S
Semangelof
Guest
No, that truth did not set us free. It led to murder and terror.And that truth will set you free.
No, that truth did not set us free. It led to murder and terror.And that truth will set you free.
Some of it were certainly necessary. Also, murder implies killing of innocents. If the said people were guilty of promoting heresy when warned, then there is nothing wrong with the death penalty.No, that truth did not set us free. It led to murder and terror.
Would you kill me if you had the power? My other question is are you representative of the catholic church?Some of it were certainly necessary. Also, murder implies killing of innocents. If the said people were guilty of promoting heresy when warned, then there is nothing wrong with the death penalty.
Why would I kill you?Would you kill me if you had the power? My other question is are you representative of the catholic church?
Thanks Tomster.As for a specific denomination, see the link at the bottom of his posts.
Some teachings are given infallibly so we can have assurance that this is divinely revealed.That teaching could be done without any infallible statements, since Catholics are expected to assent to all teachings of the RCC.
Why issue an statement if it’s infallibility cannot be known?
You are correct - it isn’t a quote, and I apologize. I thought it was a quote, but I searched the thread also and no such statement exists anywhere. It is apparently an unintentional paraphrase from posts 22 and 49. Here’s an actual quote, with my comments added in italicized blue:First, I don’t recall asking that question. I looked through this whole thread and could not find it. Could you tell me the number of the post you got this from?
I think I simply combined two ideas from these comments:Why bother making infallible statements at all? If all Catholic teachings are binding, and, as others have said, it shouldn’t matter at all to the average person in the pew, why make them?..Interesting. So there is disagreement among Catholics about a very important issue*(ie whether a particular teaching is infallible)*
Truer words were never spoken here on the CAFs! :sad_yes:I see how the sola scriptura, and everyman a priest has divided the faith down many roads. Protestants lack a strong enough authority to hold the sheep together, they divide forever.
This, too, is true.I remember the old catholic church. That much authority became a terrible, terrible, terrible thing. I tremble when I think of the things done in the name of God.
Go the to Church that Christ established, and then conform your beliefs to that Body.Where should I go?
Hmm, OK?That, of course, can be debated by going into what the church fathers wrote, but that would create the very back-and-forth mess I don’t care to get into.
No dictating going on here! The only mind-set is fidelity to the facts with solid discussion and reasoning based on them. Certainly you don’t have a problem with that?It’s incumbent on YOU to make good on your claims that this was a preexisting position and that the idea of SS was totally absent from the thoughts of the church until the Reformation. I find it astonishing that you dictate who must prove what, as if it’s a foregone conclusion that your position was right. Man alive, I can just see what kind of a discussion it would end up being with that kind of mind-set involved.:dts:
Absolutely. Note, however, that my reference to pride was specifically in relation to the desire to “make my own rules”.I’ve addressed this issue earlier. But just as a side note, let me say that just because someone questions what an authority states does not HAVE to mean that the root of that is pride. It could be, but not necessarily. It could also be that the person doing the questioning value his soul greatly.
Paul expected them to respect his authority in preaching the Gospel. He never said they should place their personal interpretation of Scripture over his authority as you indirectly assert. I believe he was using a bit of hyperbole since no other Apostle would preach a false gospel. His preaching - by virtue of his office of Apostle, willed by the Father, established by the Son and protected by the Holy Spirit - is protected from teaching error in matters of faith and morality.Scripture does tell us to “examine everything carefully” (1 Thess. 5:21). The Bereans were called noble because they tested even what the apostles taught by comparing it with Scripture. Paul, as I’ve mentioned elsewhere, told the Galatian believers that anyone who brings another gospel–even an apostle or an angel–let him be accursed. He could not expect them to do that unless he also expected them to exercise discernment as to whether a particular message is another gospel.
It helps the development of Truth over the course of the era of the Church as it applies to the increasingly complicated world. It establishes areas where the “rehashing” of doctrine is no longer considered. Examples? Canon of Scripture, Trinity, Real Presence, Baptism etc. And it provides evidence to anyone who wishes to see that the Church, guided by the HS does not reverse it’s position through the centuries on these doctrine. **This helps reveal the Church for what it is.Then the question I’ve asked others, I will also ask of you: If we are required to obey them because of their authority, what difference does it make whether they are called infallible or not?
