Least persuasive argument used by Catholics?

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I leave that to the mathematicians. Multiplication and division were never my strong suits in school. English and history, on the other hand, well, I have something of a tentative grasp on those.
Factor analysis is likely to play a part. But those mathematicians and analysts are going to need a lot of help from sociology, theology, and history. Math can help you count the divisions. But the dividing principle is not a mathematical one.

Daunting.

I been grasping history for around 60 years, systematically. Lots of it still to go.

GKC
 
While I agree with your assessment, I think the real question that people should chew on is; should there be divisions. There were not for 1500 years, but there is now.
Why?
Should there be divisions?
If not, how do we get back to a time when there were none?

Also, what is the root cause of divisions?
Goodness… There have been divisions since the beginning…
 
Goodness… There have been divisions since the beginning…
So Arians, Gnostics, etc…are Christian brothers… You seem to embrace divisions…oh except those divisions those aren’t the good kind.

Like someone on this thread…"we are all brothers in Christ despite our divisions…except those Mormons and oneness Pentecostals, and other groups that are too different from me (many insert catholics and Lutherans here!)

Sorry, but there is no authority to say “Gnostics are heretics” or “Arians are heretics” anymore.

All that can be said now is “they are different than what I believe” and if charitable a “but they are brothers and sisters” in Christ might be added.

I’m sorry but were there divisions in the early church…yes…were they accepted…no. Because people respected the authority of the church. The enlightenment period idea of “I know best” had not been established.
 
Hear, hear ye.:o

What hope is there for us here if Mother Angelica, a Catholic religious and Protestant converts like Hann and Staples are not persuasive?
This is very similar to the point I’ve been making. I notice that you have also opened another pot of worms – to wit, the question of whether having-been-in-something-and-then-left-it is a credential for telling others that it is wrong.
 
Along with this one, I would add when people say, “It’s been around for 2000 years so it must be right.”
First of all, Judaism has been around longer, so that ends that argument right there.
Second, just because something has been around for a long time, doesn’t mean it’s right or true or correct. There are many, many reasons why some religions and beliefs may last a long time that have nothing to do with it being true or not.

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👍👍
 
The reason no one can come up with a figure that is no one has an agreed upon definition of what a denomination is. I have no idea if 1000 is reasonable. To make it an acceptable number, one would have to have an agreed upon definition of what was being counted.

As I have said, that is certainly an interesting concept; to do a valid, peer reviewed, broad, and longitudinal professional study of how many denominations (whatever that is defined to mean) Christianity (however that is defined) is made up of and how that changes.

Meanwhile, pick a number. It’s likely as good as anyone else’s.

GKC
I think this is a good point. The number you get is all dependent upon how you classify the data, and this is debatable.
 
Along with this one, I would add when people say, “It’s been around for 2000 years so it must be right.”
First of all, Judaism has been around longer, so that ends that argument right there.
Second, just because something has been around for a long time, doesn’t mean it’s right or true or correct. There are many, many reasons why some religions and beliefs may last a long time that have nothing to do with it being true or not.

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Yes, but I think you can argue that Christianity emerged out of Judaism, so it shares pre-Christian Jewish history with Judaism, otherwise there would only be a New Testament.

Certainly relying only on the historical pedigree of a faith is not a sufficient argument, but I don’t think it is unreasonable to give weight to things/ideas that have stood the test of time.
 
I’m not sure that we* can*, JonS. Some few people, more or less, leaving and joining Catholicism, leaving and joining Lutheranism, leaving and joining Eastern or Oriental Orthodoxy, churches cross- pollinating each other in terms of membership can only strengthen the existing divisions. The conservative churches are in growth while some liberal churches are in a serious decline. A fundamental return to the most hardline interpretations of the various doctrines of Christianity can help in keeping Christianity alive, but it will also maintain the divisions inherent therein. When Jesus returns again, I maintain we’ll have that unity so many seek, but until then, we are where we are.
The divisions exist. In the here and now, the divisions exist. The best we can do is trust that God has even these various Gospel preaching churches in mind for mission to His scattered sheep.
From a purely historical/sociological perspective, I think all of the splitting in the Church may have “saved” Christianity as a whole while undermining unity. I think of the French case. Here the Reformation was seriously repressed and the eventual outcome was the aggressive, militant secularism of the French Revolution. So, I’d rather have a split Church than that, if that is the alternative history.
 
