P
PC_Master
Guest
No – they’re asserting themselves to be right, because they believe that. They don’t believe themselves to be infallible, however.…they then simply fall back on “you’re wrong”…which to my mind means that they are asserting themselves…to be infallibly correct in interpretation.
On the other hand, talking to many Roman Catholics, it comes down to much the same thing “you’re wrong because the RCC’s interpretation says so”. How do you verify the RCC from an outside source? If one has to trust what the RCC says, and how it interprets things, for those things to point to the RCC, it’s circular logic, period. So, what’s your outside source? I’m pretty sure that outside source is your own faith in the RCC, and while that may be as good a source as any can hope for, it’s also a fallible source, and thus won’t do much good in demonstrating the validity of the RCC to others.
It’s much the same way dealing with Roman Catholics and the idea that all Protestants embrace SS.I don’t think there is any dearth of good apologetic explanations for Catholic belief, I just think that the n-Cs that we encounter are generally not knowledgeable enough (or are just too set in their a-C thinking) to actually comprehend Catholic apologetics. Neither one of those options makes for a very good discussion.
Most don’t disregard that point. Most of us simply disagree that Roman Catholic tradition is the tradition scripture speaks of.Anyway, I don’t see why you disregard the fact that the Bible tells us explicitly that Tradition is relevant and that we need more than the NT.
The basis for believing in the inspiration of scripture is the issue. Did the Roman Catholic Church, as it exists today (at least at the very core) exist as the apostolic church, or is the RCC a deviation from that? And whether it is or not, how do we know? If you have to rely on statements of the RCC to verify this, then you’re on shaky ground, and it is indeed a case of circular logic.The authority of the Bible is circular, no doubt about that – but it’s at least a circularity that both Catholics and Protestants agree upon. So the fact that the Bible says that scripture is inspired is not really an issue (at least between Catholics and Protestants, it might be between Christians and other religions).
I’m not saying there’s any external source available except for our faith in X, but at least people should be willing to admit that. I believe as I do because I have faith that God won’t let me fall into grave error if I’m earnestly seeking the truth. Likewise, you have faith that the RCC won’t fall into error, and therefore you trust its teachings.
The question is – how do you know you’re having the right faith? Are you not capable of believing error? What we’re really dealing with isn’t a case of “objective truth versus individual truth”, it’s a case of every person having faith in what they believe.
And in the Eastern Orthodox view, those churches (congregations) and persons were Orthodox, I’m sure. Each group obviously interprets the past in light of what it believes is true. The question is how we can know which interpretation is right.But the Catholic church views those Christian churches at the time as part of itself, not forerunners. So Peter and Paul were Catholic, in its view…
Actually, I’m more interested in seeing you prove that anyone aside from God alone can actually forgive sin. I’m also interested in seeing you disprove the concept that if we (or the apostles, as humans) forgive the sins of another, we’re only doing so saying “we believe God forgives you”.Apparently, PC wanted me to prove to him that when Jesus Christ gave authority to his Apostles to forgive sins in His name in John 20:22-23, that this was indeed true.
Continued…