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nuntym
Guest
Who told you that?snip
What I do know is that the Protestant Bible is without error.
Who told you that?snip
What I do know is that the Protestant Bible is without error.
Take up my challenge … and you will seeYou are very blind IMO; where is the word “infusion” ever used in the NT? Furthermore; where is it used in connection with justification?
And, does yours include book of James ? verse 2:26What I do know is that the Protestant Bible is without error.
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.... "faith apart from works is dead. " ///// Thanks for confirming the Catholic teaching
Do you imagine, that when “all of Judea” came out to be baptized, there was no line?And why do you think you can’t find any examples in the Scriptures of men lined up for miles on end to confess their sins to the Apostles in order to have them absolved?
The Apostles did not separate confession from an act of faith. These did not become separated until the Reformation.Code:Because the Apostolic message was not *confess* and *be forgiven*, but rather *believe* and you *are forgiven*:**Acts 10:43** "Of Him all the prophets bear witness that ***through His name everyone who believes*** in Him receives forgiveness of sins."
Yes, and part of that gospel of forgiveness of sins is "if we confess our sins, He is faithful and just to forgive them. This should not be separated from the proclamation.Acts 13:38 “Therefore let it be known to you, brethren, that through Him forgiveness of sins is proclaimed to you,”
This passage is commonly misapplied to excuse the nature and effects of sin on the believer. IN fact, the Love of Christ is so deep that He will watch us walk right through the gates of Hell. This is the freedom HIs love grants to us. He loves us enough to allow us to walk away from Him. The fact that our sins do not separate us from His love is irrelevant. We are still separated from eternal life with Him. We are His creation, and He came to die for us because He loves us (while we were yet sinners). In His love, He allows us to remain sinners, refusing to accept His sacrifice for our sins.In Rom 8:35 Paul asks rhetorically:“Who will separate us from the love of Christ? Will tribulation, or distress, or persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or peril, or sword?” Notice the one thing that Catholics say will separate us from Christ is conspicuously missing: SIN. A careless overlook by Paul? Heavens no! Paul didn’t put it on the list because according to Pauline theology sin was dealt with, once for all, judicially by death and the shed, sacrificial blood of God’s Sin-bearer.
This is a good summary of the Calvanist Mythology (speaking of faith’s born of the imagination of men). There is no category in Scripture for a “true believer” as you are fond of inventing yourself.For the true believer NOTHING can separate him from Christ. Not even sins, since all of them, yes, all of them, were laid on Christ, once for all, and buried with Him. You see, sin can’t separate the true believer from the love of Christ because through Christ his sins have been forever separated from him.
Indeed, and that faith that gives eternal life is faith that acts, faith that obeys, faith that abides with love and hope. Narrow is the road that leads to life, and one can easily stray from it and be on the road to death once more.Code:For this reason Jesus said:John 5:24 "Truly, truly, I say to you, he who hears My word, ***and believes*** Him who sent Me, has eternal life, and does not come into judgment, but has passed out of death into life."This is called GRACE, my friend. The message of the Apostles was/is about GRACE, FAITH and LIFE eternal in the risen Christ. That's why it's called the "*gospel*" ("*good news*"). :extrahappy:
Not even your understanding…I don’t add to God’s Word.
I agree that God’s grace is a mystery and a stumbling block to men. However, your contrivance of Catholic belief as “God must see something good to merit salvation” is contrary to what the Catholic church believes and teaches. On the contrary, it is the fact that he made purification for our sins on the cross that enables us to participate in this purification. Had He not offered His blood to cover our sins, we would never have the advantage of Purgatory, which we are afforded by His grace. In this purification, all that is dross is burned away, and we are made fit for dwelling with Him in eternity. No snow covered dunghills, but creatures made in His image and likeness, to declare His glory.the simplicity of the Apostolic gospel message of belief in the Person and sacrificial work of Jesus Christ for the forgiveness of sins and the divine gift of eternal life that has caused men to stumble in unbelief down through the centuries. They simply can’t tolerate such grace, such unmerited, divine favor. It’s repugnant to them. God must, in the end, see something good in them to merit their salvation.It’s neither. It completely denies the sufficiency of the sacrifice of Christ:Heb 1:3 “And He is the radiance of His glory and the exact representation of His nature, and upholds all things by the word of His power. When He had made purification of sins, He sat down at the right hand of the Majesty on high.”
