P
PC_Master
Guest
No problem – just wrap quote] and /quote] around the text. You can find a post and click the “quote” button beneath it to get an idea of how this works.I don’t know how to do the quote thing, could you tell me how? For now I just copy and pasted what you said into my post I hope that’s allright.
[quoteAlso, I did think you were Sola Scriptura, sorry bout that.
[/quote]
Many people make that mistake.
Yep, they had those people.You’re right! They did have the apostles, and those who learned from them, I.E. St. Ignatius of Antioch, St. Polycarp, St. Clement of Rome.
But it didn’t stop there, it kept going in pristine fashion. Christ himself said so:
Matt. 28:18-19 “All power in heaven and on earth has been given to me. Go, therefore and make disciples of all nations…” Matt 28:20 “teaching them to observe all I have commanded you. And behold, I am with you always, until the end of the age.”
Yes – and more specifically, it can be applied to each member of the church. Or, is there some reason you know that this can apply only to the supposed successors of the apostles, but not to anyone else?How can He just be with the apostles till the end of the age, clearly they will die within 50-70 years of His death. This must refer to the church. He doesn’t say I’ll give you a book till the end of age, He says I will be with you until the end of age.
True – but you can bring them in front of other believers as a collective.Clearly, the final authority here is the church. He can’t be talking about some intangible church made of only spirit, because you can’t bring your brother in front of an intangible church to settle an argument.
Well, some of those works do have later dates. However, the written evidence I can find doesn’t show the Acts of Peter, or most of the other non-canon works as having even a reasonable following in the church in the early centuries.There were many works floating around. The Gnostics, Acts of Peter, and so forth.
The gospel of John was in question by whom?Many didn’t agree on the Gospel of John, Revelation, James and others. It took the Authority of the Church to settle the matter.
What’s your means of proving the inspiration of the teachings of the RCC?There is no reasonable way to prove the inspiration of the Bible without the Catholic Church. Trying to prove inspiration of the Bible from the bible is a circular argument.(I know this refers to SS). I’d like to know what your method of proving inspiration of the bible is?
No, the contents of scripture come straight from God, through inspired men, to us.Further, the bible says nothing of the effect that it is the only authority. The bible gets its authority from the Church.
Whereas I believe the holy spirit is the authority, and God chooses to act, not through the RCC, but through revelation to individual believers. Can you show anything conclusive that can only apply to the RCC, and not to a church composed of individual believers?I firmly believe the Holy Spirit is THE authority, but He chooses to practice it through the Catholic Church, just as Jesus said he would as mentioned above.
In response to the first point – the amount of agreement between many of the supposed 30,000 denominations is incredibly high. If you’re looking for complete unity, you won’t find it, even in the RCC. Thus the problem is solved.If it is up to each individual to interpret the bible, only two things are possible.
- We are not open at all to that inspiration, because there are over 30,000 different Protestant denominations, all because of certain aspects of doctrine.
- Or, the Holy Spirit is Schizophrenic. I find this one highly unlikely.
On the second point – agreed. There is only one truth.
Based on what? How do you know that God would act this way? What makes the assumption that he’d act this way more reasonable than that he would act in some other way?I think God would have foreseen all this division, and probably would have done something about it. Like give us an Inerrant guide in these matters.