So Arians, Gnostics, etc…are Christian brothers… You seem to embrace divisions…oh except those divisions those aren’t the good kind.
I do not appreciate the false accusation as I have expressed nothing of the sort.

The fact is that there have been divisions since the Judaizers with the Apostles. To negate this fact is to ignore history. To naively say that the Church had no division for 1,500 years (Your post #134) is not only wrong but another false accusation.

Not only the heresies you mentioned happen but the division after Chalcedon and then on the Great Schism.

Anything else you say besides a retraction doesn’t help what you said.
 
So Arians, Gnostics, etc…are Christian brothers… You seem to embrace divisions…oh except those divisions those aren’t the good kind.

Like someone on this thread…"we are all brothers in Christ despite our divisions…except those Mormons and oneness Pentecostals, and other groups that are too different from me (many insert catholics and Lutherans here!)

Sorry, but there is no authority to say “Gnostics are heretics” or “Arians are heretics” anymore.

All that can be said now is “they are different than what I believe” and if charitable a “but they are brothers and sisters” in Christ might be added.

I’m sorry but were there divisions in the early church…yes…were they accepted…no. Because people respected the authority of the church. The enlightenment period idea of “I know best” had not been established.
Just as there are Protestants who are more about being anti-Catholic than about being Protestant, so too I fully expect there to be Catholics who are more about being anti-Protestant (or anti-ecumenism as the case may be) than about being Catholic. If that’s where your coming from with ^^ these comments, then I respect your right to free speech but it makes little or no impression on me, because it simply doesn’t matter to me. What the Church said through Vatican II matters a great deal though. 🙂
 
I do not appreciate the false accusation as I have expressed nothing of the sort.

The fact is that there have been divisions since the Judaizers with the Apostles. To negate this fact is to ignore history. To naively say that the Church had no division for 1,500 years (Your post #134) is not only wrong but another false accusation.

Not only the heresies you mentioned happen but the division after Chalcedon and then on the Great Schism.

Anything else you say besides a retraction doesn’t help what you said.
Did the apostles just let the judaisers continue…did they say, to each his own…same with the heresies.
My point of course being that there was none of this idea of “to each his own your truth is valid my truth is valid” etc…

By embracing division today people embrace relativism and that is why the mainlines especially are collapsing.

The church exercised her authority to uphold orthodox doctrine and continues today. The divisions come when individuals come and say, "the church is wrong, it’s been wrong, I know better, come join my church of Luther or Calvin or Wesley, or whoever founded the next denomination.
 
Just as there are Protestants who are more about being anti-Catholic than about being Protestant, so too I fully expect there to be Catholics who are more about being anti-Protestant (or anti-ecumenism as the case may be) than about being Catholic. If that’s where your coming from with ^^ these comments, then I respect your right to free speech but it makes little or no impression on me, because it simply doesn’t matter to me. What the Church said through Vatican II matters a great deal though. 🙂
I don’t understand how you can take that at all from my post…🤷

I am a former evangelical, I was baptized evangelical, I love very much what my evangelical upbringing gave me. my family is entirely baptist or evangelical, I have no doubt they will be in heaven they very much love the Lord.

That doesn’t mean that we need to accept division as norm contrary to Christs words for unity. It doesn’t mean we should not in our ecumenism be truthful.

If we believe the Catholic faith we should want the whole world to know it, and we should not settle for it being ok that people have only pieces of the truth of Christ.
 
What your saying doesn’t really make sense to me (especially the below-quoted). If you’re attacking a strawman (again I say “if” because I don’t know and it doesn’t matter to me) then … well, that’s your business I guess. 🙂
That doesn’t mean that we need to accept division as norm contrary to Christs words for unity. It doesn’t mean we should not in our ecumenism be truthful.

If we believe the Catholic faith we should want the whole world to know it, and we should not settle for it being ok that people have only pieces of the truth of Christ.
My point of course being that there was none of this idea of “to each his own your truth is valid my truth is valid” etc…
 
I don’t understand how you can take that at all from my post…🤷

I am a former evangelical, I was baptized evangelical, I love very much what my evangelical upbringing gave me. my family is entirely baptist or evangelical, I have no doubt they will be in heaven they very much love the Lord.

