B
benaiah
Guest
Hello Artist,
You have not offended me. Thanks for trying to help me. I do appreciate it
. God Bless,
Benaiah
You have not offended me. Thanks for trying to help me. I do appreciate it
Benaiah
Welcome to the forums!I am a Baptist and live around and work with alot of Catholics. Most all of the Catholics I have talked with say my Bible came from the Catholic Church, but cannot seem to give me historical details or titles of books that I could explore. I thought this would be a great forum to ask this question on. I have asked this question on Baptist forums and only get responses that I have already heard. I feel this is a good forum to help me understand the Catholic position. I would appreciate all the help you could give me. I thought this was the right place to post this since I’m not a member of the Catholic Church. Thank you and God Bless,
Benaiah
I am a Baptist and live around and work with alot of Catholics. Most all of the Catholics I have talked with say my Bible came from the Catholic Church, but cannot seem to give me historical details or titles of books that I could explore. Thank you and God Bless,
You have a lot of reading to do, my friend. From the look of the follow up postings!Benaiah
I am a ‘cradle’ Catholic (Roman rite) who is married to a Jewish girl (father fought in the '48 War of Independence; came to USA for college and died a citizen).
I was always interested in our Church’s ‘jewish’ roots. Many Catholic rituals and sacramentals were taken from this faith (a natural outgrowth since our Lord was Jewish) and modified in light of Jesus as Messiah and the Eucharist. Some traditions (like our modern St Valentine’s custom of billets doux to our sweethearts) the Church (in various locales as the Word spread) adapted to alter later Roman pagan customs, to get those new Catholics thinking of ‘Christian’ ideas instead of pagan ones.
I think the best approach is to take one idea and ask the readers for (name removed by moderator)ut.
If, for example, you want to discuss ‘baptism’ as a custom, a rite and a sacrament, then many of us (except for Zerinus the Mormon and his crew) can give you the early Church views (from Scripture and Tradition) and the whys and wherefores of why we baptize infants.
One idea at a time, from Scripture, is always the best approach. You will be surprised (as CS Lewis and John Henry Newman and GK Chesterton and Malcom Muggeridge and Dorothy Day and countless others on this thread have attested) at what the Catholic Church, as the one founded by Jesus, has consistently taught and adhered to for almost 2000 years.
God bless you and your family and welcome to the Forums!
Pax Christi
Jonathan
You are welcome.Thank you Bishopite,
for the info on Phillip Schaff, and I have ordered the other two mentioned books, God bless,
Benaiah
This is absolutely, positively, the best, ‘Short’ explanation I’ve seen on a post, or anywhere, and I’m copying this for future use. This is good work.And THIS is where the Bible comes from. It is the liturgical Book of the Catholic Church, and Protestants received it through their Catholic ancestors.
- But, by the late 300’s, all this began to change. The Church had just succeeded in putting down the Arian heresy, which had disturbed the Church’s universal unity from A.D. 320 until A.D. 381. Now, during the Arian controversy, the Arians would often cite various books that were used in the city-churches to support their heretical beliefs. So, in order to make sure such heretics never had the oppotunity to do anything like this again, Pope St. Damasus I called for the creation of a UNIVERSAL canon of Scripture, which would be used in common by all the city-churches. He did this at a synod held in Rome in A.D. 382. And, at that time, he put forward a proposed canon, which was a synthesis of the canons used by the Patriarchate of Rome and the Patriarchate of Alexandria --Alexandria being the second ranking see of the universal Church (after Rome), and the primate in the East. Pope Damasus then submitted this canon to the bishops of North Africa, so that they could put it to the test and debate it. And the reason that Damasus sent it to the N. African bishops is three-fold: a) N. Africa had the most bishops per capita in the world at the time; and so a consensus among them would reflect the consensus of all bishops everywhere. b) The Church in N. Africa traditionally met twice a year in a regional council, held either at Hippo or at Carthage; and this would help to foster the debate; and c) The N. African bishops were known for their Biblical scholarship and had many great scholars among them (e.g. St. Augustine of Hippo). And so, the Africans took up the challenge and began to debate the canon --that is, to decide which books should be used in the liturgies of the churches and which books should not. Their criterion for deciding this was to go over each book, verse by verse, and to make sure that it agreed with the substance of the Catholic Faith that these CATHOLIC bishops believed in. And this, of course took some time. But, by 393, at the Council of Hippo, the first serious debate took place. It tentatively ratified the canon submitted by Pope Damasus back in A.D. 382, but there were still certain objections. These objections were ultimately addressed and dispelled by the Council of Carthate in A.D. 397. At this time, our present NT canon (and Catholic *OT *canon) was officially defined, and the debate came to an end. Here, it should be noted that the Epistle to the Hebrews and the Book of Revelation were held in serious dispute, and they were almost rejected. It was only the tireless arguments of St. Augustine of Hippo that got them included.
