Great. Perhaps i will something from you. i still need to study. Sounds you are an expert in it. If so, then i will certainly learn some things.
Not an expert by any means. But I have done some studying for a good number of years. Forgive me if I came off as arrogant or uncharitable.
]If the catholic church was not corrupt, then why was desired in the catholic church itself for a reformation around the 15th century?
Do you consider the inquisitions that was supported by various popes for centuries a sign of corruption?
How about some of the popes, the vicars of Christ who were evil. Is this a sign of corruption?
These are signs of human sin. And frankly, there’s plenty of sin and abuse to go around on both sides.
In Geneva, under the Protestant regime, Catholics were burned at the stake. In England, under the Protestant regimes of Elizabeth I and James I, Catholics were hung, drawn and quartered as a matter of policy. In Ireland, under the British Protestant regime, Catholics were deprived of all basic human rights for 200 years under the Penal Laws. And in the 19th century the Protestant regime allowed 2 million Irish Catholics to starve to death from the potato blight… when all the rulers had to do was open up the graineries - the fruit of Irish Catholic labor - to prevent the mass starvation. And it wasn’t as if the rulers didn’t know that they could prevent it. It was an intentional act of Protestant hatred.
So tell me… do you consider these to be signs of inherent corruption in Protestant Christianity? Or signs of the sinfulness and human frailty of the people involved?
The Catholic Church does NOT teach that Catholics cannot sin… even on a grand scale. It does not teach that the Pope cannot sin in his capacity as a human being. (That’s not what the Infallibility doctrine means. It has nothing to do with the personal opinions or behavior of the Pope). The Catholic Church teaches that the CHURCH cannot err in teaching on matters of doctrine and morals. Only when the Pope speaks
ex cathedra is his position considered Infallible.
Some of these matters have been explained repeatedly in this thread by various posters. But you keep bringing up the same issues that have been addressed. So allow me to state definitively:
We do not believe that the Pope cannot sin. We do not believe that the Pope cannot have erroneous private opinions. We do not believe that a Pope cannot be wicked (though it’s been a good long time, thank God, since we’ve had a wicked Pope). In the medieval period, officials of the Church - including the Pope - did some things that almost all Catholics today consider wicked. Believe me, we probably know our dirty laundry a lot better than you do.
BUT we believe that through the working of the Holy Spirit, God has preserved the Church from spreading false *dogmas *- even in its most wicked periods. And as an added bonus, the power of the Holy Spirit has brought the Church back, time and again, from the abyss of sinful human actions.
When Protestants find human sinfulness, their tendency is to start a new church. This is in their DNA. Yes, that’s a slight overstatement. I know some Evangelicals who will stay planted where they are, and will pray and pray and pray for reform. But if reform does not come, they will ultimately start a new church.
What you as a Protestant probably cannot understand is why we choose to stay planted when the Church engaged in horrors like the Inquisition. My response is that the Inquisition was a long time ago. It’s no longer relevant. It was a perversion of the Catholic Christian faith, not a natural outgrowth of it. It has since been repudiated. By the power of the Holy Spirit, and the prayers of the faithful, the Church has reformed itself. If the Church was so intrinsically corrupt that God abandoned it, how then was it able to repent of these sins, when repentance comes from the prompting of the Holy Spirit?