R
rcwitness
Guest
Is the Layman able to know and uphold the Deposit of Faith (Sacred and Written Tradition), guided by the Holy Spirit, just as clergy?
The “just as” part is where I would note that Bishops and the Pope have a very particular charism …so I would not put it that way.Is the Layman able to know and uphold the Deposit of Faith (Sacred and Written Tradition), guided by the Holy Spirit, just as clergy?
Yes! I agree that the Magisterium (Bishop of Rome/College of Bishops) are necessary to confirm the Deposit of Faith throughout the ages. In that sense, those clergy are equipped with a gift greater than laity.The “just as” part is where I would note that Bishops and the Pope have a very particular charism …so I would not put it that way.
But yes a Christian who is also a lay person can very well know and uphold the deposit of Faith and be guided by the Holy Spirit (in a way in harmony with the Teaching Office of the Church- which is guided by the Holy Spirit in a very particular way - of course).
Aquila and Priscilla being wonderful examples from Acts.
I’m not disrespecting priests at all. I am doing them a service, actually. They are spread thin, and cannot bear the burden of educating and directing everyone all the time. Neither can they do what the Holy Spirit does! But I do not neglect to seek their counsel! I just don’t place all my trust in them, nor would I think a good priest would want us to.No. I’m not coming from a Protestant point of view at all.
I just don’t trust priests to always represent what they’ve learned in seminary. Plus, priests don’t make up the Magisterium
Many may say I am wrong for not having the “fullness of the truth” but I am from a tradition were the minimum to preach is 7 years study (including an official Masters although many go to PhD). Not saying this answeres the question but some other denominations do take studying and learning Hebrew and Greek quite seriously as a respondent to your post (did not) pointed out.Is the Layman able to know and uphold the Deposit of Faith (Sacred and Written Tradition), guided by the Holy Spirit, just as clergy?
I would never say that any individuals, be they laymen or clergy, are individually guided by the Holy Spirit regarding the Deposit of Faith. Christ left us a Church as a teaching authority.Is the Layman able to know and uphold the Deposit of Faith (Sacred and Written Tradition), guided by the Holy Spirit, just as clergy?
Not in a way contrary to the Teaching Authority of the Church - but it is important to clarify that one can say a Christian can be guided by the Holy Spirit in the reading and understanding of Sacred Scripture or in other knowing and living of the faith.I would never say that any individuals, be they laymen or clergy, are individually guided by the Holy Spirit regarding the Deposit of Faith. Christ left us a Church as a teaching authority.
Quite correct!We are all part of the Common Priesthood through Baptism.
The word your looking for is “ordained”. We are consecrated.But we laity are not Consecrated.
…some are even far more educated than many Priests.We are not formed and educated such as a Priest is.
Even if the priest clearly ignores Holy Tradition and Holy Scripture? A lay person is not allowed to speak up about it? What about St. Paul’s example with St. Peter, correcting him in his error? (maybe that’s a bad example, because maybe St. Paul is considered a bishop or something? They say St. Peter was the first pope. )Everyone is capable of thinking for themselves, but in order to be authoritative in any living tradition, you need the official backing of that tradition. A lay person doesn’t have that.
In other words, listen to your priest.
May have to be because the Catholics on America are worried about “not being conservative”, and some are not agreeing to the “liberalness” of Pope Francis? And that Evangelical thoughts are quite influential here? And that we have bishops that’s wording can be interpret as going against doctrine? And that a certain Archbishop in United States implied one should not obey the Pope?Reading CAF , whats going on in USA that laity is so distrustful their clergy will get the Deposit of Faith wrong or anything else?
Well said.We are all part of the Common Priesthood through Baptism. But we laity are not Consecrated. We are not formed and educated such as a Priest is.
I hear your argument constantly…I dont trust my Priests…and believe me, in my Diocese its a sentiment being echoed for reasons other then the Deposit of Faith.
Sorry but that is an issue you need to deal with and resolve. Its an argument invading and destroying the Church from within.
Look at What happens Sunday, We go to Mass, hear scripture, then a Homily. There are 2 Liturgies,
the Liturgy of the Word
the Liturgy of the Eucharist.
In the Sacraments
The Priest also follows a form of Liturgy.
What exactly dont you trust about a Priest or the Clergy.
Being extremely busy or stretched thin is no valid reason to distrust.
You are doing the clergy a grave disservice suggesting they might get it wrong, and you are scandalising others with this attitude.
It is the Bishop’s job to Sheperd his flock, his Parish Priests help him do this.
Question, have you ever been given wtong information about yhe Deposit of Faith by a Priest?
People in USA always like to question authority, and the Church is no exception. We don’t have a big tradition of respecting and deferring to the priests’ judgment as some other countries do. And a lot of conservatives don’t like it when the priests aren’t as conservative as they are. In addition, with so many Protestants around insisting that you don’t need the priest and you can just read the Bible and go straight to Jesus, some of the thinking tends to rub off on Catholics, especially when said Catholic encounters a priest espousing some view (such as more tolerance for gays or illegal immigrants) that said Catholic personally doesn’t agree with.Reading CAF , whats going on in USA that laity is so distrustful their clergy will get the Deposit of Faith wrong or anything else?