K
Krocker
Guest
ChurchMilitant,
You wrote: “If you’re looking for any religious environment that is all sweetness and light, I suspect you’re on the wrong planet.”
Response: Maybe that’s true. I’m just saying if what we are ultimately trying to do is spread the Word to nonbelievers, I would rather they know our commonalities than that we tend to bicker, sometimes bitterly, on issues they would probably see at least initially as irrelevant. I have had numerous discussions with nonbelievers as to this very point, which has turned them off to CHRISTIANITY regardless of Catholic or Protestant beliefs, and I think that is very sad.
You wrote: “Of the two choices (Catholic vs non) I will have to assert that in my experience, the Catholic teachings have proved more scriptural and in better agreement with the writings of the early church.”
Response: Hence your beliefs, no doubt. Does “in your experience” mean what the Church tells you? (I’m not trying to be rude, that’s an honest question). I thought Catholics could not interpret scripture on their own? How then can you compare whether one interpretation is more right than the other when you aren’t allowed to interpret at all?
You wrote: “In both cases the scriptural teachings were ignored or twisted to permit their practices.”
Response: Agreed, I’ve seen it too. Believe it or not, I’m having pro-Catholic type conversations with Protestant family members (at least to the extent that a lot of divisive issues are largely irrelevant).
You wrote: “Can you show me a passage of the Word of God that tells us that we should not show deference to those who lead and teach us in the Church?”
Response: Deference? No, obviously there are verses that call for this. Undying devotion and refusal to question is not in there either. I think it’s pretty clear that scripture is difficult to interpret (parables, Peter’s claim that Paul’s teachings were “difficult”). It’s for that reason that I find it hard to swallow that fallible humans can get every single point absolutely right, however miniscule.
You wrote: “The earliest discussion that I can find on [limbo] is from the early 4th century.”
Response: So a discussion and concept that is 1600 years old was just now clarified (or having to be re-clarified) as not official teaching? Why wouldn’t that have been stamped out hundreds of years ago? (Again, an honest question, I’m not trying to be rude).
You wrote: “If you’re looking for any religious environment that is all sweetness and light, I suspect you’re on the wrong planet.”
Response: Maybe that’s true. I’m just saying if what we are ultimately trying to do is spread the Word to nonbelievers, I would rather they know our commonalities than that we tend to bicker, sometimes bitterly, on issues they would probably see at least initially as irrelevant. I have had numerous discussions with nonbelievers as to this very point, which has turned them off to CHRISTIANITY regardless of Catholic or Protestant beliefs, and I think that is very sad.
You wrote: “Of the two choices (Catholic vs non) I will have to assert that in my experience, the Catholic teachings have proved more scriptural and in better agreement with the writings of the early church.”
Response: Hence your beliefs, no doubt. Does “in your experience” mean what the Church tells you? (I’m not trying to be rude, that’s an honest question). I thought Catholics could not interpret scripture on their own? How then can you compare whether one interpretation is more right than the other when you aren’t allowed to interpret at all?
You wrote: “In both cases the scriptural teachings were ignored or twisted to permit their practices.”
Response: Agreed, I’ve seen it too. Believe it or not, I’m having pro-Catholic type conversations with Protestant family members (at least to the extent that a lot of divisive issues are largely irrelevant).
You wrote: “Can you show me a passage of the Word of God that tells us that we should not show deference to those who lead and teach us in the Church?”
Response: Deference? No, obviously there are verses that call for this. Undying devotion and refusal to question is not in there either. I think it’s pretty clear that scripture is difficult to interpret (parables, Peter’s claim that Paul’s teachings were “difficult”). It’s for that reason that I find it hard to swallow that fallible humans can get every single point absolutely right, however miniscule.
You wrote: “The earliest discussion that I can find on [limbo] is from the early 4th century.”
Response: So a discussion and concept that is 1600 years old was just now clarified (or having to be re-clarified) as not official teaching? Why wouldn’t that have been stamped out hundreds of years ago? (Again, an honest question, I’m not trying to be rude).