Protestants, pick a question take your best shot. I got nothing

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I have said for a long time I think the problem with sola scriptura and private interpretation is that if every man decides for himself what the Bible says, he will explain it away completely. I think that is the logical conclusion of sola scriptura
That’s why there are so many divisions in other denominations and also why they seem to be rapidly accepting so many of the evils of today, such as Birth Control, Abortion, Homosexuality, SS Marriage etc. I often wonder what God thinks of our society today. Do we remind Him of Noah’s time or maybe Abraham’s pleading for Sodom and Gomorrah. We need to plead for our world! God Bless, Memaw
 
How can there be perseverance of the saints but not perseverance of the church?
Well the bible teaches the saints and the church are one in the same. The “church” Jesus came to build was individuals into the the living body and temple of God not buildings or a religious organization. So you see there is no conflict.
 
Well the bible teaches the saints and the church are one in the same. The “church” Jesus came to build was individuals into the the living body and temple of God not buildings or a religious organization. So you see there is no conflict.
I thought of that. But it’s pretty weak isn’t it when you have verses in the new testement that talk about being submissive to those who watch over your soul as though we are talking about a formally recognizable hierarchy. The Protestant tradition of authority is you submit to the pastoral leadership of the church until you believe their judgement is contrary to scripture and then find a church you prefer. It’s cafeteria Christianity as a dogma. Also the word church means assembly or congregation. It doesn’t mean a smattering of disconnected independent saints.

John writes that if we walk in the light we have fellowship with one another. So at lest the saints should recognize each other. If that is happening and the saints are recognizing each other in Christ and the leadership appointed by Christ, explain to me again how the church gets lost and becomes invisible. “A city built on a hill cannot be________”
 
Those being your questions, you have had a very shallow experience in evangelicalism, which is easy to do.

I am not sure you can answer these questions well. Based on this, you give me the impression you have read more about evangelicalism from a Catholic perspective than you have read evangelical theology from evangelicals. The reason I say this is that I really don’t think you would be asking these questions if you understood where evangelicals are coming from. It seems to me you may be leaving evangelical circles without understanding evangelical theology. It is very easy to sit in evangelical churches for a long time and even attend Sunday school regularly without getting a good grasp on the essentials of the faith.

And if you do have answers to these questions that satisfy you as a Protestant, why are you asking them of Protestants?
I have rhetoric that would satisfy the likes of Jericho777. It doesn’t satisfy me. Part of my problem is I fear I am wrong. I’ve been wrong about the silliest things. This is big.
 
Good stuff!! Thank you for your response! Based on your background and experience I’d like to run an idea by you. I’ve been in many debates, read debates on this site and others, and have seen debates on videos. Every time it ends up in what I call a “my interpretation is better than yours” type debate. We each use the Bible, interpret it in our own ways, and then more often than not agree to disagree. Why not change the game? Here’s what I mean.

Before engaging in a debate on a particular belief you first establish ground rules. The ground rules are the acceptance that Jesus established His Church and that He would protect it (MT 16:18). This protection must include error for we can all agree that if His Church taught idolatry then the gates of hell shall have prevailed.

Once that is established then you can talk about the debated belief because now you can ask, “who believed as you believe in the Church’s first 800 years when there was just a single universal Christian Church?”. For if we believe that the real truth never changes then your “truth” must have been evidenced in that one Church. If not, then you are saying you have the truth and the early Church got it wrong, but then that means that Jesus was unable to keep His promise. And we know that’s not possible.

When I’ve used this approach the only responses I have heard was that there was a “hidden church for 1500 years” or a “who cares?” type response. But, now they’re playing on my field because my clear differentiator is being the one true Church. Yes, they get frustrated and try to get back to the “my interpretation is better than yours” game, but I continue then to ask the “who believed as you believe” question because I can answer that question! It takes the emotion out of the argument and why debate them on their field when mine is so strong? And I don’t have to memorize so much to make my point, that there is a Church that proves that Jesus kept His promise and that Church is the Catholic Church, whether they like it or not. I take the attitude that I’m planting seeds rather than trying to win a debate or argument.

How would you have responded?

Thanks!

