Hi, P101,
Welcome back…

You know, it is just not the same without you…

I mean, just where else are we treated to such creativity …

Let me explain…
The Bible was discovered by the Church; not written by.
There are certain DISCOVERIES that have stayed in my mind over the years:
1492 Columbus DISCOVERS Americia
1628 Harvey DISCOVERS the circulation of blood
1848 Gold DISCOVERD in California
1970 I DISCOVERED my future wife and married her
I would so much like to add the date when the Bible “, was discovered…” and who was this awesome yet unknown soul who made such a wonderful ‘;discovery’. Can you answer these questions?

I have a bit of a fuzzy vision of someone like the fictional “Indiana Jones” moving a stone or point to a group of ancient cly jars and saying, “X marks the spot!”
As I recall … the Catholic Church did not ‘write’ the Bible - it wrote the Canon of Scripture which identified which were the books inspired by God (and which were not) and the order in which these inspired books would appear. In fact, here is a brief list of what the Catholic Church did and when/where it took this action:
“Council of Laodicea (c. 360)
A local council of the church in union with Rome produced a list of books of the Bible similar to the Council of Trent’s canon. This was one of the Church’s earliest decisions on a canon.
Council of Rome (382)
Local church council under the authority of Pope Damasus, (366-384) gave a complete list of canonical books of the OT and NT which is identical with the list later approved by the Council of Trent.
Council of Hippo (393)
Local North African Church council in union with and under the authority of the Bishop of Rome approved a list of OT and NT canon (same as later approved by the Council of Trent)
Council of Carthage (397)
Local North African Church council in union with and under the authority of the Bishop of Rome approved a list of OT and NT canon (same as later approved by the Council of Trent)
Pope Innocent I, Bishop of Rome, 401-417 (405)
Responded to a request by Exuperius, Bishop of Toulouse, with a list of canonical books of Scripture; this list was the same as later approved by the Council of Trent.
Council of Carthage (419)
Local North African Church council in union with and under the authority of the Bishop of Rome approved a list of OT and NT canon (same as later approved by the Council of Trent)” Here is the link for even more informaiton:
catholicapologetics.org/ap031100.htm
Historically; the Church has always been allowed to “fall” from truth to error.
I guess you will need to provide a couple of references to back that statement up. What you are writing and what I am reading may be two different matters. The Catholic Church has made many errors caused by human leaders failing to fully follow the Gospel (sort of like Peter, the First Pope), being pre-occupied with greed, lust and the five other deadly sins, and making errors in such things a economics and geography. No argument there.

But, when you spake of ‘truth’ - then I understand you to be talking about doctrine - and if you are claiming that the Catholic Church has or is teaching error - you will need to specifically what it is you are talking about.
Note: John 13:16 specificaly identifies Christ promising to sent the Spirit of Truth to show us all Truth. If you believe Christ - then, His Church - the one He is sending His Spirit to - The Catholic Church - can not teach error. If it did, the Gates of Hell would have prevailed a long time ago.
All Churches have equality on that count; while all of our respective churches also have the privilege of being “one in Christ;” making us all equal in Christ. Your church has no more “status” before God than anyone else.
If that were true, P101, then Christ would have said something like, “Do your own thing” or words to that effect. What historically happened however is quite different - Christ chose 12 men to be His Apostles - He did not chose the Nation of Israel. Out of this group of 12, God the Father chose Peter by giving him the answer to Christ’s question (Matt 16). God the Son, verbally identified His Father’s choice and appointed Peter as the one in charge and gave him the Keys as a sign of that authority. There were not 11 others sets of keys.
We are not of equal standing before the Bar. Those who follow Christ will be judged differently than those who do not. Of those who follow Christ, those who are faithful members of the Church He founded on Peter will be judged differently from those who are not. It really is NOT just a big club of Jesus fans. Here is a link that will provide additional information on this idea.
catholic.com/thisrock/2005/0512fea3.asp
Looking forward to hearing from you.
God bless