C
CopticChristian
Guest
Brandon,This is good advice. The Hebrews definition, modified to specifically refer to objects of religion, would make a better definition.
“Now faith is the assurance of things hoped for, the conviction of things not seen, insofar as these are religious things.”
After all, I believe atoms exist, and would not call this faith, and I also hope that Dundee United wins the cup, and this is also not faith.
Most people in two of the four church communities I am part of (Church of Scotland and Scottish Episcopal) do not think the Bible is inerrant. The University group (non-denominational) is split, probably 50/50 (although I haven’t done any statistics). The Catholic community strongly supports inerrancy (although not universally; quite a few of the Catholics there don’t accept it).
Why would inerrancy be important for going to Church? Why would Trent be important for going to Mass?
I go to Church on Sunday because of the community, because of the preaching, because of the singing, and because prayer, especially community prayer, helps me come intellectually and emotionally closer to relationship with God. Also, I want to serve others, and the Church helps in this.
I attend the Mass because it is a beautiful and unique ancient expression of the Christian faith, and because of the friends I have who also attend, that we can enjoy attending together.
I sense you are a person of integrity and appear to be investigating thoughts honestly. I would find it difficult to attend any service that I could not accept as honest. In other words since I do not believe that the Book of Mormon is Scripture and that Joseph Smith is not a prophet, as much as I like the Mormon people, I could never attend a Mormon service.
Integrity, honesty, mean different things to different to different people. I would imagine that denying the Eucharist for me would cause me not to attend any service where this is believed, to be true to myself.
I suggest you discount what any particular Catholic believes as it concerns the Bible and look to what the Church teaches…dissent does not equate with what is to be believed to be true…I suggest you not get your strength of beliefs from dissenters, rather from the disseminator of beliefs that provides those beliefs rather than those that choose to dissent. How can any sense of understanding be made from gathering information from dissenters? Gather the information, weigh it, consider it, accept it, reject it and then if you choose to dissent you know why you dissent rather than joining in with dissenters that have different reasons for dissenters. You should have your own reasons for dissent or you are no better than a lemming.
thank you
