L
Lincoln7
Guest
In practice it’s not, I just dont think the Catholic Church gets it right in some places.And how is that different from what the Church does for Catholics?
Lincs
In practice it’s not, I just dont think the Catholic Church gets it right in some places.And how is that different from what the Church does for Catholics?
On this, you judge me incorrectly, Roy.It strikes me that PRMerger and CopticChristian have very little insight into and certainly only hostility toward that varied phenomenon commonly referred to as Protestantism.
As I said, its circle is just wider than Catholics. But there is a circle nonetheless of beliefs that you reject and beliefs you accept.While Catholicism has a definite set of dogmas that must be believed to be a ‘good Catholics’ Protestantism is very different.
Okay. Good. So your position is that there’s no Scriptural evidence for papal infallibility. NOT that it’s a “new dogma”.Hmm… The Trinity has vast proof, it’s there. Nicea, Chalcedon, all in accord with scripture, based upon scripture.
With Papal infallibility I mean, I dont even see a papacy in the NT or early Chuch, hence why I see no papal infallibility. If that clarifies it?
After like 60 or 70 posts in this thread by me or whatever now, confusion can occur
Lincs.
Yes, the Magisterium has spoken through the Deposit of Faith, Lincs.With respect, I feel i should press on this…
Aren’t they all the posters private interpretations of these verses? Has the magisterium said what these do mean?
Regards
Lincs
Indeed, the Apostles then commited their teachings to writing,which as a Protestant, I believe contradict modern Rome.The Catholic Faith was whole and entire before a single word of the NT was ever put to writ.
They affirm it to one Catholic, but I’m sure some others disagree that’s what they say, when placed in context…So, yes, when Jesus spoke, and revealed His Word and the Church received it, those verses were indeed given to the Magisterium to affirm the teaching on Infallibility.
Excellent. :extrahappy:In practice it’s not,
I just dont think the Catholic Church gets it right in some places.
And on this, we can discuss further!Lincs
Scripture verse for this, please.Indeed, the Apostles then commited their teachings to writing,
Just to supplement PR’s response to you: This is how the Church understands and makes use of Scriptures:mark-shea.com/tradition.htmlWith respect, I feel i should press on this…
Aren’t they all the posters private interpretations of these verses? Has the magisterium said what these do mean?
Regards
Lincs
Let me ask a question…Why Calvin? What makes Calvin better or more learned than, let us say…Joseph Ratzinger? Scott Hahn? or Ignatuis of Antioch? Or Clement of Rome? or any of the ECFs?I did? I sat down with my Bible open and let Calvin open it up for me. What he did was point me to where to go… Aka 2 Christians sat down and opened up the scriptures…
Regards
Lincs.
My position always has been that its perfectly fine to have external guides to help us understand them… I just don’t think Rome is said infallible guide. I hope I’ve never stated something along the lines of we don’t need help sometimes, but again, that Rome is not this guide. She has departed from scripture in my opinion, respectfully. My vocal response to guides has always been in the context of me saying this… Not lambasting all forms of help from others… My issue is with Rome setting itself as an authority over the scriptures.So we have really moved forward from your initial position, which was “we don’t need any external guide to understand and correctly interpret the Scriptures”, to “it’s fine to use an external guide to understand and correctly interpret the Scriptures.”
I don’t see any convincing argument from other church bodies that there is teaching I need not contained in them. I see that churches which all claim Tradition capital T, are also rather divided on what is right and who’s got it right…Scripture verse for this, please.
How do you know the CC does not get it right?In practice it’s not, I just dont think the Catholic Church gets it right in some places.
Lincs
That’s how Mark Shea views it, don’t see any official magisterial stuff in there.This is how the Church understands and makes use of Scriptures:mark-shea.com/tradition.html
I think he aligns best with scripture… Can I also just say, don’t see me as looking at Clement and Ignatius and dismissing them. Their letters are fascinating.Let me ask a question…Why Calvin? What makes Calvin better or more learned than, let us say…Joseph Ratzinger? Scott Hahn? or Ignatuis of Antioch? Or Clement of Rome? or any of the ECFs?
So to put it simply: Private interpretation is wrong. The option now being to privately interpret church history and scripture to conclude which infallible or ultimate church authority to pick. Catholic, Orthdox, Coptic, JW… All claim in some way to be the true church and expression of it.He adopts a pick-and-choose approach. This approach attempts to avoid the dilemma raised above by methodologically, though not explicitly, counting as ‘traditional’ [as in “traditional Christian orthodoxy”] only whatever the Church said and did that agrees with or is at least compatible with one’s own interpretation of Scripture. ‘Tradition’ becomes whatever one agrees with in the history of the Church, such as the Nicene Creed or Chalcedonian…What makes it ‘authoritative’ for Mohler is that it agrees with his interpretation of Scripture. If he encounters something in the tradition that seems extra-biblical or opposed to Scripture he rejects it. For that reason, tradition does not authoritatively guide his interpretation. His interpretation picks out what counts as tradition, and then this tradition informs his interpretation.
