In need of a POPE?

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Contarini:
I want to make it crystal clear that you do *not *speak for me in that respect!

Not that you claimed to. Just letting it be known that I’m not part of that “most part” to which you allude.

Edwin
Okay. I believe most people - at least from either knowing them firsthand or seeing their written thoughts are as I claimed. That’s why I said “for the most part”. It was a general statement with no research involved and hopefully it will be taken as such.

Peace…
 
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RCCDefender:
False Doctrine is not a bona fide reason. If you could prove that the Catholic Church has false doctrines then I’d have to listen.

Stay for the hymns?? :eek: What are you kidding me?! 9 out of 10 Catholics can’t sing. You should hear them at my parish!
No no no my friend. We have misunderstood each other.

Let me clarify: (my position is) correct doctrine is a reason to stay in one’s present faith while false doctrine is a good reason to leave one’s present faith. This is hypothetical (not stating either you or I are wrong). I’m not saying your faith is wrong and you shouldn’t stay in it. Neither am I saying my faith is wrong and shouldn’t stay in it.

When one is convinced beyond a shadow of a doubt that his church’s doctrine is wrong, then he would have then the moral decision to make; i.e. to go with correct doctrine or not. regardless of consequences.

9 out of 10 protestants can’t sing either - at least in the churches I have belonged to 🙂 . That’s why we have choirs who practice and who are led by a choir director.

I personally would not leave my faith for hymns and other accessorials. I would leave for doctrinal reasons if I found my present church was false concerning salvific issues.

Peace…
 
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Contarini:
And the Papacy, some of us (such as Dr. Long and myself) believe, is the historic (and I would say divinely instituted, at least in some sense) instrument of unity. That being said, I don’t think the papacy is infallible, and I think that its errors are in large part responsible for the disunion of Christians (starting with the East/West schism, for which I think papal arrogance is largely to blame).
You obviously misunderstand the meaning of papal infallibility.
Isn’t that the reason for the so many splinters in the protestant church(I’m not talking about the Anglican church).
Why is the Anglican church excluded in this statement? Anglicans are protestants.
Originally Posted by ahimsaman72 And, for the most part, we are quite happy to be in our respective faiths without resorting to electing a pope.
Contarini: I want to make it crystal clear that you do not speak for me in that respect!
Does this mean you are not happy in your respective faith?? Why not?
I’m not trying to invalidate Catholicism as a true Church. I don’t even claim that what I’m saying invalidates Catholicism as the true Church, in the sense of the Church that has preserved the deposit of the Faith and has not officially taught error, and hence the Church to which all Christians should belong.
If you say the the Catholic Church is the true church what keeps you from coming into the fold?
 
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Contarini:
And for myself, I cannot accept that we do not have a valid Eucharist (“we” meaning Protestants as a whole–I’m not just speaking as an Anglican here).
I am sorry but you do not have a valid eucharist because you do not have a validly ordained bishop, priests, or deacons.

Ignastius of Antioch:
You must all follow the bishop as Jesus Christ follows the Father, and the presbytery as you would the Apostles. Reverence the deacons as you would the command of God. Let that be considered a valid Eucharist which is celebrated by the bishop, or by one whom he appoints. Wherever the bishop appears, let the people be there; just as wherever Jesus Christ is , there is the Catholic Church.
Letter to the Smyrnaeans [ca. A.D. 110]
 
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RCCDefender:
You obviously misunderstand the meaning of papal infallibility.
I think you misunderstood me. I know that one can believe in papal infallibility and still think that papal arrogance played an important role in the schism. (The Syllabus of Errors condemned such a view, but then I don’t think any but the most ultra-traditionalist Catholics would say that the Syllabus is infallible!). But since I don’t believe in papal infallibility, I think that there were doctrinal aspects to papal misbehavior in the 11th century as well. I think the claims of the Gregorian Papacy were to a large extent wrong and unjustified (although very understandable given the situation). We don’t need to go into this on this thread . . . .
Why is the Anglican church excluded in this statement? Anglicans are protestants.
Ask gryskull–those were his words not mine. But Anglicanism as a matter of fact has not splintered the way other Protestant groups have. That is to say (lest we get in a big argument about this), Anglicanism has not fractured into several groups of significant size all of which can claim to be Anglican. At least, not till recently:o I suspect that gryskull was simply avoiding a possible response from me to the effect that “Anglicans haven’t splintered, and aren’t really Protestants anyway.” He was trying not to get into an irrelevant side argument, and I appreciated that.
Does this mean you are not happy in your respective faith?? Why not?
First of all, I’m not happy with disunity. That was my main point.
In the second place, do I have to give you possible reasons why someone would not be happy as an Episcopalian right now?
And finally, my situation is more complex than that of others because I grew up in what amounted to a house church. I don’t have a solid ecclesiastical identity the way some folks do. That’s one of the reasons I have been drawn to Catholicism.