-Ernie-
Although I would agree that Christ protects his church, if we were debating, I would not assent to that as a blanket agreement because I see where it is headed. I would, as a Protestant agree to the use of the Bible, but then I would ask questions to keep you on the defensive about protecting the church. The reason being that most Protestants are going to go with something like what Jerrico777 offered. It’s the idea that there are people in any number of denominations including the RC that are true Christians who are not lost to God. They are the wheat among the tares. The church doesn’t include the tares even though they are always there. So, if we are going to debate about the identity of the RC, I am going to keep you trying to answere questions. It’s easier to find fault then to support a claim. So when I am in a debate in the real world like in the lunchroom at work or whatever, I keep the other guy in the position of having something to prove. Your goal is to persuade not to win. It’s about philosophy not rhetoric. So you ask questions that encourage the opponent and any bystanders to use their brain a little. You also go for the aortic artery. That means innocuously asking questions they won’t know how to answer. For example, I could respond to tommyris by claiming to have a better pedigree than he assumes. Then I have something to prove. It really doesn’t matter what my experience is though in this context, because he only attacked me personally. That’s an ad homonym. It’s a distraction from the fact that he hasn’t offered a solid answer–just a dismissal of the question as the ravings of an ignoramous. So why did he post at all? That doesn’t matter either. How would Tomyris re ask one of my questions in a form that is insightful?
 
Although I would agree that Christ protects his church, if we were debating, I would not assent to that as a blanket agreement because I see where it is headed. I would, as a Protestant agree to the use of the Bible, but then I would ask questions to keep you on the defensive about protecting the church. The reason being that most Protestants are going to go with something like what Jerrico777 offered. It’s the idea that there are people in any number of denominations including the RC that are true Christians who are not lost to God. They are the wheat among the tares. The church doesn’t include the tares even though they are always there. So, if we are going to debate about the identity of the RC, I am going to keep you trying to answere questions. It’s easier to find fault then to support a claim. So when I am in a debate in the real world like in the lunchroom at work or whatever, I keep the other guy in the position of having something to prove. Your goal is to persuade not to win. It’s about philosophy not rhetoric. So you ask questions that encourage the opponent and any bystanders to use their brain a little. You also go for the aortic artery. That means innocuously asking questions they won’t know how to answer. For example, I could respond to tommyris by claiming to have a better pedigree than he assumes. Then I have something to prove. It really doesn’t matter what my experience is though in this context, because he only attacked me personally. That’s an ad homonym. It’s a distraction from the fact that he hasn’t offered a solid answer–just a dismissal of the question as the ravings of an ignoramous. So why did he post at all? That doesn’t matter either. How would Tomyris re ask one of my questions in a form that is insightful?
And that is what happens, but when they try to prove from the Bible that the Catholic Church is not the one true Church based on their own interpretations of Peter not the rock, universal priesthood, or Peter not given keys exclusively I tell them I’m not talking about a debate on interpretations. I actually tell them that their interpretations are absolutely plausible. But, there is a way to go from plausibility to the truth. Then I simply ask them, “you seem to be positive that the Catholic Church is not the one true protected Church that Jesus speaks of in Mt 16:18, then who is and how can you prove it? Assuming you believe that your beliefs are the ones of the one true Church how can you prove that your interpretations were the same ones used by the Church of the first 800 years?”. I haven’t had a Protestant yet who has answered me straight (again other than the “hidden church” thing which is easily shown to be not only silly but unbiblical per Mt 5:14-15). At that point, I proceed to tell them that I can prove that the Church of the first 800 years believed in the Eucharist, infant baptism, Mary as Mother of God and ever-virgin, and a 73 book Bible. Can you name me 1 person, yet alone a group, that believed in the collection of beliefs they you espouse to? Again they resort to the “hidden church” or interpretive attacks of the Catholic Church. It’s almost painful to watch and I’m just wondering if I’m not speaking to knowledgeable Protestants and if there is something more to their arguments that I should be prepared for.

Thanks again for the dialogue.

