the protestant who excludes himself.

Respect for our teachings as handed down through generations for 20 centuries should be protestants’ guide. I do not receive communion in a protestant church, because I do not believe nor accept the teachings of protestant churches.
 
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reggie:
I’m sorry, wabrams, I don’t see it that way. St. Justin spoke of the mass in 150AD. The Eucharist has always been and remains communion with Jesus and with the church.
So it is either Jesus and the Catholic Church or nothing?
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reggie:
Protestants “celebrate” communion as symbollic. It is a mockery when one who does not believe that Jesus is truly present in the Eucharist receives Him in the Host. He isn’t present for Catholics and not present for non-catholics, but the non-catholic does not see Him there. On the road to Emmaus, the two disciples did not recognize Jesus until He broke the bread and blessed it. In the breaking of the bread, they knew it was Him. It is the same for Catholics. Jesus is truly present whether you “see” Him or not.
So I’m mocking communion because I don’t believe Jesus is literally in the bread and wine?
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reggie:
That prostestants should not receive is not my opinion but official church teaching though it is not meant to exclude. It is not the church who excludes, it is the protestant who excludes himself.
Obviously you share the same opinion as the Church. I don’t feel as though I have excluded myself.
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reggie:
Respect for our teachings as handed down through generations for 20 centuries should be protestants’ guide. I do not receive communion in a protestant church, because I do not believe nor accept the teachings of protestant churches.
I respect the teachings of the Church, though I don’t agree with some of them. But to each his own.
 
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wabrams:
I see nothing wrong with a Protestant taking communion in a Catholic Church. By doing so, we are praising Jesus and His sacrifice for us. It has nothing to do with accepting the teaching of the Church, but merely sharing our faith in Jesus.
When the Priest holds up the consecrated Host and says: “The Body of Christ,” we respond “Amen.” Our Amen encompasses all of the ramifications of the sacrifice of the Cross, which means we accept that Jesus Christ gave us the Church. When you accept the Blessed Sacrament in a Catholic Church, do you say “Amen” to the real presence of Christ in the Eucharist? Do you say “Amen” to the transmission of the Holy Spirit to the Apostles for the forgiveness of sin? Do you say “Amen” to the Church’s stance on openness to life? Our Amen is for the whole counsel of God in the plenitude of the mystery. When your “Amen” is for *all *of that, c’mon home. We’re keepin’ the light on for ya.
 
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wabrams:
So it is either Jesus and the Catholic Church or nothing?
Not “nothing.” “Less.”
So I’m mocking communion because I don’t believe Jesus is literally in the bread and wine?
In the Methodist Church, you are mocking nothing because Methodists do not even attempt to consecrate the Eucharist in the way Catholics understand it.

If you are receiving in a Catholic Church, then you are *emphatically *mocking Communion because you do not believe what we believe and are mocking the reverence in which we hold it as well as the Sacrament itself.
Obviously you share the same opinion as the Church. I don’t feel as though I have excluded myself.
“Feeling” is what gets people into trouble with issues like this. What does “feeling” have to do with any of this? It is about what Christ has done for us, what Christ has given us, and about Communion with Him in and through His Church.
I respect the teachings of the Church, though I don’t agree with some of them. But to each his own.
To respect them is to observe them. To disagree or question is fair. Besides, you’re not even Catholic! You are not obliged to agree. But receiving our Sacraments is kind of pointless (I’m using the mildest word I can think of here), if you don’t even believe in them, isn’t it?
 
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mercygate:
Not “nothing.” “Less.” In the Methodist Church, you are mocking nothing because Methodists do not even attempt to consecrate the Eucharist in the way Catholics understand it.

If you are receiving in a Catholic Church, then you are *emphatically *mocking Communion because you do not believe what we believe and are mocking the reverence in which we hold it as well as the Sacrament itself.
When I go to mass with my fiance, I don’t take communion b/c of the Church’s stance.
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mercygate:
“Feeling” is what gets people into trouble with issues like this. What does “feeling” have to do with any of this? It is about what Christ has done for us, what Christ has given us, and about Communion with Him in and through His Church.
It’s this attitude of “my communion and church is the right one, yours isn’t” is one of the things that holds me back from converting. I can’t stand that attitude. So much for us being brother’s and sister’s in Christ, huh?
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mercygate:
To respect them is to observe them. To disagree or question is fair. Besides, you’re not even Catholic! You are not obliged to agree. But receiving our Sacraments is kind of pointless (I’m using the mildest word I can think of here), if you don’t even believe in them, isn’t it?
Repect as many different meanings. Again, I don’t recieve the sacraments.
 
wabrams,

Jesus and His church are not separate entities that you can accept one and reject the other. This is a point that many protestants cannot grasp. A protestant unhappy with what is preached, or with the “fellowship” of one church simply shops around for another with a message and community more pleasing to him than the one left behind.

A Catholic knows that Jesus is to be found in the Eucharist and the Eucharist is found in the Catholic Church. He is our church, the source and summit of our faith. We may choose a different parish, but we can never choose a different Lord or a different message. They are one and the same in every Catholic church.

