I find that to be an odd question…tis like asking: how is your wife not your car? Do you feel a need to explain why Stephen is not the new Ark simply b/c I can make a bunch of
forced connections? (at post #78)
yes, she was a virgin…and the apostles claimed no more than that…the rest appeared much later and starting with a very dubious source…let’s not forget that and let’s not act as if you can actually trace these Catholic teachings all the way back to the apostles w/o jumping many decades in some instances and many centuries in other instances.
and she was under the law of Moses.
the point is that you find the few similarities that exist in the passages, fudge the wording to enhance the similarities, ignore the many more dissimilarities and then declare that there is a connection….it is hard for me to imagine a more subjective and contrived methodology
it flat out names Jesus as God, flat out names the Father as God, it flat out gives the Holy Spirit divine qualities and it flat out states that God is one….the concept of the Trinity is an effort to reconcile these flat out statements. Your Marian doctrines don’t have any basis in flat out statements.
fudged similarities it seems.
again, David is said to have danced in front of the Lord (I don’t think the Septuagint even mentions jumping/leaping)….yet those trying to make the connection stress both “leaped” as if the same word was used.
you stress form over substance…in substance they have no similarity. Also, there is Araunah’s question in 2 Sam 24:21:
Then Araunah said, “Why has my lord the king come to his servant?” Shall we conclude that Mary is also David?
no, not a coincidence at all…just as my demonstration (that Stephen is really the New Ark) has nothing to do with coincidence. It is a designed result achieved by taking two passages of sufficient length to find a number of connections, fudging the wording to make the connections stronger, not being shy about claiming any possible connection no matter how much of a stretch it is and then ignoring all the dissimilarities.
it seems more to be the case that you have great desire to hold these beliefs….I see no reason, let alone a great one
I define the true Church as all those possessed of the Holy Spirit
the need for certainty sure seems to be the attraction for many that end up Catholic… I can understand that desire, I am just not prepared to swallow what it takes.
Am I to understand that you think that the use of the word “IS” means that Paul/Jesus was claiming that the bread had become his body through a change of substance? All that from “IS”? If so, then when Jesus used that exact same word to say that he who does the Father’s will is Jesus’ mother, does that mean a change of substance occurred then too, and the disciple actually became Mary? Or what about when you asked earlier, “How is she not the New Ark?”…does your use of “IS” mean that you think that the substance of Mary was transformed into the substance of the Ark? How is it that when Catholics see: “This is my body…” they think that the “IS” can only be interpreted in one fashion, but then they will use and interpret “IS” so very differently in so many other situations. The phrase “This is my body” in no way requires that any change of substance is involved.
please note that it is real bodily presence….not just real presence….I find that Catholics blur the distinction and then equate the real bodily presence of their present theology with the real presence of the second century. Jesus re-designated the Passover symbols. It is said that the symbols within the Passover meal enabled the participant to be made present in the exodus and participate in it. That does not mean that the substance of the participants’ surroundings were changed into the substance of Egypt…it was a spiritual participation…a spiritual “making present.” Such might be called a Jewish real presence. That is how the first Lord’s Supper worked. However, when it was introduced into Greek culture, they introduced Platonic philosophy and could see that the bread was the body in that the power of the body became present in the bread….it still was bread in substance, but by way of the “greater reality” of the power that it possessed, it became the body. Such might be called a Platonic presence. Neither the Jewish nor the Platonic real presence was a real somatic presence.
so tell me, from the little bit that we have from Ignatius, can you tell me if he held to a Jewish real presence or a Platonic real presence or to something else?
yes, for Justin it was still bread, but not merely common bread.
no it doesn’t, b/c I am not the one saying that there is no sound argument against my position…but I will declare that my position has greater soundness than yours.
as I said, the selection/recognition of which works were and weren’t scripture was pretty well complete.
I believe I’ll leave it at that…you wanted to know what it was about Catholicism that I didn’t agree with…Mary is but one thing and hopefully you have come to understand that there are solid reasons to reject the Catholic Marian beliefs (even if you don’t accept those reasons). Cheers and may God bless you…PM me if there is anything that you really want me to respond to…or point it out in the post itself. thanks.