Hello Angainor;
Angainor:
I can see how you, as a Catholic looking out over a sea of Protestanism can see only rough waters, it appears “unstable”. What are appearances?
It’s not just appearances. There are serious disagreements in doctrine among the protestant denominations. Just compare the Anglican Church on one end of the spectrum to the LDS and SDA Churches, and the Jehovah’s Witnesses at the other end. It’s not just the appearance of disagreement. It is fundamental core doctrinal dispute.
Angainor:
Can the Holy Spirit not guide the rough waters of Protestantism?
Yes. The HS can guide the protestant churches back into unity - a.k.a. catholicity. But I do not believe the HS had any hand in creating the doctrinal anarchy of reformed christianity that exists today. In other words, the HS is not stirring up the “rough waters” of Protestantism. Individuals working alone within that schism are creating the sea foam.
Angainor:
Does the unstable appearance really seem out of place from scripture?
Yes. Christ intended a doctrinal uniformity among christians. I think the Scriptures are pretty clear:
Jn 10:16 - there shall be one fold and one shepherd
Eph 4:3-6 - one Lord, one faith, one baptism, one God and Father
Rom 16:17 - avoid those who create dissention
1 Cor 1:10 - I urge that there be no divisions among you
Phil 2:2 - be of the same mind, united in heart, thinking one thing
Rom 15:5 - God grant you to think in harmony with one another
Jn 17:17-23 - I pray that they may all be one, as we are one
1 Cor 12:13 - in one spirit we are baptized into one body
Rom 12:5 - we, though many, are one body in Christ
I don’t mean to throw “proof texts” at you. I am simply responding to your suggestion that God intended there to be so many different and conflicting versions of christianity. To me it seems obvious that something is wrong. Even if you don’t concede the fullness of truth in the Catholic Church you must concede that it certainly is apparent that the state of all of christianity is splintered and divided.
Angainor:
We are told to stay on our guard. We are told to “test everything”. We are told being a Christian is not easy.
This is true, but these statements are not inconsistent with a Church that is led by one with authority conferred by Christ to settle doctrinal disputes. This is because even the Popes must “be on guard” and “test everything” against Scripture - especially in the role of Vicar of Christ.
Angainor:
Who said there would be a final human arbiter on truth?
Jesus Christ. (Mt. 16:18-19.) But, of course, Peter and his successors are not affirming doctrines apart from the HS, rather they do so with the guidance and direction of the HS. It is the HS that is speaking infallibly through the very human popes - just as the HS spoke infallibly through the four very human gospel evangelists. If you can concede that the inerrant gospels were written by the divine inspiration of the HS, then why can’t you accept that the HS is still able to use a fallible human being to declare infallible doctrine to the people of God today?
Angainor:
Who said the Church Paul mentions in 1 Tim 3:15 would be a human being you could go to and ask for the truth? Is the Church incarnated into the person of the Pope? The Church is the foundation of the truth. The truth of the Gospel has survived 2000 years, so I know the Church is doing its job.
(1)Jesus Christ implicitly acknowledges the human aspect of His Church in Matthew’s gospel. (Mt 18:16-20) (2) The Church is not just the Pope. The Pope is the visible head of Christ’s Church and a father figure, but he is not the Church incarnate. (3) Yes. I agree that the Church is the piller and bulwark of truth. But you and I have a very different understanding of just what that Church is. You think the “Church” is simply a body of “believers” and refuse to define the limits of that belief, whereas I see a body of believers that are spiritually guided by a physically real and present teaching authority. I think my understanding of the Church comports with Scripture and yours is just the rationalization of men who want to make up a comfortable church that “fits” the times - without being bound to the authority that Christ founded.
Angainor:
As to the charge of subjectivism, true Christian Protestants seek objective truth with the tools God gave them. True Christian Protestants recognize the existance of an objective truth, and hope their undertanding of that truth is correct.
They may acknowledge the existence of objective truth, but they have no way to confirm it. I also believe that 500 years of bias, prejudice and mistrust (granted that some of it was well-earned) have blinded many protestants to the fullness of truth that still exists in the Catholic Church.