You may not see taking communion in a Catholic church as a mockery, but just as you can’t see Jesus’s presence in the Eucharist, it is there all the same.

I give you an example. I do not receive communion because my marriage is not sacramental until blessed in the church. I am currently working to change this, but in the meantime, I refrain because I know that at this time I am not in full communion with the church. Now, imagine as I kneel there, longing for the day when I can humbly approach and receive my Lord and Saviour, I know that there are people who do not believe that He is even there and yet they go. They do not understand or appreciate whom they are receiving and as such, they mock my belief and my devotion.

Now this is difficult for me, but just as I accept Jesus as my Saviour and accept all He did and sacrificed for my salvation, I accept His words in the NT regarding His church. Jesus said to the chosen…

As the Father has sent me, so I send you.
He who hears you hears me.
Whatsoever you bind on earth is bound in Heaven, whatsoever you loose on earth is loosed in heaven.
Go then and make disciples of all nations, teaching them as I have taught you and baptizing them in the name of the Father, and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit.
Lo, I will be with you even until the end of time.

Jesus did not separate Himself from His church. They are one and the same. When I submit to His church, I submit to Him.
 
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dennisknapp:
One question–

The Catholic Church’s accessment of history is that it is the Church Christ established and maintains through the successor of St. Peter.

Do you agree that the Catholic Church is the Church that Christ established and is maintained through the successor of St. Peter?

If you want evidence I can give you sections from the CCC, but this is common knowledge.

Peace
I know the Catholic Church’s view is that the church Christ established is maintained through the successor of Peter. I am not saying that I disagree, I am asking you where the historical documentation is for that?
I want you give an outline of historical references accepted by historians that supports that view. I am not asking about common knowledge. I am asking for historical documentation.
 
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dennisknapp:
A very informed Protestant named Contarini posted this on another thread:

"I don’t know of any reputable reference work that would list 606. When you think the “Roman Catholic Church” began is a subjective matter, because both Catholicism and Orthodoxy developed over time from the early Church. There is no date that one can assign, except the various dates when the Church split. So you could argue that both Catholicism and Orthodoxy date from 1054 or whatever other date you give for the East/West split. You could also claim that “Roman Catholicism” originated with the Council of Trent. But it’s all subjective, really. What can’t be disputed is that there is a continuous, organic link between modern Catholicism and Orthodoxy (including the “Oriental Orthodox” and the “Church of the East”) and the New Testament Church, and that no other church existing today can trace such a link except through Catholicism or Orthodoxy. All the claims of some kind of apostolic succession of dissenting Christians throughout the Middle Ages are bogus. I don’t know of any credible modern historian who believes those claims."

This is what I am looking for.

Peace
You asked for a Protestant assessment and evidence that backs up that assessment. My idea of evidence and your idea of evidence are two different things. This is a commentary of historical documentation, not verifiable referencing. If this is what you are looking for, that is fine. Glad you got what you wanted.
 
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CatherineofA:
You asked for a Protestant assessment and evidence that backs up that assessment. My idea of evidence and your idea of evidence are two different things. This is a commentary of historical documentation, not verifiable referencing. If this is what you are looking for, that is fine. Glad you got what you wanted.
What kind of evidence would you like? References to the CCC, or quotations of the Early Church Fathers? Just name it and I will give it to you.

Peace
 
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dennisknapp:
What kind of evidence would you like? References to the CCC, or quotations of the Early Church Fathers? Just name it and I will give it to you.

Peace
I was a history major in college and have a B.A. So, when I am looking at Christian history of any kind, I am looking at it in various ways. There is the one that is accepted by historians as fact and that is the use of primary sources of information used to come to a conclusion about historical events. In other words, proof that something happened and where the information exists that proves the existence. There is another approach and that is the use of tradition and ancient writings that are not often verifiable through documented avenues. This often includes much of religious tradition and claims by religion. Another way of presenting history (used on these boards) is historical commentary. This is discussing historical events through past personal experience in reading and research. A last way of presenting history (used on these boards) are links and references to other works or commentaries as a way to discuss points for the poster presenting the links. I personally think historical commentary is the most realistic for boards such as these with a little primary documentation here and there when asked for back-up. I find links and references to other works and commentary a demonstration of a lack of personal investment in the topic and a need to depend on someone else’s point of view to support your point or think for you. If you (not you personally) feel as if you know the topic from personal investment in research, you should be able to present the points yourself. Religion involves strong feelings of right and wrong and to really know truth you must investigate for yourself.
 
