LutheranScholar #117
Obviously they can stand up to scrutiny and they have stood up to scrutiny.
You have just been shown that Our Lord requires our cooperation with His Will for us to be saved (post #130), as against your error that nothing else is required from us.
Just because you dismiss them doesn’t make them any less valid. Actually, isn’t it the Catholic Church that insists that her people believe all of the teachings of the Magisterium?
When the Christ founded His Catholic Church He warned “if he refuses to hear even the Church let him be like the heathen and a publican.” (Mt 18:17).
catholicessentials.net/magisterium.htm Does it encourage questioning, or does it accuse those who follow their consciences of being " cafeteria Catholics" when they make their own informed decisions on what is or is not correctly taught by the Catholic Church? So, while I am accused of " blind belief," what, exactly, are those who follow everything the Catholic Church says because that’s what they’re supposed to do doing?
Another error, as following conscience essentially involves making sure that the conscience is correct. Conscience is not a god but a judgment of the practical reason, so there can be no “informed decisions” when the formation of conscience is in error.
The real Catholic is not in “blind belief” precisely because it is the Christ who commands that He be followed through the only Church he founded.
As the Christ taught His Apostles: “I will not leave you orphans; I will come to you." (John 14:15-18) “The Advocate, the Holy Spirit that the Father will send in My name, He will teach you everything and remind you of all that I told you.” (John 14:26) “But when He comes, the Spirit of truth, He will guide you to all truth. He will not speak on His own, but He will speak what He hears, and will declare to you the things that are coming. He will glorify Me, because He will take from what is mine and declare it to you. Everything that the Father has is mine; for this reason I told you that He will take from what is mine and declare it to you.” (John 16:13-15)
As Msgr Cormac P Burke (
Law and Dissent, 1985) points out, for the real Catholic, there is never a conflict between the authority of the Church and conscience, because belief that Christ has given His Church authority to teach without error is part of his conscience, freely accepted.
The only way we know “Christ’s teachings” with certainty is through His own Church which He established and which gave us the Sacred Scriptures as the Word of God, as Christ wrote nothing. Further dogma “proposes, in a form obliging the Christian people to an irrevocable adherence of faith, truths contained in divine Revelation or also when it proposes, in a definitive way, truths having a necessary connection with these.” (CCC #88).
I notice that LutheranScholar is most unscholarly in avoiding the clear teaching of Christ on His Church.