I am very happy in the two (yes, two–one Episcopalian and one Methodist) churches that I currently attend. I love Anglicanism on the local level–it’s the big picture that bugs me. . . .
If you say the the Catholic Church is the true church what keeps you from coming into the fold?
I didn’t say it was the true Church. I said it was *a *true Church and that my arguments don’t invalidate its claim to be *the *true Church in a relatively restricted sense. I do have doubts about that claim, but if I accepted the premise that dogmatic accuracy was the overriding concern that should govern us in affiliating with a church, then I would probably be able to override those doubts (although Orthodoxy would be a very tempting alternative, since pretty much *all *my issues with Orthodoxy are non-doctrinal). I certainly would not remain Protestant in that case.

Edwin
 
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RCCDefender:
I am sorry but you do not have a valid eucharist because you do not have a validly ordained bishop, priests, or deacons.

Ignastius of Antioch:
You must all follow the bishop as Jesus Christ follows the Father, and the presbytery as you would the Apostles. Reverence the deacons as you would the command of God. Let that be considered a valid Eucharist which is celebrated by the bishop, or by one whom he appoints. Wherever the bishop appears, let the people be there; just as wherever Jesus Christ is , there is the Catholic Church.
Letter to the Smyrnaeans [ca. A.D. 110]
Where does Ignatius describe what it takes to be a “validly ordained” bishop?

Edwin
 
Ignastius of Antioch:
You must all follow the bishop as Jesus Christ follows the Father, and the presbytery as you would the Apostles. Reverence the deacons as you would the command of God. Let that be considered a valid Eucharist which is celebrated by the bishop, or by one whom he appoints. Wherever the bishop appears, let the people be there; just as wherever Jesus Christ is , there is the Catholic Church.
Letter to the Smyrnaeans [ca. A.D. 110]

If the bishop is not appointed by the Catholic Church then he is not valid. Furthermore, many protestant churches do not even have bishops or any heirarchy. They do not believe in transubstantiation or confessing sins to a priest; this invalidates their Lord’s Supper.
 
They only invalidate a claim to “perfect unity,” or perfect anything else. A field with weeds in it is not a perfect field. Weeds and wheat do not have perfect unity. That should be obvious.
The point I’m making is that you can only make the claims you do for your Church by resorting to mystical abstractions that have nothing to do with the reality on the ground. And then you say that we are the ones who deny the Visible Church!
OK, I’ll put it this way-the field is the Church. Look for that field that God has tilled and planted. It is irrelevant that the devil sneaks in and sows weeds. Look for the visible field (the Catholic Church) and hold fast to the Traditions that are passed down from the Apostles.
I have some problems with that claim (mostly because I think it ranks official dogma far too highly above everything else that makes the Church the Church),
Then what, praytell, ranks above Dogma?
So you say. But again, in that case you are the one positing an “invisible Church” that has very little to do with the Church we actually experience.
The “church we actually experience” is irrelevant. I doubt you have the same intentions, but that is the same kind of arguement posted by my apostate friends, “People are just going to have sex anways, who cares what some old man in a white dress says from his ivory tower in Rome.” What matters is the teaching of the Church, that the teaching and the “actuality” doesn’t always jive is irrelevant. Those who do not hold fast to what is taught will pay for it later.