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CatherineofA:
I was a history major in college and have a B.A. So, when I am looking at Christian history of any kind, I am looking at it in various ways. There is the one that is accepted by historians as fact and that is the use of primary sources of information used to come to a conclusion about historical events. In other words, proof that something happened and where the information exists that proves the existence. There is another approach and that is the use of tradition and ancient writings that are not often verifiable through documented avenues. This often includes much of religious tradition and claims by religion. Another way of presenting history (used on these boards) is historical commentary. This is discussing historical events through past personal experience in reading and research. A last way of presenting history (used on these boards) are links and references to other works or commentaries as a way to discuss points for the poster presenting the links. I personally think historical commentary is the most realistic for boards such as these with a little primary documentation here and there when asked for back-up. I find links and references to other works and commentary a demonstration of a lack of personal investment in the topic and a need to depend on someone else’s point of view to support your point or think for you. If you (not you personally) feel as if you know the topic from personal investment in research, you should be able to present the points yourself. Religion involves strong feelings of right and wrong and to really know truth you must investigate for yourself.
So, are you saying you would like me to write you a paper and provide the sources I used in it?

All I was asking for was an interpretation of the historical record with evidence from the time period.

Peace
 
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dennisknapp:
What kind of evidence would you like? References to the CCC, or quotations of the Early Church Fathers? Just name it and I will give it to you.

Peace
I am asking you for historical evidence that demonstrates that the Catholic Church was indeed the only Christian approach during the first 200 years after Christ. What I mean by “only Christian approach” is that I want you to show me that the church was in existence from the beginning and that there were no alternate opinions in that first 200 years. I am not asking you for the church’s point of view on itself through quotes of church views or early church fathers Why? Because those fathers are a part of the Catholic Church. What else are they going to say? The Catholic point of view! So, what historical evidence can you produce by the historian community outside of the church that has shown that the Catholic Church was the original church and that there were no dissenting groups? What does the community of academic historians say about this? Thanks!
 
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dennisknapp:
So, are you saying you would like me to write you a paper and provide the sources I used in it?

All I was asking for was an interpretation of the historical record with evidence from the time period.

Peace
As I mentioned in an earlier post, ther is no need for an academic approach to posting on this. Historical commentary (interpretation as you put it) with some referencing (sources as you put it) is the most realistic and feasible way on a board like this. Feel free to answer my question this way in the question I posted just before this or one or two past it.
 
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CatherineofA:
I am asking you for historical evidence that demonstrates that the Catholic Church was indeed the only Christian approach during the first 200 years after Christ. What I mean by “only Christian approach” is that I want you to show me that the church was in existence from the beginning and that there were no alternate opinions in that first 200 years. I am not asking you for the church’s point of view on itself through quotes of church views or early church fathers Why? Because those fathers are a part of the Catholic Church. What else are they going to say? The Catholic point of view! So, what historical evidence can you produce by the historian community outside of the church that has shown that the Catholic Church was the original church and that there were no dissenting groups? What does the community of academic historians say about this? Thanks!
So, you want me to use modern historians that are not Catholic to show that the Catholic Church was the only option? I cannot use Catholic sources or early Church Fathers, correct?

Peace
 
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dennisknapp:
So, you want me to use modern historians that are not Catholic to show that the Catholic Church was the only option? I cannot use Catholic sources or early Church Fathers, correct?

Peace
I want you to use information amongst historians (outside of the Catholic community) to demonstrate that evidence exists for your point of view. I am not debunking a Catholic point of view. I am just asking for information outside of that to gain insight into the community of historians who are examining history apart from theological truths. Historical events and not theological beliefs.
 
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CatherineofA:
I want you to use information amongst historians (outside of the Catholic community) to demonstrate that evidence exists for your point of view. I am not debunking a Catholic point of view. I am just asking for information outside of that to gain insight into the community of historians who are examining history apart from theological truths. Historical events and not theological beliefs.
Why not use primary sources? It would seem to me that they would be the most reliable. I too am a history B.A. and was taught primary sources were always the most reliable.

Also, do you have any historians in mind? Or are you talking about history books like the one used in Colleges?

Peace
 
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dennisknapp:
Why not use primary sources? It would seem to me that they would be the most reliable. I too am a history B.A. and was taught primary sources were always the most reliable.

Also, do you have any historians in mind? Or are you talking about history books like the one used in Colleges?

Peace
As I stated earlier, primary sources are the best. By all means use them. Use any information that is accepted in the community of historians. Again, I am not talking about Catholic theology or a church account of events. I am talking about verifiable and documented information accepted as actual history by historians. The floor is yours!
 
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dennisknapp:
You know, you are not going to win any friends by calling people names.

Also, it not very tolerant of you. As an Apostolic Christian you should be able to be tolerant “over things which are flexible to more discerning Christians.”

BTW you never answered my question:

Should Protestants be allowed to recieve communion in the Catholic Church?

Peace
Unless you suffer from a severe reading comprehension I strongly suggest that you and the remaining Catholics/Protestants here take note that Jesus addresses two types of Christians before you congratulate yourselves and each other on your worldly education.I will even accentuate where the difference exists.

“I am the resurrection and the life. He who believes in me will live, even though he dies; AND whoever lives and believes in me will never die. Do you believe this?”

biblegateway.com/passage…r=11&version=31

I do not ask this question,Jesus does !.
 
I don’t think anyone doubts that Jesus said that. That is more over the message of Christ. This discussion is over the documented evidence we have concerning the actions and whereabouts of ancient peoples who described themselves as Christian.
 
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