So while your canon is closed, you still consider many other writings to be of benefit, and effectively treat them as scripture: but you don’t consider your ‘tradition’ to be canon despite, apparently, treating it as such? There are many quotes given on here that, I assume, are not canonical or part of the ‘tradition’ as written and stored by the church, but which are clearly considered beneficial for edification, for teaching and for better understanding Jesus Christ and your faith in Him?
This sounds very much like our view also, in that we seek out all good things, because anything that is good comes from God; Satan being incapable of producing anything fruitful or that is designed to bring men joy. The difference being that however good and true, and regardless of its source you will not include it into either your canon, or tradition; while when we have something that is of great worth to enlighten the mind and to encourage people to come into Christ, we are happy to include that into what we consider scripture.
Just a slight clarification, many of our Doctrines and Dogma that have been passed down from the very beginning, come directly from Sacred Tradition. Even though many of them do not necessarily appear in Scripture, those are still part of our canon. Like I said, the Bible is composed of the most important writings of the Apostles, but there are many, many more that just didn’t make it in. Of course, there are many other writings that are beneficial to the faithful, not just from that period of time, but those that were written by holy men and women over the entire history of the Church. They were also inspired by the Holy Spirit, but none of those can ever be considered as ‘scripture’ or doctrine.
Scripture, particularly the Gospels and the whole New Testament, only comes directly from eye-witnesses that were there when those events took place. Even if more of those writings of the Apostles surfaced from archeological research, they would never be considered to be scripture, nor would they influence any real changes in Doctrine or Dogma, even though they might shed new light on them. It would be impossible to verify them as authentic, for one thing, and there is no way to ever change scripture since the Bible was originally compiled. It’s sufficient, in and of itself, to teach the basics of what we need to know about the life of Jesus. That’s its purpose. It’s just an outline, like an introductory course for anyone that wishes to learn about God. Whatever the Holy Spirit wanted to be included in it, is already there. God doesn’t change His mind, no matter what happens down the road. Sacred Tradition is what fills in all of the rest of the details that have been revealed to the Church by the power of the Holy Ghost, since that time. It’s never stopped happening, and never will.
Still no…
An angel is any messenger sent from heaven: these may be spirits prior to entering a mortal existence; spirits following their mortal death, but prior to ressurection; or (more usually) resurrected beings - spirit and body together and perfected (physically). All of these are spirit children of God, just as each and every one of us are: ‘spirit child’ doesn’t imply some kind of immaturity, just that we are His offspring.
There are no ‘resurrected beings’, nor those with bodies in Heaven, except Jesus and Mary (possibly Elijah). They’re not angels, although they frequently visit people on the earth to give them messages. (The general resurrection won’t happen until the end of time. There are very few exceptions to that rule.) Angels are a totally separate kind of life form than either man, or God. They were created before man and are extremely intelligent. I’m not a ‘spirit child’ of God. But, I am an adopted daughter that He created, body & soul, spontaneously… out of His love.
Wrong again: we affirm the divinity of Jesus Christ as the Lord and God of the Old Testament.
If you really want to learn of the fullness of Jesus Christ, His premortal, mortal and ante mortal missions: I would very much reccomend reading ‘Jesus The Christ’ it’s quite comprehensive.
If that were really true, then the whole story of the preexistence would have to be false. Jesus is not our ‘bother’, or Satan’s. He never was. He is and always was God. We are nothing at all like Him, in essence. The only way we become anything like Him is through receiving the Holy Eucharist. That’s how we partake in His Body & Blood, Soul & Divinity. If you never receive Him in that way, then you can never become a part of Him.
Thanks for the links, but I’m really not that interested in a comprehensive breakdown of LDS beliefs. It really doesn’t matter what you believe about any of that stuff. It’s still blasphemous from a Catholic perspective, and in the eyes of God. I prefer reading the Bible and books about Catholic spirituality. I have a lot of them on my bookshelf, collecting dust atm, since I’ve been spending a lot of time (probably too much) on this forum, lately. Maybe you should pick up “The Imitation of Christ”, or “The Story of a Soul” (those 2 are a bit deep, though), or maybe some biographies of Catholic Saints, like Padré Pio, to learn a little about our spirituality.
He is telling that that searching the scriptures is important, but that through them alone nobody attains eternal life. That the purpose of the scriptures is to teach people about Jesus Christ and encourage them to learn of Him and come unto Him for salvation.
Jesus was telling them that even though they diligently searched scripture, they completely missed its true meaning due to their own pride, that caused them to not comprehend the true meaning of the message it contained. It was their loss for believing that they already ‘knew it all’ better than anyone else, even though they didn’t know anything at all.