They are two inseparable sides of the same coin, Moon. If we are under His grace, then we will not continue in sin. Sin separates people from God, and causes death. Although it is true that avoidance of sin does not cause salvation, one who falls from grace can still be separated from that salvation by sin.As for sin, again, I agree with Paul:Rom 6:1-2 "What shall we say then? Are we to continue in sin so that grace may increase? May it never be! How shall we who died to sin still live in it?"But the avoidance of sin is never the cause of one’s salvation, according to Pauline theology. That’s gifted according to God’s grace through faith (Eph. 2:8-9).
Don’t be discouraged by that, James. There are many folks reading these threads, sometimes ten times more than the ones posting, and they will benefit from your postings. MD is articulating very common heresies, so it is beneficial to have them refuted here, even if they are of no ultimate benefit to MD. When it comes to cases of intractible resistance such as this, prayer is all that will work. He claims to his errant ideas of what the Catholic Church believes and teaches, and insists that these fantasies are reality. No amount of logic can change such things, but only, as he has correctly pointed out, the revelation of God.You claim you don’t add to God’s Word yet you put all kinds of your own ideas into Paul’s “head” and don’t account for ALL of God’s word that is spoken on a matter. You cherry pick a few top level concept verses that seem to support your views but fabricate new semantics and meanings for those other pesky “Catholic verses” that always can’t be so easily explained and contradict you so you try to brush them aside.
I feel like I have just been cheated of 3 days of my life trying hard to help you see how wrong you are only to have you “cut and run”. In your almost 2 years of being here MD you still do not “get it”.James
Moondweller, The Apostolic message was to love God and to love each other. This is clear throughout the new testament. Paul summarizes this in 1Corinthians 13:I take from all of this that your answer to my question is NO. I knew it already but I wondered if you did. And why do you think you can’t find any examples in the Scriptures of men lined up for miles on end to confess their sins to the Apostles in order to have them absolved? Because the Apostolic message was not confess and be forgiven, but rather believe and you are forgiven:Acts 10:43 “Of Him all the prophets bear witness that through His name everyone who believes in Him receives forgiveness of sins.”
Acts 13:38 “Therefore let it be known to you, brethren, that through Him forgiveness of sins is proclaimed to you,”
No, Moondweller, James just reiterates in chapter 2 what paul said above in 1Corinthians 13: here is what James 2 says:You’ve got lots of theories and a fertile imagination (expressed by many words) James, but Christian theology (not theory) is based on divine revelation (not one’s imagination). It’s what makes true Christianity unique amongst all the religions developed by men on this earth, ancient and contemporary.
I’m sorry Moodweller, but you are wrong here. Move up to Romans 2: 5-16 and you will see what Paul says about sin separating man from God:In Rom 8:35 Paul asks rhetorically:“Who will separate us from the love of Christ? Will tribulation, or distress, or persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or peril, or sword?” Notice the one thing that Catholics say will separate us from Christ is conspicuously missing: SIN. A careless overlook by Paul? Heavens no! Paul didn’t put it on the list because according to Pauline theology sin was dealt with, once for all, judicially by death and the shed, sacrificial blood of God’s Sin-bearer.
Jesus actually said more than that about those that hear him didn’t he: here’s what Matthew recorded in 7: 21-27:For the true believer NOTHING can separate him from Christ. Not even sins, since all of them, yes, all of them, were laid on Christ, once for all, and buried with Him. You see, sin can’t separate the true believer from the love of Christ because through Christ his sins have been forever separated from him. For this reason Jesus said:John 5:24 "Truly, truly, I say to you, he who hears My word, and believes Him who sent Me, has eternal life, and does not come into judgment, but has passed out of death into life."This is called GRACE, my friend. The message of the Apostles was/is about GRACE, FAITH and LIFE eternal in the risen Christ. That’s why it’s called the “gospel” (“good news”). :extrahappy:
Indeed, this is what John says in 1 john 2: 1-11They are two inseparable sides of the same coin, Moon. If we are under His grace, then we will not continue in sin. Sin separates people from God, and causes death. Although it is true that avoidance of sin does not cause salvation, one who falls from grace can still be separated from that salvation by sin.
It is similar to the way a bullet works. A bullet cannot bring life to a person, but a bullet can certainly be the cause of losing one’s life.
It strikes me Moondweller, that you can’t bear to say that the theological virtues are Faith, Hope and LOVE, and as you should know from 1Corinthians 13, the greatest of these is Love.