You see the visible Church every time you see the Pope on TV or drive by your local Catholic church. The Church is the city on a hill-it is blatantly obvious and visible. The Church has existed from the days of Jesus to this very day, and will continue to the end of time, as Jesus Himself promised.
That the promise of Christ is made to the whole Church, namely to all believers who receive bread and wine in memory of Him.
He said that all must eat His flesh and drink His blood to have eternal life. Some of his disciples found this hard to follow and left him. It is not merely bread and wine.
It was not made to the Apostles simply as office-bearers within the Church, but as representatives of the Church. Indeed, any view of office within the Church that does not see it as representative of something present in all believers is false to the clear teaching of the New Testament (especially the letter to the Hebrews and the second chapter of Acts, with its invocation of Joel’s prophecy about the Spirit coming on all).
Prove it. Pentacost is the birthday of the Church, the Sprit came upon the Apostles-not everyone in general. The Fathers affirm the necessity of the Priesthood and the Church has consistently taught this. It has only been a modern invention to say that we don’t need an actual Priesthood.
The question that we Protestants need to be asking is whether you think we are (even if imperfectly) within the covenant of grace (to use some Puritan language!). It seems that Vatican II grants that we are–that we receive genuine grace from baptism and from the Word of God. This is not the same kind of grace received by a non-Christian of good faith. It is sacramental grace received through the visible means of grace. That’s a key difference, and it’s vitally important to us.
I would say this, I believe it to be difficult for anyone outside of the Catholic Church to be saved. I do not despair on anyone’s salvation, however, I don’t see how lacking the Sacraments would be in anyone’s favor. In that manner I see poor aborigines and protestants in the same boat, with the advantage possibly to the aborigine because he truly knows no better. Seems to me it would be awfully hard for a protestant to claim invincible ignorance. As Christ teaches:

Luke 6:46-49
46 “Why do you call me, ‘Lord, Lord,’ but not do what I command?
47 I will show you what someone is like who comes to me, listens to my words, and acts on them.
48That one is like a person building a house, who dug deeply and laid the foundation on rock; when the flood came, the river burst against that house but could not shake it because it had been well built.
49But the one who listens and does not act is like a person who built a house on the ground without a foundation. When the river burst against it, it collapsed at once and was completely destroyed.”

Furthermore, if you find your position to be right-why would you or any other protestant care what the Church teaches? Seems to me if you ask and find the Church’s position to be important, you ought to really look into jumping aboard the Barque of Peter!
 
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RCCDefender:
Ignastius of Antioch:
You must all follow the bishop as Jesus Christ follows the Father, and the presbytery as you would the Apostles. Reverence the deacons as you would the command of God. Let that be considered a valid Eucharist which is celebrated by the bishop, or by one whom he appoints. Wherever the bishop appears, let the people be there; just as wherever Jesus Christ is , there is the Catholic Church.
Letter to the Smyrnaeans [ca. A.D. 110]
If the bishop is not appointed by the Catholic Church then he is not valid.
Orthodox bishops are not valid? That would be news to the Pope, I think.

Besides, my question is where you find this affirmation in Ignatius. You didn’t answer that, because you can’t. Ignatius doesn’t go into that question.
Furthermore, many protestant churches do not even have bishops or any heirarchy.
Ignatius is speaking about hierarchy within a local church. Are you suggesting that most Protestant churches don’t have pastors and other officers who lead the congregation? Of course they do.

I’m not defending thorough-going congregationalism, which denies the existence of a universal visible Church. I’m just pointing out the limits of what you can prove from Ignatius.
They do not believe in transubstantiation or confessing sins to a priest; this invalidates their Lord’s Supper.
Well, that’s an affirmation I have no reason to accept. I understand why you believe it, but simply saying it isn’t going to convince me.

Edwin
 
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Contarini:
Ignatius is speaking about hierarchy within a local church.
How do you know that? That isn’t what the Church teaches. If it is I’d like to see it.

How about the writings of Clement of Rome? You know, the pope? Do his words count for anything with you??

Clement of Rome:
Our Apostles knew through our Lord Jesus Christ that there would be strife for the office of bishop. For this reason, therefore, having receive perfect foreknowledge, they appointed those who have already been mentioned, and afterwards added the further provision that, if they should die, other approved men should succeed to their ministry. As for these, then, who were appointed by them, or who were afterwards appointed by other illustrious men with the consent of the whole Church, and who have ministered to the flock of Christ without blame, humbly, peaceably and with dignity, and who have for many years received the commendations of all, we consider it unjust that they be removed from the ministry.
Our sin will not be small if we eject from the episcopate those who blamelessly and holily have offered its Sacrifices.
Letter to the Corinthians [ca. A.D. 80]
 
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RCCDefender:
How do you know that?
Because I’ve actually read Ignatius’s letters. No one disputes that he is writing to individual churches and that bishops at that era were the leaders of local Christian communities in particular cities. This is still theoretically the case–that’s why you guys quite rightly give all your bishops titles with the name of a city in them–Bishop of Raleigh or Archbishop of Newark instead of Bishop of North Carolina or Bishop of New Jersey (as we Episcopalians unfortunately call ours).