-Ernie-
 
Ernie It sounds like you are doing it right. I have a bad habit of debating everybody. I have only got someone to say they changed their mind on the spot once. He was a very intelligent but new believer with not a lot of baggage and I convinced him he should only date Christians. Most people change their mind slowly. This guy I debated for more than an hour. That is really fast but he was single and had nothing to lose accept the phrase “you convinced me.” People bet their immortal soul on their religion. They like to be sure they made the right bet so they choose carefully and don’t change their mind easily. The best you can do is plant a seed of wonder. If you are going to meet again in life, instead of arguing for 3 hours, you might ask a hard question and ask them to get back to you with documentation on the hidden church or whatever they bring up. “I have not seen any primary sources from the hidden church. Would you get some citations for me.” Let them do their due dilligence and get back to you. If you are studying to persuade evangelicals, make sure you study their theologians. The reason why tomyris thinks my questions are distortions is because I simplified them hurriedly for another thread and pasted them over. If you are using questions to try to expose an error you need to ask them better. I was hoping for the right answer to the real question that my questions alluded to. But I guess it just went to you must not know your own faith. I thought the same of Scott H when I read his book.
 
When I’ve used this approach the only responses I have heard was that there was a “hidden church for 1500 years” or a “who cares?” type response. But, now they’re playing on my field because my clear differentiator is being the one true Church. Yes, they get frustrated and try to get back to the “my interpretation is better than yours” game, but I continue then to ask the “who believed as you believe” question because I can answer that question! It takes the emotion out of the argument and why debate them on their field when mine is so strong? And I don’t have to memorize so much to make my point, that there is a Church that proves that Jesus kept His promise and that Church is the Catholic Church, whether they like it or not. I take the attitude that I’m planting seeds rather than trying to win a debate or argument.

How would you have responded?

Thanks!

-Ernie-
I must say. This is the first time I have ever heard of a “hidden Church” argument. In real life and on this forum.

Regards
 
I must say. This is the first time I have ever heard of a “hidden Church” argument. In real life and on this forum.

Regards
COC makes this wild claim.

Not a iota of evidence to support it, but that doent stop them
 
I thought of that. But it’s pretty weak isn’t it when you have verses in the new testement that talk about being submissive to those who watch over your soul as though we are talking about a formally recognizable hierarchy. The Protestant tradition of authority is you submit to the pastoral leadership of the church until you believe their judgement is contrary to scripture and then find a church you prefer. It’s cafeteria Christianity as a dogma. Also the word church means assembly or congregation. It doesn’t mean a smattering of disconnected independent saints.

John writes that if we walk in the light we have fellowship with one another. So at lest the saints should recognize each other. If that is happening and the saints are recognizing each other in Christ and the leadership appointed by Christ, explain to me again how the church gets lost and becomes invisible. “A city built on a hill cannot be________”
Actually it’s pretty strong when you study the word church “called out ones” in context and usage it is referring to people not a religious organization. Paul’s epistles and letters are perfect examples of this. They are written directly to the people of the congregation not the religious leadership. That is quite odd in the catholic paradigm don’t you think with its top down power structure and the “church” being the sole mediator of God limiting all to pass through them? What about individuals going to the throne of Grace themselves boldly Hebrews 4:16?
 
That means innocuously asking questions they won’t know how to answer. For example, I could respond to tommyris
Tomyris

And you are demonstrating that your question is anything but innocuous, and that my earlier criticism was accurate.
by claiming to have a better pedigree than he
she
assumes. Then I have something to prove. It really doesn’t matter what my experience is though in this context, because he only attacked me personally. That’s an ad homonym. It’s a distraction from the fact that he hasn’t offered a solid answer–just a dismissal of the question as the ravings of an ignoramous. So why did he post at all? That doesn’t matter either. How would Tomyris re ask one of my questions in a form that is insightful?
That does not make a whole lot of sense. I will address your first question, though, since you don’t like my ‘best shot’. 😃

No. Christ did not lose His church. I never said He did. There is a presupposition that His church is identical to the Roman Catholic Church, which is a false statement, even in Catholic belief. The Catholic Church recognizes the Orthodox and some other churches as legitimate churches.

Most Protestants consider that the RCC veered into false doctrine and buried the Gospel under superstition and corruption, and that the Reformation was His correction to the problems in the church, as church leadership of the time was resistant to calls for reform, such calls having been going on for centuries.

It is fairly insulting to assume that Protestants believe that Christ somehow lost His church, as if He were incompetent in handling it. You gain nothing by antagonism and putting people on the defensive - instead you inculcate an adversarial relationship. This stems from a school of apologetics that has done great harm to Christian unity over the centuries and today is perpetuated by the likes of Art Sippo (“the Art of Attack”) who delights in smearing and slamming Protestants any way he can. Not a way to win friends and influence people. This school of apologetics that you are seeming to join is also one that goes against how the Catholic Church currently views ecumenical relations. I invite you to read Don Ruggero’s posts and consider what he would think of your approach.
 
