S
susanlo
Guest
Where does one go to know about Tradition? Isn’t the Catholic Church and its authorities and writings the only accepted source to teach Sacred Tradition?Anybody can ‘know’ what Sacred Tradition is, not simply Catholics.
Is Mary’s immaculate conception a teaching from Tradition? When did Christians become aware of this Tradition? That’s what I am interested in learning about.All Christians were aware of it for centuries just as they are today.
The KJV is an English Bible. The English language had not yet developed by 350AD. There wouldn’t have been a point to having a KJV Bible. However there were Greek versions of the Scriptures at that time. Actually the Greek Scriptures were written in the 1st century (not 350 AD) and were known to and used by the Christians from the late 1st century. By at least the late 2nd century all of the 27 books were well known in all of the major churches. All of the early writings are saturated in quotations from the Scriptures. The Gospel of Thomas was Gnostic or heretical. Which early church accepted this as Scripture? There was some slight variances on what books were Scripture, but there wasn’t nearly as much confusion and disagreement as some Catholic apologists claim.Why do you base your belief on what the Bible reveals when the Bible as you know it did not exist for the first 350 years of Christendom? Depending on who you were, where you lived, when you lived, and who was preaching, your “Scripture” might have included a few letters of St. Paul, the gospels of Matthew, Mark, and THOMAS, the Didache, several letters from St. Peter, letters from St. Clement and St. Ignatius, and the Shepherd of Hermes, as well as stories from the book of Genesis and Exodus, perhaps the book of Ruth, passages from Isaiah and some of the psalms and Wisdom.
Were those early Christians not sufficiently taught even though they lacked the KJV?
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