E
enickman
Guest
Sorry for butting in here, but the conversation went along a different path while I was away
I would say that this means that the Church will never be destroyed nor will its mission of revealing Christ and mission to the world ever be compromised. On some issues, I believe the Church must teach truthfully or else the Church’s mission would be compromised. On other issues… not so much. This is the vague, protestant notion of essential and unessential beliefs. Let us take the doctrine of the Assumption of Mary. Can we really say that the Assumption of Mary is dogmatic for the gospel of Christ on the same level that the Resurrection is? I would think not, so I really cannot say that the Church must believe this doctrine or else its mission would be compromised.
Ah… Thank you for the correction. I actually knew this already, but I was just using the shorthand to which I am accustomed. I will change this in the future to avoid perpetuating misunderstanding.
I really need to leave my computer for an hour or so and come back and read these posts before I submit them. However, I stand by what I was trying to say. Why is it that the gates of hell would prevail if the Church teaches false doctrine but not when the praxis is corrupt? This puts belief in extreme supremacy over and above praxis, much like the Gnostics did. I am not saying this as a jab against Catholics; Evangelical Christianity at least in the U.S. has much the same problem.
Well you could say that we don’t have Christ in the Eucharist. I say we do.But did Christ not say “For where two or three are gathered in my name, there am I with them?” So why do you say we believe we must wait until heaven to be with Christ?
There is also the issue that we have been baptized into the Body of Christ and as such we are the presence of Christ in this world. I had a professor who once said the difference between EO and RC is the mystical and the literal body of Christ. Catholics believe that the bread of the Eucharist becomes the literal body of Christ and the Church is the mystical body of Christ. Orthodox, on the other hand, believe the Church to be the literal body of Christ and the bread to be the mystical body. Now I have no idea if that is true or not, but the fact remains is that due to our valid baptisms, Protestants have every right to claim to be the body of Christ.
P.S. On an unimportant note: “pay no mind to” is about as far from what I do to the Catholic Church that a Protestant can get. For purely selfish reasons, I wish I could be Catholic, but I refuse to be a “cafeteria Catholic” and cannot join until my issues are clarified.
- Do some research on the Assumption. The Church doesn’t declare something Dogmatic without a LOT of consideration. I think many people fail to recognize this.
- Ask your pastor if your hosts are consecrated by a priest that can trace his ordination back to the Apostles, or if he believes in the real presence when he hands out what ever you guys use to represent it. (in every Protestant church ive been to, its been saltine crackers and welch’s grape juice)
- I am aware of your baptism and that we share the belief that baptism erases original sin. What I am telling you is that our churches are not the same due to conflicting beliefs over numbers of issues. We are both Christian, but we are not both One, Holy, Catholic, and Apostolic. And I hope this doesn’t come across arrogant, because that isnt the intention.
- Why are your reasons to not be Catholic selfish? We would happily welcome you. I do commend you on not wanting to be a cafeteria Catholic, as many are when pertaining to moral issues. It sounds like you’re on a journey, I hope we Catholics can help in any way.