R
reen12
Guest
Hi, Catholic Dude,
Think of Catholicism’s claim to be the original faith
establised by Jesus. The truthfulness of scripture,
written by and then interpreted by a God-ordained
group of men. “Entrusted” to them.
Later, Luther comes along and says the Church has
essentially jumped the rails and he ends up
establishing a denomination within Christianity.
“Heretic!” is heard, throughout the land.
Go back 2000 years. Judaism is unquestionably
the “parent” faith.
It has doctrine: who the Messiah is to be, what
the “Kingdom of Heaven means” and the premiere
role of crying out for 2500 years:
“Hear, O Israel, the Lord our God, the Lord is One.”
Along comes a group within their group [the Apostles
and original disciples were all Jews] saying Jesus is
God and Messiah, that He rose from the dead,
that man is in original sin…
“Apostasy!” cries rabbinic Judaism. They were
genuinely horrified.
My point is: *Apostasy “works” both ways. *
The quarrel with Luther is over the number of
sacraments, authority, sola fides, etc.
This *pales *in comparison with a group within a group
stating: God is Three Persons in One.
I guess you’d have to really understand the level of
horror this evoked, to understand my point.
Because only one of two possibilities exist:
-Christians are right
or
-they are engaging in a form of blasphemy…
i.e., there is one God, period. Not three Persons.
[Can someone give the distinction between heresy and
apostasy?]
I think the distinction is this:
To depart from part of doctrine is considered heresy.
To deny all of the doctrine is apostasy.
I realize that what is stated above is quite starkly put.
But the issue is stark. As clear as crystal. Either
God is One, or God is three Persons in One.
And the whole issue turns on whether Jesus rose
from the dead.
“If Christ has not risen, then our faith is in vain.” Saul
The gospel accounts of the resurrection are vivid in
their detail.
The question is, are they true?
And that is a matter of faith.
I hope the point on Luther is clearer.
reen12
OK. Maybe I can present my thought more clearly:quote: Catholic Dude
This stuff looks interesting though Im having a hard time following it. What is this stuff about Luther? It looks like your making the claim that what the early/first Christians did was a major “scandal” to the Jews, and yet Christians see no problem with such a “scandal”, in fact Christians say it was “meant to be”…but at the same time what Luther did was a “scandal” to the Catholic Church, and yet Protestants see this “scandal” as a “meant to be” as well. Your saying this is the big irony, the Jews were there “first” and outsiders started to push their way in…Am I understanding you correctly?
If I am understanding you it is because I have though about the same stuff.
Think of Catholicism’s claim to be the original faith
establised by Jesus. The truthfulness of scripture,
written by and then interpreted by a God-ordained
group of men. “Entrusted” to them.
Later, Luther comes along and says the Church has
essentially jumped the rails and he ends up
establishing a denomination within Christianity.
“Heretic!” is heard, throughout the land.
Go back 2000 years. Judaism is unquestionably
the “parent” faith.
It has doctrine: who the Messiah is to be, what
the “Kingdom of Heaven means” and the premiere
role of crying out for 2500 years:
“Hear, O Israel, the Lord our God, the Lord is One.”
Along comes a group within their group [the Apostles
and original disciples were all Jews] saying Jesus is
God and Messiah, that He rose from the dead,
that man is in original sin…
“Apostasy!” cries rabbinic Judaism. They were
genuinely horrified.
My point is: *Apostasy “works” both ways. *
The quarrel with Luther is over the number of
sacraments, authority, sola fides, etc.
This *pales *in comparison with a group within a group
stating: God is Three Persons in One.
I guess you’d have to really understand the level of
horror this evoked, to understand my point.
Because only one of two possibilities exist:
-Christians are right
or
-they are engaging in a form of blasphemy…
i.e., there is one God, period. Not three Persons.
[Can someone give the distinction between heresy and
apostasy?]
I think the distinction is this:
To depart from part of doctrine is considered heresy.
To deny all of the doctrine is apostasy.
I realize that what is stated above is quite starkly put.
But the issue is stark. As clear as crystal. Either
God is One, or God is three Persons in One.
And the whole issue turns on whether Jesus rose
from the dead.
“If Christ has not risen, then our faith is in vain.” Saul
The gospel accounts of the resurrection are vivid in
their detail.
The question is, are they true?
And that is a matter of faith.
I hope the point on Luther is clearer.
reen12