Same with Clement. He’s talking about a conflict within the Church of Corinth. The “bishop” in question is the bishop of Corinth. There’s no mention of a hierarchy beyond the local church.

Edwin
 
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ComradeAndrei:
OK, I’ll put it this way-the field is the Church. Look for that field that God has tilled and planted.
I do. And I see it wherever the Word is preached and the Sacraments are administered. I see it in every Christian church that acknowledges Jesus Christ as God incarnate for our salvation.
It is irrelevant that the devil sneaks in and sows weeds.
Not quite irrelevant. Some of the weeds in Protestant churches are quite disturbing. But the wheat is there as well. Converting to Catholicism would be a form of pulling the wheat up with the weeds.
Look for the visible field (the Catholic Church) and hold fast to the Traditions that are passed down from the Apostles.
Some of which we have historically preserved better than you (communion in both kinds, free access of all Christians to Scripture, lay participation in worship, etc.).
Then what, praytell, ranks above Dogma?
Well, I suspect that all Christians would agree that love ranks above everything. But as a matter of fact I didn’t say that anything ranked above Dogma (and I don’t think for a minute that love and Dogma are opposed to each other, so please let’s not go off on that). I said that I didn’t put Dogma as high above everything else as the Catholic Church does.

The everything else would include things like
liturgy
practical piety
traditions of devotion
the formation of local congregations that actually act as the Church in the world
Speaking out against social evils in a countercultural manner
Works of charity

and other such things.

All these things are part of what make the Church the Body of Christ. We will not reach perfection in any of them in this life–but from the Protestant perspective we won’t necessarily reach perfection in dogma either. I’ll grant that dogma is much easier to identify, and so it can be used more easily as a standard for identifying the true Church. But overreliance on this relatively easy standard is a trap, I think. And Christians have too often fallen into it (not just Catholics–the “Orthodox Protestants” of the 17th century were arguably worse).
 
The “church we actually experience” is irrelevant.
Then your boasts of believing in the visible Church are empty.

This statement of yours, more than anything else, expresses the reason I am not a Catholic, although I know that most Catholics wouldn’t put it as baldly as you have. The Church we actually experience is the Church Christ purchased with His own blood. It’s the only Church we’ve got. The Church you believe in is an abstraction. It’s the same spiritualist poison I imbibed growing up in nondenominational evangelicalism.
I doubt you have the same intentions, but that is the same kind of arguement posted by my apostate friends, “People are just going to have sex anways, who cares what some old man in a white dress says from his ivory tower in Rome.” What matters is the teaching of the Church, that the teaching and the “actuality” doesn’t always jive is irrelevant.
No, it is deeply and troublingly relevant. That doesnt mean that we should ignore the teaching of the See of Rome. (By “we” I mean all Christians, not just those of you in full communion.) That is part of the Church as we actually experience it too. I am not the one saying “who cares what a man in a white dress says . . . .” On the contrary, I’m the one saying that we should care about all of it–the dogmas and the popes and the hymns and the rituals and the little old ladies on their back porches in Alabama reading the Bible.
You see the visible Church every time you see the Pope on TV or drive by your local Catholic church.
But you’re telling me that the reality of what I find inside that church is irrelevant.
He said that all must eat His flesh and drink His blood to have eternal life. Some of his disciples found this hard to follow and left him. It is not merely bread and wine.
Of course it isn’t. I didn’t even mean to start an argument about in what sense it is or is not still bread and wine after the consecration, an argument I don’t find profitable (though that may just be a blind spot of mine). But if St. Paul calls it bread, I can call it bread.
Prove it. Pentacost is the birthday of the Church, the Sprit came upon the Apostles-not everyone in general.
Only if you define the Apostles more generally than the Twelve. There were a hundred and twenty there in that upper room, including the Blessed Virgin and other women. Are you sure you really want to go there:D?
The Fathers affirm the necessity of the Priesthood and the Church has consistently taught this. It has only been a modern invention to say that we don’t need an actual Priesthood.
First of all, I didn’t say that. I said that the prophecy of Joel (quoted in Acts 2) says that the Spirit will come upon “all flesh,” and St. Peter said that this was what was happening on Pentecost. I conclude from this and from the Letter to the Hebrews that the ministerial priesthood is an expression of the universal priesthood conferred on all the baptized by the Holy Spirit. In other words, I’m trying to apply that famous “Catholic both/and”!
I would say this, I believe it to be difficult for anyone outside of the Catholic Church to be saved. I do not despair on anyone’s salvation, however, I don’t see how lacking the Sacraments would be in anyone’s favor. In that manner I see poor aborigines and protestants in the same boat, with the advantage possibly to the aborigine because he truly knows no better.
That’s a reasonable and consistent position. There’s no way I could possibly ever accept it. It would be like accepting that all the air I had been breathing up to now and all the food I had eaten and all the water I had drunk were poisonous. Since I am not dead, this is not a tenable conclusion:)
Furthermore, if you find your position to be right-why would you or any other protestant care what the Church teaches? Seems to me if you ask and find the Church’s position to be important, you ought to really look into jumping aboard the Barque of Peter!
All Christians are in some sense part of the Catholic Church. That is affirmed by Vatican II, and I accept it. We are part of the same Church you are. We disagree on just how and to what degree, but that much we can agree on (unless you reject Vatican II). So how can I not care what the Roman Communion teaches? Especially since (like Dr. Long) I believe that the Papacy is an indispensable office within the Universal Church.

