R
R_C
Guest
Sure, I am always for charity and true ecumenism, for Christians share a common faith and are called to unity and to be one flock with one shepherd.Hey, I don’t feel any need to sugar-coat ideas, either. Just saying that there are better ways to ask questions about other faiths
But some facts are just facts: we do not call church any community that is not legitimately apostolic, and we term errors in doctrine as heresy (without however calling the followers of those doctrines heretics, unless they were Catholics first).
I do not mind particularly that one would feel offended that we speak of heresies in their doctrines, because there indeed are heresies, and by being told and feeling disturbed about it they may just be strong enough to step out of their comfort zone, take a good look at their doctrine, weigh our arguments on an objective balance, and realize that what we are saying may actually make some sense.
And back in the days that’s what Arians, Nestorians, etc. probably saidIf I were Pentacostal, I would probably say, " we have no heresies".![]()
We didn’t pick the name Pentecostals, did we? For us, there are Christians in full communion with the one visible Church and Christians not yet in full communion with the one visible Church. As I said, we term “church” a society that has as shepherds the legitimate successors of the apostles (thus the Catholic author of the original post correctly added quotes, though he may have politely spoken of ecclesial communities), and we do call heresy all errors that make a doctrine differ from orthodox, apostolic Christianity - that doesn’t mean that those who follow the doctrines are heretics, since they really don’t know any different than what they were told to be the truth.or some quality of Christan respect obviously. And so the perpetuation of name calling lives on.
Quod erat demonstrandum. The above post is from a user whose religion is marked as Pentecostal.First, Pentecostalism is not a “church;” it is a movement of churches and individuals.
However, the Holy Spirit is not the only one that can allow people to do things that appear miraculous. In fact, as Catholics we are well aware throughout history of a very large amount of people who did not just display what appeared to be gifts of the Holy Spirit (such as the notorious gift of tongues) but who could do much more, such as heal, prophesy, speak and understand foreign languages, know things that were secret. However their fruits (mainly lack of humbleness, disobedience, and division) proved that their “manifestations” were spectacular indeed, but far from being the gift of the Holy Spirit.Real manafestations of the gifts, when seen, cannot be denied. fakes commit sin.