A
apophasis
Guest
Randy Carson:
I’m already “satisfied” with accepting the fact of that fact that the dogma is not Biblically supported. I’m not asking for a Biblical quote. The point I was making is that no post-Apostolic writer on the extra-biblical Marian doctrines ever quotes an Apostle, thereby indicating that the teachings are, in fact, Apostolic. Your church simply asserts it and claims “oral” tradition as the source.As you know, there is no verse in the Bible which says, “Mary remained a virgin all the days of her life.” So, if this is what you need to see in order to be satisfied, then I’m afraid you will be disappointed.
Exactly! Your personal acceptance of the Marian dogmas is based on your first accepting the RC dogma concerning itself. None are taught in Scripture, all are asserted. It’s quite a stretch to interpret “and the gates of Hades will not prevail against it” as meaning the infallibility of Rome’s “magesterium.” Even your acceptance of this interpretation rests on your first accepting Rome’s dogma regarding itself.Once I understand that the Catholic Church has been given real authority by God and that it is protected from teaching error, then I can accept her judgment concerning matters that are not explicitly stated in scripture.
No, I don’t agree. Our example is Christ Himself. To verify and validate His Person and work He did not appeal to the “traditions” of the Judaism of His day but to the theopheustos Scriptues (see Lk. 24:25-27; 32, 45).I’m sure that you would agree that the New Testament was never intended to be a comprehensive work of systematic theology. Our understanding of theological truths can develop from what we know from both Sacred Scripture and Sacred Tradition.
Certainly: Matt. 1:25; 13:55-56 teach to the contrary. Yes, I know all the interpretations and arguments presented by you who first accept the dogma, but a normal reading of those Biblical texts testify to the contrary.Tell me, do you find anything in the Perpetual Virginity of Mary to be contrary to the Word of God?
2 Tim. 2:2 does not at all imply that certain teachings by Paul were left to the fate of verbal propagation and preservation. You would have to assign infallibility to every person who heard them and “handed them on” (orally) to others until they were written down centuries later. And then you would have to accept “partial inspiration” of those writings (as guanophore does).Forgive me if I was unclear here. What I mean is that the teachings of the Apostles were handed down from one generation of believers to the next as demonstrated in the letter to Timothy that I quoted previously. Some of the Apostles teaching was written down and some was handed on orally.
You cannot ask me to prove a negative. The burden of proof is upon the one who makes the assertion. I’m sure you must understand why.Actually, the challenge here would be for you to prove that Marian doctrines were not part of that deposit of faith.
True Christian doctrine is never based on what men “believed” (even the majority) but what God revealed.Just because the first extant writings from the fathers date from later centuries, it does not by any stretch prove your case that the earlier believers did not hold these beliefs.
Would a written “complaint” prove to you that they aren’t Apostolic in origin? Of course not. Not any more than a lack of “complaint” proves they are. You yourself, however, testify that the primary basis for your belief in the dogmas is your acceptance of the infallibility of Rome’s magesterium.I have asked you to provide examples of complaints from those who objected to the introduction of these heretical novelties, but you have none.
There’s a huge difference between Christological doctrines that are developed in time and based securely on Scriptural revelation, and the introduction of non-scriptural “ideas” about Mary centuries later. From what were the Marian dogmas “developed?” All we see is that centuries later they were simply asserted by men, accepted by church hierarchy, and presented to the people as dogma.The fact is that some ideas that we hold today were not fully formed in the first two or three centuries, but this only means that it took time for them to fully develop them - just as the ideas about Christology or even the canon too time to sort out.