The whole point I’m arguing is that “jumping ship” is an inappropriate metaphor.

Edwin
 
Paul also addressed his letters to certain churches. Does that mean what he says in them doesn’t apply to the whole Church? No.

The reason that these letters are so important is because much of what is written in them applies to all of us.

Pope Clement did not say to the Corinthians, “Your sin will not be small…” He said, “Our sin will not be small…”

Ignatius said, “Let **no one ** do anything of concern to the Church without the bishop.”

Jesus was called Jesus of Nazereth. Does that mean he only came for the people of Nathereth or applied his teachings only to them?

Heirarchy beyond the local church? Clement was the pope! The Church of Rome held primacy over the other churches. You can also see that just by the way Ignatius addresses the Church of Rome in his letter.
 
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Contarini:
Only if you define the Apostles more generally than the Twelve. There were a hundred and twenty there in that upper room, including the Blessed Virgin and other women. Are you sure you really want to go there:D?
I have never heard this before. Care to elaborate??
 
Marcion:
The Church of God which sojourns Smyrna, to the Church of God which sojourns in Philomelium, and to all the doiceses of the holy and Catholic Church in every place: May mercy, peace, and love of God the Father and of our Lord Jesus Christ be given you in abundance…
Now with the Apostles and all the just he is glorifying God and the Father Almighty, and he is blessing our Lord Jesus Christ, the Savior of souls, the Helmsman of our bodies, and the Shepherd of the Catholic Church.
The Martyrdom of Saint Polycarp [A.D. 155]

As you can see each of the “individual” Churches are not their own little individual identities at all but actually dioceses of the Catholic Church.
 
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Contarini:
Some of which we have historically preserved better than you (communion in both kinds…
No, not every Catholic Church has communion in both species, but many do.
…free access of all Christians to Scripture…
When, during your time in RCIA, did you not have access to Scripture?
…lay participation in worship, etc.)
Everyone who comes to Mass participates in worship.

You seem to be confusing Traditions with traditions. All of the above, which you had cited as Traditions, are not; they are traditions.
 
As an example of the primacy of the Church of Rome also read St. Polycrates’ Letter to Victor of Rome [ca. A.D. 190].

The letter of Polycrates of Ephesus to Victor of Rome is one of the prime sources for the history of the Quartodeciman controversy. Polycrates was the leader of those bishops of Aisia Minor who opposed Victor’s order in regard to arranging the date of Easter so that it would fall always on a Sunday. Polycrates held a synod with his fellow-bishops, and informed Victor by letter of the reasons for which they had determined to continue following the only custom they knew, that of observing the 14th Nisan, no matter what day of the week. Only a sizable fragment of the letter is extant, preserved by Eusebius (Hist. Eccl. 5, 24, 2-8). In Eusebius’ account, Victor thereupon excommunicated the dioceses of Asia and all of the Quartodecimans, as those who observed the 14th Nisan were called.
 
Not quite irrelevant. Some of the weeds in Protestant churches are quite disturbing. But the wheat is there as well. Converting to Catholicism would be a form of pulling the wheat up with the weeds.
I would say transplanting. Protestantism, objectively, is heretical. That there exists good people within protestantism does nothing to prove that it has any right to exist as a viable alternative to Catholicism or even as another option.
Some of which we have historically preserved better than you (communion in both kinds, free access of all Christians to Scripture, lay participation in worship, etc.).
Protestantism has preserved nothing better than the Catholic Church. Communion in both kinds is a tradition (little t) that is subject to the authority of the Church, as the Body, Blood, Soul, and Divinity are present in even the smallest particle of the Precious Body or smallest drop of the Precious Blood. Therefore, it is totally acceptable to receive Communion in one form and not only acceptable but preferable as you are less likely to have mishaps with the Host than with the Blood.

