Can you show me where Jesus and the apostles taught purgatory?
Yes, of course we can. These verses have been provided numerous times in this thread.
Luke 16:19-31
Matthew 12:32
Matthew 18:32-35
1 Corinthians 3:10-15
We would also look to numerous passages that support the idea of praying for the dead which makes no sense unless something like purgatory exists.
Now, a few questions for you:
Can you show us where Jesus and the Apostles taught that the early Church should ignore what they taught orally and go by scripture alone?
:nope:
Can you show us where Paul taught that we should ignore his express written instructions that we should “hold to the teachings [he] passed on to [us], whether by
word of
mouth or by letter” and simply go by his letters alone?
:nope:
Can you show us where Jesus and the Apostles taught the hypostatic union or that Jesus had two wills and two natures?
:nope:
Can you show where Jesus and the Apostles taught that God is a Trinity as we understand that doctrine today?
:nope:
Can you show me unanimous consent of the early church “fathers” on the belief of purgatory? And I don’t mean find just 3 fathers who believed in it.
I already answered this exact question in this thread in post #525. There, I wrote:
Sure there is. You just don’t understand what the phrase means. We Americans tend to be very analytical and precise in our language. Other cultures are less so. However, let me use an analogy in an attempt to explain this.
Imagine that the local Rotary club has been discussing the idea of building a playground for the kids in town. All the costs and options and pros and cons have been presented and discussed. Now, it’s time for the vote.
The president says, “All in favor, say ‘Aye’.”
“The Ayes have it.” Later, the local newspaper reports that the vote passed unanimously, and the playground gets built. But it wasn’t REALLY unanimous, was it?
Conversely, the President could have called the roll of all the members and recorded carefully who voted and how they voted…just like Congress. There, if a measure passes 99-1, it is called an “overwhelming majority” but not “unanimous consent.”
That’s how we modern Americans view and do things.
However, that is somewhat beside the point. The Church listens carefully to all of her sons with regard to matters of doctrine. And then she chooses which of their ideas to accept and which to reject. It does not matter whether the majority believe an idea or not…what matters is what is true.
For example, at one time, the Arian heresy overwhelmed the Church; there were more Arian Bishops than orthodox Bishops. Athanasius held out against them all, and in the end, Arianism was defeated.
Anyone can call themselves a “Christian,” but it isn’t enough just belonging to a church and following the rules and rituals of that church. Jesus said unless you are born-again, you cannot see the kingdom of God.
Agreed, and this normally happens at baptism. However, the Church also recognizes two other possibilities: baptism of desire and baptism of blood.
The Scriptures says “But the natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God: for they are foolishness unto him: neither can he know them, because they are spiritually discerned” (1 Cor. 2:14). The world cannot understand the things of God because only the truly born again Christian receives the indwelling of the Holy Spirit.
Perhaps this explains why so many people struggle to accept the fact that Jesus built a single Church upon Peter the rock and that this Church has been protected from EVER teaching error by the Holy Spirit just as Jesus promised.
Since the Bible teaches this, how do you feel about the fact that the catholic church teaches that you cannot understand the Scriptures on your own; that you need the church to interpret it for you? If you are regenerate, born from above and thus a child of God, then why is it your church says you can’t understand and interpret the Scriptures?
The Catholic Church does not teach that we cannot understand and interpret the scriptures. However, the Church does encourage us to compare our understanding with the Church’s teachings because she is taking into account the warning from Peter:
[
2 Peter 3:16](
http://www.biblegateway.com/passage/?search=2 Peter+3:16&version=NIV)
He writes the same way in all his letters, speaking in them of these matters. His letters contain some things that are
hard to
understand, which ignorant and unstable people distort, as they do the other Scriptures, to their own destruction.
From this, we see that Peter knew that people were misunderstanding Paul’s letters during Paul’s lifetime. Nothing has changed since that day.