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Mannyfit75
Guest
She the Holy Mother Church has not err. You and other Protestants may make the claim, but we Catholics here have refute it because most of the claim are taken out of context.
Interesting, but why would it be any more reasonable to assume that error, if it did happen, could not have happened early? I don’t follow your logic there.My goal here is not to prove that the Catholic Church was right all along, even though I believe that. It could very well be that the “Fundamentalists” are right, although I highly doubt it. My observation is to point out that if you accept the Church went astray, it’s only reasonable to conclude it happened very rapidly, perhaps within the first century.
Many who consider themselves “Fundamentalists” and other “Protestant” groups can accept this as a possibility. However, I cannot. This is not based on intellectual or historical truths as strong as I believe they are. This is a faith issue.
For a person to say that the Church went astray within the first century does not reflect well on God, in my view. That would be like saying God was disinterested in guiding and walking with His people. What kind of God will allow His people to fall into serious theological darkness for 1500 years? It’s possible, but I cannot accept it. If the Reformation happened in the 4th or 5th century (right after the council of Nicea), I would be more inclined to buy into this perspective.
If God was capable of ensuring His Church would stay on the right track, wouldn’t He? I believe He did, and He didn’t wait 1500 years either.
God Bless you for being an Honest personAni Ibi,
P.S.: I suppose my response above sounds snotty and, if so, I apologize but I do want to hear if there are any valid, rational explanations as to how and when the Catholic Church began to err. As Protestants, believe that to be true, yet what is it saying about us if we cannot explain what happened? If there are no good explanations, then the absence of an explanation has persuasive value for the Catholic position.
There were reformers long before Martin Luther came along. Luther was the first reformer able to succeed. All of the other reformers like Jan Hus were either put to death, imprisoned or their writings were suppressed. After the death of Jan Hus, Martin Luther found some of his writings hidden in an attic. I believe that the Holy Spirit led Luther to those writings. Those writings influenced his beliefs about faith.Ani Ibi,
P.S.: I suppose my response above sounds snotty and, if so, I apologize but I do want to hear if there are any valid, rational explanations as to how and when the Catholic Church began to err. As Protestants, believe that to be true, yet what is it saying about us if we cannot explain what happened? If there are no good explanations, then the absence of an explanation has persuasive value for the Catholic position.
After two thousand years Israel is now a country again. Why two thousand years?Interesting, but why would it be any more reasonable to assume that error, if it did happen, could not have happened early? I don’t follow your logic there.
Also, hypothetically, could God have allowed error to be in the Church for 1500 years? Why not? God’s sense of time is different than ours. His people were slaves in Egypt for many years, Abraham was promised a son for many years before he saw that promise fulfilled, the Jews waited for a Messiah for ages (and most are still, alas, waiting …unwilling to see Jesus), most of the disciples at the time of Christ believed (with some reason if you look at some of the scriptural references) that Jesus’ second coming would be within their lifetime…all I am trying to say is that our human understanding about time–and about when something should happen–often does not match God’s will.
Why do you need rational explanations from Protestants? Don’t you ever pray to the Holy Spirit to ask him who is right?Ani Ibi,
P.S.: I suppose my response above sounds snotty and, if so, I apologize but I do want to hear if there are any valid, rational explanations as to how and when the Catholic Church began to err. As Protestants, believe that to be true, yet what is it saying about us if we cannot explain what happened? If there are no good explanations, then the absence of an explanation has persuasive value for the Catholic position.
No. I think I have made my intent clear already. I was asking for clarification. Moreover I believe that all CAF threads are (as yet) accessible by people of all faiths.Oh, I see. I thought you were trying to dissuade him from this line of questioning, or to listen only to Catholic responses to his questions.
Shall we turn over CAF forums for discussions exclusively among non-Catholics now?
In order to show definitively that there is no valid answer from the Protestant side of the fence - that the best they can come up with is a rather vacuous “invisible church” theory - I think it is reasonable to let that happen, yes.
Yes, I already understand this and said as much. This has now become a tautology and does not respond to my question.I think the reason he is asking Protestants primarily is in order to determine whether or not there exists a Protestant answer to the question.
I already understand this. However, who is going to assess the Protestant answer? Is it not rr who will assess the Protestant answer?If there is a Protestant answer to the question, then he can remain Protestant - if not, then he must become Catholic.![]()
Of course, but God is also a God of order, not chaos, who gave us minds with which to think and reason. A rational explanation of Catholic error, if such error exists, is not too much to ask Protestants whose faith is based on a scriptual understanding that presupposes that the Catholic Church erred. I am having a struggle understanding that presupposition at this time.Why do you need rational explanations from Protestants? Don’t you ever pray to the Holy Spirit to ask him who is right?