Holy Mother Church is the whole reason anyone even has the Scriptures today. If it weren’t for the clergy (namely monks) of the Catholic Church painstakingly and beautifully handwriting every single word, there wouldn’t have been a Bible to read. If it weren’t for the Church chaining them to the wall, they would have been stolen and nobody would be able to read them. Furthermore, since most people couldn’t read, it was the Church that decorated the stained glass windows of the great Cathedrals and pictures in the small country chapels with scenes from the Bible to teach to poor uneducated masses the Gospel. When Gutenburg invented movable type in the West, the first book printed was a Catholic Bible. The Church allowed the first vernacular translations. It wasn’t Luther or Calvin that brought the Bible to the world-the Catholic Church had been doing that for some 1500 yrs. before them.

Lay participation? It is one of the Precepts of the Church-Participate at Mass on Sundays and all Holy Days of Obligation. As RCCDefender pointed out, everyone at Mass is participating in worship. Everyone has their place, and everyone’s place is not up front.

(cont.)
 
Well, I suspect that all Christians would agree that love ranks above everything. But as a matter of fact I didn’t say that anything ranked above Dogma (and I don’t think for a minute that love and Dogma are opposed to each other, so please let’s not go off on that). I said that I didn’t put Dogma as high above everything else as the Catholic Church does.
I almost did go off on that tangent, but I think we would (at least outwardly) agree here. Love and Dogma are part and parcel.
The everything else would include things like
liturgy
Liturgy is part of dogma
practical piety
likewise stems from dogma
traditions of devotion
ditto
the formation of local congregations that actually act as the Church in the world
such as…?
Speaking out against social evils in a countercultural manner
if it wasn’t against dogma it wouldn’t be a social evil
Works of charity
I think you get the point
All these things are part of what make the Church the Body of Christ. We will not reach perfection in any of them in this life–but from the Protestant perspective we won’t necessarily reach perfection in dogma either. I’ll grant that dogma is much easier to identify, and so it can be used more easily as a standard for identifying the true Church. But overreliance on this relatively easy standard is a trap, I think. And Christians have too often fallen into it (not just Catholics–the “Orthodox Protestants” of the 17th century were arguably worse).
How do you fall into a “trap” of dogma? You need an authoritative Church to define such things when questions arise. Otherwise you have denomintations just deciding they will do whatever they feel like.
Only if you define the Apostles more generally than the Twelve. There were a hundred and twenty there in that upper room, including the Blessed Virgin and other women. Are you sure you really want to go there?
We have the gifts of the Holy Spirit, however, that still doesn’t mean that everyone is of the Priesthood. The baptized have the obligation to preach Christ to the world, we are a priestly people but not everyone is a deacon, a priest, or a bishop. Not everyone can consecrate the gifts.
Then your boasts of believing in the visible Church are empty.
Maybe I’m just not explaining this right (and that may very well be true) but this does not invalidate the visible Church. The Church is visible in the Hierarchy, in the Dogmas and Doctrines, in the fact that it has existed from the time of Jesus to now and til the end of time. The Church professes the same Creed, believes in the same doctrines and dogmas in America, in Rome, in Africa, etc.
This statement of yours, more than anything else, expresses the reason I am not a Catholic, although I know that most Catholics wouldn’t put it as baldly as you have. The Church we actually experience is the Church Christ purchased with His own blood. It’s the only Church we’ve got. The Church you believe in is an abstraction. It’s the same spiritualist poison I imbibed growing up in nondenominational evangelicalism
Christ purchased the Church-his Church He set up upon St. Peter and the Apostles-and the Church is to be the pillar of Truth, it is to be perfect and indefectible. That is the Church-that which you can turn to and know that it is right. It does not matter that popes have been debauched or that Joe Schmoe Catholic watches porn-the Church is protected to always teach the Truth. The Holy Spirit will guide us into all Truth through His Church. It is not an abstraction.

And how you can compare nondenominationalism with the Catholic Church is beyond me.

What do you think the visible church should be, all warm and fuzzy, with good sermons and lots of potluck get togethers?

(cont.)
 
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