The reformers gave us the notion that marriage occurred under the state. At the time even Protestant Europe exercised state religion. However when state religion was rejected, it was only a matter of time until post Christian cultures saw no need for the state to enforce a religious definition of marriage. As a result, divorce and marriage of abomination are now common.
True, what was started by Calvin was finished by Napoleon. Marriage was no longer understood as human nature recognized by the state, but a product of the state. As society has been able to control nature and reject orthodoxy, they think they can control what marriage is; anything they want it is be.
 
Actually it’s pretty strong when you study the word church “called out ones” in context and usage it is referring to people not a religious organization. Paul’s epistles and letters are perfect examples of this. They are written directly to the people of the congregation not the religious leadership. That is quite odd in the catholic paradigm don’t you think with its top down power structure and the “church” being the sole mediator of God limiting all to pass through them? What about individuals going to the throne of Grace themselves boldly Hebrews 4:16?
That sounds like what I learned in Anabaptist school. The new testement has books written to congregations and to specific leaders–bibliolotry 101. The Catholic Church does not teach that all God’s grace passes strictly through the priests. Where did you here that?
 
I must say. This is the first time I have ever heard of a “hidden Church” argument. In real life and on this forum.

Regards
I’ve been told that “real Christians” formed an “underground church” (hidden) that had to hide from the persecutions of the Catholic Church surfacing again near the time of the Reformation. I thought it was a joke until I researched that theory a bit. It seems to be anti-Catholics that use this approach.
 
Tomyris

And you are demonstrating that your question is anything but innocuous, and that my earlier criticism was accurate.

she

That does not make a whole lot of sense. I will address your first question, though, since you don’t like my ‘best shot’. 😃

No. Christ did not lose His church. I never said He did. There is a presupposition that His church is identical to the Roman Catholic Church, which is a false statement, even in Catholic belief. The Catholic Church recognizes the Orthodox and some other churches as legitimate churches.

Most Protestants consider that the RCC veered into false doctrine and buried the Gospel under superstition and corruption, and that the Reformation was His correction to the problems in the church, as church leadership of the time was resistant to calls for reform, such calls having been going on for centuries.

It is fairly insulting to assume that Protestants believe that Christ somehow lost His church, as if He were incompetent in handling it. You gain nothing by antagonism and putting people on the defensive - instead you inculcate an adversarial relationship. This stems from a school of apologetics that has done great harm to Christian unity over the centuries and today is perpetuated by the likes of Art Sippo (“the Art of Attack”) who delights in smearing and slamming Protestants any way he can. Not a way to win friends and influence people. This school of apologetics that you are seeming to join is also one that goes against how the Catholic Church currently views ecumenical relations. I invite you to read Don Ruggero’s posts and consider what he would think of your approach.
Thank you. Much more to the issue at hand. I apologize for misidentifying the correct pronoun, sister. I worded it the way I did because that is how a Mormon bishop presented it to me. However, your characterization that the Catholic Church as a denomination went astray by burying the gospel beneath superstition still lends one to ask, how is that even possible if they were on the right track in the first place? As a Calvinist, you must find it odd that God would elect his people but leave his congregation to be tossed about by the winds of heresy.

As far as debate tactics go, I am certainly not the best example as I have a very sharp edged personality. A suave and gentle soul could ask for “clarification” in a way that challenges the other to think more deeply about the subject.
 