- With the canon finally decided at the Council of Carthage (A.D. 397), the African bishops submitted their Carthaginian canon to Rome for final ratification. This ratification came in about A.D. 401, when Pope St. Innocent I officially sanctioned the Carthaginian canon, and sent it to the bishops of Spain, Gaul, Britain, and Illyria for observation. Pope Innocent also sent it to the Patriarchate of Alexandria in Egypt (the Church’s second see), which immediately accepted it and sent it to all the other bishops of the East. However, in the Patriarchate of Antioch (the Church’s third see), there was an obstacle to implementing it. Antioch, at this time, was torn by an internal schism, with two Catholic bishops both claiming to be the true Patriarch of Antioch. This schism dragged on for a long time, and it effected many churches in Asia Minor, Syria, Palestine, and Mesopotamia. It also effected the imperial capital of Constantinople. And, because of this, the implementation of the Carthaginian canon (our present Biblical canon) was delayed in these regions for many centuries. Indeed, it was only in A.D. 787, at the Ecumenical Council of Nicaea II, that these Eastern churches finally accepted the Carthaginian canon of the Bible --that is, our present Biblical canon.
Hope that helps,
Joe
This is also right on the money, and something of great importance, and a huge difference between Catholicism, (Eastern and Western) and Protestantism. The absolute strong connection to Judaism. We are the people of the New Covenant, the fulfillment as well as the continuation of the Old Covenant. The Mass itself, is a Passover meal, containing Old Testament references that point to the fulfillment shown in the New Testament, such as when we say and proclaim in Mass that we *‘join with the choirs of Angels’ *to proclaim the glory of God, in the Santus (Holy Holy Holy), partially taken from Isaiah. When we say in Mass, “*Blessed is **he *who comes in the name of the Lord”, at that part of the Mass, we are proclaiming Christ coming to us, literally, now, with the Priest’s consecration of the Eucharist. So much of the Catholic faith is a continuance, or a fulfillment of a ’for-shadowing’ from the Old Testament, such as Mary, being the ‘Ark of the Covenant’. Literally, the Ark of the NEW Covenant. Luke understood this. There is just so much and I think that when our Protestant brothers and sisters open themselves up to this experience, the beauty, truth and immensity of the Catholic Church can be amazing.You have a lot of reading to do, my friend. From the look of the follow up postings!
I am a ‘cradle’ Catholic (Roman rite) who is married to a Jewish girl (father fought in the '48 War of Independence; came to USA for college and died a citizen).
I was always interested in our Church’s ‘jewish’ roots. Many Catholic rituals and sacramentals were taken from this faith (a natural outgrowth since our Lord was Jewish) and modified in light of Jesus as Messiah and the Eucharist. Some traditions (like our modern St Valentine’s custom of billets doux to our sweethearts) the Church (in various locales as the Word spread) adapted to alter later Roman pagan customs, to get those new Catholics thinking of ‘Christian’ ideas instead of pagan ones.
I think the best approach is to take one idea and ask the readers for (name removed by moderator)ut.
If, for example, you want to discuss ‘baptism’ as a custom, a rite and a sacrament, then many of us (except for Zerinus the Mormon and his crew) can give you the early Church views (from Scripture and Tradition) and the whys and wherefores of why we baptize infants.
One idea at a time, from Scripture, is always the best approach. You will be surprised (as CS Lewis and John Henry Newman and GK Chesterton and Malcom Muggeridge and Dorothy Day and countless others on this thread have attested) at what the Catholic Church, as the one founded by Jesus, has consistently taught and adhered to for almost 2000 years.
God bless you and your family and welcome to the Forums!
Pax Christi
Jonathan
I also came across this information,Hi benaiah,
He writes,
One book that he might like to read is by the Protestant scholar Albert C. Sundberg, and it’s called “The Old Testament of the Early Church” (Harvard U Press).
I am honestly not sure if it’s entirely fair to say that Catholic Church give us the Bible. It’s true that the Catholic Church determined what was considered valid Scripture by the guidance of the Holy Spirit though. And it is true that the original apostles were ‘Catholic’ in Christ.
So, in this regard, I think it would be more fair to say that the Catholic Church determined what was considered valid Scriptures from a body of documents that were already well known at this time in Church history.
I agreeThe Catholic Church, therefore, protected many Christians when she spoke definitively on these matters. And without the Catholic Church’s guidance on this, and after many persecutions of the early Church, we would indeed be very confused today, not being able to fairly discern what was a heretical or spurious work and what was truly inspired of the Holy Spirit.
I understand it to be, that when someone speaks of the Catholic Church as ‘giving the Bible’, they mean physically, as in codified, and also Spiritually, as in discerning what was and wasn’t’ inspired, but not in the sense that the Church 'WROTE’ it. The Church ‘discerned’, with guidance from the Holy Spirit,… and to me, that means, putting it together and saying, ‘here it is, this is IT’… not this, nor this, but ‘THIS’. When we say, Bible, as our Prot friends understand it, they don’t mean other writings that may or may not have been inspired, but the Canon, and that Canon was the work of the Church. What IS IN IT, was the work of God.I am honestly not sure if it’s entirely fair to say that Catholic Church give us the Bible. It’s true that the Catholic Church determined what was considered valid Scripture by the guidance of the Holy Spirit though. And it is true that the original apostles were ‘Catholic’ in Christ.
So, in this regard, I think it would be more fair to say that the Catholic Church determined what was considered valid Scriptures from a body of documents that were already well known at this time in Church history.
The Catholic Church, therefore, protected many Christians when she spoke definitively on these matters. And without the Catholic Church’s guidance on this, and after many persecutions of the early Church, we would indeed be very confused today, not being able to fairly discern what was a heretical or spurious work and what was truly inspired of the Holy Spirit.