Correct.At any rate, it’s not making sense because you’re contradicting yourself. You said that we are expected to obey because of the authority of the one doing the teaching, not because of its infallibility.
I don’t think I said that. The authority of the Church is better recognized - over the course of history - by it’s unwavering proclamation of an infallible truth.Now you’re saying that we can know to obey it because of its infallibility.
They are both true: we obey the Church because It has divine authority; we recognize the divine authority and protection given to the Church by virtue of its unwavering proclamation of the Truth over the course of history.But according to you, we ALREADY know to obey it because of the authority of the hierarchy and because God has not placed us in a position of authority.
Really? Is that a divinely revealed truth or one you simply made up to explain that which you don’t understand? Honestly - who gets to decide when enough “detail” exists for it to be something we “need” to know. Me? You? Can the opinion of what is “enough” change over the course of time (like it has with many doctrine among the SS communities)?If the Scriptures don’t go into detail about something, then it’s because it’s not a detail that we need to know.
Of course we can, but that doesn’t mean it is the fullness of Truth regarding the “breaking of the bread”. You are ignoring lots of information related to the “breaking of the bread” in issuing this minimalist reduction. John 6, 1 Cor 10, Acts 2:42, and the entire history of the early Church. In my mind - and to return to the main point of infallible teaching - your inability to follow the original gospel that Paul, John and others “preached” and to instead of chosen another gospel (the breaking of the bread is ONLY a memorial) is evidence of your fallibility; whereas Catholics can look back in time and see this teaching as the naturally incomprehensible divinely revealed supernatural truth for what it is and the Church as God’s instrument - together with Scripture - for revealing it.We’re told what we are to do in that passage: Do that in remembrance of Christ. One can do that without having to know the full details of what he meant.
Absolutely. Note, however, that my reference to pride was specifically in relation to the desire to “make my own rules”.
Paul expected them to respect his authority in preaching the Gospel. He never said they should place their personal interpretation of Scripture over his authority as you indirectly assert. I believe he was using a bit of hyperbole since no other Apostle would preach a false gospel. His preaching - by virtue of his office of Apostle, willed by the Father, established by the Son and protected by the Holy Spirit - is protected from teaching error in matters of faith and morality.
It helps the development of Truth over the course of the era of the Church as it applies to the increasingly complicated world. It establishes areas where the “rehashing” of doctrine is no longer considered. Examples? Canon of Scripture, Trinity, Real Presence, Baptism etc. And it provides evidence to anyone who wishes to see that the Church, guided by the HS does not reverse it’s position through the centuries on these doctrine. **This helps reveal the Church for what it is.
**
Correct.
I don’t think I said that. The authority of the Church is better recognized - over the course of history - by it’s unwavering proclamation of an infallible truth.
They are both true: we obey the Church because It has divine authority; we recognize the divine authority and protection given to the Church by virtue of its unwavering proclamation of the Truth over the course of history.
Really? Is that a divinely revealed truth or one you simply made up to explain that which you don’t understand? Honestly - who gets to decide when enough “detail” exists for it to be something we “need” to know. Me? You? Can the opinion of what is “enough” change over the course of time (like it has with many doctrine among the SS communities)?
Of course we can, but that doesn’t mean it is the fullness of Truth regarding the “breaking of the bread”. You are ignoring lots of information related to the “breaking of the bread” in issuing this minimalist reduction. John 6, 1 Cor 10, Acts 2:42, and the entire history of the early Church. In my mind - and to return to the main point of infallible teaching - your inability to follow the original gospel that Paul, John and others “preached” and to instead of chosen another gospel (the breaking of the bread is ONLY a memorial) is evidence of your fallibility; whereas Catholics can look back in time and see this teaching as the naturally incomprehensible divinely revealed supernatural truth for what it is and the Church as God’s instrument - together with Scripture - for revealing it.
Blessings!