Thank you.understand the Catholic Church to hold that as the One True Church founded by Christ, as against which Scriptures state the Gates of Hell shall not prevail, and which has been promised to be lead into all truth by the Holy Spirit, cannot err regarding matters of faith and morals. This means that the Holy Spirit preserves the Church, speaking as the Church and not necessarily as individuals, from proclaiming doctrine that is incorrect. The promise does not mean that the Church will actively speak on every issue but, rather, that when it does speak authoritatively that it will speak without error. This is my understanding of the Catholic position.
I have problems with it on a number of levels but, again, I really don’t want to get into a discussion of that in this thread because it is not what I was seeking. There are numerous threads regarding the inerrancy of the Church and the grounds for Church authority. I intended this thread to see what answers, if any, can be offered as to when and how the Church erred if, as almost all Protestants believe, it has so erred. So far, the explanations have been weak. They also have been weak, btw, over at CARM as well.Thank you.
If so, please identify the problem for us and, if we do not understand, then please be prepared to clarify so that we do understand.
- Now do you, as a Protestant have a problem with any of what you have said here?
- Do any other Protestants on this thread have a problem with any of what rr has said here?
Please also give reason and reference for your problems with this Church position. Maybe we can work toward some common ground from that point on?
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Thanks this makes sense.No - this is a very common misconception, and actually this misconception is the reason the Church no longer uses numbers of years to identify partial Indulgences.
The years were referring to the amount of penance that the Apostles would have assigned to someone, that the Indulgence replaces.
So, for example, 30 minutes of prayerful meditation on a passage of the Scriptures represents three years of Apostolic penance. (Fasting in sack-cloth and ashes.) This would be earthly penance, not Purgatorial penance.
Because the idea of fasting in sack-cloth and ashes for months or years on end is completely meaningless to us today (not to mention completely impractical), the Church has made the decision to no longer use any references to these penances, with regard to Indulgences.
The Church has never tried to predict how long someone might be in Purgatory. Indeed, it is a matter of theological speculation, whether it is even possible to experience the passage of time at all, in Purgatory.
Somehow I question the premise here, but am having a difficult time exactly articulating how.As Protestants, we believe that the Catholic Church errs in matters of doctrine and that the Reformation was a necessary correction of those errors. So, assuming that the Catholic Church erred, at what time did this begin? In other words, when was the Church essentially doing things right and when, exactly, did it subsequently depart into heresy?
I’d like to avoid the shallow and stock answers usually offered by Catholic and Protestants alike. Serious responses only please.
First of all that scriptural understanding is based on interpretation. That interpretation could be the interpretation of yourself as an individual, a friend of yours, your pastor, or some sort of Protestant scholar. But it is individual interpretation.Of course, but God is also a God of order, not chaos, who gave us minds with which to think and reason. A rational explanation of Catholic error, if such error exists, is not too much to ask Protestants whose faith is based on a scriptual understanding that presupposes that the Catholic Church erred. I am having a struggle understanding that presupposition at this time.
You mean kinda like what Christians say to the rest of creation? I’m always surprised when Christians attack the Catholic Church for holding a position regarding the truth of the faith that they, the Christians, also hold, and hold quite ferociously at that. You can’t have it both ways.Here you go again with this, “We are right and the rest of creation is wrong” stuff again.
Hi TS. I sooooo understand what you are saying here. I can’t speak for the US. You guys have good old Patrick O’Reilly at the Cardinal Newman Society watchdogging the Catholic universities for the bishops.Yet the idea that someone can teach Catholicism to the church but be in error (my friendly neighborhood pastoral associate in charge of adult ed, for example, who refers to “Jesus events” that we have no idea of knowing about what actually happened, or his statement that “Jesus supposedly appeared to Paul”) so that the sheep are not defended against error (the priest hears this stuff but does nothing) to me is a big-time error. Catholicism is not being taught to Catholics. That is a big turn-off to me.
Nobody said it would be easy. Only possible. I never represent to prospective converts that Catholicism is an easy way out of anyone’s problems. I always ask them if they are ready to feel really small in a big Church and if they are ready for things to get tough.…these battles are long and arduous, never simple, never easy, never without cost. But a clarity comes out of them.
Yes, God’s sense to time is different than ours.Also, hypothetically, could God have allowed error to be in the Church for 1500 years? Why not? God’s sense of time is different than ours.
Yes, tremendously ironic. Especially considering that over 90% of the Church could not read. What would they have used their Bibles for? Plant stands?Isn’t it ironic that the the printing press came along about the time the Reformation began giving the common people access to the Bible?
What is your answer as a Protestant?I intended this thread to see what answers, if any, can be offered as to when and how the Church erred if, as almost all Protestants believe, it has so erred.