Love is the essence of Christianity because it is the essence of God, yet your theology seems to ignore it, focusing instead on Faith and Hope. Because you have faith, you have hope. But thats not enough. To be saved, we must love God and love one another. Jesus said that this was the essence of Scripture.
brother!!Here is your misunderstanding:Tanner, Tanner, Tanner … read again what you wrote above. You contradict U-self, thereby disproving your premise, and actually pointing out the validity of Catholic FOCUS. Catholics indeed focus on the messenger(s) … the Person of Christ, and those saints who are IN CHRIST.
Who died on the Cross ? Christ or his message ? Christ said, " If I be lifted up, I will draw all men to ME". Christianity is PERSON(al) relationship with Christ … not the protestant THEORY of the Christian message. You & Md can have ALL your Faith in Bible Scripture Theories … but that won’t get you to heaven. Your ‘Faith Alone’ in the scriptural MESSAGE won’t seal the deal.
Recall what Christ said at the Judgment … “Depart from me, I never KNEW YOU”.
The scriptural MESSAGE is only the means God uses to convict a person and bring about conversion / adoption INTO the PERSON of CHRIST.
Rebirth my ‘protesting’ friend … REBIRTH into the PERSON, not the message. The two become ONE, when the H.S. is INFUSED into the new convert by GRACE.
Hello Nun,brother!!
MD, Tanner, Mick Taylor and others, do you know why we Catholics are so, as you say, focused on sin? It is because we know sin is the most cruel thing anyone can do to God. Sin hurts God so much that we talk time and again, and read, and meditate, and put it in our minds all the time, all the ways we can and have hurt the Lord so we can avoid them and acquire the grace to do that and do effective penance through grace in reparation; and at the same time ask for the grace by prayers, by supplications, by reading, by talking, by posting here at CAF and other websites, by fasting, etc. to know and do what pleases Him the most.
Because we LOVE Him!
All this talking about “Jesus payed the price of sin of mankind once for all, so let’s not talk about sin anymore,” or (even worse) “Jesus payed the price of sin of mankind once for all, so my sins do not matter anymore” is something repugnant for us Catholics and rouses something fierce in us—as you can see how we can never seem to leave this topic alone. The thing is, we Catholics all know that the redemptive act of Jesus’ crucifixion is efficacious once and for all until eternity. But we also know that everytime we sin, it is as if we crucify the Lord again and again and again with the hurt we give Him! We cannot help but feel horror at someone who belittles sin.
Do you want to know how we view sin? Leo J. Trese in The Faith Explained says, “A sin is a refusal to give God our obedience, a refusal to give our love.” He then says, “In all creation there is no evil so great as venial sin, excepting only mortal sin.”
In other words, we think of those who think little of sin as those people who love God little.
Tanner, it starts with love. If you love God, you will want to do his will. When you fail to do this and sin, you will be contrite about your sin, confess it to the priest that is Jesus’ ordained representative, do penance, and repent of it, avoiding sin in the future. You will do this because of your love of God.Hello Nun,
I glad you brought up the issue of sin. This is the very starting point on the path to reconciliation with God…would you agree? I hope so. Something I have noticed throughout CAF is that no one seems to have dealt with the sin issue on Gods terms, but rather their own terms.
As you seem to emphasize; it is very important and without first dealing with your sin issue Gods way, then the rest is mute because you will not receive the Holy Spirit. Perhaps you might agree the Publican in Luke 18 is a model of someone dealing with the sin issue.
I was hoping you might consider giving your testimony and how you dealt with your sin as an example to others who may read this; especially among the Catholic brethren.
Thank you and God bless you for bringing this up.
Tanner
The topic is saving grace here; it is imputed 100% at the time a believer truly believes in their heart; whereas you are taught that it is “infused” a little at a time as you go through the Sacraments and other rituals that are not based on Biblical authority.Baptism not the mechanism of rebirth ??
Holy Spirit is not the Holy Element ?
The Eucharist is not delivered to Catholics internally ? Absorbed into the bloodstream … by ‘natural’ Intravenous Infusion. Blood going first to the Heart, and only then to the Mind/Brain. Supernatural Grace to us, reinforcing grace previously received.
Where is the Fatal Flaw ? Perhaps only a FF for those who deny Supernatural Grace of Body & Blood.
Is what you have said a different gospel to the one Christianity has continuously taught for the past 2000 years?The topic is saving grace here; it is imputed 100% at the time a believer truly believes in their heart; whereas you are taught that it is “infused” a little at a time as you go through the Sacraments and other rituals that are not based on Biblical authority.