:o Some of these questions. 🤷
After God covers our sins and makes us positionally righteous, is he just no longer omnipotent and self deluding about sin? Or perhaps he actually changes us as the church teaches.
Do you really think that Protestants teach that God does not “actually change” us? Has your experience of Protestantism shown you that we believe we simply live and die and are resurrected as depraved sinners? Have you never been taught about sanctification?
If the apostles had power to bind their teaching on earth and heaven, how did God just disregard their establishment of apostolic succession so that those who came a short time later were apostate?
This question assumes that the apostles “established apostolic succession” in the first place.
All the sacraments mentioned in the Bible are spoken of in language consistent with the sacramental view.
What is your definition of a sacrament? How do the biblical writings support your sacramental view?
How did this happen if sacraments are just pictures. For that matter wouldn’t it make them vain rituals if there is no substance?
All Protestants believe that sacraments have “substance” and are not merely rituals. The Lutherans and many Anglicans have views that affirm some type of Real Presence. The Reformed churches believe the sacraments are “signs and seals” of the covenant of grace. Even strictly “memorialist” churches believe the sacraments/ordinances are not empty rituals without substance. They are full of meaning and edification for the person receiving them and for the body of Christ as a whole.
Jesus prayed we would be one. That makes schism a sin. Where did our denomination come from?
The problem with throwing around the “schism” accusation is that it is not always clear cut as to who the schismatics are and who the “faithful remnant” are. Also, if you believe a religious body has become heretical, is it still schism to leave them or are they the schismatics for embracing false teaching in the first place?
 
Thank you. Much more to the issue at hand. I apologize for misidentifying the correct pronoun, sister.
It happens. 🤷
However, your characterization that the Catholic Church as a denomination went astray by burying the gospel beneath superstition still lends one to ask, how is that even possible if they were on the right track in the first place? As a Calvinist, you must find it odd that God would elect his people but leave his congregation to be tossed about by the winds of heresy.
Things do go astray.

I don’t like the term Calvinist because it seems to have degenerated into a mushy pejorative meaning Hyper-Calvinist puritanical hypocrite, usually flung about by people who have little understanding of what it actually means.

I see nothing odd about people in leadership becoming corrupt and going astray. He did not continue the Sanhedrin, for example, but replaced the leadership completely. It would be odder if He did nothing to fix a situation in which church leadership refused to reform the church.

There is no conflict between a corrupt church and election. God saves whom He saves. He can use a church or do it without the church. It was the church leadership that was the problem more than anyone else. You need to read up on Alexander VI and Leo X and the business of the papacy being bought and sold as well as all kinds of corruption.
As far as debate tactics go, I am certainly not the best example as I have a very sharp edged personality. A suave and gentle soul could ask for “clarification” in a way that challenges the other to think more deeply about the subject.
I am a battle-axe myself but occasionally grace makes its way to the surface. 🙂
 
It happens. 🤷

Things do go astray.

I don’t like the term Calvinist because it seems to have degenerated into a mushy pejorative meaning Hyper-Calvinist puritanical hypocrite, usually flung about by people who have little understanding of what it actually means.

I see nothing odd about people in leadership becoming corrupt and going astray. He did not continue the Sanhedrin, for example, but replaced the leadership completely. It would be odder if He did nothing to fix a situation in which church leadership refused to reform the church.

There is no conflict between a corrupt church and election. God saves whom He saves. He can use a church or do it without the church. It was the church leadership that was the problem more than anyone else. You need to read up on Alexander VI and Leo X and the business of the papacy being bought and sold as well as all kinds of corruption.

I am a battle-axe myself but occasionally grace makes its way to the surface. 🙂
Thanks for these responses. I am not planning to debate them all on this thread. This is more a survey. I have had many discussions with pastors and seminarians about theology over the years. Recently I stopped reading about Catholicism from a Protestant point of view for the exact reason in reverse of what you mention about the quality of my questions. I was reading a book by a Protestant about what a horrible idolatrous church Catholicism is and when I went to look up his quote of a catholic source, it wasn’t in the book. After that I decided to do my own research. This thread is to give the other team a chance to help me not get locked into a mindset. My grandpa is a Calvinist. I attended a theology class with Campus Crusade for Christ. So I am not entirely uninitiated in “reformed theology.” The issue in this context with the term is that it does not mean “reformation theology.” Words: what a minefield. It seems, and this is not a rigorous criticism, that reformed theology can be described as that point of view which flows naturally from adding the correctly placed word “elect” into any verse which contains an inconvenient superlative. That is my perception.
 
Actually it’s pretty strong when you study the word church “called out ones” in context and usage it is referring to people not a religious organization. Paul’s epistles and letters are perfect examples of this. They are written directly to the people of the congregation not the religious leadership. That is quite odd in the catholic paradigm don’t you think with its top down power structure and the “church” being the sole mediator of God limiting all to pass through them? What about individuals going to the throne of Grace themselves boldly Hebrews 4:16?
Do you have a citation for your definition of church?

Here’s mine:
biblehub.com/greek/1577.htm
 
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