Exactly.You said that we are expected to obey because of the authority of the one doing the teaching, not because of its infallibility
On my own I wouldn’t mind, but in a forum like this? We’d get nowhere. I’ve seen it happen before: One side quotes a church father that allegedly supports his view, and then the other side fires back a contradictory quote and/or claims that the particular church father is being taken out of context, etc. So saying merely that I “don’t want to refer to the fathers” is oversimplifying, misrepresentative, and ignoring this explanation of mine, which I have already given in another post.Well, you don’t want to refer to the fathers to resolve this
I doubt that seriously. But in regard to the tone of this comment, I suggest you read and meditate on 1 Cor. 13.–and, truthfully, it wouldn’t be a good idea for one who holds your position to attempt it.
Really? Why, then, did I quote/make reference to NT writings elsewhere in this thread. I really have no idea where you’re getting this from.And you seem to eschew gathering data regarding what is taught and portrayed by the NT authors taken as a whole on the subject.
Well, first of all, SS does not speak against STC, at least not in one sense. SS does not militate against tradition or the church. Anyone who uses SS to justify abandonment of church and tradition either doesn’t understand it or is distorting it. SS says that tradition and the church are not infallible, and that the only infallible rule is Scripture, which means that both the Church and tradition are subject to Scripture. So it does acknowledge all three (STC), but not the T and C in the way that the RCC defines them.So as the conversation now stands, it IS incumbent upon YOU to make good on the claims of the Reformation protest against this preexisting position and show why the evidence of positive theology rationally compels one to abandon STC in favor of SS.
But why is that necessary? You already submit to the RCC because you believe firmly that she speaks for God, and that her teachings must be assented to. Are you more likely to believe an RCC teaching that is declared infallibly than one that is not?Some teachings are given infallibly so we can have assurance that this is divinely revealed.
Why, sure you do. You already believe that the RCC alone has the authority to interpret Scripture, teach, etc., so that is your assurance.While we must give religious assent to even teachings that have not been dogmatically (that is, infallibly) proclaimed, we do not have the assurance that this is divinely revealed.
I’ve already explained this. 2 Tim. 3:16-17 says that Scripture makes the man of God thoroughly equipped for every good work, and complete. If something by itself makes you fully equipped and complete, there is no need for anything else. That is sufficiency.No leap. The Bible is clear where in the NT it is held as useful, or in other translations profitable, nowhere does it say that it is the sole sufficient source.
I asked first. Why not just answer it?Do you want to learn about them?
or
Do you want to fight about them?
Do you belong to a specific denomination of Protestantism?
Maybe this link helps?
A DISCUSSION OF INFALLIBILITY
I ask you, as a professed Protestant, what good are good works? What need of them have you? According to Protestant theology all you need is faith? Yes/No?I’ve already explained this. 2 Tim. 3:16-17 says that Scripture makes the man of God thoroughly equipped for every good work, and complete. If something by itself makes you fully equipped and complete, there is no need for anything else. That is sufficiency.
I think you have misunderstood the teaching of the Apostles that is embraced by the Catholic Church. We are taught by the Apostles that Jesus is Head of His One Body, the Church. We are taught by Jesus that obedience to the Church is obedience to Christ.I’m afraid you’ve missed the point. If one must assent unconditionally, that means necessarily that one must assent without question, without testing the authority using what has been inspired by God. That puts what has been inspired on a lower level than the RCC.
Now your comment of “testing authority” really is a matter of comparing your own private interpretation of the scriptures to what God has revealed to His One Body, the Church. What you are saying is that, if your personal interpretation is different, then you will rely upon your own perceptions instead, and reject the Church.… without testing the authority using what has been inspired by God.
For the record, the Catholic Church is not “Roman”.Code:That puts what has been inspired on a lower level than the RCC.
I don’t need to. The existence of various interpretations does not prove that the text cannot be clearly grasped. People can see a text clearly for what it says but then reject it because it differs from their pet theory or beliefs.How do you explain the thousands of various Protestant sects then?
Let’s apply this to the RCC. Do all Catholics agree about the number of infallible teachings of the RCC?It is obvious to anyone, who has the slightest familiarity with Scriptures and other religious sects, that no matter HOW you say you have arrived at your interpretation (including private enlightenment by the Holy Spirit) they will be contradicted by others claiming the exact same methods!
Then why do Catholics still disagree?Only an authority, a Religion, can settle what a Religion has produced.