N
Non_Serviam
Guest
I was mistaken. I apologize.
My understanding was that when catholics prayed for the dead, they expected them to remain dead. I see from several recent posters that catholics are actually asking God to bring their dead loved ones back to life. I’ve always acknowledged the reality of that sort of prayer for the dead as there are several examples in the Bible.
starts calculating
Jesus plus 12 Apostles plus Paul is 14 with 4 resurrections over 3 years of Jesus’ ministry and 30 years of apostolic ministry gives us 1 resurrection every 8 or so years.
The USCCB has 272 active bishops, divided by 14 is roughly 19, so since 1980, US catholics should have a list of 76 people who were raised from the dead by their bishops’ prayers. And like Lazarus, 25% of them should have been dead several days.
Since I’m feeling generous, I’ll only ask for 50 names of people in the US legally declared dead who have been raised from the dead by catholic prayers for the dead since 1980. With those names and a bit of research I will gladly confess the error of my ways on this topic.
If such a list of names is not forthcoming, perhaps those catholics who claimed their prayers for the dead were proved by referring to these resurrection examples will deign to explain why their bishops, the successors of the Apostles, can’t deliver the goods like the Apostles did. After all, you shall do greater things…
or perhaps they’ll apologize for the use of a cheap debating tactic and admit that their prayers for the dead are nothing like the resurrection examples.
My understanding was that when catholics prayed for the dead, they expected them to remain dead. I see from several recent posters that catholics are actually asking God to bring their dead loved ones back to life. I’ve always acknowledged the reality of that sort of prayer for the dead as there are several examples in the Bible.
starts calculating
Jesus plus 12 Apostles plus Paul is 14 with 4 resurrections over 3 years of Jesus’ ministry and 30 years of apostolic ministry gives us 1 resurrection every 8 or so years.
The USCCB has 272 active bishops, divided by 14 is roughly 19, so since 1980, US catholics should have a list of 76 people who were raised from the dead by their bishops’ prayers. And like Lazarus, 25% of them should have been dead several days.
Since I’m feeling generous, I’ll only ask for 50 names of people in the US legally declared dead who have been raised from the dead by catholic prayers for the dead since 1980. With those names and a bit of research I will gladly confess the error of my ways on this topic.
If such a list of names is not forthcoming, perhaps those catholics who claimed their prayers for the dead were proved by referring to these resurrection examples will deign to explain why their bishops, the successors of the Apostles, can’t deliver the goods like the Apostles did. After all, you shall do greater things…
or perhaps they’ll apologize for the use of a cheap debating tactic and admit that their prayers for the dead are nothing like the resurrection examples.