That doesn’t mean that we need to accept division as norm contrary to Christs words for unity. It doesn’t mean we should not in our ecumenism be truthful.

If we believe the Catholic faith we should want the whole world to know it, and we should not settle for it being ok that people have only pieces of the truth of Christ.
I think what is being disputed is not that divisions are good or should be accepted but your statement that there were no divisions for 1500 years. There were divisions which still exist. The Assyrian Church of the East after the Council of Ephesus, the Oriental Orthodox after the Council of Chalcedon and then with the Orthodox. Nobody is saying these divisions are good. They are merely saying it is wrong to say there were no divisions for the first 1500 years,
 
They are merely saying it is wrong to say there were no divisions for the first 1500 years,
Personally, I was more interested in affirming Vatican II’s Decree on Ecumenism, Unitatis Redintegratio – and, I would now like to add, in encouraging people to read it in order to form a proper view of what it says. (Personally, I’m sure that the amount of time I spend on the CA forums in a single day would be more than enough time to read through it!)
 
I think what is being disputed is not that divisions are good or should be accepted but your statement that there were no divisions for 1500 years. There were divisions which still exist. The Assyrian Church of the East after the Council of Ephesus, the Oriental Orthodox after the Council of Chalcedon and then with the Orthodox. Nobody is saying these divisions are good. They are merely saying it is wrong to say there were no divisions for the first 1500 years,
Well, I thought I had posed 1000 years with the major divisions about 1500 years. I think there is a fundamental difference between the eastern schism (which aren’t multiplying exponentially) and the 16th century reformation.

Sorry if I came across as being absolute, I was being more generalized.
 
The difference being there is no debate over what the church teaches. There is 1Catholic faith. Individuals are either in or out of the catholic faiths bounds.

This isn’t true in protestantism. There is for example not 1 Lutheran Faith or 1 baptist faith or 1 Presbyterian faith. There are many doctrinal differences between not just the laity, but the church bodies themselves.

And as a later post of mine asked…how many divisions are acceptable. I get people don’t like the 30,0000 number but no one has come up with another…let’s say it’s 1,000 is that acceptable?
So, it is based on a number game? 1,000 is bigger than 242? The Roman Catholic Church is just as divided as the Lutherans or Calvinists or Orthodox or any other religion. Whether they are “in or out”. A Roman Catholic cannot say they disagree with doctrine, but they can think it. Just a thought, logically if Rome allowed for separation *from *Rome(minus the fear of anathema) there would be significantly more than 242 Roman Catholic denominations.
 
One of the arguments used by Catholics that is not persuasive to me and makes me not want to listen to anything else that person has to say is when a Catholic plays the “You don’t have the fullness of the faith” card.

Whether intended or not, the message I get from that is that my faith tradition – which I love dearly and which has brought me close to God and is the foundation of everything I believe and hold dear – is somehow inferior to Catholicism or that I am a second-rate Christian because I am not Catholic.

It comes across as arrogant boasting that reminds me of this commercial from the 1960’s:

youtube.com/watch?v=Oi84maqHgxg
 
Did the apostles just let the judaisers continue…did they say, to each his own…same with the heresies.
My point of course being that there was none of this idea of “to each his own your truth is valid my truth is valid” etc…

By embracing division today people embrace relativism and that is why the mainlines especially are collapsing.

The church exercised her authority to uphold orthodox doctrine and continues today. The divisions come when individuals come and say, "the church is wrong, it’s been wrong, I know better, come join my church of Luther or Calvin or Wesley, or whoever founded the next denomination.
Jon, you are changing the subject.

Division did not start after the 1,500’s.

and

I don’t embrace or seem to embrace division.

Those are the facts.

We (Catholics) changed after the Great Schism and it wasn’t until the 1,400’s that the Pope was given supreme, universal, immediate, absolute jurisdiction over the whole Church.

That is another fact.

If anything, we are the ones saying that the Church is wrong by not being all under the present power of the Pope, when that was non-existent until after the 1,400’s and walking away from Conciliarism.

So this argument of division not existing until the 1,500’s is probably in the top 3 least persuasive arguments used by Catholics.
 
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