M
MT1926
Guest
Yeah this would be circular reasoning if we start from your point that Jesus never left anyone here on earth with authority of His Church. Not sure if that makes sense or not. I believe the Church can not err in teachings on faith and morals because Jesus says so, not because the Church says so. See I interpret this verse for myself I’m not just saying what the Church tells me to say. Sure you might want to claim I am being brain washed by the Catholic Church but I can make the same claim about your church. When I read Matthew 16 I see Peter’s name mentioned or Jesus referring to him 9 times in 4 verses. I don’t need anyone to tell me that Jesus is doing something BIG by changing Peter’s name here. So to me I can’t see the circular argument because all I see is a straight line starting with Jesus.Part of the problem is circular thinking. “The church cannot err therefore everything the church teaches is correct.”
No this kind of sounds like a circular argument to me. Like I said I see it claimed all the time but no one ever points to an exact example of where the Church erred or changed a teaching on faith an morals. Now claiming by definition that the Church would be able to declare a falsehood as truth, even though she never has, therefore she must not be able to declare truth is kind of circular isn’t it?By that definition the church could declare anything as truth and it is not truth because it is fact, but because the church declared it to be truth.
This actually kind of proves the Holy Spirit’s guidance of the Catholic to me. As I already stated I totally agree we have had some really, I mean really, bad Popes through the years. We are talking guys I wouldn’t trust alone in my own home. To me the only possible way they didn’t throw the Catholic Church off the rails was because the Holy Spirit wouldn’t let them. I see no other explanation here.
I guess this would depend on the issue. My curious question would be what time frame would you have been comfortable for us humans to fully understand and decide how Jesus wanted certain things? Sure the Apostles were great but I am pretty sure the Bible shows us that they were kind of working off of a learning curve.Part of my issue with the Roman Church and to a lesser extent the Orthodox church is that it took legends, cultural practices, and religious practices and traditions that developed within the first 400-600 years and declared them as “truth”.
Could you please show me where this definition comes from? And more importantly where the authority comes from to interpret this definition of apostolic teaching?The definition of apostolic teaching is that it was taught by Christ and that apostles. Not that it was practiced and believed by the early church. Those two things aren’t the same thing.
Thanks,
God Bles