Excellent.My position always has been that its perfectly fine to have external guides to help us understand them…
Beautiful! Eloquently spoken! :clapping:Just to supplement PR’s response to you: This is how the Church understands and makes use of Scriptures:mark-shea.com/tradition.html
It simply acted as a lens and refocused the light of Scripture so that something which had been hidden there was now visible. For, despite appearances, the dogmatic definitions of the Church do not just pop up with absolutely no relation to Scripture. Rather, they assemble the materially sufficient revelation of Scripture using the mortar of Sacred Tradition. And that Tradition is not separate, secret and parallel to Scripture, but the common teaching, life, and worship of the Church. In the case of the Council of Jerusalem, the common teaching from the apostles included the then-unwritten command of Christ to preach the gospel to the whole world (Mt 28:19)… In short, the Council places the Church on the judge’s seat and the Scripture in the witness box, deriving its revelation not from Scripture alone but from Sacred Tradition and the magisterial authority of the apostles in union with Scripture. And so materially sufficient bricks of Old Testament revelation, which we thought were made to build into a synagogue are stacked and mortared with apostolic Tradition by the trowel of the Church’s magisterial authority, and turn out to make a cathedral instead.
The biblical Council, like the modern Catholic Church, places Scripture in the context of Tradition and magisterial, apostolic authority. The biblical Council, like the modern Catholic Church, speaks with apostolic authority and declares, “It seemed good to the Holy Spirit and to us…” (Acts 15:29). And so, the biblical Council, just like the modern Catholic Church, develops a doctrine which, to “Bible-only” eyes, appears to flatly nullify Scripture yet which, upon closer inspection, turns out to uphold it (Rom 3:31).
The Church does not sit down and derive the dogma from the tortured reading of a few isolated texts of Scripture. Rather, it places the Scripture in the context of the Tradition handed down by the apostles and the interpretive office of the bishops they appointed.
That’s how Mark Shea views it, don’t see any official magisterial stuff in there.
Mark Shea is a catholic…and reflects and does not contradict the teaching of the CC.
Here is the CCC on Sacred Tradition…and point to me if he contradicts the Catechism:
scborromeo.org/ccc/p1s1c2a2.htm#80
scborromeo.org/ccc/p1s1c2a3.htm#113
78 This living transmission, accomplished in the Holy Spirit, is called Tradition, since it is distinct from Sacred Scripture, though closely connected to it. Through Tradition, "the Church, in her doctrine, life and worship, perpetuates and transmits to every generation all that she herself is, all that she believes."37 "The sayings of the holy Fathers are a witness to the life-giving presence of this Tradition, showing how its riches are poured out in the practice and life of the Church, in her belief and her prayer."38
113 2. Read the Scripture within “the living Tradition of the whole Church”. According to a saying of the Fathers, Sacred Scripture is written principally in the Church’s heart rather than in documents and records, for the Church carries in her Tradition the living memorial of God’s Word, and it is the Holy Spirit who gives her the spiritual interpretation of the Scripture (". . . according to the spiritual meaning which the Spirit grants to the Church"81).
By Mark Shea…Sacred Tradition is the living and growing truth of Christ contained, not only in Scripture, but in the common teaching, common life, and common worship of the Church. That is why the Tradition that does not change can seem to have changed so much. For this common teaching, life and worship is a living thing-a truth which was planted as a mustard seed in first century Jerusalem and which has not ceased growing since-as our Lord prophesied in Mark 4:30-32. The plant doesn’t look like the seed, but it is more mustardy than ever. And this is an entirely biblical pattern, as we discover when we consider the circumcision controversy in Acts 15.
I object because in some cases, the nature of Christ’s sacrifice for example, I think Rome is not in alignment with scripture.So what you find objectionable is that the Church claims this charism of infallibility?
In the same way Calvin does with scripture then?Mark Shea is a catholic…and reflects and does not contradict the teaching of the CC.
Lincoln7;9189807 said:Let me ask a question…Why Calvin? What makes Calvin better or more learned than, let us say…Joseph Ratzinger? Scott Hahn? or Ignatius of Antioch? Or Clement of Rome? or any of the ECFs?
So let me ask…how did you come to the conclusion Calvin aligns best with Scripture? and not Clement of Rome? Or Ireneus? or Ratzinger?I think he aligns best with scripture… Can I also just say, don’t see me as looking at Clement and Ignatius and dismissing them. Their letters are fascinating.
But you’ve already admitted you’re fallible.I object because in some cases, the nature of Christ’s sacrifice for example, I think Rome is not in alignment with scripture.
Fire away.I seem to be answering a lot here and not asking much…