I
inkaneer
Guest
Jesus also said that the Jews should follow what the Pharisees said. He said for they sit on "Moses’ seat’. This concept of a seat or chair as being a position of authority is still with us today not only in the church but in academic circles as well. In colleges and universities the head of a dept. of study is known as the “chair”. As for the Jews they had a reliable authority in Moses and the prophets.Very interesting discussion. The problem for me is that when I answered the questions as I understood them, I was told that my admission that I am not infallible basically negates my entire argument, and that I didn’t answer the question. When I asked for clarification, I was told in no uncertain terms that my postings were nothing more than “red herrings”. Even AlanFromWichita got jumped on for “sounding” like a Protestant. Why are you surprised that Protestants are responding to this thread?
In regard to “infallibly” knowing the interpretation of Scripture, did the Jews have an “infallible” magisterium? Did they “infallibly” know the Scriptures? The obvious answer is “No”, yet Jesus held them accountable for what was written in the Scriptures. Why do you think we need an “infallible” interpretation? Here’s the problem I see with the Catholic Church (and part of the reason I left) - once the “infallible” magisterium defines what a specific scripture verse means, YOU have to accept it as true. For example - how do you know the teachings of the Church are infallible? Think about this - who defines what Scripture is, and what it means? Who defines what Tradition is, and what it means? If the Magisterium defines and interprets both Scripture and Tradition, and claims that these things give it the infallibility it claims to have, how can you test this claim? If you examine the Scriptures, you will not find any promise of infallibility to the Church. True, we have the Holy Spirit to guide us (ALL Christians), and He will lead us into His Truth, but that is not a promise of infallibility.
I guess it comes down to this - I have complete trust in my ultimate authority, which is the God-breathed Scriptures. If I am proven wrong on a particular point, the fault is mine, not the Scriptures. Roman Catholics, on the other hand, have (or are supposed to have) complete trust in their ultimate authority, which is the teaching Magisterium of the Church. The difference is, my authority doesn’t change. Your authority makes changes in the form of dogmatic decrees (such as Mary’s immaculate coneption, made dogma in the 1800’s, papal infallibility, made dogma at Vatican I, also in the mid 1800’s, and the bodily assumption of Mary, made dogma around 1950, and there is talk of making Mary co-redeemer and co-mediator a dogma).
Having said all that, I will leave this thread and leave you to do what you feel is appropriate.
Pax!
As for The Catholic Church making changes in doctrine that is a complete falsehood. Doctrines such as the immaculate Conception and the Assumption are not changes but rather formal definitions of doctrines long held but never formally defined. For example, in 1547 the canon of scripture was formally defined as comprising 73 books. Was that new? No. Th every first Bible, Jerome’s Vulgate had the very same 73 books in it asdid every Bible from 400 AD on until the 16th century when Luther removed seven books. Did we change doctrine? No. In the early church there was controversy anbd confusion over the nature of Jesus Christ and also the Holy Spirit. The Catholic Church defined the natures of Christ and the nature ofthe Holy Spirit. If you believe in the Trinity you have accepted the Catholic Church’s formal definition of the Trinity. And no, you did not get it from scripture alone. The Trinity doctrine is stated in Greek philosophical terms that are completely foreign to the scriptures. So let’s be truthful here the allegation that the Catholic church has changed doctrines is an absolute falsehood, in other words, a lie.
But you are correct in one thing. When you say , “…my authority doesn’t change” you are indeed correct. For once a train goes off the track it never goes back on. Similarly once wrong your authority will always be wrong. And don’t tell me your authority is the scriptures. You authority is your interpretation of the scriptures. There is a very big difference between the two.