It is a fatal flaw because it is an attack on Scripture because it denies the complete and effectual atonement accomplished on the cross. Another gospel.
:clapping: You should read this Tanner.Tanner, it starts with love. If you love God, you will want to do his will. When you fail to do this and sin, you will be contrite about your sin, confess it to the priest that is Jesus’ ordained representative, do penance, and repent of it, avoiding sin in the future. You will do this because of your love of God.
You see, this is fundamental to the Catholic view of Salvation. We are put into the state of Grace through Baptism. This sacrament washes away our sin and establishes us as part of God’s One, Holy, Catholic and Apostolic Church. We stay in the state of Grace only as long as we do Gods will, which is to love him and each other. If we fall from Grace, God in his infinite mercy, allows us to be reconciled through the sacrament of reconciliation, which is a real and visible humbling of ourselves to God. We thus can return to the state of Grace. If we die in the state of Grace, we will be embraced by God in heaven.
Its all about Love. Love of God for Man and love of the elect for God and his neighbor. As Saint Paul has said, if you have faith enough to move mountains,but don’t have love, you are nothing. And this is the great loss of Protestantism. They focus on Faith but deny the importance of Love (which is an action word).
I, and all Catholics I would think, totally agree.Hello Nun,
I glad you brought up the issue of sin. This is the very starting point on the path to reconciliation with God…would you agree? I hope so.
Now this is interesting. How does one deal with the “sin issue” on God’s terms?Something I have noticed throughout CAF is that no one seems to have dealt with the sin issue on Gods terms, but rather their own terms.
Correct.As you seem to emphasize; it is very important and without first dealing with your sin issue Gods way, then the rest is mute because you will not receive the Holy Spirit.
If this is so, then every Catholic who sincerely participates in the Roman Rite Holy Mass is a good model of someone dealing with the sin issue, for we say at the beginning of each Mass, with the beating of our breastsPerhaps you might agree the Publican in Luke 18 is a model of someone dealing with the sin issue.
I confess to almighty God,
and to you, my brothers and sisters,
that I have sinned through my own fault,
in my thoughts and in my words,
in what I have done, and in what I have failed to do;
and I ask blessed Mary, ever virgin,
all the angels and saints,
and you, my brothers and sisters,
to pray for me to the Lord our God.
O my God,
I am heartily sorry for having offended Thee,
and I detest all my sins
because I dread the loss of heaven
and the pains of hell,
but most of all because they offend Thee, my God,
Who are all good and deserving of all my love.
I firmly resolve with the help of Thy grace
to confess my sins, to do penance,
and to amend my life.
Amen.
I still deal with my sins everyday, Tanner. Everyone still does, without exemption, until we leave for the other side. Even you, Tanner. We have a saying: Even a Saint sins at least seven times a day.I was hoping you might consider giving your testimony and how you dealt with your sin as an example to others who may read this; especially among the Catholic brethren.
Thank you and God bless you for bringing this up.
Tanner
You are not qualified to be teaching the Catholic faith so please stop teaching a thing you don’t know what you are talking about and creating strawman arguments. The Church does not teach that “grace is infused a little at a time”. What the Church teaches is that God gives us all the grace sufficient for our salvation at baptism and that it begins to transform us over our entire lives in the same way Jesus described the growing vine and the tree that bears good fruit. It’s not a “quantitative” argument it is a sufficiency argument and a recognition of how God NORMALLY prefers to do His work in us. Growing in grace means to be progressively more cooperative with grace and letting God increase our spiritual capacity in proportion to our ability to receive it and to cooperate with it. This same principal in seen in Paul’s writings where he mentions those who are not yet ready for adult food and are still eating infants food. This refers to maturing in the faith and spiritually growing and is harmonious with a concept of God perfecting man in the here and now and even with a concept of a hiearchy of rewards from least to greatest in heaven. Gaining more grace over one’s life is about increasing the capacity of one’s soul to love God more and draw deeper into His Love in the here and now and into deeper beatitude in the afterlife.The topic is saving grace here; it is imputed 100% at the time a believer truly believes in their heart; whereas you are taught that it is “infused” a little at a time as you go through the Sacraments and other rituals that are not based on Biblical authority.
It is a fatal flaw because it is an attack on Scripture because it denies the complete and effectual atonement accomplished on the cross. Another gospel.
This makes no sense. What is “truly believes”? What does a believer believe if he/she does not truly believe? Where in Scripture does it say a believer must truly believe in their heart?it is imputed 100% at the time a believer truly believes in their heart